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                  <text>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

t

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Arts group filling void
MARIETTA (AP) -Vicki Oils considers students "starved
for the arts" and she's out to change that.
Oils, a dancer, is one of more than 25 artists and groups
contracted to work in area schools through Artsbridge, an arts
service agency for the Marietta area .
"Our kids in the schools today are starved for the arts," Dils
said. " They're starved for creativity. We teach the kids vision,
and without vision you 're not creating anything new."
Ambridge raised more than S201 ,000 last year to help fund
and support nearly 30 community-based art projects, concerts, plays, festivals and a film series in the Marietta area.

Formerly missing man kills seH

PageAl
Tuesd.y, Mlrch 20,2001

CLEVELAND (AP) - There were
some doubts and worries.
Even so, workers at a Ford Motor Co.
engine casting plant return ed to work
ea rly Tuesday, assured their plant had
been properly cleansed after an outbreak of Legionnaires' disea se.
The third shift, primarily' maintenance and setup work, left an informational meeting at 12:30 a.m. and went
to work. Production shifts were expec ted to report later Tu esday.
Four workers at the plant came down
with Legionnaires' disease, :md the plant
was ordered temporarily closed
Wednesday night . Workers David Hinderman, 53, and Donald T.1foya, 6 1,
were diagnosed with the di sease and

died .
.
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has been analyzing water
samples taken from the plant. Ford has
not confirmed that the source of the
disease was in the plant, but the company had it disinfected anyway.
Legionnaires' is a form of pneumonia
thor is spread through inhalation of mist
from contan1inated water. It 'Yas first
identified at a 1976 American Legion
co nvention in Philadelphia. ·Symptoms
include hi gh fever, cough and shortness
of breath.
Ford's .Cleveland Casting Plant in
suburban Broo k Park has 2,500
employees.
About 450 third-shift workers began

meeting with Ford officials, and county
and state health officials, Mond~y night
to get details on what was dlme to
make the plant safe. Pord spo~es~n
Edward Miller descnbed m~etlng,
closed to the media, as quiet with plant
workers listening intently.
.
' Miller said that the meeting with
workers went longer than scheduled
and concluded abo ut 12:30 a.m. Tuesday, after workers asked numerous questions. After some workers expresse·d
concerns, the standing-room only
crowd .in a plant garage filed into the
casting plant to begin the work shift.
Miller said some of the workers said
that they would feel better if the source
of the bacteria was known.

Pilarczyk sent the letter March 12.

River history explored

Wendy's earnings smaller .

DUBLIN (AP) - Wendy's International Inc. said lower
sales during the winter months and higher utility and beef
costs will cause its first- quarter earnings to fall below expeccations.
The company said Monday that earnings for the quarter
ending April 1 would be 33 cents per share, 3 cents more than
in the same quarter last year. Wall Street analysts had been
expecting 34 cents.
full-year goal is 12 percent to 15 percent growth .
h
h
M cARTHUR (AP) - Evidence against a man who owns
"The positive results are we continue to s ow growt
.
the property where the rematns of two people were found- d . . I
h ..
k
B b Be t'
·
by th e e nd of the month , esplte
r· 1cou ld be presence d to a gran d JUry
. . me ement
. . weat er, company
-"' spo esman
,
ho
_m sa1d. "We antiCipate stronger penormance .or t e remamCHARDON (AP) -Jill Holder declined to speak on her the Vinton County prosecutor sai d .
own behalf Monday as a judge sentenced her to at least 33
Timothy Gleeson said Monday that investigators have con- der of the year."
years in prison for her complicity in the shooting death of a eluded the death of Kenyon College student Emily Murray,
gas· station clerk.
.
who was shot in the head, was not a suicide.
Holder, 18, of Chester Township, received a life sentence
And it appears that Greg Julious had b~en dismembered
with no chance of parole for 33 years.
KINGSTON (AP) -Two people were found dead early
after his death, Gleeso n said.
Judge Forrest W. Burt told Holder she brought the punishThe body of the 20-year-old Murray was found Dec. 9 in· Monday inside a mobile home that. burned near this southment upon herself by letting one ' of her cohorts shoot a trailer on Vinton County property owned by Gregory ern Ohio village:
Danielle Kovacic, 19, and wound Rachael Cogswell, 18, dur- McKnight and his wife, Kathy.
The bodies were burned beyond recognition and sent to
ing closing-time robbery of a Clark Oil gas station.
the Montgomery County coroner's office for identification
Holder ignored her opportunities to prevent the shooting,
and to determine what caused their deaths, Ross County
Burt said.
Sheriff Ron Nichols said. Authorities were called about 2:15
TOLEDO (AP) - The city is cracking down on landlords a.m. Monday.
and University of Toledo students sq ueezing too many peoNo other details were available.
ple into houses near campus.
Kingston is about 35 miles south of Columbus.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A vote cast 17 years ago by former
Housing. near campus is at a premium because the univer•
Councilman Charlie Luken - now Mayor Luken - is hold- sity does not have enough rooms to house students who want
ing up his plans to buy a .house.
to live on campus.
"It's a nutty result," Luken said. "I've offered to cure. the
City inspectors are warning rental property owners that a
S~RINGFIELD (AP) -· A decision to have the Central
problem, but that might not be enough."
. 1993 zoning ordinance prohibits more' than three unrelated
·Intelligence Agency's second highest-ranking official speak at
The townhouse Luken wants to buy isn't subject to city people from living together in a single-family home.
property taxes because the city council voted in 1984 to
Inspectors also have handed •out more than 200 h&lt;lusing Wittenberg University's commencement is generating oppowaive taxes in the area to encourage growth and develop- and nuisance violations to student rentals and homeo\vners sition among somi: students and teachers.
ment. Luken voted with the majority to waive the taxes.
John Mclaugh.Jin, deputy director of central intelligence ·
since Feh 1.
Since then, Luken has served in the U.S. House and has
and a 1964 Wittenberg graduate, is scheduled to be the combeen a television news anchor in Cincinnati. Now he is being
mencement speaker during the May 12 ceremony at this pritold by city lawyers that buying the house could be a conflict
vate sc!10ol in this western Ohio city.
of interest that violates state ethics laws.
CINCINNATI (AP) -A leader of Ron~an Catholic bish"The senior class invited the speaker of their choice,"Witops in Ohio has asked Gov. Bob Taft to spare the life of a pris- ten berg spokesman Jim Dexter said Monday. "There have
oner scheduled to be executed April 17 for the 1983 murder been some faculty and some students on campus who have
of a Cleveland delicatessen owner.
opposed philosophically having a high-ranking CIA officer ·
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Con&gt;air pilots have almost unaniCincinnati Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk said Jay D. Scott's here. But he is one of our most illustrious alumni. So most
mously rejected the company's five-year contract offer and killing of 74-year-old Vinnie Prince was an "outrageous and everyone here is delighted to have him."
say they're ready to strike.
horrifying crime." But the state would only be expanding the
McLaughlin, a career intelligence officer, was selected by
"We're ready to n&gt;ake the sacrifice if we have to," said Scott
cycle of violence by executing Scott, Pilarczyk wrote in a let- President Clinton last June to serve in the No. 2 spot in the
Hudgins, 47', of Erlanger. "My wife and I have already disCIA. Before that, Mclaughlin served as the deputy director
cussed putting our house on the market, because that's what ter to Taft.
"The choice before you is grave and awesome - life or for intellige11ce, the CIA's analysis division.
.
it would mean."
Only six of the 1,096 pilots who voted supported the con- death
," · Pilarzyk
as
...
...
chairman
of the wrote
Catholic
tract offer,J.C. lawson, chairman of negotiators for Comai r's Conference of Ohio. "We ask
chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association, said Monday.
you to choose life, not based .
He said 1,133 pilots were eligible to vote.
on Mr. Scott's guilt or innocence, but because his death is
u~necessary. You
haVe an
option - that of commuting
' CLEVELAND (AP) - Two blue-collar neighborhoods his sentence to life without
that have been exposed to toxic air pollutants fer years will parole."
get $500,000 under a pilot air-quality program announced
The Archdiocese of CincinMonday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agen cy.
nati said on Monday that
EPA chief Christie Whitman told Slavic Village residents

Case may go to grand jury

Its

Accomplice gets 33 years

2 found

dead in bumed trailer

a

Apartment crowding targeted

Old vote haunts mayor

CIA speaker irks students .

ArchbiShOp issues ap·peal

Comair pilots nix contrad

~~~~--~-~-~~-~- -~-~~~~~~-~-

------"!!"--

Clean air projed begins

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The ·

Regulators approve crucial license
upgrade for Paducah plant
·
enrichment.
Until · Monday, it was
licensed to increase .the concentration of uranium-235
isotopes only to a level of
2.75 percent. Now; it can
enrich to a concentration of
5.5 percent. Power plants
typically use con&lt;:entrations,
or assays, of 4 percent to 5
percent, though higher concentrations may be needed by
more modern plants in the
future.
Currently, the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion plant in
Ohio completes the job of
enriching uranium to the
highest concentration .
Rep. Ted Strickland, DOhio, and the union that represents production line workers in Piketon have repeatedly raised questions about the
Paducah plant's ability to
handle its new ennchment
duties .
Strickland and Rep. John
Dingell, 0 - Mich., asked the

NRC to delay its. licensing
decision or impose conditions so that the Ohio plant
could not be closed until
Paducah has proven its ability
to handle the extra enrichment and become the
nation 's only domestic producer of u~ility-grade uranium.
In a letter to Strickland,
whose district includes Piketon , the NRC said: "We
believe that it would be inappropriate to condition the
Paducah amendment on
USEC's maintaining a particular operational status at
Portsmouth ."
The letter did not appea se
the congress]nan.
"This is not the last word
on this issue," Strickland said.
"I will co ntinue to explore
every ava ilable avenue to
ensure tha. t our nation 's energy n eeds co me before a private co mpany's bottom line."

'

____ • ~oint ~leasant 1\egtster
• ~allipolis 1aailp mrtbune

Prayer

Concems

Divorce filed

Signupsset

•

Supper off

~

LOCAL STOCKS

t AEP- 44Yt
: Arch
,

•

~

:
•

f

'•
•
;
•
:

•

Coal - 24
Akzo -44Ya
AmTech/SBC- 43
Ashland Inc. - 37~
AT&amp;T-23),
Bank One- 35~
Bob Evans - 20
BorgWamer - 43Y.
Champion - 2%
Charming Shops - 5%
City Holding - 10'•
Federal Mogul - 3),
USB-22

Gan11ett- 59
General Electric- 40~
GKNLY -1o'f,
Haney Davidson - 38
Kmart-8~

Kroger - 23h
Lands End- 26'1,
Lid. -15~
Oak Hill Financial
13Y.
OVB-24~

BBT-35),

Peoples- 11·~.

Premier-

B'•

43'·

Rockwell Rocky Bools - 4\
RD Shall - sal.
Sears- 37~
Shonoy's -1
Wai-Mart - 47),
1
Wendy's - 22~ ,
.
Worthington - 9/.
Dally sleek reports are
lhe 4 p.m. · closing.
quotes of !he previous
day's transactions, provided by Smllh Part·
nors al Advest Inc.

:f . ------------------~

The Daily Sentinel

(

Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2001

•

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Deaths

Gospel sing

POMEROY - A car stolen
POMEROY - Lula Shaffer, 91, of Pomeroy, died on SaturThursday
at a Pomeroy conve. day, March 17, 2001 at the extended care unit of Veterans
nience store was recovered on
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
· She was born on July 27, 1909 in Pliny, West Virginia, daugh- Friday in Mason County.W.Va.,
. ter of the late Noah and Sarah Martin Myers. She was a home- just before a second vehicle was
, maker.
found in the Clifton,W.Va., area.
Both
vehicles were apparently
Surviving are a niece and her husband, Betty and Bob Pooler o f Middleport, and five nephews and their wives, Clarence burned by the thief.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
and Inez Roy, and Bob and Hazel Roy, all of Racine, Ronnie
and Faye Myers, and Mike and Margie Myers, all of Caldwell; Proffitt said that the first vehicle,
owned by Jessica Wolfe and
.
·
and Ray and Grace Myers of Athens.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two Kimberly Holliday, both of
, husbands, Cassa Rose and Bonney Shaffer; her brothers and sis- Pomeroy, was driven away by a
• ters, Marie, Mary, Jane, Liza, Laura, Rielly, Ed, John , Jim and · male subject while Wolfe and
Holliday were in th~ Riverside
Hetzel; and .an adopted sister, Helen.
Marathon
Food Mart.
Private graveside services will be conducted for the family,
Proffitt said that the car,
with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Arrangements were
described
as a 1990 Plymouth
comple ted by Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport.
Laser, was found early Friday at
There will be no calling hours.
the C~fton Cemetery in Clifton
by a Mason County deputy. The
car
had been burned, apparently
· ings will be held at the
So uthern Baptist Church, after it was stuck in th~ c em~­
Pomeroy, 9 to 9:30 a.m.; Lau- · tety's soft mud.
Wolfe said she saw a "suspifrom Page AI
rei Cliff Methodist C hurch,
Pomeroy, noon to 12:30 p.m.; cious subject" behind Hutton 's
Ranger," CNN News, People Faith Full Gos pel C hurch, Car Wash next door to the Food
magazine and in USA Today. · Long Bottoni, 7 to 7: 30 p.m .; Mart, and described him as a
· The Power Team bills itself Reedsville United Methodist male in his late teens, \vith short
. · as "the world's greatest exhi- Church, Reedwille, 7:30 to 8 brown hair, approximately 5foot-11, and clean-s haven.
- bition of power, strength, p.m.
Proffitt said that the man
- speed, inspiration and motivaOn Friday, a prayer service
tion."
will be held from 9:30 to 10 Wolfe described . is the primaty
Meanwhile, daily prayer a.m. at the Ash Street Church suspect in the theft.
Authprities believe that he left
gatherings are continuing for in Middleport; and on Saturthe
cemetery after setting the
the ministry. Wednesday, day it will be held from 8:30
prayer meetings will be held to 9 a.m. at the Middleport car on fire, and then stole a Ford
Tempo trom a Clifton resifrom 12:30 to 1 p.m. at the Church of Christ.
dence.
That vehicle was also
Pomeroy United Methodist
The Power Team will be at
found burned on Friday
Chun:h; 5:30 to 6 p.m. at t"'e Meigs High School at 7 each
Proffitt urged residents to turn
Harliest Outreach Church at evening from March 28,
off their ignitions and take their
Chester; 6 to 6:30 p.m. at the through April 1. The $2 donakeys when leaving their cars to
Agape Life Center in Mason . tion at the door will go to the
pay for gasoline. A similar ·inciOn Thursday, prayer meet- team.
dent at another Pomeroy convenience store several years ago,
which resulted in the arrest and
vast amy of assorted violations.
imprisonment of a local man, he
In other matters, council said.
approved a resolution giving the
from PllpA1
mayor authorization to apply
for a Ohio Deparanent of Natfighters fiom various fire depart- ural Resources grant that would
POMEROY -- An action
ments throughout the county assist with the funding of a new for divorce h:u been filed in
on basic fire fighting methods public boat docking facility on Meijp County Common Pleas
and techniques.
Pomeroy's waterfront.
Court by Glenda K. Willis, Long
''
Council also appiOVI!d the
. Blaettnar informed .. council Bottom, against Larty Eugene
1' pultlwe df new office equip- the villajll! is to receM Dhanc:ial Willis,APO,AE;
ment for the fire depamnent, assistance in the sum of$70,687
Dissolutions haw been ·grantwhich included a new copier, from the Ohio Public Works ed. to Paula Kay Dillon and
fax machine and file cabinets. Commission for road repair Timothy E. Dillon; Rebecca
- The cost of the new equipment work on • portion of Main Lynne Folnier and Daniel Ray
totaled $800.
Street neat the Pomeroy/Mid- Folmer, Shelby J. Pickens and
Shawna R . Pickens, David M.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark dleport corporation line.
Proffitt presented the police
The assistance will help pay Rhodes and Norma lea
department's new parking viola- for 80 percent of the project, Rhodes, and Aprillove Colburn
tion citations for council to which is estimated to cost and Ricky D. Colburn.
·- examine.
around $90,000, said Blaettnar.
The difference between the
Blaettnar said the roadway
. new tickets :irid the existing has been slipping for some time
RUTLAND Rutland
ones is the posting of a warning and that construction efforts
Youth
league
will
have
baseball
about unpaid parking tickets should alleviate the problem.
Council approved advertising signups on Tuesday from 6-8
and fine costs on the back of the
p.m. at the Rutland Firehouse.
for bids for work and materials
new tickets, said Proffitt.
The fee is $15 per child, or two
,•
After reviewing the police on the refurbishing of the
for $25, with a $35 maximum
" department's violation summa- · Pomeroy Municipal Building's
fee per family.
t ry, Mayor John Blaettnar com- wjndows. All of the building's
~ plimenred the depamnent on wmdows are scheduled to be
! "keeping; al:!reast ofvillage activ- redone, with the exception of
: ities" b~use of the summaty's the back and east side windows.
CHESTER - The soup

:------------~-----------------------------•

Tha Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Lula

:

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

Ford Motor Co. casting plant reop~ns

DESHLER (AP) - A 64-year-old man who disappeared
for nine days before turning up safe last week has died of an
apparent suicide, authorities said.
Henry County Sheriff John Nye said Richard Burner
hanged himself in hi s barn . The body was found Monday
morn mg.
' 'There's a higher purpose to all of this. We just don't know
what it is,'' said his son·, Robert Burner.
.
H e and o ther fa mil y members declined to comment on the
nature of Burner's death .
that the EPA will work with residents to find ways to
improve the qua li ty of ai r in the inner-city neighborhood.
The goal is to cut t\)xi c air pollutants within a year in neighborhoods where homes and industry exist side-by-side.
STOCKPORT (AP) - As .a lock tender and naturalist for
The EPA is consider ing implementin g simil ar progra ms in
th e state, Wendy Watte ha s studied and worked the Muskother ci ties nationwide after ev;J lu ating the results of Cleveingum River for 11 years.
land's program, Whitman said.
She thinks people would enjoy traveling the river from
''1 called th is progra m revolutionary because it truly breaks
Marietta to Coshocton , visiting hi storic sites and learning the
new ground ~n environmental protection," she said,; " If it is
region's history and folklore, so she 's giving it a try.
successful , wed hke to expand 1t across the co untry.
.
Waite's making the Muskingum River her business.
She recently opened Elk Eye Tour Company to specialize
in trips visiting the cities along the river.

WASHINGTON (AP) The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission on Monday
upgra&lt;)ed the license of the
Paducah Gaseous Diffusion
Plant in Kentucky, rebuffing
congressmen who · asked that
a decision be delayed .
· Without
the
license'
improvements, the
U.S.
Enrichment Corp: would not
have been able to stick to its
schedule for ending production in June at its Piketon,
Ohio, plant and consolidating
operations in Kentucky.
Produci ng uranium at just
one plant is intended to save
money for the financially ailmg co mpany.
"This positions the co mpany to move forward w1th our
business. stra tt"gy," Morris
Brown, USEC's vice president of o perations, said in . a
prepared release.
Th e Paducah plant's new
license terms allow it to perform a higher level of

• Tuesday, March 20, 2001

supper for Saturday at the
Chester . United Methodist
Chun:h has been canceled.

aubto meet
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literaty Club will meet at
2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Library with Bernice
Carpenter, hostess. "Dury" by
Bob Greene will be reviewed by
Olita Heighton.

Broadcast.set ·
POMEROY - A .national
immunization program and
public health ttaining network
satellite broadcast which gives
continuing education credit is
being offered weekly through
April 5.
·
The first session on epidemiology and prevention of vaccinepreventable diseases.The fir&gt;t class
was was held last week. Other
classes will be held Man:h 22, 29,
and April5 , noon to 3:30p.m.

CLIFTON,W.Va. -A gospel
sing will be held on Man:h 31 at
the
Clifton
Tabernacle,
Clifton,at 7 p.m. on March 31.
The Gabriel Quartet will be
featured.

Boil advisoly
POMEROY - A boil advisory remains in effeC! for those
residen~ who were without
water Sunday due to a main line
leak in Pomeroy. The outage
affected Sugar Run and Naylor's
Run.

Foreclosure filed
POMEROY - A fon.;dosure action has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Bank of New York,
·Plano,Texas, against Amly L. Patterson, Syracqse. and others,
alleging default .on a mortg•ge
agreement in the amount of
$21,694.67.
An action for foreclosure has
been filed by Fifth Third Bank ,
C incinnati, against Darrell E.
Wheeler, Reedsville, and others,
demanding judgn1ent in the
amount of$29,661.43.

Musical service
POMEROY
Bruce
Stone, formerly of the Pomeroy
area, will present a musical service at the Hemlock Grove
Christian Church, Sunday, 9:30
a.m. A poduck meal will be
served at the grange h;ill at
noon.The public is invited.

Enrollment
thisweell

Mary Jean Bailey
POMEROY - Word has been received here of the death of
Maty Jean Bailey ofJacksonville, Fla., formerly of Middleport.
She was born on March 28, 1922, daughter of the late Herman
and Mae Bailey.
Surviving are her children, Doris McElhinny, Doug Harrison and ·
Jeff Harrison; and five grandchildren and three great-[grandchildren.
Graveside services were held on Sunday, March 18, 2001 in
Deltona, Fla.

RickyDe~r
RACINE - Ricky Lee Deeter. 42, Racine, died Saturday, Man:h
17,2001 at his residence.
He was born on Sept. 30, 1958 in Gallipolis, son of Argyle L. and
Aorence Eloise Dailey Deeter, he was a brick mason with Garrett
Masonty.
S.urviving in :.tddition r:o his parents are two brotht:rs and a sisterin-law, Thomas Lloyd Deeter of Columbus. and Robert D. and
Connie Deeter ofSpringfield, Mo.;a SISter, Joyce Ann Adam• of GalLipolis; and several nieces, nephews, J Lm t~ and uncl ~s
He was preceded in death by h1s sistcr,Judy Di.1ne Deeter West.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in Ewing Funer.tl Home,
Pomeroy, \vith the Rev. Mark Matson officiating. Burial will be in
Morris Chapel Cemetery, Portland. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 tonight.

Durward Swain
LONG BOTTOM -. · Durw.~rd Swain, 83, Louisville, Ky., formerly of long Bottom, died Sunday, March 1H, :2001 at the Transitional H ealth Care Center, Jeffersonville, Ind.
He was a retired employee ofWorthingron Stcd, a vetera n of the
U.S. Navy during World War II, and a member of the Nmth Bullitt
Christian Chun:h m Sheperdsville, Ky.
Surviving are his son, Mike Swain of Lebanon; three sisters, Georgia Autherson of Newark, Hope Drake of Long Bottom and
Pauline Primmer of Logan; and two grandsons and two grcatgranddlUghters.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Dorothy Raiguel
Swain; his parents, William and Tressa Coleman Swam; his sister,
Dixie Teboe; and two brothers, James Oliver Swain and William
Swain:
•
Services will be noon Thursday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with burial to follow at the Reedsville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home on Thursday trom 11 a.m. until the
time of service.

Raymond Yonker

POMEROY - The Community Outreach Tean1 with the
Chillicothe Veterans Administration Medical Center will enroll
veterans into the VA Health
·Care System'of Ohio at the VA
Field Service Center in
Pomeroy, trom 10 a.m. to 2
p.m., Wednetday and Thunday.
Veter:ins shouH bring dis• charge, separation, DD214,
spouse's Social Security number,
date of birth, date of marriage
and Social Security numben; of
dependent children, income and
insurance and Medicare information.
Veterans who \vere enrolled
in the past and have not used the
VA Health Care System in the
past three yem should ·re-enroll .
A nurse will also be available
to provide blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol screenings.

Fl"ee sa"eenings
POMEROY - Free breast
and cervical cancer screenings
will be provided by the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic Medicine's Mobile
Health unit on March 29 trom
10 a.m. until2 p.m. at the Meigs
County Health Depamnent.
Pap tests, pelvic and breast
exaininations, and breast health
education will be pnnrided by
appointment to the uninsured
and underinsured women of
Meigs County.
Those interested should call
593-2432 or toll-free at 1-800844-2654 for an appointment.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Raymond F.Yonker, 84, New Haven,
W.Va., died Monday, March 19, 2001 at Point Pleasant Center,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy during World War 11, and was
a retired truck driver. He was the son of the late Charlie and Jessie
Conduss Yonker.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Farrell "Buddy" and
Dottie Yonker ofApple Grove, W.Va.; cwo daughters, Ro•e and S.m
Anc:lenon of Hartford; W.Va., and Anna and Reel Mom. of lndianapolis, Ind.; rwo broihen;, Charles Yonker of Letart, W.Va., and
Danny Yonker of Mason, W.Va.; cwo sisters, Martha Powell of Indianapo~s, and Leota Kennedy ofTampa, Fia:; eight grandsons, nine
granddaughters, 23 great- grandchildren and five great-great gral1dchildren. ·
The Rev. Sam Anderson ,viJ] conduct graveside services on·
Wednesday, March 21, 2001 at 11 a.m. at the Union Cemetety in
letart.There ,viJ] be no calling hours.
Arrangements·are by New Haven Funeral Home.

VALLEY WEATHER
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Weather forecast:
Wednesday
night. .. Partly
Tonight... Cloudy with a
chance of rain. Low near 40. East cloudy Low near 40.
\vind around 10 mph. Chance of.
rain 30 percent.
Wednesday. .. Cloudy. A chance
of rain showers through early
afternoon. High in the upper
40s. Northeast wind 10 ·to 15

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

Benefit sing
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- A benefit gospel sing will
take place at 7 p.m. on Friday at
the 22nd Street Church of God
in Point Pleasant.
Performing at the benefit will
be Proclaim, Randy Pan;ons and
The Family Circle.

United Fund for
Meigs County
2001 Goal

REVIVAL

Racine First Baptist Church
With Evangelist Ray Stagno
. from l'lew York City . ·

Sun - Wed March 18-21
Sun - 10 am; Nightly 7pm
Special Music nightly
featuring area singers

740-949-:3131
Pastor Rick Rule
Invites the public.

Send your tox deductible
contrl bullon to:
United Fund For MeiC)s

P.O.Box424
Middleport; OH 45 760
I

'

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Arts group filling void
MARIETTA (AP) -Vicki Oils considers students "starved
for the arts" and she's out to change that.
Oils, a dancer, is one of more than 25 artists and groups
contracted to work in area schools through Artsbridge, an arts
service agency for the Marietta area .
"Our kids in the schools today are starved for the arts," Dils
said. " They're starved for creativity. We teach the kids vision,
and without vision you 're not creating anything new."
Ambridge raised more than S201 ,000 last year to help fund
and support nearly 30 community-based art projects, concerts, plays, festivals and a film series in the Marietta area.

Formerly missing man kills seH

PageAl
Tuesd.y, Mlrch 20,2001

CLEVELAND (AP) - There were
some doubts and worries.
Even so, workers at a Ford Motor Co.
engine casting plant return ed to work
ea rly Tuesday, assured their plant had
been properly cleansed after an outbreak of Legionnaires' disea se.
The third shift, primarily' maintenance and setup work, left an informational meeting at 12:30 a.m. and went
to work. Production shifts were expec ted to report later Tu esday.
Four workers at the plant came down
with Legionnaires' disease, :md the plant
was ordered temporarily closed
Wednesday night . Workers David Hinderman, 53, and Donald T.1foya, 6 1,
were diagnosed with the di sease and

died .
.
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has been analyzing water
samples taken from the plant. Ford has
not confirmed that the source of the
disease was in the plant, but the company had it disinfected anyway.
Legionnaires' is a form of pneumonia
thor is spread through inhalation of mist
from contan1inated water. It 'Yas first
identified at a 1976 American Legion
co nvention in Philadelphia. ·Symptoms
include hi gh fever, cough and shortness
of breath.
Ford's .Cleveland Casting Plant in
suburban Broo k Park has 2,500
employees.
About 450 third-shift workers began

meeting with Ford officials, and county
and state health officials, Mond~y night
to get details on what was dlme to
make the plant safe. Pord spo~es~n
Edward Miller descnbed m~etlng,
closed to the media, as quiet with plant
workers listening intently.
.
' Miller said that the meeting with
workers went longer than scheduled
and concluded abo ut 12:30 a.m. Tuesday, after workers asked numerous questions. After some workers expresse·d
concerns, the standing-room only
crowd .in a plant garage filed into the
casting plant to begin the work shift.
Miller said some of the workers said
that they would feel better if the source
of the bacteria was known.

Pilarczyk sent the letter March 12.

River history explored

Wendy's earnings smaller .

DUBLIN (AP) - Wendy's International Inc. said lower
sales during the winter months and higher utility and beef
costs will cause its first- quarter earnings to fall below expeccations.
The company said Monday that earnings for the quarter
ending April 1 would be 33 cents per share, 3 cents more than
in the same quarter last year. Wall Street analysts had been
expecting 34 cents.
full-year goal is 12 percent to 15 percent growth .
h
h
M cARTHUR (AP) - Evidence against a man who owns
"The positive results are we continue to s ow growt
.
the property where the rematns of two people were found- d . . I
h ..
k
B b Be t'
·
by th e e nd of the month , esplte
r· 1cou ld be presence d to a gran d JUry
. . me ement
. . weat er, company
-"' spo esman
,
ho
_m sa1d. "We antiCipate stronger penormance .or t e remamCHARDON (AP) -Jill Holder declined to speak on her the Vinton County prosecutor sai d .
own behalf Monday as a judge sentenced her to at least 33
Timothy Gleeson said Monday that investigators have con- der of the year."
years in prison for her complicity in the shooting death of a eluded the death of Kenyon College student Emily Murray,
gas· station clerk.
.
who was shot in the head, was not a suicide.
Holder, 18, of Chester Township, received a life sentence
And it appears that Greg Julious had b~en dismembered
with no chance of parole for 33 years.
KINGSTON (AP) -Two people were found dead early
after his death, Gleeso n said.
Judge Forrest W. Burt told Holder she brought the punishThe body of the 20-year-old Murray was found Dec. 9 in· Monday inside a mobile home that. burned near this southment upon herself by letting one ' of her cohorts shoot a trailer on Vinton County property owned by Gregory ern Ohio village:
Danielle Kovacic, 19, and wound Rachael Cogswell, 18, dur- McKnight and his wife, Kathy.
The bodies were burned beyond recognition and sent to
ing closing-time robbery of a Clark Oil gas station.
the Montgomery County coroner's office for identification
Holder ignored her opportunities to prevent the shooting,
and to determine what caused their deaths, Ross County
Burt said.
Sheriff Ron Nichols said. Authorities were called about 2:15
TOLEDO (AP) - The city is cracking down on landlords a.m. Monday.
and University of Toledo students sq ueezing too many peoNo other details were available.
ple into houses near campus.
Kingston is about 35 miles south of Columbus.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A vote cast 17 years ago by former
Housing. near campus is at a premium because the univer•
Councilman Charlie Luken - now Mayor Luken - is hold- sity does not have enough rooms to house students who want
ing up his plans to buy a .house.
to live on campus.
"It's a nutty result," Luken said. "I've offered to cure. the
City inspectors are warning rental property owners that a
S~RINGFIELD (AP) -· A decision to have the Central
problem, but that might not be enough."
. 1993 zoning ordinance prohibits more' than three unrelated
·Intelligence Agency's second highest-ranking official speak at
The townhouse Luken wants to buy isn't subject to city people from living together in a single-family home.
property taxes because the city council voted in 1984 to
Inspectors also have handed •out more than 200 h&lt;lusing Wittenberg University's commencement is generating oppowaive taxes in the area to encourage growth and develop- and nuisance violations to student rentals and homeo\vners sition among somi: students and teachers.
ment. Luken voted with the majority to waive the taxes.
John Mclaugh.Jin, deputy director of central intelligence ·
since Feh 1.
Since then, Luken has served in the U.S. House and has
and a 1964 Wittenberg graduate, is scheduled to be the combeen a television news anchor in Cincinnati. Now he is being
mencement speaker during the May 12 ceremony at this pritold by city lawyers that buying the house could be a conflict
vate sc!10ol in this western Ohio city.
of interest that violates state ethics laws.
CINCINNATI (AP) -A leader of Ron~an Catholic bish"The senior class invited the speaker of their choice,"Witops in Ohio has asked Gov. Bob Taft to spare the life of a pris- ten berg spokesman Jim Dexter said Monday. "There have
oner scheduled to be executed April 17 for the 1983 murder been some faculty and some students on campus who have
of a Cleveland delicatessen owner.
opposed philosophically having a high-ranking CIA officer ·
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Con&gt;air pilots have almost unaniCincinnati Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk said Jay D. Scott's here. But he is one of our most illustrious alumni. So most
mously rejected the company's five-year contract offer and killing of 74-year-old Vinnie Prince was an "outrageous and everyone here is delighted to have him."
say they're ready to strike.
horrifying crime." But the state would only be expanding the
McLaughlin, a career intelligence officer, was selected by
"We're ready to n&gt;ake the sacrifice if we have to," said Scott
cycle of violence by executing Scott, Pilarczyk wrote in a let- President Clinton last June to serve in the No. 2 spot in the
Hudgins, 47', of Erlanger. "My wife and I have already disCIA. Before that, Mclaughlin served as the deputy director
cussed putting our house on the market, because that's what ter to Taft.
"The choice before you is grave and awesome - life or for intellige11ce, the CIA's analysis division.
.
it would mean."
Only six of the 1,096 pilots who voted supported the con- death
," · Pilarzyk
as
...
...
chairman
of the wrote
Catholic
tract offer,J.C. lawson, chairman of negotiators for Comai r's Conference of Ohio. "We ask
chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association, said Monday.
you to choose life, not based .
He said 1,133 pilots were eligible to vote.
on Mr. Scott's guilt or innocence, but because his death is
u~necessary. You
haVe an
option - that of commuting
' CLEVELAND (AP) - Two blue-collar neighborhoods his sentence to life without
that have been exposed to toxic air pollutants fer years will parole."
get $500,000 under a pilot air-quality program announced
The Archdiocese of CincinMonday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agen cy.
nati said on Monday that
EPA chief Christie Whitman told Slavic Village residents

Case may go to grand jury

Its

Accomplice gets 33 years

2 found

dead in bumed trailer

a

Apartment crowding targeted

Old vote haunts mayor

CIA speaker irks students .

ArchbiShOp issues ap·peal

Comair pilots nix contrad

~~~~--~-~-~~-~- -~-~~~~~~-~-

------"!!"--

Clean air projed begins

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The ·

Regulators approve crucial license
upgrade for Paducah plant
·
enrichment.
Until · Monday, it was
licensed to increase .the concentration of uranium-235
isotopes only to a level of
2.75 percent. Now; it can
enrich to a concentration of
5.5 percent. Power plants
typically use con&lt;:entrations,
or assays, of 4 percent to 5
percent, though higher concentrations may be needed by
more modern plants in the
future.
Currently, the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion plant in
Ohio completes the job of
enriching uranium to the
highest concentration .
Rep. Ted Strickland, DOhio, and the union that represents production line workers in Piketon have repeatedly raised questions about the
Paducah plant's ability to
handle its new ennchment
duties .
Strickland and Rep. John
Dingell, 0 - Mich., asked the

NRC to delay its. licensing
decision or impose conditions so that the Ohio plant
could not be closed until
Paducah has proven its ability
to handle the extra enrichment and become the
nation 's only domestic producer of u~ility-grade uranium.
In a letter to Strickland,
whose district includes Piketon , the NRC said: "We
believe that it would be inappropriate to condition the
Paducah amendment on
USEC's maintaining a particular operational status at
Portsmouth ."
The letter did not appea se
the congress]nan.
"This is not the last word
on this issue," Strickland said.
"I will co ntinue to explore
every ava ilable avenue to
ensure tha. t our nation 's energy n eeds co me before a private co mpany's bottom line."

'

____ • ~oint ~leasant 1\egtster
• ~allipolis 1aailp mrtbune

Prayer

Concems

Divorce filed

Signupsset

•

Supper off

~

LOCAL STOCKS

t AEP- 44Yt
: Arch
,

•

~

:
•

f

'•
•
;
•
:

•

Coal - 24
Akzo -44Ya
AmTech/SBC- 43
Ashland Inc. - 37~
AT&amp;T-23),
Bank One- 35~
Bob Evans - 20
BorgWamer - 43Y.
Champion - 2%
Charming Shops - 5%
City Holding - 10'•
Federal Mogul - 3),
USB-22

Gan11ett- 59
General Electric- 40~
GKNLY -1o'f,
Haney Davidson - 38
Kmart-8~

Kroger - 23h
Lands End- 26'1,
Lid. -15~
Oak Hill Financial
13Y.
OVB-24~

BBT-35),

Peoples- 11·~.

Premier-

B'•

43'·

Rockwell Rocky Bools - 4\
RD Shall - sal.
Sears- 37~
Shonoy's -1
Wai-Mart - 47),
1
Wendy's - 22~ ,
.
Worthington - 9/.
Dally sleek reports are
lhe 4 p.m. · closing.
quotes of !he previous
day's transactions, provided by Smllh Part·
nors al Advest Inc.

:f . ------------------~

The Daily Sentinel

(

Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2001

•

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•'
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Deaths

Gospel sing

POMEROY - A car stolen
POMEROY - Lula Shaffer, 91, of Pomeroy, died on SaturThursday
at a Pomeroy conve. day, March 17, 2001 at the extended care unit of Veterans
nience store was recovered on
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
· She was born on July 27, 1909 in Pliny, West Virginia, daugh- Friday in Mason County.W.Va.,
. ter of the late Noah and Sarah Martin Myers. She was a home- just before a second vehicle was
, maker.
found in the Clifton,W.Va., area.
Both
vehicles were apparently
Surviving are a niece and her husband, Betty and Bob Pooler o f Middleport, and five nephews and their wives, Clarence burned by the thief.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
and Inez Roy, and Bob and Hazel Roy, all of Racine, Ronnie
and Faye Myers, and Mike and Margie Myers, all of Caldwell; Proffitt said that the first vehicle,
owned by Jessica Wolfe and
.
·
and Ray and Grace Myers of Athens.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two Kimberly Holliday, both of
, husbands, Cassa Rose and Bonney Shaffer; her brothers and sis- Pomeroy, was driven away by a
• ters, Marie, Mary, Jane, Liza, Laura, Rielly, Ed, John , Jim and · male subject while Wolfe and
Holliday were in th~ Riverside
Hetzel; and .an adopted sister, Helen.
Marathon
Food Mart.
Private graveside services will be conducted for the family,
Proffitt said that the car,
with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Arrangements were
described
as a 1990 Plymouth
comple ted by Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport.
Laser, was found early Friday at
There will be no calling hours.
the C~fton Cemetery in Clifton
by a Mason County deputy. The
car
had been burned, apparently
· ings will be held at the
So uthern Baptist Church, after it was stuck in th~ c em~­
Pomeroy, 9 to 9:30 a.m.; Lau- · tety's soft mud.
Wolfe said she saw a "suspifrom Page AI
rei Cliff Methodist C hurch,
Pomeroy, noon to 12:30 p.m.; cious subject" behind Hutton 's
Ranger," CNN News, People Faith Full Gos pel C hurch, Car Wash next door to the Food
magazine and in USA Today. · Long Bottoni, 7 to 7: 30 p.m .; Mart, and described him as a
· The Power Team bills itself Reedsville United Methodist male in his late teens, \vith short
. · as "the world's greatest exhi- Church, Reedwille, 7:30 to 8 brown hair, approximately 5foot-11, and clean-s haven.
- bition of power, strength, p.m.
Proffitt said that the man
- speed, inspiration and motivaOn Friday, a prayer service
tion."
will be held from 9:30 to 10 Wolfe described . is the primaty
Meanwhile, daily prayer a.m. at the Ash Street Church suspect in the theft.
Authprities believe that he left
gatherings are continuing for in Middleport; and on Saturthe
cemetery after setting the
the ministry. Wednesday, day it will be held from 8:30
prayer meetings will be held to 9 a.m. at the Middleport car on fire, and then stole a Ford
Tempo trom a Clifton resifrom 12:30 to 1 p.m. at the Church of Christ.
dence.
That vehicle was also
Pomeroy United Methodist
The Power Team will be at
found burned on Friday
Chun:h; 5:30 to 6 p.m. at t"'e Meigs High School at 7 each
Proffitt urged residents to turn
Harliest Outreach Church at evening from March 28,
off their ignitions and take their
Chester; 6 to 6:30 p.m. at the through April 1. The $2 donakeys when leaving their cars to
Agape Life Center in Mason . tion at the door will go to the
pay for gasoline. A similar ·inciOn Thursday, prayer meet- team.
dent at another Pomeroy convenience store several years ago,
which resulted in the arrest and
vast amy of assorted violations.
imprisonment of a local man, he
In other matters, council said.
approved a resolution giving the
from PllpA1
mayor authorization to apply
for a Ohio Deparanent of Natfighters fiom various fire depart- ural Resources grant that would
POMEROY -- An action
ments throughout the county assist with the funding of a new for divorce h:u been filed in
on basic fire fighting methods public boat docking facility on Meijp County Common Pleas
and techniques.
Pomeroy's waterfront.
Court by Glenda K. Willis, Long
''
Council also appiOVI!d the
. Blaettnar informed .. council Bottom, against Larty Eugene
1' pultlwe df new office equip- the villajll! is to receM Dhanc:ial Willis,APO,AE;
ment for the fire depamnent, assistance in the sum of$70,687
Dissolutions haw been ·grantwhich included a new copier, from the Ohio Public Works ed. to Paula Kay Dillon and
fax machine and file cabinets. Commission for road repair Timothy E. Dillon; Rebecca
- The cost of the new equipment work on • portion of Main Lynne Folnier and Daniel Ray
totaled $800.
Street neat the Pomeroy/Mid- Folmer, Shelby J. Pickens and
Shawna R . Pickens, David M.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark dleport corporation line.
Proffitt presented the police
The assistance will help pay Rhodes and Norma lea
department's new parking viola- for 80 percent of the project, Rhodes, and Aprillove Colburn
tion citations for council to which is estimated to cost and Ricky D. Colburn.
·- examine.
around $90,000, said Blaettnar.
The difference between the
Blaettnar said the roadway
. new tickets :irid the existing has been slipping for some time
RUTLAND Rutland
ones is the posting of a warning and that construction efforts
Youth
league
will
have
baseball
about unpaid parking tickets should alleviate the problem.
Council approved advertising signups on Tuesday from 6-8
and fine costs on the back of the
p.m. at the Rutland Firehouse.
for bids for work and materials
new tickets, said Proffitt.
The fee is $15 per child, or two
,•
After reviewing the police on the refurbishing of the
for $25, with a $35 maximum
" department's violation summa- · Pomeroy Municipal Building's
fee per family.
t ry, Mayor John Blaettnar com- wjndows. All of the building's
~ plimenred the depamnent on wmdows are scheduled to be
! "keeping; al:!reast ofvillage activ- redone, with the exception of
: ities" b~use of the summaty's the back and east side windows.
CHESTER - The soup

:------------~-----------------------------•

Tha Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Lula

:

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

Ford Motor Co. casting plant reop~ns

DESHLER (AP) - A 64-year-old man who disappeared
for nine days before turning up safe last week has died of an
apparent suicide, authorities said.
Henry County Sheriff John Nye said Richard Burner
hanged himself in hi s barn . The body was found Monday
morn mg.
' 'There's a higher purpose to all of this. We just don't know
what it is,'' said his son·, Robert Burner.
.
H e and o ther fa mil y members declined to comment on the
nature of Burner's death .
that the EPA will work with residents to find ways to
improve the qua li ty of ai r in the inner-city neighborhood.
The goal is to cut t\)xi c air pollutants within a year in neighborhoods where homes and industry exist side-by-side.
STOCKPORT (AP) - As .a lock tender and naturalist for
The EPA is consider ing implementin g simil ar progra ms in
th e state, Wendy Watte ha s studied and worked the Muskother ci ties nationwide after ev;J lu ating the results of Cleveingum River for 11 years.
land's program, Whitman said.
She thinks people would enjoy traveling the river from
''1 called th is progra m revolutionary because it truly breaks
Marietta to Coshocton , visiting hi storic sites and learning the
new ground ~n environmental protection," she said,; " If it is
region's history and folklore, so she 's giving it a try.
successful , wed hke to expand 1t across the co untry.
.
Waite's making the Muskingum River her business.
She recently opened Elk Eye Tour Company to specialize
in trips visiting the cities along the river.

WASHINGTON (AP) The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission on Monday
upgra&lt;)ed the license of the
Paducah Gaseous Diffusion
Plant in Kentucky, rebuffing
congressmen who · asked that
a decision be delayed .
· Without
the
license'
improvements, the
U.S.
Enrichment Corp: would not
have been able to stick to its
schedule for ending production in June at its Piketon,
Ohio, plant and consolidating
operations in Kentucky.
Produci ng uranium at just
one plant is intended to save
money for the financially ailmg co mpany.
"This positions the co mpany to move forward w1th our
business. stra tt"gy," Morris
Brown, USEC's vice president of o perations, said in . a
prepared release.
Th e Paducah plant's new
license terms allow it to perform a higher level of

• Tuesday, March 20, 2001

supper for Saturday at the
Chester . United Methodist
Chun:h has been canceled.

aubto meet
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literaty Club will meet at
2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Library with Bernice
Carpenter, hostess. "Dury" by
Bob Greene will be reviewed by
Olita Heighton.

Broadcast.set ·
POMEROY - A .national
immunization program and
public health ttaining network
satellite broadcast which gives
continuing education credit is
being offered weekly through
April 5.
·
The first session on epidemiology and prevention of vaccinepreventable diseases.The fir&gt;t class
was was held last week. Other
classes will be held Man:h 22, 29,
and April5 , noon to 3:30p.m.

CLIFTON,W.Va. -A gospel
sing will be held on Man:h 31 at
the
Clifton
Tabernacle,
Clifton,at 7 p.m. on March 31.
The Gabriel Quartet will be
featured.

Boil advisoly
POMEROY - A boil advisory remains in effeC! for those
residen~ who were without
water Sunday due to a main line
leak in Pomeroy. The outage
affected Sugar Run and Naylor's
Run.

Foreclosure filed
POMEROY - A fon.;dosure action has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Bank of New York,
·Plano,Texas, against Amly L. Patterson, Syracqse. and others,
alleging default .on a mortg•ge
agreement in the amount of
$21,694.67.
An action for foreclosure has
been filed by Fifth Third Bank ,
C incinnati, against Darrell E.
Wheeler, Reedsville, and others,
demanding judgn1ent in the
amount of$29,661.43.

Musical service
POMEROY
Bruce
Stone, formerly of the Pomeroy
area, will present a musical service at the Hemlock Grove
Christian Church, Sunday, 9:30
a.m. A poduck meal will be
served at the grange h;ill at
noon.The public is invited.

Enrollment
thisweell

Mary Jean Bailey
POMEROY - Word has been received here of the death of
Maty Jean Bailey ofJacksonville, Fla., formerly of Middleport.
She was born on March 28, 1922, daughter of the late Herman
and Mae Bailey.
Surviving are her children, Doris McElhinny, Doug Harrison and ·
Jeff Harrison; and five grandchildren and three great-[grandchildren.
Graveside services were held on Sunday, March 18, 2001 in
Deltona, Fla.

RickyDe~r
RACINE - Ricky Lee Deeter. 42, Racine, died Saturday, Man:h
17,2001 at his residence.
He was born on Sept. 30, 1958 in Gallipolis, son of Argyle L. and
Aorence Eloise Dailey Deeter, he was a brick mason with Garrett
Masonty.
S.urviving in :.tddition r:o his parents are two brotht:rs and a sisterin-law, Thomas Lloyd Deeter of Columbus. and Robert D. and
Connie Deeter ofSpringfield, Mo.;a SISter, Joyce Ann Adam• of GalLipolis; and several nieces, nephews, J Lm t~ and uncl ~s
He was preceded in death by h1s sistcr,Judy Di.1ne Deeter West.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in Ewing Funer.tl Home,
Pomeroy, \vith the Rev. Mark Matson officiating. Burial will be in
Morris Chapel Cemetery, Portland. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 tonight.

Durward Swain
LONG BOTTOM -. · Durw.~rd Swain, 83, Louisville, Ky., formerly of long Bottom, died Sunday, March 1H, :2001 at the Transitional H ealth Care Center, Jeffersonville, Ind.
He was a retired employee ofWorthingron Stcd, a vetera n of the
U.S. Navy during World War II, and a member of the Nmth Bullitt
Christian Chun:h m Sheperdsville, Ky.
Surviving are his son, Mike Swain of Lebanon; three sisters, Georgia Autherson of Newark, Hope Drake of Long Bottom and
Pauline Primmer of Logan; and two grandsons and two grcatgranddlUghters.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Dorothy Raiguel
Swain; his parents, William and Tressa Coleman Swam; his sister,
Dixie Teboe; and two brothers, James Oliver Swain and William
Swain:
•
Services will be noon Thursday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with burial to follow at the Reedsville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home on Thursday trom 11 a.m. until the
time of service.

Raymond Yonker

POMEROY - The Community Outreach Tean1 with the
Chillicothe Veterans Administration Medical Center will enroll
veterans into the VA Health
·Care System'of Ohio at the VA
Field Service Center in
Pomeroy, trom 10 a.m. to 2
p.m., Wednetday and Thunday.
Veter:ins shouH bring dis• charge, separation, DD214,
spouse's Social Security number,
date of birth, date of marriage
and Social Security numben; of
dependent children, income and
insurance and Medicare information.
Veterans who \vere enrolled
in the past and have not used the
VA Health Care System in the
past three yem should ·re-enroll .
A nurse will also be available
to provide blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol screenings.

Fl"ee sa"eenings
POMEROY - Free breast
and cervical cancer screenings
will be provided by the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic Medicine's Mobile
Health unit on March 29 trom
10 a.m. until2 p.m. at the Meigs
County Health Depamnent.
Pap tests, pelvic and breast
exaininations, and breast health
education will be pnnrided by
appointment to the uninsured
and underinsured women of
Meigs County.
Those interested should call
593-2432 or toll-free at 1-800844-2654 for an appointment.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Raymond F.Yonker, 84, New Haven,
W.Va., died Monday, March 19, 2001 at Point Pleasant Center,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy during World War 11, and was
a retired truck driver. He was the son of the late Charlie and Jessie
Conduss Yonker.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Farrell "Buddy" and
Dottie Yonker ofApple Grove, W.Va.; cwo daughters, Ro•e and S.m
Anc:lenon of Hartford; W.Va., and Anna and Reel Mom. of lndianapolis, Ind.; rwo broihen;, Charles Yonker of Letart, W.Va., and
Danny Yonker of Mason, W.Va.; cwo sisters, Martha Powell of Indianapo~s, and Leota Kennedy ofTampa, Fia:; eight grandsons, nine
granddaughters, 23 great- grandchildren and five great-great gral1dchildren. ·
The Rev. Sam Anderson ,viJ] conduct graveside services on·
Wednesday, March 21, 2001 at 11 a.m. at the Union Cemetety in
letart.There ,viJ] be no calling hours.
Arrangements·are by New Haven Funeral Home.

VALLEY WEATHER
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Weather forecast:
Wednesday
night. .. Partly
Tonight... Cloudy with a
chance of rain. Low near 40. East cloudy Low near 40.
\vind around 10 mph. Chance of.
rain 30 percent.
Wednesday. .. Cloudy. A chance
of rain showers through early
afternoon. High in the upper
40s. Northeast wind 10 ·to 15

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

Benefit sing
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- A benefit gospel sing will
take place at 7 p.m. on Friday at
the 22nd Street Church of God
in Point Pleasant.
Performing at the benefit will
be Proclaim, Randy Pan;ons and
The Family Circle.

United Fund for
Meigs County
2001 Goal

REVIVAL

Racine First Baptist Church
With Evangelist Ray Stagno
. from l'lew York City . ·

Sun - Wed March 18-21
Sun - 10 am; Nightly 7pm
Special Music nightly
featuring area singers

740-949-:3131
Pastor Rick Rule
Invites the public.

Send your tox deductible
contrl bullon to:
United Fund For MeiC)s

P.O.Box424
Middleport; OH 45 760
I

'

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Page A4.,
TUescllly, Mllrc:h JD, HD1 •

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

General M1n1111er

'

"

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

•

Diane Kay Hill

..

Controller

•
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ttn 111bj.ct to tditiftl and ,.UJI H t;,Md IUUI intiM ad4nm alld tft.,MM 11urHr.
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l'ublishitiJ Co. '• ~ botud, unlln otMJ'WiJ1 IIOIH.

•

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NATIONAL VIEWS

1\lesd•y. March 10, 1001

Sister gives up her daughter to sister who can't have kids

jsWI\tftidncypaat.can

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

Charlene Hoeflich

_Th_eo_a_ny_se_nt_ine_l

Ci~~.

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

----=B:;;;,.:J the Bend

Page AS

"
".,

Dear Ann Landers: Two years
ago, our 35-year-old, single daughter,
"Alicia;' gave birth to a baby girl. The
father was not interested in being part
of her life. Our older daughter, "Kay,"
had been trying unsuccessfully to
have a child for several . years, so she
and her husband agreed to adopt Alicia's little girl. Their "opefi adoption"
ADVICE
agreement called for Alicia to have
four visitations per year.
After the adoption, we discovered since she thinks Kay's husband doesn't
that Kay's husband didn't really want a really want the child. Kay won't
child .and had agri'Od to the adoption increase Alicia's visits and will not peronly because he knew how much his mit het to take the baby out alone.
wife wanted it. He resents the new Alicia is now talking about petitionresponsibilities and the many changes ing the court to give her n1ore time
hoving a child has brought to his life. with' the child. As you can imagine,
To his credit, however, he and Kay this is causing all sorts of trouble withhave been dutiful and devoted par- in the family.
1
ents .
. If King Solomon were available, ·
Alicia still grieves. for the child she perhaps he could offe~ some advice
gave up and wants to spend more - although no 'viser, I'm sure, than
time with the little girl, especially yours, Ann. Please help us.- Sulfer-

Ann
Landers

ing in Seatde
Dear Sulfering: My heart breaks
for all of you. l am no King Solomon,
but I'll do my best. For heaven's sake,
try to stay out of the courts. Whatever the court's decision qllght be, it
would surely leod to estrangement in
the family.
Alicia i! obviously trying to be a
mother to this child. If Kay's husband
truly does not want the girl,and ifAlicia can now provide a stable environment, I would vote for that resolution
to the problem. If, however, Kay's husband has developed a loving attachment and wants to keep the baby, as
far as I'm concerned, the child should
be with him and. his wife. Adoption
should not be disregarded after two
years because the birth mother has
had a change of heart.
Alicia may need counseling in order
to accept the decision she nude and
become a loving aunt. When she sin-

cerely gives up all claim to the girl, the
adoptive parents will be less restrictive
about the amount of time she can
spend with the child.
Dear
Ann
Landers: My
boyfriend is an intelligent, caring person, and we are happy together. He
recently told me he plans to go to a
strip club with a group of guys. He
said, "It would be funny." I don't
believe him. Guys don't go to strip
clubs to satisfy their sense of humor.
I am totally against this little outing.
Strip clubs encourage men to treat
women as objects and perpetuate the
idea that sex can be bought. The men
there are often drunk and can get out
of control. I don't want my boyfriend
to go, but I'm nor sure I should make
a major issue of it. What do you say,
Ann' -Jennifer in Texas
Dear Jennifer: How old is your
boyfriend' If he is over 21, he should
be able to decide on his own where

he wants to go and doesn't need "perrrussion."
Strip joints are a cheap thrill, and I
do mean cheap. If your boyfriend has
any class, one visit will be enough.
The decision, however, should be his.
Meanwhile, ':l!ease remember that
"forbidden fr~it" can be very appealmg.
.
Dear Ann Landers: Someone
Wt9te to you about a survey showing
that men leave hotel rooms in better
condition thln women. You said it's
probably because when women are
away from home, \hey want a REAL
vacation. I agree with that part, but
my question is, why are men cleaner
away from home? - Henry in
Maryland
Dear Henry: A slob is a slob, no
matter where he (or ·she) might be. It
was the hotel housekeepers who said
men ·are neater than women. Take it
up with them.

'

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES
and pledge. and singing of the
Missionary
National Anthem. It was
Widows'
noted that at the District 13
Society meets
meeting
Emillee Ashley was
Fellowship
RACINE Bertha M.
welcomed as a new members.

..'

Dedsion confirms EPA has
only been doing its job

PERKINS' VIEW

Democrats' thinking on tax cut is shortsighted
• The Akron Beacon Journal: All nine justices of the U.S.
President Bush hit a home run in his
income folk for whom they presume to .
Supreme Court agreed: The Clean Air Act requires federal regState
of
the
Tax
Cut
message
to
Conspeak
calculate their tax savings under
ulators to focus solely on public health and safety in setting
gress, as evidenced by a CBS News poll
the president's plan.
national standards for air quality. The unanimous and emphatic
in which two-thirds of those surveyed
Consider the following example post- ,
ruling represented a triumph for the embattled Environmental
said they support his 10-year, $1.6 triled on the MSNBC Web site: A rmrried ,
Prote~tion Agency. Often accused of excess, the agency won
lion plan.
couple with three kids; Dad . brio~ ,
the timely and landmark understanding of the court: The EPA
has been merely enforcing the law.
Now the president has to touch all the
home $35,000 a year; Mom earns ,
political bases. And blocking his path are
$20,000. They have itemized deductions !
In Ohio, utility executives and even governors have long
two grizzled old clas.s warriors- Senate
worth $8,000.
· .'
howled at the agency. George Voinovich, once governor and
Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,
Under current law, they pay $3,454 itt :
now senator, penned notes to his friend George Bush, the
elder, contending the president "got snookered by the EPA."
and House Mino•ity Leader Dick
COLUMNIST
federal income taxes. Under the Bush '
Voinovich and others have insisted that the EPA fails to conGephardt, D-Mo.
plan, they would pay only $100.TIIat'•
"The president's plan is deeply unfair
$3,354 tax cut. A 97-percent t;ur savings.
sider adequately the cost of the standards it sets. A coalition led
by the American Trucking Association and the U.S. Chamber
to middle-income Americans," lamented that the Bush tax cut will come at the . Or how about the following exafple
of Commerce asked the high court to find a requirement in the
Daschle. "The wealthiest i percent" expense of education, debt reduction on the ABC N ews Web site: A smgl·e
Clean Air Act for such analysis. Writing for the majority, Justice
those boas~ing an nual incomes of and rescuing Medicare and Social Secu- parent with two kids earning $30,000 a
Antonin Scalia found none.
$208,000 or ':"ore- "get 43 percent of rity from insolvency.
year. Under the current tax regiine, she
the preSidents tax cut. lt gives so much
That doesn't mean the EPA ignores cost. The financial burThat's because, contrary to what the &lt;,&gt;r he pays $1,310 to the IRS. U11der th e
den plays a critical role in implementing the regulations, in setto so few. !~!. it..!':i!l force tax increase! . De.mocratic ... leade rship . apparently Bush plan, however, that single parent ;
ting deadlines and allowing flexibility. With that in mind, the
or cuts m Social Secunty, Medicare and believes, the majority of Americans does pays absolutely nothing. A 100-percent ,
Supreme Court ondered federal regulators to rework new ·rul~s
\ other es~ential;programs ."
.,
not suffet from class enily, Also, the tax •avings.
,
· .J· ,
for controlling ozone, or smog.
·
·· The Dem&lt;&gt;era!S"have a better plan, said majority of Americans ;. •·unpersuaded
If you're that middle-income, married ,
In short, the health standard does n!)t translate into an agency
Gephardt. It won't cut taxes so much . that returning little more than a quarter family, if you're that middle-income sinout of control.
Aod it v.toti'~ provide tax relief to all of the projected $5.6 trillion budget sur- gle-parent family, all you can say about
• Evansville (Ind.) Courier &amp; Press: The Justice DepartAmcricim s. BIH it will give the party of plus over the next I 0 years will crowd the Bush tax cut is, Bring it on.
ment, which said it was bringing the Microsoft case to protect
So Daschle and Gephardt will spend
Daschle arld ·Gephardt more surplus tax out all other b11dget priorities.
consumers from the depredations of a monopoly, has already
dollars to spend down the road in the
In fact, when given a choice of four much of this spring trying to make the
cost consumers billions of dollars in the ·plunging values of
. event they succeed in retaking Congress. major budget priorities, 35 percent of case to the American people that the
stocks that are held not just by the rich, but by huge numbers
. But at least one Democratic lawmaker those surveyed by CBS News preferred Bush plan is really no good for them;
of average-income citizens . whose mutual funds include
believes such thinking b~ his party's the president's tax cut; 25 percent pre- that th,ey really don't deserve so large a
Microsoft.
leaders is shortsighted.
ferred shoring up Soci~ 1 Security and taX cut, even though $4 trillion (and
The case against Microsoft has everything to do with a dis"I think the Democrats are making a Medi~are; Z2 percent were in favor of quite possibly much more) in surplus tax
taste for the aggressive, unapologetic style of Bill Gates and
terrible mistake by being against a taX increased education spending; and 15 . revenue will be left over for Social Secuwith the illusion of a number of academicians and public officut," said the freshman Democratic sen- percent were for paying down the rity, Medicare, dc;bt reduction, education
cials that they know better than the marketplace how the comator from Georgia, Zell Miller, in an national debt.
,,
and other purposes.
puter industry should operate.
So while the Bush plan has been charSen. Miller says that his Democratic
interview published this week in The
The appeals court should toss the case out, and the Bush
Washington Times. '
acterized in some news reports as a Party kaders are being dishonest in
administration, discarding the antitrust enthusiasms of the Clin"I know that they are saying that they "tough sell" to the public, it~ really the attacking the president's tax cut plan.
ton administration, should then drop the case and do its best to . want tax cuts and want to make it more Democrats' oppositio~~o .to the Bush tax · "I've heard all of this before from the
persuade a number of state attorneys general to do the same.
' fair and everything, but their body Jan- . plan that is the tough r.ell, for the over- propeller heads when I was outting caxes.
The consumer has suffered enough. .
·
guage and what Joe Six-Pack hears out taXed American people welcome the in my state as governor," he said. "I just
there in the Kmart parking lot is that president's across-the~board tax cut, do not believe all this gloom-llndcdootn
they're against giving him a tax cut.''
especially if Congress,. makes it retroac. talk. Figures don't lie, but liars do figure.' '
Indeed, despite the remonstrations by tive. .
111 ,
Mssrs: Daschle and Gephardt, most
Nothing undermin¢5 the Democratic
Ooseph Perkins is a rolumnist for The San
Americans are buying neither their leadership's arguments against the Bush Diego Union- Tribune and can be reached at
BY TttE ASSOCIATED PRESS
class"warfare rhetoric nor their warning taX cut more than 1\Vhen the middle- Joseph.PerkinsUnionTrib.com.)
Today is Tuesday, March 20, the 79th day of 2001. There are
I'
286 days left in the year. Spring arrives at 8:31a.m. EST.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 20, 1727, physicist, mathematician and
astronomer Sir Isaac Newton died in London.
On this date:
In 1413, England's IGng Henry IV died.
In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel about
slavery, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," was first published.
Bv JOAN RYAN
to Farhat-Naser's office.
Ariel Sharon's rule will bring an escalaIn 1896, U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S.
Sumaya Farhat-Naser is a Palestinian
''I'm not very ,qraye," Greenblatt said. tion of violence. Yet despite all that, the
citizens in the wake of a revolution.
.
professor of botany and a mother of three "But the fact that I do this reflects my
w.omen still believe there. will be peace,
In 1969,John Lennon rnarriedYoko Ono in Gibraltar.
teen-agers. She lives in Birzeit in the relationship with,Sumaya."
and they believe women must be a part
occupied territories. She is the director
In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was
The two WOmfn were to share their of the solution.
of a wcimen's organization called the stories at the Global Fund for Women's
convicted of armed robbery for her part in a San Francisco
"This I know: Women are willing to
Jerusalem Center for Women.
bank holdup.
celebration of International Women's stay longer at the table before wt will
Terry · Greenblatt was born in New Day in San Fraq~isco. But Farhat-Naser
t98t, former girls' school headmistress Jean Harris was
giye up and go for ,option B," Greenblatt
York, but she has lived in Israel for 30 was trapped in Birzeit.
sentenced in White Plains, N.Y., to IS years to life in prison for
said.
years. She is the director of a women's
slaying "Scarsdale Diet" author Dr. Herman Tarnower. She
The Israelis w;qiJ)dn 't issue her a travel
When Greenblatt found out upon
peace organization in Jerusalem called permit, the sitUi!pon for all Palestinians
served almost 12 years.
arriving
in San Francisco that FarhatBat Shalom.
since the upr~lmg in October. The
In 1987, the Food and Drug Administration approved the
The two women have forged an Israelis have also, shut down m any of the Na.&lt;er was barred from coming, her orgasale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS
unusual partnership. They are not friends. roads within and out of the occupied ter- nization was the first to speak out. "The
patients .
But they share the same principles about ritories, preventing Farhat-Naser from real issue here is not 'security', but rather
In 1990, Namibia became an independent nation, marking
peace and feminism, thus enabling them reaching the aiiports iq both Tel Aviv and the desire by the state of Israel to extend
the end of75 years of South African rule~
·
the policy of 'closure' and intimidation
to talk across the political. divide when Amman, Jorda~ .
,
In 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people .:Vere killed and more than
the occupied territories to the
beyond
.others can't.
But it wasn'f just the Israelis blocking
5,500 others sickened when packages containing sarni, a poiThey kryow tl1at the truth isn't likely to Farhat-Naser. - Since November, the entire world," Bat Shalom said in a press
sonous gas, were leaked on five subway trJins.
.
be found in the governmel'\t offices, but Palestinian Authority , has forbidden release.
In 1999, Bertrand Picca~d of Switzerland and Brian Jones of
With Farhat-Naser back in Birzcit,
on the ground, where the people live.
Palestinian groups from ·working with
Bmam became the first aviators to Ay a ho t air balloon around
Greenblatt
spoke alone at the Global
"As feminists in the year 2001, we have Israeli groups, concerned that such coopthe world without stopping.
a fundamental understanding that there is eration has giyen a false impression to the Fund's event.
. Ten years ago: A U.S. jet fighter sho t down an Iraqi warplane
more than one narrative," Greenblatt world that P.&gt;ace is on the horizon.
"Sumay:i told me; '[ tr~st you to teU
m the first rur attack smce . the Gulf War cease-fire. April
said.
the
story even if I'm not there'," Gre~n ­
"It's very painful not to be there,"
Glasp~e, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, told the Senate Foreign
But the thread that connects the two Farhat-Nas&lt;;r said by phone. "We're for- blatt said. "That, to me, is the highest
Relatmns Committee Saddam Hussein had lied tb her by'
women, as Greenblatt said, "is still very, bidden to V{Ork together, but it would be honor. It is th,e indication that, thougii
denying he would invade; Kuwait. The Supreme Court ruled
very thin." The simple act of meeting is a worth (th&lt;;..,reprisals), especially in this we haven't solved the problems, we are
employers could not adopt "fetal prote,tion" policies barring
challenge. For Farhat- Naser, traveling turbulent time,"
on the right path.",
.
women of childbearing age from certain hazardous jobs.
.
into Israel is too dangerous. So GreenThe closures are keeping Palestinian
O&lt;Mu Rya11 is a col11m11ist for the S.m
Five years ago:Ajury in Los Angeles convicted Erik and Lyle
blatt takes an Israeli taxi to the bonder of workers fwm traveling to jobs inside Fra11cisco Chro11icle. Se11d comme..ts to her ill
Menendez of first-degree murder in the shotgun slayings of
the occupied territories, then boards a Israel. And there's a growing fear among care of tltis newspaper or mtd her e·mail at
their millionaire parents.
Palestinian cab to go the rest of the way Palestinians that new Prime Minister joamymi@sfgate.com.)

JOSeph

PerKins

a!

TODAY IN HISTORY

RYAN'S VIEW

Two women are able to_talk across political divide

\

I.

In

"

.

•

Sayre Missionary Society met
at the home of Mildred Hart
recently for a luncheon.
During the meeting members rolled bandages to be sent
overseas for hospital use.
Attending were Noami Stobart, Nondus Hendricks, Lillian Hayman, Marge Grimm,
Barbara Gheen, Geraldine
Cleland, and Linda Grimm.
Next ineeting will be· at the
Stobart home with Stobart to
have the program.

MIDDLEPORT The
Widows' Fellowship met
recently for breakfast at the
Golden Corral with 21 members and guests mending. It
was announced that the April
meeting will be held at Middleport Church of Christ on
April 12 at noon. Those
attending are to take their
favorite covered dish. Table
service and drinks will be provided.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
ol the Civil War, 7:15p.m, annex
TUESDAY
of Hope Baptist Church.
POMEROY- Women's Auxil·
ial'f, Veterans Memorial Hospijaf,
1:30 p.m., conference room.
MIDDLEPORT- Major David
McCook Circle, Ladies of the
Grand Army ol the Republic,
POMEROY- Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, birth· 7:15p.m., annex of Hope Baptist
day party, 7 p.m. dinner al
Church.
Senior C~izens Center. Legionnaire of Year to be named; din·
MIDDLEPORT- Revival
through Sunday, Wesleyan Bible
net music.
Holiness Church. Rev. Mark
Hunter, evangelist. Services
RUTLAND - Rutland Youth
League slgnups, 6 to 8 p.m. $15 nightly, 7:30p.m.; Sunday serper child, two lor $25, $35 maxi· vices, 9:30a.m. and 7:30p.m.
mum per family.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Ladies lor the POMEROY - Community Out·
Lord, women's Bible study, 9
reach Team wijh the Chillicothe
a.m. All denominations welcome. Veterans Administration Medical
Center to enroll veterans into the
VA Health Care System of Ohio,
POMEROY- Tenilic Tuesday
V.A. Field SelVice Center, 10
at God's NET, 3 to 5:30 p.m.
Free meal, games and crafts lor a.m. to 2 p.m., Wednesday and
Thursday. Bring discharge, sepa·
youth.
ration, DD214, spouse's Social
MIDDLEPORT- Brooks-Grant Security number, date of birth,
date of marriage, date ol birth
C~mp, Sons of Union Veterans

and Social Security numbers of

dependent children, income and
insurance and Medicare informa-

tion.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053 meets at the hall, 7
p.m. Special drawing.

Altt Ballard and Marcia
Keller were reported ill, and
letter were read from ·Bette
Wages, Norma Farris, and
POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi,
Bertha Stapleton. Erma Cledinner 6:30 at the St. Paul
land thanked those who called
Lutheran Church, prepared by
at funeral homes for Delmar
the social committee.
Baum, Buz Beegle, and Harrison Smith. Charlotte Grant
REEDSVILLE- RiveNiew Gar·
den Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m.,
won the game prize.
Reedsville Church of Christ. ProAttending were Mary Jo
gram will include making Easter
Barringer, Opal Hollon, Erma · .
favors for nursing home.
Cleland; Opal Eichinger, Gary
The Community Calendar Is
Holter, Mary Holter, Juli~
published as a free service to
Curtis, Charlotte Grant,
non-profit groups wishing to
Everett Grant, Doris Grueser,
announce meetings and speLaura Mae Nice, Esther
cial events.
Smith, Helen Wolf, Jo Ann '
CHESTER - Plans for a Ritchie.
POMEROY -The annual soup supper at the first meetbenefit dinner for the Chester ing in April were made when
Courthouse restoration sched- Chester Council 323, DaughLiz and
uled for friday night has been ters ofAmeric~, met at the hall · SYRACUSE postponed- so that residents with members being remind- Dave Klingenberg of 2191
Thind St., Syracuse announce
may attend the Eastern tour- ed to take game prizes.
• Notice ofNames of Current
Gary Holter presided at the the March 16 birth of son at
nament game on Friday night.
· or Former Residents ofMeles County
The dinner has been resched- meeting which opened with O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Appearing to be owners of Unclaimed Funds.
uled for May 4 at Royal Oak pledges to the American and in Athens. The infant has been
The accounts listed were received in the previous year and are valued at $50 or more. Infor·
Christi~n flags, Lord's prayer named Gabriel Bach.
. Resort.
mation concerning the amount of the funds and how to claim them may be obtained by any
person possessing a proprietary interest in the unclaimed funds. Prescribed forms will be
furnished by addressing an inquiry to the Ohio Department of Conunerce at the address below.
Name and address must be given exactly as listed in the advertisement.
·
Ohio Department ofConunerce
Division ofUnclaimed Funds
77 South High Street, 20th Floor
BY VALREA THOMPSON
medical records os you can, Medicare, is available on the
AntENS SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE
but don't wait to get your 'Internet and it describes the
Columbus, Ohio 43266~0545
Q. I've been getting disabil- medical records before you differerlt types of supplemental
NOTICE: Names and addresses of unclaimed accounts advertised in prior years are on file
ity benefits for several years. I come in. Ask your treating insurance available. This publiwith your County Treasurer, as well as unadvertised accounts of less than $50. The Division
·am still severely disabled, but l sources to respond immedi- cation and other Medicare
will also search for accounts in names not appearing on those lists. Send a list of complete
want to try to work. If I do, ately to our requests for infor~ information is available at the
names, along with the Ohio counties in which they may have lived. We will provide claim forms
will I immediately lose my marion. Have the names and Health
Care
Financing for possible matches.
Internet
benefit?
addresses of all sources that Administration's
A. Absolutely not' In fact, . have treated you . Complete address: www.medicare.gov.
We also are on the internet. Our web site address is:
with a new package of work your disability claim applicawww.com.state.oh.us
incentives, it is easier than ever tion as fully as possible. And
Q. Are there any Medicare
for disabled beneficiaries to go notify us of changes, especially programs
for
over-theCity of Cheater: Betzing, Frbda, 38253 SR 684; Crow, Fred Jr, PO Box St; Wolfe, Hubert L, 36573 Texas Rd.
back to work. Of course, your changes in contact informa- counter medication (i.e., medGeneral Delivery; Smith, Tim L, Box 668; Downie, Rachel, PO Box 99;
City or Portland: Howling,
Downie, William. PO Box 99 ;
work will have an effect on tion, like your address and ications you can buy without a 84.
55127 SR 124.
Lawrence,
Eastman,
Linda
,
37607
Texas
Rd
;
your benefits, depending on phone number. All of this will prescription)?
Family
Homes
Inc,
PO
Box
207;
.City of Lanesville: Bryant, Jo·
whot sort of benefits Y"U help speed up the processing
A. No. Medi~are does not
City of Racln(': Campbtdl, Robseph, Rt 1 Box 109 A; B.ryant, Jo. Farmers Bank, 202 Butternut Ave ;
receive and the amount you
offer any such programs at this
ert
B, PO Box 607; First National
of your claim.
·Freeman,
Christi,
245
Union
A;
Fulk5,
seph, Rt 1 Box. \09a; Burgett, James,
earn.
Bank,
Unknown; Hen 5ler, William A,
Arthur,
34580
Crew
Rd
;
Globokar,
30100
Bowles
Rd;
Metheney,
Jim
R,
time.
It is Social Security's goal to
Phillip,
i28
I 2 Union Ave; Graham, 47856 SR 124 ; Jone s, Arnold, 412
27139
St
Rl
124;
Parsons,
Cynthia,
·Q. I have just enrolled in
do everything we con to help
Salem School Loi Rd; Parsons, Cloris M, General Delivery; Grueser, Pearl St; Jones, Penny, PO Box 811;
Q. My son was born with a 329I4
Medicare since I will be age
Larry,
32914. Salem School Lot Rd; Billie E, 42198 Enterprize Rd; Klein, Barbara A, 50874 Valley Bell
disabled people in their
65 in three months. However, disability, and this has caused Thompson, Timothy J, 32008 Tid~~os Hoschar, George, 36050 Rocksprings Rd ; Powell, Jerry, PO Box 706; Racine
attempts to return to work.
Rd; Johnson, Bradley B. 37898 Ball Home Bank, Unknown; Ritchie, Jack
I feel that I should consider physical, emotional and finanRd .
For more information, visit
Run Rd; Jonas, Bruce Bernard, 24 112 L, PO Box 45; Rose, Leah, 47798 SR
purchasing a supplemental ··cia! bundens. Can Social Secuour website at www.ssa.gov or
City of Lon1 Bottom: Milliron, Plum St; Jonas, Max Otto, 24 112 Plum 338; Thornton, Florence l, 48251
health insurance policy as rity help?
Laurie S, 46939 SR 248; MI Olive Street; Jonas, Rose Marie, 24 112 Plum Plants Rd; Turley. l inda L, 47798 SR
. call us at 1-800-772-1213 to
well. How do . I go about
A.
Yes. If your. income is
Community
Church, 51305 Mt Olive St: Jonas, Yvonne Marie, 24 112 Plum JJ8.
make an appointment at your
selecting the right coverage? Is low, you may be able to get
Rd ; Pi1o1t. Susan, 51424 Mt Olive St; L.eifheil, Marie, Union Ave;
local Social Security office.
Clly or Reednille: Carpe nte r,
Rd. ·
there any information on the Supplemental
Security
Marshall , Taminy, 43475 Lovers Alex. 48949 SR 10 59, Carp enter,
·
Incoine (SSI) for your son. SSI
'Q. I ·plan to opply for dis- Internet?
City of Middleport: Bisset, Slacy Ln; Meigs Cly Auditor, Unknown; James, 48949 SR 1059; Carpenter,
A.
When considering a sup- ·would provide a monthly
R,
269 N 4th Ave; Cleland, Alana, Rt Miller, Donald H, Rce 4; Moore, Pat, 48949 SR I059; Johnso n, Charles,
ability due to a gradually
plemental
health
insurance
.
income
to
care
for
your
disI
Box
121 B; Frazier, Lonnie E, Pe~~rl Randall, 35554 ' Flaiwoods Rd; 3933 I Bridgle Rd.
worsening condition. I'v~
St;
Hoffman,
963 Locust St; Jeffers, Norman, Myrtle, 32087 Hysell Run
heand these claims can take policy, look the policy over abled child. If your family does
City" of Rullnd: Anderson, ThoEula
E,
.713
Short
4th~ Lathey, Mary, Rd ; Pauley, Paul J, 804 W Main Sl;
some time. What can I do to carefully and compare it with not have medical insurance,
Bradbury Rd; Mcclure, Belinda, PO Payne, Lois J, 36185 Wolf Pen Rd; mas, \24 Salem; Facklcr, ·J D, 367 14
the coverage provided by your son may also qualify for
help speed up the process?
Box 352; Pickens, Mary, S Second Pickens, Ray R, Riverview Dr ~ Zion Rd; Gmac, 33562 New Lima Rd:
Medicare.
Make
sure
it
really
ls
Medicaid.
Ave;
Qualls, Marcia E, 30920 Proffilt, James, 38180 Arnold Rd; Klein, Ke lly R, 33562 New Lima Rd;
A. There are a number of
a
supplementol
policy
and
For
information,
visit
our
Mcelhinney
Hill; Riebel, Renee, 205 ' Reed, Elizabeth, 141 Mulber-ry; Shane, Patricia A. 33375 Crouser Rd;
things you can do to ensure
Ash Sl; RosebeTry, Della J, '30 Loyal Reeves, Paul E, 115 E Memorial Dr; Starcher, Stanley R, 69 A Mccumber
faster processing of your doesn't simply duplicate your website at www.ssa.gov or call
St; Sheley, L.endela, 2 Main St; Shoe- Roach, Pamela, 202 Butternut Ave; Rd; The, Ina , c/o Mrs Lian The Mill tdaim. Apply as soon as your Medicare protection . The us at 1-800-772-1213 to make
maker, Lester P, Rt I Box 118; Shoe- Schwab, Edith M, 405 W Main St; ner; Welsh, Aldena M. 33591 SR 143.
Guide
To
Health
an
appointment
at
your
local
publication,
can and don't miss any
maker, Viola 8, Rt 1 Box 118; Snyder, Scioto Twp Volunteer Fire Dept,
City of Syracuse: Cottrill , James.
Insurance
For
People
With
Social
Security
office.
38300 SR 684; Smiih, James N,
Shawn,
'5 S Third SI. #1 7.
appointments. Bring as rmny

Chester dinner

.postponed·

DofAmeets

at hall

Birth announced

UNCLAIMED FUND~

Soda[ Security questions and answers

I

PEOPLE

5p1•ke Lee
NEWYORK (AP) - He loves basketball and
he's from Brooklyn. But in May, filmmaker Spike
Lee will be writing about baseball for a new
upscale Manhattan magazine.
. Lee has been hired to write a sports column
for Gotham. His debut effort will appear in the
.
magazine's third issue, and acco ndmg
to M onday's Daily News, will contend that Babe Ruth
wa• black.

'

'

'

City or Mlnusvllle: Wat.s on,
Lloyd L, Box 87.

Lee did not respond to requests for co mment,
and Gotham editor Joseph Steuer was unable to
shed light on the subject.
·
"All l know is that basically he's writing a column for me and I was asked to pull a picture of
. Babe Ruth for ir;· Steuer said.
In 1997, Lee wrote a memoir about growing
up as a New York Knicks fan titled "Best Seat in
the House." But as the director of" Malcolm X,"
"Do the Right Thing" and "Summer of Sam,"
he's best known for exploring race relations.

.

City of Pomeror: Brown, Harold
DDS Inc, 200 1/2 W Main; Bunce,
Denise, PO Box 652 ; Clark, Lola E,

41920 SR 681; Stafford, Herbert Es· 23165Ih St; Comill . Paula, 2316 5Ih
tate, 36185 Wolf Pen Rd ; Story, St
Clarence, 39436 Rocksprings Rd,
City of · Tuppers Plains:
Story, Goldie Marie, 39436
Rocksprings Rd; Taylor, Veda, 115 I/ Trippyatcs. Carolyn, PO Box 309.
2 E Memorial ; Thomas, Richard W,
Clly Unknown: Pearman , Mabel.
124 Lincoln HI; Veterans Memorial
Hospital, \IS E Memorial Dr; West II 54 Mill St; Stcven5, Patnck T. 33 1
Star Garagr &amp; Towing, 245 W Main Mechani c St.

STATE OF OHIO, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bob Taft
Governor
Gary C. Suhadolnlk
Director

David L. Moore
Superintendent

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Page A4.,
TUescllly, Mllrc:h JD, HD1 •

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

General M1n1111er

'

"

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

•

Diane Kay Hill

..

Controller

•
Lcu.n 1o II•• •dilor ~ -kmn•. Tiley tlttndd N ltn tltiul JfJIJ word~. AU klkn
ttn 111bj.ct to tditiftl and ,.UJI H t;,Md IUUI intiM ad4nm alld tft.,MM 11urHr.
No ll111i6n•d l«tm wlU M publith~ Ult1n Jlloukl 1¥ ;,. ptNI ttut., tlddtw11U.,

''

illllll, litH

,.,OIUJiili¥,,

.

Tlu opilliont IXprtuu/ in thf colu,niHJo,.. Gl'l tiN conrtnru• uf 1M Ohio V.aU.,
l'ublishitiJ Co. '• ~ botud, unlln otMJ'WiJ1 IIOIH.

•

'"

NATIONAL VIEWS

1\lesd•y. March 10, 1001

Sister gives up her daughter to sister who can't have kids

jsWI\tftidncypaat.can

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

Charlene Hoeflich

_Th_eo_a_ny_se_nt_ine_l

Ci~~.

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

----=B:;;;,.:J the Bend

Page AS

"
".,

Dear Ann Landers: Two years
ago, our 35-year-old, single daughter,
"Alicia;' gave birth to a baby girl. The
father was not interested in being part
of her life. Our older daughter, "Kay,"
had been trying unsuccessfully to
have a child for several . years, so she
and her husband agreed to adopt Alicia's little girl. Their "opefi adoption"
ADVICE
agreement called for Alicia to have
four visitations per year.
After the adoption, we discovered since she thinks Kay's husband doesn't
that Kay's husband didn't really want a really want the child. Kay won't
child .and had agri'Od to the adoption increase Alicia's visits and will not peronly because he knew how much his mit het to take the baby out alone.
wife wanted it. He resents the new Alicia is now talking about petitionresponsibilities and the many changes ing the court to give her n1ore time
hoving a child has brought to his life. with' the child. As you can imagine,
To his credit, however, he and Kay this is causing all sorts of trouble withhave been dutiful and devoted par- in the family.
1
ents .
. If King Solomon were available, ·
Alicia still grieves. for the child she perhaps he could offe~ some advice
gave up and wants to spend more - although no 'viser, I'm sure, than
time with the little girl, especially yours, Ann. Please help us.- Sulfer-

Ann
Landers

ing in Seatde
Dear Sulfering: My heart breaks
for all of you. l am no King Solomon,
but I'll do my best. For heaven's sake,
try to stay out of the courts. Whatever the court's decision qllght be, it
would surely leod to estrangement in
the family.
Alicia i! obviously trying to be a
mother to this child. If Kay's husband
truly does not want the girl,and ifAlicia can now provide a stable environment, I would vote for that resolution
to the problem. If, however, Kay's husband has developed a loving attachment and wants to keep the baby, as
far as I'm concerned, the child should
be with him and. his wife. Adoption
should not be disregarded after two
years because the birth mother has
had a change of heart.
Alicia may need counseling in order
to accept the decision she nude and
become a loving aunt. When she sin-

cerely gives up all claim to the girl, the
adoptive parents will be less restrictive
about the amount of time she can
spend with the child.
Dear
Ann
Landers: My
boyfriend is an intelligent, caring person, and we are happy together. He
recently told me he plans to go to a
strip club with a group of guys. He
said, "It would be funny." I don't
believe him. Guys don't go to strip
clubs to satisfy their sense of humor.
I am totally against this little outing.
Strip clubs encourage men to treat
women as objects and perpetuate the
idea that sex can be bought. The men
there are often drunk and can get out
of control. I don't want my boyfriend
to go, but I'm nor sure I should make
a major issue of it. What do you say,
Ann' -Jennifer in Texas
Dear Jennifer: How old is your
boyfriend' If he is over 21, he should
be able to decide on his own where

he wants to go and doesn't need "perrrussion."
Strip joints are a cheap thrill, and I
do mean cheap. If your boyfriend has
any class, one visit will be enough.
The decision, however, should be his.
Meanwhile, ':l!ease remember that
"forbidden fr~it" can be very appealmg.
.
Dear Ann Landers: Someone
Wt9te to you about a survey showing
that men leave hotel rooms in better
condition thln women. You said it's
probably because when women are
away from home, \hey want a REAL
vacation. I agree with that part, but
my question is, why are men cleaner
away from home? - Henry in
Maryland
Dear Henry: A slob is a slob, no
matter where he (or ·she) might be. It
was the hotel housekeepers who said
men ·are neater than women. Take it
up with them.

'

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES
and pledge. and singing of the
Missionary
National Anthem. It was
Widows'
noted that at the District 13
Society meets
meeting
Emillee Ashley was
Fellowship
RACINE Bertha M.
welcomed as a new members.

..'

Dedsion confirms EPA has
only been doing its job

PERKINS' VIEW

Democrats' thinking on tax cut is shortsighted
• The Akron Beacon Journal: All nine justices of the U.S.
President Bush hit a home run in his
income folk for whom they presume to .
Supreme Court agreed: The Clean Air Act requires federal regState
of
the
Tax
Cut
message
to
Conspeak
calculate their tax savings under
ulators to focus solely on public health and safety in setting
gress, as evidenced by a CBS News poll
the president's plan.
national standards for air quality. The unanimous and emphatic
in which two-thirds of those surveyed
Consider the following example post- ,
ruling represented a triumph for the embattled Environmental
said they support his 10-year, $1.6 triled on the MSNBC Web site: A rmrried ,
Prote~tion Agency. Often accused of excess, the agency won
lion plan.
couple with three kids; Dad . brio~ ,
the timely and landmark understanding of the court: The EPA
has been merely enforcing the law.
Now the president has to touch all the
home $35,000 a year; Mom earns ,
political bases. And blocking his path are
$20,000. They have itemized deductions !
In Ohio, utility executives and even governors have long
two grizzled old clas.s warriors- Senate
worth $8,000.
· .'
howled at the agency. George Voinovich, once governor and
Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,
Under current law, they pay $3,454 itt :
now senator, penned notes to his friend George Bush, the
elder, contending the president "got snookered by the EPA."
and House Mino•ity Leader Dick
COLUMNIST
federal income taxes. Under the Bush '
Voinovich and others have insisted that the EPA fails to conGephardt, D-Mo.
plan, they would pay only $100.TIIat'•
"The president's plan is deeply unfair
$3,354 tax cut. A 97-percent t;ur savings.
sider adequately the cost of the standards it sets. A coalition led
by the American Trucking Association and the U.S. Chamber
to middle-income Americans," lamented that the Bush tax cut will come at the . Or how about the following exafple
of Commerce asked the high court to find a requirement in the
Daschle. "The wealthiest i percent" expense of education, debt reduction on the ABC N ews Web site: A smgl·e
Clean Air Act for such analysis. Writing for the majority, Justice
those boas~ing an nual incomes of and rescuing Medicare and Social Secu- parent with two kids earning $30,000 a
Antonin Scalia found none.
$208,000 or ':"ore- "get 43 percent of rity from insolvency.
year. Under the current tax regiine, she
the preSidents tax cut. lt gives so much
That doesn't mean the EPA ignores cost. The financial burThat's because, contrary to what the &lt;,&gt;r he pays $1,310 to the IRS. U11der th e
den plays a critical role in implementing the regulations, in setto so few. !~!. it..!':i!l force tax increase! . De.mocratic ... leade rship . apparently Bush plan, however, that single parent ;
ting deadlines and allowing flexibility. With that in mind, the
or cuts m Social Secunty, Medicare and believes, the majority of Americans does pays absolutely nothing. A 100-percent ,
Supreme Court ondered federal regulators to rework new ·rul~s
\ other es~ential;programs ."
.,
not suffet from class enily, Also, the tax •avings.
,
· .J· ,
for controlling ozone, or smog.
·
·· The Dem&lt;&gt;era!S"have a better plan, said majority of Americans ;. •·unpersuaded
If you're that middle-income, married ,
In short, the health standard does n!)t translate into an agency
Gephardt. It won't cut taxes so much . that returning little more than a quarter family, if you're that middle-income sinout of control.
Aod it v.toti'~ provide tax relief to all of the projected $5.6 trillion budget sur- gle-parent family, all you can say about
• Evansville (Ind.) Courier &amp; Press: The Justice DepartAmcricim s. BIH it will give the party of plus over the next I 0 years will crowd the Bush tax cut is, Bring it on.
ment, which said it was bringing the Microsoft case to protect
So Daschle and Gephardt will spend
Daschle arld ·Gephardt more surplus tax out all other b11dget priorities.
consumers from the depredations of a monopoly, has already
dollars to spend down the road in the
In fact, when given a choice of four much of this spring trying to make the
cost consumers billions of dollars in the ·plunging values of
. event they succeed in retaking Congress. major budget priorities, 35 percent of case to the American people that the
stocks that are held not just by the rich, but by huge numbers
. But at least one Democratic lawmaker those surveyed by CBS News preferred Bush plan is really no good for them;
of average-income citizens . whose mutual funds include
believes such thinking b~ his party's the president's tax cut; 25 percent pre- that th,ey really don't deserve so large a
Microsoft.
leaders is shortsighted.
ferred shoring up Soci~ 1 Security and taX cut, even though $4 trillion (and
The case against Microsoft has everything to do with a dis"I think the Democrats are making a Medi~are; Z2 percent were in favor of quite possibly much more) in surplus tax
taste for the aggressive, unapologetic style of Bill Gates and
terrible mistake by being against a taX increased education spending; and 15 . revenue will be left over for Social Secuwith the illusion of a number of academicians and public officut," said the freshman Democratic sen- percent were for paying down the rity, Medicare, dc;bt reduction, education
cials that they know better than the marketplace how the comator from Georgia, Zell Miller, in an national debt.
,,
and other purposes.
puter industry should operate.
So while the Bush plan has been charSen. Miller says that his Democratic
interview published this week in The
The appeals court should toss the case out, and the Bush
Washington Times. '
acterized in some news reports as a Party kaders are being dishonest in
administration, discarding the antitrust enthusiasms of the Clin"I know that they are saying that they "tough sell" to the public, it~ really the attacking the president's tax cut plan.
ton administration, should then drop the case and do its best to . want tax cuts and want to make it more Democrats' oppositio~~o .to the Bush tax · "I've heard all of this before from the
persuade a number of state attorneys general to do the same.
' fair and everything, but their body Jan- . plan that is the tough r.ell, for the over- propeller heads when I was outting caxes.
The consumer has suffered enough. .
·
guage and what Joe Six-Pack hears out taXed American people welcome the in my state as governor," he said. "I just
there in the Kmart parking lot is that president's across-the~board tax cut, do not believe all this gloom-llndcdootn
they're against giving him a tax cut.''
especially if Congress,. makes it retroac. talk. Figures don't lie, but liars do figure.' '
Indeed, despite the remonstrations by tive. .
111 ,
Mssrs: Daschle and Gephardt, most
Nothing undermin¢5 the Democratic
Ooseph Perkins is a rolumnist for The San
Americans are buying neither their leadership's arguments against the Bush Diego Union- Tribune and can be reached at
BY TttE ASSOCIATED PRESS
class"warfare rhetoric nor their warning taX cut more than 1\Vhen the middle- Joseph.PerkinsUnionTrib.com.)
Today is Tuesday, March 20, the 79th day of 2001. There are
I'
286 days left in the year. Spring arrives at 8:31a.m. EST.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 20, 1727, physicist, mathematician and
astronomer Sir Isaac Newton died in London.
On this date:
In 1413, England's IGng Henry IV died.
In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel about
slavery, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," was first published.
Bv JOAN RYAN
to Farhat-Naser's office.
Ariel Sharon's rule will bring an escalaIn 1896, U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S.
Sumaya Farhat-Naser is a Palestinian
''I'm not very ,qraye," Greenblatt said. tion of violence. Yet despite all that, the
citizens in the wake of a revolution.
.
professor of botany and a mother of three "But the fact that I do this reflects my
w.omen still believe there. will be peace,
In 1969,John Lennon rnarriedYoko Ono in Gibraltar.
teen-agers. She lives in Birzeit in the relationship with,Sumaya."
and they believe women must be a part
occupied territories. She is the director
In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was
The two WOmfn were to share their of the solution.
of a wcimen's organization called the stories at the Global Fund for Women's
convicted of armed robbery for her part in a San Francisco
"This I know: Women are willing to
Jerusalem Center for Women.
bank holdup.
celebration of International Women's stay longer at the table before wt will
Terry · Greenblatt was born in New Day in San Fraq~isco. But Farhat-Naser
t98t, former girls' school headmistress Jean Harris was
giye up and go for ,option B," Greenblatt
York, but she has lived in Israel for 30 was trapped in Birzeit.
sentenced in White Plains, N.Y., to IS years to life in prison for
said.
years. She is the director of a women's
slaying "Scarsdale Diet" author Dr. Herman Tarnower. She
The Israelis w;qiJ)dn 't issue her a travel
When Greenblatt found out upon
peace organization in Jerusalem called permit, the sitUi!pon for all Palestinians
served almost 12 years.
arriving
in San Francisco that FarhatBat Shalom.
since the upr~lmg in October. The
In 1987, the Food and Drug Administration approved the
The two women have forged an Israelis have also, shut down m any of the Na.&lt;er was barred from coming, her orgasale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS
unusual partnership. They are not friends. roads within and out of the occupied ter- nization was the first to speak out. "The
patients .
But they share the same principles about ritories, preventing Farhat-Naser from real issue here is not 'security', but rather
In 1990, Namibia became an independent nation, marking
peace and feminism, thus enabling them reaching the aiiports iq both Tel Aviv and the desire by the state of Israel to extend
the end of75 years of South African rule~
·
the policy of 'closure' and intimidation
to talk across the political. divide when Amman, Jorda~ .
,
In 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people .:Vere killed and more than
the occupied territories to the
beyond
.others can't.
But it wasn'f just the Israelis blocking
5,500 others sickened when packages containing sarni, a poiThey kryow tl1at the truth isn't likely to Farhat-Naser. - Since November, the entire world," Bat Shalom said in a press
sonous gas, were leaked on five subway trJins.
.
be found in the governmel'\t offices, but Palestinian Authority , has forbidden release.
In 1999, Bertrand Picca~d of Switzerland and Brian Jones of
With Farhat-Naser back in Birzcit,
on the ground, where the people live.
Palestinian groups from ·working with
Bmam became the first aviators to Ay a ho t air balloon around
Greenblatt
spoke alone at the Global
"As feminists in the year 2001, we have Israeli groups, concerned that such coopthe world without stopping.
a fundamental understanding that there is eration has giyen a false impression to the Fund's event.
. Ten years ago: A U.S. jet fighter sho t down an Iraqi warplane
more than one narrative," Greenblatt world that P.&gt;ace is on the horizon.
"Sumay:i told me; '[ tr~st you to teU
m the first rur attack smce . the Gulf War cease-fire. April
said.
the
story even if I'm not there'," Gre~n ­
"It's very painful not to be there,"
Glasp~e, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, told the Senate Foreign
But the thread that connects the two Farhat-Nas&lt;;r said by phone. "We're for- blatt said. "That, to me, is the highest
Relatmns Committee Saddam Hussein had lied tb her by'
women, as Greenblatt said, "is still very, bidden to V{Ork together, but it would be honor. It is th,e indication that, thougii
denying he would invade; Kuwait. The Supreme Court ruled
very thin." The simple act of meeting is a worth (th&lt;;..,reprisals), especially in this we haven't solved the problems, we are
employers could not adopt "fetal prote,tion" policies barring
challenge. For Farhat- Naser, traveling turbulent time,"
on the right path.",
.
women of childbearing age from certain hazardous jobs.
.
into Israel is too dangerous. So GreenThe closures are keeping Palestinian
O&lt;Mu Rya11 is a col11m11ist for the S.m
Five years ago:Ajury in Los Angeles convicted Erik and Lyle
blatt takes an Israeli taxi to the bonder of workers fwm traveling to jobs inside Fra11cisco Chro11icle. Se11d comme..ts to her ill
Menendez of first-degree murder in the shotgun slayings of
the occupied territories, then boards a Israel. And there's a growing fear among care of tltis newspaper or mtd her e·mail at
their millionaire parents.
Palestinian cab to go the rest of the way Palestinians that new Prime Minister joamymi@sfgate.com.)

JOSeph

PerKins

a!

TODAY IN HISTORY

RYAN'S VIEW

Two women are able to_talk across political divide

\

I.

In

"

.

•

Sayre Missionary Society met
at the home of Mildred Hart
recently for a luncheon.
During the meeting members rolled bandages to be sent
overseas for hospital use.
Attending were Noami Stobart, Nondus Hendricks, Lillian Hayman, Marge Grimm,
Barbara Gheen, Geraldine
Cleland, and Linda Grimm.
Next ineeting will be· at the
Stobart home with Stobart to
have the program.

MIDDLEPORT The
Widows' Fellowship met
recently for breakfast at the
Golden Corral with 21 members and guests mending. It
was announced that the April
meeting will be held at Middleport Church of Christ on
April 12 at noon. Those
attending are to take their
favorite covered dish. Table
service and drinks will be provided.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
ol the Civil War, 7:15p.m, annex
TUESDAY
of Hope Baptist Church.
POMEROY- Women's Auxil·
ial'f, Veterans Memorial Hospijaf,
1:30 p.m., conference room.
MIDDLEPORT- Major David
McCook Circle, Ladies of the
Grand Army ol the Republic,
POMEROY- Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, birth· 7:15p.m., annex of Hope Baptist
day party, 7 p.m. dinner al
Church.
Senior C~izens Center. Legionnaire of Year to be named; din·
MIDDLEPORT- Revival
through Sunday, Wesleyan Bible
net music.
Holiness Church. Rev. Mark
Hunter, evangelist. Services
RUTLAND - Rutland Youth
League slgnups, 6 to 8 p.m. $15 nightly, 7:30p.m.; Sunday serper child, two lor $25, $35 maxi· vices, 9:30a.m. and 7:30p.m.
mum per family.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Ladies lor the POMEROY - Community Out·
Lord, women's Bible study, 9
reach Team wijh the Chillicothe
a.m. All denominations welcome. Veterans Administration Medical
Center to enroll veterans into the
VA Health Care System of Ohio,
POMEROY- Tenilic Tuesday
V.A. Field SelVice Center, 10
at God's NET, 3 to 5:30 p.m.
Free meal, games and crafts lor a.m. to 2 p.m., Wednesday and
Thursday. Bring discharge, sepa·
youth.
ration, DD214, spouse's Social
MIDDLEPORT- Brooks-Grant Security number, date of birth,
date of marriage, date ol birth
C~mp, Sons of Union Veterans

and Social Security numbers of

dependent children, income and
insurance and Medicare informa-

tion.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053 meets at the hall, 7
p.m. Special drawing.

Altt Ballard and Marcia
Keller were reported ill, and
letter were read from ·Bette
Wages, Norma Farris, and
POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi,
Bertha Stapleton. Erma Cledinner 6:30 at the St. Paul
land thanked those who called
Lutheran Church, prepared by
at funeral homes for Delmar
the social committee.
Baum, Buz Beegle, and Harrison Smith. Charlotte Grant
REEDSVILLE- RiveNiew Gar·
den Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m.,
won the game prize.
Reedsville Church of Christ. ProAttending were Mary Jo
gram will include making Easter
Barringer, Opal Hollon, Erma · .
favors for nursing home.
Cleland; Opal Eichinger, Gary
The Community Calendar Is
Holter, Mary Holter, Juli~
published as a free service to
Curtis, Charlotte Grant,
non-profit groups wishing to
Everett Grant, Doris Grueser,
announce meetings and speLaura Mae Nice, Esther
cial events.
Smith, Helen Wolf, Jo Ann '
CHESTER - Plans for a Ritchie.
POMEROY -The annual soup supper at the first meetbenefit dinner for the Chester ing in April were made when
Courthouse restoration sched- Chester Council 323, DaughLiz and
uled for friday night has been ters ofAmeric~, met at the hall · SYRACUSE postponed- so that residents with members being remind- Dave Klingenberg of 2191
Thind St., Syracuse announce
may attend the Eastern tour- ed to take game prizes.
• Notice ofNames of Current
Gary Holter presided at the the March 16 birth of son at
nament game on Friday night.
· or Former Residents ofMeles County
The dinner has been resched- meeting which opened with O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Appearing to be owners of Unclaimed Funds.
uled for May 4 at Royal Oak pledges to the American and in Athens. The infant has been
The accounts listed were received in the previous year and are valued at $50 or more. Infor·
Christi~n flags, Lord's prayer named Gabriel Bach.
. Resort.
mation concerning the amount of the funds and how to claim them may be obtained by any
person possessing a proprietary interest in the unclaimed funds. Prescribed forms will be
furnished by addressing an inquiry to the Ohio Department of Conunerce at the address below.
Name and address must be given exactly as listed in the advertisement.
·
Ohio Department ofConunerce
Division ofUnclaimed Funds
77 South High Street, 20th Floor
BY VALREA THOMPSON
medical records os you can, Medicare, is available on the
AntENS SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE
but don't wait to get your 'Internet and it describes the
Columbus, Ohio 43266~0545
Q. I've been getting disabil- medical records before you differerlt types of supplemental
NOTICE: Names and addresses of unclaimed accounts advertised in prior years are on file
ity benefits for several years. I come in. Ask your treating insurance available. This publiwith your County Treasurer, as well as unadvertised accounts of less than $50. The Division
·am still severely disabled, but l sources to respond immedi- cation and other Medicare
will also search for accounts in names not appearing on those lists. Send a list of complete
want to try to work. If I do, ately to our requests for infor~ information is available at the
names, along with the Ohio counties in which they may have lived. We will provide claim forms
will I immediately lose my marion. Have the names and Health
Care
Financing for possible matches.
Internet
benefit?
addresses of all sources that Administration's
A. Absolutely not' In fact, . have treated you . Complete address: www.medicare.gov.
We also are on the internet. Our web site address is:
with a new package of work your disability claim applicawww.com.state.oh.us
incentives, it is easier than ever tion as fully as possible. And
Q. Are there any Medicare
for disabled beneficiaries to go notify us of changes, especially programs
for
over-theCity of Cheater: Betzing, Frbda, 38253 SR 684; Crow, Fred Jr, PO Box St; Wolfe, Hubert L, 36573 Texas Rd.
back to work. Of course, your changes in contact informa- counter medication (i.e., medGeneral Delivery; Smith, Tim L, Box 668; Downie, Rachel, PO Box 99;
City or Portland: Howling,
Downie, William. PO Box 99 ;
work will have an effect on tion, like your address and ications you can buy without a 84.
55127 SR 124.
Lawrence,
Eastman,
Linda
,
37607
Texas
Rd
;
your benefits, depending on phone number. All of this will prescription)?
Family
Homes
Inc,
PO
Box
207;
.City of Lanesville: Bryant, Jo·
whot sort of benefits Y"U help speed up the processing
A. No. Medi~are does not
City of Racln(': Campbtdl, Robseph, Rt 1 Box 109 A; B.ryant, Jo. Farmers Bank, 202 Butternut Ave ;
receive and the amount you
offer any such programs at this
ert
B, PO Box 607; First National
of your claim.
·Freeman,
Christi,
245
Union
A;
Fulk5,
seph, Rt 1 Box. \09a; Burgett, James,
earn.
Bank,
Unknown; Hen 5ler, William A,
Arthur,
34580
Crew
Rd
;
Globokar,
30100
Bowles
Rd;
Metheney,
Jim
R,
time.
It is Social Security's goal to
Phillip,
i28
I 2 Union Ave; Graham, 47856 SR 124 ; Jone s, Arnold, 412
27139
St
Rl
124;
Parsons,
Cynthia,
·Q. I have just enrolled in
do everything we con to help
Salem School Loi Rd; Parsons, Cloris M, General Delivery; Grueser, Pearl St; Jones, Penny, PO Box 811;
Q. My son was born with a 329I4
Medicare since I will be age
Larry,
32914. Salem School Lot Rd; Billie E, 42198 Enterprize Rd; Klein, Barbara A, 50874 Valley Bell
disabled people in their
65 in three months. However, disability, and this has caused Thompson, Timothy J, 32008 Tid~~os Hoschar, George, 36050 Rocksprings Rd ; Powell, Jerry, PO Box 706; Racine
attempts to return to work.
Rd; Johnson, Bradley B. 37898 Ball Home Bank, Unknown; Ritchie, Jack
I feel that I should consider physical, emotional and finanRd .
For more information, visit
Run Rd; Jonas, Bruce Bernard, 24 112 L, PO Box 45; Rose, Leah, 47798 SR
purchasing a supplemental ··cia! bundens. Can Social Secuour website at www.ssa.gov or
City of Lon1 Bottom: Milliron, Plum St; Jonas, Max Otto, 24 112 Plum 338; Thornton, Florence l, 48251
health insurance policy as rity help?
Laurie S, 46939 SR 248; MI Olive Street; Jonas, Rose Marie, 24 112 Plum Plants Rd; Turley. l inda L, 47798 SR
. call us at 1-800-772-1213 to
well. How do . I go about
A.
Yes. If your. income is
Community
Church, 51305 Mt Olive St: Jonas, Yvonne Marie, 24 112 Plum JJ8.
make an appointment at your
selecting the right coverage? Is low, you may be able to get
Rd ; Pi1o1t. Susan, 51424 Mt Olive St; L.eifheil, Marie, Union Ave;
local Social Security office.
Clly or Reednille: Carpe nte r,
Rd. ·
there any information on the Supplemental
Security
Marshall , Taminy, 43475 Lovers Alex. 48949 SR 10 59, Carp enter,
·
Incoine (SSI) for your son. SSI
'Q. I ·plan to opply for dis- Internet?
City of Middleport: Bisset, Slacy Ln; Meigs Cly Auditor, Unknown; James, 48949 SR 1059; Carpenter,
A.
When considering a sup- ·would provide a monthly
R,
269 N 4th Ave; Cleland, Alana, Rt Miller, Donald H, Rce 4; Moore, Pat, 48949 SR I059; Johnso n, Charles,
ability due to a gradually
plemental
health
insurance
.
income
to
care
for
your
disI
Box
121 B; Frazier, Lonnie E, Pe~~rl Randall, 35554 ' Flaiwoods Rd; 3933 I Bridgle Rd.
worsening condition. I'v~
St;
Hoffman,
963 Locust St; Jeffers, Norman, Myrtle, 32087 Hysell Run
heand these claims can take policy, look the policy over abled child. If your family does
City" of Rullnd: Anderson, ThoEula
E,
.713
Short
4th~ Lathey, Mary, Rd ; Pauley, Paul J, 804 W Main Sl;
some time. What can I do to carefully and compare it with not have medical insurance,
Bradbury Rd; Mcclure, Belinda, PO Payne, Lois J, 36185 Wolf Pen Rd; mas, \24 Salem; Facklcr, ·J D, 367 14
the coverage provided by your son may also qualify for
help speed up the process?
Box 352; Pickens, Mary, S Second Pickens, Ray R, Riverview Dr ~ Zion Rd; Gmac, 33562 New Lima Rd:
Medicare.
Make
sure
it
really
ls
Medicaid.
Ave;
Qualls, Marcia E, 30920 Proffilt, James, 38180 Arnold Rd; Klein, Ke lly R, 33562 New Lima Rd;
A. There are a number of
a
supplementol
policy
and
For
information,
visit
our
Mcelhinney
Hill; Riebel, Renee, 205 ' Reed, Elizabeth, 141 Mulber-ry; Shane, Patricia A. 33375 Crouser Rd;
things you can do to ensure
Ash Sl; RosebeTry, Della J, '30 Loyal Reeves, Paul E, 115 E Memorial Dr; Starcher, Stanley R, 69 A Mccumber
faster processing of your doesn't simply duplicate your website at www.ssa.gov or call
St; Sheley, L.endela, 2 Main St; Shoe- Roach, Pamela, 202 Butternut Ave; Rd; The, Ina , c/o Mrs Lian The Mill tdaim. Apply as soon as your Medicare protection . The us at 1-800-772-1213 to make
maker, Lester P, Rt I Box 118; Shoe- Schwab, Edith M, 405 W Main St; ner; Welsh, Aldena M. 33591 SR 143.
Guide
To
Health
an
appointment
at
your
local
publication,
can and don't miss any
maker, Viola 8, Rt 1 Box 118; Snyder, Scioto Twp Volunteer Fire Dept,
City of Syracuse: Cottrill , James.
Insurance
For
People
With
Social
Security
office.
38300 SR 684; Smiih, James N,
Shawn,
'5 S Third SI. #1 7.
appointments. Bring as rmny

Chester dinner

.postponed·

DofAmeets

at hall

Birth announced

UNCLAIMED FUND~

Soda[ Security questions and answers

I

PEOPLE

5p1•ke Lee
NEWYORK (AP) - He loves basketball and
he's from Brooklyn. But in May, filmmaker Spike
Lee will be writing about baseball for a new
upscale Manhattan magazine.
. Lee has been hired to write a sports column
for Gotham. His debut effort will appear in the
.
magazine's third issue, and acco ndmg
to M onday's Daily News, will contend that Babe Ruth
wa• black.

'

'

'

City or Mlnusvllle: Wat.s on,
Lloyd L, Box 87.

Lee did not respond to requests for co mment,
and Gotham editor Joseph Steuer was unable to
shed light on the subject.
·
"All l know is that basically he's writing a column for me and I was asked to pull a picture of
. Babe Ruth for ir;· Steuer said.
In 1997, Lee wrote a memoir about growing
up as a New York Knicks fan titled "Best Seat in
the House." But as the director of" Malcolm X,"
"Do the Right Thing" and "Summer of Sam,"
he's best known for exploring race relations.

.

City of Pomeror: Brown, Harold
DDS Inc, 200 1/2 W Main; Bunce,
Denise, PO Box 652 ; Clark, Lola E,

41920 SR 681; Stafford, Herbert Es· 23165Ih St; Comill . Paula, 2316 5Ih
tate, 36185 Wolf Pen Rd ; Story, St
Clarence, 39436 Rocksprings Rd,
City of · Tuppers Plains:
Story, Goldie Marie, 39436
Rocksprings Rd; Taylor, Veda, 115 I/ Trippyatcs. Carolyn, PO Box 309.
2 E Memorial ; Thomas, Richard W,
Clly Unknown: Pearman , Mabel.
124 Lincoln HI; Veterans Memorial
Hospital, \IS E Memorial Dr; West II 54 Mill St; Stcven5, Patnck T. 33 1
Star Garagr &amp; Towing, 245 W Main Mechani c St.

STATE OF OHIO, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bob Taft
Governor
Gary C. Suhadolnlk
Director

David L. Moore
Superintendent

�I

Page A&amp;

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Sharon appeals to White House
WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon is appealing for cooperation at)d a bigger role in U.S.
missile defense planning in his first meeting with President
Bush, while vowing to defer negotiations with the Palestinians until violence ends.
Sharon also would relish Bush's reaffirmation of a presidential campaign pledge to move the U.S. Embassy in Israel from
Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, thereby bolstering what Sharon says is
Israel's right to eternal sovereignty over an undivided city.
However, the Bush administration already has aligned itself
with the previous administration of Bill C linton in declaring
the citv's future is for Israel and the Palestinians to determine
· through negouations.
.
Sharon's main theme on his two- day visit, which includes a
White House meeting Tuesday with Bush, is a need for security; that Israel will not negotiate while under attack, and that
it must hold on to territory "to protect it from the growing
dangers in th e Mrddlc East."

w~:!~!! ~P)Cii:e~:~g :~~!~s~~~udi1

cial nominHions, Pre sident Bush ha s dumped the last of President C linton's judicial nom in ees, including the first black
appellatt· judge in the circuit with the most minorities in the
nation .
But Roger Gregory, who was the first black j udge on the
4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Ri chmond, Va. , when
appo imed temporarily by Clintor1. might still haw a chance
to s· r:~y on the bench, officials said.
"Som~ of th(;sc individuals will be cons ickrc? for positions
in th e Bush ;tdmini~tration,'' White H o use spokesma n Scott
McClellan sa id . "No one should be conSidered ruled in or
out at this point.!'
Bush on Monday officially withdrew. 62 executive and
judicial nominations made by Clinton in hi s last days, including Gregory. The 4th U.S. Ci rcuit - comprising Maryland,
North Carolina, South Carolina, VHginia and West Virginia
- includes rnore n1inoritics than any other circuit in the
nation.

Inflatable toys recalled
WASHINGTON (AP) - Eight companies are recalling
about 835,000 inflatable toys because of a tiny -balloon that
can detach , posing .a choking hazard.
The firms announced the recall on Monday, in ·coordination with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission:
A 3-year-old boy inhaled the balloon tongue that detached
from a toy animal and it lodged in his nose, the Safety Commission reported. Doctors had to remove it.
The vinyl toys are about 3 inches long and come in 12 different styles, most of which are animals.

HUD sets aside utility funds
WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal government is earmarking $1 OS million to help public housing authorities pay
utJlity bills after extende.d cold spells and power shortages in
some areas.
Many utility bills are 18 percent higher "than what housing
authonties projected last year, Housing Secretary Mel Mar-.
tinez said Monday. In a few cases, the bills have jumped 50
percem.
Housing authorities in Los Angeles, suffering under a
severe power shortage, have reported a 25 percent higher
utility bill than what was expected. ·
"Increases of that magnitude are too large 'to absorb,''' Martinez said.

. Five states sue Reynolds
WASHINGTON (AP) - Five states announced plans
Monday to sue R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., contending the
con1pany ha s violated a promise to stop marketing to youngsters.
In county cou rthouses in Arizona, California, ()hio, New
York and Washington, state officials are alleging violations of
different aspects of the master settletnent agreement signed
by the major tobacco companies and the states. They're asking that the cou rts come up with a punishment.
"We've mediated tobacco issues large and small," said Betty
Montgomery, Ohio's attorney general. "Today the attorneys
general are sending a unified message that we will not tolerate the marketing strategies of old thattargeted our children."
Arizona , California, New York and Washington, want the
company to remove Winston Cup billboards after a
NASCAR race has been run cnstead of leaving them up at

lUHd•y. M•rch 20.2001

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
(AP) - His voice brimming
with emotion, an officer of the
Navy submarine that rammed
a Japanese trawler apologized
as an inquiry into the deadly
accident neared its end.
"To the families of those
who perished and to the crew
of the Ehime Maru ... I
humbly apologize," Lt. j .g.
Michael Coen said Monday.
"Although I cannot comprehend the unimagmable gnef
you must feel, I want you to
know that you· are in my
thoughts and prayers at all
times and you will be for the
rest of my life."
Coen, 26, is one of three
officers
of
the
USS
. Greeneville under investigation over the Feb. 9 sinking of
the
Ehime
Maru. The
Greeneville smashed into the
Japanese fishing vessel while
demonstra ting a rapid-surfacing drill for 16 civilians. Nine
people. ii1cluding four tee nage boys, were killed.

Coen read his unsworn
statement to · three admirals
presiding over . the Navy's
court of inquiry. Attorneys for
another officer, Lt. Cmdr. Gerald Pfeifer, submitted a written
statement to the court that was
not released to the public.
Closing arguments in the
inquiry were expected to
begin Tuesday. The presiding
admirals gave the Greeneville's
skipper - Cmdr. Scott Waddle - and his attorneys until
Tuesday morning to decide
whetbet· he would address the
court.
Waddle's civilian attorney,
Charles Gittins, has said Waddle won't testifY without
immunity from future ·c h~rges .
Waddle's request for immunity
was denied Monday.
The inquiry has focused on
whether Waddle rushed preparations for surfacing, and
whether he 'performed an
inadequate periscope search
before tak.tng the Greeneville
up.

Bearcats keep rolling, Page B6

Page 81
.,

WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate supporters of limiting political donations
narrowly overcame their first challenge in
their drive to bring about the most significant change in campaign spending law
in a quarter-century.
The Senate by a 51-48 vote Monday
defeated a proposal to effectually eliminate direct party contribution limits for
candidates running against wealthy opponents who put at least S I million of their
own money into a campaign.
The vote opened two weeks of debate
on legislation offered by Sens. John
McCain, R-Ariz., and Russell Feingold,
D-Wis., that would ban loosely regulated
11
Soft money" donations that corporations, unions and wealthy individuals give
political p~rties .

The millionaire amendment was
defeated only after Democrats, in intense
discussions on the Senate floor, persuaded
three of their members who had voted in
favor of the amendment to change their
votes. Democrats publicly promised they
would work on a compromise version
that would be taken up Tuesday.
McCain said the original amendment,
offered by Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M.,
would increase rather than decrease campaign spending and was "a meat-ax
approach to a problem that requires a
scalpel." But he said he thought a satisfactory compromise could be reached.
Two of the three who switched their
votes - Sen. Jon Corzine of New Jersey
and Herb Kohl ofWisconsin - arc millionaires who financed their own cam-

paigns. Corzine won his race last fall after
spending a record $60 million of his own
money. The third was Sen. Robert Tarttcelli of New Jersey.
·
Domenici, the chief proponent· of the
millionaire amendment, said a compromise he and Sen. Mike DeWine, ROhio, were considering would allow a
tenfold increase in the $1,000 individual
contribution limit for candidates running
against opponents who use more th~n $1
·
million of their own money.
The larger issue was the future of campaign spending laws, with supporters of
McCain-Feingold asserting that the
integrity of the nation's election system
was at stake. Opponents said First
Amendment free speech rights were at
risk.

After Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Gonzalez spent hours
,tracks on the Winston C up ci roiit throughout the racing seaqu
estioning Real Genest about docum~nts connecting
son.
Ressam to Montreal addresses and telephone numbers, the
judge sent the jury out and asked the reason for the testimony.
ATLANTA (AP) - Turner Broadcasting System ·Inc. has
"It's kind of like watching the corn grow, Mr. Gonzalez,"
decided to stop airing World Championship Wrestling, a said U.S. District Judge John Coughenour.
,,
mainstay of the network's lineup since rts fledgling days in the
1970s, a company spokesman said on Monday.
As a consequence, a deal to sell the troubled wrestling organization fell through. Fusient Media Ventures, a New York
NEWYORK (AP) - A man suspected in the U.s, embassy
media investment firm, had announced its purchase of the bombing in Tanzania said terrorists prefer to target American
company in January. The firm says talks have resumed on a embassies and civilians because the military is too difficult to
new deal now that' the WCW has no broadcast outlet.
hit, an FBI agent testified.
The·decision means that the WCW will cease after a March
The agent, Abigail Perkins, testified in federal court on
26 event in Panama City Beach, Fla., pending its sale to a new
Monday that defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed also told
owner.
her that he knew a bomb he helped load onto a truck would
Turner spokesman ,Jim Weiss said Monday that Turner
blow up a U.S. embassy in Dar es Salaam.
expects the company - which lost an estimated $80 million
She said Mohamed was angry because the United States
last year- will be sold quickly.
continued to have a presence in Saudi Arabia,, the holy Land,
and exercised its superpower influence improperly in the
Middle East.
Those trying to rid the Middle East of U.S. influence first ·
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Space shuttle Discovery faced a windy and rainy forecast that could alter its trip tried to target military installations but found them too diffiback to Earth with the first crew· of the international space . cult to reach, so they changed their .targets to include
embassies, she said Mohamed told her.
station on board.
The shuttle is scheduled to land early Wednesday at
Kennedy Space Center in Florida. But because the weather
in Florida for the next two days doesn't look good, NASA is
TETOVO, Macedonia (AP) - Ethnic Albanian rebels said
already considering the possibility of a landing at Edwards Air
Force Base in California, the backup site, said flight director Tuesday they were willing to negotiate a peaceful settlement
to end their week-old insurgency, but warned Macedonia's
Wayne Hale.
~'K~;.nnedy Space Center does nqt IQok very promising," government to r~spm;d or ,the fightil)g would c&lt;;mtinlje.
"We are determined to realize our demands, and urge
Hale said. ·"If these forecasts continue to 1 hold, there's a good
possibility we will land in the wee hours of (Wednesday) Macedonian authorities rand non-government figureS: to
r.t)orning in Caliorrii~/·
make:.. public as sooT! as possible if they want this to be
'"The weother in California for an early Wednesday landing resolved peacefull)"'or not," the rebels said in a conununique
is gqod but deteriorates early Thursday as winds become obtained by The Associated Press.
stronger.
If talks are rejected, "we will bear no responsibility for the
future chain of events," said the statement, signed by the
"National Liberation Army - Tetovo branch." It urged the
"international community to recognize our demands, 'which
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) - An F-16 fighter pi)ot who are for peace, not for war."
flew off course and collided with . a small plane, killing its
The Slav-led Macedonian government did not immediatepilot, has been cleared of wrongdoing.
ly react to the communique. But officials repeatedly have said
"Although Capt. Greg Kreuder was involved in the acci- they have no intention of negotiating with the rebels, whom
dent, I did not frnd any indicators that· warrant disciplinary
they have branded as "terrorists."
action against him," Col. Stephen T. Sargeant said Monday.
Ja cq ues Olivier, a flight instructor, was killed · in the
November c rash.
Kreuder was following a lead pilot, Lt. Col. James Parker,
MOSCOW (AP) -The Russian space agency on tuesday
nn his way frnm Moody Air Force Base in Georgia to a
set a final firm date for dumping the Mir space station, sayb'ombing range in central Florida.
ing it would be brought down into the South Pacific on Friday by a six-hour series of engine pushes.
The Progress cargo ship docked at the station will "fire its
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prosecutors in the trial of an engines twice during two consecutive orbits to lower the staAlgerian accused of smuggling bomb-making materi·als into tion. Several hours later, it will fire one last time to send the
the United States say they intend to link him to a fourth station hurtling into the South Pacific between Australia and
Chile at around 9:30a.m. Moscow time Friday, said Russian
alleged conspirator, an Algerian facing charges in London.
The government's intent surfaced Monday during lengthy Aerosp"ace Agency spokesman Konstaniin Kreidenko.
Mission Control officials say they have conducted 50,000
questioning of a retired Canadian immigration official who
comfJuter
simulations of the descent process to make sure
dealt with the arrival of defendant Ahmed Ressam in Canathat the station's debris land in the designated ocean area.
da in 1994.

Turner will drop WCW show

Witness: embassies targeted

Crew checks on weather

Rebels ready to talk

Military clears F·16 pilot

Mir will ·be dumped Friday

Prosecutors look at susped lin~

Code No. 323.08.of Stahl of Ohio, do hereby viva notlc:. of

I

The Daily Sentinel

Campaign finance debate begins with dose vote

for2000

Sub officer apologizes
as hearing nears end

Inside:

-

lox ·Vllluation.

u

TOWNSHIPS
SCHOOL DISTRICTS

HIGHLIGHTS
Etherton goes
under the knHe
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Cincinnati Reds right-hander
Seth Etherton was scheduled
for arthroscopic surgery on ,
his right shoulder Tuesday to
remove bone spurs and to
repair the torn labrum.
'
Dr. Timothy Kremchek, the
Reds' medical director, was to
perform the surgery at Good
Samaritan
Hospital
in
Cincinnati.
Etherton, 24, was acquired
by the Reds on Dec. 10 from
the California Angels in
exchange for infielder Wilmy
Caceres.

. Sylvester,
Sullinger named
D-rs top players ·

LETART

31111111

40.420157

3t.a811102

41.21-

RHI - · t u N
no1 boen pold 111he- o l - oollec1ion !101'1' a ponaJ1V of ton parcont. Tuea may be paJd 11 the- ol
by moil. P - bring yolK 1111 tax rocotpt; oncl WIOU P1tf by malt, lie 11ft 10 your property by t.xlng cl!l1tlol and aociOH IWnPOCI
Always examine your tu recelpl to . . that It ooverw eft yOur pruprl!ty. Ofllce haurlp 1:30 A.M. to 4:00P.M. Monday through Fridlly- Ctoled
Faiturt to rtcelw t.IK ltala ntntt dote not aYOICI any ptnllty, . . , . , or Charge tncUrredfor IUd1 delay. Ohio Revllld Code 323.,13. Ctotlno date
HOWARD E. FRANK, ~County Tr. .urer

Eagles get back in the gym
after winning regional title
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
MEIGS - It wa~ back

EAST
to business
for Eastern on Monday after,the Eagles took
a couple of days off to celebrate the school's
first-ever regional championship.
Eastern (22-3) defeated Worthington
Christian 79-71 in an emotionally and physically exhausting overtime thriller Friday . to
earn a berth in this week's Division IV state
.tournament. The Eagles will face Tipp City
Bethel at 2 p.m. Friday in the state semifinals.
For head coach Howie Caldwell and his
team, this has been an extremely busy . time,

but also a very rewarding time.
"It's been a very, very exciting time," said
Caldwell. "The phone has rung with congratulations offered by a lot of nice people.
Today (Monday) at school, 1 think we sold
something like 600 tickets in two to three
hours. I think it's a very exciting time; the
kids and the players are very excited. lt's good
for the community, gbod for the area. It's
great."
Caldwell said that the fan support this Eastern team has enjoyed has been rather over-

Please see Eastem. 16

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

Wisconsin sacks
hoops coach
MADISON, Wis. (AP) Brad Soderberg will not keep
the Wisconsin basketball job, a
decision that comes four days
after the Badgers were ousted
in the first round of , the
NCAA tournament.
Soderberg replaced Dick
Bennett three games into the
season. Bennett quit because
he was tired of coaching and
picked Soderberg to step in
.for him.
· Soderberg won his first
eight games, the first Wiscon·sin coach to do that since
:1911, and was the only firstyear UW coach to take the
-Badgers to the NCAA tour'nament. But they were upset
by Georgia State in the first
round Thursday.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - A student newspaper
joined the dispute regarding
Dale Earnhardt's autopsy
photos, requesting that it be
allowed to see them.
• The Independent . Florida
Alligator, which is run by
University of Florida students
but is not an official university publication, filed a motion
in a Daytona Beach court Friday.
A . settlement between
Earnhardt's widow and the
Orlando Sentinel and a bill
prop~sed in the state Legislature limiting access and barring publication of the photos
is not in the public's best
interest, Alligator editor Jasqn
Brown said.

I .

ENOUGH SAID - This sign above the door to the gym at Eastern says it all. (OVP staff photo)

Distrid 13 stars shine at Rio

COLUMBUS (AP) -Two
players from high-profile programs headed for higher-profile programs took the top
honors on the 2000-2001
Associated Press Division I
boys All-Ohio high school
basketball team announced
Monday.
Cincinnati Moeller's Matt
Sylvester, a 6-foot-7 senior,
shares the player of the year
honors in the big-school division with Thomas Worthing, ton's J.J. Sullinger.
Sylvester, who has signed to
· play next season at Ohio
State, averaged 21.4 points
-and 7.5 rebounds a game
while shooting 48 percent
fiom 3-point range.'
Sullinger, a 6-5 senior who
will · next play for Arkansas,
had averages of 20.6 points,
8.8 rebounds, 6 assists, 2.1
blocks and 1.8 steals a game.
The coaches of the year in
the division are Jed Dunn,
who led Lyndhurst Brush to a
17-3 record and a league title,
and Columbus Brookhaven's
Bruce Howard.

Student paper
wants photos

LEBANON

II

'I'uFsDAY'S

l'uesd.y, ~rch 20. 1001

ALL.STAR MVP - Meigs senior Amber Vining helped lead the Division 1-11 All-Stars to a 5956 wln over the Division 111-lV team in the District 13 All-Star Game. (Doug Shipley photo)

RIO GRANDE - The
Division 1-11 teams reigned
supreme Monday.
During the District 13 AllStar boys and girls games at
Newt Oliver Arena, the Division 1-11 rallied in the fourth
quarter and the boys controlled the game throughout
to sweep the Division III- IV
squads.
In the girls game, the Division 1-11 team was without the
services of district player of
the year Beth Howe, but came
away with a 59-56 victory.
The Division III- IV team
led by 14 early in the second
half and by 11 with 19 seconds left in the third quarter
after a basket by Eastern's
Danielle Spencer.
That's when the bigger
schools be8an to dominate, led
in part by Gallia and Meigs
county girls .
A pair of free throws by
Gallia Academy's Tiffanie
Hager to end the third quarter
and a 3-point goal by River
Valley's Cynthia Ward to open
the fourth, sparked a 16 point
run by the Division 1-11 squad
as they went on top 54-49.
During that span, Amber
Vining of Meigs made a pair
of 3-pointers as she made
eight of her 12 points on the
night.
For her efforts, Vining was
named her team's most valuable player.
Also for the Division 1- 11
team, Marietta's Jen Gwin
scored 12 points, Hager added
10 and Ward finished with
nine.

Amanda Downs of Logan
pitched ·in with seven points,
Rock Hill 's Dobbi Clark
scored five and Logan's Adrienne McCabe each had two.
Jessica Esnor of Ironton was
named MVP of the Division
lli~lV squad with 16 points.
Josie Carr of Alexander led
all scorers with 18 points for
the Division 111-lV team,
while Fairland's Ashley Harris
scored nine, Alexander's Lisa
Kubachka had eight and
Spencer scored five.
The smaller schools brought
the game to within two points
on a basket by Carr and a free
throw by Spencer. But a pair
of Vining free throws and
another foul shot by Downs
helped the l)ivision 1-11 squad
regain a five point lead and,
with the help of a late Hager
bucket, hold on to the win.
In the boys contest, the
Division 1- 11 team took a 2913 lead at the end of the
opening quarter, and fought
off charges by the Division
111-lV team to pick up an 8163 win.
The Division lll- lV team
was without the seniors from
Eastern . (Matt Simpson, Joe
Brown- and Chad Nelson),
who are preparing to play in
the state tournament this
weekend in Columbus.
A well-balanced scoring
attack paced the Division 1-11
team, led by Athens Wade
Martin with 13 points, includrng
three 3-poiilters, and
Meigs' J.P. Staats . with 12
points.
Gallia Academy's Dustin

Ple1se see Stars. 16

Southwest Missouri State shocks Rutgers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

first-round win over Toledo.
"My hat's off to Jackie Stiles," Stringer said. "She
is the hardest working player. She is a WNBA player. I would love to have her as a professional coach."
Southwest Missouri State, a No. 5 seed, was one
ofjust three teams to advance to the round of 16 by
winning on its opponent's floor. Sixth-seeded
Washington did it in the West Regional and 1Othseeded Missouri advanced as a visiting team in the
East. Both won second-round games on Sunday.
Otherwise, it's business as usual in the regional
semifinals. Defending national champion Connecticut i~ in. So are Tennessee, Louisiana Tech,
Duke and Notre Dame. Tennessee ·played Sunday
night. The others all won big on Monday.
Connecticut, the top seed in the East, rolled over ·

Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer believes there's
a place for someone like Jackie Stiles.
It's called the WNBA.
Stringer watched with a mixture of agony and
awe Monday night as Stiles knocked Rutgers, a
.Final Four team last year, out of the N::::AA tournament.
Stiles scored 32 points, including 17 in the final
6:57, as Southwest Missouri State beat the Scarlet
Knights 60-53 in the second 'round of the West
Regional at Piscataway, NJ.
Most times, that would be just a routine game for
Stiles, the NCAA career scoring leader. But this
came against a team noted for tough defense and
two nights after she suffered a mild concussion in a

Colorado State 89-44. In two tournament games,
the Huskies have given up an average ofjust 36.5
points.
'.' Everything goes back to our defense," UConn's
Swin Cash said. "We were getting o.ut, pressing in
the wing, trying to make them go back door. Our
defense took care of everything, basically."
Louisiana Tech, seeded third in the East, beat
TCU 80-59.
In the Midwest, top-seeded Notre Dame cruised
past Michigan 88-54, third-seeded Vanderbilt was a
65-59 winner over Colorado and fifth-seeded Utah
defeated Iowa 78-69.
Top-seeded Duke moved on in the West with a

Ple•se see NCAA. B6

·oayton moves on in NIT after win over Spiders
DAYTON (AP) -Dayton
coach Oliver Purnell feels
lucky that his team is alive for
the third round of the
National Invitation Tournament.
And he realizes that staying
alive won't get any easier.
"We're going to be playing
another difficult team in
·Detroit," Purnell said Monday
after savoring a 71- 56 secondround victory over Rich-

'.

'

mond. ''But we have a chance
to play for a championship.
We're one game away from
New York."
The winner of the DaytonDetroit contest later this week
will advance to the NIT
semifinals at Madison Square
Garden.
"Those guys are solid,"
guard Tony Stanley said of
Detroit. "They have a very
good guard in Rashaud

Phillips. But I don't think it
will be a matchup of me versus ·him. 1t's going to be our
defense versus their defense:·
Stanley broke the Richmond game open· with 14
second-half points that featured a steal and a breakaway
dunk with 6:05 left that fired
up the hometown crowd and
sapped the spirit of Richmond.
''I'm not trying to end my

career at UP,'' said Stanley, a
senior who had a game total
of 17 points. "I'd like to end
my career in New York."
Dayton (21-12) got hot
when it counted.
With the score tied at 5050 with 7:23 remaining, the
Flyers went on an 18-3 run,
paced by Stanley and Brooks
Hall, who finished with 14
points.
Richmond (22-7) got into

team foul trouble about midway in the seco nd half,
enabling Dayton to seal the
game at the foul line.
Greg Stevenson scored 21
points and grabbed six
rebounds for Richmond, but
the Spiders shot only 25 percent from the 3-point line,
making five of 20.
The Flyers won the battle

Pluse IH Flyers, Bl

�I

Page A&amp;

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Sharon appeals to White House
WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon is appealing for cooperation at)d a bigger role in U.S.
missile defense planning in his first meeting with President
Bush, while vowing to defer negotiations with the Palestinians until violence ends.
Sharon also would relish Bush's reaffirmation of a presidential campaign pledge to move the U.S. Embassy in Israel from
Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, thereby bolstering what Sharon says is
Israel's right to eternal sovereignty over an undivided city.
However, the Bush administration already has aligned itself
with the previous administration of Bill C linton in declaring
the citv's future is for Israel and the Palestinians to determine
· through negouations.
.
Sharon's main theme on his two- day visit, which includes a
White House meeting Tuesday with Bush, is a need for security; that Israel will not negotiate while under attack, and that
it must hold on to territory "to protect it from the growing
dangers in th e Mrddlc East."

w~:!~!! ~P)Cii:e~:~g :~~!~s~~~udi1

cial nominHions, Pre sident Bush ha s dumped the last of President C linton's judicial nom in ees, including the first black
appellatt· judge in the circuit with the most minorities in the
nation .
But Roger Gregory, who was the first black j udge on the
4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Ri chmond, Va. , when
appo imed temporarily by Clintor1. might still haw a chance
to s· r:~y on the bench, officials said.
"Som~ of th(;sc individuals will be cons ickrc? for positions
in th e Bush ;tdmini~tration,'' White H o use spokesma n Scott
McClellan sa id . "No one should be conSidered ruled in or
out at this point.!'
Bush on Monday officially withdrew. 62 executive and
judicial nominations made by Clinton in hi s last days, including Gregory. The 4th U.S. Ci rcuit - comprising Maryland,
North Carolina, South Carolina, VHginia and West Virginia
- includes rnore n1inoritics than any other circuit in the
nation.

Inflatable toys recalled
WASHINGTON (AP) - Eight companies are recalling
about 835,000 inflatable toys because of a tiny -balloon that
can detach , posing .a choking hazard.
The firms announced the recall on Monday, in ·coordination with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission:
A 3-year-old boy inhaled the balloon tongue that detached
from a toy animal and it lodged in his nose, the Safety Commission reported. Doctors had to remove it.
The vinyl toys are about 3 inches long and come in 12 different styles, most of which are animals.

HUD sets aside utility funds
WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal government is earmarking $1 OS million to help public housing authorities pay
utJlity bills after extende.d cold spells and power shortages in
some areas.
Many utility bills are 18 percent higher "than what housing
authonties projected last year, Housing Secretary Mel Mar-.
tinez said Monday. In a few cases, the bills have jumped 50
percem.
Housing authorities in Los Angeles, suffering under a
severe power shortage, have reported a 25 percent higher
utility bill than what was expected. ·
"Increases of that magnitude are too large 'to absorb,''' Martinez said.

. Five states sue Reynolds
WASHINGTON (AP) - Five states announced plans
Monday to sue R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., contending the
con1pany ha s violated a promise to stop marketing to youngsters.
In county cou rthouses in Arizona, California, ()hio, New
York and Washington, state officials are alleging violations of
different aspects of the master settletnent agreement signed
by the major tobacco companies and the states. They're asking that the cou rts come up with a punishment.
"We've mediated tobacco issues large and small," said Betty
Montgomery, Ohio's attorney general. "Today the attorneys
general are sending a unified message that we will not tolerate the marketing strategies of old thattargeted our children."
Arizona , California, New York and Washington, want the
company to remove Winston Cup billboards after a
NASCAR race has been run cnstead of leaving them up at

lUHd•y. M•rch 20.2001

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
(AP) - His voice brimming
with emotion, an officer of the
Navy submarine that rammed
a Japanese trawler apologized
as an inquiry into the deadly
accident neared its end.
"To the families of those
who perished and to the crew
of the Ehime Maru ... I
humbly apologize," Lt. j .g.
Michael Coen said Monday.
"Although I cannot comprehend the unimagmable gnef
you must feel, I want you to
know that you· are in my
thoughts and prayers at all
times and you will be for the
rest of my life."
Coen, 26, is one of three
officers
of
the
USS
. Greeneville under investigation over the Feb. 9 sinking of
the
Ehime
Maru. The
Greeneville smashed into the
Japanese fishing vessel while
demonstra ting a rapid-surfacing drill for 16 civilians. Nine
people. ii1cluding four tee nage boys, were killed.

Coen read his unsworn
statement to · three admirals
presiding over . the Navy's
court of inquiry. Attorneys for
another officer, Lt. Cmdr. Gerald Pfeifer, submitted a written
statement to the court that was
not released to the public.
Closing arguments in the
inquiry were expected to
begin Tuesday. The presiding
admirals gave the Greeneville's
skipper - Cmdr. Scott Waddle - and his attorneys until
Tuesday morning to decide
whetbet· he would address the
court.
Waddle's civilian attorney,
Charles Gittins, has said Waddle won't testifY without
immunity from future ·c h~rges .
Waddle's request for immunity
was denied Monday.
The inquiry has focused on
whether Waddle rushed preparations for surfacing, and
whether he 'performed an
inadequate periscope search
before tak.tng the Greeneville
up.

Bearcats keep rolling, Page B6

Page 81
.,

WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate supporters of limiting political donations
narrowly overcame their first challenge in
their drive to bring about the most significant change in campaign spending law
in a quarter-century.
The Senate by a 51-48 vote Monday
defeated a proposal to effectually eliminate direct party contribution limits for
candidates running against wealthy opponents who put at least S I million of their
own money into a campaign.
The vote opened two weeks of debate
on legislation offered by Sens. John
McCain, R-Ariz., and Russell Feingold,
D-Wis., that would ban loosely regulated
11
Soft money" donations that corporations, unions and wealthy individuals give
political p~rties .

The millionaire amendment was
defeated only after Democrats, in intense
discussions on the Senate floor, persuaded
three of their members who had voted in
favor of the amendment to change their
votes. Democrats publicly promised they
would work on a compromise version
that would be taken up Tuesday.
McCain said the original amendment,
offered by Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M.,
would increase rather than decrease campaign spending and was "a meat-ax
approach to a problem that requires a
scalpel." But he said he thought a satisfactory compromise could be reached.
Two of the three who switched their
votes - Sen. Jon Corzine of New Jersey
and Herb Kohl ofWisconsin - arc millionaires who financed their own cam-

paigns. Corzine won his race last fall after
spending a record $60 million of his own
money. The third was Sen. Robert Tarttcelli of New Jersey.
·
Domenici, the chief proponent· of the
millionaire amendment, said a compromise he and Sen. Mike DeWine, ROhio, were considering would allow a
tenfold increase in the $1,000 individual
contribution limit for candidates running
against opponents who use more th~n $1
·
million of their own money.
The larger issue was the future of campaign spending laws, with supporters of
McCain-Feingold asserting that the
integrity of the nation's election system
was at stake. Opponents said First
Amendment free speech rights were at
risk.

After Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Gonzalez spent hours
,tracks on the Winston C up ci roiit throughout the racing seaqu
estioning Real Genest about docum~nts connecting
son.
Ressam to Montreal addresses and telephone numbers, the
judge sent the jury out and asked the reason for the testimony.
ATLANTA (AP) - Turner Broadcasting System ·Inc. has
"It's kind of like watching the corn grow, Mr. Gonzalez,"
decided to stop airing World Championship Wrestling, a said U.S. District Judge John Coughenour.
,,
mainstay of the network's lineup since rts fledgling days in the
1970s, a company spokesman said on Monday.
As a consequence, a deal to sell the troubled wrestling organization fell through. Fusient Media Ventures, a New York
NEWYORK (AP) - A man suspected in the U.s, embassy
media investment firm, had announced its purchase of the bombing in Tanzania said terrorists prefer to target American
company in January. The firm says talks have resumed on a embassies and civilians because the military is too difficult to
new deal now that' the WCW has no broadcast outlet.
hit, an FBI agent testified.
The·decision means that the WCW will cease after a March
The agent, Abigail Perkins, testified in federal court on
26 event in Panama City Beach, Fla., pending its sale to a new
Monday that defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed also told
owner.
her that he knew a bomb he helped load onto a truck would
Turner spokesman ,Jim Weiss said Monday that Turner
blow up a U.S. embassy in Dar es Salaam.
expects the company - which lost an estimated $80 million
She said Mohamed was angry because the United States
last year- will be sold quickly.
continued to have a presence in Saudi Arabia,, the holy Land,
and exercised its superpower influence improperly in the
Middle East.
Those trying to rid the Middle East of U.S. influence first ·
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Space shuttle Discovery faced a windy and rainy forecast that could alter its trip tried to target military installations but found them too diffiback to Earth with the first crew· of the international space . cult to reach, so they changed their .targets to include
embassies, she said Mohamed told her.
station on board.
The shuttle is scheduled to land early Wednesday at
Kennedy Space Center in Florida. But because the weather
in Florida for the next two days doesn't look good, NASA is
TETOVO, Macedonia (AP) - Ethnic Albanian rebels said
already considering the possibility of a landing at Edwards Air
Force Base in California, the backup site, said flight director Tuesday they were willing to negotiate a peaceful settlement
to end their week-old insurgency, but warned Macedonia's
Wayne Hale.
~'K~;.nnedy Space Center does nqt IQok very promising," government to r~spm;d or ,the fightil)g would c&lt;;mtinlje.
"We are determined to realize our demands, and urge
Hale said. ·"If these forecasts continue to 1 hold, there's a good
possibility we will land in the wee hours of (Wednesday) Macedonian authorities rand non-government figureS: to
r.t)orning in Caliorrii~/·
make:.. public as sooT! as possible if they want this to be
'"The weother in California for an early Wednesday landing resolved peacefull)"'or not," the rebels said in a conununique
is gqod but deteriorates early Thursday as winds become obtained by The Associated Press.
stronger.
If talks are rejected, "we will bear no responsibility for the
future chain of events," said the statement, signed by the
"National Liberation Army - Tetovo branch." It urged the
"international community to recognize our demands, 'which
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) - An F-16 fighter pi)ot who are for peace, not for war."
flew off course and collided with . a small plane, killing its
The Slav-led Macedonian government did not immediatepilot, has been cleared of wrongdoing.
ly react to the communique. But officials repeatedly have said
"Although Capt. Greg Kreuder was involved in the acci- they have no intention of negotiating with the rebels, whom
dent, I did not frnd any indicators that· warrant disciplinary
they have branded as "terrorists."
action against him," Col. Stephen T. Sargeant said Monday.
Ja cq ues Olivier, a flight instructor, was killed · in the
November c rash.
Kreuder was following a lead pilot, Lt. Col. James Parker,
MOSCOW (AP) -The Russian space agency on tuesday
nn his way frnm Moody Air Force Base in Georgia to a
set a final firm date for dumping the Mir space station, sayb'ombing range in central Florida.
ing it would be brought down into the South Pacific on Friday by a six-hour series of engine pushes.
The Progress cargo ship docked at the station will "fire its
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prosecutors in the trial of an engines twice during two consecutive orbits to lower the staAlgerian accused of smuggling bomb-making materi·als into tion. Several hours later, it will fire one last time to send the
the United States say they intend to link him to a fourth station hurtling into the South Pacific between Australia and
Chile at around 9:30a.m. Moscow time Friday, said Russian
alleged conspirator, an Algerian facing charges in London.
The government's intent surfaced Monday during lengthy Aerosp"ace Agency spokesman Konstaniin Kreidenko.
Mission Control officials say they have conducted 50,000
questioning of a retired Canadian immigration official who
comfJuter
simulations of the descent process to make sure
dealt with the arrival of defendant Ahmed Ressam in Canathat the station's debris land in the designated ocean area.
da in 1994.

Turner will drop WCW show

Witness: embassies targeted

Crew checks on weather

Rebels ready to talk

Military clears F·16 pilot

Mir will ·be dumped Friday

Prosecutors look at susped lin~

Code No. 323.08.of Stahl of Ohio, do hereby viva notlc:. of

I

The Daily Sentinel

Campaign finance debate begins with dose vote

for2000

Sub officer apologizes
as hearing nears end

Inside:

-

lox ·Vllluation.

u

TOWNSHIPS
SCHOOL DISTRICTS

HIGHLIGHTS
Etherton goes
under the knHe
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Cincinnati Reds right-hander
Seth Etherton was scheduled
for arthroscopic surgery on ,
his right shoulder Tuesday to
remove bone spurs and to
repair the torn labrum.
'
Dr. Timothy Kremchek, the
Reds' medical director, was to
perform the surgery at Good
Samaritan
Hospital
in
Cincinnati.
Etherton, 24, was acquired
by the Reds on Dec. 10 from
the California Angels in
exchange for infielder Wilmy
Caceres.

. Sylvester,
Sullinger named
D-rs top players ·

LETART

31111111

40.420157

3t.a811102

41.21-

RHI - · t u N
no1 boen pold 111he- o l - oollec1ion !101'1' a ponaJ1V of ton parcont. Tuea may be paJd 11 the- ol
by moil. P - bring yolK 1111 tax rocotpt; oncl WIOU P1tf by malt, lie 11ft 10 your property by t.xlng cl!l1tlol and aociOH IWnPOCI
Always examine your tu recelpl to . . that It ooverw eft yOur pruprl!ty. Ofllce haurlp 1:30 A.M. to 4:00P.M. Monday through Fridlly- Ctoled
Faiturt to rtcelw t.IK ltala ntntt dote not aYOICI any ptnllty, . . , . , or Charge tncUrredfor IUd1 delay. Ohio Revllld Code 323.,13. Ctotlno date
HOWARD E. FRANK, ~County Tr. .urer

Eagles get back in the gym
after winning regional title
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
MEIGS - It wa~ back

EAST
to business
for Eastern on Monday after,the Eagles took
a couple of days off to celebrate the school's
first-ever regional championship.
Eastern (22-3) defeated Worthington
Christian 79-71 in an emotionally and physically exhausting overtime thriller Friday . to
earn a berth in this week's Division IV state
.tournament. The Eagles will face Tipp City
Bethel at 2 p.m. Friday in the state semifinals.
For head coach Howie Caldwell and his
team, this has been an extremely busy . time,

but also a very rewarding time.
"It's been a very, very exciting time," said
Caldwell. "The phone has rung with congratulations offered by a lot of nice people.
Today (Monday) at school, 1 think we sold
something like 600 tickets in two to three
hours. I think it's a very exciting time; the
kids and the players are very excited. lt's good
for the community, gbod for the area. It's
great."
Caldwell said that the fan support this Eastern team has enjoyed has been rather over-

Please see Eastem. 16

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

Wisconsin sacks
hoops coach
MADISON, Wis. (AP) Brad Soderberg will not keep
the Wisconsin basketball job, a
decision that comes four days
after the Badgers were ousted
in the first round of , the
NCAA tournament.
Soderberg replaced Dick
Bennett three games into the
season. Bennett quit because
he was tired of coaching and
picked Soderberg to step in
.for him.
· Soderberg won his first
eight games, the first Wiscon·sin coach to do that since
:1911, and was the only firstyear UW coach to take the
-Badgers to the NCAA tour'nament. But they were upset
by Georgia State in the first
round Thursday.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - A student newspaper
joined the dispute regarding
Dale Earnhardt's autopsy
photos, requesting that it be
allowed to see them.
• The Independent . Florida
Alligator, which is run by
University of Florida students
but is not an official university publication, filed a motion
in a Daytona Beach court Friday.
A . settlement between
Earnhardt's widow and the
Orlando Sentinel and a bill
prop~sed in the state Legislature limiting access and barring publication of the photos
is not in the public's best
interest, Alligator editor Jasqn
Brown said.

I .

ENOUGH SAID - This sign above the door to the gym at Eastern says it all. (OVP staff photo)

Distrid 13 stars shine at Rio

COLUMBUS (AP) -Two
players from high-profile programs headed for higher-profile programs took the top
honors on the 2000-2001
Associated Press Division I
boys All-Ohio high school
basketball team announced
Monday.
Cincinnati Moeller's Matt
Sylvester, a 6-foot-7 senior,
shares the player of the year
honors in the big-school division with Thomas Worthing, ton's J.J. Sullinger.
Sylvester, who has signed to
· play next season at Ohio
State, averaged 21.4 points
-and 7.5 rebounds a game
while shooting 48 percent
fiom 3-point range.'
Sullinger, a 6-5 senior who
will · next play for Arkansas,
had averages of 20.6 points,
8.8 rebounds, 6 assists, 2.1
blocks and 1.8 steals a game.
The coaches of the year in
the division are Jed Dunn,
who led Lyndhurst Brush to a
17-3 record and a league title,
and Columbus Brookhaven's
Bruce Howard.

Student paper
wants photos

LEBANON

II

'I'uFsDAY'S

l'uesd.y, ~rch 20. 1001

ALL.STAR MVP - Meigs senior Amber Vining helped lead the Division 1-11 All-Stars to a 5956 wln over the Division 111-lV team in the District 13 All-Star Game. (Doug Shipley photo)

RIO GRANDE - The
Division 1-11 teams reigned
supreme Monday.
During the District 13 AllStar boys and girls games at
Newt Oliver Arena, the Division 1-11 rallied in the fourth
quarter and the boys controlled the game throughout
to sweep the Division III- IV
squads.
In the girls game, the Division 1-11 team was without the
services of district player of
the year Beth Howe, but came
away with a 59-56 victory.
The Division III- IV team
led by 14 early in the second
half and by 11 with 19 seconds left in the third quarter
after a basket by Eastern's
Danielle Spencer.
That's when the bigger
schools be8an to dominate, led
in part by Gallia and Meigs
county girls .
A pair of free throws by
Gallia Academy's Tiffanie
Hager to end the third quarter
and a 3-point goal by River
Valley's Cynthia Ward to open
the fourth, sparked a 16 point
run by the Division 1-11 squad
as they went on top 54-49.
During that span, Amber
Vining of Meigs made a pair
of 3-pointers as she made
eight of her 12 points on the
night.
For her efforts, Vining was
named her team's most valuable player.
Also for the Division 1- 11
team, Marietta's Jen Gwin
scored 12 points, Hager added
10 and Ward finished with
nine.

Amanda Downs of Logan
pitched ·in with seven points,
Rock Hill 's Dobbi Clark
scored five and Logan's Adrienne McCabe each had two.
Jessica Esnor of Ironton was
named MVP of the Division
lli~lV squad with 16 points.
Josie Carr of Alexander led
all scorers with 18 points for
the Division 111-lV team,
while Fairland's Ashley Harris
scored nine, Alexander's Lisa
Kubachka had eight and
Spencer scored five.
The smaller schools brought
the game to within two points
on a basket by Carr and a free
throw by Spencer. But a pair
of Vining free throws and
another foul shot by Downs
helped the l)ivision 1-11 squad
regain a five point lead and,
with the help of a late Hager
bucket, hold on to the win.
In the boys contest, the
Division 1- 11 team took a 2913 lead at the end of the
opening quarter, and fought
off charges by the Division
111-lV team to pick up an 8163 win.
The Division lll- lV team
was without the seniors from
Eastern . (Matt Simpson, Joe
Brown- and Chad Nelson),
who are preparing to play in
the state tournament this
weekend in Columbus.
A well-balanced scoring
attack paced the Division 1-11
team, led by Athens Wade
Martin with 13 points, includrng
three 3-poiilters, and
Meigs' J.P. Staats . with 12
points.
Gallia Academy's Dustin

Ple1se see Stars. 16

Southwest Missouri State shocks Rutgers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

first-round win over Toledo.
"My hat's off to Jackie Stiles," Stringer said. "She
is the hardest working player. She is a WNBA player. I would love to have her as a professional coach."
Southwest Missouri State, a No. 5 seed, was one
ofjust three teams to advance to the round of 16 by
winning on its opponent's floor. Sixth-seeded
Washington did it in the West Regional and 1Othseeded Missouri advanced as a visiting team in the
East. Both won second-round games on Sunday.
Otherwise, it's business as usual in the regional
semifinals. Defending national champion Connecticut i~ in. So are Tennessee, Louisiana Tech,
Duke and Notre Dame. Tennessee ·played Sunday
night. The others all won big on Monday.
Connecticut, the top seed in the East, rolled over ·

Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer believes there's
a place for someone like Jackie Stiles.
It's called the WNBA.
Stringer watched with a mixture of agony and
awe Monday night as Stiles knocked Rutgers, a
.Final Four team last year, out of the N::::AA tournament.
Stiles scored 32 points, including 17 in the final
6:57, as Southwest Missouri State beat the Scarlet
Knights 60-53 in the second 'round of the West
Regional at Piscataway, NJ.
Most times, that would be just a routine game for
Stiles, the NCAA career scoring leader. But this
came against a team noted for tough defense and
two nights after she suffered a mild concussion in a

Colorado State 89-44. In two tournament games,
the Huskies have given up an average ofjust 36.5
points.
'.' Everything goes back to our defense," UConn's
Swin Cash said. "We were getting o.ut, pressing in
the wing, trying to make them go back door. Our
defense took care of everything, basically."
Louisiana Tech, seeded third in the East, beat
TCU 80-59.
In the Midwest, top-seeded Notre Dame cruised
past Michigan 88-54, third-seeded Vanderbilt was a
65-59 winner over Colorado and fifth-seeded Utah
defeated Iowa 78-69.
Top-seeded Duke moved on in the West with a

Ple•se see NCAA. B6

·oayton moves on in NIT after win over Spiders
DAYTON (AP) -Dayton
coach Oliver Purnell feels
lucky that his team is alive for
the third round of the
National Invitation Tournament.
And he realizes that staying
alive won't get any easier.
"We're going to be playing
another difficult team in
·Detroit," Purnell said Monday
after savoring a 71- 56 secondround victory over Rich-

'.

'

mond. ''But we have a chance
to play for a championship.
We're one game away from
New York."
The winner of the DaytonDetroit contest later this week
will advance to the NIT
semifinals at Madison Square
Garden.
"Those guys are solid,"
guard Tony Stanley said of
Detroit. "They have a very
good guard in Rashaud

Phillips. But I don't think it
will be a matchup of me versus ·him. 1t's going to be our
defense versus their defense:·
Stanley broke the Richmond game open· with 14
second-half points that featured a steal and a breakaway
dunk with 6:05 left that fired
up the hometown crowd and
sapped the spirit of Richmond.
''I'm not trying to end my

career at UP,'' said Stanley, a
senior who had a game total
of 17 points. "I'd like to end
my career in New York."
Dayton (21-12) got hot
when it counted.
With the score tied at 5050 with 7:23 remaining, the
Flyers went on an 18-3 run,
paced by Stanley and Brooks
Hall, who finished with 14
points.
Richmond (22-7) got into

team foul trouble about midway in the seco nd half,
enabling Dayton to seal the
game at the foul line.
Greg Stevenson scored 21
points and grabbed six
rebounds for Richmond, but
the Spiders shot only 25 percent from the 3-point line,
making five of 20.
The Flyers won the battle

Pluse IH Flyers, Bl

�Page B 2 • The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

440

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OJ S o e Stock
Co ec ons 937)875 2930 A e
600pm

460 Space for Rent

(740)38~71

IUUTI~UL APA~TMINTI AT

330 F1rm1 for Sale

620 Wanted to Buy

Tw n Ave Towe s now aooept ng
apphca ons fo 1 BA
HUO subs d zed ap fo elderly
and d sabled EOH (304)(1756679

3 Bed oom Bath House Wash
e &amp; D yer New Ca pe $450
man h P us $200 Depot 1 No
Pe s 1 Mile Up Route 2 At G en
wood
(304)576 9991
0
(304)1175 0127

a11m•11o

ONLY U15 00 DOWN end
$188 58 t month move• you In o
• New 3 bedroom 2 blth nome
Calfo dOlO • 740 385 •387

The Dazly Sentznel
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

NH415 D scb ne Leu Than 200
Acres $11 000 (304)937 3435

CaTofFoe
I -888-816 835

MOBIL£ HOME OWNERS

New
Fleetwood
161180
$19 999 00 3 Bedroom 2 Balh I

BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CRED T FOR LISTINGS CALL
1 B00-338 0020 ... 8811
1 112 11ory 3 btaroom bllh big
k tchtn newly rtmodtltd on 1
acre of and w 2 atorv garage
OyOIVI I Rd 185 000 740 7.2

Ta a Townhouse Apa mens
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oors CA 1 2 Bath Fully Ca
peted Adu Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Pa o Sa $365 Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Secu ty Deposit Re
qu red Days 740 446 348
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740
446-Q101

Rent On

440

SO DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;

\

Rea 11 ate wanted I am to cad
out of my nouae ro h ghway m
p ovemen Looking lo old fa m
noun n Mt 01 County w th
ocroogt col 1•0 7&amp;7 &amp;303 740
9921132

House
Tra e
Fo
Aent
Below Ga po s Locks On S a •
Route 7 Soui11 (740)441-oe 9

Fleduced 1991 Sunen na Slnglt

310 Homealor Sale

Oakwood Apartments
60 Be
ween Town &amp; Hotze 1 Bed oom
Stove Ref ge ato Fu n shed No
Pes Oepost $190 Pus U tes
Ca (740)446-3929 Anar 7pm

Real Eatete
Wanted

New 14 ft wide $499 down only
$199 per mon call now 1 BOO
69 -fln7

w dt 1e.ao Th 11 Bldroom 2

WI Powtrwttl\ HOUIII T a e 1
And RV 1 Contac Ron At
(740)448 0 ! o 339 09SO If
No An1wt Leave Meuaga

360

no pelS

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
o $500 ns ant y l:ly phone
877 EARLYPAY L c• 750005 S1
ADVANCE FREEl

POSTAL JOSS 10 S a 35 h
WILDLIFE JOBS o $21 60 h n
c udes Btntf Ia No Expe tnce
Ntctua y Fo App cat on and
Exam nto ca 1 800 992 7054
x208 M F a 30 5 OOpm

Two acre ot fo tall off New Uma
Ad water &amp; eewer nt up 7&lt;40
742 2803

2 bed oom mobile home to ent

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD ES Home S udy app oved
A lo dab e camp ehens ve egal
tan ng s nee 890 FREE Cata
log 800 826 9228 w e PO Bo)C
70 449 Oa as TX 75370 NA o
h p www backs one aw com

NOWHIRNG
EAAN UPTO $10 OOAN HOUR
$7 50 An Hour To Start
(QUII'IInllld Salary)
Men and Women Needed To Oo
Te ephone Opera o Wo k Fo
RADIO STATION PROMOT ONS
Homemaker work while
en d en In 1c::hoo
DAY AND EVENINQ SHIFT
AVAILABLE
FULL AND PAin TIME
OPENINGS
NO EX PER ENCE NEEDED
TRA N NCl PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply n Pt oon AI
303MinS HI
fto nt Pluun WV
1\Hiolley Mtrch 20th
Wodneodoy M1rch 2111
Thul'ldey Mtrah 22nd
3 oopm Unll I OOpm ONLY
AtkForMt W t

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Con Have Land? We Dollt Hu y
On~ 0 lolA Loft 304 738-7295

1998 Oakwood Mol:lla Home 2
Bed oom 2 Salh 521 500
(304)727 :196' Aflo 6pm

230

Gallpo 11 Caree Co ege
(Ca ee s C ose To Home
Ca I TOday 740 446 4367
BD0-214 0452
Reg 1190 05-12748

EZPETRX COM Save up to SO%
on ALL pe mad cations and suppi es Inc ud ng Hea tga d nte
cep to F on ne morel I FAEE
SH PP NG 0 de onl ne www Ez
pe R)C com 80Q.844-1427

997 F eetwood Home 4x70 3
Bed oom 2 Batl't Cent al A
E eo Me Ca (304)675 2058 (304)
675 3927

URGENTLY NEE OED p asma
donas ean$45to$60fo 2o 3
hou s week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592.£65

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL FOLKS

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS Even w h
less than per ec c ed I 1 800
477 9018 Code /4C 2 wwwomc
sOiu Ions com

for Sale

14x70 Southern Dream fee De
very I ee Setup on y $9995 1
888 9213428

140

Chu en Build ng w th Parsonage
to sale located n Point Pleasan
Good Ne ghl:lo hOod Reduced
$6! 000 (304)675-1618

320 Mobile Homes
t21t50 Mobile Home New K tch
en New Bathroom New F oors
18x8 Cove ed Porch Cent al A
$5 000 (7•0144 1-9389

Dayton led most of the first
half taking a 3 2 lead at 18 43
and bmlding a none pomt
bulge But Stevenson s 11
first half pomts and Rich
mends sufTocatmg defense
that kept the Flyers from get
ung the ball onsodc enalllcd
the Sp1ders to creep back and
trall only 30 27 at halfume

Purnell md he was warned
when Richmond began to
take control of the game at
the start of the second half
I m glad we did not col
lapse at that poont Purnell
sa1d
We started gemng
steals loose balls and the zone
was workmg well Stanley
broke the game open That s
why I m glad we have him
around

Building•

Aenta Property 3 Lots N ce 3BA
Houses On Each Co ne Lot 50
Vacant Lot n M ddle Co ne Of
Rand &amp; Perch Sl eat Kanagua
Ohio Owner MuSI Sei Due To II
ness (740)ol.l6-7•73

1978 Norris 141t70 2 Bed oom
Bath D nlng Room &amp; La ge Uv ng
Room 8X24 Po ch Unde p nn ng
2 AC s Inc uded
$9000
(740)742-4119

JOB POSTING
W f C DlreciOr
~Jackson V non Com
mun ty Achon Inc Curren ly Has
A Pos lon Ava table Fo WI C
0 ector Th s Is A Ful Year Po
s \on Sa ary Range s $ 1 0().
S 5 00 pe Hou Based On Qua
f ca on And Ellpe ence Wo k
Schedule M F B 4 30
M111or Besoons b!hl!es Responsbe Fo CompetngTheG ant
App !Ca ion And Ottle F sea A&amp;
qu ements Fo The Jackson
County Women nlan And Ch dren (W C) P ogram Aespons ble
ForSuparvsonOFWCC nc
Pe sonne Must Mon o As
s gned Caseload Vendo Actl\l
1es W C C nk: Ope allons AAd
Perfo m WIC Can fleattons Aespons be Fo Commumcat on
And Coo Clina 10n Of The WIC
Prog am Actlv t es wnn Local
And S ale Agenc es Must Have
EKcelenl 0 at And W itten Com
mumca Ions Sk lis Some 1i avet
Is Requ ed
Ouahl!cahons Reglsle ed Li
censed 0 etlclan In The Stale 0
Ohio P elerred Reg s e ed Nu se
0 0 e elte TechniC an May Qua
fty Mus Have Va id Ohio 0 v
er's License And Own Ae ab a
Transpo tal on Previous Supe
vlsory EKpe ence And Know
edge 01 Prena a In an And
Ch ld Nu !ilion P eferred Compu
e Sk Is AeqUI ed Know edge Of
Netwo k ng E)CC8 And Word A
Plus
Subm t Resume W th Cove Le
e To Chery Thessen E11ecutve
0 acto Ma To JVCA 4333
SaeRoue327 We son Oho
45692 An Agency App ca on
Must Be Comple ad P or To neNiew A JOb Oesc 1p ion Is
Ava lab o By Ca ng (740)384
3722 Ext 19 2 Dead ne Fo Ap
pynglsMach30 200 0 unt
PoSition s F ed JVCA Is An
Equa Oppo un ty Employe p avide of Serv~ces Aux ary Ads
And Services A e AvaMal:l e
Upon Reques To nd v duals
W h D sal:l es Oh o Relay
Se v ce 800.750 0750

of the boards outre bound
mg Rich nand 36 28
They had a heck of a run
R1chmond
coach
john
Beilem md of Dayton We
ran onto a very good team
today We fought back onto

s~ns:a.ttonal

340 Bualneaa and

41 0 HOUIII for Rant

Jackson Avenue Story &amp; Ha
Fo ma Din ng &amp; llv ng Room
Basement Garage &amp; N ce Lot
Need Offor Ca Somerv It Really
(304)67! 3030 (304)675343

the game but thc1r run at the

end was

from Pap II

AUTOS FROM S500 00
Po ce Impounds &amp; Aepos
Toyooas Chevy'o JtOfll
Pease Ca Ifo Us no•
1 80()..451.0500 E1t C9817

ll~NTALS

Poa a Jobs $48 323 oo y Now
tl lno No e~tpe lence pa d t a n
ng g ea belief a ca 7 days
800-429 3660 ... J 365

Homewo ke s Needed
$635 weekly p ocess ng ma 1
Easy No expe ence needed
Ca 800-490 9450 24 h s
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Awlab e n Ou C rcu alieni
Marketing Department
Are you look ng for a tu I time
po- lllal offofl opponunll)l fo
acfvance1'1l8nl? Do you enJOy
work ng With youth? Do you en a;
sa es? Do you enjoy be ng crea
ve? Do you have dependab e
transporta JOn? f so you could
be he person we a e ook ng to l
Pes lon oHe s a company
benefitS nc ud rrg heanh and 1fe
nsu anee 4 OK plan pad hoi
davs and vaca ion plan
Fo nteN ew cons de alion
send you resume with a b te
cove Jette te Nng us why you a e
the person we are look ng lo to
PAUL BARKER
Clrcullllon Director

Merchandlae

arv

Own a PC? Put 1 to Wo k Fo a
free book at ca 800 429 5853 o
vall us on ne
www getpcwo k com

Handyman fo yardwort odd jobs
fence bu ld ng and epa r ca 1
740 S.9 2582 aho 6 OOpm

www 4dalematchmaker ne

Business
Opportunity

AOVEFIT S NG SPECIAL TIES

All roof eotaiO adwnlslng n
s lubf8CI to
lho Federal Fair Housing N:l
of 1968 which makes It llegal
to adver11ae arrt preference
limitation o disCrimination
buod on race color religion
aex lam a status or nation&amp;
origin 01' any lfltenHon 1o
make
such preference
mltaticm o diacrimlnatlon
thJI newspape

NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecom mends hat you do l:lus
ness w h peop e you know and
NOT o send money th ough he
rna unl you have nves ga ed
he offenng

Peraonala

Not do-h voursaH k
CALL BOO 263 0!03 lo FREE
n o mat on Bank uptcy nia n TN/
KY

540 Mlacellaneoue

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS Sma
Oeposl WJ hold Up o 60% OFF
401t75 50K90 501t120 801t1 50
Boa Olft I Ooug I (800) 778
!07

$501 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING W TH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PER ENCE RE
OUIRED 1 BOO 748 57 6 EXT
XIO

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tappan HI Eff c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 I Fu naces 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond I on ng
Sys ams Free 8 Year War an y
Bennetts Hea lng &amp; Coo lng
800 872 5967 www oNb com/ben
noH

TRANSPORTATION
'2 f!OO.f1 28 000 a..
One hOUr approval Call
lloll·free 1 888-605 3379

988 Chevy Co s ca V 6 au
oma lc PW $400 down $ 00
mon h 1992 Geo Slo m 5 speed
am m casse e $400 down S100
mon h ca 74Q-398 9693 o 740
742 7428 Buy he e pay he e

Home
Improvements

App e c y Auto Sales o
Jackson Oh o 0 le s Many Good
Used Ca s Sa 1ng At $500 Ana
Up Sop In And See Us Fo The
Dea s A 64 0 ckason 51 Ac ass
F om Save A Lo G ace y 0
Ca (740)288 618 M Sa ooam
To 5 OOpm

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Heat
Pumps l P &amp; Natu a Gas Fur
naces I You Con t Call Us We
Bo h Lose (740)446 6306 &amp;
1800-2910098

Sawm $3 795 New Supe Lum
l:le mate 2000 a gar capac 1ea
mo a opt ons Manulactu e of
sawm lis edge s and sk dde 6
NORWOOD NDUSTRIES 252
Sonw 0 Iva Buffalo NY 14225
FREE In o mal on
800 578
1383 EXT 200-U

ONE 1 mple low monthly
ori1EIIrninllll High nter11l Save
bloom ng debt tree Program•
homeownera and "en ·-·~ •
cre&lt;lt dHficuiUea Speola z ng
oollectlon aooounll madlcll
andu.,.ocu,•d loan~ Call

Tobacco P ants 0 de Now To
Gua antee Ea 1y Sp ng Plan ngs
Inc ease A otmen s Mean Ex a
Pan s Thank You Fo You Bus
ness Cal Danny Dewhu st
leave Message (304}895 3740
Or 304)895-3789

720 Trucks for Sale

110 Help Wanted
1995 Chevy Monte Ca o Z34
Lea he Cd Loaded (740)245
9480
1995 s 10 $4395 994 s 10
$3491 1992 Lum na $ 495 993
Caval or s1896 988 0 ds 88
$99! I 9a5 Monlo Ca o $2795
COOK MOTORS (740)448-0103

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorles

Budget Priced T antmlnlont
A Types Access To Over
o coo T ansm u ont Trans ar
Cases 740 24! 5677 Ce I 339
376!

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Home•

1181 Oranel Am GT II filiOn
ab y lo01o y wo ran1v 1•0 ~92

2358

2 Natol T Cklll For VA500
FlaCJe At Maruna\1 le Moto
Spudwoy April 81h Exc1111n1
Suit (740)256-I:JOol
2 Prom Orton• 1 Long 1 Shon
9 za 11 Worn Once EKctlltnt
Cond ion $75 00 For Bolh DBO
(304)67!5-2515

1999 Coachman Ca a n• 37
Fool T ave T 1 1 B ana New
Ultd l I t AIOI 0 E&gt; II
(740)245-9480

3 STEEL BUILDINGS 24K30
was $7 SOO 111 $3 400 40a4a
waa$10900 Hi$5200 50xl20
was $21 900 ae S 900 N111er
Put Upl Can De ve Tom 1 (800)
3927803

91
Red
IUZU Amigo .4)14
5 Speed ea ooo M 11 s2a ooo
(3Qol)675 8781

AKC Aeglale ed Lab ftupp es
$100 Eoch (740)2M-11483

Full Blooded Cocke Span e
Fupploa $150 Each (740)446
2988

810

CARS $29 MONTHI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPO S HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO S 0 9 9•• FOR
LIST NGS CALL 1 800 94 I
8777"
9814

Home
Improvement•

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOF NQ
Uncond lona te me gua an ee
Loca e e ences u n shea Es
tab shed 975 Ca 24 H s 740
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rog
esWaep oo n~

c

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

38 Gil Cookl 0vt Needa Thar
mo1tat For Ovan $!50 00 080
(740)44ll-4880
&amp;2 Geo Matro Oood Work Car
$700 Ani que Herv1 d Uprlghl
$250
Plano With Btnch
(740)1197-5927

94 Ou chman Camper 3 f WI n
Expando Room Eve yth ng Ready
To Go Camp ng Ron Shtlts
(740)44 9!31

SERVICES

Oel.ong'l G oom Shop Groom ng
AI D9g B-1 7ll0 401 1602

Full and p1rt tlmt poalllona evalleble
Compltl• training provided with flexible houl'8

Earn up to $15 /hour
Full time poeltlanl offer benefit package which
lncludtl Medical OenloV401K/Pd Vacotlono

CALL TODA'l

START TOMORROW!

1-888-974-JOBS
MANAGEMENT

984 Ford F 3eO Pow• 11 oke
4•4 69 000 m 01 512 500 Good
Cond on (740 388 88!8 tven
ngs (740)389 9053 dayt

1540 Mlacelleneou•
Merchandlae
$0 DOWN HOMES
NO Credit OKI HUD VA
FHA. Call for Ill ng&amp;
I 800-!01 1777 E" &amp;a18

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED

Clvlo Dovolopmont Oroup/MIItannlum Tal11arvlceo

18&amp;&amp; Ford E&gt;p o tr XLT losdod
v a gorago kapl 20 ooo mill
740 802 7817
LlrQI Co ilclion ol Anaqut Pool!
et Watchll Qood Condit on 422
20&lt;1 Avo phone (740)446-1815

ClASSII'IEIDSI

9 S 10 EKtended Cab V 6 5
speed a r uns &amp; looks good
$2 !0 740 742 2780

898 Chevy Tahoe 4 Coo
Owpor WOOD (740,.48-«1748

Antlquaa

Electncal and
Relrlgeralton

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

750 Boats &amp; Motors
I
lor Sale

1995 Ford Asp o(304)67Hl008
SUN SAND SURF Wh le sandy
beachll latlu ous sunse s De
uxa roomaJk chine es &amp; ba co
nles ove coking the gu f ol Mtltl
co Island Inn Beactl Resort
Treasu e slenel FLA 800 2-41
9980 www • and nn 110 t com
NearS Pt eraburg

840

999 Honda CR250 Eitel en
Cond lion As&gt; ng $3100 (740)
441 690

C&amp;C Genera Home Man
tenence Pa nt ng v nv s d no
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob te home repa ana mo e Fo
ee est mate cal Che 740 992
6323

nu

Established local company looklno to 5
entry•leval manaoement positions
Associates de;ree or mana;ement
1xperlence Solid people skills oroanlzatlonal
skills, and self motivation are a must
S23·$30k to start
Benefits and 401 K plan available

1-888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Dev•lopment Group/MIII•nnlum tolaMrVIe••

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed In Meigs County Hours 1Opm Frl thru Bam
Mon sleep over required Dulles 1nclude teaching
community and personal skills to an lndovldual w th
mental retardation Requirements High school
diploma /GED valid drivers llcensa three years
good dnvlng expenence and adequate automobile
rnsurance coverage Starting salary $6 00/hr
Send resume to Buckeye Community Services
P0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Deadline lor
applicants 3/29/01 Equal Opportunity Employer

�Page B 2 • The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

440

Apartment•
for Rent

Fu n ahtd 2 &amp; 3 Room Ape 1
mentt Clean No Pet&amp; No Smok
ng Re e enc•• &amp; Depos 1 Ae
qu ed Uti t es Fu n &amp;hed
(740)446- 519

All Porsonol

Announcement,
Glvoowoy Lool &amp; Found
Vanl Soloo ond Wanled
To Do Ado Must Be Paid

In Advance
TRIBUNE QEAQUNE
2 00 p m tho day before
the ad Ia to run Sunday &amp;
Monday edition 2 00 p m
Friday
SENJ!NEL OEAQUNE
1 00 p m tho day before
tho ad 11 to run
Sundoy &amp; Monday adRian
1 I)') p m Friday
REGISTER pEAQUNE.
2 daya before tho ad lo to
run by 4 30 p m Saturday
&amp; Monday odRion 4 30
Thursday
Doadllnoa subject to
chango due to holldayo

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Help Wanted

110

110

FINANCIAL

210

Needed Someone To l ve n And
G ve Ass s ance To E de y lady
n E1change Fo Room &amp; Boa d
Leave A Message 740 25e
68 0

WORK FROM HOME
$500 S 500 per mo Prr
$2000-$8000 pe mo Fir
No eKpe lance ne8118d
Train ng provlde&lt;l
800-680 9468

0 vorce S so
Bankruplcy $ 9!
Adop on$225
343 DRIVERS NEEDED No tx
PI tnct needed I Qu ck COL
a n ng prog am ava able Ea n
$36 000 ..- 1I year S STAR
800 4-48 6669 Exptr enctd d lv
e a hold no C aae A ca
800
918 2313
A NEW CAREER Exam Info ma
on to Poa al Jobs G 111 Pay
Banal 1
888 726 9083 ' 701
7am 7pmCST

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
In e ne Users Wanted
12000 $5000/mo
www e commblz m~t

Own A Compute 7
Pu Towo k
$25 $75/h PT FT
888-685 4325
wwwb hap com
Government Jobs
$1 00
$33 00 pe hou poten ea Pad
Tan ng Fu Bane ta For mo a
n o rna on ca 1 888 674 9 !10
lXI 3234

V s us on I me o r nd pe teet
mateo cal 1 868 915 3266 1

900 329 4638 $2 99 min

30 Announcements
New To YouTh tt Stloppe
9 West St mson Athens
740 592 1842
Qual y cloth ng and household
terns S 1 00 bag sa e every
Thu sday Monday th u Sa u day
9 ()().6 00

40

Giveaway

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Craf s
Toys Jewel y Wood Sew ng
Typ ng G ea Pay CALL 800
795-0380 Extt 20 (24h S)
Atten on
Work From Home
$1 200 $5 000/mo
I 877 582 1054

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP Work t om home Ma or
de E Comme ce $522 week PT
$1000 $4000 wk FT 800 92
8538 www drtam2bfrte com

Ohio V•lley Publishing

a26 THIRD AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS. OH 45131

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
Basement sa e Tuesday &amp; Wed
nesday Sa emS eet Rutland

80

Auction
and Flea Market

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ATIENTON
In ema IOnal company Expand ng
Wo k From Home or Off ce
$500 $6000/mo PT FT
MbM Order n e net
Pa~ Tralning/VacaiiOns
Ca 600 228 0317
www CashOnTheTablt com
IBe your own bo11
I om home Up to $500 $8000/MO
PIT Fir 800 811).070!
www caahNowAndFOteve com

CAREER OPPORTUNITY Earn
exce ent ncome Easy c a ms
process ng Fu ran ng Home
PC equ ed Cal Phys c an &amp;
Healthca e Deve opmen s o
free 1 800.772 5933 ex 2070
CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS
Your own home based bus ness
ma o de n e ne
$1 500
$7200 mo PTFT Fee noma
ton! 4 4 290 9526 www ts you
bzcom

DATA ENTRY
$45 000/y po en a
Need se Sla lers who equ e no
supe v son Ful T a n ng Set
Own Hou s Compute w modem
equ ed Ca To Fee 888
523-4417 eKt a&amp;4

DR VERS Cannon Exp ess
Lease P og am 83e m Owner
Ope a or aae m company d 'II
essta ngup o 34em w n
c eases to 39e m Pay alses
www cannonexpress com Ca 1o
data 11 I 800 845 9390
Dr ve a Weekends wilh you
tam ly on y a d um? Make a
ea ty w th Tandem T ana port
Corp
ona OTR f atbtd com
pony Coli odayl soo 5&amp;1 1057
t1tt -40 www tandcom

•o

12 000 WEIKLYI Milling COO
brochu 111 SIIIIIIC on Gul
anlttd floatage &amp; Suppllea p o
v dtd Aulh St I ACdrtlltd
Sllmptd Envt opt 0 00 DEPT
I Sox •31 ANTIOCH TN
370 1 •38 SIAn lmmed lily

$987 85 WEEKLY P OCIII ng
HUD FHA Mo 1gag1 Rofund&amp; No
Expo tnct Rtqu td Fo FAEE
nfo moton Ct I 1 100 101 5832
... 1300

0 VI I 14 oar COL an ng •NO
EXPER ENCE •38K Ill yoor •Fu I
bentf It Mtdka -4011&lt; •Lifttlmt
Job pltctmant •Tul on re mbu 11
mtnl f qual fad Cli 1 868 845
8505
D vo I B G MONEY NO EX
PER ENCE Ltl Ul lrl n )'OU In ou
qulctc C 111 A CDL prag 1m Job
P ecemtn Tu t on 111 1tanc1
lvailb t Clll I 177 8558424
EICJ)trltnctd dr VI I Cl 1 800
1!80.02S. M; 0218

a

boom ndus y And one ha can
make you $20 000 $30 000 even
$50 000 up om sa es o p omo
on a p oduc s 10 oca l:lus ness
commun ty p us $1000 up mon h
11 n ova des Top comm ss ons
advanced da y No co ect ons
no nven o'ry no del \lerles No
bus ness nvestmen A Sk.,less
oppo un y uto pat me You
ca I he shots and ael you own
hou I Ask IO
ee p oapeciUI
and 216 P•oe co mpetlt onleu
cata og To t et ptlone auppor
Ou c eden a a 07 years eon
nuous ope a on D&amp;S attd 3A 1
Fo nt ant act on ptlone L nda
Bu b nk 800 642 0790 or w tt
Kaese &amp; Bar Inc Dept P101
4238 C nom Or Batavia 01'1
4! 03

This newspaper w not
know1ngly accept
actvertlsemants for rea estate
whictl Is In vlofallon of the
law 01.1' readers are hereby
informed lhal al dwellings
aavenlaad In th s newspaper
are ava abll on an equa
opportunliy balit

2 SIOry B ~k """ OX ml tly 3400
$quart Ftll 1 I 2 Ac 11 Fu
Baeement
ut lUI Wtw 01 R v
1r Wll SU 500 Roducod To
$89 SOO By Appolnlmlnl On V
(740)2-172

a..

3 Bedroom 1 Betti F tmt hOutfl
w Attached Ga age 1 Ac111 ml
E1t ra Tra er Lot GCLS Rural
Waltl Ntar
(740)387 ms

C 1y

S55 000

Flyen

$800 30
Pump
S 25 Like New
&amp;Chair $300

EXTRA MONEY?? Work from
home a ound you schedule pa t
time u I ma Exce ant Income t
BOO 8 3 5694

Help wanted n adu group home
day and n ghl sh ft call 740 992
!023

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOMEI Bu d your own sue
cess u bus ness Ma o de E
Commerce $1000 $7000 PT FT
F ee nlo mat on www FocusOn
F eedom com 800 736 2334

H CUBE EXPRESS
Home Every Weekend Mo e
NO East Coast NO Touch
f ogh
75o/. 0 op Hook G eat Benef Is
Accep ng 0 der Modes
BOO 200 2823

MED CAL B LL NG Un mlled In
come po en a No e1tper ence
necessa y F ea nto ma on &amp;
CD ROM nvestmen f om $2495
F nanc ng ava abe (800) 322
139 EXT 050 www bus ness
sta up com

Housakeepe Needed Please
Apply At Budget nn Jackson
P ke Gall po s No PhOne Calls
Please

12x65 e~tcellent cood lion m4s1
see o app eclate please call If
nteres ed 740-247-4700

995 Schult 161t80 3 Bed oom
2 Ba h
Sha p Home $2 500
Kanuaga Mob a Home Sa les
(740)446-9662

Professional
Services

S FREE CASH NOW$ from
wea hy lam es unloael ng mlllk)ns
of do a s o help m nlm za their
axes W te lmmed ale 'I WINO
FALLS 30 0 WILSHIRE BLVD
•BB LOS ANGELES CAL FOR
NA9000

76 14X70 Bayview (wiDen) New
S nee 97 CIA Wale Heate
Furnace With F ant Porch Shed
&amp; Wood Fence
Lots 01
AemodOI ng Mull Sea $8 ooo
(304)67! 3008

Faclory Goo! 32x80 $10 000 Dis
coun only $1000 00 Down De
very and setup pa d l:ly Facto y
I 800-691.£777

150

Business
Tramlng

Schools
Instruction

CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Consol dat on to $200 000 Bad
No C ed C edt Ca ds Mort
gages Fo nfo ma on 1 800
335-76 2 ex 3622
CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBT! Reduce monlhly
paymen s Pay one b I month
EASY to get s a ed F nanclal
F eedom Ch sl an Counsel ng
BOO 84 9757
axl
CC3
www deb ccs o g (Non Prof )

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Comp ahens e a o C1
abe Home S udy ega a n ng
s nee 1890 Fee ca a og 800
826 9228 P0 Box 70 449 Da
las TX 75370 o ht p www back
&amp;loneawcom

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 888 8 1 0902

No Fees Serv ce cna gas In
Need of Finane a Anlatance?
Please C11l Us Toll F ee 888
613 8881 24hr
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY I&amp;SI?
NoFooUntiiWtWnl

I 618 582 :J3.1S

Lot model cle11 a"ce save up to
$8 e2s w h any home check us
out we e deal ng Coles Mob le
Homes US 50 East Athens Oh
Mus 5e 116xBO
Maka 2 Paymlms &amp; MCMI n
1-800 691-6777

1 3 Btd ooma Foreclostd
Homes From S 99/Mo •% Down
30 Vea a at 8 !5% APR Fo L s1
ngs soo 319 3323 E" 709
1800tl 3 Beclroom 2 Baltl a 908
Smokoy Rd S!2! mo (740)446
9487

New Fleetwood 14!C70 $16 999 00
3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 877 777
1170

Full Bllht W11ho &amp; Dryer Mull
s11 s13 900
1740)379-11231
Evonng&amp;

oao

2 Bedroom n Coun ry Stove
Ref ge ato C A Wale T ash
Paid No Pets $350 Oepos 1
Four Room House 52 0 lve
s oe jJhono (740)446-3945
Gal 1p0 s 750 3rd Ave $160
BR 1 Bath Fa me
Monttl
House Gas Heat No Pe s Wee
kends/Nghts (740)446-8614

226&lt;4

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES I
SO OR LOW DOWNI TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT FOR L ST NG CALL 1
BOO !01 777 txl 9a13

Downtown Second Avenue Nea
Cou !house And C y Bu ld ng
NceyOecoaed AC 3Aooms
Bu d ng By I sal 448 2nd Ave
(740)446-9539

"!II

630

Livestock

FREE G ant Money &amp;
ment fund ng Education Ho'"''r'o
Pu chase o Repa s Bus
Sta up o E1tpans on 1nvan1on
W e sAt s s &amp; Many Moe N
FORMAT ON 1 800 242 0363
8)( 4009 0
www gran s-dot com com
GET SEXY FOR SUMMER lose
3 5 lbs weekly Gus anteed con
I o c av ngs eel o aa Burn at
qu ck y Only $ 9 95 COOS
Ptlonechecks C ed t Cards
8Q0-256 09a9

Box 7~ Weatcheate ll
1 (708)212 5400 (24 houri)

Mallng OUr Salet Broctlures
Free Suppliee Postage
SIOrt lmmadlaloly
Genuine Opportunllyl
For Free nlormatlon

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ad New &amp; Rebu n S ock
Ca Ron Evans 800 537 9528

Huge nventory 0 scount P ces
On V nyl Ski I ng Ooo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wa er Haate s
P umb ng &amp; Elac lea Pa 1s Fur
neces &amp; Hea Pumps Bennet s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
9416 wwworvb com/bennett

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

A t Year Old Kenmore Waaher
Has 7 Cyc es Pad SS-49 W II

Take $200 Fl m (740)379-2388

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 Bedroom 1 2 Bath All
E ectrlc In Porte A II You
Pay
Depos t &amp;
Utll ues
(740)388-9182
2 bed oom lu nlshed o unfur
nJshed tra e n&amp;ltt o Wal Mart In
Mason cent a a r t nancla and
personal references equ ed no
pOlS 740-!!92 3961
740 992 5656

Appliances
Racond Uoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Retr
grato s Up To 90 Days Guar
an eedl We 5•11 New May ag Ap-P lances French City Maytag
740 446 7795

Pa ty supples de ve ed o you
doo I Ch stlan C own En e ta n
men Home Business Oppo tun ty
888 655 0607 Phone SOB 437
9511 E mall nasm h1 0 won com
www 1800pa tyconsultant com/
38786 Nancy Sm h 138786

e s dryers and retr gera o s

RCA ~ 3 nch Bad room Coo TV
W h l ghled Remote l ke New
S 00 Call (740)448-1155

QOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washe s d ye s ef ge a o s
anges Skaggs App ances 76
V ne Srraet Ca 740 446 7398
1888818028

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Matching Couch And Char S SO
And La ge Wooden Aock ng
Ctlair $25 Good Cond 1 on
(304)675 4137

New &amp; Used Fumilu e
New 2 Pace L vlng oom Suites
$399 Buy Sal Trade
New And used Fu n tu a Sto e
Balow Holiday nn Kanauga We
Se Gave Monuments And
Vases

2 Bed com Otposl No Pets
(740)241 5582 0 (740)441
9060
3 Bedroom 2 Bath No Petl
lnalde 0 Oulsldo (740)446

7322

Used Kenmore Washer I C yer
Good Condit on Wo ks Good
$300 Pair (740)ol.l6- 082

520

Apartments
for Rent

2 Apartment• For Rant n Rio
Grande Walk ng Olattnce To
Coltgo AI Ulllllltl Paid 10%
discount on I rtt monttll rtnt
(740)2-4&amp;-5100
?20 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upt11 ro Apt tm1n1 uoo •Do
POIII Wtltr Stwtr Tr11h Paid
(H0)441 82 8 (Doy) (740)441
0101 (Evonlngo)
IUDOIT PftfCII AT JACK
ION IITATII 82 Wttlwood
D lvo from 12&amp;7 10 $383 Wolk 10
ohOp &amp; movln Col 7•0
21588 Equol Houalng Opportunity
Chr lly 1 ~1m y L vlng, 33140
NIW Liml Ad RUUtn&lt;J Ohio 7407'2 7•03 Aplrlmonl home and
t a tr rent111 Commerc 11 IIOrt
I ontl 1\11 ablt ro 11111 vacan
ella flOW

Sporting
Goode

Go f C ubo Sp lng Cilanlng Sail
lnd ah Crook Go f Range Ping
Cal oway Tay or Made Cob a
(7110)245-57•7

530

and 2 bfdroom apartment• tu
nlshed tnd unfurnished eecu ty
depos t requlr•d no ptta 740
992 2218

NEW AND USED STEEL Sloe
Beams P pe Reba Fo Cooc ate
Angle Channe Fltt Bar St••
G a ng ForD 1 ns Orvewaya &amp;
Wa kways L&amp;L Scrap Metals
(740)446-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS Almos eve yone app oved
w h SO dowfl Low mon h y pay
monoS! Hl()()-617 3476 eXI 330

Thompsons App lance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675-7388

Plot Program Ranters Needed
304 736 7295

New &amp; used E ec c And Gas
Furnaces For Sate Ga I FCJ S z
es
nsta a on
Ava lab a
(740)448-.£308 8()()-291-Q098

AlmonCI Whl pool Wh te Maytag
Kenma e Was he s $65 oo Each
A mond Wh lpool Mag c Chat
D yers $80 00 Each Wh te Dry
ors AlSO (740)446-9066

Fo Sate Recond 1 on ad wash

ue

88 Acre Farm For 8a 1 By Ownt
Wli11 11500 Sci Foil 3 Sld&lt;oom 1
I 2 Solh Homo W lh Oak Tr m
AnCI La ga K chen Hat A La gt
Ga ago And Barn W lh 40• Till
tb e Ao t t Excel tnt Locat on
Nu
R o Grandt
Aak ng
$129 900 (740)380-0259 Evon

950 a &amp; 1980 s 45 33 RPM
Reco ds
OJ S o e Stock
Co ec ons 937)875 2930 A e
600pm

460 Space for Rent

(740)38~71

IUUTI~UL APA~TMINTI AT

330 F1rm1 for Sale

620 Wanted to Buy

Tw n Ave Towe s now aooept ng
apphca ons fo 1 BA
HUO subs d zed ap fo elderly
and d sabled EOH (304)(1756679

3 Bed oom Bath House Wash
e &amp; D yer New Ca pe $450
man h P us $200 Depot 1 No
Pe s 1 Mile Up Route 2 At G en
wood
(304)576 9991
0
(304)1175 0127

a11m•11o

ONLY U15 00 DOWN end
$188 58 t month move• you In o
• New 3 bedroom 2 blth nome
Calfo dOlO • 740 385 •387

The Dazly Sentznel
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

NH415 D scb ne Leu Than 200
Acres $11 000 (304)937 3435

CaTofFoe
I -888-816 835

MOBIL£ HOME OWNERS

New
Fleetwood
161180
$19 999 00 3 Bedroom 2 Balh I

BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CRED T FOR LISTINGS CALL
1 B00-338 0020 ... 8811
1 112 11ory 3 btaroom bllh big
k tchtn newly rtmodtltd on 1
acre of and w 2 atorv garage
OyOIVI I Rd 185 000 740 7.2

Ta a Townhouse Apa mens
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oors CA 1 2 Bath Fully Ca
peted Adu Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Pa o Sa $365 Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Secu ty Deposit Re
qu red Days 740 446 348
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740
446-Q101

Rent On

440

SO DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;

\

Rea 11 ate wanted I am to cad
out of my nouae ro h ghway m
p ovemen Looking lo old fa m
noun n Mt 01 County w th
ocroogt col 1•0 7&amp;7 &amp;303 740
9921132

House
Tra e
Fo
Aent
Below Ga po s Locks On S a •
Route 7 Soui11 (740)441-oe 9

Fleduced 1991 Sunen na Slnglt

310 Homealor Sale

Oakwood Apartments
60 Be
ween Town &amp; Hotze 1 Bed oom
Stove Ref ge ato Fu n shed No
Pes Oepost $190 Pus U tes
Ca (740)446-3929 Anar 7pm

Real Eatete
Wanted

New 14 ft wide $499 down only
$199 per mon call now 1 BOO
69 -fln7

w dt 1e.ao Th 11 Bldroom 2

WI Powtrwttl\ HOUIII T a e 1
And RV 1 Contac Ron At
(740)448 0 ! o 339 09SO If
No An1wt Leave Meuaga

360

no pelS

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
o $500 ns ant y l:ly phone
877 EARLYPAY L c• 750005 S1
ADVANCE FREEl

POSTAL JOSS 10 S a 35 h
WILDLIFE JOBS o $21 60 h n
c udes Btntf Ia No Expe tnce
Ntctua y Fo App cat on and
Exam nto ca 1 800 992 7054
x208 M F a 30 5 OOpm

Two acre ot fo tall off New Uma
Ad water &amp; eewer nt up 7&lt;40
742 2803

2 bed oom mobile home to ent

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD ES Home S udy app oved
A lo dab e camp ehens ve egal
tan ng s nee 890 FREE Cata
log 800 826 9228 w e PO Bo)C
70 449 Oa as TX 75370 NA o
h p www backs one aw com

NOWHIRNG
EAAN UPTO $10 OOAN HOUR
$7 50 An Hour To Start
(QUII'IInllld Salary)
Men and Women Needed To Oo
Te ephone Opera o Wo k Fo
RADIO STATION PROMOT ONS
Homemaker work while
en d en In 1c::hoo
DAY AND EVENINQ SHIFT
AVAILABLE
FULL AND PAin TIME
OPENINGS
NO EX PER ENCE NEEDED
TRA N NCl PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply n Pt oon AI
303MinS HI
fto nt Pluun WV
1\Hiolley Mtrch 20th
Wodneodoy M1rch 2111
Thul'ldey Mtrah 22nd
3 oopm Unll I OOpm ONLY
AtkForMt W t

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Con Have Land? We Dollt Hu y
On~ 0 lolA Loft 304 738-7295

1998 Oakwood Mol:lla Home 2
Bed oom 2 Salh 521 500
(304)727 :196' Aflo 6pm

230

Gallpo 11 Caree Co ege
(Ca ee s C ose To Home
Ca I TOday 740 446 4367
BD0-214 0452
Reg 1190 05-12748

EZPETRX COM Save up to SO%
on ALL pe mad cations and suppi es Inc ud ng Hea tga d nte
cep to F on ne morel I FAEE
SH PP NG 0 de onl ne www Ez
pe R)C com 80Q.844-1427

997 F eetwood Home 4x70 3
Bed oom 2 Batl't Cent al A
E eo Me Ca (304)675 2058 (304)
675 3927

URGENTLY NEE OED p asma
donas ean$45to$60fo 2o 3
hou s week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592.£65

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL FOLKS

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS Even w h
less than per ec c ed I 1 800
477 9018 Code /4C 2 wwwomc
sOiu Ions com

for Sale

14x70 Southern Dream fee De
very I ee Setup on y $9995 1
888 9213428

140

Chu en Build ng w th Parsonage
to sale located n Point Pleasan
Good Ne ghl:lo hOod Reduced
$6! 000 (304)675-1618

320 Mobile Homes
t21t50 Mobile Home New K tch
en New Bathroom New F oors
18x8 Cove ed Porch Cent al A
$5 000 (7•0144 1-9389

Dayton led most of the first
half taking a 3 2 lead at 18 43
and bmlding a none pomt
bulge But Stevenson s 11
first half pomts and Rich
mends sufTocatmg defense
that kept the Flyers from get
ung the ball onsodc enalllcd
the Sp1ders to creep back and
trall only 30 27 at halfume

Purnell md he was warned
when Richmond began to
take control of the game at
the start of the second half
I m glad we did not col
lapse at that poont Purnell
sa1d
We started gemng
steals loose balls and the zone
was workmg well Stanley
broke the game open That s
why I m glad we have him
around

Building•

Aenta Property 3 Lots N ce 3BA
Houses On Each Co ne Lot 50
Vacant Lot n M ddle Co ne Of
Rand &amp; Perch Sl eat Kanagua
Ohio Owner MuSI Sei Due To II
ness (740)ol.l6-7•73

1978 Norris 141t70 2 Bed oom
Bath D nlng Room &amp; La ge Uv ng
Room 8X24 Po ch Unde p nn ng
2 AC s Inc uded
$9000
(740)742-4119

JOB POSTING
W f C DlreciOr
~Jackson V non Com
mun ty Achon Inc Curren ly Has
A Pos lon Ava table Fo WI C
0 ector Th s Is A Ful Year Po
s \on Sa ary Range s $ 1 0().
S 5 00 pe Hou Based On Qua
f ca on And Ellpe ence Wo k
Schedule M F B 4 30
M111or Besoons b!hl!es Responsbe Fo CompetngTheG ant
App !Ca ion And Ottle F sea A&amp;
qu ements Fo The Jackson
County Women nlan And Ch dren (W C) P ogram Aespons ble
ForSuparvsonOFWCC nc
Pe sonne Must Mon o As
s gned Caseload Vendo Actl\l
1es W C C nk: Ope allons AAd
Perfo m WIC Can fleattons Aespons be Fo Commumcat on
And Coo Clina 10n Of The WIC
Prog am Actlv t es wnn Local
And S ale Agenc es Must Have
EKcelenl 0 at And W itten Com
mumca Ions Sk lis Some 1i avet
Is Requ ed
Ouahl!cahons Reglsle ed Li
censed 0 etlclan In The Stale 0
Ohio P elerred Reg s e ed Nu se
0 0 e elte TechniC an May Qua
fty Mus Have Va id Ohio 0 v
er's License And Own Ae ab a
Transpo tal on Previous Supe
vlsory EKpe ence And Know
edge 01 Prena a In an And
Ch ld Nu !ilion P eferred Compu
e Sk Is AeqUI ed Know edge Of
Netwo k ng E)CC8 And Word A
Plus
Subm t Resume W th Cove Le
e To Chery Thessen E11ecutve
0 acto Ma To JVCA 4333
SaeRoue327 We son Oho
45692 An Agency App ca on
Must Be Comple ad P or To neNiew A JOb Oesc 1p ion Is
Ava lab o By Ca ng (740)384
3722 Ext 19 2 Dead ne Fo Ap
pynglsMach30 200 0 unt
PoSition s F ed JVCA Is An
Equa Oppo un ty Employe p avide of Serv~ces Aux ary Ads
And Services A e AvaMal:l e
Upon Reques To nd v duals
W h D sal:l es Oh o Relay
Se v ce 800.750 0750

of the boards outre bound
mg Rich nand 36 28
They had a heck of a run
R1chmond
coach
john
Beilem md of Dayton We
ran onto a very good team
today We fought back onto

s~ns:a.ttonal

340 Bualneaa and

41 0 HOUIII for Rant

Jackson Avenue Story &amp; Ha
Fo ma Din ng &amp; llv ng Room
Basement Garage &amp; N ce Lot
Need Offor Ca Somerv It Really
(304)67! 3030 (304)675343

the game but thc1r run at the

end was

from Pap II

AUTOS FROM S500 00
Po ce Impounds &amp; Aepos
Toyooas Chevy'o JtOfll
Pease Ca Ifo Us no•
1 80()..451.0500 E1t C9817

ll~NTALS

Poa a Jobs $48 323 oo y Now
tl lno No e~tpe lence pa d t a n
ng g ea belief a ca 7 days
800-429 3660 ... J 365

Homewo ke s Needed
$635 weekly p ocess ng ma 1
Easy No expe ence needed
Ca 800-490 9450 24 h s
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Awlab e n Ou C rcu alieni
Marketing Department
Are you look ng for a tu I time
po- lllal offofl opponunll)l fo
acfvance1'1l8nl? Do you enJOy
work ng With youth? Do you en a;
sa es? Do you enjoy be ng crea
ve? Do you have dependab e
transporta JOn? f so you could
be he person we a e ook ng to l
Pes lon oHe s a company
benefitS nc ud rrg heanh and 1fe
nsu anee 4 OK plan pad hoi
davs and vaca ion plan
Fo nteN ew cons de alion
send you resume with a b te
cove Jette te Nng us why you a e
the person we are look ng lo to
PAUL BARKER
Clrcullllon Director

Merchandlae

arv

Own a PC? Put 1 to Wo k Fo a
free book at ca 800 429 5853 o
vall us on ne
www getpcwo k com

Handyman fo yardwort odd jobs
fence bu ld ng and epa r ca 1
740 S.9 2582 aho 6 OOpm

www 4dalematchmaker ne

Business
Opportunity

AOVEFIT S NG SPECIAL TIES

All roof eotaiO adwnlslng n
s lubf8CI to
lho Federal Fair Housing N:l
of 1968 which makes It llegal
to adver11ae arrt preference
limitation o disCrimination
buod on race color religion
aex lam a status or nation&amp;
origin 01' any lfltenHon 1o
make
such preference
mltaticm o diacrimlnatlon
thJI newspape

NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecom mends hat you do l:lus
ness w h peop e you know and
NOT o send money th ough he
rna unl you have nves ga ed
he offenng

Peraonala

Not do-h voursaH k
CALL BOO 263 0!03 lo FREE
n o mat on Bank uptcy nia n TN/
KY

540 Mlacellaneoue

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS Sma
Oeposl WJ hold Up o 60% OFF
401t75 50K90 501t120 801t1 50
Boa Olft I Ooug I (800) 778
!07

$501 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING W TH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PER ENCE RE
OUIRED 1 BOO 748 57 6 EXT
XIO

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tappan HI Eff c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 I Fu naces 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond I on ng
Sys ams Free 8 Year War an y
Bennetts Hea lng &amp; Coo lng
800 872 5967 www oNb com/ben
noH

TRANSPORTATION
'2 f!OO.f1 28 000 a..
One hOUr approval Call
lloll·free 1 888-605 3379

988 Chevy Co s ca V 6 au
oma lc PW $400 down $ 00
mon h 1992 Geo Slo m 5 speed
am m casse e $400 down S100
mon h ca 74Q-398 9693 o 740
742 7428 Buy he e pay he e

Home
Improvements

App e c y Auto Sales o
Jackson Oh o 0 le s Many Good
Used Ca s Sa 1ng At $500 Ana
Up Sop In And See Us Fo The
Dea s A 64 0 ckason 51 Ac ass
F om Save A Lo G ace y 0
Ca (740)288 618 M Sa ooam
To 5 OOpm

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Heat
Pumps l P &amp; Natu a Gas Fur
naces I You Con t Call Us We
Bo h Lose (740)446 6306 &amp;
1800-2910098

Sawm $3 795 New Supe Lum
l:le mate 2000 a gar capac 1ea
mo a opt ons Manulactu e of
sawm lis edge s and sk dde 6
NORWOOD NDUSTRIES 252
Sonw 0 Iva Buffalo NY 14225
FREE In o mal on
800 578
1383 EXT 200-U

ONE 1 mple low monthly
ori1EIIrninllll High nter11l Save
bloom ng debt tree Program•
homeownera and "en ·-·~ •
cre&lt;lt dHficuiUea Speola z ng
oollectlon aooounll madlcll
andu.,.ocu,•d loan~ Call

Tobacco P ants 0 de Now To
Gua antee Ea 1y Sp ng Plan ngs
Inc ease A otmen s Mean Ex a
Pan s Thank You Fo You Bus
ness Cal Danny Dewhu st
leave Message (304}895 3740
Or 304)895-3789

720 Trucks for Sale

110 Help Wanted
1995 Chevy Monte Ca o Z34
Lea he Cd Loaded (740)245
9480
1995 s 10 $4395 994 s 10
$3491 1992 Lum na $ 495 993
Caval or s1896 988 0 ds 88
$99! I 9a5 Monlo Ca o $2795
COOK MOTORS (740)448-0103

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorles

Budget Priced T antmlnlont
A Types Access To Over
o coo T ansm u ont Trans ar
Cases 740 24! 5677 Ce I 339
376!

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Home•

1181 Oranel Am GT II filiOn
ab y lo01o y wo ran1v 1•0 ~92

2358

2 Natol T Cklll For VA500
FlaCJe At Maruna\1 le Moto
Spudwoy April 81h Exc1111n1
Suit (740)256-I:JOol
2 Prom Orton• 1 Long 1 Shon
9 za 11 Worn Once EKctlltnt
Cond ion $75 00 For Bolh DBO
(304)67!5-2515

1999 Coachman Ca a n• 37
Fool T ave T 1 1 B ana New
Ultd l I t AIOI 0 E&gt; II
(740)245-9480

3 STEEL BUILDINGS 24K30
was $7 SOO 111 $3 400 40a4a
waa$10900 Hi$5200 50xl20
was $21 900 ae S 900 N111er
Put Upl Can De ve Tom 1 (800)
3927803

91
Red
IUZU Amigo .4)14
5 Speed ea ooo M 11 s2a ooo
(3Qol)675 8781

AKC Aeglale ed Lab ftupp es
$100 Eoch (740)2M-11483

Full Blooded Cocke Span e
Fupploa $150 Each (740)446
2988

810

CARS $29 MONTHI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPO S HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO S 0 9 9•• FOR
LIST NGS CALL 1 800 94 I
8777"
9814

Home
Improvement•

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOF NQ
Uncond lona te me gua an ee
Loca e e ences u n shea Es
tab shed 975 Ca 24 H s 740
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rog
esWaep oo n~

c

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

38 Gil Cookl 0vt Needa Thar
mo1tat For Ovan $!50 00 080
(740)44ll-4880
&amp;2 Geo Matro Oood Work Car
$700 Ani que Herv1 d Uprlghl
$250
Plano With Btnch
(740)1197-5927

94 Ou chman Camper 3 f WI n
Expando Room Eve yth ng Ready
To Go Camp ng Ron Shtlts
(740)44 9!31

SERVICES

Oel.ong'l G oom Shop Groom ng
AI D9g B-1 7ll0 401 1602

Full and p1rt tlmt poalllona evalleble
Compltl• training provided with flexible houl'8

Earn up to $15 /hour
Full time poeltlanl offer benefit package which
lncludtl Medical OenloV401K/Pd Vacotlono

CALL TODA'l

START TOMORROW!

1-888-974-JOBS
MANAGEMENT

984 Ford F 3eO Pow• 11 oke
4•4 69 000 m 01 512 500 Good
Cond on (740 388 88!8 tven
ngs (740)389 9053 dayt

1540 Mlacelleneou•
Merchandlae
$0 DOWN HOMES
NO Credit OKI HUD VA
FHA. Call for Ill ng&amp;
I 800-!01 1777 E" &amp;a18

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED

Clvlo Dovolopmont Oroup/MIItannlum Tal11arvlceo

18&amp;&amp; Ford E&gt;p o tr XLT losdod
v a gorago kapl 20 ooo mill
740 802 7817
LlrQI Co ilclion ol Anaqut Pool!
et Watchll Qood Condit on 422
20&lt;1 Avo phone (740)446-1815

ClASSII'IEIDSI

9 S 10 EKtended Cab V 6 5
speed a r uns &amp; looks good
$2 !0 740 742 2780

898 Chevy Tahoe 4 Coo
Owpor WOOD (740,.48-«1748

Antlquaa

Electncal and
Relrlgeralton

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

750 Boats &amp; Motors
I
lor Sale

1995 Ford Asp o(304)67Hl008
SUN SAND SURF Wh le sandy
beachll latlu ous sunse s De
uxa roomaJk chine es &amp; ba co
nles ove coking the gu f ol Mtltl
co Island Inn Beactl Resort
Treasu e slenel FLA 800 2-41
9980 www • and nn 110 t com
NearS Pt eraburg

840

999 Honda CR250 Eitel en
Cond lion As&gt; ng $3100 (740)
441 690

C&amp;C Genera Home Man
tenence Pa nt ng v nv s d no
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob te home repa ana mo e Fo
ee est mate cal Che 740 992
6323

nu

Established local company looklno to 5
entry•leval manaoement positions
Associates de;ree or mana;ement
1xperlence Solid people skills oroanlzatlonal
skills, and self motivation are a must
S23·$30k to start
Benefits and 401 K plan available

1-888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Dev•lopment Group/MIII•nnlum tolaMrVIe••

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed In Meigs County Hours 1Opm Frl thru Bam
Mon sleep over required Dulles 1nclude teaching
community and personal skills to an lndovldual w th
mental retardation Requirements High school
diploma /GED valid drivers llcensa three years
good dnvlng expenence and adequate automobile
rnsurance coverage Starting salary $6 00/hr
Send resume to Buckeye Community Services
P0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Deadline lor
applicants 3/29/01 Equal Opportunity Employer

�I

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, March 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHI!.LIP

Sayre
Truckine

P/8

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRIKTION

COII'IIACTORS. INC.
Racine, Ohio 48771

• NewHomea

740-985-3948

·Oarlgl8
• COmplete
Rtmodellng
Stop I ComPire
FREE ESTIMATES

CONCREIF/BLOU/BRICK
• Fooltn, WaiiJ, Strps •

Flat Work,
Repllcementl, • Walkl
aad Drives • Steacll

Cftte Frft EtHmolel
Se,..IIJ Ohio aod W.V.
WV103171l

740-992·1671

Advertise
in this ·

TRI-STATE

MOBILE POWER
WASH
Trucks- Tractor TrailersHouses • Mobile Homes
· Decks -DrivewaysEquipment a eancd &amp;

Detre""'d
Jdt Stethem

(740) 985-4218
Emai l:
stethem@eurckanct.con

fno lslfiiiiH

Coll1·1740) 591·0477
Coll2· 740 591-2712

46384 St. Rt. 248 Ch&amp;st&amp;r, Ohio
(740) 985- 3301

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

WANTED

Rocky R Hupp . Agenl
Box 109
Moddleport. Oh10 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home

tulltl, &amp; l*tl
Cell Chuck

space for
$50 per

DDOYIII
PIRft
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equlpmeal Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
. 1000 St. Rt. 1 South

Nodcn In

Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE

tho South llno of
Socllon 13 ond tho

United Statto of

America, va. Branda
Jonea, et al.

Molga County
Common Pla11 Case
No. OO.CV·108.
In pureuance of an
order laaued from

Common
Piau
Court, within ond tor
the County of Meigs,
State of Ohio, on the
20th
day
of
December, 2000, and
to me directed, I will
ollor for aala at
Public Auction In the
Meigs
County
Courthouse, 100 E.
2nd Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio ,

on Tuesday,

April 24, 2001 at
10:30 a.m. of aald
day, the following
Real Estate, to·wlt:
Situate In Section
13, Town 3·N, Ronga
12·W,
Sutton
Township, Meigs
County, Stolt of Ohio
8f'd

being

more

particularly dtocrlbed
as followa:

PARCEL NO . 1:
Commencing 11 the
Southeast corner of

Section 13 and the

Grantor's Southeast
corner; thence S. 86

dag. 16'28" W. along

the South line of
Section 13 and the
GrantOr's South line,

1, 75G.81 flit to an
Iron pipe att In tho
contorllno of Sutton
Townahlp Road 28,
(Saltor Road); thence
N. 00 dog. 54' 40" E.
along tho tald
centerline of SuHon

Grantor'• South 11na,

1,327.61 Joet to an
Iron pipe sot, said
Iron pipe ut alto
being tho real point
of beginning of tho
YOUNG'S
parcel deocrlbad:
Thence continuing
CARPENTER
S. 86 dog. 16'28" W.
along tho provlouoly
SERVICE
dllcrlbed Uno, 412.22
~.!='RING CRAFT SH()\11/ r •
•
RoomAddlllona &amp;
loti to a point In the
,.,
. Rornodollng
East Rlght·Of·Way
Natl'onal Guard Armory
·Now oor•o••
line of Sutton
• Eltctrlcol&amp; Plumbing
Townahlp Road 28
S t d M h 31
• Roollng&amp;Outtoro
(Salaer Road), aald
a Ur ay arC
• Vinyl Sieling &amp;Painting
point bearing N. 86
10:00 am • 5:00 pm
• Polio end Porch DlcU
dog. 18 '28" E., 20.08
Free Eotlmates
leal from an Iron pipe
V. C. YOUNG 111
oat In tha centerllno
992·6215
of aald Sutton
Townahlp
28 '
"" ·11111
""'!..•- - '
(Salser Road
Road),
,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - L-....l"U!!•"'a.
Public
Notice
paaalng through an ,__Pu_b_ll_c_N_ot_l_c_e_
Iron

plpa aet for •-

rolarance at 410.87 mattera, Including,
laet; thence N. 00 but not limited to,
dog. 54'40" E. along concealed or latent
tho oald Ent Righi· dalecto, and/or the
Of·Way line of said preoonco of harmful
Sutton Townahlp or toxic chemicals,
Rood 28 (Soloor. pollutants, or,gatoo.
Torma of Solo: Ten
Road), 138.00 !eat to
an Iron pipe set that Parcont (10%) day of ·
boars S. 89 deg. sale, balance within
05'20" E., 20.00 laot 30 daye.
from a raUroad aplke
set In tha. said Ralph E. Tntatoll,
centerline of oald Sherlfl of MaJgt
'"
sutton Townohlp County, Ohlb
Road 28 (Salsor
Road); thence S. 89 Stophon D. Mllao,
deg. 05'20" E. olong a Attorney
random llno, 395.00 18 West Monument
·
IHI to an Iron pipe Avenue
Oayton,
Ohio
45402
sot; thence S. 07 deg.
52'32" E. along ·a March 6, 13, 20, 27 &amp;
random Una, 103.90 Aprll3,10, 2001
loot to tho point of I;_______
beginning
ond
Publlc No11ce
containing 1.1 08G
acres.

Township Road 28
Subject to ell legal
(Salser Rood), 137.62 hlghwoya
and
feat to a rollroad easement• of record.
oplkt sot; thonco S.
Tho
abovo
89 dog. 05'20" E. description Ia baud
along a random line, on a aurvsy by
20.00 feet to an Iron Gerold w. Bayha,
plpa sot In tho Eoat Roglatored
Rlght·Ol-Woy line of Proleialonal
uld Sutton Townohlp Surveyor No. 5·8138
Road (Saltor Road), (Job No. 879·02),
oold Iron plpo oat complottd on Auguot
· oleo being the real 30,19N.
point of beginning of
SUBJECT to taxoa
the parcel horoln and ••••••mente
dotcrlbed; thence N. which are now or
00 deg. 54' 40" E. may
horoaflor
along tho said Eoll becomo Ilona an oold
Rlght·Of·Way Una of prllmltoo onci except
uld Sutton Townahlp conditione,
·Rood 28 (Salaor reatrlctlona and
Rood), 114.00 foot to
It any,
on Iron plpa oat thot ••••menta,
contained In former
btara S. 88 dog. doodo of record for
05'20" E., 20.00 ftot aold promlaoa,
from a railroad aplka oubloct to all of
Itt In tho aald which
this
contarllna of oald conveyance
Ia made.
Sutton Townahlp
FURTHER
Rood
28 (Soltor EXCEPTING
tho cool
Road); thanoa S. 89 ond mining rlghto
deg. 05'20" E. along a aold to Morlln
rondom line, 377.38 Eberabaoh by dead
loti to on Iron pipe dolod April 17-, 1811
eet; thence S. 07 deg. which provldoa that
52'32" E. olong • ony aurfoco lond
rondom llna, 115.35 required or utod for
.foot to on Iron plpo mining provldoa thot
lot that boare N. ·07 ony ourfoce land
dog. 52'32" w., 103.110 required or utod for
feet from on Iron pipe mining purpoato
oat In the aald South shall be paid to tho
line of Section 13 and Grant••• or their
tho Grantor's South helra 11 tho rato of
line; thence N. 89 1200.00 par ocro and
dog. 05'2ii''W., along that no ahafta to be
a random line, 395.00 aunk within .300 fttt
foot to tho point of of tho then praaant
beginning
and realdence.
contolnlng 1.0106
PERMANENT
acrea.
PARCEL No: 1 B·
Subloct to all legal 00051.000
hlghwoyo
ond
l,.ooatad at 30980
oetomenta of record. M.Jtcholl
l'!ood, ,
The
obove Raclno, OH 45771.
doacrlptlon Ia baaed
Sold property haa
on e aurvoy by been oppraload at
Gonld W. Bayha, $30,000.00 and
Roglatored
cannot sell for loll
Profolflontl
than two·thlrda of
Surveyor No. 5·8139 appraisement. Thla
(Job No. 879·02), appralul Ia baud
QOmploted on Auguot upon I
VIIUII·
30, 1979.
lnapocllon of thtl
PARCEL NO. 2: part of the promises
Commencing at the to which acc,as waa
Southoaot cornor of readily avollablo. Tho
Soctlon 13 and tho appralaera aaaume
Grentor'a Southeaat no ieoponalblllty lor,
cornor; thence S. 88 and glva no weight
dog. 18' 28" w. along to, unknown legal

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Caoo No. OO.CV·14B
Judgo&gt;Crow
Tho Chou Moo\hattan
Bank, Aa Tni- of
IMC Homo Equity
Loon Truat19H-5
under tho Pooling
and SoNiclng ·
Agrumont dated 11
of Soptambor 1, 11188
c/o CltiFinonolal
Mortgogo Company

No. OO·CV·148,m on
tho docket. of the
Court, and lht object
and damand lor relief
of which plitaoilrig Ia
to forecloaa the ltan
ot . . p. laln.tjlt'~.

,Rofld, LOng Bottom,

OH 45743 and being
more particularly
ducrlbed
In
plaintiff's mortaaga
rocordod In Mortgage
· Book 86, page 171, ol
this
County
Rocordar'a Office.
All of tho abovo
named dafandanto

A&amp;D Auto Upholstew Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
molorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

ar•

required

to

anawer
within
twonty-olght (28)
To
daya after laat Reserve Your Lot
publication, which
(7 40) 949·7039
ahall be publlohod
one~

• week fQr alx

or

conaecutlve weeka,

by

reeaonable

dlllgonco

be '

aecert•lnMI, will take

notice that on tho Blh
day ol December,
2000, tho Chua
Mtnhattan sank, Ae
Truatoo of IMC Home.
Equity Loon Trull
1998·5 under the
Pooling
and
Servicing Agreement
dated
ao
ol
Septlmbar 1, 1998
C/O
CIIIFinanclal
Mortgage. Company
flied Ito Complaint In
the Common Pleoa
Court of Molga
County, OhiO In Ca!ll

';

J
J
J

NO FEMALES ALLOWED IN
TH' BARN II WE'RE FIXIN' TO
PLAY
CARDS !!

~

l

t

:
I

I

JJ&amp;tlVE'

Licensed and Insured

WV 005176

1•
'
•'

.,'
·I

l

j

...I

''I

l

JONES'

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Bucket Truck

The CRAFrY,

Attornaya for ·Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Clnclnnou, OH 45201·
5480
(513) ~1-3100
March 8, 13, 20, 27 &amp;
Aprll3,10, 2001

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
AD veo;t!col blind. are
made to order at our
locadon
UPTO 70%0FF
• Verticals • Wood

t.

Wrltesel

44087 Wipple Road

oofllil!l• Home

Additions, Garages,

l
I

\

I

•,'

Gutters- Down

Spoilt

ITUESDAY

Fraa ElitmM
1

949-1405
591·5011

SPE(~IAL FINANCE

,

MiddlePort

992-2772
Advertise· In
this space
for $25
per .month.

f·:r.',lf flr,J.'"I,
r' .rJr!'&lt;&gt; IJ'll'

).Jhr:·n•·

''!(I)

L",'

Racine
Mower "-~
High&amp; Dry
Clinic Self-Stor}ge
Open
Mon·Frl 9-5:30

. Sat 9-1

~40)

949-2804

79or

Marathon Service Center
420 W. Main St.

740-985-4212
1'1 i

Pomeroy, OH 45769.
(across from Pizza,ltut)

Now Rentilg
A·JMIN!·STORAGE
992-6396
992-2272

(740) 992:-.1
Full service .auto oenter

Hlll't Self
Ster•a•

21670 Bashan Roed
Raolnt,Ohlo
.,

4S771

33795 Hiland Rd.

74()..949-2217

Pomeroy, Ohio

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 1o· x 30'

740-992.:s232

Hour•

Pd1 ma.

age play is still to
finesse the nine, but
West hesitated slightly
before playing low.
Now, if he was an hon·
):------,..-1 est soul, he had to
have
the
queen,
because without that
card he would have
had no reason [o hitch.
Therefore, naively (I
said I was young), I
calfed for dummy's
jack. This lost to the
queen, and I went one
down. ·
I called for the tournament director to
complain. West said
he hadn't hesitated.
East agreed. My partner claimed he wasn 't
watching. West told
me T had ruined his
weekend. But l k~ew
he had hesitated.
Still, learning that
lesson has held me in
good stead ever since .

MARCH20I

45 Fond du -

Wla.

41 Oyeing

'

conlllner

4B HlehHt

point
51 GtiiOUI
filii
55 Brings lorth
(memorlea)
56 Clo""'
57 Like aome
tNII
58 Shoota
lrom t
oeeret apot

lobi

counterpart

be

Curved
molding
5 Fomouo
phyolclot
6 Property
7 Plano .
4

mote

38 Serloa ol
horolc
event•
40 Nerve
natwork
41 Actrou
Su1an -

wdo./
p aylng

(2

8

34 Waxed

article

35 Periods of
time
39 Lucky
number•

wloh
43 Like some
18 Stobbld
cereals
19 Nonmetallic 45 Similar to
olomont
47 Bangkok

20 Illness
22 Gibson/
AUIBO

route

,

10 "'Velvet"

13 Fond

31 Htckloo
Sumtc
33 Grco,.,..to- 3 ,Guy'a
36 Greonlond
llllltment
37 Tackle't

32 German

2,00t

finish
11 Before,
to a bard

DOWN

1 Pep
.,. 2 Singer

30 Bet-n

9 Roman

marbl1

Last

letter

film
23 Out ol (dlo·
ordered)

49 AGabor
50 Nalthor'a
partner
52 Dade

25 Sprlnta
27 Barnyard

blnh
54 Hesitation

24 Coneelve

tr,pe o

resident

48

founder

53 By

bird

aounde

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Lula Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, pall and present. Each letter In the cipher stands fo r another.

Today's clue: K equals S

' XU

KTSSUJ

LEJU

OLWPOBWHOEB

HZWB

08

KUBUAW

JUWDOHN.'

'XZWH,

08

LU

XEJJN? '

WOSJUC
U.
BUXLWB
.
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Take a tumble in lila? Rub some dirt
where It hurts and keep on going. • - (Coach/stroke survivor)
WaN Hazzard ·
WOlD
'::~:~~, S©R~lA-~£~s· lAM
I
141to4 .., CLAY I. POlLAN - - - - - 0 lour
Roorrango loHoro of lfla
ocrambled wordJ be-

low to IOfm four olm.,l. words.

THSAGA

I 1 I I~ I I
I I I 1I I
1

SL UBH
1

I~ 15 I I'· I
MY R E E

I~

"I may be getting older, " thJ
fellow confided. "But I think that
inside we are all the · --· · - ·."

I I~ I I I I' I0
GADEMA

Complelo the chuckle quoted ,

by lUling In the mlaing "ords

you dev•k?P

fr~.

step No. 3 below.

SCJWA.LETS ANSWIRS

Eschew - Knife. Valid · Wheeze - VICES
"I believe," the dad told his daughler , "that mosl peo ple
would rather be saved from their consequences lhan
their VICES ."

Ask For Mike Hindle

.. • PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE
....... • STEADY

"OUT BACK TANNii•u.
OPINING MARCH l '

11VE AL.WA'J'S HOPED THAT
S~E'P WAIT UNTIL I 6REW
UP, ANt' THEN MARRV ME ..

AI,_

12 Orewlnga
t3 R~
t .g.
t4 Laoatdark
15 Atoa fur
18 'OuTdo's
hlfth nato
17 W Y
18 Actrooo
Baalngar
21 Skyllt
Interiors
23 Btby ~
21 Actor II
21 Acquire y
lobor
20 Mounlllln
on Crete

Call Ut l'lrst Or Wt Both Loeel

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 learsl"

155N2nd

AFRAID OF
TJ.IAT.. .

•

Maintenance- 11.;_-.!!!!~

Locally owned and oporated by
JACK A UNDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

J&amp;L

TEACWER IS
IN LOVE ..

I

· 740-992·5344

J &amp; L SANITATION

Welded Fron:te 8t
Saah0-101 United
Inch•
S199.00 lns1alled

I WAS

'

Pomeroy

Bankruplcy? Credit Probie1111?
'We Can Help"ll
Windows

I THINK OUR

Tire. Barn

Howard L.

New Homes, Room

Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, prywall &amp;
More
We Can M.U Your
Dream A Reality/
740-74Z·34ll
FREE ESTIMATES I

PEANUTS

.........

740-742-8015 or

LERNER, SAMPSON

&amp; ROTHFUSS .

'I

•lllllmtnt .... frllt Elllll. .
•llllll &amp; II
•
• billlit Wlrll • niWMIIIIIIIIIIIrl

FraaEIUmatn

Sunset Home
Construction

,

'I

, _ INT

In an ideal world,
all bids and plays are
made in tempo. However, it is impossible
not to pause for
thought occasionally.
Yet there is an important principle: · You
must ignore all of part·
ner's .hesitations, bidding and playing as if
he acted in tempo.
Unfortunately, hesitations can cause
major problems. This
deal occurred many
years ago, during a
county match in London. My opening bid
as South was a weak
no-trump, promising
12-14 points .
West led the spade
queen,
which
I
ducked. He continued
with the spade 10.
l had eight top
tricks : two spades,
four hearts, one diamond and one club .
Clearly, I had to try for
a second club trick.
The percentage play
is low to dummy's
nine,
winning whent-10\o-J, Thi&gt;..T~ UGf\T
ever West has the KPOPCO~t-~1
10 or Q-10. Low to the
jack works only when
West has the K-Q ,
which is half as likely.
So, after winning
trick two with my
spade ace, I led a low
club, but West went in
with the king. l won
with dummy's ace,
returned to hand with a
rwo;:r;;;;-;:w;NG''TH~I heart, and led another
low club. The percent-

~5~~~==-~

'
I'
'
''

Quality Driveways,
Pltlot, Sidewalkl.
25 yaal'l 8xpetlence

1-sn-353-7022

Double Huno

reslden.;ea
are
unknown and cannot

!•

BARNEY

1
•

Mon•Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742·8888
1·888·521..()916

(740) 992-3203

. or lhoy might bt
. denied 1 hoorln~ In
thlacato. ·

Replacement

diVIIIII 1 llgltlll,

BY PHILLIP ALDER

l

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

. NOTICE IN SUIT .
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE

ex.ecutore,
admlnl.tratora,
spouooo and ~aolgnt
and the unknown
guardlono ol 1111nor
and/or Incompetent
htlro of ·EIIzoboth
Bartoo, all ot ,who to

l

11ft

•

1-)04-'75-7824
1-800-250.!1077
Residential Commercial New C-lnldlon
Sales S.nke lnllallallon
Specializi"' in Shed Metallhoctwork
"Trane" Sales &amp; Senice For
Gallio, Muon, and Meil' Counties

-----·q

l

••

It h llmdThSlopA Thuu..~

tQIItl

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

l

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

-....

• • 7f,

• q It

• "t •

1
•'

EXCAVAttNG

••n•

-

..,.

• AI I

'
•••

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

•11..1111
• lt I I
t IU

"I 4 I I

'
"'

we'll get you going for
spring

(7;~;o~·~~·~~l0 -P

e.

l

740-985-4180

1-------'

Dtlondonta.

hllrl,

••

Leave Message
Afier 6 pm

992·2975

Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • FIII'I&gt;irt
•Mulch
~

Go-t..

1!••

New Homes • V111l
Siding • New Gonges
• Repllcement
WlodeM•Rooin ,.,
mortgage recOrded
Addklons·-•
upon tho following
deocrlbod taiiMtate COMMIRCW ond R!SIDENliAl
to wit: ·
,
Property · ad~reao: FREE ESTIMATES
52302 Mount •Olivo 17j!J0·9!~2··7f

446-4995

unknown

"'•'

BUILDERS INC.

l!llzabtth Bartoo, at
ol.

. Ellzoboth BlrtOO,
whoaa loot known
oddrtao Ia 52302
Mount Olive Road,
Long Bottom, OH
45743, and tho

\

Interior
FREE ESTIMATII
Bolon 6 p.m.

BISSELL

• M1nil • Etc
144 n.d Ave. G..

Plaintiff,

••'

Bring In your repair work

',and

.......,.
6 Et t
• A .r I

\

Sales &amp; Service
. .
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

HAUUNG

Anouk -

\

GRAVELYTRACTOR

CK'S

°

~..

" Take the poin of paintins· IAI ""'
do it for you..

~

.

Public Notice

f

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

/JJ/

month.

'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

740-985-3831

MONUMENTAL liFE INSURANCE CO.

..cloo,old

,I

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
•Ahead In aervlce"
·11.6" l'roltin IMslod/cattlo r..d $6.25/100
.2Jll Hllllfln Pride Dog Faad S6.7S/SO
-I !X Wtst1111 pride hone fMd $5.60/SO
$1.00 oH Coupon n11bs 1101 purchoH $4.60/SO
laytr er.niMs SS.2S
l.M. Salt llocb $4.75/SO II.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rl. 7 North Pomoroy, Ohio 457BG

BAUM LUMBER CO.

ACROSS 42 Juliet's
lover
1 Primary cell 44 That llgol
T~
thing

ALDER

•

7:00AM ·8:00PM

Cellular

when you lhrow caution to the
Wednesday, March 21 , 200 I
Changes you didn't expect wind and get yourself inlo deep
might be foisted upon you in the trouble.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ·
coming year. However, if you
Do
not, under any circum·
•
work within them, everything
stances,
labor under the illusion
will tum out to be to your odvantage in the long scheme of things. today that the hand you're hold·
ARIES (March 2l·April 19) • ing can trump all the tricks. Be
• There will be a price to pay if prepared for the worst so you can
you put your needs above the stay in the game.
'LEO (July 23 - Au~ . 22) ..
family's today. Not.only will your
Th.ings
are changing all the time,
desires fall short, but the chill in
the air at home will put you in the · and that partnership that worked
deep freeze. Aries, treat yourself so well in the last few days may
to I birthday aifl. Send for your now foil shon. If you're working
Astro-Ontph pimictions for the on something important, try to so
year ahead by mallina $2 and it alone.
VIROO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22) ..
SASB to AJ1ro-Or1ph, clo lhis
The
problems you' II create for
newspoper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY younelf will be far men lhan that
10156. Be aure to alate your for which you baraaln, if you let
your reaponsibilitlu drift just .
Zodioc alp,
.
TAURUS (Aprll20.~20) • beca1110they're not convenient for
• Thoe&amp; channlna aood I
you you to like on todoy.
won't do you 1 bli ·o f
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) ••
1ooc1 when It comea to compotl· Serioua complicatlona could stem
tlve clevelopmenu today. If you're from pttlnslnvolved todoy In an
not prepared, your competition activity wlih others about which
will &amp;llde ri&amp;hl pall you.
you feel dubloua. Listen to your
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) .. Inner e&amp;lf and bow out of the
Belns a Gemini can cause you to plana.
·
oct Impulsively from lime tQ time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) •
Today could be one of those deys • Don't even try to alter the

po••••

· Jeff Warner Ins.

992·5479
'

'

thouglits or views of others who
are having trouble seeing your
point. If they are adamant about
their opinions, a healed debate
could ensue. ·
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 2 ~·Dec.
21) ·· Production should be your
primary concern today. nol fl ow·
ery prattle. If you attempt 10 con
others into doing your task., so
you can idle the hours away, long·
term resenlmenl might develop.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) .. Be boih caulious and pru·
dent wilh financial or commercial
transactions today. The trends are
not in your favor allhis time. and
you could come out on the short
end of the deal.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
.. Lack of initiative to carry
through on your intentions will be
your undoing iodoy. Persons who
are depending on you will be boih
disappointed and an~ry.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) •
- In uliualion In which your contribution is less than that of oth· ·
ers, don't kid yourself into believin&amp; you are owed the ••me
amounl :as lhey. The disappoint·
ment you eKperience coukJ be
srove.

�I

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, March 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHI!.LIP

Sayre
Truckine

P/8

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRIKTION

COII'IIACTORS. INC.
Racine, Ohio 48771

• NewHomea

740-985-3948

·Oarlgl8
• COmplete
Rtmodellng
Stop I ComPire
FREE ESTIMATES

CONCREIF/BLOU/BRICK
• Fooltn, WaiiJ, Strps •

Flat Work,
Repllcementl, • Walkl
aad Drives • Steacll

Cftte Frft EtHmolel
Se,..IIJ Ohio aod W.V.
WV103171l

740-992·1671

Advertise
in this ·

TRI-STATE

MOBILE POWER
WASH
Trucks- Tractor TrailersHouses • Mobile Homes
· Decks -DrivewaysEquipment a eancd &amp;

Detre""'d
Jdt Stethem

(740) 985-4218
Emai l:
stethem@eurckanct.con

fno lslfiiiiH

Coll1·1740) 591·0477
Coll2· 740 591-2712

46384 St. Rt. 248 Ch&amp;st&amp;r, Ohio
(740) 985- 3301

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

WANTED

Rocky R Hupp . Agenl
Box 109
Moddleport. Oh10 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home

tulltl, &amp; l*tl
Cell Chuck

space for
$50 per

DDOYIII
PIRft
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equlpmeal Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
. 1000 St. Rt. 1 South

Nodcn In

Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE

tho South llno of
Socllon 13 ond tho

United Statto of

America, va. Branda
Jonea, et al.

Molga County
Common Pla11 Case
No. OO.CV·108.
In pureuance of an
order laaued from

Common
Piau
Court, within ond tor
the County of Meigs,
State of Ohio, on the
20th
day
of
December, 2000, and
to me directed, I will
ollor for aala at
Public Auction In the
Meigs
County
Courthouse, 100 E.
2nd Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio ,

on Tuesday,

April 24, 2001 at
10:30 a.m. of aald
day, the following
Real Estate, to·wlt:
Situate In Section
13, Town 3·N, Ronga
12·W,
Sutton
Township, Meigs
County, Stolt of Ohio
8f'd

being

more

particularly dtocrlbed
as followa:

PARCEL NO . 1:
Commencing 11 the
Southeast corner of

Section 13 and the

Grantor's Southeast
corner; thence S. 86

dag. 16'28" W. along

the South line of
Section 13 and the
GrantOr's South line,

1, 75G.81 flit to an
Iron pipe att In tho
contorllno of Sutton
Townahlp Road 28,
(Saltor Road); thence
N. 00 dog. 54' 40" E.
along tho tald
centerline of SuHon

Grantor'• South 11na,

1,327.61 Joet to an
Iron pipe sot, said
Iron pipe ut alto
being tho real point
of beginning of tho
YOUNG'S
parcel deocrlbad:
Thence continuing
CARPENTER
S. 86 dog. 16'28" W.
along tho provlouoly
SERVICE
dllcrlbed Uno, 412.22
~.!='RING CRAFT SH()\11/ r •
•
RoomAddlllona &amp;
loti to a point In the
,.,
. Rornodollng
East Rlght·Of·Way
Natl'onal Guard Armory
·Now oor•o••
line of Sutton
• Eltctrlcol&amp; Plumbing
Townahlp Road 28
S t d M h 31
• Roollng&amp;Outtoro
(Salaer Road), aald
a Ur ay arC
• Vinyl Sieling &amp;Painting
point bearing N. 86
10:00 am • 5:00 pm
• Polio end Porch DlcU
dog. 18 '28" E., 20.08
Free Eotlmates
leal from an Iron pipe
V. C. YOUNG 111
oat In tha centerllno
992·6215
of aald Sutton
Townahlp
28 '
"" ·11111
""'!..•- - '
(Salser Road
Road),
,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - L-....l"U!!•"'a.
Public
Notice
paaalng through an ,__Pu_b_ll_c_N_ot_l_c_e_
Iron

plpa aet for •-

rolarance at 410.87 mattera, Including,
laet; thence N. 00 but not limited to,
dog. 54'40" E. along concealed or latent
tho oald Ent Righi· dalecto, and/or the
Of·Way line of said preoonco of harmful
Sutton Townahlp or toxic chemicals,
Rood 28 (Soloor. pollutants, or,gatoo.
Torma of Solo: Ten
Road), 138.00 !eat to
an Iron pipe set that Parcont (10%) day of ·
boars S. 89 deg. sale, balance within
05'20" E., 20.00 laot 30 daye.
from a raUroad aplke
set In tha. said Ralph E. Tntatoll,
centerline of oald Sherlfl of MaJgt
'"
sutton Townohlp County, Ohlb
Road 28 (Salsor
Road); thence S. 89 Stophon D. Mllao,
deg. 05'20" E. olong a Attorney
random llno, 395.00 18 West Monument
·
IHI to an Iron pipe Avenue
Oayton,
Ohio
45402
sot; thence S. 07 deg.
52'32" E. along ·a March 6, 13, 20, 27 &amp;
random Una, 103.90 Aprll3,10, 2001
loot to tho point of I;_______
beginning
ond
Publlc No11ce
containing 1.1 08G
acres.

Township Road 28
Subject to ell legal
(Salser Rood), 137.62 hlghwoya
and
feat to a rollroad easement• of record.
oplkt sot; thonco S.
Tho
abovo
89 dog. 05'20" E. description Ia baud
along a random line, on a aurvsy by
20.00 feet to an Iron Gerold w. Bayha,
plpa sot In tho Eoat Roglatored
Rlght·Ol-Woy line of Proleialonal
uld Sutton Townohlp Surveyor No. 5·8138
Road (Saltor Road), (Job No. 879·02),
oold Iron plpo oat complottd on Auguot
· oleo being the real 30,19N.
point of beginning of
SUBJECT to taxoa
the parcel horoln and ••••••mente
dotcrlbed; thence N. which are now or
00 deg. 54' 40" E. may
horoaflor
along tho said Eoll becomo Ilona an oold
Rlght·Of·Way Una of prllmltoo onci except
uld Sutton Townahlp conditione,
·Rood 28 (Salaor reatrlctlona and
Rood), 114.00 foot to
It any,
on Iron plpa oat thot ••••menta,
contained In former
btara S. 88 dog. doodo of record for
05'20" E., 20.00 ftot aold promlaoa,
from a railroad aplka oubloct to all of
Itt In tho aald which
this
contarllna of oald conveyance
Ia made.
Sutton Townahlp
FURTHER
Rood
28 (Soltor EXCEPTING
tho cool
Road); thanoa S. 89 ond mining rlghto
deg. 05'20" E. along a aold to Morlln
rondom line, 377.38 Eberabaoh by dead
loti to on Iron pipe dolod April 17-, 1811
eet; thence S. 07 deg. which provldoa that
52'32" E. olong • ony aurfoco lond
rondom llna, 115.35 required or utod for
.foot to on Iron plpo mining provldoa thot
lot that boare N. ·07 ony ourfoce land
dog. 52'32" w., 103.110 required or utod for
feet from on Iron pipe mining purpoato
oat In the aald South shall be paid to tho
line of Section 13 and Grant••• or their
tho Grantor's South helra 11 tho rato of
line; thence N. 89 1200.00 par ocro and
dog. 05'2ii''W., along that no ahafta to be
a random line, 395.00 aunk within .300 fttt
foot to tho point of of tho then praaant
beginning
and realdence.
contolnlng 1.0106
PERMANENT
acrea.
PARCEL No: 1 B·
Subloct to all legal 00051.000
hlghwoyo
ond
l,.ooatad at 30980
oetomenta of record. M.Jtcholl
l'!ood, ,
The
obove Raclno, OH 45771.
doacrlptlon Ia baaed
Sold property haa
on e aurvoy by been oppraload at
Gonld W. Bayha, $30,000.00 and
Roglatored
cannot sell for loll
Profolflontl
than two·thlrda of
Surveyor No. 5·8139 appraisement. Thla
(Job No. 879·02), appralul Ia baud
QOmploted on Auguot upon I
VIIUII·
30, 1979.
lnapocllon of thtl
PARCEL NO. 2: part of the promises
Commencing at the to which acc,as waa
Southoaot cornor of readily avollablo. Tho
Soctlon 13 and tho appralaera aaaume
Grentor'a Southeaat no ieoponalblllty lor,
cornor; thence S. 88 and glva no weight
dog. 18' 28" w. along to, unknown legal

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Caoo No. OO.CV·14B
Judgo&gt;Crow
Tho Chou Moo\hattan
Bank, Aa Tni- of
IMC Homo Equity
Loon Truat19H-5
under tho Pooling
and SoNiclng ·
Agrumont dated 11
of Soptambor 1, 11188
c/o CltiFinonolal
Mortgogo Company

No. OO·CV·148,m on
tho docket. of the
Court, and lht object
and damand lor relief
of which plitaoilrig Ia
to forecloaa the ltan
ot . . p. laln.tjlt'~.

,Rofld, LOng Bottom,

OH 45743 and being
more particularly
ducrlbed
In
plaintiff's mortaaga
rocordod In Mortgage
· Book 86, page 171, ol
this
County
Rocordar'a Office.
All of tho abovo
named dafandanto

A&amp;D Auto Upholstew Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
molorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

ar•

required

to

anawer
within
twonty-olght (28)
To
daya after laat Reserve Your Lot
publication, which
(7 40) 949·7039
ahall be publlohod
one~

• week fQr alx

or

conaecutlve weeka,

by

reeaonable

dlllgonco

be '

aecert•lnMI, will take

notice that on tho Blh
day ol December,
2000, tho Chua
Mtnhattan sank, Ae
Truatoo of IMC Home.
Equity Loon Trull
1998·5 under the
Pooling
and
Servicing Agreement
dated
ao
ol
Septlmbar 1, 1998
C/O
CIIIFinanclal
Mortgage. Company
flied Ito Complaint In
the Common Pleoa
Court of Molga
County, OhiO In Ca!ll

';

J
J
J

NO FEMALES ALLOWED IN
TH' BARN II WE'RE FIXIN' TO
PLAY
CARDS !!

~

l

t

:
I

I

JJ&amp;tlVE'

Licensed and Insured

WV 005176

1•
'
•'

.,'
·I

l

j

...I

''I

l

JONES'

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Bucket Truck

The CRAFrY,

Attornaya for ·Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Clnclnnou, OH 45201·
5480
(513) ~1-3100
March 8, 13, 20, 27 &amp;
Aprll3,10, 2001

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
AD veo;t!col blind. are
made to order at our
locadon
UPTO 70%0FF
• Verticals • Wood

t.

Wrltesel

44087 Wipple Road

oofllil!l• Home

Additions, Garages,

l
I

\

I

•,'

Gutters- Down

Spoilt

ITUESDAY

Fraa ElitmM
1

949-1405
591·5011

SPE(~IAL FINANCE

,

MiddlePort

992-2772
Advertise· In
this space
for $25
per .month.

f·:r.',lf flr,J.'"I,
r' .rJr!'&lt;&gt; IJ'll'

).Jhr:·n•·

''!(I)

L",'

Racine
Mower "-~
High&amp; Dry
Clinic Self-Stor}ge
Open
Mon·Frl 9-5:30

. Sat 9-1

~40)

949-2804

79or

Marathon Service Center
420 W. Main St.

740-985-4212
1'1 i

Pomeroy, OH 45769.
(across from Pizza,ltut)

Now Rentilg
A·JMIN!·STORAGE
992-6396
992-2272

(740) 992:-.1
Full service .auto oenter

Hlll't Self
Ster•a•

21670 Bashan Roed
Raolnt,Ohlo
.,

4S771

33795 Hiland Rd.

74()..949-2217

Pomeroy, Ohio

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 1o· x 30'

740-992.:s232

Hour•

Pd1 ma.

age play is still to
finesse the nine, but
West hesitated slightly
before playing low.
Now, if he was an hon·
):------,..-1 est soul, he had to
have
the
queen,
because without that
card he would have
had no reason [o hitch.
Therefore, naively (I
said I was young), I
calfed for dummy's
jack. This lost to the
queen, and I went one
down. ·
I called for the tournament director to
complain. West said
he hadn't hesitated.
East agreed. My partner claimed he wasn 't
watching. West told
me T had ruined his
weekend. But l k~ew
he had hesitated.
Still, learning that
lesson has held me in
good stead ever since .

MARCH20I

45 Fond du -

Wla.

41 Oyeing

'

conlllner

4B HlehHt

point
51 GtiiOUI
filii
55 Brings lorth
(memorlea)
56 Clo""'
57 Like aome
tNII
58 Shoota
lrom t
oeeret apot

lobi

counterpart

be

Curved
molding
5 Fomouo
phyolclot
6 Property
7 Plano .
4

mote

38 Serloa ol
horolc
event•
40 Nerve
natwork
41 Actrou
Su1an -

wdo./
p aylng

(2

8

34 Waxed

article

35 Periods of
time
39 Lucky
number•

wloh
43 Like some
18 Stobbld
cereals
19 Nonmetallic 45 Similar to
olomont
47 Bangkok

20 Illness
22 Gibson/
AUIBO

route

,

10 "'Velvet"

13 Fond

31 Htckloo
Sumtc
33 Grco,.,..to- 3 ,Guy'a
36 Greonlond
llllltment
37 Tackle't

32 German

2,00t

finish
11 Before,
to a bard

DOWN

1 Pep
.,. 2 Singer

30 Bet-n

9 Roman

marbl1

Last

letter

film
23 Out ol (dlo·
ordered)

49 AGabor
50 Nalthor'a
partner
52 Dade

25 Sprlnta
27 Barnyard

blnh
54 Hesitation

24 Coneelve

tr,pe o

resident

48

founder

53 By

bird

aounde

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Lula Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, pall and present. Each letter In the cipher stands fo r another.

Today's clue: K equals S

' XU

KTSSUJ

LEJU

OLWPOBWHOEB

HZWB

08

KUBUAW

JUWDOHN.'

'XZWH,

08

LU

XEJJN? '

WOSJUC
U.
BUXLWB
.
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Take a tumble in lila? Rub some dirt
where It hurts and keep on going. • - (Coach/stroke survivor)
WaN Hazzard ·
WOlD
'::~:~~, S©R~lA-~£~s· lAM
I
141to4 .., CLAY I. POlLAN - - - - - 0 lour
Roorrango loHoro of lfla
ocrambled wordJ be-

low to IOfm four olm.,l. words.

THSAGA

I 1 I I~ I I
I I I 1I I
1

SL UBH
1

I~ 15 I I'· I
MY R E E

I~

"I may be getting older, " thJ
fellow confided. "But I think that
inside we are all the · --· · - ·."

I I~ I I I I' I0
GADEMA

Complelo the chuckle quoted ,

by lUling In the mlaing "ords

you dev•k?P

fr~.

step No. 3 below.

SCJWA.LETS ANSWIRS

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as South was a weak
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West led the spade
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l had eight top
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Clearly, I had to try for
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The percentage play
is low to dummy's
nine,
winning whent-10\o-J, Thi&gt;..T~ UGf\T
ever West has the KPOPCO~t-~1
10 or Q-10. Low to the
jack works only when
West has the K-Q ,
which is half as likely.
So, after winning
trick two with my
spade ace, I led a low
club, but West went in
with the king. l won
with dummy's ace,
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rwo;:r;;;;-;:w;NG''TH~I heart, and led another
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Cellular

when you lhrow caution to the
Wednesday, March 21 , 200 I
Changes you didn't expect wind and get yourself inlo deep
might be foisted upon you in the trouble.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ·
coming year. However, if you
Do
not, under any circum·
•
work within them, everything
stances,
labor under the illusion
will tum out to be to your odvantage in the long scheme of things. today that the hand you're hold·
ARIES (March 2l·April 19) • ing can trump all the tricks. Be
• There will be a price to pay if prepared for the worst so you can
you put your needs above the stay in the game.
'LEO (July 23 - Au~ . 22) ..
family's today. Not.only will your
Th.ings
are changing all the time,
desires fall short, but the chill in
the air at home will put you in the · and that partnership that worked
deep freeze. Aries, treat yourself so well in the last few days may
to I birthday aifl. Send for your now foil shon. If you're working
Astro-Ontph pimictions for the on something important, try to so
year ahead by mallina $2 and it alone.
VIROO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22) ..
SASB to AJ1ro-Or1ph, clo lhis
The
problems you' II create for
newspoper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY younelf will be far men lhan that
10156. Be aure to alate your for which you baraaln, if you let
your reaponsibilitlu drift just .
Zodioc alp,
.
TAURUS (Aprll20.~20) • beca1110they're not convenient for
• Thoe&amp; channlna aood I
you you to like on todoy.
won't do you 1 bli ·o f
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) ••
1ooc1 when It comea to compotl· Serioua complicatlona could stem
tlve clevelopmenu today. If you're from pttlnslnvolved todoy In an
not prepared, your competition activity wlih others about which
will &amp;llde ri&amp;hl pall you.
you feel dubloua. Listen to your
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) .. Inner e&amp;lf and bow out of the
Belns a Gemini can cause you to plana.
·
oct Impulsively from lime tQ time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) •
Today could be one of those deys • Don't even try to alter the

po••••

· Jeff Warner Ins.

992·5479
'

'

thouglits or views of others who
are having trouble seeing your
point. If they are adamant about
their opinions, a healed debate
could ensue. ·
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 2 ~·Dec.
21) ·· Production should be your
primary concern today. nol fl ow·
ery prattle. If you attempt 10 con
others into doing your task., so
you can idle the hours away, long·
term resenlmenl might develop.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) .. Be boih caulious and pru·
dent wilh financial or commercial
transactions today. The trends are
not in your favor allhis time. and
you could come out on the short
end of the deal.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
.. Lack of initiative to carry
through on your intentions will be
your undoing iodoy. Persons who
are depending on you will be boih
disappointed and an~ry.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) •
- In uliualion In which your contribution is less than that of oth· ·
ers, don't kid yourself into believin&amp; you are owed the ••me
amounl :as lhey. The disappoint·
ment you eKperience coukJ be
srove.

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 20, 2001

Community news and notes, AS
Meet the Simpsons, Bl

lhu~

Hllh:50s;~:SOs

No monkey on·UC's back
LOS ANGELES (AP) - If
Kansas coach Roy Williams
had a monkey on his back,
what about Bob Huggins?
Forget that, the Cincinnati
coach said Monday, pointing
out that sometimes, stuff just
happens.
Williams shared the dais
with a stuffed red monkey
after Kansas' 87-58 victory
over Syracuse on Sunday in
the Midwest Regional, ending
a string of th ree second-round
NCAA losses.
"I wanted to see how (the
Kansas team) would be taking
the monkey off my back,"
Williams said .
A day earlier, C in cinn:lti

overpowered Kent State 66-43
in the West R egional to snap a
streak of four second-round
lo sses.

" I know the extenuating
circumstances, meaning Keny-

NCAA
from Page 11
75-54 win over Arkansas,
and second-seeded Oklahoma beat Stlnford 67-50.
That leaves the tournament
with these pairings for the
regional semifinals on Saturday: Connecticut vs. North
Carolina State and Louisiana
Tech vs. Missouri in the East
at Pittsburgh; Tennessee vs.
Xavier and Texas Tech vs.
Purdue in the Mideast at
Birmingham, Ala.; Notre
Dame vs. Utah and Iowa State
vs. Vanderbilt in the Midwest
at Denver; and Duke vs.
Southwest Missouri State and
Oklahoma. vs. Washington in
the West at Spokane, Wash.
Stiles missed the last 10
minutes of the Toledo game
after being knocked woozy
running into a pick. She ·said
there was 11ever a question she
would play against Rutgers.
"This is your senior year
and you go for it with every·
thing r,ou got," Stiles said.
Joked Southwest Missouri
State coach Cheryl Burnett,
"She plays like this, we're
going to knock her in the
head again ."
Tasha Pointer led Rutgers
with 15 points, but lost the
ball with about 12 seconds
left and the Scarlet Knights
trailing 56-53. Stiles made
two free throws, then drove
for a layup at the buzzer.
East
Connecticut 89,
Colorado St. 44
UConn smothered Colorado State with oppressive

on Martin breaking his leg,"
Huggins said by telephone
from San Diego, where the
Bearcats won their first two
tournament games by a total
of 48 points. "Roy (Williams)
didn 't have the best player in
the country breaking his leg."
Cincinnati was ranked No. 1
in the nation late last season
when Martin, the consensus
player of the year, suffered his
season-ending injury.
"We just haven't had a lot of
luck," Huggins said. "Once in
a while, you need some luck"
The Bearcats were seeded
second or third in the regionals in each of the last four
tournaments. They were eliminated by Tulsa 69-6llast year ;
their previous three secondround losses were all tightly

they took son1e cnttctsn1,
some of it probably justifiably
so," Huggins said of his team
advancing to the third round.
The unranked Bearcats (259) started their Conference
USA schedule by losing three
of their first six games, but finished by winning seven of
eight to capture their sixth
straight regular-season crown.
uWe're hard to score

against," said Huggins. whose
team faces top-seeded Stanford (30-2) Thursday night at
the Anaheim Arena. "Our guys
have done a really good job
defensively. I thought we got a
good draw, I thought we
matched u·p well with who we
were going to p.Iay."
The Bearcats are scheduled
to make the 100-mile trip
co ntesrcd games dt"cided at or from San Diego to Anaheim
ncar the end.
late today.
''I'm happy for the guys,

defense in reaching 30 victories for the seventh time in

eight years. Cash had 18
points and 11 rebounds for
the top-seeded Huskies (302), who outrebounded the
Rams 53.-27 and got 31
points off turnovers.
Lisa Narkiewicz led ninthseeded Colorado State (25-7)
with 14 points.
La. Tech 80, TCU 59
Ayana Walker, who scored
only two points in the first
round, came back with 17
points and 11 rebounds as
Louisiana Tech ran its winning streak to 18. Tricia
Payne's 13 points led 11thseeded TCU (25-8).
Midwest
Notre Dame 80,
Michigan 54
All-American Ruth Riley
scored 21 points and Notre
Dame held Michigan to 32.9
percent shooting. · Kelley
Siemon added 16 points for
the Irish (30-2), now one
short of tying the school
record for victories. Raina
Goodlow's •16 poinrs led
eighth-seeded Michigan (1912).
Vandy 65, Colorado 59
Zuzi Klimesova scored 12
of per 20 points while leading
scorer Chantelle Anderson
was sitting out with four
fouls, rescuing Vanderbilt (23~).The Commodores trailed
43-39 when Anderson left
with. 14,20 remaining. They
were ahead by the time she
returned. Jenny Roulier led
sixth-s.eeded Colorado (22-9)
with 17 points. ·
Utah 78, Iowa 69
Lindsay Herbert scored 15
points, and the nation's No. 1

sion III-IV team.
Also for the Division III-IV
squad, Zeb Best of Chesapeake scotN nine points and
from Pqe 11
teammate Bobby Barbour
Deckard, for his late efforts, scored eight, while Southern's
was named his team's MVP Chad Hubbard :&gt;,nd Coal
with 11 points, while Eric Grove's Ryan Young scored
Nolan of River Valley also four points each, Jarred Perscored 11 points. Rounding due of South Point scored
out the Division I-II scoring three and Chesapeake's Josh
was Logan's Johnny Conrad Waugh and Waterford's Mark
and Warren's Issac Ward with Waller scored two each.
In the third quarter, the
nine points each, six points
each by Matt Taulbee of Division III-IV team made it
Logan and Fairland's Josh ari eight point affair on a 3Dunfee, and Jackson's Eric pointer by Arnold.
Evans and Vinton County's
Nolan matched it with a
Josh Patterson with two trey of his own for the Division 1-11 team .
points each.
A pair of free throws by
Meanwhile, Trent Patton of
Trimble was overwhelming Patton and another 3-pointer
choice for MVP of the Divi- by Arnold made it a 48-41
sion lli-IV team as he led all game midway through the
scorers with 16 points.
third.
From there, the Division IWaterford's Josh Arnold
scored I 5 points, including ll team went on a 12-0 run to
three 3-pointers for the Divi- pull away and take a 60-49

Stan

Eastern

defensive team held jowa to
from Page 11
30 percent shooting. Utah
(28-3) forced Iowa guards
whelming, but that it's
Lindsey Meder and Cara something that he and his
Consuegra into a 4-for-27 players have come to embrace
shooting night in earning its during his three years at Eastfirst trip to the round of 16. ern.
Randi Peterson led fourth"I'll tell you a true story," he
seeded Iowa (21-10) with 17 said. "My first game here, we
points.
played Belpre and one the
West
players I had was a fellow by
Duke 75, Arkansas 54
the name of Joe Dillon. We
Alana Beard had 14 points ran upstairs and tried to play
and seven rebounds as Duke well, didn't play well and put
(30-3) dominated inside to pressure on ourselves and so
make the regional semifinals forth, and really got beat kind
for the fourth straight year. of badly, I remember coming
Duke is the only school to get into the next practice and I
both its men's and women's said 'fellas, what happened?'
teams to the third round. Amy
"And he said 'well, that's the
Wright and Dana Cherry led biggest crowd we've ever
sixth-seeded Arkansas (20-13) played jn fro11t of before.'You
with 11 points each.
think back to that little event
Oklahoma 67,
· right there, and now, if you're
Stanford 50
not to our games by a quarter
LaNeishea Caufield scored :til five, five o'clock, you have
18 points and Oklahoma a very difficult time finding a
managed to pull away despite seat. We have really progressed
missing its fi'"'!t 14 shots of the in that way. People like to see
second half Caton Hill added . kids that work hard and these
14 points and 14 rebounds for kids work hard."
the Sooners . (28-5). Corl
Caldwell said he was
Enghusen· and Nicole Powell extremely pleased with the
each scored 14 points for turnout for the regional final,
1Oth-seeded Stanford (19" especially in light of the dis11).
tance and time involved in
SW Mo. St. 60,
traveling to the Fairgrounds
Rutgers 53
Coliseum. In fact, Eastern fans
Carly Deer put Southwest purchased more than 1,000
Missouri State (27-5) ahead advance tickets for the game.
to stay with two free throws
"I \Vas really. amazed by the
after grabbing an offensive
"
rebound. Melody Campbell,
who rarely shoots, hit a key
baseline jumper for a 49-45
lead with 225 left. Rutgers
(23-8) lost for the first time at
home this .season.

number of people that went
to the game against Worthington Christian," he said .
"I made the comment to the
players that Worthington is
about 15 minutes away and
we've got a two hour and
maybe 15 or 20 minute trip.
.We probably will not have as
many fans .as what they will
have.
"We did and maybe we had
more than they did," Caldwell
added. "I know they were
. more vocal than what Worthington's were. To go to the
C:onvo and look up, it's just a
thrill to see that many people
involved and interested and in
15, 16, 17, 18-year-old kids.
"[ can remember the last
hdme game against Trimble,
we played the song 'We're
from the Country and We
Like It that Way; and then we
played it a second time and
you could see everybody
stand up and sing the song
and clap their hands, yeah,
that's a very special feeling."
Caldwell said that despite
the hoopla surrounding the
Eagles playoff run, the ballclub ~as maintained its focus
and .businesslike approach to
the game and he believes that
the team's struggles in the
early part of the season helped
mold it for its current run of
success.
"You can just see these kids
and know; 'hey, they're going
to play, they really are;." he
said. "I don't know whether

lead at the end of the third
quarter.
In the fourth, the Division
1-11 outscored the sm~ller
sch lOU 21-14 to run away
with the win.
In the 3-point shootouts
Monday, Wellston's Dusty
Cremeans won the girls competition with eight treys.
In the boys event, Bobby
Knight of Meigs and Martin
each made eight 3-pointers to
force a shootout.
After both competitors
made their first four treys,
Martin missed his fifth, setting
Knight up to make his next
two to come away with the
win.
Logan's Johnny Conrad
won the slam dunk contest.
Both the 3-point contests
and slam-dunk event were
open to all high school players in the district, while the
games themselves were for
seniors only.
we'd be as good a club right
no,v as what we are if we1d
have gotten that success early
on. You think about it, we're
12 points away from being
undefeated, we really are. But
like I told them tonight
(Monday), and I really stressed
this to our young kids, .we
played something like 45 or
46 games in the summer 'in .
· team camps and shootouts
and so forth. They didn't
become the club they are by
accident; they got there by
real hard work."
·
· That hard work has produced a second consecutive
20-plus win season, a second
straight TVC Hocking Division title, a 19-game winning
streak and a final state ranking
of No. 10 in the AP state poll. ·
Additionally, that winning
attitude has led to the. club's
first district championship
and its first regional crown in
this year of firsts for the Eastern program.
That work ethic has also
instilled a deep-seated confidence in the Eastern team
collectively and individually.
"These kids aren't cocky,
but they are very confident in
their abilities," Caldwell said.
"They don't go and strut
around, but they know what
kind of club they are. They
honestly do believe that they
can play with anyone around.
And when they want to
play, I believe they can, also."

Wcrtch thi$ week's lhli/y Sentinel for a
special tribute section to the Eastem Eagles!

lhe Dally Sentinel• 991·1156

,

. ..

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. ... .

··· - ; . · ··

# 1 Great OPPortunitY TQ Tell Your Business StorY

#2 Great OPPortunitY to Hi1!hli1!ht Your Business· AccomPlishments
#3 Great 0PPortunitY·to .SPotli1!ht Your EmPloYees
#4 Great OPPortunitY To Generate New Business
#5 It APPears In The GalliPolis DailY Tribune. Point Pleasant Re1!ister, And The DailY Sentinel

Details, A3

•
Meigs County's

entine

Hometown Newspaper

~

.

.

.' .

-

-

--

.

o;n 1 """

Micltllc•pot I • l'omrt II\' Ohtn

11"1"""' .., 1 Numb"' 1111

Firm is low bidder on connector project
ODOT's official cost estimate of '11110 additional construction sch eduled for March I 4, but were
delayed until Tuesday so that con SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
$30 million .
phases
will
complete
the
15
tractors could prepare bids for both
RACINE -The Canton firm of
Other bidders on the project
1
11-mile
connector,
which
the Ravenswood project and the
Beaver ·Excavating Co. is the appar- were: Kokosing Constnlction Co.,
• Lancaster bypass, which was also
will/ink U.S. 33 near
ent low bidder on the first phase of Inc., Columbus, $23,515,993 .96;
the Ravenswood ·connector pro- . Elmo Greer &amp; Sons Inc. , London,
Pomeroy with the. Ritchie sold yesterday.
first phase of construction
Ky., $26,449,839.27; Smith &amp; Johnjeer.
Bridge and It1terstate 77 at on The
the Connector proj ect involves
Bids on the first phas,e of the pro- son Construction Co., Columbus,
Ravmswood,
W.Jia.
six miles of "Super Two" highway
ject were opened at Ohio Depart- $26,598,140.19; Bizzack Inc., Lexment ofTransportation headquarters ington, Ky., $27,352,748.95; Heeter and Gary A. Rubel Inc., Lewisville, from the Ritchie Bridge to the
intersection of Ohio I 24 and
in Columbus on Tuesday morning. Construction Inc., Spencer, W.Va .,
$38,586,211.08 .
County Road 36 (Portland).
Beaver Excavating's bid of $31,52S,667.2 ; Trumbull Corp.,
Two additional construction
The bid opening was originally
$22,231,277.98 is well below West Mifflin, a., $31,607,947.96;
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

bids mark

Please see Project. Al

approves
Project

milestone
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - It has
been 10 years in the works,
but Tuesday's opening of
bids for the first of three
phases of the Ravenswood
Connector project marks a
milestone for local devel- ·
opment leaders.
Pomeroy
attorney
Steven L. Story recalls that
it will be 10 years ago next
month that he and three
other members of the
fledgling Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
visited ODOT's th~n­
Deputy Director, John
Dowler, to inquire about
the department's progress
on constructing the longawaited construction project.
Story, who chairs the
Southeastern
Ohio
Regional Council's U.S.
Route 33 Highway Committee, has been an active
lobbyist for local highway
projects, and has enlisted
the support of officials
from other counties along
the "Capital Corridor'.' the highway which will
ultimately link Columbus
and Charleston, WVa.
Story, along with Meigs
County's first economic
development director, Elizabeth Schaad, and Lenny
Eliasdn, then owner of
WMPO Radio and president of the chamber of
commerce, niet with
ODOT's
District
10
Deputy Director John
Dowler · early in the
Voinovich administration,
only to find out that plans
for the project, which had
been discussed for 15 years,
were vi'rtually non-existent.
"At the time we became
involved, we had heard
promises for several years
that construction would
begin soon," 1story said,
"but it turned out that the
environmental study was so
old that it coullin't be used,
and that there were no
concrete plans for construction."
"Essentially,
'Ravenswood Connector'
was little more than the
name cif a long-forgotten
project," he added.
The Athens-to-Darwin
project, the first phase of
which is scheduled to sell
later this year, had also languished on ODOT's back
burner for years·.
Story said Meigs County's efforts quickly developed into a multi-county
push for the roadway,
which helped to boost
progress not only on the
local project, but on other
'"corridor" projects, includ"

phases will compl ete the I 5 1/2mile conn ector, whi ch will link U.S.
33 near Pom eroy with th e R itchie
Bridge and Inte rs ta te 77 at
Ravenswood, W.Va .
ODOT expects that the second
phase of th e proj ec t, es tim ated at
$22 million , will sell on June I H.
.That phase involves comtru ction
from Five Points near Po meruy ·ro
Morning Star.
Phase 3, also estimated at S22 mil-

Committee

Opening

THAW

School tn Racln;-The new school Is estimated to be finished In May and operational at the beginning of the
2001.02 school year. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Building project races to Jfinish line'
BY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

R
line." .

ACINE -"Progress is
moving along at a rapid
pace and we are beginning to see the finish

The "finish line" that Southern
Local
Superintendent
James
Lawrence was referring to is the day
when · construction on the district's
new elementary school in. Racine
has been completed.
Construction crews were busy
Thesday unloading wd affixing both
ceiling md floor tile to the new $9.8
million K-8 elementary school,
expected to be complete. in. May,
andoperational at the begmrung of
the 2001-02 school year.
"Besides the ceiling and floor tile,
workers are also concentrating on
the placement of cabinetry in each of

the classrooms," said Lawrence.
"Most of the marker and bulletin
boa;.ru have already been fastened to
the walls and the first floor restrooms
are 85 percettt complete.''
The new school, an 80,000 square
foot, two-story structure that will
house more than 20 classrooms, a
gymnasium, a library and ~everallabl­
oratories, will replace the JUmor htgh
school in Racine, as well as elementary· schools in Letart Falls, Portland
and Syracuse.
Lawrence said he expect&lt; the
school's gymnasium floor to be
installed around the first weeks of
April ancl' that various outside landscaping could begin within days,
dtpending on the right weather
conditions.
"Lighting on the first floor has
alreadv been installed and is fully
operational," added Lawrence. "We

anticipate the lighting on the second
floor, which is halfway complete, to
be finished within a matter of

weeks:'
Lawrence said an open house is
planned in July for public inspection
of the new school, and that a special
tour for both parents and students
will probably take place sometime in
August.
"The anticipation level around
here is increasing every day," said
Lawrence. "You can definitely feel
the excitement. What once seemed
like forever is now just a few months
away."
.
The new school is being funded
through the Ohio Department of
Education's Building Building Assistance Program, matched locally by
$4,042,000 from a 23-year, $5.39
million bond/levy issued approved
in May 1998.

COLUMBUS (AP) -A Senate committee on Tuesday approved Gov. Bob Taft's plan
to help low-income Ohioans pay their winter
heating bills under legislation that also allows
communities to buy natural gas in bulk.
The unanimous vote by the Senate Ways &amp;
Means Committee came after majority
Republicans accepted a Democratic amendment that gives customers the chance to pay a
past-due balance attached to a single bill. .
The bill now goes to the full Senate, which
is expected to consider it on Wednesday.
The centerpiece of the bill is Taft's Project
THAW, or Temporary Heating Assistance for
· Warmth. It would allow families making up to
200 percent of the federa l poverty level to
apply for a one-time payment to help pay
their energy bills. A family of four with an
Income of about $37,000 or less would qualify. The plan would pay for half of the family's
energy bill, up to $250.
The state is using $20 million from its federal welfare surplus, and the bill would provide another $20 million in state money
because the federal money can only go to
families. Taft introduced the proposal . in his
State of the State speech.
The Democrats' amendment replaced language that limited the help to a single month's
bill. The program 'Ylll allow customers behmd
on their gas bill to collect half of the overall
amount, as long as the total is on one bill.
Democrats on the committee complained
last week that Republicans were working
against the intent of the bill. The Department
ofJob and Fan1ily Services, which is administering the Project THAW program, already
counts those past-due payments as eligible for
state aid.
"We kept to the way the program was promoted. That's all we were saying: honor what
you said;' said Sen. Greg DiDonato, a New
Philadelphia Democrat and the amendment's
sponsor.
The committee also appropriated another
$20 million in federal money for the Home
Energy Assistance Program, a federal energy
aid plan. It will allow more low-income
Ohioans to receive the federal ·help.

Next House GOP tax cut: Double $500 child credit
WASHINGTON (AP) House The marriage penalty qffects arl
Republicans are working on legislation that estimated .15 milliott tavo-earnt' f
would go much further than President Bush
hollseholds becallse ittcome tax
in easing the tax marriage penalty and give
Wnilies an immediate break by raising the brackets are .narrower for single
child tax credit effective for this year.
. people than they are for cor1pks.
The measure, which was circulated in
draft form Thesday night on Capitol Hill sputtering economy. The House GOP plan
and obtained by The Associated Press, is would raise the $500 child tax credit to $600
likely to be considered by the House Ways retroactive to Jan. 1 of this year, and then
and Means Committee this week and reach gradually increase it to $1,000 by 2006.
the House tlOQr next week.
The marriage penalty affects an estunated
Led by social conservatives, Republican 25 million rwo-earner households because
lawmakers have vowed to. pass marriage income tax brackets are narrower for single
penalty relief much broader than Bush people than they are for couples.
requested in his 10-year,S1.6trilliontaxcut.
For example, under current law the 15
"My feeling is that we're going to be able · percent brada:t app~es to the firit $27,050
· to do better than what the president did in of a single persons raxable mcome, . or
that area," Senate Finance Committee $54,100 fur two single people. A marned
Chairman Charles Grassley, R-lowa, said couple, on the other hand, pays the lowest
earlier Thesday.
15 percent rate on only their first $45,200 of
Lawmakers are also under pressure to give income.
The House GOP proposal would enlarge
more tax relief immediately to help the

•
~

March 21, 2001

-

PIIMtHtlldi,AS

..

Wedn~sday

the bottom 15 percent bracket so that it is
equal to twice that of singles. For those who
don't itemize deductions, the House measure would raise the current S7 ,600 standard
deduction fur married people so that it
equals that of twO singles, which would now
be S9, 100 combined.
This effectively gives a taX cut to virtually
all married couples, even those in one-.
income households that now receive a taX
bonus. Former President Clinton last year
,vetoed a Republican bill closely resembling
this year's emerging legislation.
Bush proposed only to provide two-earner couples a 10 percent taX deduction fur
the first $6,000 of the lower-earning
spouse's income, gradually rising to $30,000.
The president's advantage is cost: His plan
Was in the range of $100 billion over 10
years, while last year's similar GOP marriage
penalty bill would have cost S292 billion
over that span.

Today's

Sentinel
2 Sedlons- 12 Peps

&lt;;:alendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
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Sports
Weather

AS
62-4
65

A4
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61.3-4.6
A3

OHIO
Pick 3' 2-3-5; Pick 4: 7-3-1-6
Budceye 5: 4-11·30-31·32

W.VA.

I ·

Daily 3: 3-9-4 Daily 4: 2·3-3'3
4:1 200 1 OhiuVallt'y Publishing Co

•

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