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                  <text>SHOW YOUR PRIDE WITH SPECIAL DISPLAY FLAG ON A6
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Hip: 40s; Low: 1Ds
Details, nL•-

P&amp;G slashes workforce, A2
Southern Cal upsets Kentucky, Bl

Melp County's
Volume

s I.

shortage
affects
agency
FROM

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'·f '
i

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'32.• Thursday, March 22, 2001

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ONE·· MORE

NET:10 Cut;

·H fl
ELL Congratulations
Eagles
STORAGE
Good Luck
, ·Garrett &amp;
,The Entire .
Eagles Team!

+ 10 K 10, 10 X 20, lOx 30 Units
•
•
•
•

'

lighted and Secure
24 Hour Hccess·
monthly Rentals
Long Term Discounts

-Mom &amp; Dad

992-1717
located llorlh of P~ on St. Rt. 7
(Dext to Pamldl)
Office: 100 East IDaln

•

·HARTWELt .HOUSE
Corner of Court &amp; Main

PomerOy, Ohio

In Histotic Downtow:n Pomeroy

'(740) 992-7696

WeSAM GONSTRUG,IDN, .INC•.
~

.

~·

PI••• ·-

REPORTS

Talanua, AJ

Sentinel
2 S1dlou- IIPapl

lit
t

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Ray &amp;Tom K-rr .
'

(740) 992-6466
Chester · Ohio

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Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

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Sports

Weather .

entine

Hometown Newspaper

so Cents

Tate low bidder for MCCoA trucks
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Bids for two new
truck cabs for the Meigs County Council on Aging were opened during
Thursday's regular meeting of the Meigs
County commissioners.
Don Tate Motors ofPomei,'O)' was the
apparent low bidder for the two cabs,
Chevrolet S-10s, with a bid of$14,492
each.
The trucks will be used as delivery
vehicles for the MCCoA's home-deliv-

· ered meal program, and will be funded
through the Community Development
Block Grant formula program.
Three bids were received, from Don
Tate Motors as well as Jerry Bibbee Ford
of Middleport, in th~ amount of
$13,729.30 for each of two trucks, and
Gene Johnson Chevrolet of Gallipolis,
in the amount of S16,508.
The Bibbee bid, although received by
the board, was withdrawn by the dealer.
who has since closed the business.
Action on the bids was tabled pending

review · by MCCoA Director Susan lution authorizing th~ application, as
Oliver.
well as other documents required by the
Jean Tru&lt;Sell, rhe county~' fair housing USDA in order to apply for the funding.
administrator and grants administrator,
Trussell said S227,7(KJ is available for
conducted the si:cond and final public the program across the state.
hearing on a $90,000 grant through the
TruS&lt;ell alm noted that a second pubUSDA R.unl Housing Service's Rural lic hearing on a grant application for a
Housing Preservation progrdm.
·Columbia Township water line extenThe fund•, if awarded, would be used sion project ·has been set for April I 0 at
to provide "mini-rehab" home repair the Columbia Township Firehouse.
services for up to 15 low-income
The project, as proposed, would prohouseholds.
The commissioners approved a resoPlease see MCCoA,. Al

Go Eagles!

GOP wants

bigger
tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP) Citing the
drooping economy, Senate Republicans say
they want to rush $60 billion in tax cuts. to
Americans this year on top of the $1.6 trillion,
10-year reduction that President Bush has
championed.
GOP senators said Thu~y they would try
to write a bill this spring that couples an
inm1ediate $60 billion cut with a 10-year, $983
billion reduction in income tax rates. the heart
of Bush's tax propos.1l.
Their decision underlined how the weaker

A3

84-6
B7
A4

A3
BL3,6
A2

Lotteries
OHIO
Pidc 3: ~; Pidc 4: 3-6-&amp;ll
&amp;&amp;eye 5: 10.:15-27·31·3\1

W.VA.

llally 3: 7-o--4 Daily 4: 3-2+7
C 2001 Ohio Valley P\lblishins Co.

I. ·

economy and the stock markers' recent swoon

have created sudden bipartisan momentum for
sizable tax cuts for 2001. Bush's ta.~ package,
which he says will help spark the economy,
contained virtually no reductions until next

year.
"If anybody has a better plan to help the
American economy, ... I'd like to see it," said

Jennifer ~uckley, a junior, and Jennifer Thoma, ·a .:;ophomore, were brimming with school spirit as they put the
finishing touches on. a sign encouragement for the Eastern Eagles. Eastern's boys basketball team was set
to compete In the !1001 OHSM Dlv)ston IV tournament today, taking on the Tlpp City Bethel Bee~. (Toriy M.
Leach photo)

of

Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete
Domenici, R.-N.M., after GOP senators huddled privately on their ta.x plans.
Senate Democrats also have beb'lln pushing
for tens of billions of dollars in tax reductions
this year, though they want fewer than half the "
cuts that Bush does over the decade. Senate
Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., said the
combined package the GOP envisions would
cost too much and remains too tilted toward
the wealthy.
"I think that is too e&gt;&gt;pensive and would be
very difficult to accept," Daschle said.
Daschle haso!fered a plan to cut the bottom
15 percent income ta.~ rate to I0 percent
immediately, which could cost $35 billion this
year. Sen. Max Baucus of Montana, senior
Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee,
has proposed a three-year, $200 billion income
taX cut with up to $70 billion in cuts this year.
Domenici said no decisiom would be made
on the form of this year's tax reductions until
the Senate Finance Committee writes the bill
in coming weeks.

,

POISON
PREVENTION

Students learn to avoid 'pretty poisons'

Today's

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ST~FF

POMEROY
A
national shortage of adult
tetanus and diphtheria toxoids (Td) has resulted in
the Meigs County Health
Department prioritizing
the usage of a-.ailable supplies.
The -.accine is used to
immunize people who are
age 7 years and over. The
normal dosing schedule is a
booster every 10 years
once a primary series (of at
least three doses) is
received, according to T.C.
Ervin~ RN, assistant nursing director.
The primary series, she .
explained, is accomplished
through the infants DT&amp;P
jchedule of 2, 4, 6 and 1518 months. A booster is
Shen recommended before
entry inte
and thefi followed every 'j 0
years thereafter.
D~ng the l~st quarter
of 2000, there was a shortage
resulting
from
decreased production of
the -.accines by the two
· l:f.S. manufactttrers leaving
Aventis Pasteur the sole
. nationwide distributor of
Tetanus.
While. Aventis Pasteur is
shipping limited quantities
of vaccine to assure a wide
distribution of available
does, priority is being
given. to treating acute
wounds:
Aventis
Pasteur
is
increasing the amount of
T d production, however,
because of the long production time re4uirements,
the shortage is not expect- ·
ed to be resolved for 12 to
18 months, according to
the Health Department
nurse. However, she indicated that some additional
supplies had arrived this
week.
Ervin said that the· following recommendations
·will be followed by the
local agency staff un'il such
time as S\)pplies are replen-

March 23, 2001

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 112

Te~anus

Friday

BY TONY M. l.v.ctl
SEI'(TlNa NEWS STAFf

TuPPERS PLAINS - In obsermnce of
National Poison Week, botl&gt; kinde~en and first
grade students at Eastern Elementary
Tupper.;
f'lains were briefed on the importance of avoiding
poisonous products.
Betsy Herald Nicodemus, coordinator for the
Meig; County Accident and Injury Prevention program. spent Thursday morning educating sn1dents
on how to avoid "pretty poisons," which are potentially poisonous products that children can't visually
differentiate fiom products they recognize and associate as being,non-harmful.
Nicollemus said childhood poisoning is a hazard
often oVerlooked by parents and care giver.;. Commonly used products such as cosmetics, detergents
·and medicines can be futal to )QUng children iflefi
within theil: reach.
Ewn innocent looking items like household
plants and vitamin supplements can poison a child
in less than a tcinu~ she said
"Children ages 5 and under are particularly vul1

near

-Betsy Her·
aid Nicode·
mus, coordi·
nator for the
Meigs County
Accident and
Injury Prevention program,
spent Thursday morning
instructing
both kindergarten and
first grade
students at
Eastern Elementary on
the lmpor·
tance of
avoiding
"pretty pol·
sons." (Tony ·
M. leach
photo)

"Chiltlren ·ages 5 and 1mder are
particularly tmlnerable to
poisonings due to their wriosilj'
and natural desire to put thin,lls
in tlteir mouths."
Betsy Harald Nlcodemuo

nerable to poimnings due to their curiosity and natural deoiire to put thing; in their mouths;' saic\
Nicodemu•. "Many poisoning; can be prevented if
parents would simply lock poisonous products out
of children's reach."
·
Through the use of visual models, Nicodemus
helped students distinguish between products that
resemble each other, but whose contents are tompletely different.
"Young children can ofteil be confused with
items that are visually similar, like apple juice and
l'itJe-Sol,a Parmesan cheese container and a Comet

P I - - PI IIIII, AJ
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The Daily Sentinel

VALLEY WEAT.HER

Colder conditions Saturday
Cloudy with a chance of rain
Colder northerly air will showers in the morning, then
move into the tri-counry area a chance ofsnow showers in
tonight, sending temperatures the afternoon. Highs only in
dipping into the 20s and pro- the lower 40s. Northwest
ducing some snow · showers, wind·around 15 mph. Chance
the National Weather Service of precipitation 50 percent.
Saturday night ... Brisk and
said.
Wintry condition• will cold with a chance of snow
continue on Saturday with showers. Low in the mid 20s.
scattered snbw showers or
Extended forecast:
flurries likely. Temperatures
Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
and continue cold. High in
won't climb out of the 40s.
Unseasonably cold condi- the lower 40s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. .
tions will prevail until the
middle of next week, when a Low in the mid 20s and high
gradual warming trend will near 50.
Tuesday... l~creasing
begin, forecasters said.
Sunset tonight will be at cloudiness. low in the upper
6;46, and sunrise on Saturday 20s and high in the lower 50s.
Wednesday.. .Mostly cloudy
is at 6:29 a.n1.
with a chance of rain. Low in
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Rain
showers the lower 40s and high in the
'
likely after midnight. Low 35 upper 50s.
Thursday
...
Mostly
cloudy
to 40. Southwest wind around
I 0 in ph. Chance. of rain 60 . with a chance of showors.
Low in the mid 40s and high
percent
Saturday... Turning colder. in the lower 60s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hotel planned at fairgrounds
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio Expositions Commission;
over the objections of Agriculture Director Fred Oatley, has
approved a deal to put a 60-room hotel on the state fairgrounds.
Dailey objected primarily to the length of the lease for 2.52
acres of land in the northeast corner of the fairgrounds which
could extend to 45 years.
"It's unconscionable to approve a lease that extends way
beyotid the useful life of the product, which for a hotel would
be about 40 years;' Dailey said Thursday after casting the oilly
dissenting vote on the lease for Troy Motel Associates.
The company plans to build a' three-story hotel with at least
60 suites as well as meeting rooms, a restaurant and a pool by
April2003.
~

Tiger attack surprises worker
CLEVELAND (AP) -Just a few days after surgery, Russell
Shuey found the strength to talk about the puncture wounds in
his neck and shoulder blade from a 500-pound-Siberian tiger's
attack.
The tiger sunk its teeth into him Monday at Burnette's Pet
Farm in Olmsted Township, a Cleveland suburb.
The animal, named Tigger, was sltipped off to .an exotic animal refuge on Thursday. Shuey remained in stable condition at
MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland.
Shuey, a 39-year-old carpet cleaner from suburban North
Ridgeville, said he had just dumped a second wheelbarrow of
gravel in the tiger's cage when Tigger jumped him from behind.

City considers wind ~fanning'
PAINESVILLE (AP) --This windy northeast Ohio ciry has
its own self-sustaining municipal power plant. It could soon add
a wind farm as a source of power production.
The first step \Vas the installation of a wind tower last July.
The 130-foot tower collected data on wind speed, direction
and tetnperature.
But the information gathering stopped when the tower blew
over during a winter storm.
•
City officials arc working with members of Green Energy
O~io, a nonprofit group that researches alternative energy
1
• ~ources. Bil1 Spracley, executive director of Green Energy Ohio,
' in Columbus, said the Painesville tower will be rebuilt in the
next few months.

.Salmonella source sought
RAVENNA (AP) - The Portage Counry Health Department is trying to determine how five people who ate at a
restaurant in Brimfield Township on March 11 came down
with salmonella poisoning.
All of the victims ate eggs or food; containing eggs at the

Consumer products maker to cut jobs
CINCINNATI (AP) Procter &amp;
Gamble Co. will cut 9,600 more jobs
worldwide to meet competitors' prices
and increase sales of core brands, the
company's chief executive said Thursday.
The move raises total job cuts to
24,600 announced in the past two years
by P&amp;G, once regarded by workers as a
job-for-life employer.
The new cuts represent about 9 percent of the work force of 110,000 for
the m~ker of Crest toothpaste, Pampers
diapers and Tide detergent.
Chief Executive A.G. Lafley said he
witnessed the market competition problem a few weeks ago when he accompanied a mother of three as she shopped in
a Safeway supermarket in the San Jose,

Calif., area. She spent about S100 on
groceries and filled her cart with mostly
store-label products and just a few
brand-name products - but no P&amp;G
items.
"I didn't have a very good night,"
Lafley told reporters, recalling that experience. 11 We've got to deliver consumers
a better value. Consumers are our boss."
One-third of the job cuts companywide will come from manufacturing,
and those. red4ctions are expected to
include plant closings and consolidations. Corrtpany officials declined to
elaborate.
In June 1999, P&amp;G announced its
Organization 2005 plan to cut 15,000
jobs and dose 10 plants to reduce

Country Kitchen restaurant, said Marjorie Westfall, nursing
director of the county's health department.
Three people were hospitalized, but they were released after
medical treatment, Westfall said. The he~lth dcpartmellt would
not release their names.
SalmOilella poisoning results in diarrhea; cramps, vomiting,
chills, fever and body aches that occur 12 to 72 hours after
someone is infected, Westfall said.

Shootings yield prison tenn

bureaucracy and get products to tru&gt;rko,t
faster. Of that number, 7,800 jobs still
need to be cut because not enough
workers have left voluntarily.
Stepping up product innovation will
help P&amp;G go on the offense, rather than
simply try to match competitors' efficiency in cutting operating costs, Lalley
S&gt;id Thursday.
P&amp;G expects the job cutting program
to cost $1.4 billion after taXes, with most
of that expense coming during the company fiscal year that begins July I.
·
Savings from the reduction should
total at least $600 million a year after
taxes by fiscal 2003-04; management
said.

smuggling, as well as state charges in Ohio and New York,
police said. The charges were not specified.

Peebles bids for Stage stores
FREMONT (AP) - Peebles Inc. , a department store company, is planning to take over, remodel and reopen Stage department stores in several Ohio cities.
Peebles outbid The Dunlap Co. on Wednesday · in a U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in Texas for the right to some Stage .locations.
The retail chain secured the former Stage store in Fremont,
along with locations in Tiffin, Van Wert, Wilmington, Hillsboro,
Marysville, Sidney and Coshocton in Ohio, and Tell City, Ind.
Peebles has not disclosed its b~d. which is expected to be
finalized during an April 2 bankruptcy court hearing.

DAYTON (AP) -A man received the maximum sentence
of 19 years in prison in the 1999 shootings of tWo Dayton
police officers.
Alonzo Freeman Jr., 20, was sentenced Thursday on two
counts of felonious assault with firearm specifications in the
shootings of officers Michael August and Michael Robinson.
August and Robinson both . asked Judge John W Kessler of
Montgomery County Common Pleas Court to impose the
maximum sentence.
LIMA (AP) - · A driver accused of hitting and killing a surAugust's bullet- proof vest blocked a bullet that struck him in
the center of the chest, and he suffered a wound to his foot in veyor has pleaded no contest to aggravated vx:hicular homicide.
Charles Stannard, 53, of Lakeview, faces up to five years in
a brief shootout. Robinson was wounded five times, mostly in
his upper legs. Both officers are back on duty.
prison. Allen Counry. Common Pleas judge Richard Warren
told Stannard on Wednesday that he would not sentence him to
more than four years.
Stannard is scheduled to be. sentenced May 9.
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) -With Comair and its pilots union set
Glen Martz, 63, of Lima, was hit by Stannard's pickup truck
to begin federally mediated contract talks in advance of a pos- in October. Martz never 5aw the truck, said State Highway
sible strike Monday, the regional airline is shutting down 7 per- Patrol investigators.
cent of its flight operations, a company spokesw'oman said.
That will mean cancellation· of 50-60 flights Friday, spokeswoman Meghan Glynn said Thursday night.
"Our customers have been notified," Glynn said.
LUCASVILLE (AP) -A tree uprooted and fell on a sport
Comair pilots represented by the Air Line Pilots Association
almost have unanimously rejected the company's five-year con- utility·vehicle, killing the driver.
Dana McCloud, 33, of Lucasvil115 was driving on a county
tract offe..They .could go on str.ike as-early •• 12:01 a.m&gt;Monroad Wednesday, when the tree fell on her Ford Explorer. It had
day, when a 30-day cooling-off period ends.
been raining in the area, the State Highway Patrol said.
McCloud's 2-year-old daughter, Stephanie, was in the back
seat and was not injured, authorities said.
.
CAMBRIDGE (AP) - A r----------~-----'-----------i
five-week investigation into
weapons and crack cocaine
dealing has resulted in 42 nusdemeanor arrests, 12 felony
counts and several federal
charges, police said Thursday.
The investigation focused on
a group of people who allegedly bought guns in Ohio, sold
The Melga County Commlaalol)ere Intend to apply to the Ohio Department of
them in New York, and used
the proceeds to bring crac k
Development, Office of Houalng and Community Partnerahlpa, for funding
cocaine to Ohio for sale, police
under the FY' 200'1 Community Development Block Grant Community Houalng
said.
Program, i federally fundtd program aclmlnlattrtd by the State. .The CHIP
The main target of the invesPrograma provldea a mQimum of $1100,000 for eligible actlvltlea, provtdtd the
tigation was Noel Williams; a
county meeta applicable progr11m requlrementa.
fugi,tive from New York Ciry,
who used the name Keith
On March 8, 2001, the County conducttd Ita flret public hearing to Inform
Campbell while living in Camcltlzana about the CHIP CDGB program, how It may be ulld, what actlvltlea are
bridge, police said.
eligible, and other Important program requlrementa.
·
Williams
was
arrested
'
.
Wednesday and is facing multiA aacond public hearing will be held on Aprll5, 2001 at 10:00 a.m. at the Melge
ple federal counts of firearms

Accident kills surveyor

Comair slashes flight operation

Uprooted bee kills driver

Guns-for-crack deals probed

NOTICE · OF SECOND
PUBLIC HEARING

County Commlaalonere office, M~lga County CourthouM, Pomeroy, Ohio to
glva cltlzana an .opportunity to revlaw and cl)mment on the County'a propoatd
CDBG FY' 2001 Community Houalnglmprovementt Project.

Baaed ~n both .citizen Input and local offlclala' aaaeaamant of the. CountY'•
netda, the County Ia prCI!)Oalng to undertake tha following CDBG Community
Houalng Improvement .actlvltlu for CHIP Flacal Yaar 2001:

Honeysuckle
Addison Pike
Myrtle
Rafferty
Polecat

L-..cky
Bulavllle .Addison
McCully
Maddy Cemetery
Township #1 083

Carmen
Hillview
Lila
Don
.

.

I

Also: Ellen St. Rt. 7 from house#1037 to Cheshire
&amp; G~orges Creek Rd •.from 36-1200

You may experience brief
service Interruptions.
Please be
assured we will do
everything to
keep interruptions
to a minimum.

•

•

ACTIVITY: Owner Occupied Homa Repair
$80,000 CDB~ CHIP
National Objective: Low to Moderate Income Houaeholda

..

Jtfl' ThorntOn, Prealdent
Melga County Commlulonera

HARRISONVILLE- Har·
risonville Senior Citizens, Monday, 11 a.m. at the townhouse.
Blood pressures will be taken.

•

Ha~ey

Davidson

36l.

Rocky Boots - 4'·
AD Shell- 5-4~

Sears- 34~
Shoney'a -1

Kmart- sl.

Wai·Mart - 4Sl,

Kroger- 23
Lands End - 28

system contracts

Wendy's- 20l.
Worthington - 9

Ltd. -15

Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes ol the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smltl1 Part·

LOCAL BRIEFS

Boil advisory

Ladies to meet

..

MCCoA

Cookie sale

·from Page AI

~

Game broadcast

GOP to meet

.

Alumni plans
for event

EMS runs

Poison
fromPageA1

The Daily Sentinel

Reader ,Services
Correction Polley

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. error in a story. call the newsroom

at (740) 992·2156.

Newa Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department axtentlons are:

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Gonorol monager

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News .

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or

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Other aarvlces
A\IVtrtlolng

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Circulation

Ext.4

Cloulfled Ads

Ext. 5

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Ohio.
Second-class

postage paid at Po""roy.

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Mtmbtr: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association .

PoltmiStlf: Send address correc·
tklns to The Dally SenUnet, 111 Coun.
St., Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.

Subscription rates
By clfrier or motor route

OntWHk
$2
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One.year
.
5104
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50 cents
Subscrlt)ers not dashing to pay the
carrier may remit In advar~ee direct to
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carrier each week. No subscription by
mall permitted in areas where hOme
carrier seNice Is available.

Mall subsc~on
Inside M•lga Counly

13 Weeks

To aend e-mail

•

GKNLV-10~

from Page AI

dailysanllnel 0 yahoo.i:om

•

AmTechiSBC- 40l.
Ashland Inc. - 36),
AT&amp;T -21l.
Bank One - 33l.
Bob Evans - 1B"f,
BorgWamer- Jill,

General Electric - 37\

Tetanus

Cltlzena ara encouraged to atte!1d thla maat!ng on April 5, 2001 to expreaa their
vlewa and commenta on the county'a propoaed CDBG FY' 2001 CHIP
Application. Written commanta will be accepted until 1o:oo a.m., April 5, 2001,
and may ba mailed to the Malg1 County CourthouM, Pomeroy,'Ohlo 457811.

If a participant will naad auxiliary aida (Interpreter, brallled or ttptd material,
aaalttlve llatenlng devlca, other) due to a dlaablllty, pleaae contact Gloria
Klotl, Clerk, prior to April 5, 2001, at (814) H2-2885 In order to enture that
your nHCia will be accommodated.

AEP- 42)•
Arch Coal- 25~
Akzo- 40l.

IRS auditing prison

COLUMBUS (AP)- The $210,000 for psychiatrist
'
Internal R.evenue Service, at David Axelson at the ChilliOak Hill Financial
13~
RACINE - Special meeting,
Champion- 2~.
odds with Ohio over the · cothe Correctional lnstituCharming Shops - 5l. OVB -24'1.
•.. Pomeroy-Racine lodge 164,
POMEROY- Veterans Service
state's
use of private contrac- tion.
BBT-31~•
City Holding - 9l.
" Free and Accepted Masons.
Commission, 7:30p.m., t17 E.
Contracts represent the
tors to fill prison jobs, is auditPeoples- IB
Federal Mogul - 3
" Annual Inspection in entered
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
ners at Advest Inc. of
Pramler- a'*f.
USB- 19),
amount
of money allocated
ing · hundreds of contracts
apprentice degree. Refresh·
Gallipolis .
Rockwell-39
Ga~nett- ss:,
from 1998 and 1999, The annually and don't always
,1 • ments.
CARPENTER - Columbia
reflect the amount a vendor
Associated Press has learned.
Township Trustees, special
POMEROY - Meigs County
meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
earns
in a year, the state said.
The
largest
of
the
438
consons at occupational risk for
•• Chapter of Ohio Retired Teach·
The !R.S examines how
tracts were held by psychia• , ers Associalion, luncheon meet- POMEROY- Ohio Hunter Edu·
·tetanus prone injuries who
trists, doctors and other med- much control an employer has
ing, noon, Trinity Church,
cation Class. through Wedneshave not been vaccinated
·· Pomeroy. Ha.l Kneen w~h pro·
ical
professionals, including over a worker when deterday, 6 to 9 p.m., and Saturday,
with Td within the preceding more than 60 six-figure agree- mining whether that worker
gram on perennial gardening
at Pomeroy Gun Cll!b. Register
and musical selections.
10 years.
at Meigs SWCD, 992·4282.
ments, according to Oh10 ·should be classified as an
ished.
Door prizes.
• Adolescents who have not Department of Rehabilitation employe e or independent
TUPPERS.PLAINS...:.. Final
• Persons requiring tetanus
been vaccinated with a vac- and Correction records.
contractor.
••
signup for the Tuppers Plains
1
TUESDAY
vaccination for prophylaxis in
baseball and softball season, 9
The
IRS
has
strict
rules
for
cine
containing
T
d
within
the
Michael Harding, 49, a partPOMEROY- Winding Trail
wound manageme~t.
to 11 a.m. at ballfield.
when a worker is claSsified as time psychologist at Noble
Garden Club meeting, 8 p.m.
• Persons who have already preceding 10 years.
Tuesday, home of Valerie Not• Adults who have not been an independe~r. contractor, Correctional Institution in
SYRACUSE- Syracuse Youth , tingham.
receiyed doses of vaccine
.~ Baseball league sign ups, 10
vaccinated with Td within the which involve~ a differem C aldwell, said 'the state has
containingTd.
method of tax payment. In the extensive control over hts
a.m. to noon, Syracuse mayor's RACINE- Southern Local
• Pregnant women and p!!r- preceding' 10 years.
office. March 29 is deadline.
state
's case, the IRS is claiming schedule.
Board of Education, 4 p.m.,
that the prison contractors
"One of the problems the
Syracuse Elementary School.
SUNDAY
should
have
been
state
IR.S ha s is the state IS telling
MIDDLEPORT- Gospe~Sing,
POMEROYMeigs
County
employees
and
taxed
as
such,
contractors
what their hours
Middleport Church of the
Emergency
Planning
Committee
Nazarene, 6:30 p.m. Family
said Tina Krueger, a lawyer should be and setting their
regular meeting, 11;30 a.m.,
' Heritage Singers.
with the prison system.
sc hedule, as such, treating con Multipurpose Senior Center con·
proper certification.
The IRS "could say that tractors like regular emp loyterence room.
. . MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury ,
Martha Holter and Eliza- there are certain guidelines \:VC
•ees," said Harding, who has an
Church of Christ, farewell dinner
The Community Calendar Is
POMEROY A boil beth Newman were employed have to follow if we want to $81,900 contract.
lor Tom and Lynn Runyon, who
published as a free service to
advisory for water customers as student teachers.
are leaving lor their retirement
continue to use them as mdeThe IR.S declined to comnon-profit
groups
wishing
to
The board also:
home in Florida. Dinner will lot·
in Pomeroy has been lifted.
pendent
contractors,
or
else
ment . . Spokeswoman Teri
announce meetings and spetow worship services in church
• Approved financial reports,
hire
them,
or
not
use
then1,"
Dixon
said the agency couldcial events. The calendar Ia
··' basement. Pubjic invited.
·
a resolution authorizing the
said Joe Andrews, a prison n't confirm or deny the exisnot designed to promote sates
necessary tax levies and certior lund raisers of any type.
· spokesman.
MONDAY
tence of art audit without perMIDDLEPORT - Ladies fying them to the county
MIDDLEPORT- OH·KAN Coin Items are printed only as
Hiring the contractors nlission from a person or entispace permlta and cannot be
Club, 7 p.m. at Trolley Station.
for the Lord will have a Bible auditor;
would be extremely difficult ry being andited. The state
guaranteed to be printed a
.
Auction, drawings and refresh·
• Approved a resolution in
study at Abundant Grace
because of current budget declined to give permission.
specific number of days.
ments.
Church in Middleport at 9 support of the House of Rep- constraints, Krueger said.
Dr. Gary Beven, a psychiaresentatives School Funding
a.m. Tuesday.
Earlier this n)onth, Regi- trist at the Southern · Ohio
Plan to resolve the school
nald Wilkinson, prison system Correctional Institution in
announced that they have
funding issue, providing that
director, told lawmakers that Lucasville with a $199,902
received a request for the tranSvideo lottery machines are not
his department will have to contract, said he pays "quite a
,.
fer of a Cl liquor permit from
established;
POMEROY
Pomeroy
cut 300 employees by July and bi.t" of self-employment tax.
Chester Country Kitchen Inc.,
,,
• Approved a records comBrownie
Troop
1271
will
hold
another 125 by the end of Unlike Harding, he said he has
to Athens Landmark Inc.,
mission meeting for March 28
a
Girl
Scout
Cookie
booth
2002.
almost entire control o.ver his
vide water service to resiqents doing business as Chester
at 10 a.m. at the administrative
sale
on
Saturday
at
9
a.m.
at
The
state
argues
that
it's
up
.
Country
Kitchen.
The
existing
on Ohio 143 and Ohio 692,
schedule.
Kroger in Pomeroy. The sale office, to dispose of old to private contractors to pay
sale
of
carrylicense
allows
the
"I think they would be able
., , and Mount Union, Mudfork,
records.
the
cookies
will
continue
until
their
own
federal
taxes.
The
to recruit competent, board-·
State Farm, Woodyard, Hills, out beer until 1 a.m.
are sold. All eighi varieties will
contractors
pay
taxes
now
The
commissioners
also:
Myres, Townsend, Gibson, and
certified physicians like myself
under different IRS rules for if they adJUSted CIVil sbrvJCe
• Declared Friday · "Eastern be on sale for $3 per box. April
Blackwood roads.
Smith is the troop leader.
independent contractors.
The project would provide Eagles Day" in honor of the
rates to reflect the market,"
TUPPERS PLAINS There
are
many
problems
School
boys'
basEastern
High
service to approximately 108
Beven said. "I think that most
Two local radio stations will
hiring
full-time
employees
at
'' households through the Lead- ketball team;
doctors want to be just paid
broadcast Friday afternoon's
of
some
state
prisons
because
•
Approved
the
first-half
". ing C!'llek Conservancy Dis.. . POMEROY - A special state semi-final . basketball the institutions' locations· and well for what they do, and
appropriation
for
the
,_. triCt's water system . .
meeting of the Republican game with the Eastern Eagles. the dangerous nature of prison especially if you feel you're
MCCoA,
in
the
amount
of
''
' The commissioners tabled a
putting your safery at risk in a
Sportsradio ESPN AM 630
Central Committee will be
$4,000;
.
work,
Kru
eger
said.
request from the Meigs Coundangerous place like a prison ."
held on Monday at the Meigs ·and 100.9-FM of Marietta
Contracts also give the state
ry Humane Sociery, for per- . • Authorized the Depart- Counry Courthouse ·at 7:30 will broadcast Friday's game as
Fornal earned $64 an hour
a
lot
of
flexibtliry
because
they
ment
of
Job
and
.Family
Sermission to place two additionas a psychiatrist at Oakwood
well as all state finals on Saturp.m.
don't
reqmrc
benefits
and
al humane officers on the vices to advertise for bids for a
state prison in Lima, then
day.
other
administrative
costs
that
new
voice.activitated
tele.
resigned as a state employee
' counry payroll, at the organizaMiddleport's 92.1 WYVKgo
along
with
employees,
she
phone
answering
system;
tion's expense.
FM will also broadcast Friday's
and became a psychiatrist at
• Approved payment of bills
The Sociery has hired Gary
game, with the pregame said.
London Correctional InstituAlmost
all
medical
jobs
in
in
the
amount
of.$470,225.96;
Willford and Janet Ambrose.
beginning at 1:30 p.m., ,
tion for $106 an hour.
• Approved payment of dues
The current offteer, Carol
POMEROY Plans are accotding to Station Manager state prisons are held by co ntractors , said Kay Northrup,
lemley, is paid partially by the in the Buckeye HiUs/Hocking underway for the annual Kevin Knotts.
tht• state's deputy director of
counry, and partially by the Valley Regional Development Pomeroy High School Alumni
corr~.":ction:1l health care.
District
in
the
amount
of
Association's reqnion on May
Humane Sociery using grant
The 1999 contracts include
26 at Meigs High School.
funds and funds from the $2,298.80.
a
$227,000 agreement with
Present
were
Commissioners
POMEROY Units of
A social hour will be held
United Fund for Meigs Counry, but is paid through the Mick Davenport and Jim from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the the Meigs Emergency Service psychiatrist R.obert Fornal at
Sheets, and Clerk Gloria · high school cafeteria, followed answered eight calls for assis- London Correctional Institucounry to aUow for benefiG.
by the dinner. A dance with tance on Thursday. Units tion , a $213,000 contract with
The ' ·
commissioners !Goes.
psychiatrist
Theophilus
George Hall will follow. Phoc responded as follows:
Arthur-Mensah
at
Grafton
tos of reunion classes will be
CENTRAL DISPATCH
prevention of unintentional
taken · in the interval between
12:45 a.m., Ohio 124, assist- · Correctional Institution and
childhood injuries.
ed by Syracuse, Mary Cleek,
the dinner and dance.
"Over 1 million unintentional
Tickets for the . dinner and St. Joseph Hospital;
poisonings of children age 5 and dance are $15 each.
8:47 a.m., Joppa Road,
IPRIIIG Vl+iltY CIIH '.\i,
under are reported to U.S. poison
Again this year, scholarships assisted by Reedsville, James
446·45 24 ' . ' , " . '
:. container, lamp oil and Listerine, control centers ellery year;' said are offered to students who R.upe, Camden-Clark Memoand candy and prescription med- Nicodemus."Ifwe can prevent at are either a child or grand- rial Hospital;
icines;' said Nicodemus. "This least one child fiom being poi- child of a PHS graduate. The
11:22 a.m., Main Street,
similarity in appearance can lead soned, then our program has application deadline is May Timqthy Lyons, O'Bleness
children to make a rash decision been a complete success."
Memorial Hospital;
18.
about what they ingest"
·
There are no official appli3:37 p.m., Dorcas R.oad,
Nicodemus also visited Har"Children act fast, but unforcations. Those applying should Louise Wolfe, Holzer Medical
risonville Elementary, Rutland
send a resume, transcrip\, letter Center;
tunately, 'so do poisons;' she
Elementary, Southern E1emen10:45 p.m., Salem Street,
of application, a current photo
added.
tary, and Tuppers Plains Head and a notation of their rela- assisted by Rutland, Paul TayThe Meigs Counry Accident
Start throughout the week.
tionship to a Pomeroy gradu- lor, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
and Injury Prevention program is
For
more
information
on
POMEROY .
ate to the Pomeroy Alumni
funded by the Meigs Counry
7:36 p.m., Naylor's Run,
Department of Jobs and Family poison prevention, call 992- Association, P.O. Box 202,
assisted
by Centtal Dispatch,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Services and is dedicated to the 6625.
Graduates who wish to Annette Marshall, treated.
REEDSVILLE
donate to the scholarship fund
4:22 p.m., Dr. Hunter's
may do so by sending the
donation to the association at office, Carla Schuler, CCMH.
RUTLAND
the same address.
(USPS 2t 3·HO)
4:40 p.m., Arbaugh AddiOhio Volley Publlohlng Co.
Published
every
afternoon,
Monday
tion,
David Corbin, CCMH.
.
I

ACTIVITY: Aclmlnlatratloll/lmplamentatlon/Falr Houalng
$100,000 CDBG CHIP

COMGbAr.ter

'•

•

ACTIVITY: Acqulaltlon/Rahabllltatlon (Down paymen~Cioalng coat/Rehab) .
$120,000 • CD8G CHIP
!
1
$450,000 • USDA • Rural D~velopment • HUD Homeownarahlp • and Local
financing
National Objective: Low to Moderett Income tiouaaholda

SATURDAY
•· CHESTER - Chester baseball
:•, and softball final signup Satur·
. day, 10 to 12, Chester firehouse.

to be accurate. II you know of an

'

'

. ACTIVITY: Private Owner Rehabllltttlon
. $200,000 - CDBG CHIP
National Obj.ectlve • Low to moderate Income houaeholda In Malga County

LOCAL STOCKS

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

..•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• • Friday, March 23, 2001
•

...

·

$27.30

26 Weeks

$53.82

52 Weeks

$105.56

A.... outside Ueigl County
13 Woeko
$29.25
26 Woeko
$56.68
52 weeu
$109.72

Board acts

TUPPERS PLAINS
Supplemental positions and
other personnel actions were
taken during Wednesday's regular meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
Jennifer Lawrence Hayman
was employed as a substitute
tCacher for the remainder of
the 2000-01 school year.
Abigail Cauthorn was hired
as the senior class play director; Nancy Morrisey \~as
hired as an elementary gmdance counselor for200 1-02
school year, and Scott Christman and Michael Barnett
were approved as volunteer
assistant baseball coaches for
the 2001 season, pending

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4 00

Chester·

Kitchen

�-

I
PageA4

•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

r- '

-

..

2£

J

R. Shawn Lewis
Diane Kay Hill

General Manager

Controller

Lilltttr "-blr 111 Gad
Muon,WV..

' n";"'T'T1,

!'T'!l1"'f

'

Fht Soutbtra Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.
Wedneiday Services - 7:00p.m.

Flnt Baptlat Cbun:b
Pastor: Mart Morrow .
6th and Palmer S1 .. Middleport
Sunday School- 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, March 23, the 82nd day of 2001. There are
283 days left in the year. ,
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry made his famous call for
America's independence from Britain, telling the Virginia
Provincial Convention, "Give me liberty, or give me death:'
On this date:·
In 1743, George Frideric Handel's oratorio "Messiah" had its
London premiere.
.
In 1806, explorers Lewis and Clark, having reached the
Pacific coast, began their journey back east.
In 1919, Benito Mussolini founded his Fascist political
movement in Milan, Italy.
In 1933, the German Reichstag adopted the Enabling Act,
which effectively granted Adolf Hitler dictatorial legislative
powers.
. In 1942, during World War II, the U.S. goverrunent began
:moving Japanese-Americans from their West Coast homes. to
:detention centers.
In 1956, Pakistan became an independent republic within
:the British Commonwealth.
; In 1965, America's first two-person space flight blasted off
:from Cape Kennedy with astronauts Virgil I. Grissom and John
;W.Young aboard.
. In 1981, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that stat~s could
·require, with some exceptions, parental notification when teen:age girls seek abortions.
In 1983, Dr. Barney Clark, recipient of a permanent artificial
~heart, died at the l/niversity of lll:;lh Medical Center after 112
days with the device.
: Ten years ago: Iraqi President Saddam Hussein ·shuffied his
:cabinet, but kept in place his hard-line ministers .of interior and
:defense to direct a crackdown on rebellion against his rule.
· Five years ago: Taiwan held its first direct presidential. elec:tions; incumbent Lee Teng-hui' was the. victor.
· One year ago: Pope john Paul II paid his respects at Yad
:vashem, Israel's Holocaust memorial: President Clinton visited
ch e western Indian village of Nayla. In a first, Speaker Dennis
Hastert named a Catholic priest, the Rev. Daniel CoJJghlin, as
the new House chaplain.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian Marty Allen is 79. Movie director Mark .Rydell is 67. Singer-producer Ric Ocasek is 52.
Singer Chaka Khan is 48. Actress Amanda Plummer is 44.

'

feared state, a "synchronous recession,"

where all the continents trip into ihe tank
together?
Or is what we're seeing just one of
those oscillating thin!?;\&gt;. perhaps not even
reaching the level of" cyclical?"
I lean toward the latter view for severd!
reasons. The most important fact about
the New Economy is it is not so new.
Usually, it's said to have begun either in
the early 1980s or the e~rly 1990s (the
date chosen as a benchmark too often
dependent on whether the describer seeks
to laud Reagan Republicans or Clinton
Democrats).
But the big muscular change. in the
American economy goes back half a century. From 1900 to 1950, there were six
depressions or deep recessions when the
Gross Domestic Product fell by more than
5 percent. Since 1950 there have been
none. Economics may not be an exact science, but that's a pretty good run, leading
one to think that the future will resemble
the past. The little negative blips we've had
since 19 50 are barely visible on a fairly
scaled long-term chart.
At dicey times like these, Americans .
wan~ a president acting like one. A president elected by 51 percent of the electoral
vote wins I00 percent of the presidency
and t 00 percent of the constitutional
power granted to a president. Splitting the ·
difference with cry-baby Democrats on,
for example, . federal judgeships would
turn the presidency wimpy. A nervous
nation wants to see a firm hand on the
reins, which is what they're seeing now.

SUnr Rao B1ptist

28601 St. tb- 7,Middlepon
Suadlly School- 10 a.ln.
Evening- 7:00p.m.
Thunday Services- 7:00
Hlllllde Bapdot Chun:b
St Rt 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Vlctorr Bapt111 llldependanl
.52.5 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: JUles E. Keesee
Worship- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services : 7 p.m.
Follb Baptl• Church
Railroad St .. Mason
Sunday ~hvol - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

COLUMNIST

a

Abllnd111t 'Grace R.F. I.
923 S. Third St., Middlepon
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sundliy service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Rutland

Faitlll FuU C01pe1·Church

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Reedtwllle Church ot Chrilt
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30am.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study. Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Salem Ctnttr

Pastor: Nathan Robinson

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler ·
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Sunday school9:30 •.m.
Norman Will, supe.rinltndem
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m.
Churda of Christ

Inteneelion 1 and l24 W

I

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Frit~
Sunday School- 9:4~ a.m.
WOIShip • II a.m.

Mt.M-Bapdol
Founh &amp;: Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Oilbcn Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worahip- 10:4S a.m.

A•tlqully Baptist
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Sunday Bvenilli -.6:00p.m.
Rutlood F,.. WIIIBopllot
Sal~m St.
hsror: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenins -· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

SKond Baplilt Churdti
' Ravenswood, WV
Paator!'David W. McClain
Sundaf ScbooiiO amMomlnJ wonhip II am Evening - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Harll'ord Church ol Chriot hi
Chrlodu Vllloa
Hartford, W.V..
Pastor.Jim Hulhtt
Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

I nitl'tl \ll'thodi ... t
Gnham United Mtthodlat
Worship · 9:30a.m. (hi&amp;: 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

( hun It ol ( ,od

MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- !0:30 a:m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Rullud Churd ol God ,
Paaaor: ~n Heath
Sundlly Worship- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Meip Cooperativt: Pllrish
Northco~t Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Syratt~~t

FlrU Church ai'God
Apple and Second SIS.
Pastor: Rev. David Ruuell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Sc~icea- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service1 • 6:30 p.m.

Cherttr
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Wor1hip - 9 a.m . .
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Se~iccs- 7 p.m.

Churcb of God ofl'ropbec:y
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pu10ro PJ. Cluipmon

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
MillWork
· Cabinet Making
Syracuse
"

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

264S..tU..... Avt.•ll'll' 1 •~01145760

740-H2-5141
hot.lltl!or- Dlroctw
590 lAst . . Slftll• , _ , , OH 45769

740.992-5444
992·3785

.+.

- . R. Aa•, J1.- Dlrodor

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Maln
992·5130
Pomeroy

Davi..Oulckel Agency Inc.
Full llneol
Insurance
Produc1s +
Financial
ENCillS lno. Services

works
unto the Lord. and th~
thouahts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

.:fumat

EWING

NEW HAVEN

HOME

FUNERAL HOME
"We accept Preneed Transfers" .
882·8200
Lundy Brown
Rll(lan Brown

Olgnlty and Service Always
Established 1913

992-2121

•

Dyes_wille Community Churth
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Belhtl Chludl

Fllltb Go.ptl Churr..
Long Bottom
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4.5a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Grand Street

Sunday School· IOa.m.
Wanhlp • II •.m.
Wednesday Servkes - 8 p.m.
Torch Cbun:b
Co. Rd. 6J

Sunday School· 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

\at:IITIH'

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday-School- 9:4~ a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · !U a.m.

-.,,., t·nl h·l Ia\ \d• &lt;'Ill i'l
I

)

'

'

Mulherry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor:'Roy Lawinsky
~aturday Sef'\·ices:
Sabbath St:hool- 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

ML Ollwe Community Churth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Service - 7 p.m.

I 11itl'd Brl'lhn·11

UDJ1e41 Fahb Church ~
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

ML Hermon Unllecl Brtlhrtn
ill Christ Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Roben Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30 o.rn.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wl!dnesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Middleport Church ot the Nu.rme

FuU Gospel Lllhth0111e

Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wollihip- 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

3304j Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastot: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. 111ursday - 1:30 p.m.

Rtedsvlh Ftllowahlp
Church of the Nazarc11e

Soltb Btdtel New Tesllmtnl
Silver Ridge

Family Restaurant
"Futurlng Kentucky Fried ·
Chicken•

Clean out your basement
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
· CLASSIFIED SECTION/
992·5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY fLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BUTIERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions
"Aowers for all occasions'
992·2955
Pomeroy
SNOUFFER FIRE &amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ave•
Middleport, Oh

..

tl'ria 11

Syntust First United Pmbykrlan
Pulor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo~ hip - II a.m

Mont Chapel Ch~tth
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Township Rd., 468C
Sun~t&amp;y School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
WednesdayServices-IOa.m.

992-7028

Pe:ntecosbll AB5embly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
SundaY School - I0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser.'iccs - 7 p.m.-

l'n·..,h~

Haul Community Cburth
Off RL 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:]0 p.m.

Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Ave.

l'l' n t l'l'O" t a I

Midcllcportl'enterostal
ThirdA\'e
Putor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sundmy School- 10 a.m.
Evening - ti p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Syi'I(Ust Milslon
1411 Bridgernan St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson.Past01
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wed~sday Service - 7 p.m.

CoolriUe Untied Methodist Parish

Middleport, OH

Pastor: Clyde Femll

Sunday School 9:30 am
Sunday e\l(:ning SC: I'\'icc 6 pm
Wednesday servi~e 7 pm

Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service . "' p.m.

- Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - J I a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

169 N 2nd Ave.

SaJem Community Church
Lieving Road, West Calumbia, W.Va.

F11lh VaUey 'filbe:rnaclt Cllun-h

Worship - 10 a.m.

Ingel's Carpet

God's Temple otPnlse
3166.5 McQuire Rd . Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Waynt Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service established.

Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School W a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m,

Momln1Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.

Time to clean
house?

Full Gollpel Churrh of the Lh1.. S.vtor
R1.338 , Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Monis ,
Servit:es: Saturday 7:30p.m.

.5"1~

HocldJIIPOrt Cllun:h

Mt. Mortoh Cltu... of Gad
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Paator: Brice Utt
Sundly School ~ 9:_.5 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

New Lite Vldory Ctnltr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis. OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- I 0 11.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedn(sday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Mkldltport Commu.nHy Chun-h

Carmd-Sutlon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewaync Stuller
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Helen Kline

Rua B1pdlt
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wot5hip- II a.m.

Rtjulcins Lire Churdl
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- I 0:00am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Rodne
Pastor: Brian Harkness

Ou.r SaYiouf i.utlleran Churth
W11lnur and Henry 515., Ravenswood. W.Va.
Pastor. David Rus!iell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

EVIlljelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study • 9:30a.m.
\VQrship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m .-~

Stinnvllle Communlly Chun:h
Pastor: Way11e R. Jewell
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
· Thursday -7:00 p.m.

Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

HarrtJonvUic Con.ununlty Church

PDStor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

St. John Lut,heran C'llurtb
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:0!) a.m .
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Putor: Re v. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Clif'len TabemiK!Ie Chun:h

Tht Belit\ten' Fellawahlp Mlnl!ltry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Miu-garet J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

E.tt.eeart

l .uthl'ran

Do:ltr Cb•rdl of Chrllt

Faith Fellowtblp Cru.sadt tor Chrut

•

Long Boltom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -9:30 a.111. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - reuow!!llip ~&gt;ervice 7 p.m.

Snowville
Sum;lay School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

The Charrh ar.JesuJi
Chrlsl af Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 o,r 446-7486
Sunday School l0:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10: I~ a.m.
Homemaking meeting. lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

fora~

American Enterprise Institute, is the hostessayist qf the PBS special "17re First Measured Century" and co-author qf a new bOI)k qf
the same title. Y&lt;&gt;u may send comments to him
via e-mail: Watmail@aol.com.)

churches. I remember one congregation
that met in a vacant drugstore. Instead of
stained-glass windows, worshippers
looked up at empty shelves that once held
thin~ like aspirin, cough syrup and cans
of shaving cream.
The exterior wasn't much, either. It
looked every bit like vacant drugstore.
There was a small sign outside, but some
of the letters had fallen off. "CHURCH
0 GO IN CHRIST;' the hand-lettered
sign 5aid.
Storefion~ churches have long been a
familiar sight on the dingy, down-at-theh'ee!s urban landscape. The invitation in
the window promises salvation and abetter life to all who enter. Who cares if some
(Geotge R. Piagenz is a colum11ist.for Newsof the letters in the sign are missing? You paper Elltetprise Associatio11.)

'

Htmkld Grove Christian Cluu..:h
Pw;tcr: Richard Nease
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 • .OL.
Bible Study~ 1 p.m.

Wedrx!&amp;day Services- '7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Faen:e
Sunday School- 9:15a.m.
Worship- IO:IS a.m.

Reorganized Church or Jrswi Christ
of Laner Day Saints
Ponland-Racinc Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday SchOOl-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Lelart. W.Va. RL I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 7:00 p.m.
Wedne!ldly Bi ble Smdy -7:00p. m.

C1lvary BibR Chun:h
Pmneruy Pib, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser-'ice- 7:30 p.m.

Hanmi o.treach Mlnlstriel
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastors: R'ev. Mary and Harold Coole.
Suoday Services: IO a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.

RockSpri...
Putor: Xeitll Rader
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a.m.
Wo!'lhip- 10 a.m.
Yauth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

I .a ttl' r· ll:l\ Sa i 11 h

f1lnitw Bible Cbun:h

Mlotn¥We
Pastor. Bob Rabin10n
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship .· 10 a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship-9:30a.m.
· Sunday School- 10:3.5 a.m.

Laurel CHI!' Jo'ree Met.hodi!ll Chun:h
Pas1or. Donald Balis

Coolville Road
Pastur: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Rudaad Church ot the Nuanoe
Pulor: Rev. Samuel W. B.uye

Appe Lilt Center
"Full-Gaspe! Church"
Pastors Jobn &amp; Pauy Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-3017
Service time: Sunday I0:30 m.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Hy.ll!ll Run Hollaess Churth
Rev. Mart: Michael
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and You_th- '7 p.m.

Whilt's CUptl Welkyan

Sunday SdKIOI · 9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednc&amp;day Services - '7 p.m.

Putor: ROO Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Woo;hip - II :00 a.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOilbip - 10:30 a.m. 1111d 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - "1:00 p.m.

Litnpvillt Chrlstiaa Church
Pascor: Roben Musser
Sunday School • 9:30a.m,
Worship- I0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneailay Service 7:30p.m.

Old ~lbel Fret WID B•ptkt Cblln'h

StorifYont churches are still a big sell
George
Plagenz

HlckOI'J 111111 Ch•rth ol Clnilt
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship· lO:JO,a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00p.m

(Ben · IMlttenbew, a senior ftlltnv at the

will be made to feel more welcome in the
storefront church than any.;,..here else in
the world.
'
· · i
There were only a few of us· at the'
church I attend&lt;;d. but we sang aQ,d
clapped our hands and listened to each
other talk about wh~t Jesus has meant to
us. Everi I got up to make a testimoni:IJ..
"Praise the Lord!" they all said when 1 sat
down.
The pastor was 'Elder Samuel, a big,
good-natured man who was "saved" 20
years ago and has been preaching ever
since. He is a parking lot attendant during
the week.
He never prepares his sermons in
advance. "I get a revelation frOm God
when I preach;' he said. On this particula.i:
Sunday he preached about personal righteousness.
I could have stayed for the whole Sunday morning service, but it was 12:45 and
I had to go. 1 had been there since 10:30.
I got up and made another short testimonial and said I would be back. "Praise the
Lord!" they all said again.
Bill Clinton is in for a treat. If he calls
me, I'll join him. ·

MI. UDion Baptist
Pa!itor : Joe N. S11yre
Sunday Schooi-9:_.S a.m.
Evening · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Great Bend. Route 124, Racine, OH

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

I don't know whether Bill Clinton will
be going to his office in Harlem on Sundays or not. If he does, I hope he goes to
church first.
In churches with black congregations;
you can hear some of the best preaching
-and singing· al).ywhere. I'll tell you
one of the reasons for. the good preaching:
The black congregations are responsive.
While the minist~r is preaching, the
people in the pews break in with their
own comments, such as "Amen!" and
"Yes! Yes!" I once asked a black pastor if
these interruptions were distracting.
"Distracting?" he said. "I couldn't
preach without them."
Compare this audience participation
with . the blank looks 'on the faces of the
people in most white congregations. This
lack of enthusiasm from the pews kills
many a preacher's fervor.
When I was a parish minister, I' would
often take·my glasses off when I preached.
Because f am badly near-sighted, the congregation appeared to be a big blur, and l
imagined that everyone had eager, expectant looks on their faces. People couldn't
explain it, but tl1ey always said I preached
better with my glasses off.
.Sill Clinton will be able to have his pick
of all th~ churches in Harlem - from the
bjg, imposing structures to the storefront

Sunday School- IOa.m:
Worahlp-lla.q.., 7:00 p.m.
~ednesdlly Services-7:00p.m.

Chakr Cln•ld: fll the N011rue
P-olSI..-: Rev. Herben Grau

AohSI-Cbur&lt;h
Ash St., Middleporl
Pastor l.e5 Hayman
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:00p.m.
Wedne!lday Service· 7:00p.m.

Purl Clulpel

We*yu Blbk Holl-. ChuKh
7.5 Pearl St.. Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worshlp - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

~

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor. Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 7 p.m.

( Jt lll'r ( It 11 rdtl''

Hulh (Mkldltport)

Plae Growe Blblt Hollntss Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 32.5
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Mantey
Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 pJn.

........ ..

ina

Fol"f5i Rua
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

-

No Sunday or Wedne.y N•aflt Setv1cn

POIIM'roy O.rdl ol the Nuam.e
Putor. Jan LavcndnSunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 am. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Portl"'d Flnt Cbar&lt;b of lhe Nozare•
Paa10r. William Ju11it
Sunday School -10:00 a. m.
Mom Wonhip. 10:4!1 a.m.
Suoday Service - 6;30 p.m.

Flltwoock
Pastor: Keith Radl!r
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.n\ .

R1111t of Sharon HollntSS Church
Leading Creek Rd., RutliiJid
PastOI': Rev. Dewey King
Sunday s.chool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meelins- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - '1:10am
Wtnhip Sen.·•ce 10:30 a.m

10.30a.m, 6p.m.

Wednrsda)' Serv1ces 7 p m

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm .• 6:30p.m.
Wednesdly Services - 1 p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rider
Sunday Scbool- IOa.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Hairi!iOO'Iille Road
Pastor: Owle~~ McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship • I I a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Minister. Doug Slwnblin
Youth Miniater: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m .. 7:00p.m·.
Wednesday Services - 1:00 p.m.

Betlllebem Bapllo!Cburcll

Eat£~

ColvU}' Pllarlm Cbapd

Bradford Cllu.rch riChrid
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Pastor: Steven K. Uule

~bury (Syrac·use)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednnday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Dauvlllt Holinea Church
310.57 State Route 32.5, L.angsvlle
Pastlll': Gary Jackson
SuMay school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:~ a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday (Dyer service • 7 p.m.

Rulland Clnar&lt;h Ill Cbl'lol
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School- 9;30 a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Centnl Ollltft'

Comm•l}oltr Chun:h
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main SUtet. Rutland
Sunday Woohip-IO:OOa.m.
Sunday Service- 7 p.m.

Brodburr Chur&lt;h o1 Chriot
Putor. Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

bdnt Flnl S.ptlat

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9 a.m
W&lt;mhip - 10 a.m.
Tue&amp;dly Services • 7:30p.m.

llolitll'"

Communion - 10 •.m.
Sunday School - 10: l!i • -m.
Youth- !1:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wedoelday' 1 pm

Wonh1p •

..._.. ...... s.. .....

Rev. James Bernacki. Rev. Katharin Foster
· Rev. Deborah Rankin, CJcrgy
Sunday: Adult Educa1ion Sunday ~hool 10: 11 a.m.
Holy E~teharilt II :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Euduulsl5:00 p.m.

Instrumental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.

Worship · 10:4.5 a.m., 7:00p.m.

R-.W.
Worstup • 9:30 1.m.
Sunday Scltool - I0:30a.m.
FiJ'$1. Sundoily uf Month - 7:00p.m. service

Gna E~ Chllr'dl
326 E. Main St. Pomeroy

tuppers Ploln Cha""' Ill Chriot

Putor: E. Lamu O'Bryant

Cool Hand Luke enters town on nervous steed

Pastor: Rev. Crail! Crossman
Wo.Vup 10:2j a.m.
SWiday Schml9:13 a.m.

Zion Church ol ChrW
Pomeroy, H'arriM~nville Rd. (R1.143)
Putor: Roger Wauon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30-a.m., 7:00 p.tn.
Wcdneado.y Sc:rviut • 7 p.m.

East Main Sl.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m:

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

r.:tmrmr Chllftll o1 Clrlst

Btlrwallow IUdp: Cllurcb ol Cbrill
Pastor:Terry Stewan
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Pomu G) Flnt Baptist

President deserves kudos for
delivering his mesage

'IIinily Oun;-h
Second &amp;: LyM, Pomtroy

WMhip- 9:30a.m.
SuDday School· 10:30 a.m.
Pastor·Jeffrey Wallace
· Is:~ and 3rd Sunday

Rutland Flnt Blplllt Chutth
Sundly School - 9:30 •.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

innal

( hun h ul' ( 'lrri'l

Keno Church ot Cht1st

IIGpo Bapdot Chur&lt;b (Sovlbern)
570 Orant St .. Middlepon
Sunday school • 9:30a.m.
Wo~ip · ll a.m. and6p.m.
Wednesday Service - "' p.m.

Skill

TODAY IN HISTORY

( Oll:.!l'l'l.!,:ll

MkldJtporl Chu.n:h at Chrfs1
.5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp- 8: 1.5, ·10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

BwtinJham - 742-7606
Putor: John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.n,.
Momina Sen-ice II :00 Lm.
Evening Strvke - 6:00p.m.
Wednclday Service - 7:30p.m.

OHIO VIEWS

for taxpayers who created the surplus. But cutting and spending too much at the same time will be disastrous. We need to
study the most sober projections of government incoine to
know what we can afford. And in the Senate, where the body
is evenly split between Republicans and Democrats, we expect
that kind of prudent study.
Nevertheless, Bush continues to uplift his supporters and
confound his criti cs with his skill in delivering his message that
taxpayers deserve a break. His address to the nation before a
joint session of Congress was matched only by his aggressive
journey across the nation to sell his plan to the taxpayers in
person. Don't underestimate this president.
• Wapakoneta Dally News: This one could be seen coming for some time, as the reports of problems associated with
the state's Job and Family Services Department continued to
pile up.
So while the recent resignation of Job and Family Services
Department Director Jacqueline Romcr-Sensky was no surprise, it was the latest in a series of human-services fumbles by
.her department and by Gov. llob Taft that continued through
her last day in the handling of her departure by the governor.
More than back child-support payments appears to be at
work here. Romer-Sensky also was charged with overseeing
the merger of two state' agencies - human services and job
services.· It is a merger that has caused numerous bureaucratic
glitches at the state and local level and has caused confusion and
resentment among clients of both former agencies.
Taft said all of the right things in the wake of Ramer-Sensky's departure, citing the tough job she faced and commending her for her accomplishments.
But despite the too-little, too-late praise, this episode leave.s a
bad taste - one that suggests the support wasn't there for
Romer-Sensky when she needed it and that she, her department and the state did not respond as aggressively as they
should have to the department's problems.

Carkton lnknkaomlftadoul O..tdt
Kingsbury Road
Putor: Robcn Vanl;c

Wedne5day St:rvi~• • 7 p.m.

llapli'l

The public voices of opposition to
George W. Bush are building their case that he is responsible for "talking down
the economy," that he's in thrall to cashheavy corporate contributors who have
descended upon Washington like the wolf
on the fold, that he's broken his word
about the envirorunent, that he is secretly
working to rush through confirmation of
an army of conservative judges.
But the private voices of tl1e opposition
COWMNIST
know better, that Bush is knocking it out
of the park, eating their lunch, and dinner,
and breakfast, leaving them naked in the skulls, or those of the Pulitzer-seeking
public square with an agenda whose media mavens, that not every political
major plank is obstruction, linked in part decision, nor most, are political payoffi to
to whether Sen. Strom Thurmond dies fat cats? Or that when business benefits,
sooner or later.
the
ordinary voter need not get hurt. (After
And a good thing it is that Bush has
picked up the reins so quickly. The eco- all, 52 percent of Americans own stocks.)
nomic trail ahead is rocky, and the land- Or that most good jobs come about·
scape is hazy.
through the private enterprise system?
By definition, the immediate future of a
And. wouldn't it be nice if we stopped
free market economy is unknowable, but personalizing and politicizing the econothis moment is as weird as any in the past · my? Because politicians play politics, and
half a century. That its Bush's "fault;' that it newsmen noodle the news, that is probastarted downward in December of 2000 bly in1possible. But, no matter what they
when Dick Cheney said we "might be on say, the American economy didn't grow
the leading edge of a recession;• is barely because of Clinton or Greenspan. It didn't
worth rebuttal. The NASDAQ started its start going down
dive a year ago. Corporate earnings were
because of Clinton or Greenspan, or
headed south by mid-2000.
Bush. When · it turns around it won't
The idea that "the corporate interests" because of Bush or Greenspan. Folks, the
are bending America out of' shape for Amerian economy has a life of its own,
their own craven motives is almost as with 130 .million people at Wbrk in a elidumb. Yes, indeed, the coal industry gave mate of remarkable commercial liberty.
big bucks to candidate Bush, and yes,
Spleen vented. Withal, it is a most
indeed, they did well when, after careful unusual moment, and scary. Is what we
study within the administration, he decid- hear the sound of the bubble bursting,
ed to publicly modifY his views about car- with possibly horrific effects, ~~~t just in
bon dioxide emissions. But the natural gas the stock market, but in the real ecoriomy,
industry also gave big bucks to Bush, and where it counts? Could the "New Econthey lost out on the decision.
omy" have been just a happy-time blip?
Might we ever get it through our thick Could we be entering that most

SyneUR Clnndl ut the Naaul'nt
PaSIOr Mike Adkin~
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m

Worship - I ()a.m., 6 p.m.

Pastor: Neil Tenntnl
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

No unriBnnl ktkn wiJI H publlrhtd. Ltlkn rholdll IH in 1ood tarlf, dl/dnuin1
Urutr, not ,.:nort~~lilin.
Th• opiniotu ezpNrlfti inlh• col11111n b.low ID'I' thr: c!Mistnslll. oflltt Ohio V•U.,
Pu61Uhins Co. '1 edilor/4/IHMNI, ullk11 Olhtrwist noktl.

in Washington to spend those surpluses, it is time. to cut taxes

Worship - 10:30Lm.

Pomeroy We~t.tick: Churdl ot Chritt
J3226Childrtn't Home Rd.
Sundly School - II a.m.

P.O. 8ol46'7, Dudding Lane

Utttrr to llu tditOI' an wtktwttt. Thty 1lwulil N hu rh11re J()() words. AU ktUn
,.. ruh~t to tdilirw •1111 ,.~.rt h ri8nrd tuvl WluM addnr.r •nd ldtpholtf nllltfhr.

• The (Canton) Repository: President Bush's tax plan
deserves bipartisan scrutiny. But Bush deserves high marks for
his campaign to pass the plan.
At a time of record budget surplus, and the great temptation

Sunday School-9:30 a.m.

Worship. !0:30a.m•• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

\"llllhll ul ( .od

Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich

SWl. Mw ·9:30a.m.

Dailey Maq • 8:30 1.m.

212W. Main St.
Minilter. Neil Proudfcu
Sunday School - 9:)() 1.m.

Wcdntldly, 7:30p.m.

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.__

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Worship. II Lm.
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Evenln1 ·7:30p.m.
Ourcll .t Ja~~~ Christ
Apo110Uc FaiU!
New l..ima Road
Sundey, 10 a.m. Mil '7 :30 p.m.

om

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5
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\

~rch 23, 2001 \.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992·2158 ·Fax: 992·2157

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Friday, Merch 23, 2001

Eden United Brtlllren In Chr~
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on Stme Route 124
Pastor: Re-v. Ro!K!rt Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:!10 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m
.
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�The Daily Sentinel

·Inside:
Friday, March 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

More sports, Page BJ, B6

Cut this out and place It on your window to show your support at home, In your car or at your business.

Page.BI
Fricllry, Mllrch 2S, 2001

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

USC·surprises Wildcats

OHSAA

agrees
to
•

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Track dub
meeting
RIO GRANDE An
organizational meeting of the
USA Track and Field Association will be held 6:30 p.m.
Monday at the University of
Rio Gtande's Lyne Center for
ages 9-18.
Also, anyone interested m
coaching are invited. to
attend.
For more information, call
Juan McCabe at 245-9054 or
. 1401.

Reviewer
. chosen for pix

"

.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -An associate professor
of biomedical engineering at
Duke University was chosen
to review the auwpsy photos
of NASCAR driver Dale
Earnhardt.
Barry Myers was picked by
special
master
John
Upchurch, who last week
worked out a settlement
between Earnhardt's widow,
'w ho wanted the photos
sealed, and th~ Orlando Sentinel, which wanted its .own
medical expert to review the
pictures.
Earlier this · week, Sentinel
lawyer
David
Bralow
expressed concern about the
agreement after learning that
a NASCAR physician had
reviewed the photos before a
circuit judge sealed them at
Teresa Earnhardt's request.
Bralow and lawyers · for
Mrs. Earnhardt met to talk
about reopening the mediation. But after Upchurch
announced his choice ·of an
expert, the talks ended with
the Friday setrlement still in
place.

.,.

~·

•

•..

' .'

'

I
tUe.
Brought to you by Ohio Valley
Publishing, Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, The Doily Sentinel, Point
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hometown newspapers that
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and ·advertising than any other
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We are the only 'medium· that
offers .vou to reach every house
in the Tri-county o~ea.
Place your spring classified ads
today and reap the cash rewords
tomorrow... Coll992-2155.
Or order. a su~scrlption · by
calling 992-2155 and do .n ot miss
,
anothe~ day's news.

It's News you can use.
I

David Blurhenrhal left his
Southern· California coach
speechless. Duke's Jason
Williams rendered UCLA
defenseless.
In the East Regional semifinals, Bluthenrhal delivered
clutch free throws down the
stretch for USC, and Williams
carried the Blue Devils in the
second half as the unpredictable NCAA tournament
held to form Thursday night.
Bluthenthal hit five free
throws in the final halfminute as USC moved within in a game of its first Final
Four since 195.4 by upsetting
second-seeded Kentucky 8076 in Philadelphia.
"The last three games, I've
been speechless," USC coach
Bibby said. "I like being
speechless in these situations."
Williams was the unlikely
hero for Duke, scoring 19
straight Blue Devils pointS
and matching a career high
with 34 as the Blue Devils
found themselves in a familiar
spot with a 76-63 victory
over UCLA.
"(Assistant coach) Johnny
Dawkins told Jason, 'You do
your thing,' and he did his
thing and that's why we
won,'' Duke coach Mike
Krzyzewski said:
The top-ranked Blue Devils (32-4) reached the region- ·
al finals for the 1Oth time in
16 years and will play sixthseeded Southern California
(24-9) on Saturday with a
Final Four berth at stake.
In the West Regional semifinals in Anaheim, Calif., on
Thursday night, top-seeded
Stanford beat No. 5 Cincinnati 78-65, and third-seeded
Maryland outlasted 1Othseeded Georgetown 76-66.
QOT ME IN A TANGLE - USC's Sam Clancy tries to prevent Kentucky's Jason Parker
from scoring the easy basket in Thursday's game. (AP)
PIHH NCAA,. 83

rev1ew

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- The association controlling
Ohio high school sports
promised to have an independent co n1mitcee review its
finances in the wake of a
newspaper se ries showing lax
control of expenses.
Clair Muscaro, Ohio High
School Athletic Association
commissioner, said Thursday
he will appoint an independent committee to review
financial records of the organization .
Earlier
Thursday,
The
Columbus Dispatch reported
that its five-month investigation of the OHSAA indicated .
th e · organization failed to
closely monitor expenses in
many area.11.
Muscaro said that he hopes
to appoint the committee by
next week and that its goal
will be to have a single policy
for all districts in place by the
2001-2002 school year.
The Dispatch continued its
four-part series on scholastic
sports with a report Friday
detailing how the OHSAA's
tournaments have become big
rnone)'- makers.
The S 13 million collected
in ticket sales from the tournaments during the last school
year led to a $3.2 million sur- .
plus for the association. That's
more than the entire budget
of high-school associations in
many other states, including
the big high-school sports
stares of Florida and Texas.,
· Football and basketball generated more than enough
money in the 1999- 2000
school year to .cover losses in
eight other tourna.mems.

Rams make free
agent moves

Early Bird showcases some of area's best

ST. LOUIS (AP) -· The St.
Louis Rams made rneir first
big move into the 2001 freeagent market, signing safety
Kim Herring to a five-year
contract.
The Rams a)so released
safety Keith Lyle, a prominent ·
member of the 2000 Super
Bowl championship team
who has spent his entire
seven-year NFL career with
the team.
Herring helped the Baltimore Ravens win the Super
Bowl. He started all 16 regular-seasol;l games, with 66
tackles, three interceptions, 12
pa.«es defended, one sack and
two forced fumbles. He also
had 11 special teams tackles.

8Y BurcH COOPER

· Henson ski~

·· grid workout

ANN ARBOR, Mich: (AP)
.
Michigan quarterback
l:lrew Henson returned to
'campus a day after . his trade
from the Cincinnati Reds to
the 'N ew York Yankees was
'made final - but he didn't'
practice with the football
.team.
·• Henson, who has not spoken publicly since the trade,
made · an appearance at
Schembechler Hall, Michigan's football building, on
Thursday. The team practiced
that afternoon. It was the second practice Henson lri.issed
this week, The Detroit News
reported.
Henson arrived in Tampa,
'Fla., on Thesday night to take
the required physical to com~
plere the trade that returned
him to the Yankees. The team
originally drafted him out of
Brighton High School in
1998.
Henson has a . year of col.lege
football
eligibility
remaining.

.,

AND DAN' POLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAFF

RIO GRANDE - On Saturday,
eight boys track teams and seven girls
squads will converge at the University of Rio Grande track facilities.
The 2001 track and field season
will get underway for many teams
around the area at the River Valley
Early Bird Invitational.
The first event, the 110 meter hurdles preliminaries, are scheduled to
- begin at noon with River Valley's
John Gill, Point Pleasant's Chris Wagner and Meigs Josh Eagle set to compete. The girls 110 will see Andrea
Jones of South Gallia, River Valley's
Tiffany Frazee and Meigs' Brooke

"It's going to be our largest
meet," said River Mlfley head
coach Ed Sayre. "People
should come out and watch
it. It's going to be a very
exciting meet."
Brolin competing in one heat, while
the River Valley duo of Devin Cottrell and Stacy Rankin will meet in
the other heat.
"It's going to be our largest meet,"
said River Valley head coach Ed
Sayre. "People should come out and
watch it. It's going to be a very excit~
ing meet. Times are fast for the first
part of the year on that track, but of

course the weather report is not that
good."
"There are not high expectations,!!
· said lloint Pleasant sprint coach Chip
Wood: "We just want to run some
decent times and something average,
an average time for each person that
way we can build on it and see what
kind of shape we're. That way we
know where co take our trJining
form here on out"
"As far as scoring in the meet, we
have ·a chance to scoro high, maybe
place in the top three team-wise,
regardless of what our times are. We
just looking to see where we are at
really."

Texas Tech

.

Please see Track. 86

moves to finals

a goodJit

ll•

.

Mr. Basketball

Knight,
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) The Texas South Plains could
be the perfect fit for a man
who thrives on independence
as much as former Indiana
coach Bob Knight.
Most people in Lubbock
believe in taking care of their
own, hard work is a way of
life, friendships are made over
a morning cup of coffee at a
local diner and family, religion
and conservative values are
held in the highest esteem.
On Friday, Texas Tech University and the region that
surrounds it wiU begin to see
if the independent spirit of
the region and the volatile
coach can mesh.
Knight was expected to be
named the university's i2th
head · coach during a news
conference at United Spirit
Arena - which could draw
more fans than the Red

Meigs, Piketon, River Valley, South
Gallia and Wheelersburg are expected
to bring full squads to this year's
event.
'
Meanwhile, Berne Union, Point
Pleasant are only bringing boys teams
and Ironton and Vinton County are
just sending their girls squads.
"It's going to be some great competition," said Sayre. "A lot of teams
like to get on Rio Grande's track. I'd
like to think Bob Wiley (Rio Grande
head track coach) for letting us use it
and promoting the track down in this
.
area.
The event is boiling down to the

GOOD FIT FOR KNIGHT- Many believe that Bobby Knight's
indeendence and work ethis will fit well In Lubbock where
Knight is expected to .become the Texas Tech coach. (AP)
Raiders did in their less-thandesirable performances all
season.
· Those who have spent rime
in both Bloomington, Ind.,
and Lubbock say Knight
won't suffer too much culture

shock when h e begins to call
this West Texas city with red
brick downtown roads and an
occasional dust storm home.
Lubbock and Bloomington

PIHH IH Knlpt. B6

COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) - Mighty Akron St.
Vincent-St.. Mary - as
expected - moved on to
. the Division Ill championship game.
But the Fighting Irish
arc well aware that it's
never easy to be the hunted instead of the hunter.
" l told our kids tonight
they should say a little
prayer, because those guys
. played hard,'' SVSM coach
Keith Dambrot said after
the No. !-ranked Division
Ill team in the state edged
Haviland Wayne Trace 5650 in the state semifinals.
As
expected, super
sophomore LeBron James
was at his best. He scored
29 points on 12-of- 17
shooting and wowed the
·· crowd with a variery of
slashing moves to the hoop
and thundering dunks.
"I've coached for . 31

years and I've never
coached agaimt an athlete
like that," Wayn e Trace
coach Al Welch said.
Ohio State coach Jim
O'Brien, North Carolina's
Matt Doherty and Cal's
Ben Braun were among
the big- name, big- game
coaches in the crowd at
Value City Arena. And they
can't sign him for another
18 months - and that's if
the 6-foot-6 1/2 sophomore doesn't decide to go
directly to the NBA,.
This week he's won several honors, including the
Onio Associated Press' Mr.
Basketball award.
Tht· Fighting Irish (251), the defending state
champs and top- ranked
team in the final regularseason poll for the second
year in a row, advance to

Please-s.t..a.

�Page

B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday March

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

23, 2001
Friday,
440

March

23, 2001

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Pomeroy, Middleport Ohi o

Adv:mcmg past the second
round for the fir&gt;t orne smce t
reached me F nal Four 27 yem
ago USC started qwckly hit
ong 12 of tts 6r&gt;t 17 shots and
building a 21 pomt lead m the
first 10 nunutes
Kentucky (24 I 0) managed
JUSt four baskets n the fi"t etght
nu nutes The Wildcats faced
thetr largest halftime defiCit of
the season at 43 74
We felt we were gettmg
open looks but we vere not
hirung s:nd Kentuck) po nt
guard Saul Snuth vho hit five
3 po nters
T he W ildcats closed to 75 74
vtth 32 se conds lefi vhen
Bluthenthal an 80 p cent free
throw shooter setz d o trol
hito 1g five shots fro
h b e
l knev ifl vas go t g oth
line I \ VJS go ng to 1 k those
shots satd Bluth c 1 I al vi o
had stx 3 po nt rs d fin shed
vtth ?7 p mnts
Sam C lancy added 7 po nts
for U SC
Jaso n P rker ha i a career
h gl 2? po nts at d Ketch
Bogans added 23 for Ke tu ky

Tayshau n Pnnce the Wildcats
leading scorer finuhed VJth SJX
poll)ts
In the rughtcap Williams one
of the Blue Devils two All
A nencans stynued UCLA s
comeback attempts by reeling
off 19 po nts m JUSt under 7
nunutes and firushing the half
With 26
Willianu one man run start
ed With 14 29 to play and
restored Dukes lead to s x
pomts after Earl Watson s 3
closed the Brums to 40 37 It
ended w th a dnve that put the
Blue Devils up 59 51 With 8 40
to play
UCLA was never able to get
closer tha 1 e1ght po nts th e es
of the Nay as D ke hi e gh
strught free throws n tl e final
I 29
Sha e Battier Dukes other
All A 1 er can had ?4 pomts
a d 11 rebou ds the th d
ga 1 m this tour 1am t he h
had at least 20 po nts a. d 1
rebou ds
T he gan e marked th e erur
of Du ke cent r C rlos B oze
vi o t ussed s x gat e ft
breaki g a bo 1e m his foot H e
h d two po nts a d s x
ebo nels n 72 un t s
Earl Watso 1 had 17 po ts fo
U C LA vhile Jason Kapo o

Dally Sent inel • Page

B3

the Brums leading sco"'r added
12 fiw below his average.

WEST
Stanford 78 Cinctnnatt
65
Casey Jacobsen scored a
career high 27 pomts as the
Cardinal set a school record
With thetr 31st vtctory agamst
two losses
Jason Collins had 15 po nts
and e ght rebounds and 7 foot
twm Jarron added 14 pomts and
seven rebounds
I have n t seen two b g n en
like that all year s;ud Ke ny
Satterfield wl o led the Bearcats
(?5 to) Wid 24 po nts
Maryland 76 Georgetown 66
Lo ny Baxter had ?6 po nts
and 15 reb ounds and Juan
D xu added 13 po nts as
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Sarvlces

3 Bed oom
Bath House Wash
e &amp; 0 ye New Ca pe $•50
man h P us $200 Oepos 1 No
Pea MeUpRoue2A. Gen

Giveaway

Yard Sale

Huge nven o y 0 scoun P ces
On V ny Sk ng Coo s W d

(740)448-9539

wood
(304
(304 675 0 27

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

70

PAUL BARKER

C rcullll on D reclor
Ohio V• ty Publl•hlng

Home
Improvements

800 20D-2823

eoo 737 2222

A a abe nOll C cu a!OrV
Ma ke 1f10 Oepartmen
Aeyou ookngfo au me
pos on ha orrers oppo un 1y to
ad ancement? Oo you enjOy
wo k ng wth youth? Do you en ay
sa es? Do you enjoy be ng c ea
u e? Do you have dependable
transpona 10n? I so you could
be he person we a e ook ng fo
Pos on offe s au company
bent s nc ud ng haa h and ile
suance 4 OK pan padho
days and vacation pan
Fo n eMew cons de a on
send you esume w h 11 b el
co e elte e ng us why you 11 e
the pe son we are look ng fo o

Home
Improvements

Uncond ona e me QlJa an ee
Loca e e ence s u n shed Es
abl shed 975 ca 24 H s 740

MOB LE HOME OWNERS

6679

810

810

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NO

446-010

Tw n R v. TOW&amp;fs now accepting
app 1ca110ns o BR
HUD subs d zed ap lo aide ty
and d sab ad EOH 304 875

SERVICES

Motorcycles

$$ NEED A LOAN? T y Deb
Conso da on Cu Paymen s Up
To 60 o/o Same Day App ova I
877 769 8 88

998 Oakwood Mob e Home 2
Bed oom 2 Bath $2 sao

(304)727 3964 Afte 6pm

52 Foot Ooub e W de St 750
Down $329 Pe Mon tl t 888

~76

9991

CLASSIFIEDS

0

Aval abe Mach 26 6 Aoom
House Balh Double Garage A
R o G an de $325 Month Plus

TRANSPORTAfiON

Depos 1No Pots (740 245-5439

928 3426

71 0

4x70 Bayv ew (wiDen) New
S nee 97 C A Watt Heate
Fu nace W h F ont Po ch Shed
&amp; Wood Fence
L.ots 01
Remode ng Mus See $8 000

$0 DOWN CARS PO CE M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29
MD 24 MO S II 9 9 ~ FOR
L ST NGS CALL 800 45 0050
ex C 9812

76

JOB POSTING
WIC OINC10t

Fou

Room House

52 0 \le

Stroll phone (7401446-3945

MERCHANDISE

(3041675 3008

pos!t19o Jackson V n on Com
munity Ac on nc Curren y Has
APos ion Ava abeFo w c
0 ecto Ths s AFu Yea Po
sHion Sa ary Range Is $ 00
$15 00 pe Hou Based On Qua

CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conso da on o $200 ooo Bad
No C ed C ed Ca ds Mo
gages Fo nto ma on 1 600
335-76 2 eX1 3622

Fac a y Gaol 32K80 $10 000 0 s
coun on y $1000 00 Down De
\lev and se Uf' pad by Fac o y

510

1 eoo 891 6777

Ilea on And Expe ence Wo k
Schedu e M F 8-4 30

825TH RD AVENUE
GALL POL S OH 46631

When It comes to selltng your car
nothing goes the distance like the
Classlfiedsl Get the show on the road
by
us

House Fo Rent 1789 Add son

Pike $501limo P us uu Mlos $500

Autos for Sale
110 Help Wanted
In Memory

MANAGEMENT
Established loc:al company looking to HilS
entry-level management positions
Associates degree or manogement
experience Solid people skills orqanlzatlonal
skills and self mollvatlon are o must
$23 -$30k to slort
Bene His and 40 I Kplan available

Household
Goods

Appl ancas
Recond
Washe s D ye s Range s Re
g a o s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed Wa Sa New May ag Ap
p ances F anch C y May ag

740-446 7795

1-888-974-JOBS

Secu 'I Depos t F ae Gas Re'
e ence Requ e
No Pe s

Ask for Mr McCovey
CMc Dewlopment Group/Millennium teleservlces

740)38Hl063

In lovmg memory of

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
a $500 ns an y by phone

877 EAALYPAV Lcf 750005
ADVANCE FREE

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted
New And Used Fu n lu e Sto e
Be ow Ho day nn Kanauga We
Se G ave Monumen s And

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV /SSI?
No Fee Unless We wn
-888

998 Ctlevy Lum na oaded ex
ce en cond lon $8500 740 949

vases

582 3345

550

REAL ESTATE

Building
Supplies

2203

House
Tralle
For
Rent
Below Ga po a Locks On Sta a

Apartmente
for Rent

FINANCIAL
'

210

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG W TH ~H E GOV
ERNMEN T FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPE A ENCE RE
QU RED 800 748 57 6 EXT

Business
Opportunity

340

X0

BuelneiS end
Bulldlnga

720 Trucks for Sale

$0 DOWN HOMES
No Cad OK HUD VA

9 S 0 E~t ended Cab v 6 5
speed a
uns &amp; oo ks good
$2 so 740 742 2760

FHA. Ca fo lisllfiOS
1 800 50 1777 Ex.! 9818
VAI500

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

OWN A COM PUTER Pu

o

wo k $25 $75 hou Fee Oeta s
W 1i a n www 9 success com

2001

her qddte!!t I•
55 N Jqm~ Rd
Colqmbij• 01-1

and 943 In the recorda

2808 740 992 873 eave mes
sago

440

~.b 1~

Book 236 Page 901

Sma two bedroOm mob e home
luln shod $275 pe month $200
depoa no pets ca 1•0 IJit::Z
$199 58 a mon h moves you nto
a New 3 bed oom/2 ba h home
CaN o de a s 740 385 4387

ot frlendt wlthlng
to tend cqrd• to
BQtbQtQ l White
dqughtet of
[lol•• Coojoet White
who pq••ed QW8 y

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed 1n Me gs County Hours 1Opm Fr thru Bam
Mon sleep over requ red Out es Include teach ng
community and personal sk1lls to an nd v dual with
mental retardation Requ rements H gh school
d ploma /GED va d dr ver s I cense three years
good dr vmg expenence and adequate auto mob le
nsurance coverage Starting salaty $6 00/hr
Send resume to Buckeye Community Serv ces
P 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Deadline for
app !cants 3/29/01 Equal Opportun ty Emp oyer

Public Notice

Aoule 7 Soufl1 (740)4.4 Hl6 9

ONLY $111 00 DOWN and

Harold (Doug) Reeves
who went to be wtth hts
God March 17th 1999
He IS JUSt away beyond
the hills that lead to
heaven s golden shore
Beyond all earthly care
and patn He IS alive
forevermore
loved forever
Janet Tr na

of the Melga County
Recorder a Olllce
Deacrlpllon lor the
above tract baing the
re1u1ta o1 a survey
made by Richard C
Glasgow R S No
5161
Relarenca Dead
Volume 79 Page 787
Meigs County Official
Records
Auditor a
Parcel
Noa 19.00521 000 19
00522 000 and 19
005230DO
PROPERTY
ADDRESS 308 Third
Street Racine OH
45771
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$45 000 00 Tho real
ootate cannot be oold
lor len than two
thlrdo the approloed
value

TERMS OF SALE
10% down day of 11te
bolonce on delivery of
doed Sold oub)ect to
accrued real ••tate

tax••
Dougln W Uttle
Attorney lor Plolnllll
3(9) 3(16) 3(23

�Friday, March 23,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 4 • The Dally SanUnel

2001

Friday, March

23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP

-------------------------·
NEA
Puzzle

PHILLIP

.C ro11word

ALDER

re
Truckina

P/B
CONlllCTORS, INC.
RIICine, Ohio 48771

740-985-3948
CONCIETE/BLOCK/BIICK
• Footen, Walls. Step• •
· Flat Work,

Replacements, • Walks
•nd Drives • Steacll
Crete Fl'ft Eslimalel

Senlna Ohio and w.v.
WVI0317ll

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH
Trucks· Traaor Tnilers·
Houses - Mobile Homes
- Decks -Driveways •
Eq11ipment Cleaned &amp;:

• Geregee
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE ESTIMATES

Degreased

Jelf Stethem

(740) 9115-4218
Email :

740.992-1671
Clltsllf (ISIOII 5cr

PrlllilgiiMW

CUSTOM SCREEN

PRINTING
Please caH
1·800.891-0735

750 .East Stale Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
.
"A Better Wa Eve. Da ..

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

Box 1!!9
M•dcileporl. Ohto 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplemenl; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home

Before 6p.m.

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
N•w •qulpm•nt arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tracto.r,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

WICK'S
HAULING

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St:
Pomeroy

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-lH Parts
Dealen

and

992·2975

EXCAVATING

(7;~~;o~e~~e~~~O

•

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

)jy--·

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Out Back Tanning
Now Open
11 to 9
493 "Rear" Broadway Middleport

"'~:::::;::O::P:i;Ehoi:!ni:e992-3253 ~~j

HELP WANTED .
GRILL COOK
CROWS STEAKHOUSE
APPLY IN PERSON

• Roam AddHiont &amp;
Remodeling

• Ntw G•r•a••

• Eloclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing 1: Gutltra
• Vlny191dtng &amp; Painting
• P..lo and Porch Decka

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomel'oy, Ollio

•

1-300-lS0-!1077

Residential Commercial New Construction
Sales S...ice lmtollation
SpeclaBzlna in Sheet Metal Du&lt;twork.

A&amp;DAuto
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seals, car seats, headliners, truck 1arps,
convertible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seals,
mQIOrcycle seats, boat covers, carpels, etc,
Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00

Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521·0916

"Trane" Solos II&lt; Son ice For

G.Uia, Mason, 1nd Melp CountifS
Licenstd and

' "ured

WV 005176

JONES' _

Tree Service
• Bucket Truck ·

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
Siding • New Garogeo
• Replacement
Windows • Room

Addition• • Roofto1·
COMMERCIAl and RESIOilfl'.AL
FREE ESTIMATES

fifE ISlllfArES

Dellir: South
lwUI
16

Wnt
,.

,.

••

S+

P...

Paa

Pau

Ea..

Several suit combinations can be . handled in more than one
way. There is a candidate in this deal. How
would you plan lhe
play in five clubs after
BARNEY
West leads the heart
SHORE II I BEEN ••w.lo.l"'lf•turn.com
queen?
EATIN' THEM
East followed the
SINCE I WAS THAT
Law of Total Tricks
NUiN••
with his jump to four
hearls. Holding I 0
combined trumps, get
lo the 10-trick level.
South, unsure who
could make whal, sensibly went ori to five
clubs.
Afler you fruff al
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
Irick one an draw
trumps, it is ime Ia
f&gt;ON'T LtT I-IlM FOOL YOtJ.
tJStl&gt; To
broach the spades. ·
. \
BEI..ONG TO A fOfTvl Alrf
If you lake a finesse
through East and it
PllrATf.
wins, you are home,
losing only two diamond tricks. However,
if West produces the
king, you will fail, losing one spade and cwo
diamonds. Altemacively, you could lead
toward · dummy's
.THE BORN LOSER
queen. But when East
1\'l.£ '(OIJ 11&lt;\PL'I'It-16
\r: '(00 1-\P\0 """ :"1 has lhe king, you will
UI-&lt;Uf'/\\TE:O BUDGE.'(, go down. Bul if West
t c.»&gt;'i' 51-'.01'
has lhe king, you are
_,..--_ '!o.&gt;'D flt-10 /&gt;.. W/&gt;..'&lt;
If -~rr:;--t:. ~Tll I " CUR. {'Af}.N&lt;,?
safe. If West ducks his
i'O f.XC££0 \T !
king, you have no
spade losers and concede jusl two diamonds. And if West
wins with the king,
'you get three spade
tricks. A momenllater,
you will discard two of
MHCO! I C-'N'T T+IINI&lt;.
OF W+I-'T TO l)AAW.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

LIM .. ,
MII.S.

GIVE ME ,o\N II&gt;E,o\,

I'I~S,

IN

G0!&gt;f11EY

.;.

+IOS.PIT,o\L,
FIVE
ME'·

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

~~~~:-4

Quality Drlvtwaya,
Pllloe, Sidewalks.

'

•111•111 IDd fr1n1 EU 1111111'

........

25 yu11 experience

PEANUTS

•lnnDII

FrH EllllllltH
740-742-8015 or

• Ed I It Wilt • Tniiiiiiiiii Rllln

1-877-353-7q22

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All vor!leal blindo are
made to order at our
loeadon
UPTO 70%0FF
• Vorlleolo • Wood

• Mini• • Eto

1441Wnl '"· Galpa•

. 446-4995

I SUPPOSE IT'S NONE OF ftW
BI/SINESS,MA'AM. BOT I HATE
TO SEE VOU FEELIN6 SO SAD..

end

Backyard ...

S un se t Home
Co n st ru c tton
!)lew Homes, Room

Additions, Garages.
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Pec4
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Malee Your

Dream A Reality/
740-741-3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

Howard L.
WrHesel

31 Appoarlng

36

lboul
37 A llollbMy

twin

40=)

... and everywhere in between, the
newspaper is THE place to find lhe
. stories that are important to you and
your community.

949-1405
591.sci11 '

JACK &amp; UNDA PROVENCE

Sumner Roa~
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
39563

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22'!ears!"

155N2nd

• PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE

Middleport

• STEADY '

740-985-4212

You'll always be in the know with a
newspaper subscription. We've got the
goods to keep you informed,
enlightened and entertained every day.
Call today for a subscription.

A·JMINI·STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

8 VInegar

24 Gootaglcll

WWidng

t&gt;11lnly

dopoo~

52 Bulldi111J

MNlcel

2li

Orl1nlll
bird

monl

concern

46 Hoop. .,..
48CioM
roiiU ..
50 Male

1omplo
27 lllldo32 FllghtloM

camporl-

porfoclly .

lhoop

53

unh
Addhlon 10
I hOUM

54 " -

1111rlc

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campo•

Celebrily Cipher coyplograms are Cflllllod from QUOIItlono by lomous
people, palt and prnent. Each letter in lhe cipher standi for another.
Today's clue: 0 equals C
'CZRH

VPXVFP

HZP

E L

LPVRARHPK

IP P F

HX

MPPK

OARGD

HZPD'AP

XI

APLH

CZPM
MXH

IA XI

ZNBRMEHD.'

WEKKPA

,BRAUXH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The art of art, the glory of
expression, and the sunshine of the llghl of leiters Ia
simplicity.•- Wall Whliman

I

•..,.•.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

949-2804

740-992-5232
,.,~

LINCOLN

Mercury
SPECW. FINANCE DEPARTMENr
Bankruptcy? credit Problems?
"We Can Help,l

- I_ Is_ I_ I_ -

Ask For Mike Hindle

281'111111hen Raect
Racine, Ohio

740-949-2217
Slzta 5' x 1O'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Saturday. March 24, 2001

1·800-272-5

'-1

I

ces~

-A new win&lt;.J \.:uukl blow in loday,

- Those barriers tlmt were block·

lainahlc. Thi·nugh thi..; new hre;.1lh
of fresh air mu!.'h nm he Lu:com-

Marathon Service Center

in the year ahead. This win
be due in pari to your leadership
qualities being more .prevalent .
ARIES CMarch 21-April 19)-

420 W. Main St.
Pomarpy, OH.. 45769

ing your path over the last couple
of days have finally cleared out.
You'll , now be able to call your

hour

(acrosalrom Plw Hut)

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

I

which you personally take charge
wit~ have solid chances for sue·

Cellular

I 1 I I I"

I

and becoml' good frlcnJs
tim\!.

Ventures o,r enterprises of

Full service auto center

I

'lOur .
'Birthday.

Call Ua Firat Or We Both LoH!

(7 40) 992-1393

I' I I I

I

8

"""

Hill'• Self
48771

Open
Mon-Frl 9-5:30
Sat 9-1

Stt ._,

Fret &amp;1/mm.

Locally owned and operated by

Racine
Mower ~~ect"'
High&amp; Dry
Clinic Self-Storage

PomeroY

Spout

Now Renflng

·To the Big

44087 Wlpple RoaCI

Guttere- Down

WelcMdfrome&amp;

992-2772

futuroo

23 Show

e Storogof

I-

35 In good

borrleo
311 order
e.ru. form
13 Pllollble
of
18 llefrlgoront 43 Fry quickly
18 lll~nor
46 Unclalhecf
20 Hawko'
47 No..llll'l

5 Forlll...r

DCCUplnl

34 Groallloot

"You know a lot about one
6
lhe
thing," .the cutie told her dale .
ace and king of hearts. L-...L.....JL........L.......JL.....J,;, "But," she added, "I think in many
Also, wilh the kingQRUE
things you are - - -- - - - -.
queen-jack of dia- · _..;K;.:...:.A:.r;.-r:--=,-=-TT-1
7
ft Comple1e 1he chuckle qoored
monds. West wou ld
_ . _ _ _
v br filling in the missing words
probably have led
you develop from slop No. 3 below.
from !hat suit. (Yes;
A PRINT NUMBERED
.
afterwards
West 1(::11' lETTERS IN SQUARES
wished he had led a
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS
diamond.) So, if West
FOR ANSWER
doesn'l have the spade
king, where did he
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
find the values for his
Yellow- Risky- Vouch- Inward- WHISKEY
one-heart overcall?
Suffering with a head cold . my uncle tried various
Lead a low spade
ineffeclive remedies. He dtscovered, however, hts
toward
dummy's
·favorite was WHISKEY .
queen.

MA'I'6E '1'001LL FINI7 ANOTHER
60VFRIENI7 TOMORROW, OR
MllVI- EVEN THIS AFTERNOON

Tire.Barn

Maintenance- •·•

J &amp; L SANITATION

J&amp;L

Like

22 Rollgloul

7 Will
8 Manaotory

38 "Got HI"

11

4 Sondlloc

""
Ingredient

lnformod

Ill

your ace-jack of
Rearrange liners of the
spades, losing only
four scrambled words b•
one spade and one dia- low to lorm lour simple words.
mond.
Who is more likely
to have the spade
king? Because I've
peeked at the full diagram, my guess is 1-.-...!;N!...:.E~E~C;...!I~-1
West! No, seriously, 3
study the auclion and ~-=~-=-==-==-=~­
ohpeeanrtinqgueleenad. Welesal'ds _;;S:...;.:N~O...;G;:_:T:..,....-e.E',.

marks East with

Roofing. Home 1 L-~~74il0~-99~2~-5~34!.!4!:!.....~~
21271

DoubleHunq
Raplocamant
Windows
Sa•h0-101 United
Inch••
$199.00 ln1Ialtld

=-

Nnlndlan

33 LoYI111J

1--

The CRAFTY,

--ly

10 Compu1

O

THE

Hlli.H

Empire Furniture will
open at 12 noon on
Sat. March 24th

N~

chepllr

4$ ~-

~f~~~IN)-l dummy's diamonds on

740·992-7599

NOTICE

A 10 I

a K Q I I 61
Vulntrlble : Eut-Wtat '

"'

• Top • Removal • Trift1
• Stump Grinding

NewHomo•Vinyl

Meigs
Bikers'
Spring Party
Saturday, March 24
Where: Mizway
Cost: $5.00 each
Band- Three Sided Soul
8pm- 12pni
Contests: Wet tee &amp; buns
(must have at least 5 entries)
Prizes: $50/1 st, $25/2nd
50/50 Raffles

44 11-,

ttt

ltlrHmd'lb Stc¥tA7&gt;Dn~

1-384-'75-78:!4 .

.-

Bv PHILLIP ALDER

DIPOYIII

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

• Alp I I

+ QI S

O&amp;lfnlnt lud: • Q

,... OUolliT'I'I.ln CIJMIWl'f'

Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch

..... .'

~•

740-985-4180

spring

lizard
7 JlfGWII

1
0H.-..
1 - 46 -·13 2
Plaa
Puppy
girl
14 Concllve 46 Joruium'l
15 Houndod
......
lor poyJMnl 51 l&gt;ondered
18 On IOC.-. 55 Unpoll1hld
17 Sari
58 Actor
18 SilperlaiiYI
ondintl
57 Uko oome
21 ·11111roam
pia
58Vox
23 SMr'111dU
(lbbr.)
DOWN
26 Y111-or
1 Ram.on
0111111
lhiH
28 Sotla-toun2 Mov. .bout
llln IIMt
29 eywffYol
30Amerlcln 3 Shoshon-

6 10 I It

aA.Jit

Leave Message
Afier 6pm

~

PARn

....

1'QJII1(
t KJ f

Bring In gaur repair worll
we'll get gou going tor .

liJ1

...

• K 1 t

,_..,.

42 End1n1

lhiCII

4 A J It I

w...

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy, Ohio 46118

r;'!'/

' t I I

41 Prinllr'o

1 Tropical
+ If t I

Interior

740-985-3831

Rocky R. Hupp, Agcnl

Advertise
In thla space
for $25 per
month

Public Notice

35S37 St. Rl. 7 North

o QI

"Take tht pain out
of paintins- Ler rm
do it for you"

. . CrumYos sm
IM. Salt 8lacb $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

I'Hiol, old ndo
tubel, &amp;,.,..
Call Chuck

LINDA'S '
PAINTING

-2111 Hunt., Prilto Dog food $6.75/50
-1211 Wt!lom pride hone ftod $5.60/50
$1.00 off C011pon molcosnul purdtaso $4.60/50

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

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CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22l - coming wee~s .
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec.
propelling you l(lWllrds an o.bjcc· 21)-- Something diiTercnl could

tivl! you on~.:~ thou~ht w:ts unar -

pli&gt;hed.
LEO (July 21 -Aug. 21) -- II
might be tim(' tu put lht: past
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import,ani to you. Trying lo patch
up a broken romance? The AstraGraph Matchmaker can help you todoy could be quite lucky for
understand what lo do to make the you.
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I.

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CAPRICORN IDee . 22 -Jan .

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nitil's .

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

State
from .... B1
meet Casstown Miami East in Saturday's Division Ill state championship
game. Miami East edged Belpre, 61-57 ,
in overtime in the first semifinal.
In Thursday's Division II games,
Adam Waleskowski scored 19 points
and had 13 rebounds as Kettering Alter
dominated from the outset to beat
Columbus East 53-35. In the nightcap,
J. K. Brooks and Brian Swift each scored
19 points and shared the load in the
final minutes as defending champion
Warrensville Heights topped Willard
70-66.
Wayne Trace (24-2), ranked seventh
iQ the final poll, didn't back down from
St. Vincent-St. Mary. The . Raiders
trailed by two points and briefly had
the ball with less than 25 seconds )eft.
But Dru Joyce and John Taylor sealed
the outcome with fre e throws for the
Iris!), ranked fourth in the USA Todav
nation al poll .
In the first Division lil semi. Nathan

Chivington scored six points in overtime, including two free throws with
7.3 seconds left as Casstown Miami
East came back to beat Belpre.
Chivington, who finished with seven
points, also assisted on a key overtime
basket and had eight assists and six
rebounds for the Vikings (25-2).
Chivington had the ball but failed to
get off a shot in the final seconds of
regulation, but he made up for it in ~he
overtime.
Belpre's Pat Klein banked , in a ~~
pointer with 11 .1 seconds remaining in
the overtime to cut Miami East's lead to
58-57, but Chivington coolly hit both
foul shots with 7.3 seconds left.
Travis Mumma; a first-team AllOhioan, led the winners with 1~ points
- seven under his average.
Nick Morey scored 20 points for Belpre (23-4).
Kettering Alter's Waleskowski, a firstteam Associated Press All-Ohioan and
Fl~rida State signee, hit 9- of- 14 shots
from the field for the Knights (24-2) in
their win over Columbus East (16-9) .
East scored the fewest points in any
state tournament game regardless of

Track
from Page 11
like to thank Bob Wiley (Rio Grande head track coach) for
letting us use it and promoting the track down in this area."
The event is boiling down to the potential first meeting of
the season between Point Pleasant senior John Bonecutter and
River Valley sophomore Allan Brown in the 100-meter dash.
Both runners are expected to compete for the f.1stest man in
the SEOAL this season.
"Last year, I thought I could take him and he showed me I
was only a freshman," said Brown. "This year, I've learned a
whole lot from my experience."
But, before they can meet on Saturday, they have to run in
their preliminary heats.
Heat one, consisting of Bonecutter, will also have other area
runners with teammate James Hoffman, Derek Burger of River
Valley, Tyson Lee of Meigs and South Gallia's Brian Barnes
among others.
In the second heat, Brown will meet fellow Raiders' sprinter Gabe Marcum, Point's Corey James and Chad Sheets of
South Gallia.
"I've gotten better this year," said Brown. "I've worked on my
start during the offseason. It's gotten better. That's why (Bonecutter) beat me."
"The highlight of the meet is probably going to be the
Bonecutter/ Brown matchup. A lot of coaches have asked ine

part."
division since it beat Marion Harding
Texas Tech history profes
41-32 in a 1963 Class AA champisor Ron Rainger isn't con
onship game.
vinced the decision is th
Fourth-ranked. Alter, which never
Pip Bl
best one for the universit
trailed after the opening minutes, will
be seeking its third state title, having
Lubbock and Bloomington where he has taught for 1
won championships in 1978 and 1999. are cut from similar cloth, years, but after doing hi
The Knights are coached by Joe Petro- according to some, and that's graduate work at Indian
celli, who is 659-196 in 37 years with what makes Lubbock attrac- University he sees the simi
larities between the tw•
the team.
tive to the General.
Willard's losing streak at the state's
"He likes remote areas," communities.
final four continued against defending Tech
"They are both communi
president
David
champion Warrensville Heights (25-1) Schmidly said of Knight. ties that are very steeped i
in the Division II nightcap. In four trips "This is not a big city man. traditional values and reli
to the semifinals, the Crimson Flashes He and his wife visited here gious values,'' he said. "Nei
have never won.
and they. enjoyed Lubbock ther community is one th~
Down 59-58, Warrensville Heights' - · even the sandstorm didn't really likes or supports a lc
Brooks hit a 3-pointer from the right bother him . He thinks this of criticism." .
wing . with 4:34 left and the Tigers would be a good place for
Such a lack of criticisr
never trailed again. After Nick Dials, him to resume his career. will play in Knight's favo1
who led Willard (24-2) with 29 points, He's positive about Texas the professor said.
missed on a shot behind the arc, Swift Tech."
"Knight was very mucl
hit an 18-footer from the left wing for
And Tech is positive about loved by people throughou
a 63-59 lead.
Indiana. They often revere•
him.
Derek Fey, who scored 17 points for · "I think he 's one of the him," Rainger said. "There i
the Flashes, answered with a 3- pointer best basketball coa ches to also going to be a lot of sup
with 3:32 left that cut the lead to a ever live,'' Schmidly said ear- port for him here because fo
point.
lier this week .."! think if we many people he represent
can get him here and his the traditional values of dis
behavior is right and he is cipline and hard work. An·
energetic, enthused and has . even if his behavior goes
the same values that all of us little bit too far, it goe
~bout that already. Brown's not goint ' to sneak up on people
like he did bst year. You're looking at t\vo permeir sprinters. in have in West Texas and Texas toward achieving those prin
the area in the southeast (Ohio) .You can John is the old man Tech - 1 think it could be a ciples, so it's overlooked."
being the senior, but Allan and I had a hard time last year think- very good decision on our
ing (Brown) as a freshman."
These two could also meet in the 200 with Brown in the
seaond· heat along with Lee, Jacob Hill ~f Point Pleasant and
South Gallia's Hayes Lester.
p~
Bonecutter will race in the third head along with River Valley's jared Taylor, Dana Bickle of South Gallia and Jesse Dublhs
of Meigs.
"I expect, anytime in the 100, I look for John to place one
or two,'' said Wood. "In the 200, it's always an adventure; you
A Unique
never know what you are going to get. I look for him to want
Children's
to get in Brown's mind. John is a competitor. He wants to get
Portrait
·in Brown's mind that he's there, he's still strong; he's gonna run
Opportunity
fast, and let him know."
"I see John winning the 100 and placing in the top three in
Saturday, March 31st - 1tam - 7pm
the 200."
At
In Mldldlet:x&gt;rt
In heat one of the 200, area runners include Sheets, Marcum,
Meigs Derrick Johnson and Point's Andrew Lewis.
On the girls side of the 100, a pair of Gallia County runners
will square off in the first heat with River Valley's Kari Beth
Taylor and South Gallia's Holly Haner going up against seven
con1emp()rary looks • l:arehe looks • dault ~
other runners.
· . - We Have It All .
•.
.. .... In the other prelim heat, Laura Harrison of River Valley will
be the.lone tri-county runner competing.
The 100 prelims are scheduled to begin a little after 1 p.m.
S. Second
with championships set for around 2 p.m.

Knight
from

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