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•

•
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 28, 200~

PREP SOFTBALL

rallies to beat

Ga

Academy, 11-7

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS- Meigs rallied from a 7-0 deficit to
defeat Gallia Academy 11-7 in
softbaU action Tuesday. ·
Leading 1-U after BJ.Wamsiey scored on an RBI by Abby
Sipple in the ftrst, GaUia Academy struck for six runs in the
t)¥rd. Abby Rees and Whitney
Williams each drove in a run
and Katie Painter had three
RBI to help the Angels build
their lead.
Painter ripped a double to
drive in Jessica Donnally,
Gretchen Faudree and Rees.
Wamsley began the inning
with a single followed by Jo
Anna Bokovitz, who drew a
'walk. Donnally singled and
Faudree drew a one-out waik.
Meigs (1-1) began its rally in
the fourth when Stephanie
Wigal singled to start the
comeback. Mindy Chancey
and Jaynee Davis each got
aboard with one out and all
three scored to trim the gap to
7-3 .

Ashley Burbridge and Lindsay Bolin also scored in the
inning for the Marauders to
cut the deficit to 7-5.
The Marauders added two
more runs in the fifth to tie
the score at 7-all when Wigal
and Abby Harris scored after
reaching base on singles.
Shannon Price, Kayte Davis
and Harris each crossed the
plate in the sixth to give Meigs
a 10-7 lead, one it would not
relinquish.
Bolin scored an insurance
run in the top of the seventh
to round out the scoring. ·
Burbridge came on in relief
of Jaynee Davis in the third
inning and shut down Gallia
Academy for the remainder of
the game. Burbridge gave up
just one hit in four innings of
work and held the Angels
scoreless. She had one strikeout and one walk.
Davis worked two innings
and gave up seven runs on
seven hits. She had one s~rike­
out and walked one batt1r.

Wigal, . Harris and Jaynee
Davis each went 2-for-4 for
Meigs. Wigal and Harris
scored two runs apiece. Davis
scored on~ run.
Price went 1-for-4 and
scored a run. Blain scored two
runs and drew two walks.
Wamsley was the top hitter
for Galli a Academy (0-1 ),
going 3-for-4 and scoring
twice.
Sipple went 2-for-4. Donnally, Rees and Painter each
had one hit.
Haylie Johnson took the loss
in relief of Jessica Donnally
Johnson gave up four runs on
one hit. She had two strikeouts and walked four batters in
two innings of work.
'Donnally
pitched five
innings and surrendered seven
runs on six hits. Donnally
struck ou1 two batters and
walked one.
Meigs plays host to Alexander today.
Gallia Academy travels to
Fairland Friday.

•
•

..

River Valley tops Eastern, 8-3
EAST MEIGS- A seventh
inning scoring spurt by River
Valley was all the Raiclers
needed Tuesday.
The Raiders scored four
runs in the top of the seventh
to break open a close game
and give River VaUey a 8-3
decision over Eastern.
River Valley freshman Geri
McFann began her varsity
ca reer on a positive note, striking out eight Eastern batters,
while not allowing a single
earned run .
McFann was also solid at the
plate, going 2-for-3 with a
walk.
Eastern starter Juli Bailey
also struck out eight opposing

batters, but she aUowed eight
walks and six hits.
The Eagles scored first in
the bottom of the first inning
when Kristen Chevalier cross
the plate putting Eastern up 10.
It . wasn't until the third
inning when the Raiders
matched that run with one of
their own as Cynthia Ward
singled in Christen Baird.
Ward finished the game
going 2-for-4 for the Raiders
(1-0).
Eastern regained the lead in
the bottom half of the fourth
as back-to-back ·doubles by
Kass Lodwick and Bailey
helped drive in Janey Calaway.

POINT PLEASANT
After surrendering a single
' run in the . top of the first,
Point rallied to defeat Parkersburg South Tuesday, 2-l.
With the win over the
perennially-ranked
Lady
Patriots, Point imptoves to 2-1
on the season .
Point responded with two
runs in their part of the first
frame. With one out, Katie
Roush singled and Miranda
Durst doubled before Amber
Rainey npped a long single
just past the center fielder for
two RBI and the lead.
South built the initial lead
after Corrie Sizemore walked,
stole second, and scored on
Michelle McCrady's single to
left field.
·
Sizemore was likely dead to
rights at the plate, but the
strong throw from Lady
Knight left fielder Amber
Curfman hit Sizemore in the
. back about 10 feet up the line.
Kendra Riffle went the distance for the Lady Knights,
giving up just one run in
seven innings of work.
She struck out six and

Meigs

from Pap 11
and struck out five. Knapp
walked only two batters and
gave up just three hits.
He retired the Blue Devils
in order .in the bottom of the
sixth to end the game, which
was shortened due to darkness.
Knapp also got out of a jam
in the fourth when he struck
out Allen Skinner and got
Bobby Jones to ground out to

URG
from Page 11
inning, to n1ake the count

2-1 ,Jenny Null ripped a oneout triple and scored on a sacrifice fly by Brown.
Rio pushed the lead to 5-1
in th~ fourth when Amy Jewett knock.ed in Jessica Temple
ana the Redwomen scored
two more on an error by
Null .

•

walked just one batter. South
tallied just four hits in the
game.
. The Lady Patriots threatened in the fifth inning, loading the bases via a throwing
error, and a pair of infield hits
by Sizemore and McCrady,
but a pair of ground outs left
three Parkersburg runners
stranded.
"Kendra is keeping her
composure with the bases
loaded:' said Point coach Dan
Dewhurst, "the same thing she
did against Hurricane. She's
doing a fine job for lis.
"We're trying to work some
other pitchers, get them ready
io pitch and get her some rest.
Miranda Durst is getting ready
to do some pitching. Whenever we can find ti1ne, we're
gonna put her in."
Point's only other threat
came in the fourth. With two
outs, Bridget Nibert singled
and took second on an error
by the right fielder.
She then stole third, but
ended the inning right there.
Parkersburg's Elaine Enoch
worked four innings in taking
the loss.
·

The Lady Knights had six
hits, led by catcher Miranda
Durst's 2-for-3 (single, double)
performance. Jennifer Adkins
had a double and • Nibert,
Roush, and Rainey each had
singles.
Enoch had the other Parkersburg hit, a single in the second inning.
"Defense, and the kids are
starting to bust the ball,"
Dewhurst said about his teams
strengths, noting that Point
recorded a pair of doubles and
several line-drive shots.
"They are relaxing more
and they aren't uptight.
They're playing hard. We're
just letting them play and play
their game.
"They know how to play
softball. They have played it all
their lives, most of these girls.
They did a great job. One
g.tme at a time; One out at a
time. That's our strategy all
year," he added. ·
Point travels to Ripley for a
make-up
grudge
match
Wednesday against the Lady
Vikings. The Lady Knights lost
to Ripley last week in their
opening game.

Friday
·Hlp: 50s; Low: 40s
Details, A2

The Lady Scots plated two
in the top of the fifth frame,
to make the score, 5-3 when
Brown tripled and Mandy
Smith singled. Smith would
later score on a base hir by
Erin Pitb11an.
Audra Barnes had an. RBI
single in the bottom of the
fifth inning and Tucker ripped
an RBI double in the sixtl) to
make the score 7-4 .
Tucker and Temple collected two hits each for the Redwomen. Smith was 4-for-4
~

l.

Warren came on in the fifth
and gave up three runs WI
one hit. He had tWo strike-·
outs and one walk.
Jones, Warren and Nida had
the Blue Devils three hits.
Nida and Drew Bush each
stole a base for Gallia Academy.
Meigs will play host to
Alexander today in a key
TVC
Ohio
Division
match up.
Gallia Academy travels to
Ironton today, the first of four
straight road games for the
Blue Devils.

wiih two doubles and an RBI
and Null ripped three hits for
the Lady Scots.
Temple (2-0) went the distance to get the win. The
junior co-captain scattered I0
hits and struck out three
while walking two.
Bentz pitched the first
inning and took the loss for

ovc.

Rio Grande will open its
Anteric&gt;n Mideast Conference season on Friday, hosting
Walsh University at 3 p.m .

March 29, 2001

•

•

Melp County's

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum•· ') 1, Number 177

so CP nh

Wesam offers low bid
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

' POMEROY - Wesam Construction
of Meigs County is the apparent low bidder on the general .contract for renovation of Meigs High School.
Bids on the first phase of the Meigs
Local School District's $33 million build.ing program were opened Wednesday
afternoon in the district's central office.
Wesam's combined bid for general
trades and windows was $2,232,421. The
only other bid for the general contract in
combination with windows was from
RWS Building and totaled $2,478,000.
Apparent low base bids on other facets
of the work at the high school were:

• food service equi pment $67,000 from
Hooten Equipment Co., with a second
bid of $101,651 from Great Lakes Hotel
Supply;
.
• casework, $84,000 from Stonecreek
Interior Systems, with other bids being
from Farnham Equipment, $220,0000
and Cody Zeigler, $109,373;
• fire protection, $267,699 from CenIra! Fire Protection Co. with other bids,
$289,255 from Brewer and Co., and
$351,000 from Dahmtion Fire, Inc.;
• electrical, $789,000 from Brush Contractors, with other bids of $1!48,000
from Welsh Electric Co., Inc., and
$870,000 from Claypool Electric;

• technology, $244,769 from D.E.
Williams Electric;
• modular classrooms, $144,995 from
G.E. Modular, with other bids of
$278,017 from Williams Scotsman Inc.;
$169,136 from Satellite Shelters Inc.;
$240,059 from Pac Van 'leasing; and
$197,950 from APEX Structures .
Bids were opened by Jeff Engram, project manager ofrhe Qaundel Group Inc.,
t~e district 's construction management
BIDS OPENED - Bids for the renovation of Meigs High
firm, and Mark Rhoncm us, Meigs Local School. a part of the $33 million building project of the Meigs
treasurer.
Local School District, were opened Wednesday afternoon. At
· Superintendent Bill Buckley said con- center at the bid opening table Is Mark Rhonemus, district
tracts are expected to be awarded in mid- treasurer, and right, Jeff Engram of The Quandel Group, the
construction management firm. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
Please see Wesam, A:J

Show time

Southern
Board

Good START
rogram

eyes

icks off

school

Active participation sought
for tonight's.fornm

BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE Southern
Local's new elementary
school was the main topic
Bv BRIAN J. REED
· of conversation during
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Tuesday's regular meeting of
MIDDLEPORT A comprehensive
"Report to the Community" will be one outthe Southern Local Board
come from 'I'hursday night's Community
• oi Edqc~\ion. .
.+-.iJ'~orum
· MiddJ eport.
&lt;
.,,,
m
~·""' Tb.disc~d ·w ,....;.. The open forum, to be held at the Middlestatlu ' 6f the new school,
port Elementary School, is spo,nsored by the
currendy under construcVillage of Middleport and the Middleport
tion in Racine, and
Community Survey Committee, along with
approved July 8 as an open
the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Develhouse for the public and
opment, which operates the Good START
Aug. 5 as an orientation day
program.
for both students and their
Members of Middleport's business and resiparents to tour the facility.
dential communities are urged to attend
A resolution was also
tonight's meeting and express their concerns
authorized by the boaid for
about
the conmlUnity's future.
the purchase of loose fur"We hope that ·many of the residents will
nishings bids fqr the new
come to the meeting:' Mayor Sandy Iannarelschool as prepared by legal
The Power Team, with feats of strength and words of inspiration, played to a full house on opening night in the
li said. "It should be a very informative and
council.
Meigs High School gymnasium. Hundreds of Bend area residents turned out Wednesday for the first of five
interesting evening, and it's important that aU .
The board accepted the
performances to be presented nlgt)tly through Sunday at 7 p.m. The event Is sponsored by the Ohio Valley
Crusade for Christ. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
PleaH see START, A3
,........ lio.rd. A3

r:-• ·,

ooanr

NOW!

70

XOFF
lowed

flokehod

Pl'l-

.

•.

Fate of properties in contradors' hands
ODar receives
. ''
numerous tnqumes
FROM STAFF REPORTS

end the inning.
In aU, Knapp retired the last
eight batters he faced.
The first Meigs run came in
the first inning when Nick
Detwiller singled and scored.
Detwiller went 1-for-3 and
scored one run~ Stewart was
also 1-for-3 and scored.
Rfnyon, Nick Bolin arlltKnapp e_ach had a basehit.
Nick Merola started for
Gallia Academy and went
four innings. He gave one run
on four hits. Merola struck
out nine batters and walked
four.

Thu

Salute to business women inside
Meigs tops Alexander, Bl

•

Lodwick had a pair of lijt
for the Eagles (0-1).
•
River VaUey had three run
in the top of the fifth by Baird
Nicole Watkins and Ward d
give the Raiders their first leal
of the game, 4-2.
It wasn't until the seveOtl
when River VaUey put Ut&lt;
game away for good off ni~
driven in by Tarra Minnis aru
Amy Hoods helped pace · ;
four run inning · for tJ:u
Raiders.
'
River Valley will play host ti
Wahama Saturday in a doubl"·
header, while Eastern travej
to Southern today.

Point Pleasant girls
ral to defeat
Pa
rg South, 2-1
BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

-... ..

POMEROY -When someone says"the
road took their house:• most people know
what it means, but what actually becomes of
the houses and personal property acquired
during a major highway project?
l'roperties acquired for the Ravenswood
Connector project and the new PomeroyMason bridge project, for example, now
bear prominent signs indicating that they

"A contractor, for example,
could offir the structures to local
fire departmettts for 11se as
a traitring exercise, but tltat
decision, or any (I tiler decision
regarding removal methiJds, will
be solely 11p to tlte contractor,"

the Ohio Depamnent of Transportation's
District 10, said that there are several options
available to ODOT for removal of the
structures, but because of time constraints
dictated by the Ravenswood project,
removal of the.structures has been included
as a part of the actual construction, and will
be carried out by the contractor.
"A contractor, for example, could offer ·
the sttuctures to local fire depamnents for
Ken Dollloon
use as a training exercise, but that decision,
or any other decision reg:lrding . removal
have been purchased by the state for the methods, will be solely up to the contractor," Dollison said.'
projects.
,
Ken Dollison, real estate administrator for
.......... F-..A3 '

Logo contest winner
Page Bradbury was the
wl nner of the Leading
Creek Watershed logq
contest sponsored by the
Meigs SOil and Water
Conservation District.
· Bradbury, a freshman at
· ·.. Meigs High School,
designed the winning
logo, which featured the
words • Leading Creek
Watershed Committee, •
surrounding a circular
field which Includes a
sunburst, a stream and
the words, •working to
Conserve the Leading
Creek Watershed.' The
iogo will be ·used In
· watershed activities and
mailings. She received a
$100 prize and T-shlrt
for her winning entry.
(Submitted photo)
'

.

-

SEE THE CONTRACTOR - Members of the public interested in buildings and personal property acquired by ODOT in the Ravenswood Connector and other highway projects should check with the projlict's coo
iractor, said ODOT, which has received a number of Inquiries about the
houses and other prpperties. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Latest plan being considered
Sentinel puts cost at up to $1.4 billion
Today's

2 Sedlo.'lS - Ui Peps

Calendar
Classifieds

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
weather

A2
84-6

87
A4

A3
81.5.6

A2

Lotteries
OHIO
Pid&lt; 3: 7-9-9; Pidt 4: 7-&lt;H·l
Super lc*J: 4-31H7·3&amp;"12-49
Kicker: 349-5-1-3
.

W.VA
Daily 3: D-1-7 D•ily 4: 6-8-5-3
C 200 l Ohio Valley {Jubhshing (A

COLUMBUS (AP) - . Lawmakers
would spend an additional $900 million to $1.4 billion over two years to
fix Ohio's school-funding system
under the latest proposal being considered to meet an Ohio Supreme
Court order.
If lawmakers settle on the higher
amount, the plan would be · more
expensive than earlier proposals by
Gov. Bob Taft and the Ohio Senate,
but cheaper than a plan presented earlier this month by House Speaker
Larry~Householder.
·
That $3 billion plan died after Tafi
and Senate President Richard Finan
objected to a proposal to raise money
by placing electronic 'slot machines at
Ohio's seven racetracks.
The state is spending about $6.9 bil,

lion on primary and secondary education in the current fiscal year.
Meanwhile, the group of lawmakers
and aides working on the latest
school-funding plan has suspended its
work to hash out several issues independently,J"aft's office said Wednesday.
"The participants needed to review
the progress to date, to discuss within
their own camps open policy . questions, and to wrestle with the big
question of balancing the state budget
as required by the state constjtution,"
Taft spokesman Kevin Kellems said.
"These are significant unanswered
questions."
.
,
Lawmakers, their aides and Taft representatives had been meeting daily
since March 19, including the weekend, to work on a plan.

�Friday, March 30

~~~~~~

MARIETTA (AP) - A $1.3 million
state study of the Musicingum River
lock and dam system represents the first
comprehensive look at that east-central
Ohio waterway in nearly a decade.
The goal is to prioritize repairs and
make recommendations on the system,
which stretches (rom north of Zanesville
to just north of Marietta. The survey is
something river supporters have been
seeking for several years.
The river has a hand-operated lock
system, and the 147-year-old system is in
constant need of repairs. Those repairs
often cost millions. Since 1984, the state
has spent "about $11.8 million in repairs.
Despite all that money, the number of
visitors along the river boating, fishing

"""'·

• -

~ IH'/51" I •

• [Columbuo 141"153"

I

~

......

KY.

02001

0

Inc.

Cloudy

and picnicking has not increased in
those 17 years.
The visitor figures for 2000 have not
yet been compiled, but Parkway Park
Manager Pat Archer said she believes it
did increase last summer.
This s11mmer, the parkway will open
nine of the I 0 locks to boaters. The only
one that remains closed is at the Ellis
site, just rwrth of Zanesville.
"This ls ·going to help us prioritize
where Je•go next," Archer said of the
study. "We feel there are many ·other
problems that need to be addressed.
We've done other studies in the past, but
nothing this detailed."
The last comprehensive study of the
system was completed in 1993 for

.. • •

.•

~ . ._... J!'"jj~,
~ -. . - •• *
Showtrs

T-storms

Rain

Flurnu

.

~ "" . "

two boys, was identified Wednesday. Her decomposed body was
found Sunday by neighborhood boys in a wooded area ~djacent
to the Trent's mobile home complex.
The body apparently had been hidden under piles of branches in this community in northeast Ohio.
The cause of death hasn't been deterniined.

~

Snow

lea

March will end mild~ wet
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Look for April showers
across the tri-county atea on
the weekend, along with temperatures that definitely are
seasonal.
The warming trend that
will
keep
temperatures
tonight in the mid-40s continues. Highs in the 60s are
expected through the weekend.
Southerly winds are bringing moist air into the area and
producing showets that likely
will continue through Friday.
After a break on Saturday, the
rain will resume on Sunday,
the National Weather .Service
said.
Sunset tonight will be at
6:52, and sunrise on Friday at
6:19a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Cioudy with a
chance of rain. Low in the
mid 40s. Northeast wind 5 to

Council acts to avert shutdown

10 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Friday... Occasional ram.
CLEVELAND (AP) - City council members locked in a
High in the mid 50s. North fight with Mayor Michael R. White over a pending budget say
wind around I 0 mph. Chance a spending plan will be approved in time to avoid a cit)' govof r2in 90 percent.
ernment shutdown next week.
Friday night... Occasional
The commitment Wednesday came after Mayor Michael R.
rain. Low in the mid 40s.
White convened an emergency cabinet meeting to discuss what
would happen to city services if council didn't adopt a balanced
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mosdy cloudy. A budget by the state's Monday deadline.
City Council President Mike Polensek said the council
chance of rain during the day.
would meet the deadline. Finance Committee Chairman Bill
High in the lower 60s.
Sunday... Mosdy cloudy. A Patman said that he expected passage pf a budget on Friday.
chance of rain from early
Negotiations between council and the mayor's staff continafternoon on. Low in the ued, with the two .sides remaining $4 million apart. Council
lower 40s and high in the mid wants White to increase his income estimate, and the mayor .
wants to impose spending cuts.
60s.
.
Monday... Cloudy with a
chance of rain. Low in the
mid 40s and high in the upper
50s.
YELLOW SPRINGS (AP) - Antioch College employees
Tuesday... Pardy cloudy. have agreed to cuts in pay or reduced hours for the next three
Low in the lo.wer 40s and months to help prevent other co-workers from being laid off or
reduced to part-time status.
·
high in the lower 60s.
Wednesday... Pardy cloudy.
College officials announced a month ago that a projected
Low in the upper 40s and $300,000 budget shortfall would require the school to lay off
high 60 to 65.
two empl()yees permanently, furlough four other employees
."}.."

Antioch reducing staff

·-

·-·

AKRON (AP) -A 13-year-old boy allegedly'threa!ened by
his gun-wielding father took the weapon when hu dad fell
asleep and fatally shot hi.h, police said.
· '
''
Aaron Stitt was charged in juvenile court with delinquent)'
by reason of aggravated murder in the death of Denrus Floyd
Stitt, 49, early Wednesday at their home.
·'
The father was taken to 'Akron City Hospital in critical con:
dition with a gunshot wound to the head and died later in the
day.
"
The boy told ~ 911 police di~patcher that his fath~r got drun~
and waved a gun in the air and threatened to kill him. The boy
said he waited until his fatJ:ter fell aslee~;. tl;t~p got ~heJrm and
shot him.
·
·.
•··. ~
·

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) ·- · ·A privately oper2ted prison seerl
as an economic boost for .the area has announced 200 Jayoffi";
about 45 percent of its 449•memb~r staff, and more cuts could
be ahead.
.
·&lt;
. The reductions at the Northeast' Ohio Correctionai·Centeiopetated by the Corrections Coipbraticm of Amtt-ica of

·- ....
Break floods dty sbeets· .
1

, _, ,

,j

• '

CLEVELAND (AP) - Fiv~ neighborhood schools canceled
Thursday's classes because of water problems resulting· from a
burst 30-inch, 116-year-old main that flooded streets in a I 0block radius.
·
The water, which rolled over curbs and lapped at front porches, stalled cars, flooded a few basements and damaged une house
foundation.
No injuries were reported in the pipe burst Wednesday afternoon in the blue-collar Ohio ,City neighborhood·just west qf
downtown.
·
Low pressure and a reguirement to boil water for drinking as
a precaution prompted schools in the neighborhood -to close
Thursday.

Ca~ &amp;

New Cars &amp;',Trucks,
, everything goes at

ASHTABULA (A,P) - . Dental records were. l!S,e d 10. jde'}tify
a body found in a wooaed area as that of a neighborhood
woman reported missing Sept. 15.
The body of Connie Noble Trent, 35, a married mother of

MIDDLEPORT -Annual meel·
lng Un~ed Fund for Meigs County, Inc., 6 p.m meeling; 6:30
p.m. desserl bulle!, River Arts
Council Building, Middleport.

ship Truslees, Saturday, 7 a.m.
atlhe township building.
CLIFTON, W.Va.- Gospel
s.lng, Clifton Tabernacle, 7 p.m.
fealuring Gabriel Quartet.
MONDAY
,
LONG BOTfOM - Special services Monday through Saturday,
7:30 nighlly, Hazel Community
Church .neat'Long .Bottom: Special singing. John l;lswick, evan·
galist.
. '
'

MIDDLEPORT- Good START
Community Forum, 7 p.m., Middleporl Elemenlary School. Pub.4
lic urged lo attend and particiSYRACUSE - Sutton Township
pale In open discussion ol com- Trustees, regular meeling, Monmunily needs and solutions.
day, 7:30 p.m Syracuse municipal building.
POMEROY - Free breast and
cervical cancer screenings proRUTLAND - Rulland Township
vided by !he Ohio Univ11rsily
Trustees,
regular session, MonCollege of Osleopalhic Mediday,
5
p.m.
at lhe Rulland Fir11
cine's Mobile Heahh unil, 10
Slallon.
·
a.m. to 2 p.m .. Meigs County
Health Department Pap lesls,
pelvic and breast examinations, TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
and breast health educalion to
Community
Assoclalion, 8:30
be provided by appointment to .
a.m.,
Peoples
Banking and Trust
the uninsured and underinsured
Co.
women of Meigs County. Call
593·2432 or toll-free at (800)
POMEROY- Salisbury Town844-2654 for an appointment
ship Trusteeuegular meeling,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. township hall,
POMEROY- 'Thimble ThursRocksprings Road.
day" at God's NET, lree meal,
games and sewing lesson for
The Community Calendar Ia
youlh.
publlllhed aa a f.... aarvlce to
non--profit grou.,. wlahlng to
FRIDAY
announce mMtlnga and apePOMEROY - Fun, Food and
cia! eventa. Tht celendar Ia
Fellowship, God's NET, 6 to
not dealgned to promote talea
10:30 p.m. Games, compulers,
or fund-1111eere of any type.
pool tables, free refreshments
for leens.
Item• are print~ only ••
apace parmlta end cennot be
SATURDAY
guaranteed to be prlnled a
PORTLAND - lebanon Townepeclflc number of daya.

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Truck'-, c

......................
1ed.uced.prices!

)r

f1om PlaeAI
qf Middleport's residenu , and
ousiness owners give input i,nto
the coriununity wessment and
strategic planning proceas
begun by the Middleport sti~­
vey Committee in January."
lannarelli said results of the
community's recent collU'nunity-wide survey 'Yill be pmented at the meeting:
,
. Those surveys asked questions on development, retail
need§ and resident satisfaction
with community services in
·Middleport, and were distribQted to the genel"21 population,
to the business commullity and
to other community leaden.
"We want absolutely everyone who is intereSted in the
future of Middleport to come
to the meeting;'Iannuelli said.
·:our citizens' ideas, their par•
gcipatipn, and their energy are
the conununity's most important assets.''

; "Middleport is at an important crossroads;' she added.
·~The ~ompletion of d)e Darwin anc,i Ravenswood high\W)'
projects, and the consttuction

....

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1111.11 IIIII $1111M Cllll
IIIHIUIU%11rH•I as1

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of th~ new Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge will have significant
impacu on the village, and
noW is the time to begin planning for our future."
"This is just the first step in
building a community where
there are jobs, thriving busintsses and an involved community," Iannarelli said. Good
START (Small Town Assessmerit and Readiness Techniques), the program which
m:enees the survey .process and
the community forum, is a
progr2m funded through the
U.S. Department of Agriculture/Rural Development.
Melody Sands of COAD has
worked with the village and
the survey committee on the
community assessment, and
will conduct tonight's forum.
That forum, she said, will
include a review of the survey
results, an open discussion
period, and small group discussions.
"We are pleased with the
input so far in the survey
process. Middleport residents
are showing an interest in their
conununlty and many good
ideas have been expressed;'
Sands said.

.. '

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added. .• '•
.
' '•22 23 millio
Those~ lnceresccd.
in Wna • ·
n. •·--I
IIi
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-: --:i.loJ11ko , The .6nt
phase a....... Do out. mom' ·iWQ
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~
of buildings or personal PtllPCt' 11011· wd, will be ,announced
ty should contael: the corlcr.tc- ~~ely ':"hen l.t comes: .
tors 'on the pmjecll, he said. .
~~ u the ~e for mte~c- .
j

;

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To date:,llnly QAt; p'-,ofthe, ed aiiZeriS~ ~t m touch wtth
Ravenswood , COnnietor ,pn).;. the conaatlor, he idded.

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jhe .Daily Sentinel

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flllllzlll.ll'l. ..... ···~~~
$21-liii*H2DII1•1tiiDIIII1

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Reider.Services

I• III'IWUI%11rM•I IIIII ·W t•lll(il• ll'l.flnllftlllllr'l . . . .l

· Correction Polley

Our main oonoem In all eleiltilll
to be accurate. If ~ lctlow of ah
error tn a.etory, call tht new11oorn
. at (740) 1182·21118.

Newt bepartmentl

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: , Ir

.252 Upper River Rd.
(740) 446,;,0842 or
Gallipolis, Ohio 4$631
Toll Free 1-800-44&amp;-0842

New.

or

DodgeI)Different . . ,,

JeeR

(U11'111HIO)

v.tior _ ....... Co.

~ MIY ottt..-., MOnclly
th1011g11 ,~dar. 111 court st.,
I'OIIIIh&gt;l'o
onto. S.COnd-olou
plld at P011-.

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thO OhJG
Auoclotlon.

lddrlll correc·
to Till Oolr - - 111 Cou~.

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at .. Pomerav. Ohio ~5781.

.· lube6rlptlotl tite•
111 ea~Htr.,-nlo'tiW JOIM&gt;
OntwMil
lint montll
Orte yew

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Circulation
Claaalfltcl Ada

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110.

150 Clntl
· Dt111r
, _ _ not daliring to pay Ill
cartttr maL."::!.:" adVanca direct to
&amp;it. 14
Tho 0o1r · . Crtalt Will be gNifl
oontet
011011 - · NCi ouiJICrlptJon by
Other Hrvlo"
mtll ponnltted In eruo - r • liOml

Ext 13

callltir ur\'lcll II IVIHibll.

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The main numller II H2·2111e.
Deparlnltnt aiiMniiOne n:
Qenaral .mana..,
ext 12

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stoctc repor!l are

ners at Adveat Inc.

12,000

...-...
__ _

11 ,000

10,000

.

...._

9,785.35

9.000

-1.83
..
Low
9,941.20
9.695.81
Roco.. high: .11,722.98 ~.:i!.J""'-"---.1...:.--.!L-L-- 1.000

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Jin . 14, 2000

March 2S, 2001

DECEMBER

JANUARY

FEBF1UARY

... RCH

.

1.000

• nd•niA
Peor'eiOO

1.£00

""--1,163.29

·2.44

....

Low

1,182.17

1,1 ..7.83

L _ _}£!~~L--,-:!!.__ 1,100

Rocordhlgh: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

DECEMBER

JANUARY

March ~s. 2001

...-..
N d q

,..._.....,_
1.854.13

-5.99
Hilh

.....

1.125.30

1,8 52.98

RIOord high: 5,048.82
Ma1:t'l to, 2000

Wesam
. from Page AI
April, and that Qua:ndel
Group will be making, recommendations following a
review of the bids at the April
I 0 meeting of the board of
education.
Work at the high school is
expected to begin on May 21.
· · Buckley said the total construction budget ·for the ·
extensive high school renovation is $5,680,000. The apparent low bids for the project
came in $595,000 under budget, he said.
.
' At Tuesday night's board
·n~eeting, a contract for
asbestos abatement at the high
scpbol was awarded to Lepi
Ent~rprises Inc., Zanesville.
That contract was for
$1\5,064.
W~rk to be completed this
summer, according to Buckley, includes the asbestos
removal, taking out ceiling
and . floor rile, installing a
sprinkler system, upgrading
~,,

March 20, the bifls are still .
under OOOT review and a
'
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contrite hu not b,cil awarded. ·
_ "~ ODOT, will not be IlkjJeawr Excavating of Canton
mg b1ds for the ~ of,~
tht apparent low bidder on
struc~, these PP?.)eCU• he. ·tile ·fiat phue, With a. quote of

oJ\

Da~y

the 4 p.m. cloalng
quotes of the previOIJI
day's trlrtMCtlone, provided by Smith Part-

I

bids, 'and
bids w.:ire opened on

;,

Wendy's-20~

Worthington- 9~

DowJonn
.... tt'

je(t has ~n let for

. :. . ra . ,

Peoples - 18'1'.
Premier- 8"1.

Rocl&lt;well - 38

Rocl&lt;y Boo!l- 4')•
ROSheH -55
Sears-35
Shoney's _,,
Wai-Mart - 49\

March 28, 2001

.

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12~
0\18-24~
BBT-34~

Charming Shops - 5
City Holding - 9\
Fedwal Mogul - 3),
USB-23

ot

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41 ~

Ch8mplon - 2~·

'Board

·~

Linda End - 28 ),
Ltd.- t5),
Oak Hill Fln~~ncial -

-1-n.

grade studenu. The program
will be presented b}iYouth Services Cooldinator Junie Maynafli ~nd is . being funded
AI
,. I) -~
through Orug Free Schools
bid of $54,910 by Davii Bus money.
~ales for · the purch:IJe
a
In other matten, the board:
handica,pped bw. The bus con•
• approved seniors for gradusists of a Thomas body on a ation that haw met both the
freightliner chassis and was State Board of Education and
·recommended by Daniel Rii• Southern Local Board of Edufle, mnsportatiotl supervisor, c:atioru n:q\lirements for grad.and Q,vnr )i:mith, ~~d . bus uation·
mecThhanicO?hi''~ ?l;D,' · · f · . • a~epted Jacqueline Wolfe
e..
o
epartlhent d .
, b •
h ~ th
. li. all" d the di , u a .u stltute teac er ,or e
Educaaon
as owe
. s- . f h
. SSS 000 ~ . th
L~-- remamder o t e 2000-01
tract . ,
·•or
d L.,e purclliiK
.
sch oo1 year .o n an as nee ded
handi
f
o a
cappe uus,
b '
di
roval b th
The Racine Youth League
~· pen ng app
Y e
was approved to use the base- · &lt;;&gt;mo Department of Educaball fields at Southern Junior tlo~;
.
High for'pr2ctice this spring as
• grantedTma Rees access to
long ~rthe league carries the sruckn,t rec?rds for .grades 8-12
approtltiate insurance cover- as needed tn selecang students
age.
for the Jobs for Ohio Gr2duThe • acnon was a result of ates program.
the S1 ~ihern High School's
· Attending were board membaseb~ , and softball teams' be.n Ro~ Cammar2ta, Richard
requesll}for the use of S~r Mill Hill, Davtd Klucma, Dou!f LitPark &lt;!firing s¢heduled pmes.
de, ~uthe~n. Local Treasurer
The, board approyed the Denme Hill, and Southern
Char2eter Education program Local Superintendent james
for siitiChern Local's . fourth . ~Wrence.

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LOCAL EVE.NTS ·
THURSDAY
ROCKSPRINGS -Town and
Counlry EXPO, 7:30 p.m.,
Grange annex, Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.

START

Kmart-9~

Kroger- 25

Blink One- 35'1'.
Bob e-.

llolgWarner -

41 ~

Hal14ty Davidson - 37

ATU-22

_ POMEROY - Evelyn Johnson Thoma, 82, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday, March 28, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangementswill be announced by Fislier-Acree Funeral
Home.

'U;. , .

Authorities identify body

AmTeciVSBC - 42),
Alhlend Inc. - 37~

fram ....

Privately·~~- prison cuts jolis

.., ", ,. ~ ·· ._.. r._ ...
,,
_.,. ..~ .

•

Allzo-42).

Evtt,n Johnson 1homl

temporarily and temporarily reduce the hours of 16 other full~
time employees to part-time status.
''
The remainder of the shortfall is to be offset by cuts in oper-·
ating expenses and postponement of some repairs and cone·
struction.
·
',
About half of the college's 200 employees have · donated·
around $43,000 to a special fund ainied at preventing those cutu
backs, said Susan Eklund-Leen, associate professor and directo~
of cooper2tive education.

Teen fatally shoots father ,',

Gannett - 59~

General EIOG!rlc GKNLY -10~

Arch Coal - 29

$250,000. Many of the recommenda: _
tions in that study were ne~er complet-·
ed.
This time the study should give the'
parkway a direction, Archer s.aid. Themoney is well spent. i( il helps derelop a
comprehensive plan for die .(ystem,
Archer said.
The state has hired the firm' OfFuller,
Mossbarger, Scott &amp; May Engin~ers Inc ..
to do the survey. Stan Harris, office .
manger for the company's Cin'cinnat(
office, said the goal is to start in May.
The project will take one year. The ,
first step is to conduct a survey of the,
entire system and make recommendations for repairs.
''

LOCAL BRIEFS

LOCAL STOCKS

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AEP-45

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Sunny Pl Cloudy

'111unday. Mllrch 21.2001

Study looks for upgrades along river

Ohio weather

Nl.

PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

The Dilly Sentinel • P1ge A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

FEBRUARY

MARCH

Juclpnent given

mP11seetlnp

MARIETTA- District 10
POMEROY - A judgof the Ohio Depmment of ment has been gr2n ted in
Tr2nsportation has scheduled Meigs County Common
a series of public meetings for Pleas Court to Farmers Bank
area residents to view and and Savings Co., against Nelda
make conunents regarding its Pauline Bowland, and others.
draft State Transportation
Improvement Plan (STIP).
The STIP is a feder:dlymandat&lt;d four-year planning
POMEROY Units of
document, reviewed bi-annuthe Meigs EJllergency Service
ally. The dr2ft. STIP lists all .
answered I 0 calls for 'assistance
projects programmed by
· on Wednesday. Units respond! ll &gt;OT for development and
sale during State Fiscal Years ed as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
21XJ2-05. Public comments are
7:10
a.m., Rocksprings
desired and will be evaluated
and reflected in the depart- Rehabilitation Center, Stella
Martin, Holzer Medical Cenment's final STIP review.
District I 0 represents nine ter;
10:42 a.m.. Ohio 124.
Southeastern Ohio counties,
including Meigs, and the dis- Orpha Rouse, HMC;
trict's document will reflect
5:27p.m ., Overbrook Nurs- ·
upcoming projects in those ing Center, Barbara Hayes,
counties.
HMC;
The first of four public
8:46 p.m., College Street,
meetings in the district will be assisted by Syracuse as First
held on April 10 from 4 to 8 Responder, Tammy Bable,
p.m. at the Monroe Co\lnty Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Senior Center in Woodsfield.
10:30 p.m., Meigs Mine 2,
The second meeting will be James Vance, HMC.
held April 11 from 4 to 8 p.m.
POMEROY
at the Washington County
8':18 a.m., Rocksprings
Public Libr2ry in Marietta, a
Rehabilitation Center, Evelyn
joint meeting with the WoodThoma,HMC;
Washington-Wirt Interstate
7:13 p.m., Hysell Run, elecPlanning Commission, which
is also federally mandated to trical fire, Dwayne Allen

EMS nans

prepare a tl"2nsportation plan
and work closely with ODOT
in the Marietta/Belpre areas.
The third meeting will be
April 12 from 4-8 p.m., at the
. ODOT garage in Gallia
County, 2397 Jackson Pike,
Bidwell,
·
The fourth and final meeting will be held April 17 from
3 till 7 p.m. at the Herbert
Westcoat Memorial Libr2ry,
120~arket St., McArthur.
0 OT encourages area
resi nts with ·an interest in
transportation , planning to
attend one of the above meetings.

electrical work in the vocational area and replacing the
roof on the academic portion
of the building.
The superintendent said
work will continue through
the school year in blocks of
four or five classrooms ·with
students from the rooms
where \Vork is taking place to
have classes in modular units.
Everytlllng w:ill be btough~
up to code including electricPOMEROY - Meigs Soil
-ity and the sanitary sewage and Water Conservation Dissystem, he said.
trict has tree packets available
· Major renovations will take for ordering, including Scotch
place in the cafeteria as well as pine - 25 seedlings for $11,
the media center, there will and the backyard/hardwood
be new lockers and desks and packet which contains two
chairs in the entire building, each of Sugar Maple, Sweet
new ceiling tile and flooring Gum, €hinese Chestnut,
will be installed, along with a River Birch and Zumi
security and intercomnlUni- Crabapple for S1 0:
cation syste..m.
Ground cover plants still
Air conditioning will be available include the Periwinirutalled in parts of the build- kle and Crown Vetch, each
ing not now ai~ conditioned, containing 25 plants of a sinbut not the gymnasium, there gle variety for $1 I.
will be new doors and winOrders should be placed by
dows every place, and the
April 4 and packets will be
front entrance to the building
available for pickup on April 9
will have a complete redesign,
and 10. Orders are placed
· Buckley said.
through SWCD at 3310 I
Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, or by · calling 9924282.

8:07p.m., Highland, Shawn
Gilmore, PVH.

IWTLAND
7:55 p.m., Meigs Mine 31,
Kenneth Larrick, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
3:35p.m., Oak Alley, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Henry
Rider,PVH.

Seeds IYallable

Taft orders 4 percent in
Ucenselssuecl
cuts over next three months POMEROY
-A marriage

COLUMBUS (AP) - . also known as the rainy day lic~nse has been issued .in
Meigs County Probate Court
Gov. Bob Taft .ordered state fund, to help balance the curto · Chester Warren Buckley,
agencies Wednesday to cut · rent budget. Taft would not
67, Reedsville, and Dorothy
spendiQg by 4 percent over · say · how much he plans to
Jane Apolzon, 63, Sebring, Fla. I ~-iliiii~
the next three. ~on~hs, on take out, but House Speaker
Al l AGE.S, A ll T IM ES
top of $-125 nullion, m cuts L
H
h ld
Gl
- D ecemb er.
arry ouse .o er, a , enh e ma de tn
.
Taft said the state is ford Repubhcan, md the
respond(ng to a slowi.'lg amount is .abouc $28 million.
,econonw_-:espccially in manuThe new budget cuts are
· facturingstates like Ohio:
on top ?f reductions of 2
The Office of Budget and · percent to 4 percent th~t Taft
Management on Thesday ordered in December for the
lowered by about $288 mil- six months that remained in
lion its estimate of the
amount the state will collec,t the fuca! year.
in taxes, fees and other revenues over the rest of the
budget year, which ends on
Jupe 30.
The cuts represent 1 · percent of eacl\ agency's annual
A
budget, or 4 percent over the
three months left in the fiscal
year. Th~ CUfS are necessary
to balance !he budget, as
required by l~w•.Taft said.
· "We hope to work with
our Cabinet agencies to minimize the impact on essential
state services - services that
care for peeple," Taft said.
, "This will be a challenge for
4tl71 POIMI'OI Pike,
OH
our department directors."
"WW&amp;•N tile 4-laftH CI'MS"
Taft also said it was "wry
110r more InfOrmation. call
likely" that th~ state would
have to take money from the
S I · billion budget surplus,

S4 00

11r0m
Power Nam Will ae Speaking

sunday, April t, lOOt
a: II a.m. a t 0:4S a.m.
At the lllrst southern
aaptlst Church
...._rov,

(740) 992·&amp;779

TNI-1'1 ONLY ONI

(

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owner, no 1njunes;

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�Friday, March 30

~~~~~~

MARIETTA (AP) - A $1.3 million
state study of the Musicingum River
lock and dam system represents the first
comprehensive look at that east-central
Ohio waterway in nearly a decade.
The goal is to prioritize repairs and
make recommendations on the system,
which stretches (rom north of Zanesville
to just north of Marietta. The survey is
something river supporters have been
seeking for several years.
The river has a hand-operated lock
system, and the 147-year-old system is in
constant need of repairs. Those repairs
often cost millions. Since 1984, the state
has spent "about $11.8 million in repairs.
Despite all that money, the number of
visitors along the river boating, fishing

"""'·

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~ IH'/51" I •

• [Columbuo 141"153"

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KY.

02001

0

Inc.

Cloudy

and picnicking has not increased in
those 17 years.
The visitor figures for 2000 have not
yet been compiled, but Parkway Park
Manager Pat Archer said she believes it
did increase last summer.
This s11mmer, the parkway will open
nine of the I 0 locks to boaters. The only
one that remains closed is at the Ellis
site, just rwrth of Zanesville.
"This ls ·going to help us prioritize
where Je•go next," Archer said of the
study. "We feel there are many ·other
problems that need to be addressed.
We've done other studies in the past, but
nothing this detailed."
The last comprehensive study of the
system was completed in 1993 for

.. • •

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~ . ._... J!'"jj~,
~ -. . - •• *
Showtrs

T-storms

Rain

Flurnu

.

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two boys, was identified Wednesday. Her decomposed body was
found Sunday by neighborhood boys in a wooded area ~djacent
to the Trent's mobile home complex.
The body apparently had been hidden under piles of branches in this community in northeast Ohio.
The cause of death hasn't been deterniined.

~

Snow

lea

March will end mild~ wet
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Look for April showers
across the tri-county atea on
the weekend, along with temperatures that definitely are
seasonal.
The warming trend that
will
keep
temperatures
tonight in the mid-40s continues. Highs in the 60s are
expected through the weekend.
Southerly winds are bringing moist air into the area and
producing showets that likely
will continue through Friday.
After a break on Saturday, the
rain will resume on Sunday,
the National Weather .Service
said.
Sunset tonight will be at
6:52, and sunrise on Friday at
6:19a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Cioudy with a
chance of rain. Low in the
mid 40s. Northeast wind 5 to

Council acts to avert shutdown

10 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Friday... Occasional ram.
CLEVELAND (AP) - City council members locked in a
High in the mid 50s. North fight with Mayor Michael R. White over a pending budget say
wind around I 0 mph. Chance a spending plan will be approved in time to avoid a cit)' govof r2in 90 percent.
ernment shutdown next week.
Friday night... Occasional
The commitment Wednesday came after Mayor Michael R.
rain. Low in the mid 40s.
White convened an emergency cabinet meeting to discuss what
would happen to city services if council didn't adopt a balanced
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mosdy cloudy. A budget by the state's Monday deadline.
City Council President Mike Polensek said the council
chance of rain during the day.
would meet the deadline. Finance Committee Chairman Bill
High in the lower 60s.
Sunday... Mosdy cloudy. A Patman said that he expected passage pf a budget on Friday.
chance of rain from early
Negotiations between council and the mayor's staff continafternoon on. Low in the ued, with the two .sides remaining $4 million apart. Council
lower 40s and high in the mid wants White to increase his income estimate, and the mayor .
wants to impose spending cuts.
60s.
.
Monday... Cloudy with a
chance of rain. Low in the
mid 40s and high in the upper
50s.
YELLOW SPRINGS (AP) - Antioch College employees
Tuesday... Pardy cloudy. have agreed to cuts in pay or reduced hours for the next three
Low in the lo.wer 40s and months to help prevent other co-workers from being laid off or
reduced to part-time status.
·
high in the lower 60s.
Wednesday... Pardy cloudy.
College officials announced a month ago that a projected
Low in the upper 40s and $300,000 budget shortfall would require the school to lay off
high 60 to 65.
two empl()yees permanently, furlough four other employees
."}.."

Antioch reducing staff

·-

·-·

AKRON (AP) -A 13-year-old boy allegedly'threa!ened by
his gun-wielding father took the weapon when hu dad fell
asleep and fatally shot hi.h, police said.
· '
''
Aaron Stitt was charged in juvenile court with delinquent)'
by reason of aggravated murder in the death of Denrus Floyd
Stitt, 49, early Wednesday at their home.
·'
The father was taken to 'Akron City Hospital in critical con:
dition with a gunshot wound to the head and died later in the
day.
"
The boy told ~ 911 police di~patcher that his fath~r got drun~
and waved a gun in the air and threatened to kill him. The boy
said he waited until his fatJ:ter fell aslee~;. tl;t~p got ~heJrm and
shot him.
·
·.
•··. ~
·

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) ·- · ·A privately oper2ted prison seerl
as an economic boost for .the area has announced 200 Jayoffi";
about 45 percent of its 449•memb~r staff, and more cuts could
be ahead.
.
·&lt;
. The reductions at the Northeast' Ohio Correctionai·Centeiopetated by the Corrections Coipbraticm of Amtt-ica of

·- ....
Break floods dty sbeets· .
1

, _, ,

,j

• '

CLEVELAND (AP) - Fiv~ neighborhood schools canceled
Thursday's classes because of water problems resulting· from a
burst 30-inch, 116-year-old main that flooded streets in a I 0block radius.
·
The water, which rolled over curbs and lapped at front porches, stalled cars, flooded a few basements and damaged une house
foundation.
No injuries were reported in the pipe burst Wednesday afternoon in the blue-collar Ohio ,City neighborhood·just west qf
downtown.
·
Low pressure and a reguirement to boil water for drinking as
a precaution prompted schools in the neighborhood -to close
Thursday.

Ca~ &amp;

New Cars &amp;',Trucks,
, everything goes at

ASHTABULA (A,P) - . Dental records were. l!S,e d 10. jde'}tify
a body found in a wooaed area as that of a neighborhood
woman reported missing Sept. 15.
The body of Connie Noble Trent, 35, a married mother of

MIDDLEPORT -Annual meel·
lng Un~ed Fund for Meigs County, Inc., 6 p.m meeling; 6:30
p.m. desserl bulle!, River Arts
Council Building, Middleport.

ship Truslees, Saturday, 7 a.m.
atlhe township building.
CLIFTON, W.Va.- Gospel
s.lng, Clifton Tabernacle, 7 p.m.
fealuring Gabriel Quartet.
MONDAY
,
LONG BOTfOM - Special services Monday through Saturday,
7:30 nighlly, Hazel Community
Church .neat'Long .Bottom: Special singing. John l;lswick, evan·
galist.
. '
'

MIDDLEPORT- Good START
Community Forum, 7 p.m., Middleporl Elemenlary School. Pub.4
lic urged lo attend and particiSYRACUSE - Sutton Township
pale In open discussion ol com- Trustees, regular meeling, Monmunily needs and solutions.
day, 7:30 p.m Syracuse municipal building.
POMEROY - Free breast and
cervical cancer screenings proRUTLAND - Rulland Township
vided by !he Ohio Univ11rsily
Trustees,
regular session, MonCollege of Osleopalhic Mediday,
5
p.m.
at lhe Rulland Fir11
cine's Mobile Heahh unil, 10
Slallon.
·
a.m. to 2 p.m .. Meigs County
Health Department Pap lesls,
pelvic and breast examinations, TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
and breast health educalion to
Community
Assoclalion, 8:30
be provided by appointment to .
a.m.,
Peoples
Banking and Trust
the uninsured and underinsured
Co.
women of Meigs County. Call
593·2432 or toll-free at (800)
POMEROY- Salisbury Town844-2654 for an appointment
ship Trusteeuegular meeling,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. township hall,
POMEROY- 'Thimble ThursRocksprings Road.
day" at God's NET, lree meal,
games and sewing lesson for
The Community Calendar Ia
youlh.
publlllhed aa a f.... aarvlce to
non--profit grou.,. wlahlng to
FRIDAY
announce mMtlnga and apePOMEROY - Fun, Food and
cia! eventa. Tht celendar Ia
Fellowship, God's NET, 6 to
not dealgned to promote talea
10:30 p.m. Games, compulers,
or fund-1111eere of any type.
pool tables, free refreshments
for leens.
Item• are print~ only ••
apace parmlta end cennot be
SATURDAY
guaranteed to be prlnled a
PORTLAND - lebanon Townepeclflc number of daya.

'

"

Truck'-, c

......................
1ed.uced.prices!

)r

f1om PlaeAI
qf Middleport's residenu , and
ousiness owners give input i,nto
the coriununity wessment and
strategic planning proceas
begun by the Middleport sti~­
vey Committee in January."
lannarelli said results of the
community's recent collU'nunity-wide survey 'Yill be pmented at the meeting:
,
. Those surveys asked questions on development, retail
need§ and resident satisfaction
with community services in
·Middleport, and were distribQted to the genel"21 population,
to the business commullity and
to other community leaden.
"We want absolutely everyone who is intereSted in the
future of Middleport to come
to the meeting;'Iannuelli said.
·:our citizens' ideas, their par•
gcipatipn, and their energy are
the conununity's most important assets.''

; "Middleport is at an important crossroads;' she added.
·~The ~ompletion of d)e Darwin anc,i Ravenswood high\W)'
projects, and the consttuction

....

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

····~•.•'

-········-·····- ••••llllmllr Ctl~lnll'l.
11111'1, ........ - ••••,
CbnlllriiiHbit J11 Ctnlrlllll1'1
lllllniiiiiCii.,.

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1111.11 IIIII $1111M Cllll
IIIHIUIU%11rH•I as1

(

i~ .'

of th~ new Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge will have significant
impacu on the village, and
noW is the time to begin planning for our future."
"This is just the first step in
building a community where
there are jobs, thriving busintsses and an involved community," Iannarelli said. Good
START (Small Town Assessmerit and Readiness Techniques), the program which
m:enees the survey .process and
the community forum, is a
progr2m funded through the
U.S. Department of Agriculture/Rural Development.
Melody Sands of COAD has
worked with the village and
the survey committee on the
community assessment, and
will conduct tonight's forum.
That forum, she said, will
include a review of the survey
results, an open discussion
period, and small group discussions.
"We are pleased with the
input so far in the survey
process. Middleport residents
are showing an interest in their
conununlty and many good
ideas have been expressed;'
Sands said.

.. '

fiOM l'lllt AI. .·"

while

added. .• '•
.
' '•22 23 millio
Those~ lnceresccd.
in Wna • ·
n. •·--I
IIi
~L'-ut - ...
-: --:i.loJ11ko , The .6nt
phase a....... Do out. mom' ·iWQ
~ ~~·~J
~
of buildings or personal PtllPCt' 11011· wd, will be ,announced
ty should contael: the corlcr.tc- ~~ely ':"hen l.t comes: .
tors 'on the pmjecll, he said. .
~~ u the ~e for mte~c- .
j

;

•

•

To date:,llnly QAt; p'-,ofthe, ed aiiZeriS~ ~t m touch wtth
Ravenswood , COnnietor ,pn).;. the conaatlor, he idded.

I

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

_...;.;.".

WlltPii ..... 4M'JP

.......

'

•

'

,1"'

jhe .Daily Sentinel

.::-=::....... '.

flllllzlll.ll'l. ..... ···~~~
$21-liii*H2DII1•1tiiDIIII1

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......

Reider.Services

I• III'IWUI%11rM•I IIIII ·W t•lll(il• ll'l.flnllftlllllr'l . . . .l

· Correction Polley

Our main oonoem In all eleiltilll
to be accurate. If ~ lctlow of ah
error tn a.etory, call tht new11oorn
. at (740) 1182·21118.

Newt bepartmentl

·'

.

: , Ir

.252 Upper River Rd.
(740) 446,;,0842 or
Gallipolis, Ohio 4$631
Toll Free 1-800-44&amp;-0842

New.

or

DodgeI)Different . . ,,

JeeR

(U11'111HIO)

v.tior _ ....... Co.

~ MIY ottt..-., MOnclly
th1011g11 ,~dar. 111 court st.,
I'OIIIIh&gt;l'o
onto. S.COnd-olou
plld at P011-.

=
No•=·
t"'""

Mn Tho ~lottd PrMI lnd
thO OhJG
Auoclotlon.

lddrlll correc·
to Till Oolr - - 111 Cou~.

,.........

at .. Pomerav. Ohio ~5781.

.· lube6rlptlotl tite•
111 ea~Htr.,-nlo'tiW JOIM&gt;
OntwMil
lint montll
Orte yew

'

ACIVII'IIelnl
Circulation
Claaalfltcl Ada

.. I

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M.?O
110.

150 Clntl
· Dt111r
, _ _ not daliring to pay Ill
cartttr maL."::!.:" adVanca direct to
&amp;it. 14
Tho 0o1r · . Crtalt Will be gNifl
oontet
011011 - · NCi ouiJICrlptJon by
Other Hrvlo"
mtll ponnltted In eruo - r • liOml

Ext 13

callltir ur\'lcll II IVIHibll.

'"

.

The main numller II H2·2111e.
Deparlnltnt aiiMniiOne n:
Qenaral .mana..,
ext 12

' OhiO

stoctc repor!l are

ners at Adveat Inc.

12,000

...-...
__ _

11 ,000

10,000

.

...._

9,785.35

9.000

-1.83
..
Low
9,941.20
9.695.81
Roco.. high: .11,722.98 ~.:i!.J""'-"---.1...:.--.!L-L-- 1.000

'·""

Jin . 14, 2000

March 2S, 2001

DECEMBER

JANUARY

FEBF1UARY

... RCH

.

1.000

• nd•niA
Peor'eiOO

1.£00

""--1,163.29

·2.44

....

Low

1,182.17

1,1 ..7.83

L _ _}£!~~L--,-:!!.__ 1,100

Rocordhlgh: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

DECEMBER

JANUARY

March ~s. 2001

...-..
N d q

,..._.....,_
1.854.13

-5.99
Hilh

.....

1.125.30

1,8 52.98

RIOord high: 5,048.82
Ma1:t'l to, 2000

Wesam
. from Page AI
April, and that Qua:ndel
Group will be making, recommendations following a
review of the bids at the April
I 0 meeting of the board of
education.
Work at the high school is
expected to begin on May 21.
· · Buckley said the total construction budget ·for the ·
extensive high school renovation is $5,680,000. The apparent low bids for the project
came in $595,000 under budget, he said.
.
' At Tuesday night's board
·n~eeting, a contract for
asbestos abatement at the high
scpbol was awarded to Lepi
Ent~rprises Inc., Zanesville.
That contract was for
$1\5,064.
W~rk to be completed this
summer, according to Buckley, includes the asbestos
removal, taking out ceiling
and . floor rile, installing a
sprinkler system, upgrading
~,,

March 20, the bifls are still .
under OOOT review and a
'
.
' '
contrite hu not b,cil awarded. ·
_ "~ ODOT, will not be IlkjJeawr Excavating of Canton
mg b1ds for the ~ of,~
tht apparent low bidder on
struc~, these PP?.)eCU• he. ·tile ·fiat phue, With a. quote of

oJ\

Da~y

the 4 p.m. cloalng
quotes of the previOIJI
day's trlrtMCtlone, provided by Smith Part-

I

bids, 'and
bids w.:ire opened on

;,

Wendy's-20~

Worthington- 9~

DowJonn
.... tt'

je(t has ~n let for

. :. . ra . ,

Peoples - 18'1'.
Premier- 8"1.

Rocl&lt;well - 38

Rocl&lt;y Boo!l- 4')•
ROSheH -55
Sears-35
Shoney's _,,
Wai-Mart - 49\

March 28, 2001

.

'1 :'-AA

12~
0\18-24~
BBT-34~

Charming Shops - 5
City Holding - 9\
Fedwal Mogul - 3),
USB-23

ot

'; i

41 ~

Ch8mplon - 2~·

'Board

·~

Linda End - 28 ),
Ltd.- t5),
Oak Hill Fln~~ncial -

-1-n.

grade studenu. The program
will be presented b}iYouth Services Cooldinator Junie Maynafli ~nd is . being funded
AI
,. I) -~
through Orug Free Schools
bid of $54,910 by Davii Bus money.
~ales for · the purch:IJe
a
In other matten, the board:
handica,pped bw. The bus con•
• approved seniors for gradusists of a Thomas body on a ation that haw met both the
freightliner chassis and was State Board of Education and
·recommended by Daniel Rii• Southern Local Board of Edufle, mnsportatiotl supervisor, c:atioru n:q\lirements for grad.and Q,vnr )i:mith, ~~d . bus uation·
mecThhanicO?hi''~ ?l;D,' · · f · . • a~epted Jacqueline Wolfe
e..
o
epartlhent d .
, b •
h ~ th
. li. all" d the di , u a .u stltute teac er ,or e
Educaaon
as owe
. s- . f h
. SSS 000 ~ . th
L~-- remamder o t e 2000-01
tract . ,
·•or
d L.,e purclliiK
.
sch oo1 year .o n an as nee ded
handi
f
o a
cappe uus,
b '
di
roval b th
The Racine Youth League
~· pen ng app
Y e
was approved to use the base- · &lt;;&gt;mo Department of Educaball fields at Southern Junior tlo~;
.
High for'pr2ctice this spring as
• grantedTma Rees access to
long ~rthe league carries the sruckn,t rec?rds for .grades 8-12
approtltiate insurance cover- as needed tn selecang students
age.
for the Jobs for Ohio Gr2duThe • acnon was a result of ates program.
the S1 ~ihern High School's
· Attending were board membaseb~ , and softball teams' be.n Ro~ Cammar2ta, Richard
requesll}for the use of S~r Mill Hill, Davtd Klucma, Dou!f LitPark &lt;!firing s¢heduled pmes.
de, ~uthe~n. Local Treasurer
The, board approyed the Denme Hill, and Southern
Char2eter Education program Local Superintendent james
for siitiChern Local's . fourth . ~Wrence.

~

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.
• .••1.......,.,:

LOCAL EVE.NTS ·
THURSDAY
ROCKSPRINGS -Town and
Counlry EXPO, 7:30 p.m.,
Grange annex, Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.

START

Kmart-9~

Kroger- 25

Blink One- 35'1'.
Bob e-.

llolgWarner -

41 ~

Hal14ty Davidson - 37

ATU-22

_ POMEROY - Evelyn Johnson Thoma, 82, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday, March 28, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangementswill be announced by Fislier-Acree Funeral
Home.

'U;. , .

Authorities identify body

AmTeciVSBC - 42),
Alhlend Inc. - 37~

fram ....

Privately·~~- prison cuts jolis

.., ", ,. ~ ·· ._.. r._ ...
,,
_.,. ..~ .

•

Allzo-42).

Evtt,n Johnson 1homl

temporarily and temporarily reduce the hours of 16 other full~
time employees to part-time status.
''
The remainder of the shortfall is to be offset by cuts in oper-·
ating expenses and postponement of some repairs and cone·
struction.
·
',
About half of the college's 200 employees have · donated·
around $43,000 to a special fund ainied at preventing those cutu
backs, said Susan Eklund-Leen, associate professor and directo~
of cooper2tive education.

Teen fatally shoots father ,',

Gannett - 59~

General EIOG!rlc GKNLY -10~

Arch Coal - 29

$250,000. Many of the recommenda: _
tions in that study were ne~er complet-·
ed.
This time the study should give the'
parkway a direction, Archer s.aid. Themoney is well spent. i( il helps derelop a
comprehensive plan for die .(ystem,
Archer said.
The state has hired the firm' OfFuller,
Mossbarger, Scott &amp; May Engin~ers Inc ..
to do the survey. Stan Harris, office .
manger for the company's Cin'cinnat(
office, said the goal is to start in May.
The project will take one year. The ,
first step is to conduct a survey of the,
entire system and make recommendations for repairs.
''

LOCAL BRIEFS

LOCAL STOCKS

I

••

AEP-45

'.

r;,..,._, .lii:i.O. '\f!lflli!J . . . ,

Sunny Pl Cloudy

'111unday. Mllrch 21.2001

Study looks for upgrades along river

Ohio weather

Nl.

PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

The Dilly Sentinel • P1ge A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

FEBRUARY

MARCH

Juclpnent given

mP11seetlnp

MARIETTA- District 10
POMEROY - A judgof the Ohio Depmment of ment has been gr2n ted in
Tr2nsportation has scheduled Meigs County Common
a series of public meetings for Pleas Court to Farmers Bank
area residents to view and and Savings Co., against Nelda
make conunents regarding its Pauline Bowland, and others.
draft State Transportation
Improvement Plan (STIP).
The STIP is a feder:dlymandat&lt;d four-year planning
POMEROY Units of
document, reviewed bi-annuthe Meigs EJllergency Service
ally. The dr2ft. STIP lists all .
answered I 0 calls for 'assistance
projects programmed by
· on Wednesday. Units respond! ll &gt;OT for development and
sale during State Fiscal Years ed as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
21XJ2-05. Public comments are
7:10
a.m., Rocksprings
desired and will be evaluated
and reflected in the depart- Rehabilitation Center, Stella
Martin, Holzer Medical Cenment's final STIP review.
District I 0 represents nine ter;
10:42 a.m.. Ohio 124.
Southeastern Ohio counties,
including Meigs, and the dis- Orpha Rouse, HMC;
trict's document will reflect
5:27p.m ., Overbrook Nurs- ·
upcoming projects in those ing Center, Barbara Hayes,
counties.
HMC;
The first of four public
8:46 p.m., College Street,
meetings in the district will be assisted by Syracuse as First
held on April 10 from 4 to 8 Responder, Tammy Bable,
p.m. at the Monroe Co\lnty Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Senior Center in Woodsfield.
10:30 p.m., Meigs Mine 2,
The second meeting will be James Vance, HMC.
held April 11 from 4 to 8 p.m.
POMEROY
at the Washington County
8':18 a.m., Rocksprings
Public Libr2ry in Marietta, a
Rehabilitation Center, Evelyn
joint meeting with the WoodThoma,HMC;
Washington-Wirt Interstate
7:13 p.m., Hysell Run, elecPlanning Commission, which
is also federally mandated to trical fire, Dwayne Allen

EMS nans

prepare a tl"2nsportation plan
and work closely with ODOT
in the Marietta/Belpre areas.
The third meeting will be
April 12 from 4-8 p.m., at the
. ODOT garage in Gallia
County, 2397 Jackson Pike,
Bidwell,
·
The fourth and final meeting will be held April 17 from
3 till 7 p.m. at the Herbert
Westcoat Memorial Libr2ry,
120~arket St., McArthur.
0 OT encourages area
resi nts with ·an interest in
transportation , planning to
attend one of the above meetings.

electrical work in the vocational area and replacing the
roof on the academic portion
of the building.
The superintendent said
work will continue through
the school year in blocks of
four or five classrooms ·with
students from the rooms
where \Vork is taking place to
have classes in modular units.
Everytlllng w:ill be btough~
up to code including electricPOMEROY - Meigs Soil
-ity and the sanitary sewage and Water Conservation Dissystem, he said.
trict has tree packets available
· Major renovations will take for ordering, including Scotch
place in the cafeteria as well as pine - 25 seedlings for $11,
the media center, there will and the backyard/hardwood
be new lockers and desks and packet which contains two
chairs in the entire building, each of Sugar Maple, Sweet
new ceiling tile and flooring Gum, €hinese Chestnut,
will be installed, along with a River Birch and Zumi
security and intercomnlUni- Crabapple for S1 0:
cation syste..m.
Ground cover plants still
Air conditioning will be available include the Periwinirutalled in parts of the build- kle and Crown Vetch, each
ing not now ai~ conditioned, containing 25 plants of a sinbut not the gymnasium, there gle variety for $1 I.
will be new doors and winOrders should be placed by
dows every place, and the
April 4 and packets will be
front entrance to the building
available for pickup on April 9
will have a complete redesign,
and 10. Orders are placed
· Buckley said.
through SWCD at 3310 I
Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, or by · calling 9924282.

8:07p.m., Highland, Shawn
Gilmore, PVH.

IWTLAND
7:55 p.m., Meigs Mine 31,
Kenneth Larrick, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
3:35p.m., Oak Alley, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Henry
Rider,PVH.

Seeds IYallable

Taft orders 4 percent in
Ucenselssuecl
cuts over next three months POMEROY
-A marriage

COLUMBUS (AP) - . also known as the rainy day lic~nse has been issued .in
Meigs County Probate Court
Gov. Bob Taft .ordered state fund, to help balance the curto · Chester Warren Buckley,
agencies Wednesday to cut · rent budget. Taft would not
67, Reedsville, and Dorothy
spendiQg by 4 percent over · say · how much he plans to
Jane Apolzon, 63, Sebring, Fla. I ~-iliiii~
the next three. ~on~hs, on take out, but House Speaker
Al l AGE.S, A ll T IM ES
top of $-125 nullion, m cuts L
H
h ld
Gl
- D ecemb er.
arry ouse .o er, a , enh e ma de tn
.
Taft said the state is ford Repubhcan, md the
respond(ng to a slowi.'lg amount is .abouc $28 million.
,econonw_-:espccially in manuThe new budget cuts are
· facturingstates like Ohio:
on top ?f reductions of 2
The Office of Budget and · percent to 4 percent th~t Taft
Management on Thesday ordered in December for the
lowered by about $288 mil- six months that remained in
lion its estimate of the
amount the state will collec,t the fuca! year.
in taxes, fees and other revenues over the rest of the
budget year, which ends on
Jupe 30.
The cuts represent 1 · percent of eacl\ agency's annual
A
budget, or 4 percent over the
three months left in the fiscal
year. Th~ CUfS are necessary
to balance !he budget, as
required by l~w•.Taft said.
· "We hope to work with
our Cabinet agencies to minimize the impact on essential
state services - services that
care for peeple," Taft said.
, "This will be a challenge for
4tl71 POIMI'OI Pike,
OH
our department directors."
"WW&amp;•N tile 4-laftH CI'MS"
Taft also said it was "wry
110r more InfOrmation. call
likely" that th~ state would
have to take money from the
S I · billion budget surplus,

S4 00

11r0m
Power Nam Will ae Speaking

sunday, April t, lOOt
a: II a.m. a t 0:4S a.m.
At the lllrst southern
aaptlst Church
...._rov,

(740) 992·&amp;779

TNI-1'1 ONLY ONI

(

'/

owner, no 1njunes;

"

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.-

"

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�...

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

~·· _Th_e_Da_ny_s_en_tm_el_ _ ____,;;B;;;;;...y

PageA4
1hunUy. Mllrch 11. 1001 .

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

The Daily Sentinel

..

AL.~b

Mushroom workshop set

CU&amp;~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
7o10-M2·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill

Controller

•

Lll*n UJ 1M ~ .,., wkoM•. nw, •hoflld h lnr llwM ]00 tJNJnb. A.U , . ,
.n1Mltjlcr ID tdiliJtf IUtll_, N •ltiiH aM IM,. llllilrr11.,., ,.,.,_,. ,..,..,,,
N• U1Uif1Nd ltttm will it 1dlitlu&amp; i.AIIIn 1/4odi h in , - tan~, · .utw11U.,
iultlfl, 1101 ,.nolfiiiJIHr.
TIN .,U.W111 UIJ"flld ill tlw ftHIIMn INlow M'f tht aHUIIIIIU of 1M 0/do Vdll.y
hWWiilr6 Co. 'r ftlllorial ~ •~tkn IIIMrwilt Mitfl.

NATIONAL VIEWS

-

~

CELEBRATES 90TH- Gladys M. Riggs was surrounded by her
grandchildren for a picture at her 90th birthday observance.

ewe program on Lent

Riggs' 9oth birthday

-·

New arrival

,

Simlarities crop up between
Kosovo and Vietnam
• The Florida Times-Union of Jacksonville, on pulling
out of Kosovo: Kosovo had to be transferred from Serb to international control, the previous U.S. administration said a couple
of years ago, to stop the ethnic killings there -and to keep the
violence fiom spreading into neighboring Macedonia.
Yet, with NATO troops ostensibly iri control, the problems
have gotten worse.
Albanian radicals systematically murder Serbs...
Thus, the previous administration created the very crisis that
it was trying to avert when it annexed Kosovo.
President Bush says there will be "no precipitous withdrawal from the (overseas) coJ'Illltitments we inherited."
That is a fine statement of principle. But national security
adviser Condoleezza Rice said during the campaign last fall
that the United States should pull its troops out. If Bush wants
to keep them there, in the midst of an increasingly bloody crisis, he needs to say what he wants to accomplish - and how
he envisions doing it.
·
There has been no clear mission since the t)Xlops· arrived·in
Kosovo. Bush shouldn't pay the political price for his predecessor's mistakes. Nor should the price be paid by U.S. soldiers,
whose lives are increasingly at risk.
~
There are chilling similarities between· -Kosovo and both
·
Vietnam and Somalia.
• The (Charleston, S.C.) Post and Courier, on the FBI
investigations: Attorney General John Ashcroft has launched not
one but two probes of security procedures following charges
that a senior FBI official spied for Russia 16 years without
detection. Both investigations are needed.
Judge William Webster, former director of both the FBI and
the CIA, will head an outside inquiry. It will look at. ways. to
improve FBI internal security in order to discourage .and catch
·moles....
Some may view his former association with the agency as il.
potential conflict, but practicality says his experience with the
FBI has particular value.
Judge. Webster will, however, be spared the necessity for
pointing a finger of blame at bureau officials, or for recommending any penalties for misconduct.
These tasks will be the responsibility of an internal Justice
Department investigation announced recently by Ashcroft....
In launching this second probe, Ashcroft has shown that he
is appropriately sensitive to appearances a11d also prepared to
exercise ·his ultimate responsibility for the FBI.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Today is Thursday, March 29, the 88th day·of2001. There are
277 days left in the year. .
·
. Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on.March 29,195l,Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy ·ro commit espionage. (They
were executed in June 1953.)
On this date:
In 1638, Swedish colonists settle!! in present-day Delaware.
In 1790, the lOth president of the United States, John 'JYler,
was born in Charles CitY County, Va.
.
In 1847, victo!iolls fo'rces led by Gen. Winfield Scott occupied the city ofVera Cruz ·after Mexic~ defenders capitulated.
In 1867, the· British Parliament passed the North America .
Act to create the Doniinion of Canada.
· In 1882, the Kn~ts of Columbus was chartered in Connecticut.
In 1943, World War II meat, butter and cheese rationing
·
·
began.
.
In 1951,!'All About Eve" won the Academy Aw:u;l for best
picture; its director, joseph L. Mankiewicz, receiv~d his seCond
set of consecutive Oscan for direction and sqeenplay (he'd
won the previous year for "A Letter to Three Wives"); Judy
Holliday won best actress for "Born Yesterday" while Jose Ferrer was honored as best actor for "Cyrano de BergeraC:'
. In 1962, Jack Paar hosted NBC's "Thnight"· show £or the
final time.
In 1971, Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was convicted of
murdering at least 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai massacre. Calley ended up spending three years under house arrest.
In 1971, a jury in Los Angeles re'ommended the death
penalty for Charles Manson and three female followers for the
1969 Tare-La Bianca murders. The sentences were later commuted.
'
Ten years ago: Political strategist Lee Atwater, who'd helped
propel President Bush to his 1988 election victory, died at age
40 of complicationi resulting fiortl a brain tumor. Gen. H . Norman Schwarzlc.opf publicly apologized to President Bu~ for
questioning his judgment about calling a cease-fire in the Gulf
·
·
War.

•

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Is Bush too passive on pushing early tax cuts?
In the end, of course, all that cOunts is
whether the economy recovers quickly
and strongly. If it does, President Bush will
get the credit. If not, he'D get the blame.
Still, in the short run, he's beingj~d
on how he responds to the current bear
economy and stock market, and the tag
being planted on him is "passive."
· Despite a plunging. stock market and
weak economy, until late last week Bush
seemed curiously unwilling to alter his
$1.6 trillion tax-cut plan or eveh to argue
for it on the basis that it would get the
economy moving again.
.
Finally, the White House quietly indicated that it supported - and may have
helped fashion - : the proposal made by
Senate Budget Chairman Pete Domenici,
R-N.M., to return $60 billion of this
year's $93 billion. surplus to taxpayen.
White House aides issued a statement
that Bush "believes we need to get more
money into people's hands quicker, and
he's committed to working with Congress
to look for ways to make the tax cu~
retroactive" to hasten economic recovery.
Nevertheless, the president himself has
not been out in front calling for action to
end what surely will be dubbed "the aush
recession;• even if it more justly should be
named after Federal Reserve Chairmah
Alan Greenspan.
.
Up to now, Bush has ,allowed Democrats such as Sens. Thomas Daschle, S.D.,
and Kent Conrad, N.D., to steal the march
.,
on hi m, recommen ding " smaller, 1airer
and faster" tax cuts designed 10 put money
into the hands of middle-income people
who will spend it.
Daschle and Conrad called for immediate enaconenr of a cur in the lowest tix
rate from 15 percent to 10 percent - a
$60 billion proposal ihat would give about
$600 to every family this year.
Sens. Bob Graham, D-Fla., and Jon
Corzine, D-N.J., recommended a plan
that would apply the tO-percent rate to an

Morton
Kotxh::Jcke
COWMNIST

licans rally around a spe~dup, he may get a
policy through consensus without putting
his brand on it and arousing partisan passioru.
Conrad's reaction to Domenici's rebate
proposal, for instance, was "We're glad to
see them moving in our direction."
Meantime, Republicans on the House
Ways and Mearu panel passed an increase
in .the per-child tax deduction skewed
mo(\' toward lower- income families than
Bush's - possibly a hiht that the GOP
sees a need to make its cuts "fairer."
M;Uor differences remain, though, on
estate taxes, whose total · elimination
(favored by Republicans) would benefit
the wealthy. ·
'
One possible compromise i~ to stop
taxing assets, property, businesses and
1
farms on the death of the owner, but
rather when the asset·is sold, and then at a
capital-gains rate of 20 percent instead of
the current top inheritance rate of 55 percent.
·
Democrats continue. to insist that
Bush's tax cuts will end up totaling around
$2.5 trillion and will consurp.e the entire
non•Social Security budget surplus,
which they say may shrink if the economy stays soft.
.
Moderates ofboth parties have recommended inserting a trigger into Bush's tax
package so new cuts or spending couldn't
rake effect unless surplus targets were met.
Baucus' plan takes a different approach:
Congress would enact tax cuts only for
three years and revisit fiscal policy on the
~asis of proje~ons available the~. Republicans are unlikely t~ ~e to this, though.
How much fiex~bility .will Bush sh~
on t?e, StU :'"d .distnbutt~~ of tax cuts.
He JSn t ~g. That . p~utton could be
seen as pass1VIty or the kind of ~eadership
~ Congress play a role m policy·

individual's first $7,500 in income or a
couple's first $19,000, which would give
couples $950 each at a cost of$80 billion
this year.
Still another Democratic plan, .being
crafted by Sen. Max Baucus, Mont., with
the assistance of fotl)ler'Il:easury Secretily
Robert Rubin, yrould cur tax rates by
$200 billion over the next three years.
That's double the amount offered during that period under the House-passed
version of Bush's rate-cut bill, which will
cut taxes by $950 billion over a decade,
but otren most ofiti breaks in later years.
The House GOP rate-cut bill provides
a reduction of only $5.6 billion this year,
and 'Bush's budget calls for no cuts uritil
next year, when they would . total jus~
$30.6 billion.
·other Republicans have been arguing
for tax cuts that
bigger an~ faster
either .the Democrats' or Bush's, but so far
they have no official standing.
One proposal, costing $45 billion this
year, would put all ofBush's proposed rate
. cuts into . effect immediatelY- But that
would swell the total long-range cost of
his tax package to several times the S1.6
trillion over five
· Bush may ,suppon a speedup of tax
cuts, but he seems detetmined to stick to
$1.6 trillion as its 10-year total cost.
There may be a method to Bush's quiet . (Morton Ktmdmcke is executive editor
approach. If both Democrats and :ij.e'pub- · Roll CaU, tlul newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

are

man

years.

of

POMEROY - The 90th birthday of Gladys M. Riggs of
Pomeroy was celebrated recently with a family dinner party.
Local guests included Bob and Nora Eason; Rob, Krista and
Amanda Eason, Jeff, Linda, Jay and David Warner, Huey and
Susan Eason, Dean Barnitz, Virginia Heilman, Mickey Riggs,
Marge and Amy Barr, Lutichie Riggs, David and Carol Rigs,
, Joyce Bowen, Gary Lee, Guy and Donna Morr.is, Bunny Kuhl,
Gladys Chaney, Betty Farrar and Christina Johnson.
Out-of-town guests were Marty and Joan Johnson, Mark
Johnson, Ed, Paula, Lauren and Ben Hampton of Atlanta; Ga.,
. Van, Marta, Chase, Haley and Matthew Sliger of Cookville,
, . Tenn.

.,

n

IJ:

...
·'
(~.

Sunday, April1 • 9:00 -4:00

I ;•

I"

(~ ·

Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Ohio

.'',,.
•'

'

" '

· Emily Stivers

;Brenna slsaon r. ' .

10 Dealers_to BUY. and SELL

•

'

.

VISITS SCOTLAND YARD - A Middleport woman has just
returned from a visit to Essex County and London, England,
where she visited police operations at Scotland Yard. Kathi
Salser, pictured with two
English police officers, as a
police officer in Racine. She
RIO GRANDE - The .University of Rio Grande/Rio
was given a complete tour of
Grande Community College has awarded several scholarships
Scotland Yard. the police.
to high sch~ol students from Meigs County.
• · headquarters in London,
Southern High Sehool seniors, Brenna Sisson of Pomeroy
saw a street camera surv.ei Iand Emily Stivers of Middleport have been named recipients of
ta nee system in operation,
the Atwood Award for Excellence scholarship at Rio Grande.
and met with officers on the
Sisson, the daughter of Dale and Ann Marie Sisson, will be
, English police forces. Salser
made the trip as a training
studying nursing at Rio Grande.
·
exercise. She has served as
Stivers, the daughter of Donald Stivers and Betsy Jones, will
,an officer in several coun·
be studying nursing at Rio Grande.
'
'ties
for the ·past 12 years.
Atwood Award for Excellence is a four year, full-tuition
(Contributed photo)
scholarship that is named in honor of Nehemiah and Permelia ·

: Local high school students
:·: win URG scholarship awards
_
.
,.
·'
,,
.
...

.~
. Atwood, the founders of the institution. The scholarship is
. based on the ac;demic performance of the students.
.I

·'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS. subscribe today. 992-2156
---------------~

...

.

'

Save BIG on a ~
I'. FARMERS BA·N K loan!! 1
.
I
.I

BUSINESS MIRROR

.

VVhen misery ·is deepest, ·opportunity is brightest
BY JoHN CUNNIFF
miserable they dump their stocks; 2.) the
NEW YORK - The new, standard, market's greatest advances tend to occur
all-purpose, no-risk stock market fore- shortly after the misery index becomes
cast is:"the market may not have reached abnormally high.
its bottom yet - too many still feel bullHe, terms liis curren~ misery irldex
ish - and when it ·does, don't expect a "abnormally high" at its current level,
sharp recovery."
although there is no assurance is won~
. It ' has the sound of sagacity and go even higher.
At this p'omt, his latest reading tells
responsibility, but its sponsorship arouses
suspicion: A check of authorship shows ~ him, he writes in "Gerald Perritt's
some of the very people who were Mutual Fund Letter;• to "get ready fur
telling you to buy at rhe .rop of the aver- , the onset of a significant rebound;'
ages.
. .
maybe even into neW- statistical hil!;hs.
Such subjective advice was not suffi"The financial press would have you
cient for Gerald Perritt. Holder of a doc- believe investors are not feeling enough
torate in mathematics, which he once pain for q,e· bear market to end," he
taught, ·he compiled his own index, a writes, to which he responds, "halon~)"
misery index based in hard, factual, hisThe 35.3 index tells him investors
torical evidence.
~~dy have suffered greatly. It does not,
Perritt's misery index assumes that 1.) hDW~:ver, tell him if they might suffer
the more the stock market falls, the even more. And · as the historical eviworse pepple feel, and 2.) those feelings dence suaesrs, that could happen before
of dread are magnified by the length of a rebound.
time during which prices fall.
That latest index was obtained by
And so, combining the percentage of adding the 23.6 percent decline of the
stock market declines with their dura- Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index from
tion, he m.,sured all12 of them back to March 24, 2000 to March 14, 2001, and
midyear 1946 - and then observed adding · to .it the 11.7~month (to that
what happened thereafter.. He reached dare) duration. .
two conclusions: ·..
·
He found that you have tO go back to
1.) ,The greate~ the index value, the the stock market meltdown in late 1987
~ greater the likelihood investors feel so to get a misery in~ex value greater than

this. At that time the index rose to 36.8,
~ased on a 33.5 ,percent .decline over a
3.3-month periOd.
As the record demonstrates, that
decline was followed by a prolonged
though oft interrupte!l, market advance.
.More than coincidentally, the most
painful post-war decline, to an index· of
69 at the bottom of the 1973c 1974 bear
market, was followed by a two-year
advance in the ·S&amp;P 500 that produced
an 80 percent total return (including
divi,dends).
The next worst, 54.1, was at .the bottom of the 1968-1970 bear market, and
'
was
followed ,by, a two-year market
return of 52 percent. The · third worst,
47.5 in 1980-1982, was followed by a
rwo-year return of 53 percent.
.'
The meSSag!', Perritt suggests, is not to
let misery blind you to the probability
.that the best of opportunities might be
ahead when misery is prevalent.
·What's missing from the iridex is a
standard for telling when misery is at its
worst. The latest index obviously could
get worse before getting better. But take
heart. Already, it is the fifth worst in 55

years.
GohH Cunniff is a busiHess analyst for Tht

AJsociaud Prrss.)

Flower
Jaskef

Available
·In 1 Sizes

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.

(Oundl obs.erveS birthdays

CHESTER - Quarterly birthdays were observed when
Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, met recently at
the hall.
Those having birthdays in January, February and March and
honored at the meeting were Shirley Beegle, Jo Ann Ritchie,
Opal HoUon, Mary Jo Barringer, and Gary Holter.
Holter presided at the meeting which opened with pledges
to the Christian and American flags, the Lord's Prayer, Scripture from Psalms 99 an~ the National Anthem.
It was noted at the next meeting the good of the order
committee will have food for a $3 donation and games will be
played. Members are to take prizes .
Beegle thanked those who helped her at the 'time of her
brotl\er's death.
The death of Barbara Couzzins was noted and a donation
made to the diabetes fund in her memory. Ruth Sm1th and
Esther Smith served refreshn{ents. Door prizes were won by
Laura Nice, Jean Welsh, and Mary Holter.
Others at the meeting \vere Everett Grant, Betty Young,
Opal Eichinger, Charlotte Grant, Opal Hollon, Jean Welsh,
Julie Curtis, Thelma White, Charlotte VanMeter, Sandy White,
Kathryn Baum, Ella Osborne, Helen Wolfe, and Doris
POMEROY - A program on Lent was presented by Julie Grueser.
Randolph, at the recent meeting of the Sacred Heart Catholic
Women's Club held at the church . '
Sheila Cozart presided at the meeting which ·opened with
the pledge of allegiance, reports from the officers, and
POMJtROY - Beth and
announcements by the Rev: Fr. Walter Heinz. He comment- Art Tdbin of Pomeroy
ed on the Redemptorist Fathers parish mission held this week announce the birth of a
and noted that on April 4 Bishop Sheldon will hold the annu- daughter, Aaliyah Marie, on
al spring meeting which is open to aU the officers of the March 6 at Pleasant Valley
ccw. .
Hospital. The infant weighe.d
Susie Stewart was asked to chair the monthly Chamber of nine pounds, three ounces.
Commerce luncheon for the CCW group. CCW will be The couple . has another
sharing the· once-a-month luni:heon with other interested daughter, Mariah Alysse, two.
Grandparents are Mary aiid
churches in Meigs County.
Carol McCullough and Anna Layne were hostesses at the Art Tobin and Penny and
meeting. Next meeting will be held on April 4 and all women Raymond Reynolds.

R. Shawn LeWis

Charlene HOifllch
General MaMgW .

of the parish are invited to attend.

POMEROY -A workshop on growing mushrooms will
be held April 14 at the National Center for the Preservation
for Medicinal Herbs, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The workshop, described as for fun and profit, will be conducted by George Vaughan, an experienced mushroom grower who will introduce participants to starting mushrooms on
.logs, the steps involved in growing, harvesting and storage of
musl\rooms, starting a Morel patch and/or wood chip mushroom patch, integrating mushroom cultivation with timber
harvest, and the ·economics of commercial mushroom pro- .
duction.
Each participant will cake home a mushroom log (additiona! ones may be purchased, and introductory materials on
mushroom cultivation and marketing. Mushroom supplies
will be available for sale.
·
.
The cost is $20 a person with a SS discount for Rural
Action member&lt;. Lunch will be provided. Participants are
asked to take drills and hammers if they own them.
The deadline to" register is April 10. Space is limited. Additi(I)Jal information or to register may be obtained from Nikki
Longway-Snyder or Lea Birbilas, 767-2090.

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chari• W. Govey
Publisher

the Bend

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

~·· _Th_e_Da_ny_s_en_tm_el_ _ ____,;;B;;;;;...y

PageA4
1hunUy. Mllrch 11. 1001 .

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

The Daily Sentinel

..

AL.~b

Mushroom workshop set

CU&amp;~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
7o10-M2·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill

Controller

•

Lll*n UJ 1M ~ .,., wkoM•. nw, •hoflld h lnr llwM ]00 tJNJnb. A.U , . ,
.n1Mltjlcr ID tdiliJtf IUtll_, N •ltiiH aM IM,. llllilrr11.,., ,.,.,_,. ,..,..,,,
N• U1Uif1Nd ltttm will it 1dlitlu&amp; i.AIIIn 1/4odi h in , - tan~, · .utw11U.,
iultlfl, 1101 ,.nolfiiiJIHr.
TIN .,U.W111 UIJ"flld ill tlw ftHIIMn INlow M'f tht aHUIIIIIU of 1M 0/do Vdll.y
hWWiilr6 Co. 'r ftlllorial ~ •~tkn IIIMrwilt Mitfl.

NATIONAL VIEWS

-

~

CELEBRATES 90TH- Gladys M. Riggs was surrounded by her
grandchildren for a picture at her 90th birthday observance.

ewe program on Lent

Riggs' 9oth birthday

-·

New arrival

,

Simlarities crop up between
Kosovo and Vietnam
• The Florida Times-Union of Jacksonville, on pulling
out of Kosovo: Kosovo had to be transferred from Serb to international control, the previous U.S. administration said a couple
of years ago, to stop the ethnic killings there -and to keep the
violence fiom spreading into neighboring Macedonia.
Yet, with NATO troops ostensibly iri control, the problems
have gotten worse.
Albanian radicals systematically murder Serbs...
Thus, the previous administration created the very crisis that
it was trying to avert when it annexed Kosovo.
President Bush says there will be "no precipitous withdrawal from the (overseas) coJ'Illltitments we inherited."
That is a fine statement of principle. But national security
adviser Condoleezza Rice said during the campaign last fall
that the United States should pull its troops out. If Bush wants
to keep them there, in the midst of an increasingly bloody crisis, he needs to say what he wants to accomplish - and how
he envisions doing it.
·
There has been no clear mission since the t)Xlops· arrived·in
Kosovo. Bush shouldn't pay the political price for his predecessor's mistakes. Nor should the price be paid by U.S. soldiers,
whose lives are increasingly at risk.
~
There are chilling similarities between· -Kosovo and both
·
Vietnam and Somalia.
• The (Charleston, S.C.) Post and Courier, on the FBI
investigations: Attorney General John Ashcroft has launched not
one but two probes of security procedures following charges
that a senior FBI official spied for Russia 16 years without
detection. Both investigations are needed.
Judge William Webster, former director of both the FBI and
the CIA, will head an outside inquiry. It will look at. ways. to
improve FBI internal security in order to discourage .and catch
·moles....
Some may view his former association with the agency as il.
potential conflict, but practicality says his experience with the
FBI has particular value.
Judge. Webster will, however, be spared the necessity for
pointing a finger of blame at bureau officials, or for recommending any penalties for misconduct.
These tasks will be the responsibility of an internal Justice
Department investigation announced recently by Ashcroft....
In launching this second probe, Ashcroft has shown that he
is appropriately sensitive to appearances a11d also prepared to
exercise ·his ultimate responsibility for the FBI.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Today is Thursday, March 29, the 88th day·of2001. There are
277 days left in the year. .
·
. Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on.March 29,195l,Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy ·ro commit espionage. (They
were executed in June 1953.)
On this date:
In 1638, Swedish colonists settle!! in present-day Delaware.
In 1790, the lOth president of the United States, John 'JYler,
was born in Charles CitY County, Va.
.
In 1847, victo!iolls fo'rces led by Gen. Winfield Scott occupied the city ofVera Cruz ·after Mexic~ defenders capitulated.
In 1867, the· British Parliament passed the North America .
Act to create the Doniinion of Canada.
· In 1882, the Kn~ts of Columbus was chartered in Connecticut.
In 1943, World War II meat, butter and cheese rationing
·
·
began.
.
In 1951,!'All About Eve" won the Academy Aw:u;l for best
picture; its director, joseph L. Mankiewicz, receiv~d his seCond
set of consecutive Oscan for direction and sqeenplay (he'd
won the previous year for "A Letter to Three Wives"); Judy
Holliday won best actress for "Born Yesterday" while Jose Ferrer was honored as best actor for "Cyrano de BergeraC:'
. In 1962, Jack Paar hosted NBC's "Thnight"· show £or the
final time.
In 1971, Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was convicted of
murdering at least 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai massacre. Calley ended up spending three years under house arrest.
In 1971, a jury in Los Angeles re'ommended the death
penalty for Charles Manson and three female followers for the
1969 Tare-La Bianca murders. The sentences were later commuted.
'
Ten years ago: Political strategist Lee Atwater, who'd helped
propel President Bush to his 1988 election victory, died at age
40 of complicationi resulting fiortl a brain tumor. Gen. H . Norman Schwarzlc.opf publicly apologized to President Bu~ for
questioning his judgment about calling a cease-fire in the Gulf
·
·
War.

•

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Is Bush too passive on pushing early tax cuts?
In the end, of course, all that cOunts is
whether the economy recovers quickly
and strongly. If it does, President Bush will
get the credit. If not, he'D get the blame.
Still, in the short run, he's beingj~d
on how he responds to the current bear
economy and stock market, and the tag
being planted on him is "passive."
· Despite a plunging. stock market and
weak economy, until late last week Bush
seemed curiously unwilling to alter his
$1.6 trillion tax-cut plan or eveh to argue
for it on the basis that it would get the
economy moving again.
.
Finally, the White House quietly indicated that it supported - and may have
helped fashion - : the proposal made by
Senate Budget Chairman Pete Domenici,
R-N.M., to return $60 billion of this
year's $93 billion. surplus to taxpayen.
White House aides issued a statement
that Bush "believes we need to get more
money into people's hands quicker, and
he's committed to working with Congress
to look for ways to make the tax cu~
retroactive" to hasten economic recovery.
Nevertheless, the president himself has
not been out in front calling for action to
end what surely will be dubbed "the aush
recession;• even if it more justly should be
named after Federal Reserve Chairmah
Alan Greenspan.
.
Up to now, Bush has ,allowed Democrats such as Sens. Thomas Daschle, S.D.,
and Kent Conrad, N.D., to steal the march
.,
on hi m, recommen ding " smaller, 1airer
and faster" tax cuts designed 10 put money
into the hands of middle-income people
who will spend it.
Daschle and Conrad called for immediate enaconenr of a cur in the lowest tix
rate from 15 percent to 10 percent - a
$60 billion proposal ihat would give about
$600 to every family this year.
Sens. Bob Graham, D-Fla., and Jon
Corzine, D-N.J., recommended a plan
that would apply the tO-percent rate to an

Morton
Kotxh::Jcke
COWMNIST

licans rally around a spe~dup, he may get a
policy through consensus without putting
his brand on it and arousing partisan passioru.
Conrad's reaction to Domenici's rebate
proposal, for instance, was "We're glad to
see them moving in our direction."
Meantime, Republicans on the House
Ways and Mearu panel passed an increase
in .the per-child tax deduction skewed
mo(\' toward lower- income families than
Bush's - possibly a hiht that the GOP
sees a need to make its cuts "fairer."
M;Uor differences remain, though, on
estate taxes, whose total · elimination
(favored by Republicans) would benefit
the wealthy. ·
'
One possible compromise i~ to stop
taxing assets, property, businesses and
1
farms on the death of the owner, but
rather when the asset·is sold, and then at a
capital-gains rate of 20 percent instead of
the current top inheritance rate of 55 percent.
·
Democrats continue. to insist that
Bush's tax cuts will end up totaling around
$2.5 trillion and will consurp.e the entire
non•Social Security budget surplus,
which they say may shrink if the economy stays soft.
.
Moderates ofboth parties have recommended inserting a trigger into Bush's tax
package so new cuts or spending couldn't
rake effect unless surplus targets were met.
Baucus' plan takes a different approach:
Congress would enact tax cuts only for
three years and revisit fiscal policy on the
~asis of proje~ons available the~. Republicans are unlikely t~ ~e to this, though.
How much fiex~bility .will Bush sh~
on t?e, StU :'"d .distnbutt~~ of tax cuts.
He JSn t ~g. That . p~utton could be
seen as pass1VIty or the kind of ~eadership
~ Congress play a role m policy·

individual's first $7,500 in income or a
couple's first $19,000, which would give
couples $950 each at a cost of$80 billion
this year.
Still another Democratic plan, .being
crafted by Sen. Max Baucus, Mont., with
the assistance of fotl)ler'Il:easury Secretily
Robert Rubin, yrould cur tax rates by
$200 billion over the next three years.
That's double the amount offered during that period under the House-passed
version of Bush's rate-cut bill, which will
cut taxes by $950 billion over a decade,
but otren most ofiti breaks in later years.
The House GOP rate-cut bill provides
a reduction of only $5.6 billion this year,
and 'Bush's budget calls for no cuts uritil
next year, when they would . total jus~
$30.6 billion.
·other Republicans have been arguing
for tax cuts that
bigger an~ faster
either .the Democrats' or Bush's, but so far
they have no official standing.
One proposal, costing $45 billion this
year, would put all ofBush's proposed rate
. cuts into . effect immediatelY- But that
would swell the total long-range cost of
his tax package to several times the S1.6
trillion over five
· Bush may ,suppon a speedup of tax
cuts, but he seems detetmined to stick to
$1.6 trillion as its 10-year total cost.
There may be a method to Bush's quiet . (Morton Ktmdmcke is executive editor
approach. If both Democrats and :ij.e'pub- · Roll CaU, tlul newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

are

man

years.

of

POMEROY - The 90th birthday of Gladys M. Riggs of
Pomeroy was celebrated recently with a family dinner party.
Local guests included Bob and Nora Eason; Rob, Krista and
Amanda Eason, Jeff, Linda, Jay and David Warner, Huey and
Susan Eason, Dean Barnitz, Virginia Heilman, Mickey Riggs,
Marge and Amy Barr, Lutichie Riggs, David and Carol Rigs,
, Joyce Bowen, Gary Lee, Guy and Donna Morr.is, Bunny Kuhl,
Gladys Chaney, Betty Farrar and Christina Johnson.
Out-of-town guests were Marty and Joan Johnson, Mark
Johnson, Ed, Paula, Lauren and Ben Hampton of Atlanta; Ga.,
. Van, Marta, Chase, Haley and Matthew Sliger of Cookville,
, . Tenn.

.,

n

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(~.

Sunday, April1 • 9:00 -4:00

I ;•

I"

(~ ·

Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Ohio

.'',,.
•'

'

" '

· Emily Stivers

;Brenna slsaon r. ' .

10 Dealers_to BUY. and SELL

•

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VISITS SCOTLAND YARD - A Middleport woman has just
returned from a visit to Essex County and London, England,
where she visited police operations at Scotland Yard. Kathi
Salser, pictured with two
English police officers, as a
police officer in Racine. She
RIO GRANDE - The .University of Rio Grande/Rio
was given a complete tour of
Grande Community College has awarded several scholarships
Scotland Yard. the police.
to high sch~ol students from Meigs County.
• · headquarters in London,
Southern High Sehool seniors, Brenna Sisson of Pomeroy
saw a street camera surv.ei Iand Emily Stivers of Middleport have been named recipients of
ta nee system in operation,
the Atwood Award for Excellence scholarship at Rio Grande.
and met with officers on the
Sisson, the daughter of Dale and Ann Marie Sisson, will be
, English police forces. Salser
made the trip as a training
studying nursing at Rio Grande.
·
exercise. She has served as
Stivers, the daughter of Donald Stivers and Betsy Jones, will
,an officer in several coun·
be studying nursing at Rio Grande.
'
'ties
for the ·past 12 years.
Atwood Award for Excellence is a four year, full-tuition
(Contributed photo)
scholarship that is named in honor of Nehemiah and Permelia ·

: Local high school students
:·: win URG scholarship awards
_
.
,.
·'
,,
.
...

.~
. Atwood, the founders of the institution. The scholarship is
. based on the ac;demic performance of the students.
.I

·'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS. subscribe today. 992-2156
---------------~

...

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'

Save BIG on a ~
I'. FARMERS BA·N K loan!! 1
.
I
.I

BUSINESS MIRROR

.

VVhen misery ·is deepest, ·opportunity is brightest
BY JoHN CUNNIFF
miserable they dump their stocks; 2.) the
NEW YORK - The new, standard, market's greatest advances tend to occur
all-purpose, no-risk stock market fore- shortly after the misery index becomes
cast is:"the market may not have reached abnormally high.
its bottom yet - too many still feel bullHe, terms liis curren~ misery irldex
ish - and when it ·does, don't expect a "abnormally high" at its current level,
sharp recovery."
although there is no assurance is won~
. It ' has the sound of sagacity and go even higher.
At this p'omt, his latest reading tells
responsibility, but its sponsorship arouses
suspicion: A check of authorship shows ~ him, he writes in "Gerald Perritt's
some of the very people who were Mutual Fund Letter;• to "get ready fur
telling you to buy at rhe .rop of the aver- , the onset of a significant rebound;'
ages.
. .
maybe even into neW- statistical hil!;hs.
Such subjective advice was not suffi"The financial press would have you
cient for Gerald Perritt. Holder of a doc- believe investors are not feeling enough
torate in mathematics, which he once pain for q,e· bear market to end," he
taught, ·he compiled his own index, a writes, to which he responds, "halon~)"
misery index based in hard, factual, hisThe 35.3 index tells him investors
torical evidence.
~~dy have suffered greatly. It does not,
Perritt's misery index assumes that 1.) hDW~:ver, tell him if they might suffer
the more the stock market falls, the even more. And · as the historical eviworse pepple feel, and 2.) those feelings dence suaesrs, that could happen before
of dread are magnified by the length of a rebound.
time during which prices fall.
That latest index was obtained by
And so, combining the percentage of adding the 23.6 percent decline of the
stock market declines with their dura- Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index from
tion, he m.,sured all12 of them back to March 24, 2000 to March 14, 2001, and
midyear 1946 - and then observed adding · to .it the 11.7~month (to that
what happened thereafter.. He reached dare) duration. .
two conclusions: ·..
·
He found that you have tO go back to
1.) ,The greate~ the index value, the the stock market meltdown in late 1987
~ greater the likelihood investors feel so to get a misery in~ex value greater than

this. At that time the index rose to 36.8,
~ased on a 33.5 ,percent .decline over a
3.3-month periOd.
As the record demonstrates, that
decline was followed by a prolonged
though oft interrupte!l, market advance.
.More than coincidentally, the most
painful post-war decline, to an index· of
69 at the bottom of the 1973c 1974 bear
market, was followed by a two-year
advance in the ·S&amp;P 500 that produced
an 80 percent total return (including
divi,dends).
The next worst, 54.1, was at .the bottom of the 1968-1970 bear market, and
'
was
followed ,by, a two-year market
return of 52 percent. The · third worst,
47.5 in 1980-1982, was followed by a
rwo-year return of 53 percent.
.'
The meSSag!', Perritt suggests, is not to
let misery blind you to the probability
.that the best of opportunities might be
ahead when misery is prevalent.
·What's missing from the iridex is a
standard for telling when misery is at its
worst. The latest index obviously could
get worse before getting better. But take
heart. Already, it is the fifth worst in 55

years.
GohH Cunniff is a busiHess analyst for Tht

AJsociaud Prrss.)

Flower
Jaskef

Available
·In 1 Sizes

·,~- ~ ·

-I
.

(Oundl obs.erveS birthdays

CHESTER - Quarterly birthdays were observed when
Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, met recently at
the hall.
Those having birthdays in January, February and March and
honored at the meeting were Shirley Beegle, Jo Ann Ritchie,
Opal HoUon, Mary Jo Barringer, and Gary Holter.
Holter presided at the meeting which opened with pledges
to the Christian and American flags, the Lord's Prayer, Scripture from Psalms 99 an~ the National Anthem.
It was noted at the next meeting the good of the order
committee will have food for a $3 donation and games will be
played. Members are to take prizes .
Beegle thanked those who helped her at the 'time of her
brotl\er's death.
The death of Barbara Couzzins was noted and a donation
made to the diabetes fund in her memory. Ruth Sm1th and
Esther Smith served refreshn{ents. Door prizes were won by
Laura Nice, Jean Welsh, and Mary Holter.
Others at the meeting \vere Everett Grant, Betty Young,
Opal Eichinger, Charlotte Grant, Opal Hollon, Jean Welsh,
Julie Curtis, Thelma White, Charlotte VanMeter, Sandy White,
Kathryn Baum, Ella Osborne, Helen Wolfe, and Doris
POMEROY - A program on Lent was presented by Julie Grueser.
Randolph, at the recent meeting of the Sacred Heart Catholic
Women's Club held at the church . '
Sheila Cozart presided at the meeting which ·opened with
the pledge of allegiance, reports from the officers, and
POMJtROY - Beth and
announcements by the Rev: Fr. Walter Heinz. He comment- Art Tdbin of Pomeroy
ed on the Redemptorist Fathers parish mission held this week announce the birth of a
and noted that on April 4 Bishop Sheldon will hold the annu- daughter, Aaliyah Marie, on
al spring meeting which is open to aU the officers of the March 6 at Pleasant Valley
ccw. .
Hospital. The infant weighe.d
Susie Stewart was asked to chair the monthly Chamber of nine pounds, three ounces.
Commerce luncheon for the CCW group. CCW will be The couple . has another
sharing the· once-a-month luni:heon with other interested daughter, Mariah Alysse, two.
Grandparents are Mary aiid
churches in Meigs County.
Carol McCullough and Anna Layne were hostesses at the Art Tobin and Penny and
meeting. Next meeting will be held on April 4 and all women Raymond Reynolds.

R. Shawn LeWis

Charlene HOifllch
General MaMgW .

of the parish are invited to attend.

POMEROY -A workshop on growing mushrooms will
be held April 14 at the National Center for the Preservation
for Medicinal Herbs, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The workshop, described as for fun and profit, will be conducted by George Vaughan, an experienced mushroom grower who will introduce participants to starting mushrooms on
.logs, the steps involved in growing, harvesting and storage of
musl\rooms, starting a Morel patch and/or wood chip mushroom patch, integrating mushroom cultivation with timber
harvest, and the ·economics of commercial mushroom pro- .
duction.
Each participant will cake home a mushroom log (additiona! ones may be purchased, and introductory materials on
mushroom cultivation and marketing. Mushroom supplies
will be available for sale.
·
.
The cost is $20 a person with a SS discount for Rural
Action member&lt;. Lunch will be provided. Participants are
asked to take drills and hammers if they own them.
The deadline to" register is April 10. Space is limited. Additi(I)Jal information or to register may be obtained from Nikki
Longway-Snyder or Lea Birbilas, 767-2090.

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chari• W. Govey
Publisher

the Bend

Page AS

•'

I

Bring this advertisement into Farmers Bank
and get .25% off on a Personal Loan!

I

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·I
:'I
.'
~~ I

:·,I .

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OFF!
"

.

..

Your Bank ~ ltfe:.: .
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Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Company

~~~._=~-=·~-.J!.,

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Take an additiona/.25% OFF wit~""
llUIO-IIc ptzylllllft/rOIII " FAIIMEIIS BANIt c/r"'*l"' OCCDIIIfll

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. Dlacount avalla~l· lor llmltod time on~. All loan&amp; BIA&gt;jeclto Crt&lt;IK I

---------

approval. Does not apply to teal estate or bualntot ~ana, other apee;JIIt
PfQinOtiona a~or rennanclng exllting lOans. Member FDIC.
•

Large

lDxlli
Daxeho
S~aii
Wa~oM

Wheel
YlaMfer

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Trough
YlaMfer

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Cart
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YlaMfer
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�Thursday, March 29, 2001

Thursday, March 29, 2001 {

lnt PI

P
t WV
~P~~·~A~e:·~O~hl!o!Va~ll~ey~P~u~b~lls~h~ln~g~C~o~.----------~G:a:ll~lpo::II•~·:Po:m:e:~~Y~
· M:t:d:dl~epo~rt:,Ohl
~o=,~o~~e=a=•a~n~,~~·----------~~~----~--~~
...

Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio, Point Pleasant, WV

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. • Page A7

••',.

••
••

~·

I$ made up of more women than eveF
many women owning their own pusinesses.

t

''
''
'

'

~

••'
'I
I'

(

e applaud your efforts and ·w ish you the
'
best of luck in the future.

•'
~

I

'

~I
I

•

'

.~

•

l

I

l!

{' .

t

ith Sincere Appreciation,
.Dally Tribune • The Point Pleasant

•
•
••

'

...

·~

''

'

'

" ·, , &gt;fli~ Dally Senifnel

~ ~·
•~

~,ifi""

· ··

·

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••
•

••

Jlm•s Farm Equipment. Inc.

•

~

7012ndAV8
GalliPOliS

lt
•

••
I

!,

J
• l:

j

Dianna Lawson,
·Financial Advisor

~

Fraley &amp; Louise Fraley
2150 Eastem Avenue (St. Rt. 7) Gallipolis, OH
(740) 448-em

Maasey-Farguaon
Massey Feruson Is a wholly
owned subsldary ol AGCO
Corporation, Deluth, GA

*

New And Used
Industrial Equipment

Nancy Graham, MD
Paychlllrlat

446-8554

Medication, therapy, counseling, testing for

"We Carry Quality 1-owner Cars
With Service And Warranties."

Since 1992

. Owners· Cindy L. Hagger &amp;Jerry L. Bagger

./'Depression
./'Anxiety
./' Bipolar Disorder
./'ADD· ADHD

...,_,._.

Miss Paula's Day Care Center

...

For Over 14 Years.. ;

owner

20 Years

AmYCHRTER

fish Tank6
Pet Shop

Sales Consultant
5Years

675-2063

tliiooo!..,;

_ Judy
·Johnson

Point Pleasant, WV

Janey Collins

.

Bolin1 ANNE's CuRLETT!'. '
1969·1996
in 1996 opened

CouNTRY Ni\IR.
SALON

~~
,

Featuring:
• Tanning Bed &amp; S~pplifS
• Beauty Salon &amp; BeauTy Supplies
• Silk Flower for all occassions ·

· 215-A Sixth Street
Point Pleasant, WI/ 25550
Bus: (304) 875-7038 Faic: (304) 875·7387
E-mail: scottlns@zoomnet.net

ERIE FAMILY LIFE INSURANCHOMPANY

Tmm &amp; Country Reid Estate Broker
675-5548 or 675-6884

or

purchased Knight's Department Storre
Jack Knight in'l97S ·over 26 years
~atnrino mens, womens &amp; childrens clol:hlni
with name brands, such as
Carhartt, Wrangler, &amp; Levi Jeans .

Member • Erie Insurance Group
Home Office •100 Erie Insurance Place • Erie PA 18530

, ERIE.

.425 Jackson Pike (740) 446-8224 Gallipolis, OH

Directions lake Rt 35 to 325 Rio Grade. Tum north of 32.5· 3 miles to
Sailor Rd. tum left go 11(2 miles and I'm on the right.

1975-2001

also an agent for...

since 1985

etc. 20'1. off gradwatlon or
lnv. March anti part April. 30% off Brlaal 4

(eatlter ptiiS,

.ERIE INSURANCE GROUP
Auto-Home-Business-Life

Point Pleuant, WV

210!5 Jack1on Ave. Pt. Pleeeant, WV
Office: 875-5540 ·
Home: 875-4883

or

Bette ·Null Horan

675-7882

develoPment

Nice assortment trORttng canales (Or weaatng
personal use. gifts, unity canales, reg.

Debra K. Scott
Agent, LUTCF

Owner

Homestead Realty

Owner Pat Pareona started the
bualnaea In Sept. 1886 located 1482
Sailor Road, VInton, Ohio . She
carrlea allk and dried flowers.
The flowers are homegrown and
dried. She doea wedding ,
receptlona, rental, funeral
arrangementa, wedding and
greduatlon lnvllltlons.

Owner &amp; Stylist
32Years

Providing the
best
environment
for child's

PAT'S POSIE PATCH

Rt. 2 Greer Road· ·
Point Pleasant, WV
Husband:
Steve Johnson

2413 Jackson Ave.

1110 VIand St.

·

..Service 6 Caring-

Nancy Riffle

./'Family · Marltallssues
.I School Difficulties
.I Behavioral Problems
.I Substance Abuse

414 Second Avenue, Suite 201. Gallipolis
CALL 446-6530 FOR APPOINTMENTS

Thro1.1gh Raymond
James Financial
Services
LOCATED AT
PEOPLES BANK
WITH OF'FI.CR~ IN ·, ,
POMEROY,
PT. PLEASANT &amp;
GALLIPOLIS

Paychologlll

Department Store

Rates A+ Superior by ihe A.M Beat Co.

Thorne,

Rebecca keed
Owner/Design Specialist

· Custom Designs Ltd.
1111 Viand St.

Point Pleasant, WV

WOO.D ut:t ro Rr.CQGNIZt nr.a LoYAL tMPLovw:
Donna Leach· Design Specialist
Carol Spencer- Gift Consultant
Becky McMillan· Gift Consultant

DuriJil thia month salutlnC
· "Women in the Busineu World"

............,,.,............_.......·
'

'

'

882-2447

Sandy Elias 882-2221
Amy Layne·882·3292

\

H09JTJI'IJ/D IJYE?{:D
R~L

' I

Left to right: Martha Wheeler, Margarette McDonald, Michelle Poling, Jamie Smith

ESTATE SERVICES

205 Fifth St.

t

New Haven, WV

304-882-02405
www.eurekanet.com/~hbr•alty

Serving AU of Ma1on
y

From: Oak Hill Banks
Connie~ George~ )ewell ana Ann

500 Third Ave
Gallipolis
446-0315

�Thursday, March 29, 2001

Thursday, March 29, 2001 {

lnt PI

P
t WV
~P~~·~A~e:·~O~hl!o!Va~ll~ey~P~u~b~lls~h~ln~g~C~o~.----------~G:a:ll~lpo::II•~·:Po:m:e:~~Y~
· M:t:d:dl~epo~rt:,Ohl
~o=,~o~~e=a=•a~n~,~~·----------~~~----~--~~
...

Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio, Point Pleasant, WV

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. • Page A7

••',.

••
••

~·

I$ made up of more women than eveF
many women owning their own pusinesses.

t

''
''
'

'

~

••'
'I
I'

(

e applaud your efforts and ·w ish you the
'
best of luck in the future.

•'
~

I

'

~I
I

•

'

.~

•

l

I

l!

{' .

t

ith Sincere Appreciation,
.Dally Tribune • The Point Pleasant

•
•
••

'

...

·~

''

'

'

" ·, , &gt;fli~ Dally Senifnel

~ ~·
•~

~,ifi""

· ··

·

t

l'
'

••
•

••

Jlm•s Farm Equipment. Inc.

•

~

7012ndAV8
GalliPOliS

lt
•

••
I

!,

J
• l:

j

Dianna Lawson,
·Financial Advisor

~

Fraley &amp; Louise Fraley
2150 Eastem Avenue (St. Rt. 7) Gallipolis, OH
(740) 448-em

Maasey-Farguaon
Massey Feruson Is a wholly
owned subsldary ol AGCO
Corporation, Deluth, GA

*

New And Used
Industrial Equipment

Nancy Graham, MD
Paychlllrlat

446-8554

Medication, therapy, counseling, testing for

"We Carry Quality 1-owner Cars
With Service And Warranties."

Since 1992

. Owners· Cindy L. Hagger &amp;Jerry L. Bagger

./'Depression
./'Anxiety
./' Bipolar Disorder
./'ADD· ADHD

...,_,._.

Miss Paula's Day Care Center

...

For Over 14 Years.. ;

owner

20 Years

AmYCHRTER

fish Tank6
Pet Shop

Sales Consultant
5Years

675-2063

tliiooo!..,;

_ Judy
·Johnson

Point Pleasant, WV

Janey Collins

.

Bolin1 ANNE's CuRLETT!'. '
1969·1996
in 1996 opened

CouNTRY Ni\IR.
SALON

~~
,

Featuring:
• Tanning Bed &amp; S~pplifS
• Beauty Salon &amp; BeauTy Supplies
• Silk Flower for all occassions ·

· 215-A Sixth Street
Point Pleasant, WI/ 25550
Bus: (304) 875-7038 Faic: (304) 875·7387
E-mail: scottlns@zoomnet.net

ERIE FAMILY LIFE INSURANCHOMPANY

Tmm &amp; Country Reid Estate Broker
675-5548 or 675-6884

or

purchased Knight's Department Storre
Jack Knight in'l97S ·over 26 years
~atnrino mens, womens &amp; childrens clol:hlni
with name brands, such as
Carhartt, Wrangler, &amp; Levi Jeans .

Member • Erie Insurance Group
Home Office •100 Erie Insurance Place • Erie PA 18530

, ERIE.

.425 Jackson Pike (740) 446-8224 Gallipolis, OH

Directions lake Rt 35 to 325 Rio Grade. Tum north of 32.5· 3 miles to
Sailor Rd. tum left go 11(2 miles and I'm on the right.

1975-2001

also an agent for...

since 1985

etc. 20'1. off gradwatlon or
lnv. March anti part April. 30% off Brlaal 4

(eatlter ptiiS,

.ERIE INSURANCE GROUP
Auto-Home-Business-Life

Point Pleuant, WV

210!5 Jack1on Ave. Pt. Pleeeant, WV
Office: 875-5540 ·
Home: 875-4883

or

Bette ·Null Horan

675-7882

develoPment

Nice assortment trORttng canales (Or weaatng
personal use. gifts, unity canales, reg.

Debra K. Scott
Agent, LUTCF

Owner

Homestead Realty

Owner Pat Pareona started the
bualnaea In Sept. 1886 located 1482
Sailor Road, VInton, Ohio . She
carrlea allk and dried flowers.
The flowers are homegrown and
dried. She doea wedding ,
receptlona, rental, funeral
arrangementa, wedding and
greduatlon lnvllltlons.

Owner &amp; Stylist
32Years

Providing the
best
environment
for child's

PAT'S POSIE PATCH

Rt. 2 Greer Road· ·
Point Pleasant, WV
Husband:
Steve Johnson

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1110 VIand St.

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./'Family · Marltallssues
.I School Difficulties
.I Behavioral Problems
.I Substance Abuse

414 Second Avenue, Suite 201. Gallipolis
CALL 446-6530 FOR APPOINTMENTS

Thro1.1gh Raymond
James Financial
Services
LOCATED AT
PEOPLES BANK
WITH OF'FI.CR~ IN ·, ,
POMEROY,
PT. PLEASANT &amp;
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Rates A+ Superior by ihe A.M Beat Co.

Thorne,

Rebecca keed
Owner/Design Specialist

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1111 Viand St.

Point Pleasant, WV

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Left to right: Martha Wheeler, Margarette McDonald, Michelle Poling, Jamie Smith

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t

New Haven, WV

304-882-02405
www.eurekanet.com/~hbr•alty

Serving AU of Ma1on
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From: Oak Hill Banks
Connie~ George~ )ewell ana Ann

500 Third Ave
Gallipolis
446-0315

�Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Schroeder brings thomy issues

WASHINGTON (AP) -The White House calls it a getacquainted session, but German ChaQccllor Gerhard Schroeder
is bringing a list of grievances and concerns to President Bush.
With the Bush administration signaling it will not implement
a global warming treaty, Schroeder planned to urge Bush not to
back off the accord, a German government official said.
Schroeder was conveying European dismay at Bush's -recent
announcement that he would not seek curbs on carbon dioxide
emissions from U.S. industty, which reversed a position Bush
took during last year's presidential campaign. The emissions are
thought to contribute to global warming.
"We hqpe the Americans will change their mind, because we
Europeans think We have the better arguments;' said the German official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity
before Schroeder's trip.

Rise seen in traffic deaths
WASHINGTON (AP) - The number of people killed in
traffic accidents increased slightly last year, partly due to yet
another jump in fatal motorcycle accidents.
Federal estimates to be released Thursday show that after many
years of decline, motorcycle deaths steadily increased from 1997
to 2000, growing·27 percent in the three-year period.
Last. year there were 2,680 nJOtor):ycle deaths, according to
· estimates by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That's 208 more than in 1999, enough to offset the. 188
additional traffic deaths iast year.
The rate of death per miles traveled on the nation's highway'
increased slightly last year for the first time since 1977. There
were 41 ,800 fat.1lities, or 1.6 deaths per million miles traveled,
compared with 1.5 m J.999 and 3.3 in 1977.

Senate takes up last big issue on finance bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate supporters oflegislation that would reduce big
money intluences in politics face their last
big hurdle: how to protect the bill fium
constitutional challenges.
Senate leaders were hoping for a final
vote Thursday on the campaign .finance
legislation ofSens.John McCain, R-Ariz.,
and Russell Feingold, D-Wis., after nearly
two weeks of intense floor action irt which
backers have acceded to some changes but
warded off amendn1ents they considered
hostile to their cause.
Still intact were their main gnals - to
ban the largely unregulated "soft money"
donations that corporations, unions and
wealthy individuals give to political parties
and to restrict in the final 60 days of an
election so-called issue ads, which often

are barely disguised attacks on or defenses
of candidates.
But first they must get by an expected
proposal by opponents that would render
the entire bill unconstitutional if the
Supreme Court finds that any section of it
violates First Amendment free speech
rights.
With interest groups already primed to
challenge restrictions on political advertising, McCain-Feingold backers said the
"severability" aspect of the bill- meaning
the rest of the bill survives if one part is
struck down by the courts - must be
maintained. "To make it non-severable is
to destroy the bill;' Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
D-Calif., said.
Republicans who see an all-encompassing constitutional provision as a way to

bring down the entire bill could be joined
by several Democrats concerned that setting up legal firewalls could hurt their
party.
Democrats now compete well with
Republicans in raising soft money - with
both parties taking in more than $240 mil.
lion in the last election - and it could be
to the advantage of Republicans if the
Supreme Court upheld the soft money
ban but ruled the resrricl:ions on issue ads
were unconstitutional.
The first scheduled vol!e on Thu~y
will be on an attempt to eli/ninate the section of the bill that deals \Vith rh6se adi.
The Bill of Rights is clear, said the amendment's sponsor, Sen. Mike DeWine, R;;Ohio, that "Congress shall make no law
abridging the freedom of speech."
~
·~

Constmt&lt;r Product Safety Commission announoed the recall of
the 240 volt air conditioners on Wednesday.
No injuries have been reported, but the company has received
one report of an air conditioner short circuiting and catching
fire, resulting in $14,000 in damage, the safety commission said.
The air conditioners were sold by independent contractors
and at department, appliance, home and hardware stores from
November 1998 through November 2000.

Report Anny unit unprepared

Fugitive may have link to trial·

,,

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:f-·j~·

e~~-tt-ltt~, f$
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21 o East Main St.
Pomeroy ·

992·1182

We carry craft

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supplies, bulk

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seasonal
merchandise, and
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authorized Dish
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618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
. (740) 992-7270
Fax: (740) 992·3232

KEHLER
Bl ;"'lNF'SS
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SERVICES
. . J\

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Anderson}

'

:HIGHLIGHTS
Meigs to fonn
new booster
dub
ROCK SPRINGS - An
organization
called
the
"Meigs Sideliners Club" is
being formed at Meigs High
School. The club will be a
boosting organization for the
Meigs Marauder football
team.
The club wiU have an organization meeting on Suni:lay,
·April 1 at 1 p.m. in the Meigs
High School cafeteria. The
purpose of the meeting wiU ·
be to further explain the dub
and begin accepting members.
· For
information
·call
Marauder footb!lll coach
Mike Chancey at 992-2158
(school) or 992-0064 (home).

112 court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. 740 982-8524

(740) 992-3671

R&amp;G
Feed&amp;
pply

Stop in

&amp; see our
Hartwell Hares

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

44tt••tlu~Vj

.J/jj.tea•dl

1·740·992..1135
E-mail:
jmaah@frognet.net

S~U~

a1alnst NFL

~~

NEW YORK (AP)
Odando Brown · filed $200
milli~n lawsuit against the
NFL, claiming his career was
· ended by eye injuries sustained from a penalty flag
thrown by a referee.
A starting offensive tackle
for most of his seven-year
NFL career, Brown' was with
Cleveland when he was
injured.
In a Dec. 19, 1999 game
against
the
Jacksonville
·Jaguars, referee Jeff Triplette
threw his penalty flag and it
hit l3rown's right eye.
Brown never played again
and was cut by the Browns in
September 2000. But he was
paid for the first three games
of the season. ·
'~

~.

f)(II~,

• Seed potatoes
• Fertilizer

•

• Lawn &amp; garden

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Karl Kabler Ill, C.P. A.
Registered Representative

chemicals

Secllrl1les otlerad through H.D

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Pom&amp;rll)l, Oh 4!5769

Veat lnveatmem Securltlea, Inc.,
Memller, SIPC AcMaoly servlcel
• ollerad through H.D. Vest
AdviSory Services, Inc. 6333
Ntlfth State Highway 181, Irving,
nc 75038 (972) 870-6000

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eight Tuesday and should win, tonight
unless we have a perfect pitching and
defensive game, we are not going to
win with just three runs."
Eastern (1-l,TVC 1-0) went up 40 in tlie first inning on walks to Kristen Chevalier and Carrie Wiggins and
RBI singles by Janet Calaway and
Sandy Powell. Another walk and a
ground out brought home the final
runs in the 4-0 frame, Eastern leading
4-0.
Southern (0-3, TVC 0-1) came
back with three runs in the bottom of
the first when Kati Cummins reached
on a fielder's choice. Barnes doubled

the runners to second and third then
Chapman reached on a fielder's
choice on a play where Powell fired a
strike to Yeaguer at tlie plate to get
Cummins.
Tammy Fryar was hit by a pitch,
then Macyn Ervin, Kati Sayre. and
Deana Pullins all walked to force
home the three runs, the score 4-3.
Eastern plated five runs in the se.c -.
ond on walks to Chevalier, Carrie
Wiggins and Kayla Gibbs, then Powell· was hit by a pitch to drive home a
run . Calaway doubled hume two

Please see Eastem, 86

Mei s girls

wa le Spartans
batter all aided the Marauder

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

· MILWAUKEE (AP) George Karl became the
highest-paid coach in professional sports and a part-owner
of the Milwaukee Bucks.
. Terms ·weren't revealed, but
.a source with knowledge of
the deal who spoke on condition of anonymity said the
_two-year · extension is worth
$14 million and also includes
,a small slice -· believed to be
1 to 2 percent - of the fran'chise that is valued at $l25 ·
million:
Karl, who turns 50 in May,
is committed to the Bucks
through the 2003-04 season.

DoW11IOW"

Hartwell
House

RACINE - High-flying Eastern
competitor, and a
soared to a 15-3 TVC victory over
winner," Southern
Southern in varsity softball action
coach Scott Wolfe
Wednesday.
said. "Siw is a great
The game was called after five
pitcher and she just
innings because of darkness.
took the game into
''Juli Bailey pitched a great game
her own hands. Eastand our hi,~tin~ came to !if\. when we
ern came ready to
needed 1t, sa1d Eastern c6ach Pam
play and again has
Douthitt. "The girls were fired up that
another very good
Bailey
we were playing Southern and turned
ball club. We start six
it around from last night ( a loss to
sophomores
and
River Valley).
Our offense and freshmen so if we keep our heads up
defense showed signs of coming we will be fine as the season progresstogether."
es.
"Juli Bailey is a four-year starter, a
"We score 11 runs Monday and

coach

Brown files suit

Computer
Performance
Upgrades
Sales &amp; Service
110 Court Street

Bailey leads Eastem to win

Bucks make
Karl top dollar

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP)
- · Final Four coaches Mike
Krzyzewski of Duke and Lute
Olson of Arizona are on the
short list for induction into
the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Krzyzewski and Olson were
among 17 finalists - seven
players, s.even coaches and
three . con1ributors. The
inductees will be voted into
the hall in May and enshrined
Oct. 5.
Other coaches among the
finalists are Larry Brown,
Temple's John Chaney and
Fresno State's Jerry Tarkanian,
who won an NCAA championship at UNLV.
f..mong the players were
Moses Malone, who skipped
college to play 21 years in the
ABA and NBA;James Worthy,
one of the game's greatest
fastbreak finishers; scoring star
Adrian Dantley; and defensive
ace Bobby Jones.

Clarfs Jewelry
now lias.
rprom Jewelry
'fasfiions

'4-

'THuRsDAY'S

Coach K. Olson
among Hall of
Fame finalists

\

''

Page 81
Thursct.y, Mllrdl :It, 2001

Arsenic levels wony legislators

Firm recalls air conditioners ·

Spring Training, Page B2
Buckeyes future bright, Page B3
Today~ Scoreboard, Page B6

lhursct.y, Mardi 21, 2001

A statement by Algerian authorities said Abdelmaji'tl
Dahoumane was arrested on his return from Afghanisc.1n, where
he had undergone arms and explosives training.
The statement didn't say when Dahoumane was arrested O!
provide the circumstances of his arrest.
•
Dahoumane has been linked to Ahmed Ressam, who ij
involved in a bombing conspiracy trial in Los Angeles. U.S. offi~
cials believe · the two men have ties to exiled Saudi billionaire
Osama bin . Liden, the alleged mastermind of the 1999 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224
;
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two senior House Democrats on people.
••
WASHINGTON (AP) - While the Bush administration Wednesday challenged the Bush admimstration 's decision to
proposes $730 million to stop drugs abroad and promotes char- delay new environmental standards for reducing arsenic in ·the
acter education to help stop them at home, an important player d6nking water of millions of Americans.
is missing from the fight: a drug policy director.
NEW YORK (AP) - One of the Army's 10 active divisions
In a letter to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator
Lawmakers from both parties as well as former director Barry Christie Whitman, Reps. John Dingell of Michigan and Frank has been downgraded to the second-lowest level of battle readiMcCaffrey are expressing concern that more than two months Pallone of New Jersey noted that Congress last year ordered the ness due to a lack of training and personnel, The New York
into the Bush presidency, no one has been nominated to head EPA to have the standards in place by June 22.
Times reported Thursday.
the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
"Serious questions have been raised about the legality of your
Citing unidentified Pentagon officials, the newspaper said the
Some Democrats say it is a sign that Bush is not making drugs recent announcement, including its effect .on the intent of Con- 3rd Infantry Division, based out of Fort Stewart, Ga., was downa priority. Republicans say the delay reflects the careful search gress to have a new 'protective drinking water· standard for
graded because thousands of its soldiers have missed battle-readifor a director. One GOP lawmaker said the administration has . arsenic;' Dingell and Pallone wrote.
ness training while stationed overseas. Nearly 4,000 troops from
had a hard time filling the slot.
The new standards, developed by the Clinton administration the division have been serving as peacekeepers in Bosnia since ·
The White House says it is pushing ahead with the drug fight but not published until two days after Bush took office, were to
October.
·
under the acting director, Edward Jurith, but McCaffrey said the have taken effect March 23.
Maj. Gen. Walter Sharp, who commanded the 3rd Infantry
office urgently needs a Bush appointee with political clout.
Division, downgraded the division's readiness rating to C-3.That
means the division would need to prepare for weeks, if no1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Algerian security forces have arrest- months, if it was called up for wartime duty.
The Pentagon officials said the downgrading does not indicate
WASHINGTON (AP) .-An Ohio company is recalling · ed a fugitive who may be connected to a reputed terrorist on
about 17,000 air conditioners that may short-circuit and catch trial for allegedly plotting to attack West Coast targets around the military is seriously impaired. But the move is likely to add
fire.
to the debate in Congress over the deployment of military
the time of the millennium celebrations.
•
•
•I
White Consolidated Industries Inc. of Cleveland and the
troops overseas.

Drug aar job unfilled

The Daily Sentinel

Page AI

EASY RUN - Kara Musser of Meigs scores one of the Marauders 18 runs In an 18-2 win
over Alexander Wednesl;lay. (Dave Harris)

Lewis paces OSU
to NIT crown
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - The Ohio State
women's team could have quit.
Early in the Big Ten race, the team was ·decimated byinjuries, and the Buckeyes lost seven of their fir~t 10
league games. Among those lost for the season was
LaToya Turner, the team's leading scoring and ·rebounder,
who suffered a torn knee ligament ·on Jan. 4.
Then, in the opening round of the Women's National
Invitation Tournament, the Buckeyes trailed Cincinnati
by eight points with 2:05left, but rallied for a 61-60 win
on guard Tomeka Brown's buzzer-beating reverse layup.
They could have gone quietly in Wednesday's championship game of the WNIT, too, trailing New Mexico by
12 points early in the second half and playing before a
raucous and hostile crowd of 18,018 - the largest ever
to see a·WNIT game.
.
But the Buckeyes persevered one more time and pulled
out a 62-61 win.
.
"We have a team of warriors and they again had the
resiliency they showed all season," coach Beth Burns said
while celebrating with a srruJl contingent of Ohio State
fans.
Senior point guard Jamie Lewis scored 19 points;
including a pair of late 3-pointers, as the Buckeyes (2211) closed out their season of turmoil with the school's
first national title in women's basketball.
The loss ended New Mexico's bid for the school's first
national tournament title in basketball. The Lobos (2213) breezed to four wins at home in the tournament,
winning by an average of 21 points, but they couldn't
shake Lewis and Co.
"It was awesome. I'd rather been here than in Colum-

PIMA
111

see Buckeyes, Bl

ROCK
SPRINGS
Meigs spotted Alexander one
first inning run, and then
exploded for nine runs in the
fifth inning and added five
more in the sixth en route to
an 18-2 win over Alexander in
TVC softball action Wednesday.
The game was called after
six inning due to the mercy
rule.
The visitors took the 1-0
lead in the firSt inning.
Lle..yellyn singled and moved
up on a single by Canterbury.
Llewellyn then scored on a
Marauder error.
Meigs·took a 2-1 lead in the
third inning. Kara Musser singled and stole second. She
then scored on a single off the
bat of Lindsay Bolin.
Bolin then stole second and
scored on an Alexander error.
Meigs added pair of runs in
the third inning to take a 4-1
lead. Jaynee Davis, Alicia
Werry and Julie Kennedy had
back-co-back singles. After a
fielders choice Bolin added a
single for the Marauder three
run lead.
Mindy Chancey had the big
bat in the inning for Meigs in
the nine run fifth. Chancey
had a double and triple in the
inning. Bolin added a triple,
and Shannon Price, Abby
Harris and Kayte Davis each
chipped in with singles. Two
walks, a Spartan error and a hit

cause.

The Spartans added another
single run in the sixth inning
to make it a 13-2 game. Carr
singled, a fielders choice and
another single by Hamill
scored Carr.
But Meigs added five more
runs in the bottom of the
sixth to put an early end to
the contest. Harris had a double for Meigs in the inning,
and Price, Davis, Kennedy
added single.
Katte Jeffers was the winning pitcher with a six hitter.
Jeffers struck out two and didn't walk a batter. Meigs
pounded out 17 hits, Bolin led
the way with twa singles and a
triple with four RBI. Chancey
added a double and a triple .
Harris a singles and a double, Price, Kayte Davis, Pri ce,
Jaynee Davis and Kennedy
each added a pair Qf singles.
Musser and Werry each added
a single as each Marauder
starter had at least one hit.
Llewellyn picked up th e loss
forA!exander(2- 1,TVC 1- 1).
She went the route giving up
the 17 hits, striking out four,
walking four and hitting two.
Cantorbury and Hamill had
two
singles
each
and
Llewellyn and Carr each
added a single.
Meigs (2-1, TVC 1-1) will
travel to Trimble Friday and
then play host to Jackson in a
twinbill Saturday.

Marauders edge Spartans
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

. ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs senior Matt Lewis, in
his first varsity start, pitched a
complete game seven hitter to
lead the Marauders to a 4-2
win over Alexander in TVC
baseball action Wednesday.
The win was the third in as
many tries for the Marauders
(3-0, TVC 2-0) on the young
season, heading into Friday's
game at Trimble.
Meigs jumped on top 3-0
in the bottom of the first
inning. With one out, Meigs
took ·advantage of a pair of
walks and a Spartan error and
three straight singles off the
bats of Eric Runyon, John
Stanley and Adam Bullington
to plate the runs.
Alexander plated solo runs
in the second and third
innings to make it a one run
game. In the second, a pair of
fielder's choices and singles off
th e bats of L. C. Grigsby and
Kirk Crow dented the plate
with the first run.
In the third inning, Steve
Llewellyn walked and moved
to second on a balk. He then
scored on a base hit otf the bat

PIMA- Melp, B5
V&gt;

THE YOUNG LEFTHANDER - Matt Lewis of Meigs pitched a
complete game, seven-hitter as the Marauders defeated
Alexander 4-2 Wednesday. (Dave Harris)

'•

.,

�Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Schroeder brings thomy issues

WASHINGTON (AP) -The White House calls it a getacquainted session, but German ChaQccllor Gerhard Schroeder
is bringing a list of grievances and concerns to President Bush.
With the Bush administration signaling it will not implement
a global warming treaty, Schroeder planned to urge Bush not to
back off the accord, a German government official said.
Schroeder was conveying European dismay at Bush's -recent
announcement that he would not seek curbs on carbon dioxide
emissions from U.S. industty, which reversed a position Bush
took during last year's presidential campaign. The emissions are
thought to contribute to global warming.
"We hqpe the Americans will change their mind, because we
Europeans think We have the better arguments;' said the German official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity
before Schroeder's trip.

Rise seen in traffic deaths
WASHINGTON (AP) - The number of people killed in
traffic accidents increased slightly last year, partly due to yet
another jump in fatal motorcycle accidents.
Federal estimates to be released Thursday show that after many
years of decline, motorcycle deaths steadily increased from 1997
to 2000, growing·27 percent in the three-year period.
Last. year there were 2,680 nJOtor):ycle deaths, according to
· estimates by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That's 208 more than in 1999, enough to offset the. 188
additional traffic deaths iast year.
The rate of death per miles traveled on the nation's highway'
increased slightly last year for the first time since 1977. There
were 41 ,800 fat.1lities, or 1.6 deaths per million miles traveled,
compared with 1.5 m J.999 and 3.3 in 1977.

Senate takes up last big issue on finance bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate supporters oflegislation that would reduce big
money intluences in politics face their last
big hurdle: how to protect the bill fium
constitutional challenges.
Senate leaders were hoping for a final
vote Thursday on the campaign .finance
legislation ofSens.John McCain, R-Ariz.,
and Russell Feingold, D-Wis., after nearly
two weeks of intense floor action irt which
backers have acceded to some changes but
warded off amendn1ents they considered
hostile to their cause.
Still intact were their main gnals - to
ban the largely unregulated "soft money"
donations that corporations, unions and
wealthy individuals give to political parties
and to restrict in the final 60 days of an
election so-called issue ads, which often

are barely disguised attacks on or defenses
of candidates.
But first they must get by an expected
proposal by opponents that would render
the entire bill unconstitutional if the
Supreme Court finds that any section of it
violates First Amendment free speech
rights.
With interest groups already primed to
challenge restrictions on political advertising, McCain-Feingold backers said the
"severability" aspect of the bill- meaning
the rest of the bill survives if one part is
struck down by the courts - must be
maintained. "To make it non-severable is
to destroy the bill;' Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
D-Calif., said.
Republicans who see an all-encompassing constitutional provision as a way to

bring down the entire bill could be joined
by several Democrats concerned that setting up legal firewalls could hurt their
party.
Democrats now compete well with
Republicans in raising soft money - with
both parties taking in more than $240 mil.
lion in the last election - and it could be
to the advantage of Republicans if the
Supreme Court upheld the soft money
ban but ruled the resrricl:ions on issue ads
were unconstitutional.
The first scheduled vol!e on Thu~y
will be on an attempt to eli/ninate the section of the bill that deals \Vith rh6se adi.
The Bill of Rights is clear, said the amendment's sponsor, Sen. Mike DeWine, R;;Ohio, that "Congress shall make no law
abridging the freedom of speech."
~
·~

Constmt&lt;r Product Safety Commission announoed the recall of
the 240 volt air conditioners on Wednesday.
No injuries have been reported, but the company has received
one report of an air conditioner short circuiting and catching
fire, resulting in $14,000 in damage, the safety commission said.
The air conditioners were sold by independent contractors
and at department, appliance, home and hardware stores from
November 1998 through November 2000.

Report Anny unit unprepared

Fugitive may have link to trial·

,,

,

••

\

I

'
:f-·j~·

e~~-tt-ltt~, f$
Se~t-jj .
21 o East Main St.
Pomeroy ·

992·1182

We carry craft

LIW IHllllllr

supplies, bulk

19 '

candy, Nascar,
seasonal
merchandise, and
much more.
We are also an
. 992-8677
114 Court Pomeroy

authorized Dish
Network Dealer

11111

Hllh liCk Cllllr

.'111

1111

CLARK'S JEWELRY
Adjapenl from 1b11

618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
. (740) 992-7270
Fax: (740) 992·3232

KEHLER
Bl ;"'lNF'SS
~
SERVICES
. . J\

.. .

Accounting &amp; Wealth
Accumula1ion

FURNRURE • ArPUANCES • &lt;ARPEI

Courll!o....,

1-800-926-8877

Hlliorl~

.a,.. 19311

Anderson}

'

:HIGHLIGHTS
Meigs to fonn
new booster
dub
ROCK SPRINGS - An
organization
called
the
"Meigs Sideliners Club" is
being formed at Meigs High
School. The club will be a
boosting organization for the
Meigs Marauder football
team.
The club wiU have an organization meeting on Suni:lay,
·April 1 at 1 p.m. in the Meigs
High School cafeteria. The
purpose of the meeting wiU ·
be to further explain the dub
and begin accepting members.
· For
information
·call
Marauder footb!lll coach
Mike Chancey at 992-2158
(school) or 992-0064 (home).

112 court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. 740 982-8524

(740) 992-3671

R&amp;G
Feed&amp;
pply

Stop in

&amp; see our
Hartwell Hares

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

44tt••tlu~Vj

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1·740·992..1135
E-mail:
jmaah@frognet.net

S~U~

a1alnst NFL

~~

NEW YORK (AP)
Odando Brown · filed $200
milli~n lawsuit against the
NFL, claiming his career was
· ended by eye injuries sustained from a penalty flag
thrown by a referee.
A starting offensive tackle
for most of his seven-year
NFL career, Brown' was with
Cleveland when he was
injured.
In a Dec. 19, 1999 game
against
the
Jacksonville
·Jaguars, referee Jeff Triplette
threw his penalty flag and it
hit l3rown's right eye.
Brown never played again
and was cut by the Browns in
September 2000. But he was
paid for the first three games
of the season. ·
'~

~.

f)(II~,

• Seed potatoes
• Fertilizer

•

• Lawn &amp; garden

'

Karl Kabler Ill, C.P. A.
Registered Representative

chemicals

Secllrl1les otlerad through H.D

100 e. Main
Pom&amp;rll)l, Oh 4!5769

Veat lnveatmem Securltlea, Inc.,
Memller, SIPC AcMaoly servlcel
• ollerad through H.D. Vest
AdviSory Services, Inc. 6333
Ntlfth State Highway 181, Irving,
nc 75038 (972) 870-6000

740-992-7696
•
EST.199!S

••

212 hat Mlln St.

PoiMfO)', OhiO

a

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•Onion

399W. Main
Pomeroy

'

eight Tuesday and should win, tonight
unless we have a perfect pitching and
defensive game, we are not going to
win with just three runs."
Eastern (1-l,TVC 1-0) went up 40 in tlie first inning on walks to Kristen Chevalier and Carrie Wiggins and
RBI singles by Janet Calaway and
Sandy Powell. Another walk and a
ground out brought home the final
runs in the 4-0 frame, Eastern leading
4-0.
Southern (0-3, TVC 0-1) came
back with three runs in the bottom of
the first when Kati Cummins reached
on a fielder's choice. Barnes doubled

the runners to second and third then
Chapman reached on a fielder's
choice on a play where Powell fired a
strike to Yeaguer at tlie plate to get
Cummins.
Tammy Fryar was hit by a pitch,
then Macyn Ervin, Kati Sayre. and
Deana Pullins all walked to force
home the three runs, the score 4-3.
Eastern plated five runs in the se.c -.
ond on walks to Chevalier, Carrie
Wiggins and Kayla Gibbs, then Powell· was hit by a pitch to drive home a
run . Calaway doubled hume two

Please see Eastem, 86

Mei s girls

wa le Spartans
batter all aided the Marauder

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

· MILWAUKEE (AP) George Karl became the
highest-paid coach in professional sports and a part-owner
of the Milwaukee Bucks.
. Terms ·weren't revealed, but
.a source with knowledge of
the deal who spoke on condition of anonymity said the
_two-year · extension is worth
$14 million and also includes
,a small slice -· believed to be
1 to 2 percent - of the fran'chise that is valued at $l25 ·
million:
Karl, who turns 50 in May,
is committed to the Bucks
through the 2003-04 season.

DoW11IOW"

Hartwell
House

RACINE - High-flying Eastern
competitor, and a
soared to a 15-3 TVC victory over
winner," Southern
Southern in varsity softball action
coach Scott Wolfe
Wednesday.
said. "Siw is a great
The game was called after five
pitcher and she just
innings because of darkness.
took the game into
''Juli Bailey pitched a great game
her own hands. Eastand our hi,~tin~ came to !if\. when we
ern came ready to
needed 1t, sa1d Eastern c6ach Pam
play and again has
Douthitt. "The girls were fired up that
another very good
Bailey
we were playing Southern and turned
ball club. We start six
it around from last night ( a loss to
sophomores
and
River Valley).
Our offense and freshmen so if we keep our heads up
defense showed signs of coming we will be fine as the season progresstogether."
es.
"Juli Bailey is a four-year starter, a
"We score 11 runs Monday and

coach

Brown files suit

Computer
Performance
Upgrades
Sales &amp; Service
110 Court Street

Bailey leads Eastem to win

Bucks make
Karl top dollar

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP)
- · Final Four coaches Mike
Krzyzewski of Duke and Lute
Olson of Arizona are on the
short list for induction into
the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Krzyzewski and Olson were
among 17 finalists - seven
players, s.even coaches and
three . con1ributors. The
inductees will be voted into
the hall in May and enshrined
Oct. 5.
Other coaches among the
finalists are Larry Brown,
Temple's John Chaney and
Fresno State's Jerry Tarkanian,
who won an NCAA championship at UNLV.
f..mong the players were
Moses Malone, who skipped
college to play 21 years in the
ABA and NBA;James Worthy,
one of the game's greatest
fastbreak finishers; scoring star
Adrian Dantley; and defensive
ace Bobby Jones.

Clarfs Jewelry
now lias.
rprom Jewelry
'fasfiions

'4-

'THuRsDAY'S

Coach K. Olson
among Hall of
Fame finalists

\

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Page 81
Thursct.y, Mllrdl :It, 2001

Arsenic levels wony legislators

Firm recalls air conditioners ·

Spring Training, Page B2
Buckeyes future bright, Page B3
Today~ Scoreboard, Page B6

lhursct.y, Mardi 21, 2001

A statement by Algerian authorities said Abdelmaji'tl
Dahoumane was arrested on his return from Afghanisc.1n, where
he had undergone arms and explosives training.
The statement didn't say when Dahoumane was arrested O!
provide the circumstances of his arrest.
•
Dahoumane has been linked to Ahmed Ressam, who ij
involved in a bombing conspiracy trial in Los Angeles. U.S. offi~
cials believe · the two men have ties to exiled Saudi billionaire
Osama bin . Liden, the alleged mastermind of the 1999 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224
;
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two senior House Democrats on people.
••
WASHINGTON (AP) - While the Bush administration Wednesday challenged the Bush admimstration 's decision to
proposes $730 million to stop drugs abroad and promotes char- delay new environmental standards for reducing arsenic in ·the
acter education to help stop them at home, an important player d6nking water of millions of Americans.
is missing from the fight: a drug policy director.
NEW YORK (AP) - One of the Army's 10 active divisions
In a letter to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator
Lawmakers from both parties as well as former director Barry Christie Whitman, Reps. John Dingell of Michigan and Frank has been downgraded to the second-lowest level of battle readiMcCaffrey are expressing concern that more than two months Pallone of New Jersey noted that Congress last year ordered the ness due to a lack of training and personnel, The New York
into the Bush presidency, no one has been nominated to head EPA to have the standards in place by June 22.
Times reported Thursday.
the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
"Serious questions have been raised about the legality of your
Citing unidentified Pentagon officials, the newspaper said the
Some Democrats say it is a sign that Bush is not making drugs recent announcement, including its effect .on the intent of Con- 3rd Infantry Division, based out of Fort Stewart, Ga., was downa priority. Republicans say the delay reflects the careful search gress to have a new 'protective drinking water· standard for
graded because thousands of its soldiers have missed battle-readifor a director. One GOP lawmaker said the administration has . arsenic;' Dingell and Pallone wrote.
ness training while stationed overseas. Nearly 4,000 troops from
had a hard time filling the slot.
The new standards, developed by the Clinton administration the division have been serving as peacekeepers in Bosnia since ·
The White House says it is pushing ahead with the drug fight but not published until two days after Bush took office, were to
October.
·
under the acting director, Edward Jurith, but McCaffrey said the have taken effect March 23.
Maj. Gen. Walter Sharp, who commanded the 3rd Infantry
office urgently needs a Bush appointee with political clout.
Division, downgraded the division's readiness rating to C-3.That
means the division would need to prepare for weeks, if no1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Algerian security forces have arrest- months, if it was called up for wartime duty.
The Pentagon officials said the downgrading does not indicate
WASHINGTON (AP) .-An Ohio company is recalling · ed a fugitive who may be connected to a reputed terrorist on
about 17,000 air conditioners that may short-circuit and catch trial for allegedly plotting to attack West Coast targets around the military is seriously impaired. But the move is likely to add
fire.
to the debate in Congress over the deployment of military
the time of the millennium celebrations.
•
•
•I
White Consolidated Industries Inc. of Cleveland and the
troops overseas.

Drug aar job unfilled

The Daily Sentinel

Page AI

EASY RUN - Kara Musser of Meigs scores one of the Marauders 18 runs In an 18-2 win
over Alexander Wednesl;lay. (Dave Harris)

Lewis paces OSU
to NIT crown
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - The Ohio State
women's team could have quit.
Early in the Big Ten race, the team was ·decimated byinjuries, and the Buckeyes lost seven of their fir~t 10
league games. Among those lost for the season was
LaToya Turner, the team's leading scoring and ·rebounder,
who suffered a torn knee ligament ·on Jan. 4.
Then, in the opening round of the Women's National
Invitation Tournament, the Buckeyes trailed Cincinnati
by eight points with 2:05left, but rallied for a 61-60 win
on guard Tomeka Brown's buzzer-beating reverse layup.
They could have gone quietly in Wednesday's championship game of the WNIT, too, trailing New Mexico by
12 points early in the second half and playing before a
raucous and hostile crowd of 18,018 - the largest ever
to see a·WNIT game.
.
But the Buckeyes persevered one more time and pulled
out a 62-61 win.
.
"We have a team of warriors and they again had the
resiliency they showed all season," coach Beth Burns said
while celebrating with a srruJl contingent of Ohio State
fans.
Senior point guard Jamie Lewis scored 19 points;
including a pair of late 3-pointers, as the Buckeyes (2211) closed out their season of turmoil with the school's
first national title in women's basketball.
The loss ended New Mexico's bid for the school's first
national tournament title in basketball. The Lobos (2213) breezed to four wins at home in the tournament,
winning by an average of 21 points, but they couldn't
shake Lewis and Co.
"It was awesome. I'd rather been here than in Colum-

PIMA
111

see Buckeyes, Bl

ROCK
SPRINGS
Meigs spotted Alexander one
first inning run, and then
exploded for nine runs in the
fifth inning and added five
more in the sixth en route to
an 18-2 win over Alexander in
TVC softball action Wednesday.
The game was called after
six inning due to the mercy
rule.
The visitors took the 1-0
lead in the firSt inning.
Lle..yellyn singled and moved
up on a single by Canterbury.
Llewellyn then scored on a
Marauder error.
Meigs·took a 2-1 lead in the
third inning. Kara Musser singled and stole second. She
then scored on a single off the
bat of Lindsay Bolin.
Bolin then stole second and
scored on an Alexander error.
Meigs added pair of runs in
the third inning to take a 4-1
lead. Jaynee Davis, Alicia
Werry and Julie Kennedy had
back-co-back singles. After a
fielders choice Bolin added a
single for the Marauder three
run lead.
Mindy Chancey had the big
bat in the inning for Meigs in
the nine run fifth. Chancey
had a double and triple in the
inning. Bolin added a triple,
and Shannon Price, Abby
Harris and Kayte Davis each
chipped in with singles. Two
walks, a Spartan error and a hit

cause.

The Spartans added another
single run in the sixth inning
to make it a 13-2 game. Carr
singled, a fielders choice and
another single by Hamill
scored Carr.
But Meigs added five more
runs in the bottom of the
sixth to put an early end to
the contest. Harris had a double for Meigs in the inning,
and Price, Davis, Kennedy
added single.
Katte Jeffers was the winning pitcher with a six hitter.
Jeffers struck out two and didn't walk a batter. Meigs
pounded out 17 hits, Bolin led
the way with twa singles and a
triple with four RBI. Chancey
added a double and a triple .
Harris a singles and a double, Price, Kayte Davis, Pri ce,
Jaynee Davis and Kennedy
each added a pair Qf singles.
Musser and Werry each added
a single as each Marauder
starter had at least one hit.
Llewellyn picked up th e loss
forA!exander(2- 1,TVC 1- 1).
She went the route giving up
the 17 hits, striking out four,
walking four and hitting two.
Cantorbury and Hamill had
two
singles
each
and
Llewellyn and Carr each
added a single.
Meigs (2-1, TVC 1-1) will
travel to Trimble Friday and
then play host to Jackson in a
twinbill Saturday.

Marauders edge Spartans
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

. ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs senior Matt Lewis, in
his first varsity start, pitched a
complete game seven hitter to
lead the Marauders to a 4-2
win over Alexander in TVC
baseball action Wednesday.
The win was the third in as
many tries for the Marauders
(3-0, TVC 2-0) on the young
season, heading into Friday's
game at Trimble.
Meigs jumped on top 3-0
in the bottom of the first
inning. With one out, Meigs
took ·advantage of a pair of
walks and a Spartan error and
three straight singles off the
bats of Eric Runyon, John
Stanley and Adam Bullington
to plate the runs.
Alexander plated solo runs
in the second and third
innings to make it a one run
game. In the second, a pair of
fielder's choices and singles off
th e bats of L. C. Grigsby and
Kirk Crow dented the plate
with the first run.
In the third inning, Steve
Llewellyn walked and moved
to second on a balk. He then
scored on a base hit otf the bat

PIMA- Melp, B5
V&gt;

THE YOUNG LEFTHANDER - Matt Lewis of Meigs pitched a
complete game, seven-hitter as the Marauders defeated
Alexander 4-2 Wednesday. (Dave Harris)

'•

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�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Thunsday, March 21~ . 2001

Po.meroy, Middleport, Ohio
•

.Thul'ldly, iiarch at,

aGo1

''

OHIO STATE BASKETBALL

Players trade places as spring wind.s~,d~
released utilityman EP. Santangelo.
with a 0.47 spring tnining ERA.
Pitcher Matt Clement and left fielder Eric
Pbillies &lt;l, Tiger• 3
;,
Owens were tn.ded from the San Diego Pad~es
At Lakeland, Aa., Dave Mlicki became the
to the Florida Marlins for right fielder Mark latest Detroit Tigers' player to get hurt when he
Kotsay.
was hit on the left knee by a grounder off the
Two minor leaguers also were traded in the bat of Pat Burrell. The injury was not consid,
five-player exchange. Right-hander Omar ered serious.
·
Ortiz went to Florida and outfielder Cesar
Royal. 6, Indians 0
,
Crespo to San Diego.
At Haines City, Aa., Jeff Suppan, Kanm
In exhibition games, it was New York Mets City's expected opening day starter, allowe(j
5, Los Angeles 3; Florida 5, Baltimore 3;Aclanta five hits in 5 1-3 shutout innings and jon Nun~
4, Houston 4 in nine innings; Texas 12, Min- nally homered for the second straight game.
Cardinals 11, Expos 3
1
nesota 4; Toronto 61 Pittsburgh 2; Boston 8,
Tampa Bay 0; Philadelphia 4, Detroit 3; .Kansas
At Jupiter, Fla., Darryl Kile, backed by a
City 6, Cleveland 0; St. Louis I 1, Montreal 3; grand slam from Jim Edmonds, gave up a two,
Cin~;innati 7, New York Yankees 3; Chicago run double to Lee Stevens in the first, then
White Sox 10, Anaheim 5; Arizona 9, San pitched 3 1-3 scoreless innings,
Francisco 8; Seattle 9, Colorado 9 in 10
Reds 7, Yankees 3
innings; Oakland 10, Milwaukee 9; and ChicaAt Tampa, Fla., Alex Ochoa homc;red and
go Cubs 5, San Diego 5 in 11 innings..
drove in four runs. Sid Fernandez allowed three
Mets 5, Dodgers 3
runs and three hits in four innings .for the Yan•
AtVero Beach, Fla. , Gagne gave up four runs kees, wlio have lost 11 of 15 games. ·,.
in six innings, and New York starter SteveTraWhite Sox 10,Angets·s i..
"
chsel went 3-for-3 with a home run while
At Tempe, Ariz., Tim Salmon hit ' his first
allowing just two runs · in six innings.
home run of the spring, and Kip Wells gave up
Marlins 5, Orioles 3
four runs and seven hits in five innings.
Diamondbacks 9, Giants 8 ·
At Melbourne, Fla:, Ryan Dempster allowed
three runs and seven hits in six innings.
At Tucson, Ariz., Danny Bautista hit a grand
Braves 4, Astros 4
slam and Damian Miller singled home the
At Kissimmee, Fla. , Scott Elarton allowed winning ruri in the ninth.
f~mr ru?s- three ear~d- and nine hits in .
M,r.riners 9, R.gckies 9
.. ,
SIX! .tnnn1gs, and Brad N;'smus hit a two-run ,, ~t }'ucsqn; ·Ar~z ., ~~ . Hall,IPI1!"1.'):~vf up
1
1
homer.
':,:
•
.
• seve.n .~un~;a':ld e1ght qits !li 'four u'l~~~"
.;.
Rangers 12, '!Wins &lt;l
Athletics 10, Brewers 9
At Phoenix, Jeremy Giambi had three hits
At Fort Myers, Fla., Ruben Mateo, Randy
Velarde, Scott Sheldon and Craig Monroe and dtove in three runs, including a two-run
homered. Mark Redman ' gave up eight ·runs double the seventh.
·
''
and 12 hits in three innin'gs.
Cubs 5, Padret S · I
1
Blue Jays 6, 'Pirates 2
At Peoria, Ariz., 'Jon Lieber outdueled
At Dunedin, Fla., ChriS Michalak pitched six Woody Williams in a matchup of opei)ing day
shutout innings.
'"
pitchers, alloWing ·two hits · in · five ·shutou't
Red Sox 8 •. D~vil Rays 0
innings.
.... '
At St. Pe~ersburg, Fb:, Pedro Martinez
· · · ·· ·
allowed four hits in four ,ihnings, leaving him
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HAINES CITY, Fla. (AP)
- C. C. Sabathia will have the
baseball and his immediate
future in his left hand.
S.abathia, the Cleveland
Indians' top pitching prospect,
will make his final spring
training start on Thursday
against the Kansas City Royals.
If he does well, the 20-yearold left-bander will likely win
a spot in the Indians' starting
rotation.
. If things don't work out,
Sabathia will be sent to TripleA Buffalo to start the year.
"This is definitely a big
performance for C.C.," Indians manager Charlie Manuel
said Wednesday. "Seventy percent of me wants to grab C. C.
and say, 'Get on the plane.' But
the rest of me realizes that this
is still a young pitcher who has
never thrown more than 90
pitches in a game, and there
are still some things he needs
to work on."
The. 6-foot-7, 265-pound
Sabathia, who has never
pitched higher than DoubleA, is in contention for a spot as
the club's No. 4 starter along
with Steve Karsay, Tim Drew
and Steve Woodard.

'

The Indians will break
camp after playing the Royals
and may head north with as
many as 35 players still on
their roster. Teams have until
midnight on Saturday to finalize their 25-man rosters.
1'0anuel said the ch,Jb 'has
scheduled a stiff meeting for
Friday iuorning when they
hope to decide on their pitching staff and make final cuts.
"I'd like to have the rotation set by then;' Manuel said.
There are also issues to sort
out with Cleveland's relief
corps.
lfSabathia, who is 1-1 with
a 4.21 ERA this spring and
Drew or Woodard join the
rotation, Karsay would be sent
back to the bullpen. Karsay has
been a long reliever, closer and
set-up man the past two seasons and the Indians may
decide he's more valuable
pitching in relief. ,

Karsay's stock as a' reliever
has risen in recent days with
shaky outings by Sean
DePaula, Justin Speier and
Woodard, who were all perceived to be locks to make the
team before camp opened.
DePaula gave up one run
- a homer - and two hits
with two walks in a 6-0 loss to
Kansas City on Wednesday,
raising his spring ERA to
7.11. Speier has given up. 18
hits in 11 1-3 innings this
spring. Woodard gave up nine
runs a.nd 1I hits in his last out~
ing and Willie Blair's ERA
with one day left in the exhibition season is 7.98.
Blair, who can pitch as a
long reliever or spot starter,
retired all four batters he faced
Wednesday.
"There are things Willie
· can do;· Manuel said. "He has
experience and he' can chew
up innings for you. He's still in

Your Baseball

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Bob Wickman have .all pitched · tllne· at designated· hitter and
well in relief this spring, and so · outfielder Jacob Cruz; •who Is
have youngsters David Riske;·· out of options, may. also· DH.~
and Roy Smith - who both
Fryman's absence alSo
could make the roster.
opens another roster spot with
Cleveland's decision to put, infielder John 'McDonald and
All-Star thj.ql base~an Travis ~\fieldFr Marty Co~ th,~
Fryman ' P,n, \h~ , .1~ 7 day ,dit · :~eadi.~&amp;~.•ndid,ate~ . . :\ ~.
abled list with a torn elbow
Cordova, a former AL
ligament
means
Russell Rookie of the Year, is batting
Branyan will be at third on .450 this spring . .
opening day.
•
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1
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With Fryman o~'t, .Wit
CorderQ will get . the' most
•

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NOTICE .OF SECOND PUB~IC .HEARING·
The Meigs County Commissioners Intend to apply to the Ohio
Department of Development, for funding under the. FV' 2001. Community ·
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Water and Sewer Program, a federally
funded program· administered by the State. Maximum project funding
available Is $600,000 for Fiscal Year 2000 CDBG funding, provided the
County meets applicable requirements. ·on September 18, 20001 the
County conducted Ita first public hearing to Inform cltlzana about the
CDBG Water arid Sewer program, how It may be used, wtiat actlvltlei are
.,
eligible, and other Important program requll•ments.
!•

•

A second public hearing will be held on April 1o, 2001 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Columbia Fire Station, SR 143, Columbia Township, to give citizens 'an
opportunity to review and comment on the County'a propaaad CDBG' FV'
2001 Water and Sewer Project .
' . ·~

·~&gt;:Or

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·~;~,

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'

Based on . ~Jh citizen Input and local officials' assessment of' the
County's neej:ls, the County ·ls propoflng .to qn~ertake the following
CDBG Wate~'flnd sewer actlvltlt~ .fQr'F~~year 2001:
'\ ' .

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ACTIVITY: \'f,ter and Sewer· ~ater line ~enaloil: '$1,115~~ ·::':.'(
~'

··~·i

•

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SR 143, Mfount Union, Mudfork, Glbaon, SF,' 692 ind .'Ei)ackY.I..-&amp;'Cia
Roads;
.
.
, .· .·. . .. ,;
·,.; ,1
CDBGfurt4lhg: $600,000 . ,~:,
· '
•' .
., •... ' ' .
ARC: $260;doc:i
.
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Local: $2,~6
.
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NATIONAL~ OBJECTIVE: Low to moderat6 lnconi. Households (Area)

Cltlz~na.lencoura~ed t~ ,~~nd,.thi~ meetl~g on Ap~l·· 10; 2o6;;to

express .U »Ir views and comments on the county's proposed CDBO' FV'
2000 Watl!l.•nd Sewer Appllcltlon; Written cOmments will be accepted
until 4:00,.p.m., April 10, 2001, and may ba mailed to the Meigs County
Courthoua'e, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
•

J.,

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Middleport

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If I part clpant will . naed auxiliary, aida ' (Interpreter, tiralfllid, ·Or .tllped
material, .-aalliltlve na,enlng devlcl!, other) to. do a dlaablllty, pie•••
contact Gloria Kloss, Clerk, prior to April 10, 2001, at (740) 992·2895 In
order to1enaura that your nMds will ba •ccomodatad. The Columbia Fire
Station I~ a handlcapped.accelllble facility. ·
,.
· "i

992·2156
\

the hunt."
i'
Manuel has ' been disappointed in his pitching of late.
"We've been trying to give
away jobs," Manuel said. "We
want guys to show us so_mething to take those jo~~j I
don't .know if they've , ,~~n
trying too hard or what . .!iut
everyone we've put out there
seems to have a hard time get. 1 ..
ting guys out.''
Veterans Paul Shuey, Steve
Reed. Ricardo Rincon.''
,. and

~.'/Wi!'.·

I .Basebal.l Cleats
· .t Softball Cleats
.t Batting Gloves
./Bat Bags
~Score books

~

'li\
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Sabathia coulctwin starting role ,.,..,.
, -.. ~,~~

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IND.IANS NOTEBOO·K

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Jeff Tho'rnton, President
Melga County Commlaalonera

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The Dilly Sentinel • Page B 3

•

SPRING TRAINING

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A day after Garciapar,a said the probability
Glenallen Hill and Omar Olivares found of surgery was "extremely high;' he and
new addresses as teams got ready to set their Boston Red Sox general manager Dan
opening-day rosters.
Duquette had a 1 112 hour conference call
Hill, a.key addition as the New York Yankees with team doctor Bill Morgan and decided to
won their third straight World Series last year, postpone the decision on surgery a little
was traded to the Anaheim Angels on Wednes- longer.
. day for Double-A outfielder Darren Blakely.
"It's that last gleam of hope, I guess," Garcia" I think he was just happy that something parra said in Fort Myers, Fla.
was done," Yankees manager Joe Torre said.
.If GarCiaparra has surgery, he 'lllikely miss at/
"He's been hanging around here for a week or least 2 I /2 months.
so knowing somebody was going to go."
Boston newspapers were reporting that Carl
Hill's role became superfluous when New Everett has been fined and suspended. The outYork signed free agent outfielder Henry . fielder was sent home Tuesday for missing the
Rodriguez, acquired backup Michael Coleman team bus for the second time this spring, then
from Cincinnati last week and shifted Chuck failed to show up for scheduled . Red Sox
Knoblauch from second base to left field.
. workouts Wednesday.
·
.
The newspapers, citing club sources, said
After making 'the deal,Anaheim released Jose
Canseco, in camp with the Angels on a minor Everett has been fined three days' pay and susleague contract, but slowed by injuries this pended for· the team's spring training game
spnng.
Thursday against Minnesota .
"Jose worked real hard getting himself into
Larry Reynolds, Everett's agent, said he has
shape." Angels manager Mike Sciascia said. "It contacted the Major League Players Associawas just a matter of us getting a guy that can be tion in New York. Under terms of the colleca little more durable with an explosive bat."
tive bargaining agreement, the union can file a
Olivares, who lost to Cory Lidle in the com- grievance on behalf of a player for any amount
petition to be Oakland's fifth starter, was trad- above $500.
ed to pitching-depleted Pittsburgh for a player
At Kissimmee, Fla., Greg Maddux was struck
to be named.
in the foot by a hard grounder and could miss
Olivares is in the final ' season of a contract the season opener for Atlanta.
"It's sore, but I don't think it's that . bad,"
that will pay hir,n $4 million this year. The A's
will pay about half of Olivares' salary.
.
Maddux·.said..
With three Pirates starting pitchers out for ai
The ifl1pact cut a toe a~d split a toenail on
least another month with injuries - Kris Ben- ,Maddux's left foot. He recovered to throw out
son (elbow), Jason Schmidt (rib cage pull) and Houston's Glen Barker to end the second
Francisco Cordova (elbow) Olivares inning, but limped off the field.
becomes Pittsburgh's No.4 starter.
.
Ramon Martinez asked for and received his
"He's a guy who's been around and won't be unconditional release after the Dodgers picked
overwhelmed. He knows how to pitch, and we up Eric Gagne as their fifth starter.
"This was hard. We love Ramon," general
need players like that," Pirates manager Lloyd
McClendon said.
'
manager Kevin Malone. "It was a difficult decic
Nomar Garciaparra will rest his sore right sion. We just thought Eric earned 'it."
wrist a few more days in a last hope that time, · The Dodgers traded pitcher Mike Judd to
not surgery, is what's needed.
Tampa Bay for a player to be named and

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·confident about Buckeyes future
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Jim O'Brien
started this season looking for ways to replace
his three leading scoren from a year earlier and
continue to build the dormant Ohio State basketball program he inherited in 1997.
With Scoonie Penn, Michael Redd and
George Reese gone, the Buckeyes' offense got
stronger as the seuon prograued. They reached
the NCAA tournament and won at least 20
games for the third stnight seuoh. · .
O'Brien will spend this offseason looking
for ways to replace 6-foot-11 center Ken Johnson, the Big Ten's career-leader in blocked
shots.
• How will O'Brien do it? He isn't sure. But
he isn't worried, either.
"A year ago at this time, if
would have
~sked me that question 1 we would have said
'How' in God's name are we going to replace
Scoonie, Michael and George.' And sontebow
it gets done," the Buckeyes' coach said Wednes.
day. "I think that we have a galling hole that we
have to fill with Ken's departure, bui you never
know how these things are going to work out."

you

Without a double-figure scorer returning
for this season, the Buckeyes went 20-11 and
finished third in the Bjg Ten . Brian Brown
averaged a team-leading 14.5 points ·a game,
and guards Brent Darby (9.6) and . Bohan
Savovic (8.9) also boosted their scoring .averages.
O'Brien said their improved play and the
success of the team since he took over has been
overmadowed by Ohio State's first-round loss
in the NCAA tournament to Utah State.
·:were we disappointed in our last gam~ and
how it ended? Wi.t hout question. But that one
game is not going to have me look back with
any regrets whatsoever," O'Brien said.
"If you're going to look at that one game
and then try to judge what we've done on that
game, I don't buy that at all. I really don't want
to hear that. These kids played hard all year
long."
They'll have to p.lay harder next season - at
least on defense.
Johnson is so quick and his arms are so long
that he alters shots that he can't block. He kept

Ohio State opponents on the perimeter, where
the Buckeyes' guards looked for steals.
Brown, a co-captain, says that will change
next season without Johnson guarding the basket.
"I don't think our coach is going to gamble
as much as he would when Kenny's in the
game," Brown said.
·
Swingman Sean Connolly said he expects
Ohio State to stay aggressive on defense but
"it's going to be a lot tougher next year.
"We have to keep our guys in front of us,"
Connolly said. "When guys get beat, we don't
have that presence back there to block the shot
or scare thetn away from taking it."
O'Brien hasn't worked out all of next season's defensive schemes, but he expects his
players to be able to play better ma~-to-man
defense. He also hopes younger frontcourt
players such as Velimir Radinovich ·and Matt
Marinchik get bigger and stronger.
The players will begin offseason strength
training on Monday. They'll lift weights four
days a week and will be able to meet with

coaches for "individual instruction," O'Brien
said.
Ten days of practice in August and a trip to
play in Europe later that month should help as
weU, he said.
.
· "I think we will be pretty talented and have
a lot of depth on the perimeter, but how
quickly the younger kids develop up front is
·going to be a major factor in how well we do,"
he said.
O'Brien also is willing to let his three highly touted incoming freshman - Brandon
Fuss-Cheatham, Terence Dials and Matt .
Sylvester - compete for playing time.
Fuss-Cheatham, who scored 2,280 points
for Blackhawk High School in Beaver Falls.
Pa. , could challenge Brent Darby for the starting point guard spot next season.
"He's going to help our depth," 0'13rien
said of Fuss-Cheatham. "He's certainly going
to help us at that position. Is he going to be the
guy? I really don't know."

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COLLEGE BASKETBALL
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Amaker heads to Michigan,·signs·five~year contrad

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Michigan
Michigan contacted Rick Pitino about its played against him when I was at DePaul and who spoke with Amaker.
needed two weeks to find the coach it w:ma to. opening, but he chose to coach at Louisville.
he was at Duke and he's been a fitst-dass guy
"He's going to be introduced at Michigan
Amaker will replace Brian Ellerbe, who was · ever since I met him." ·
on Friday," added the source, who spoke on the
lead the Wolverines' buketball team.
· It was Seton Hall, however, that revealed on fired two weeks ago after posting a 62-60
Seton Hall was ranked as high as No. 7 early condition of anonymity.
Wedne~y that Tommy Amaker was leaving to . record in four seasons, including a 25-9 mark in the season, but the team fell apart down the
In Ann Arbor, officials at Michigan said final
take the Michigan job.
his first year. The Wolverines were 12-19, 15- stretch and didn't qualify for the Big East post· details were being worked out to hire a
"We appreciate alllilat Tommy hu done i:o 14 and 10-18 the past three seasons and didn't season tournament until it beat Connecticut in replacement for Ellerbe.
position our buketball pnigram among the finish better than eighth in the Big Ten.
its regular season finale.
"Bill Martin (Michigan athletic director) is
best in the nation," Seton Hall athletic director
Amaker, who will turn 36 in June, was 68The Pirates finished 16-15 after losing to currendy working with UM legal counsel and
Jeff Fogelson iaid. "t'm sll,c that he will do the 55 in four seasons at Seton .Hall. The fqrmer Alabama in the opening round of the NIT, the is putting together a contract that we hope can
!'arne tot Michigan."
· .
Duke star led the Pintes to four postseason team's third trip to that tournament under be announC'ed shortly," Michigan athletic
department spokesman Bruce Madej said.
Amaker agreed to a.five-year contract with appearances, the highlight being a surprising Amaker.
Michigan, according 10; The betrolt News and ttip to the. round qf 16 in last year's NCAA
Leading candidates to succeed Amaker. at · Madej referred specific questions about
Seton Hall included Skip Prosser, who led Amaker to a Seton Hall press release announcI
10llfnamen.
..
ESPN.
"1'his is an honor to be asked ·to be ·a.coach
Michigan's assistant coaches were not fired Xavier to the NCAA tournament this season. ing Amaker's resignation to take the Michigan
and teacher at · such a preitigious school as dong with Ellerbe, but it will be up to the next Fogelson was Prosser's boss when he worked as job. Madej would neither confirm nor deny its
Mich~,S4n1" Amaker cold the . News. '':1'!1\. coach whether t~ey wjJl be retained.
.
AD at Xavier.
accuracy.
thtill~d-~ca11 ~e Michl~· 11 Gnt-c4sa a~d ~~e.
.Terenc.e Green,e, on~ of the. three aSSl~tants,
"We. have already begun to identify candiFreshmen players Avery Queen, Maurice
of .tb~ premier coUeget m the collnt;ty with ~fS,· satd he did ~ot know 1f Amaker was gom~. to dates that we feel will lead Seton Hall's pro- Searight and Mike Gotfredson said they .had
academics and athlecic:s,"
.
, •. be Michipns next toach, but· he had poot1ve gum into rhe future," Fogelson said, hoting heardAmabr was hired, but had not been told
1
Amaker will receive a guaranteec! tontract things to say about him. ·
that the Pirates have already begun a search for so direcdy.
!Of be.rw,en SSOO,OOO to $600,000 per year. . . "He's one of the brightest young minds in a new coach.
:With ·in~entives be could earii. u much ' u the business," Greene said. "He's a great
Ama~er spoke to the Seton Hall players on
S900,000 per se~n. the neWspaper reported. recruiter and he relates well with people. I Wednesday, said a source close to Seton Hall,

W.sconsln
names
~o Ryan as new men's head coach
..
MADISON, Wis. (AP) retired ·in November btcause
Bo Ryan ha~ waited all hii life of buniout.
to coach at Wisconsin. He. · The Badgers lost in the first
even applied nine years ago.
rounds of the Big Ten and
, · Stu Jackson got the job NCAA tournaments this sea~ack then, but Ryan was son after Bennett took them
):xpecteil to be named the to a ~ina! !'our ~ppearnnce a
I'Jadgets~ next coach at a news year ago.
~onference Thurs~y followThe 53-year-old Ryan is a
lng a meeting of the Wiscon- tormer Badgers assistant who
6in Athletic Board's personnel wanted the head Goaching job
l:ommlttee.
in 1992, but was beaten out by
i Ryan,: who .won four Jackson, who left for the NBA
:NCAA Division . Ill national in 1994 and was followed by
~hampioplhips ill 15 years at Stan Van Gundy. Bennett
!Wisconsin-Platteville, steppe&lt;!. repliced Van Gundy in 1995.
&lt;up to pjvisi9n I. witb Wiscon'Ryan met Tuesday night
lsin-Milwaukee two years ago. with athletic dire,tor Pat
He would replace Brad Richter, chancellor John
ISoder~e~g.
who
wasn't Wiley and athletic board
ln.tained .after going 16-10 in chairman DaVid McDonald,
~iace ;Of Dick Bennelfo, who spokesman Steve Malchow

!

said.
"Our people were very
impressed with Bo Ryan, but
to my knowledge, the job has .
not been offered yet;' Malchow said Wednesday.
Ryan didn't return a. message left· at his office Wednes·
day.
His record in two years at
Wiscohsin-Milwaukee was
30-27, .a turnaround for the
Panthers after five dismal seasons.Theywere 31-105 before
Ryan arrived.
·
Wisconsin-Milwauk~e ath!eric director Bud Haidet said
he would be sorry to lose
Ryan because "we're just get"
ting things rolling" with a program tha,t had faller. on hard
times.

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the beat·

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Melp Countyl

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Klllntltl McCUIIOu9h, R. Ph•.

992·2151 '

Charttlltlflll~ Ph.
Pi'tlcrlptlan rn.ll:l-2955
t 12 Eott Main Sltett

Pomeroy, Ohio

11119 •

Richter and Ryan met for
three hours Monday, the same
day Richter said Utah coach
and Wisconsin native Rick
Majerus withdrew from the
running for the Badgers job.
Ben Braun, another possibility for Wisconsin; agreed to
a four-year extension at California on Tu.esday. That left
Ryan as the only candidate
under serious consideration at
Wisconsin.
Richter said he wanted a
big-name coach with state ties
who could recruit compeiitively with the top programs

·Honeysuckle
Addison Pike
Myrtle
Rafferty
Polecat

to attract better athletes to
Madison.
Both Soderberg and Bennett suggested that would
entail lowering the academic
standards at Wisconsin, some"
thing Richter said he won't do
under any circumstances:
· Ryan worked as a Wasconsin assi~tant under coaches Bill
Cofield and Steve Yod~r before·
going to Wisconsin-Platteville,
where he won 353 games
from 1984-99. He was the
winningest coach of the 1990s
among NCAA basketball
teams at any level (266-26).

Lucky
Bulavllle Addison
McCully
Maddy Cemetery
Township #1083

Ryan had a base salary of
$115,000 at Wisconsin-Milwaukee, about $10,000 less
than Soderberg. Bennett had a
base salary of $146,212 and a
total compensation package of .
$356,212.

-TRIVIA
·Mark Harmon was voted Se•i·
est Man Alive in .1986. He
earned a different kind of honor
in 1996 by rescuing two teens
from a burning car.

Carmen
Hillview
Lila
Don

Also: Ellen St. Rt. 7 from house #1 037 to Cheshire
&amp; Georges CrMk Rd. from 36-1200

You may experience brief
service Interruptions.
Please be
assured we will do
everything to
keep Interruptions
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HOURS
Man- Frl8am ·lpm

Sal. Sam· 6pm ,
Sun. IOom - ~pm

COM~hAr.ter
A ~IUD WOJU..O COM~ANY

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�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Thunsday, March 21~ . 2001

Po.meroy, Middleport, Ohio
•

.Thul'ldly, iiarch at,

aGo1

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OHIO STATE BASKETBALL

Players trade places as spring wind.s~,d~
released utilityman EP. Santangelo.
with a 0.47 spring tnining ERA.
Pitcher Matt Clement and left fielder Eric
Pbillies &lt;l, Tiger• 3
;,
Owens were tn.ded from the San Diego Pad~es
At Lakeland, Aa., Dave Mlicki became the
to the Florida Marlins for right fielder Mark latest Detroit Tigers' player to get hurt when he
Kotsay.
was hit on the left knee by a grounder off the
Two minor leaguers also were traded in the bat of Pat Burrell. The injury was not consid,
five-player exchange. Right-hander Omar ered serious.
·
Ortiz went to Florida and outfielder Cesar
Royal. 6, Indians 0
,
Crespo to San Diego.
At Haines City, Aa., Jeff Suppan, Kanm
In exhibition games, it was New York Mets City's expected opening day starter, allowe(j
5, Los Angeles 3; Florida 5, Baltimore 3;Aclanta five hits in 5 1-3 shutout innings and jon Nun~
4, Houston 4 in nine innings; Texas 12, Min- nally homered for the second straight game.
Cardinals 11, Expos 3
1
nesota 4; Toronto 61 Pittsburgh 2; Boston 8,
Tampa Bay 0; Philadelphia 4, Detroit 3; .Kansas
At Jupiter, Fla., Darryl Kile, backed by a
City 6, Cleveland 0; St. Louis I 1, Montreal 3; grand slam from Jim Edmonds, gave up a two,
Cin~;innati 7, New York Yankees 3; Chicago run double to Lee Stevens in the first, then
White Sox 10, Anaheim 5; Arizona 9, San pitched 3 1-3 scoreless innings,
Francisco 8; Seattle 9, Colorado 9 in 10
Reds 7, Yankees 3
innings; Oakland 10, Milwaukee 9; and ChicaAt Tampa, Fla., Alex Ochoa homc;red and
go Cubs 5, San Diego 5 in 11 innings..
drove in four runs. Sid Fernandez allowed three
Mets 5, Dodgers 3
runs and three hits in four innings .for the Yan•
AtVero Beach, Fla. , Gagne gave up four runs kees, wlio have lost 11 of 15 games. ·,.
in six innings, and New York starter SteveTraWhite Sox 10,Angets·s i..
"
chsel went 3-for-3 with a home run while
At Tempe, Ariz., Tim Salmon hit ' his first
allowing just two runs · in six innings.
home run of the spring, and Kip Wells gave up
Marlins 5, Orioles 3
four runs and seven hits in five innings.
Diamondbacks 9, Giants 8 ·
At Melbourne, Fla:, Ryan Dempster allowed
three runs and seven hits in six innings.
At Tucson, Ariz., Danny Bautista hit a grand
Braves 4, Astros 4
slam and Damian Miller singled home the
At Kissimmee, Fla. , Scott Elarton allowed winning ruri in the ninth.
f~mr ru?s- three ear~d- and nine hits in .
M,r.riners 9, R.gckies 9
.. ,
SIX! .tnnn1gs, and Brad N;'smus hit a two-run ,, ~t }'ucsqn; ·Ar~z ., ~~ . Hall,IPI1!"1.'):~vf up
1
1
homer.
':,:
•
.
• seve.n .~un~;a':ld e1ght qits !li 'four u'l~~~"
.;.
Rangers 12, '!Wins &lt;l
Athletics 10, Brewers 9
At Phoenix, Jeremy Giambi had three hits
At Fort Myers, Fla., Ruben Mateo, Randy
Velarde, Scott Sheldon and Craig Monroe and dtove in three runs, including a two-run
homered. Mark Redman ' gave up eight ·runs double the seventh.
·
''
and 12 hits in three innin'gs.
Cubs 5, Padret S · I
1
Blue Jays 6, 'Pirates 2
At Peoria, Ariz., 'Jon Lieber outdueled
At Dunedin, Fla., ChriS Michalak pitched six Woody Williams in a matchup of opei)ing day
shutout innings.
'"
pitchers, alloWing ·two hits · in · five ·shutou't
Red Sox 8 •. D~vil Rays 0
innings.
.... '
At St. Pe~ersburg, Fb:, Pedro Martinez
· · · ·· ·
allowed four hits in four ,ihnings, leaving him
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HAINES CITY, Fla. (AP)
- C. C. Sabathia will have the
baseball and his immediate
future in his left hand.
S.abathia, the Cleveland
Indians' top pitching prospect,
will make his final spring
training start on Thursday
against the Kansas City Royals.
If he does well, the 20-yearold left-bander will likely win
a spot in the Indians' starting
rotation.
. If things don't work out,
Sabathia will be sent to TripleA Buffalo to start the year.
"This is definitely a big
performance for C.C.," Indians manager Charlie Manuel
said Wednesday. "Seventy percent of me wants to grab C. C.
and say, 'Get on the plane.' But
the rest of me realizes that this
is still a young pitcher who has
never thrown more than 90
pitches in a game, and there
are still some things he needs
to work on."
The. 6-foot-7, 265-pound
Sabathia, who has never
pitched higher than DoubleA, is in contention for a spot as
the club's No. 4 starter along
with Steve Karsay, Tim Drew
and Steve Woodard.

'

The Indians will break
camp after playing the Royals
and may head north with as
many as 35 players still on
their roster. Teams have until
midnight on Saturday to finalize their 25-man rosters.
1'0anuel said the ch,Jb 'has
scheduled a stiff meeting for
Friday iuorning when they
hope to decide on their pitching staff and make final cuts.
"I'd like to have the rotation set by then;' Manuel said.
There are also issues to sort
out with Cleveland's relief
corps.
lfSabathia, who is 1-1 with
a 4.21 ERA this spring and
Drew or Woodard join the
rotation, Karsay would be sent
back to the bullpen. Karsay has
been a long reliever, closer and
set-up man the past two seasons and the Indians may
decide he's more valuable
pitching in relief. ,

Karsay's stock as a' reliever
has risen in recent days with
shaky outings by Sean
DePaula, Justin Speier and
Woodard, who were all perceived to be locks to make the
team before camp opened.
DePaula gave up one run
- a homer - and two hits
with two walks in a 6-0 loss to
Kansas City on Wednesday,
raising his spring ERA to
7.11. Speier has given up. 18
hits in 11 1-3 innings this
spring. Woodard gave up nine
runs a.nd 1I hits in his last out~
ing and Willie Blair's ERA
with one day left in the exhibition season is 7.98.
Blair, who can pitch as a
long reliever or spot starter,
retired all four batters he faced
Wednesday.
"There are things Willie
· can do;· Manuel said. "He has
experience and he' can chew
up innings for you. He's still in

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Bob Wickman have .all pitched · tllne· at designated· hitter and
well in relief this spring, and so · outfielder Jacob Cruz; •who Is
have youngsters David Riske;·· out of options, may. also· DH.~
and Roy Smith - who both
Fryman's absence alSo
could make the roster.
opens another roster spot with
Cleveland's decision to put, infielder John 'McDonald and
All-Star thj.ql base~an Travis ~\fieldFr Marty Co~ th,~
Fryman ' P,n, \h~ , .1~ 7 day ,dit · :~eadi.~&amp;~.•ndid,ate~ . . :\ ~.
abled list with a torn elbow
Cordova, a former AL
ligament
means
Russell Rookie of the Year, is batting
Branyan will be at third on .450 this spring . .
opening day.
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With Fryman o~'t, .Wit
CorderQ will get . the' most
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NOTICE .OF SECOND PUB~IC .HEARING·
The Meigs County Commissioners Intend to apply to the Ohio
Department of Development, for funding under the. FV' 2001. Community ·
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Water and Sewer Program, a federally
funded program· administered by the State. Maximum project funding
available Is $600,000 for Fiscal Year 2000 CDBG funding, provided the
County meets applicable requirements. ·on September 18, 20001 the
County conducted Ita first public hearing to Inform cltlzana about the
CDBG Water arid Sewer program, how It may be used, wtiat actlvltlei are
.,
eligible, and other Important program requll•ments.
!•

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A second public hearing will be held on April 1o, 2001 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Columbia Fire Station, SR 143, Columbia Township, to give citizens 'an
opportunity to review and comment on the County'a propaaad CDBG' FV'
2001 Water and Sewer Project .
' . ·~

·~&gt;:Or

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Based on . ~Jh citizen Input and local officials' assessment of' the
County's neej:ls, the County ·ls propoflng .to qn~ertake the following
CDBG Wate~'flnd sewer actlvltlt~ .fQr'F~~year 2001:
'\ ' .

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ACTIVITY: \'f,ter and Sewer· ~ater line ~enaloil: '$1,115~~ ·::':.'(
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SR 143, Mfount Union, Mudfork, Glbaon, SF,' 692 ind .'Ei)ackY.I..-&amp;'Cia
Roads;
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CDBGfurt4lhg: $600,000 . ,~:,
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ARC: $260;doc:i
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NATIONAL~ OBJECTIVE: Low to moderat6 lnconi. Households (Area)

Cltlz~na.lencoura~ed t~ ,~~nd,.thi~ meetl~g on Ap~l·· 10; 2o6;;to

express .U »Ir views and comments on the county's proposed CDBO' FV'
2000 Watl!l.•nd Sewer Appllcltlon; Written cOmments will be accepted
until 4:00,.p.m., April 10, 2001, and may ba mailed to the Meigs County
Courthoua'e, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
•

J.,

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Middleport

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If I part clpant will . naed auxiliary, aida ' (Interpreter, tiralfllid, ·Or .tllped
material, .-aalliltlve na,enlng devlcl!, other) to. do a dlaablllty, pie•••
contact Gloria Kloss, Clerk, prior to April 10, 2001, at (740) 992·2895 In
order to1enaura that your nMds will ba •ccomodatad. The Columbia Fire
Station I~ a handlcapped.accelllble facility. ·
,.
· "i

992·2156
\

the hunt."
i'
Manuel has ' been disappointed in his pitching of late.
"We've been trying to give
away jobs," Manuel said. "We
want guys to show us so_mething to take those jo~~j I
don't .know if they've , ,~~n
trying too hard or what . .!iut
everyone we've put out there
seems to have a hard time get. 1 ..
ting guys out.''
Veterans Paul Shuey, Steve
Reed. Ricardo Rincon.''
,. and

~.'/Wi!'.·

I .Basebal.l Cleats
· .t Softball Cleats
.t Batting Gloves
./Bat Bags
~Score books

~

'li\
I

Sabathia coulctwin starting role ,.,..,.
, -.. ~,~~

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IND.IANS NOTEBOO·K

r --t;·r:.

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l'Jd''''

t(i

·

Jeff Tho'rnton, President
Melga County Commlaalonera

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The Dilly Sentinel • Page B 3

•

SPRING TRAINING

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A day after Garciapar,a said the probability
Glenallen Hill and Omar Olivares found of surgery was "extremely high;' he and
new addresses as teams got ready to set their Boston Red Sox general manager Dan
opening-day rosters.
Duquette had a 1 112 hour conference call
Hill, a.key addition as the New York Yankees with team doctor Bill Morgan and decided to
won their third straight World Series last year, postpone the decision on surgery a little
was traded to the Anaheim Angels on Wednes- longer.
. day for Double-A outfielder Darren Blakely.
"It's that last gleam of hope, I guess," Garcia" I think he was just happy that something parra said in Fort Myers, Fla.
was done," Yankees manager Joe Torre said.
.If GarCiaparra has surgery, he 'lllikely miss at/
"He's been hanging around here for a week or least 2 I /2 months.
so knowing somebody was going to go."
Boston newspapers were reporting that Carl
Hill's role became superfluous when New Everett has been fined and suspended. The outYork signed free agent outfielder Henry . fielder was sent home Tuesday for missing the
Rodriguez, acquired backup Michael Coleman team bus for the second time this spring, then
from Cincinnati last week and shifted Chuck failed to show up for scheduled . Red Sox
Knoblauch from second base to left field.
. workouts Wednesday.
·
.
The newspapers, citing club sources, said
After making 'the deal,Anaheim released Jose
Canseco, in camp with the Angels on a minor Everett has been fined three days' pay and susleague contract, but slowed by injuries this pended for· the team's spring training game
spnng.
Thursday against Minnesota .
"Jose worked real hard getting himself into
Larry Reynolds, Everett's agent, said he has
shape." Angels manager Mike Sciascia said. "It contacted the Major League Players Associawas just a matter of us getting a guy that can be tion in New York. Under terms of the colleca little more durable with an explosive bat."
tive bargaining agreement, the union can file a
Olivares, who lost to Cory Lidle in the com- grievance on behalf of a player for any amount
petition to be Oakland's fifth starter, was trad- above $500.
ed to pitching-depleted Pittsburgh for a player
At Kissimmee, Fla., Greg Maddux was struck
to be named.
in the foot by a hard grounder and could miss
Olivares is in the final ' season of a contract the season opener for Atlanta.
"It's sore, but I don't think it's that . bad,"
that will pay hir,n $4 million this year. The A's
will pay about half of Olivares' salary.
.
Maddux·.said..
With three Pirates starting pitchers out for ai
The ifl1pact cut a toe a~d split a toenail on
least another month with injuries - Kris Ben- ,Maddux's left foot. He recovered to throw out
son (elbow), Jason Schmidt (rib cage pull) and Houston's Glen Barker to end the second
Francisco Cordova (elbow) Olivares inning, but limped off the field.
becomes Pittsburgh's No.4 starter.
.
Ramon Martinez asked for and received his
"He's a guy who's been around and won't be unconditional release after the Dodgers picked
overwhelmed. He knows how to pitch, and we up Eric Gagne as their fifth starter.
"This was hard. We love Ramon," general
need players like that," Pirates manager Lloyd
McClendon said.
'
manager Kevin Malone. "It was a difficult decic
Nomar Garciaparra will rest his sore right sion. We just thought Eric earned 'it."
wrist a few more days in a last hope that time, · The Dodgers traded pitcher Mike Judd to
not surgery, is what's needed.
Tampa Bay for a player to be named and

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·confident about Buckeyes future
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Jim O'Brien
started this season looking for ways to replace
his three leading scoren from a year earlier and
continue to build the dormant Ohio State basketball program he inherited in 1997.
With Scoonie Penn, Michael Redd and
George Reese gone, the Buckeyes' offense got
stronger as the seuon prograued. They reached
the NCAA tournament and won at least 20
games for the third stnight seuoh. · .
O'Brien will spend this offseason looking
for ways to replace 6-foot-11 center Ken Johnson, the Big Ten's career-leader in blocked
shots.
• How will O'Brien do it? He isn't sure. But
he isn't worried, either.
"A year ago at this time, if
would have
~sked me that question 1 we would have said
'How' in God's name are we going to replace
Scoonie, Michael and George.' And sontebow
it gets done," the Buckeyes' coach said Wednes.
day. "I think that we have a galling hole that we
have to fill with Ken's departure, bui you never
know how these things are going to work out."

you

Without a double-figure scorer returning
for this season, the Buckeyes went 20-11 and
finished third in the Bjg Ten . Brian Brown
averaged a team-leading 14.5 points ·a game,
and guards Brent Darby (9.6) and . Bohan
Savovic (8.9) also boosted their scoring .averages.
O'Brien said their improved play and the
success of the team since he took over has been
overmadowed by Ohio State's first-round loss
in the NCAA tournament to Utah State.
·:were we disappointed in our last gam~ and
how it ended? Wi.t hout question. But that one
game is not going to have me look back with
any regrets whatsoever," O'Brien said.
"If you're going to look at that one game
and then try to judge what we've done on that
game, I don't buy that at all. I really don't want
to hear that. These kids played hard all year
long."
They'll have to p.lay harder next season - at
least on defense.
Johnson is so quick and his arms are so long
that he alters shots that he can't block. He kept

Ohio State opponents on the perimeter, where
the Buckeyes' guards looked for steals.
Brown, a co-captain, says that will change
next season without Johnson guarding the basket.
"I don't think our coach is going to gamble
as much as he would when Kenny's in the
game," Brown said.
·
Swingman Sean Connolly said he expects
Ohio State to stay aggressive on defense but
"it's going to be a lot tougher next year.
"We have to keep our guys in front of us,"
Connolly said. "When guys get beat, we don't
have that presence back there to block the shot
or scare thetn away from taking it."
O'Brien hasn't worked out all of next season's defensive schemes, but he expects his
players to be able to play better ma~-to-man
defense. He also hopes younger frontcourt
players such as Velimir Radinovich ·and Matt
Marinchik get bigger and stronger.
The players will begin offseason strength
training on Monday. They'll lift weights four
days a week and will be able to meet with

coaches for "individual instruction," O'Brien
said.
Ten days of practice in August and a trip to
play in Europe later that month should help as
weU, he said.
.
· "I think we will be pretty talented and have
a lot of depth on the perimeter, but how
quickly the younger kids develop up front is
·going to be a major factor in how well we do,"
he said.
O'Brien also is willing to let his three highly touted incoming freshman - Brandon
Fuss-Cheatham, Terence Dials and Matt .
Sylvester - compete for playing time.
Fuss-Cheatham, who scored 2,280 points
for Blackhawk High School in Beaver Falls.
Pa. , could challenge Brent Darby for the starting point guard spot next season.
"He's going to help our depth," 0'13rien
said of Fuss-Cheatham. "He's certainly going
to help us at that position. Is he going to be the
guy? I really don't know."

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COLLEGE BASKETBALL
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Amaker heads to Michigan,·signs·five~year contrad

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Michigan
Michigan contacted Rick Pitino about its played against him when I was at DePaul and who spoke with Amaker.
needed two weeks to find the coach it w:ma to. opening, but he chose to coach at Louisville.
he was at Duke and he's been a fitst-dass guy
"He's going to be introduced at Michigan
Amaker will replace Brian Ellerbe, who was · ever since I met him." ·
on Friday," added the source, who spoke on the
lead the Wolverines' buketball team.
· It was Seton Hall, however, that revealed on fired two weeks ago after posting a 62-60
Seton Hall was ranked as high as No. 7 early condition of anonymity.
Wedne~y that Tommy Amaker was leaving to . record in four seasons, including a 25-9 mark in the season, but the team fell apart down the
In Ann Arbor, officials at Michigan said final
take the Michigan job.
his first year. The Wolverines were 12-19, 15- stretch and didn't qualify for the Big East post· details were being worked out to hire a
"We appreciate alllilat Tommy hu done i:o 14 and 10-18 the past three seasons and didn't season tournament until it beat Connecticut in replacement for Ellerbe.
position our buketball pnigram among the finish better than eighth in the Big Ten.
its regular season finale.
"Bill Martin (Michigan athletic director) is
best in the nation," Seton Hall athletic director
Amaker, who will turn 36 in June, was 68The Pirates finished 16-15 after losing to currendy working with UM legal counsel and
Jeff Fogelson iaid. "t'm sll,c that he will do the 55 in four seasons at Seton .Hall. The fqrmer Alabama in the opening round of the NIT, the is putting together a contract that we hope can
!'arne tot Michigan."
· .
Duke star led the Pintes to four postseason team's third trip to that tournament under be announC'ed shortly," Michigan athletic
department spokesman Bruce Madej said.
Amaker agreed to a.five-year contract with appearances, the highlight being a surprising Amaker.
Michigan, according 10; The betrolt News and ttip to the. round qf 16 in last year's NCAA
Leading candidates to succeed Amaker. at · Madej referred specific questions about
Seton Hall included Skip Prosser, who led Amaker to a Seton Hall press release announcI
10llfnamen.
..
ESPN.
"1'his is an honor to be asked ·to be ·a.coach
Michigan's assistant coaches were not fired Xavier to the NCAA tournament this season. ing Amaker's resignation to take the Michigan
and teacher at · such a preitigious school as dong with Ellerbe, but it will be up to the next Fogelson was Prosser's boss when he worked as job. Madej would neither confirm nor deny its
Mich~,S4n1" Amaker cold the . News. '':1'!1\. coach whether t~ey wjJl be retained.
.
AD at Xavier.
accuracy.
thtill~d-~ca11 ~e Michl~· 11 Gnt-c4sa a~d ~~e.
.Terenc.e Green,e, on~ of the. three aSSl~tants,
"We. have already begun to identify candiFreshmen players Avery Queen, Maurice
of .tb~ premier coUeget m the collnt;ty with ~fS,· satd he did ~ot know 1f Amaker was gom~. to dates that we feel will lead Seton Hall's pro- Searight and Mike Gotfredson said they .had
academics and athlecic:s,"
.
, •. be Michipns next toach, but· he had poot1ve gum into rhe future," Fogelson said, hoting heardAmabr was hired, but had not been told
1
Amaker will receive a guaranteec! tontract things to say about him. ·
that the Pirates have already begun a search for so direcdy.
!Of be.rw,en SSOO,OOO to $600,000 per year. . . "He's one of the brightest young minds in a new coach.
:With ·in~entives be could earii. u much ' u the business," Greene said. "He's a great
Ama~er spoke to the Seton Hall players on
S900,000 per se~n. the neWspaper reported. recruiter and he relates well with people. I Wednesday, said a source close to Seton Hall,

W.sconsln
names
~o Ryan as new men's head coach
..
MADISON, Wis. (AP) retired ·in November btcause
Bo Ryan ha~ waited all hii life of buniout.
to coach at Wisconsin. He. · The Badgers lost in the first
even applied nine years ago.
rounds of the Big Ten and
, · Stu Jackson got the job NCAA tournaments this sea~ack then, but Ryan was son after Bennett took them
):xpecteil to be named the to a ~ina! !'our ~ppearnnce a
I'Jadgets~ next coach at a news year ago.
~onference Thurs~y followThe 53-year-old Ryan is a
lng a meeting of the Wiscon- tormer Badgers assistant who
6in Athletic Board's personnel wanted the head Goaching job
l:ommlttee.
in 1992, but was beaten out by
i Ryan,: who .won four Jackson, who left for the NBA
:NCAA Division . Ill national in 1994 and was followed by
~hampioplhips ill 15 years at Stan Van Gundy. Bennett
!Wisconsin-Platteville, steppe&lt;!. repliced Van Gundy in 1995.
&lt;up to pjvisi9n I. witb Wiscon'Ryan met Tuesday night
lsin-Milwaukee two years ago. with athletic dire,tor Pat
He would replace Brad Richter, chancellor John
ISoder~e~g.
who
wasn't Wiley and athletic board
ln.tained .after going 16-10 in chairman DaVid McDonald,
~iace ;Of Dick Bennelfo, who spokesman Steve Malchow

!

said.
"Our people were very
impressed with Bo Ryan, but
to my knowledge, the job has .
not been offered yet;' Malchow said Wednesday.
Ryan didn't return a. message left· at his office Wednes·
day.
His record in two years at
Wiscohsin-Milwaukee was
30-27, .a turnaround for the
Panthers after five dismal seasons.Theywere 31-105 before
Ryan arrived.
·
Wisconsin-Milwauk~e ath!eric director Bud Haidet said
he would be sorry to lose
Ryan because "we're just get"
ting things rolling" with a program tha,t had faller. on hard
times.

I

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the beat·

loc:lls~

coverapfor

Melp Countyl

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~Q'
· aY. CHAIN STORES'
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THAT THEY
HIVE
IPTIIN PRICESI

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Subscribe
today
,,
Klllntltl McCUIIOu9h, R. Ph•.

992·2151 '

Charttlltlflll~ Ph.
Pi'tlcrlptlan rn.ll:l-2955
t 12 Eott Main Sltett

Pomeroy, Ohio

11119 •

Richter and Ryan met for
three hours Monday, the same
day Richter said Utah coach
and Wisconsin native Rick
Majerus withdrew from the
running for the Badgers job.
Ben Braun, another possibility for Wisconsin; agreed to
a four-year extension at California on Tu.esday. That left
Ryan as the only candidate
under serious consideration at
Wisconsin.
Richter said he wanted a
big-name coach with state ties
who could recruit compeiitively with the top programs

·Honeysuckle
Addison Pike
Myrtle
Rafferty
Polecat

to attract better athletes to
Madison.
Both Soderberg and Bennett suggested that would
entail lowering the academic
standards at Wisconsin, some"
thing Richter said he won't do
under any circumstances:
· Ryan worked as a Wasconsin assi~tant under coaches Bill
Cofield and Steve Yod~r before·
going to Wisconsin-Platteville,
where he won 353 games
from 1984-99. He was the
winningest coach of the 1990s
among NCAA basketball
teams at any level (266-26).

Lucky
Bulavllle Addison
McCully
Maddy Cemetery
Township #1083

Ryan had a base salary of
$115,000 at Wisconsin-Milwaukee, about $10,000 less
than Soderberg. Bennett had a
base salary of $146,212 and a
total compensation package of .
$356,212.

-TRIVIA
·Mark Harmon was voted Se•i·
est Man Alive in .1986. He
earned a different kind of honor
in 1996 by rescuing two teens
from a burning car.

Carmen
Hillview
Lila
Don

Also: Ellen St. Rt. 7 from house #1 037 to Cheshire
&amp; Georges CrMk Rd. from 36-1200

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

HOURS
Man- Frl8am ·lpm

Sal. Sam· 6pm ,
Sun. IOom - ~pm

COM~hAr.ter
A ~IUD WOJU..O COM~ANY

.

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t. ,

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Thui'May,lliarch 21, 2001

......... The Ddy Sentinel

Thuraday March 29 2001
510

HOUiehold
Goode

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio
Pete for Sale

560

'today's Scoreboard

App lf'ICtl
AeconO 1 oned
Waalle 1 0 ye s Ranges Ret
g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
•niHd We Se New Mey ag Ap
p ances F ench C
Maytag

740-446

779~

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 5

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DoNaa W Portland 84
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0 A C From $2 500-$1 2~ 0001 8%
Ave age Sit Ont !'lou 1pproval
Ca FCC S lOll f 81 888108
3379

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
o $500 11an y by phono 1
817 EAALYPA~ Lief 750005
1sl ADVANCE FREE

TURNEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL BECURin /Sill?
No Fee Unlou Wo Wlnl
1
582 3345

sea

tttlaFode181 Fill' Houlfng Act
10
the
ol1818""""'- k 1111(111
ID-"anrfiNIIIOIK&gt;O

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11m11a11on or dfOct'"'lnatiOI•
oolor rwflglon
- falllllfll olatul or nollanol
origin or 1/'f 1 - to

-fOriiOIknuwloouly ICIIIPI

II fn Yiolltlon of the
loW 0 \ 1 ' - ... hMby

lnfonnedthltd-....
_ . . . , fn IIIII new pepr

OWN A COMPUTER? Pu I lo
wo k $25-$75 hr PT FT F ee on
ne cata oo a www ea nag ea n
coma com o cal 1 800-770 1984

118 IMI!allfe on an oquol
opportunity-

FINANCIAL

210

Buslnsss
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecommends that you do bus
ness w h people you know and
NOT o send money th ough the
ma un you have nveat gated
lhe ol1enng
A VEND NG GOLCMINE ACT
NOW Mach nes vend He shey
candy AND phone cards (2 5e

mn US)Ea~$800 lwkyWo~
6 9 slwk G ea ocatlons B22
65!1-177~ fnv req F n avan
ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE
$0 Down
Candy VEND NG oulo
NelS $48 000 FREE nlo Toll

Free
I B77-494 8695 2Ailrl

Church basement sa • at Ma
v•at Outteacn Chu ch on Ae b1
Ad n Clie08 Salu day 9 3 1o o
ol m ac ema bake good• hOI
dogo

c-

v

Oa age 11 e tn •• lam
one
day on y Satu day Ma ch 3 11
lam 1 An que gtaaswart &amp;
crocks &amp; baw 1 qu tl I t unk
llono 1111 c o ~eo o d Goodyea
• gn &amp; Ma I Pouc~ algn old Mlck
ey Mouse wa ch Mickey Mouat
tt e book old c~ d a oy op
too 1 lots or t uff Ra n o ahln1
Turn of RT 7 a Me gs Memo y
Go clono corna of Eogll Rlclge &amp;
Pine G ove Rd n1a r Fl'lle Po n1s
are•

Pt Pluunt

a VIcinity

illnffh Rumma~ Salo Mach 31
AI Alhton Elemln 1 y S.m 3pm
All P OCIIda Go Towortl Funo 11
Eocpenoeo For May Langdon

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Pu I 10 WO kl 125/~r S751h FT/
PT FREE In o BOO 871 804~ a•l

eo www lahomtblz com

WORK FROM HOME
$501).$1500 PI mo. PIT
$2000 18000 permo FIT

No axpe IInce needed
TranngPfOYklld

·~-

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No lx
pe •nee netdl&lt;l au c~ COL
I a n ng proorarn eva lab 1 Ea n
$38 000 + IIIYoor 5 STAR I
800,.48 8168 Expo oncoo d v
oro holding Clloa A ca 8()0.958

2353
A NEW CAR~ER E•om lnforma
ton Pea a Job1 G
Pav Btn
eflts Camp Itt Otta 1 Ca t
88.728 fl083 X 701

••t

Someone To Stay W 1'1 E der y
Wom1n In Her Home F day
Evtn ng T Monday Mo n ng

310 Home• for Sills
$0 OOWN HOMESI GOV f &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY COWNI OK
CRED Tl FOR LISTINGS CALL
I IJ00.338.fl020 Old 98 I
I I 12 sfory 3 bed oom bOih big
k tchan new y remade ed an 1
acre or and w 2 story garagt
Dyoav 1e Ad $55 000 74D-7•2
2264
3 Bedroom 2 Bar~ Comp tit y
Remo dod L kt new Hear Pump
Ser ou1 lnqu rea Only (740)2455064
3 Bedroom Ful Blllomonl Lalgo
~01 Park 0 VI 116 L blrly
148 500 Appolnlment Only
(140)37...122

(304)875 3523
URGENTLY NEE CEO p asme
dOnors ea n $45 o S&amp;O fo 2 or 3
hou 1 wnkty Ca Sea Tee 740
592 8651

Remolded 3 Bodtoom V(ood
F ooro I I 2 Both B11ullful
000
Ffroplaol 2 Car Olrl(ll
(740)38&amp;-8101

.,a

Th et lledroom two blth homt
on 2 ocreo wlllt rfYI frorffago •
lacOad go ogo 1118 DOO 740
fM9-27~

320

Mobile Horne•
for Sele

1H5 14•70 W th I hi E~pondo
3 114room Conko Air Mull lo
(740):111 10011
WORK FROM HOME Earn
$1500 p lro $5000 f 1 monr~ 1
CA~L TODAY I 800 895 021e
OA www work1 omt'IOIM:2-t7 com
WORK "10M HOME Earn
$~00 $7000 mcnr~ PT FT Full
T 1 n ng, Free nformat on Call
Now! 1.8()0.290 8914
www~tamscom

v

New And Used FlJ n u e So a
Be ow Ho day nn Kanauga We
Se G ave Monuman s And
Vases 740 446-4782

1982 14XIO 3 BR 2 Bolh I I
AC&lt;II Of Land Pond Barn And
01/ogi $43 000 (740)441-D3fle
78 14x70 Boyvlow (w/Ctnl Now
8 nco 87 CIA Vjolor Hooltr
Furnooo Wllh Fro~l Poroh 8hoo
&amp;
Wood Fenco
Loll Of
Romooo11ng- Mull 111 N ooo
(300)8715-300e

oa.,..

Melg• 11 Ale..nder 2
AtexBnder
0 0 0 0 1 0 - 2-6-4
Meigs
002 295 ll -18 72
Lewellyn (L and Mclaugh n Jeffers
and Harris

FARM SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVESTOCK

New 640 New Ho and Net
W ap Ba e Command w de
Sweep 4KS Ro s Cos $ S 500
Se S 3 500 A C 333 4 Row N:J
T Co n Plan e E~~:ce ent Cond
on
$3 000 Andy
Sge

Me g1 4 Alexander 2
Alexande
011000 o- 27
Meigs
300 002 )( - 47-o
Ross (L) and L C Gngst&gt;y Lewis (W
and S ewart

304 937 20 B

a.

Golden Sta e at Washington 7 p m
ndl8na a Atlanta 7 30 p m
Utah at San Antonio S p m
Mam at M twaukee 8 p m
Phoen x a Houston 8 30 p m
Boston a Chicago 8 30 p m
New York at Vancouve 10 p m
Frldly • Gam•
New Jersey a Toronto 7 p m
Go den Sta e a Ph lade phaa 7 p m
lndanaa Boson 730pm
Denve at Chartone 7 30 p m
Ortando a Oe1roit e p m
C eveiand a Utah 9 p m
New YorK at Portland o p m
LA ClippeJBa Seatte 10pm
Oa as a LA. Lakes 10 30pm
M nnesota at Sac amen o 10 30 p m

610 Farm Equipment

I aaa.a:z•:l-4~

IPRO BASiili* I I
Exhibition Ba1ebal
American Le1gue

L m ted

o, No Crtd t? Govern--

ment Bank Flnlnct Only At OaK
wood In Barboursville WV 304

NCAA Bllketb.lll Tournament
AI A Glance
By The Aa~oclattd Pre11

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lot mode cl•• ance aave up to
$8 625 wl h any home check u&amp;
out were dea Ina Cole 1 Mob e
HomH US SO Eul A-1 011

MUST SELL 3 Bldroom 2 Bal~
Home No Old Contract To As
tume Jut A Rttlab t Pa ty To
Mako Monlh y Paymonr I 888

921989e

t and 2 bedroom apartments tu
n entd and unfu n shed eecu ty
deposit requ ed no pets 740
992 2218

New 14 tt w de $499 down only
S199 per man ca now 1BOO
e&amp;l.e777

Now 18 fl wldl $499 par mon
on y $270 pe mon con now \
800181 B777
Now doub 1 wldl 3 br 2 bo
S9JI oo down only 1295 por
mon Cll now 1 BOO.eil-lm
Now FleeiWood 14x70 $16 999 00
3 Bodroom 2 Bat~ I 877777
4170

I

n
f

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8UDOIT PRICES AT JACK
ION ESTATES 52 Wes wood
D ve from $297 to $383 Wa k o
si'IOp &amp; moves
1•0 446
2588 Equal Houa ng Oppo&lt; un ry

ca

0

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
DELL COMPUTERS Even w h
8SS than pe ec c ed
822
477 90 6 Code AC 4 www omc
solu ons com

New Flutwood th tt bedroom
wo bat~ 5855 down S199 58
month 011 740-11112 ~167

ONLY til5 qp DOWN and
$ f H 58 1 monilr moves you 1n1o
a New 3 b1droom12 bath home
Cal for dllail 740 385-43117

Stay

$1 000 BACK Ton A Co d
e 2 Ton Co
ne Se
n
s a ad $2 295 $ 000 Back
$ 295 Ne P ce F ee Es rna es
Ca Fo Quo as On 0 he S zes
I You Don
Ca
Us We
Bo h Lose Mob e Homes Ou
Spec a y 740 446 6308 800
291 0098

Am sh Buggy And M n a u e
Pony (740)256
8

m

330 Fernll for Sele

Form For Solo By Owner
Willi I 500 f!&lt;l Ftol 3 lloclroom I
1 2 Bath Home w lh Oak T lm
And Largo Kitchin Hao A Large
Go age And Baln W th 40t Tl I
able Ac ee E•ce ent Location
N11r A o Orondo
Asking
$129 BOD (740)3liD-02&amp;9 Even
lngo

340 Bualnesa and
Building•
Eslabl shoo Fino T .~ rl And
gropfllc Shop lnc!Udoo ~II Equ p
monl Clltnll And Off Ct Tralltr
(300)4111-\t:Ze

R

Fu n shed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apa t
menta Clean No Pe s No Smok
ng Rtlerenctl &amp; Otpos Ae
qu ed
Ut t es Fu n sned
(740)448-1519

E
D

Gractoua v na and 2 bedroom
ope lmtnll 11 VINoga Menor and
A ve sldt Apartments In Middle
po I F om S27B $348 Ca 740
992 5014 Equa Housing Oppo
tunlllea

Now Taking App ca ons 35
W1s1 2 Bedroom Townno~.~se
Apa fments Includes Wate
Sewage Trash $350 Mo 740
448.fl008

4 77 Aerts N11t lnteruct on Of

AIV'I Bend P ace Now Accep ng
Appllcat ona fo 1 Bed oom Hud
Subo dod Aparrmonr fo Elde ty
and D oab od eoe (304)882

Watson Road Ano Rodney P kt
Quiet Privett Wllh Barn Croak
woods Dull H g~woy Accan
10 Mlnutet From Haaf)llal
Pha macy Bank Oroo•ry Thea
lar Etc 140 000 (30.)875 •222
Aller 8pm Wllltdlys

Wo ohou1o/ Garage On
Approxlmololy 2 Ac o Lot Grear
P ace To Build Sewar Wottr &amp;
E eclr c Eotlbllahod (740)379
2AIO
Fo Sll 1o 952 Acru on
Fr
~a:f• Rd crown c ty
(740)
or (740)38•9336

•n:Jl

LOOking To Buy A Now Home?
Don t Have Land? W. Dolll Hurry
On~ 10 Loll Ltft 300 736-12fiS
N co Woodtd L01 on Roure sas
ROdnly (Unro.llolod) 112 000
(740)245 eu8

380

R..l Eatate
W•ntecf

Trade
in

J"4tw Haven one bedroom ur

loke
Acres
Home
Gal a
Road

13 Acrfl Wllh Bnullfu
V ew Sittl S!D 000 18
Wllh Large Loki IAobllo
W lh Add On S7U 500
Counry On Blackrop
(740)311-8178

3121 Or (304)882-3274

Ta 1 Townhouse Apa tmen s
Vtry Spac ous 2 e,ed ooms 2
Floo o CA
112 Ba h Fu y Car
poled Adu 1 Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pal o S!arl $365 Mo No Pe s
Ltaae Plus Secur tv Oepos t Re
qulred Days 740 446 3481
Evon nga 740 3ti7 0502 740
446-0101
1W n AlvlrTowtro now accepl ng
applk:allonolo I BR
HUO subsidized Bpi fo e derly
and disabled EOH (304)6758879

460 Space for Rent
Downtown Second Avenue Nea
Cou ll'louse And C fy Bu ld ng
Nicely Deco a ed AJC 3 Rooms
Build ng By I so f 448 2nd Ave
740)448-9539

Nlllonallnv t1tton Tournament
At A Glance

By The Assoct.ted Prn•
A Tlme1 EST
Sernlfln111
At Madlaon Square Glrden
NawYork
Tuesday March 27
Semlf n1la
A abama 74 Detro 63
Tu sa 72 Memph s 64
Chlmplonthlp Round
Thurldly March 28
At Madlaon Squere Garden
NewYort
Third PIIC8
Dot oH 25 ) vs Memph s (20.15 6
pm
Chomplonohlp
Aobama(25 IO)vs Tusa (2511) 9
pm

NEW ~ND USEC STEEL S ee
Beams P pe Reba Fo Cone e e
Ang e Channa Fa Ba S ee
G .a ng Fo D a ns 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways L&amp;L Sr: ap Me as
740 446-7300

Oak Baby Bed Chang ng Tab e
Infant Ca Sea 99 500 Sc amb e
.t5 Whee a
$4500 96 Honda
300EX 4 Whee e S2000 080
(740)44 1349

the

c
l
H
TRANSPORTATION

RESIDENT AL HOME OWNERS
Tappan H E c ency 90 ~ Ga s
Fu naces 0 Fu nar:es 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng
eoo 872 5967 www orvb comlben
nell
Sawm $3 795 New Supe Lum
be ma a 2000 a ge capac es
mo e opt ons Manulac u e o
sawm s edge s and sk dde s
NORWOOD NDUSTAIES 252
Sonw D ve Bu a o NY 4225
FREE no ma on
800 578
I 363 EXT 200 U

710 Autos for Sale

750 Boats • Motors
for Sale

SO DOWN CARS PO CE M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS 129
MO 24 MO S @ 9 9 ~ FOR
ST NGS CALL BOO 45 0050
9 c 96 2

1988 Jeep Cha okee 5 Speed
4 0 l e 6 Cy G ea Shape
Runs G ea $2300 OBQ 993
Fo d Ae OS a Van L ke New E~e:
ce en Cond on $2900 080
740)446 3649 Leave Massage

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
Budget Priced T 1nsm u ons
A Types Access To Ove
0 000 T ansm ss ons T ansfe
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce 339
3 65

790

Rtol 111•1• woproo I om forced
our of my hOiilt for highWay m
provomonl Looking lor Old farm
house In Mell:ia County w th
ICI81gt 0111 74b-7t7.f303 740

s
s
I
f
I

E
0
S!

CO!cago

2

58

171

32

We11em Confarence
M dwell DM•Ion
W
L
Pet

GB
2
704
U!o~
23 871 2 I 2
oauas
25 648
4
M nne.so a
29 592
8
Houston
32
549
1
Denve
3B 472 16 2
Vancouve
52 278 30 I 2
Pacific D v alon
W
L Pet
GB
Sacramento
46 22 l!fl6
LA Laker&amp;
47 25 653
2
Porttand
46 25 648 2 I 2
Phoen K
43 27 6 4
5
Saatt e
40 34 541
0
LA C ppers
26 46
361
23
Golden State 17 53
243
31
~~:5anAnono

50
47
46
42
39
34
20

ll"tl nched playoff spot

TUIIdly I GamH
lnd ana 1 o Wash ng on 102
Boslon 15 AHanta 112 OT
To onto 10 M am 92
Hous on 09 U ah 86
San Antonio 93 Charlotte 79
Sac amento 24 New York 17 OT
LA Cl ppers 101 De ro 94

Wednuday • 01me•
New Jersey 99 Oenve 96
Onondo 98 Pill odelp~ o 95
Phoen lC 103 Cleve and 94

L

5

Baltmoe

6

2

M nneso a
C eve and

6
2
3
2
2

12
12
4
3
15
15
14

Chicago
Detroit
Boson
Toano
Tampa Bay
Anahem
Seatte
NawYoO&lt;:

2
11

Pet
690
600

600
57

57
500

48
480
444
444
440

2

8

400

1

18

9

19

379
32

N1tonalleague
W
L
Arizona
9
10
San D ego
a
10
New Yof1&lt;
5
9
Florida
5
I
S Lous
6
12
los Ange ea
5
13
Chicago
6
14
Aana
2
1
C nc nnat
3
3
M fwaukee
4
16
P ltsbu gh
2
4
Ph adelph a
13
Hous on
13
Co orado
15
Mont ea
17
SanFancsco
19

Pet
655
643

625
577
571
536
533
522
500
467
462
458

435
423
346
321

NOTE Sp t squad games coun n he
stand ngs games aga ns non rna o
aague teams do no

TUtldly I G•mn
N Y Mats 5 Mont ea 4 11 nn ngs
Boston 1 N 'f Yankees 2
TaKas 10 C nc nna 3
Atlanta 7 S Lou s 5 o nnlngs
Hous on 7 Los Ange es 5
De ro t 4 Cleve and 3
M rmasota 10 P hsburgh 5
Kansas Clly 9 Tall1'8 Bay 3
Seatt e 15 Anahe m 2

Chk:ago Cubs 6 Co oralio 1
Oakland 9 San Franc sco 5
Arizona 2 Ch cago Wh e Sox 5
FkJrida 6 Bah mo e 2
Ph adelphia 2 Toronto 0
San D ego 0 M waukee 3
Wtdn"day e Gamee
N 'f Me s S Los Angeles 3
Forlda5 Batlmoe3
Atlanta 4 Houston 4 tie
Texas 12 M nnesola 4
Toronto 6 Pittsburgh 2
Boa on 8 Tampa Bay 0
Ph adepha 4 De rolt3
Kansas C y 6 Cleveland 0
S lous 1 Montea 3
Anzona 9 San F anc sea B
Seatte9 Cooado9 e
Oak and 0 M waukee 9
Chicago Cubs 5 san D ego 5 Ue
Chteago Wh te So~~: 0 Anahe m 5
C nc nna 7 N Y Yankees 3
Thursday • Games
S Lous vs Mon ea at Jup e Fa

Ea1tern Conference
Atlantic Dlvt1ktn
W
L Pet
GB
K Ph adelph a 49
22 690
Mam
42 28
600 6 2
New Yo k
42 28
600 6 2
Orlando
39 32
549
0
Boston
32 38
457 16 2
New Jersey
25 49
338 25 2
Wash ngton
7 54
239
32
Centra D ..., a on
W
L
Pet
GB
K M waukee
44 26
629
Charlo e
40 3
563 412
Toronto
39 32
549 5 1 2
ndana
32 38 457
12
Cteveland
26 45 366 8 1 2
De rot
25 46 352 9 2
Adanta
21 5
292
24

W
20
5

9
0
10

NCAA Women I Bllkttball Taum•
mont
AlA Glance
By The AIIDCieted PrQt
AIIT!moo EST
THE FINAL FOUR
At The SIWII Center
SL Loulo
Notlonof S.O.Iflnolo
Frldoy Morch 30
Pu due {30 6) vs Southwes M ssourl
Sta e (29-5) 7 p m
Connact cu (32 2) vs No a Dame (32
2) 9 30 p m Notional Chall!plonsh p
Sunday April\
Sam na winners a 30 p m

Buy,
Sell

or

n shed apa tment has washe
and drye no pats depos &amp; ef
O&lt;encos 740-992 018~

All Tlme1 EST
THE FINAL FOUR
At The Hubert H Humphrey
Metrodome
Mlnneapo 1
Nat onal Sem f nala
S.turday Ma ch 31
M cl'l gan Slate 28 4 vs Arizona (27 7
542 p m
Duke (33 4) vs Maryland (25 10) onow
ng rs game Nat ona Champtonsh p
Monday April 2
Sam na wnners 9 8 p m

Oakland
Kansas C y
TeKSS

m

Fo rent one bedroom fu n shed
8plrtment n M dd epo ca 740
992-523

350 Loll a Acreage

ao~tDO

fiOMES FROM 1199 30/Mo I
3BR Ropoa/ l'cro; OIUrtl lao
4% down For L stings/Payment
Deta II l.fl00.719-3001xi!U

Sa.rl A Tr1vel Agency Receive
Ti a n ng Bus n.ess SlJpport Your
own T avel Web&amp; If and Travel
D scounrs Pe k• Ea n Big SIS
Nom na Sta up Cos 1 881 899
0901 o www Ea n8ucklf om
Home com

CRAIE 8 ue Voodoo 120 ha f
s ack good cond on S500 304
BB2 3437

for Rent

Focrory Goof 32•80 $1 o000 Dlo
count on y S1000 00 Oown De
Ivery 1nd setup pa d by Factory
.e777
FACTORY OVERSTOCK Now
Coub e Wid I On!~ SI 590 00
Cown Ano 1318 DO Per Monlh
Froo Doflvory
And
Sllup

. . . . . . . . . . . .11111-...1' I 88 Acre

Thll nl\'•ptJ!If' wHI not

Secu ty Off ca s Guardsma k
Inc 1 now aeeeptlng apfl catiOns
lo pa t 1me emp oymen 1o Sa
cu ty Oft cera tn the App e GrO\Ie
a ea Sta ng pay It 18 80 pa
hou gong 10 $1 oo aHe 90 days
If you a e ovtr 21 yea s of age
have a clta po ce ecord and a
high &amp;ehool d ploma o equ valen
we woud Ike to aka you A
employees e t equ ed o pass a
drug 1c 11n You may app y n
pe son a the M&amp;G Polyme s
plant n App.._ Grove a he Ma n
Ga e be ween 9 OOam and
2 OOpm tmerv ews w I be schtd
uled afle evlew ng he appl ca
lono EOEMIF

420 Mobile Homea

Musical
Instruments

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; trlebu n S ock
Ca Ron E ans 800..537 9528

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES
SO DR LOW DOWN! 1AX
REPO S &amp; 8ANKRUPTCIE91 OK
CAED Tl FOR LISTING C~LL I
1100-SOI 1777 11ct 8813.

s

DIVORCI Cau111 Cuatom or
Cl'ertd Sing ewlde t:tome To Be
com• Ava ilab t Save $$ Ca 1
aaa.!585.fl 17

One bed oom nt•r or has been
romodolld Sol995 1500 - n w1
financo 740-992 2187

Bllullful 3 IMdrooin 2 11111 en 8
Acrll 8td4cod Fo Ou Ok Safl
$1 19 OQO Sandh Rood Reollor
(300)57t-3056

CHOOSE
YOUR
OWN
MOURS You own homtflaed
bus nus M1 I order/In erntt
~oo $7 aoo mo PT FT Free
Info mortonl4r• 2110-9528
WW'N &amp;-your biz com

sea

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS liCENSEO
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG ae•BII.flfl02

make ony oucl1 pnoloooooco
Hmllallon or dlcrfmfnlllan

ATTENTION WORK FROM
HOME Our C~ d en Come To
T~e Off co Eve yday 1~00
$7000 mo P T F T I BB8 8 •
4778
www b-at home com

P ot Program Flente s Needed
(300)738-7295

Expe anced saams eas can
do w ndow t eatment1 some
bedd ng p lows badsk Is &amp; al
te at on on most ems ca Sandy
740 992 3220

Need eat mate to move nome no
prob am w ttl pe mils Powe ca
bill phone I nes no ln&amp;u ance
needed Col 740 U92 3~64

Po ~me oonploymant Of)po un ry
must have knowtadge of acooun
ng p ocedu es M croso t Word
and typ ng good o a and wr en
commun cat on sk a and enjoy
wokngw h he pub c Send e
sume c/o The Daly Sen ne P:O
Box 729 02 Pomaroy On o
45769

l VI y frtl SIIUP on y 18115 f
11213428

New
Ftlllwaod
181C80
$1911if100 3-oom 2 Bolh 1
877
4170

--·IUbflet

Own A Compute 7
Pul To Worl&lt;
$25- $75/h PT/FT
I 888 885-4325
www b-hap com

Dopolll No Ptll (300)676-5162

CONSDL CATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBTI Ral1uce monthly
paymen s Pay one b month
EASY o gat 111 ted Finane at
Freedom Ch at 1n Countellng
800 a•r 9757
o•l
CC3
www dab leeS o g (Non Prafll)

AI roal--.,gfn

PoSial Joba $48 323 00 y Now
h ng No tlCpe lenee pa d tra n
ng g; eat benet ts ca 1 7 days
800-4~3680 e•l J 365

PIT-FIT $15 $65/h
Ma Ordl
8()0.891 5197

Bualnasa
Training

Gallfpol •
Colllgo
(Ca ae s C ObB To Home)
Ca Today 740 446 4367

12 000 WEEKLY Mo ling 400

230

570

N ce 2 Bed oom Aere ence &amp;

1••10 SOUIIIern Oroam frN Do-

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EARN WH LE YOU LEARN
Wo k 1 om Home Fu 1T a n ng
$500 $4500 PT FT F ee n o ma
on (4 4) 290 6900 www home
bus ness systems com

ATTENTON I
n e natiana company Expand ng
Woril F om Home o Otrtet
$!00 $6000/mo PTIFT
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IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
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S FREE CASfi NOWS from
wea hy faml as unloedlng mUions
of do ars o hep mnmie the
tuea W te mmed 1lely WINO
FALLS 3010 W LSH RE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
N A 90010

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 y
Mtd ca lnsu ance 8 ng Need
ed lmmtd ate Home Compute
Needed FREE lnte net
800
291 4683 CepU 09

ANNOUNCEMENT S

005

S op wonyWig Abou Layoffs!
ThngsAeToGet
BETTER When Vou B&amp;COO'II
A Pro Drive ForTMC
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
5 Day Tram ng Program Ava
Put A COL &amp; Exce4 en Wages
n Your Walol Today
And Stop WORRY NGI
800-337 9009 M k8 o cnns
7 Days A Week

EARN $600 lo $900 por n
you bll~ obi &amp; IIIPPI I G Ill
oppa lun ty o secu e you ruturt
Low nvea men 1 80()..272 0193
awOsomearn nga corn

410 Houu• for Rent

320

Sac amento 08 l A Lakers
Thuradoy •

oulhom 3
Eastern
450 5lC ll -15 t 2
Southern
30000x x -3,3
Baley (W) and VeaguOf Chapman (L)
aM Say e
Calaway 3-4 Powe 2 2
Doub es-Ca away Chevale Sames
Trlple•--loowlck

205 p m
Fonda vs A anta at K ss mmee Fa
05p m
De ro vs Te~~:as at Por1 Charlo e Fa
05p m
Bos on s M nneso a a Fort Mye s
Fa
OSpm
Tampa Bay vs To on o a Dunedin Fa
05p m
Ph ada phla vs C nc nna a Sa aso a
Fa 05pm
Kansas C y vs Ce eand at Wne
Haven Fa 1 05 p m
Ba moevs NY Mesa PortS Lur:e
Fa
Opm
Seatt e vs San 0 ego a Peons Anz 2

pm

Anahe m vs Ch cago Cubs a Mesa
Anz 305pm
P ttsbu gh vs NY Yankees a Tampa
Fa 7 5 p m
Houston vs Round Rock a The De
Demond 830pm
Oak and vs Sac amen o a Sac amen
oCa 1 905pm
Los Ange es vs A zona a Las Vegas
005 pm
Friday 1 Gamet
M nneso a (sa vs TeKBs a Port Cha
o eFa 230pm
Mont ea vs P t sburgh al Braden on
Fa
OSpm
N Y Mats vs Ba mo e at FOr1 Laud
erdaeAa 105pm
Florida vs Kansas C ty a Hanes C ty
Fa 1 OSpm
De ro t vs Tampll Bay at 5 Pelersbu g
Fa 1 05pm
C nc nna vs Ph ade ph a at C eart.~a
e Fa pspm
M nnesota (ss) vs N V Yankees a
TampaFa
Spm
Cubs M no Leaguers at Ch cage Cubs
305p m
C eve and a Atlanta 7 05 p m

Boston at Houston 8 05 p m
Seattle Bl SOn Ftancllco. 8 05 p 10
ChiCago Wh t SoK at Milwaukee 8 OS
pm
Anahe m V&amp; Arizona a Phoen K 9 05
pm
San 0 ega V$ Lake E s nora a Lake
E sino e D~mond 9 05 p m
S Louis va Oakland a Oakland Calt1
1005 p m
ColOrado al Los An!j81so,

BASEBALL
AmM' c•n Leagu•
ANAfiE M ANGELS T adod OF Do
en Bake y o he New York Yankees lo
OF OH G enaHen H Re eased DH Jose
Canseco T ansferred 1B Mo VatJghn rom
the 15-day o the 60-day dlsabktd st
Op oned I B La ry Barnes and NF W my
Cace es o Sa Lake o he PCL Reas
s gned INF Jose Fe nandez o thel m no
eague camp
Cfi CAGO WH TE SOX-Op oned
RHP Lorenzo Ba ceo and RHP Jon Ga
and o Chao eo he ne natona
League
DETRO T T GERS Paced 38 Dean
Pa me and C M ch Me uskey on the 15
daydsabed s
M NNESOTA TW N$-Piaced OF John
Ba nes on he 5 day dlsab ed st e oar:
e o Ma ch 23 and 26 Jay Can zaro on
he IS-day d sab ed s e oac ve o
March 24 Reass gned AHP W e Ma
nez o Edmon on o he PCL and AHP
Sau Ave a o New Bn an o he Eas em
eague Sen AHP 8 andon Kn gh o he
New Vorl&lt; Yankees unde Au e V prov
sons
NEW YORK YANKEES Ass !)ned OF
Da en B akely o Norwich o he Eas em
League
OAKLAND ATHLET CS-T aded RHP
Oma 0 va as oPt sburgh o a paye o
be named o cash and 2B M gue Ca o o
he Ch cago Cubs fo NF Eric H nske
FlellJsed the Cubs offe o e urn Au e 5
RHP Sco 1Ch asson
TAMPA BAY DEV L RAV8-Ag eed o
arms WI h RHP A e P ~eto on a orie yea
con ract Reca ed RHP Ken H I f om
Dufham of he Internal ona League Des
gna ad OF Kenny KE y fo ass gnmen
TORONTO BLUE JAYs-Released C
Todd G eene and AHP Hecto Carrasco
Opt oned AHP Aoy Hal aday o Dunedin o
he F onda S a e League and OF Vernon
Wei s to Sy acuse of the n ema ona
League Reass gned OF Ryan Thompson
o he m no eague camp
TEXAS RANGERS-Op oned NF
Ke V Dransleld INF M ke Lamb and NF
M chae Young to Ok ahoma o he PCL
Ass gned RHP Pete Munro C M ke Hub
bard C Dave Steed and OF C a g Munroe
o Ok ahoma Paced OF Flick Ledee RHP
DanKo b AHP Franc sco Cordero and OF
Gabe Kap e on the 5-day d sab ed st
etroact ve to March 23 and LHP Just n
Thompson on the 60cday d ~ed st
Nltlona L11gue
ARIZONA D AMONDBACKS-Traded
INF Han ay Fnas to M nnesota for c Chad
Moele
ATLANTA BRAVES Paced C Edd e
Pe az OF George Lombard RHP Kev n
MeG nchy and RHP Scott Sobkow ak on
the 15-day dlsab ad s
C NCINNATI RED8-Roass gned OF
De on Sanders and NF Chris Seldon to
he m no eague camp Sent NF W ton
Gue re o outrlgh to Lou svl e of he nter
na ona League
COLORADO RdCK ES-Ag eed to
term a w h B TOdd Hatton on an 11 yea
cont tc extension Re)eased RHP Masato
Yos~

FLOR OA MARL Ns-Deslgna ed OF
Chad Mottos o asslgnmen
HOUSTON ASTAOS-8 gned C Scon
Serva s o a mno eague con act and
ass gned h m o New Orleans o he PCL
G anted C Jeff Reed h s uncondltlona
e ease Aeass gned C F ank Charles and
OF Sco Pose o m no eague camp
LOS ANGELES DODGER8-Wo ved
FIHP Ramon Mart nez o he purpose o
g v ng h m h s uncondmona e ease T ad
ed AHP M l&lt;e Judd o Tampa Bay o a
p aye to be named
MONTREAL EXPOS Reass gned C
Randy Kno RHP Bob Scan an RHP
Fe pe L a OF Mark Sm h o
o
J mmy
he n e na ona League and
Gonza ez o Ha nsbu g o h Eas e n
League Paced OF Te ry Jones on he 15
day d sab ed s and LHP Sco Downs
RHP H dek abu RHP Carl Pavano and
FIHP Anthony Te ord on he 5 day d s
ab &amp;d s e roac ve o Ma ch 23
P TIS BURGH P AATES-Ae eased
OF Thomas Howa d
ST LOU S CARD NALS-Qp oned
RHP Jason Kamu hand NF S ubby C app
o Memph s o he PCL
SAN DIEGO PADRES-T oded OF Eno
Owens RHP Matt C amen and AHP Oma
Ort z oF orlda o OF Mark Ko say and OF
Cess C espo Re eased NF Ed Sp ague
BASKETBALL
National Batketbatl AIIOC 1t on
NEW JERSEY NETS-8igned F Mo(k
St ck and to a to day con ract
HOCKEY
Nat ona Hockey League
CA GARY FLAMES-Reco od F
Banal G anon from Sa n John of he AHL
PHOEN X COYOTE5-Named Joce yn
Lem eulC commun ty NHL a umn lason
TAMPA BAY L GHTN NG-Reosslgned
RW Om ry A anasenkov and 0 M kko
Kupa nen o De rolt o ha HL
WASH NGTON CAP TALS-S gned
RW Chris Cornne to a two yea con act
and ass gned h m o Portland of the AHL

ft1awa

992of13:1

1111,1/IL~,

410 HOUMI for Rent
I
3 Bo~room• Fo oc o'ed
Homel From S\tt/1.10. 4% DoWn
30 Voara at B il% APR For Lot
lngi.IOD-31 . . . Ext 1109
I or 2 bodroom liouH fo rent In
Mfddlaporr garego baumonr
PIUI lergo out build ng, $300 a
monlh p1u4 diPOIII 740 91~

Home
Improvement•
Sollrllfu 1eoo 5&lt;1 Rea o ed
2nd F oor Aper ment n Hla1o c
0111 lei ldla Fo P oteu ono
Coup • A Modern Amen!l es 3
lloclroorns Spaclouo Uvong 1 1 2
B&amp;lhl floor CICfl HVA!r. $800/
mo P us Ullltlts Securlly And
Key Depost No Pt 1 Rtlt ences
Roqulrod (740)446 4425 0
(740)44fl-3938

311M

2 8odroom lioulo In Eureka nn
Pill UOQ/mont~ l300 Dopo11
Col Aftor S OOpm (740)384-2560
2-3 blllroom 11n1 Delhroom on s
2na Avenue Mlddloporl Call 1
...1M-37'18 ""'for JIMo
3 -.om 1 1141111 W.oh
or &amp; Dryar Now Corpal $480
monlh ~luo U~opoolt No
Fell I Milo U~
2 ld Olon
wood
(~I 78 Hit
Or

-m

(304)8~127

~' 2 IIIIi HoUH
I'Dr Rent (74011*-0128

4

Four Room Hou11

52 01 va

II'"~ pflOnt (F40144'"3fMO

Ool polls 3 8Wdruom 1 811~
Cenltal Air SIOYO l ROfr gti810r
CI&lt;POrt No Potl Depoll l All
eroncu 1378 Month (740)379
2773

Young r; aes SS 00 Each $7 00
Each De veed W h Mnmum or
5
0 de s Dogwood Oak
C~aslnut (304)895 3408

550

MEH CHIINDISE

51 0

Building
Supplies

Ho1.1uhold
GOOde

Ll t Modal A. mond GE wasl'le
StOO Other Wasl'le a S65 00
Eac~ W~he Rope D.ye 575 oo
Othe D yo s S50 00 Ano Up
(740)+18-9088

560

Pets for Sale

994 Dodge Shadow Good Con
d on
5 000 m es 52750
(304 617-Q976

Mo oh1n Ca pe 202 C ark
Chlpel Rd Porle OH Free Eo~
morn Eoay F nanclng o 90 days
ea1h 11 Mastercard
ACCIPIId (H0)446 7444 or I
877 830-9182

••m• ••

v

Main Str111 Fu nllurl
(300)675 1422
~ 1~ Men SlriOI Potnl Ptoesant
Ntw &amp; Uled Furnl ure

New

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
U cond ona e me gut'. an e8
loca efe ances ru n shed Es
lab shod 975 Co 24 H s 740)
446 OB70 800 2B7 0576 Rog
ersWaepoo ng

a P ect L. v ng oom Su les

$389 Buy Bell T -

Meigs
from Page 81
of M1chael Hawk to pull
the Spartans to w1thm 3 2
Alexander threatened m the
top of the Sixth no mg
puttrng the first two batters
on base Hawk and Jason War
ren both s ngled Le vo
reached back to stnke o It
M1chael D1llon and go a
pop up for the s cor d o
Justm Brooks the 1 s gl 1
to center fi ld bt t Ada
B lhngtm ca ue p th o 1g
and fired a strrke to Mat

Stewart at the plate to nail
Hawk and end the mmng
Mergs added an nsurance
run n the bottom of the sev
enth Bullmgton led off th e
1111 ng w th a smgle He was
erased however on a fielders
cho ce off the bat of Zach
Balm
Bolm then stole second and
ca 1 e nto score the gan es
final r
o a st 1gle by Jacob
l th

s

Le\\ s scattered sev
p k p tl e \tn H e

o t t v a d walked
b r
S 1 1th a 1d Bull ngto
p rr of s 1 gle to lead

Stewart added a double and
Runyon and Stanley eacl
added s ngles
Adam Ross \\as the starter
and loser for the Spartans
Ross gave up seven hm
walked four h t one and
t uck out four
Warren was three for three
all Sl 1gles to lead Al exa 1der
H a vk added a pa r of s ngles
and Brooks and Cro v had
&gt; e
gle eacl
hits to
Mcrgs v1ll travel to Trr nble
stru ck o Frrda) 31 d then plav at
a I k J ck o
a d ubi I e d m
San rdav
h da
M gs

86 Fo d Tempo e new pa ts
new as uns good $600 740
992 2 89
UKC Wa ke coonhound pupa 4
lema es 3 rna es sho s up to
da e mo&amp; blanke backs mo hllr
&amp; a he exce an b ood nes and
ea dogs $100 aacl'l 740 965
4 39

Subscribe today • 992·2156

�•
Thui'May,lliarch 21, 2001

......... The Ddy Sentinel

Thuraday March 29 2001
510

HOUiehold
Goode

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio
Pete for Sale

560

'today's Scoreboard

App lf'ICtl
AeconO 1 oned
Waalle 1 0 ye s Ranges Ret
g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
•niHd We Se New Mey ag Ap
p ances F ench C
Maytag

740-446

779~

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 5

v

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DoNaa W Portland 84
seattle 94 MiMBOOta 93

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210

Bualnea
Opportunity

Annou.-ment,
GhMWIIY LAm A l'ouncl
Yard- and Want.cl
To Do Aile Muat le Paid
lnAdva.TBIDUNI!! prtpyNe
2 00 p m the day IMio,.
the .c1 Ia to run Sunday &amp;
Monday .clitiOn 2 00 p m
friday

HNJJNI!L QIAQYNI!

1 00 p m the day belore
the .cl Ia to run
Sunday • Monel., edition
1
p
Friday

D vas P:A M Tianspo t No eK
pe ence needed 2 week COL
tanno $34000y yea pus
Fu Bene ts &amp; Pad Tan ng
0 wars based n M dwes
877
230 fl002 Sunday lam 4pm
Monday 7am fl,pm Tue F 7am
4pm

oo m

RIQIIIJB pe•QUNIJ.

2 daya befON the .c1 Ia to
run by 4 30 p m Saturday
&amp; M - y .clition- 4 30
Thur.clay
"DMdl"'" aublect to
ehenge d.,. to hollclayl"

v

EMPLOYMENT

SERVICES

Per1onel1

Divorce $1SO
Banki\Jpley $195
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No do-lt yourself k tl
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KV

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FREE SEARCH
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MUSI De IB yra

Help Wanted

140

ROMANCE
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YOUII!
, 900 773 220 Ell. ens on 6749
S2 99 PI M nu e Mutt Be 18
VIars Slrv U 6 f 9)645-8434
STAAT OAT NG TONIGHT
Haw fun meet ng e g b.. 1 nQ 11
n you area C1 lo mo e nfo
rna Or'l
800 ROMANCE ext
738
Start da 111g ron goll Pay lf1e Oh~
Da ng Game Call o I I H 1 8()0romance ext t 621

b oohu est Sat sfact on Gua
anteed Postage &amp; Supp es p o
v dad Rush Se I Add es&amp;ed
Sla1111Jid Enve ope G CO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Start mmed allly

5825 WEEKLY Make Money
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HUD FHA Morrgago Refunds No
Expa once Requ od Fo FREE
lnlo mat on Call1 BOO SQ1 8832
ax 300

ca...,

80().24-0452
Reg •90 05 1274B

150
Government Jobs $1 00
$33 00 pe hou polen~ al Pad
T a n ng Fu t Benet s Fo mo e
In o mat on cal oaf 888 674
9150 lxl 3234

GROW NG BUS NESS NEEDS
HELP Wo k om !'lOme Ma o
def E Comme ce $522 week PT
$1000 $4000 wk FT BOO 92
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Abao u ely F ee lnfot lnte net
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Homewo kers Needed
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Easy No experience needed
Ca I 80().49().9450 24 h s

EARLY STAIIT SERVICE CO.
OROINATOR

New To 'lbu T~ ft Shojlpe
9 Weal Slfmoon Alhlnl
740-592 1842
Qui ty c othlng and household
Item a $ t 00 bag sa e every
thuraday Monday hfu Satu day
9 OO.B 00

40

Glveeway

!5 1 2 Week Old Pupp es
good Momes Go dan Re1 eve
so de Co 1e Ro twe er M "

(740)24S-529

FOUND Young F1m1 1 Dog
Back With S lvlr Hao Cu ly Tall
Elglo Ridge Road By C~oll n
Road (304)895 3399

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
VIcinity

a

ACC:EIS A Cenle Fo Coun
ael ng Educat on And Soc at
Se v cas s accept ng app ca
tons o the poston of Ea ly
Sta Serv ce Coord nato 3 Po
altlons (1 Gallla County \..Jick
eon County 1 Meigs County)
Thi• po111 on prov des aupe
\1 tlon a"d mplemtntlt on of lhe
Oh o Ea ly Sta 1 program n their
coun y o re1pone bJity Mon o 1
p og am outcomes and enau es
compl anee w th app cab e po
cas s anda ds and ragu at ons
Successtu IPPI cant w havt 1
m n mum o1 a Bache or's Deg ea
n Ea ly Ch dhood Educal on
Spec a Educat on Soc a Wo k
Counse ng Nu 1 ng Or Rea eel
Fie d wth 1 min mum ol 2 Years
expe ence wo k ng In an ea ly
ch dhood uttlng aspeclaUy w th
nfanl&amp; and toddlero Superv oory
tllpt ence prtter td Ab 1 ty to
p an coo d nate mplament and
mon o service&amp; o ch d en and
the families and 10 bu d and
mainta n commun ty e atlonsh pa
Ab 1Y o I n 30 b Ch d ExcoUenl
commun cat on snd documanta
lion sk lis Re abe T anspo ta
lion va d Oh o D ver s L cenH
ond proof of lnouronco requ rid
lnte es ad appl cants may send
resume o ACCESS A n Clara
R dgoway 420 E Ma n Slrell
Jackson OH 45840

Ins dl Houoeliold Solo Evory
llilng Mull Gol B81 2 Sla e Rou e
7 SOUih Ga llpol I Ohio Wad-SI

11-!pm

Marc~ 30 &amp; 311 8 ooam 5 OOpm

112M

e Out

141 200 Dabbe

Drlve Lo s Of New Th ngs Too a
Plumb ng &amp; E eel lea Items
Housewara ha dwart &amp; Fu nl
lure Men Women Teenage
BOYI l 0 II C Oth ng Fish ng
Roell I Toya All Things W Be
Prletd Aeasonabkt
Sllurday &amp; Sunday 9 00 3 OOpm
Rl n Or Sh ne 1308 Jackaon
P ke Rae ng And Barbe Co !tela
~II LoiO Of M IC No Eo y
Still

Pomero~

Middleport
VIcinity

a

ANYONE CAN DO 1T1 U8/l75/
HR PTIFT Work It h..,.. 1.e00.
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ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII C af s
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Typ ng Grear Peyl CALL I 800
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NEED HELP I need peop e to
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commt ce buslna&amp;s oca y na
t ona y and n e na one y wh11e
wo k no f om home Exce en n
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717 8271

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Profeaalonel
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Schools
Instruction

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EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
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800 964 8316

180 Wanted To Do

SIS NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash lo emalnlng paymantl on
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tionalcontractbuye a com
CASH LOANS 12000 $5000
Canso dat on to $200 000 Bad/
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CONSOLIDATE B LLS LO-'NS
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NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
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sea

tttlaFode181 Fill' Houlfng Act
10
the
ol1818""""'- k 1111(111
ID-"anrfiNIIIOIK&gt;O

-on ,..

11m11a11on or dfOct'"'lnatiOI•
oolor rwflglon
- falllllfll olatul or nollanol
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-fOriiOIknuwloouly ICIIIPI

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OWN A COMPUTER? Pu I lo
wo k $25-$75 hr PT FT F ee on
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coma com o cal 1 800-770 1984

118 IMI!allfe on an oquol
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FINANCIAL

210

Buslnsss
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecommends that you do bus
ness w h people you know and
NOT o send money th ough the
ma un you have nveat gated
lhe ol1enng
A VEND NG GOLCMINE ACT
NOW Mach nes vend He shey
candy AND phone cards (2 5e

mn US)Ea~$800 lwkyWo~
6 9 slwk G ea ocatlons B22
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Candy VEND NG oulo
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Church basement sa • at Ma
v•at Outteacn Chu ch on Ae b1
Ad n Clie08 Salu day 9 3 1o o
ol m ac ema bake good• hOI
dogo

c-

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Oa age 11 e tn •• lam
one
day on y Satu day Ma ch 3 11
lam 1 An que gtaaswart &amp;
crocks &amp; baw 1 qu tl I t unk
llono 1111 c o ~eo o d Goodyea
• gn &amp; Ma I Pouc~ algn old Mlck
ey Mouse wa ch Mickey Mouat
tt e book old c~ d a oy op
too 1 lots or t uff Ra n o ahln1
Turn of RT 7 a Me gs Memo y
Go clono corna of Eogll Rlclge &amp;
Pine G ove Rd n1a r Fl'lle Po n1s
are•

Pt Pluunt

a VIcinity

illnffh Rumma~ Salo Mach 31
AI Alhton Elemln 1 y S.m 3pm
All P OCIIda Go Towortl Funo 11
Eocpenoeo For May Langdon

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Pu I 10 WO kl 125/~r S751h FT/
PT FREE In o BOO 871 804~ a•l

eo www lahomtblz com

WORK FROM HOME
$501).$1500 PI mo. PIT
$2000 18000 permo FIT

No axpe IInce needed
TranngPfOYklld

·~-

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No lx
pe •nee netdl&lt;l au c~ COL
I a n ng proorarn eva lab 1 Ea n
$38 000 + IIIYoor 5 STAR I
800,.48 8168 Expo oncoo d v
oro holding Clloa A ca 8()0.958

2353
A NEW CAR~ER E•om lnforma
ton Pea a Job1 G
Pav Btn
eflts Camp Itt Otta 1 Ca t
88.728 fl083 X 701

••t

Someone To Stay W 1'1 E der y
Wom1n In Her Home F day
Evtn ng T Monday Mo n ng

310 Home• for Sills
$0 OOWN HOMESI GOV f &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY COWNI OK
CRED Tl FOR LISTINGS CALL
I IJ00.338.fl020 Old 98 I
I I 12 sfory 3 bed oom bOih big
k tchan new y remade ed an 1
acre or and w 2 story garagt
Dyoav 1e Ad $55 000 74D-7•2
2264
3 Bedroom 2 Bar~ Comp tit y
Remo dod L kt new Hear Pump
Ser ou1 lnqu rea Only (740)2455064
3 Bedroom Ful Blllomonl Lalgo
~01 Park 0 VI 116 L blrly
148 500 Appolnlment Only
(140)37...122

(304)875 3523
URGENTLY NEE CEO p asme
dOnors ea n $45 o S&amp;O fo 2 or 3
hou 1 wnkty Ca Sea Tee 740
592 8651

Remolded 3 Bodtoom V(ood
F ooro I I 2 Both B11ullful
000
Ffroplaol 2 Car Olrl(ll
(740)38&amp;-8101

.,a

Th et lledroom two blth homt
on 2 ocreo wlllt rfYI frorffago •
lacOad go ogo 1118 DOO 740
fM9-27~

320

Mobile Horne•
for Sele

1H5 14•70 W th I hi E~pondo
3 114room Conko Air Mull lo
(740):111 10011
WORK FROM HOME Earn
$1500 p lro $5000 f 1 monr~ 1
CA~L TODAY I 800 895 021e
OA www work1 omt'IOIM:2-t7 com
WORK "10M HOME Earn
$~00 $7000 mcnr~ PT FT Full
T 1 n ng, Free nformat on Call
Now! 1.8()0.290 8914
www~tamscom

v

New And Used FlJ n u e So a
Be ow Ho day nn Kanauga We
Se G ave Monuman s And
Vases 740 446-4782

1982 14XIO 3 BR 2 Bolh I I
AC&lt;II Of Land Pond Barn And
01/ogi $43 000 (740)441-D3fle
78 14x70 Boyvlow (w/Ctnl Now
8 nco 87 CIA Vjolor Hooltr
Furnooo Wllh Fro~l Poroh 8hoo
&amp;
Wood Fenco
Loll Of
Romooo11ng- Mull 111 N ooo
(300)8715-300e

oa.,..

Melg• 11 Ale..nder 2
AtexBnder
0 0 0 0 1 0 - 2-6-4
Meigs
002 295 ll -18 72
Lewellyn (L and Mclaugh n Jeffers
and Harris

FARM SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVESTOCK

New 640 New Ho and Net
W ap Ba e Command w de
Sweep 4KS Ro s Cos $ S 500
Se S 3 500 A C 333 4 Row N:J
T Co n Plan e E~~:ce ent Cond
on
$3 000 Andy
Sge

Me g1 4 Alexander 2
Alexande
011000 o- 27
Meigs
300 002 )( - 47-o
Ross (L) and L C Gngst&gt;y Lewis (W
and S ewart

304 937 20 B

a.

Golden Sta e at Washington 7 p m
ndl8na a Atlanta 7 30 p m
Utah at San Antonio S p m
Mam at M twaukee 8 p m
Phoen x a Houston 8 30 p m
Boston a Chicago 8 30 p m
New York at Vancouve 10 p m
Frldly • Gam•
New Jersey a Toronto 7 p m
Go den Sta e a Ph lade phaa 7 p m
lndanaa Boson 730pm
Denve at Chartone 7 30 p m
Ortando a Oe1roit e p m
C eveiand a Utah 9 p m
New YorK at Portland o p m
LA ClippeJBa Seatte 10pm
Oa as a LA. Lakes 10 30pm
M nnesota at Sac amen o 10 30 p m

610 Farm Equipment

I aaa.a:z•:l-4~

IPRO BASiili* I I
Exhibition Ba1ebal
American Le1gue

L m ted

o, No Crtd t? Govern--

ment Bank Flnlnct Only At OaK
wood In Barboursville WV 304

NCAA Bllketb.lll Tournament
AI A Glance
By The Aa~oclattd Pre11

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lot mode cl•• ance aave up to
$8 625 wl h any home check u&amp;
out were dea Ina Cole 1 Mob e
HomH US SO Eul A-1 011

MUST SELL 3 Bldroom 2 Bal~
Home No Old Contract To As
tume Jut A Rttlab t Pa ty To
Mako Monlh y Paymonr I 888

921989e

t and 2 bedroom apartments tu
n entd and unfu n shed eecu ty
deposit requ ed no pets 740
992 2218

New 14 tt w de $499 down only
S199 per man ca now 1BOO
e&amp;l.e777

Now 18 fl wldl $499 par mon
on y $270 pe mon con now \
800181 B777
Now doub 1 wldl 3 br 2 bo
S9JI oo down only 1295 por
mon Cll now 1 BOO.eil-lm
Now FleeiWood 14x70 $16 999 00
3 Bodroom 2 Bat~ I 877777
4170

I

n
f

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8UDOIT PRICES AT JACK
ION ESTATES 52 Wes wood
D ve from $297 to $383 Wa k o
si'IOp &amp; moves
1•0 446
2588 Equal Houa ng Oppo&lt; un ry

ca

0

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
DELL COMPUTERS Even w h
8SS than pe ec c ed
822
477 90 6 Code AC 4 www omc
solu ons com

New Flutwood th tt bedroom
wo bat~ 5855 down S199 58
month 011 740-11112 ~167

ONLY til5 qp DOWN and
$ f H 58 1 monilr moves you 1n1o
a New 3 b1droom12 bath home
Cal for dllail 740 385-43117

Stay

$1 000 BACK Ton A Co d
e 2 Ton Co
ne Se
n
s a ad $2 295 $ 000 Back
$ 295 Ne P ce F ee Es rna es
Ca Fo Quo as On 0 he S zes
I You Don
Ca
Us We
Bo h Lose Mob e Homes Ou
Spec a y 740 446 6308 800
291 0098

Am sh Buggy And M n a u e
Pony (740)256
8

m

330 Fernll for Sele

Form For Solo By Owner
Willi I 500 f!&lt;l Ftol 3 lloclroom I
1 2 Bath Home w lh Oak T lm
And Largo Kitchin Hao A Large
Go age And Baln W th 40t Tl I
able Ac ee E•ce ent Location
N11r A o Orondo
Asking
$129 BOD (740)3liD-02&amp;9 Even
lngo

340 Bualnesa and
Building•
Eslabl shoo Fino T .~ rl And
gropfllc Shop lnc!Udoo ~II Equ p
monl Clltnll And Off Ct Tralltr
(300)4111-\t:Ze

R

Fu n shed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apa t
menta Clean No Pe s No Smok
ng Rtlerenctl &amp; Otpos Ae
qu ed
Ut t es Fu n sned
(740)448-1519

E
D

Gractoua v na and 2 bedroom
ope lmtnll 11 VINoga Menor and
A ve sldt Apartments In Middle
po I F om S27B $348 Ca 740
992 5014 Equa Housing Oppo
tunlllea

Now Taking App ca ons 35
W1s1 2 Bedroom Townno~.~se
Apa fments Includes Wate
Sewage Trash $350 Mo 740
448.fl008

4 77 Aerts N11t lnteruct on Of

AIV'I Bend P ace Now Accep ng
Appllcat ona fo 1 Bed oom Hud
Subo dod Aparrmonr fo Elde ty
and D oab od eoe (304)882

Watson Road Ano Rodney P kt
Quiet Privett Wllh Barn Croak
woods Dull H g~woy Accan
10 Mlnutet From Haaf)llal
Pha macy Bank Oroo•ry Thea
lar Etc 140 000 (30.)875 •222
Aller 8pm Wllltdlys

Wo ohou1o/ Garage On
Approxlmololy 2 Ac o Lot Grear
P ace To Build Sewar Wottr &amp;
E eclr c Eotlbllahod (740)379
2AIO
Fo Sll 1o 952 Acru on
Fr
~a:f• Rd crown c ty
(740)
or (740)38•9336

•n:Jl

LOOking To Buy A Now Home?
Don t Have Land? W. Dolll Hurry
On~ 10 Loll Ltft 300 736-12fiS
N co Woodtd L01 on Roure sas
ROdnly (Unro.llolod) 112 000
(740)245 eu8

380

R..l Eatate
W•ntecf

Trade
in

J"4tw Haven one bedroom ur

loke
Acres
Home
Gal a
Road

13 Acrfl Wllh Bnullfu
V ew Sittl S!D 000 18
Wllh Large Loki IAobllo
W lh Add On S7U 500
Counry On Blackrop
(740)311-8178

3121 Or (304)882-3274

Ta 1 Townhouse Apa tmen s
Vtry Spac ous 2 e,ed ooms 2
Floo o CA
112 Ba h Fu y Car
poled Adu 1 Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pal o S!arl $365 Mo No Pe s
Ltaae Plus Secur tv Oepos t Re
qulred Days 740 446 3481
Evon nga 740 3ti7 0502 740
446-0101
1W n AlvlrTowtro now accepl ng
applk:allonolo I BR
HUO subsidized Bpi fo e derly
and disabled EOH (304)6758879

460 Space for Rent
Downtown Second Avenue Nea
Cou ll'louse And C fy Bu ld ng
Nicely Deco a ed AJC 3 Rooms
Build ng By I so f 448 2nd Ave
740)448-9539

Nlllonallnv t1tton Tournament
At A Glance

By The Assoct.ted Prn•
A Tlme1 EST
Sernlfln111
At Madlaon Square Glrden
NawYork
Tuesday March 27
Semlf n1la
A abama 74 Detro 63
Tu sa 72 Memph s 64
Chlmplonthlp Round
Thurldly March 28
At Madlaon Squere Garden
NewYort
Third PIIC8
Dot oH 25 ) vs Memph s (20.15 6
pm
Chomplonohlp
Aobama(25 IO)vs Tusa (2511) 9
pm

NEW ~ND USEC STEEL S ee
Beams P pe Reba Fo Cone e e
Ang e Channa Fa Ba S ee
G .a ng Fo D a ns 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways L&amp;L Sr: ap Me as
740 446-7300

Oak Baby Bed Chang ng Tab e
Infant Ca Sea 99 500 Sc amb e
.t5 Whee a
$4500 96 Honda
300EX 4 Whee e S2000 080
(740)44 1349

the

c
l
H
TRANSPORTATION

RESIDENT AL HOME OWNERS
Tappan H E c ency 90 ~ Ga s
Fu naces 0 Fu nar:es 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng
eoo 872 5967 www orvb comlben
nell
Sawm $3 795 New Supe Lum
be ma a 2000 a ge capac es
mo e opt ons Manulac u e o
sawm s edge s and sk dde s
NORWOOD NDUSTAIES 252
Sonw D ve Bu a o NY 4225
FREE no ma on
800 578
I 363 EXT 200 U

710 Autos for Sale

750 Boats • Motors
for Sale

SO DOWN CARS PO CE M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS 129
MO 24 MO S @ 9 9 ~ FOR
ST NGS CALL BOO 45 0050
9 c 96 2

1988 Jeep Cha okee 5 Speed
4 0 l e 6 Cy G ea Shape
Runs G ea $2300 OBQ 993
Fo d Ae OS a Van L ke New E~e:
ce en Cond on $2900 080
740)446 3649 Leave Massage

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
Budget Priced T 1nsm u ons
A Types Access To Ove
0 000 T ansm ss ons T ansfe
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce 339
3 65

790

Rtol 111•1• woproo I om forced
our of my hOiilt for highWay m
provomonl Looking lor Old farm
house In Mell:ia County w th
ICI81gt 0111 74b-7t7.f303 740

s
s
I
f
I

E
0
S!

CO!cago

2

58

171

32

We11em Confarence
M dwell DM•Ion
W
L
Pet

GB
2
704
U!o~
23 871 2 I 2
oauas
25 648
4
M nne.so a
29 592
8
Houston
32
549
1
Denve
3B 472 16 2
Vancouve
52 278 30 I 2
Pacific D v alon
W
L Pet
GB
Sacramento
46 22 l!fl6
LA Laker&amp;
47 25 653
2
Porttand
46 25 648 2 I 2
Phoen K
43 27 6 4
5
Saatt e
40 34 541
0
LA C ppers
26 46
361
23
Golden State 17 53
243
31
~~:5anAnono

50
47
46
42
39
34
20

ll"tl nched playoff spot

TUIIdly I GamH
lnd ana 1 o Wash ng on 102
Boslon 15 AHanta 112 OT
To onto 10 M am 92
Hous on 09 U ah 86
San Antonio 93 Charlotte 79
Sac amento 24 New York 17 OT
LA Cl ppers 101 De ro 94

Wednuday • 01me•
New Jersey 99 Oenve 96
Onondo 98 Pill odelp~ o 95
Phoen lC 103 Cleve and 94

L

5

Baltmoe

6

2

M nneso a
C eve and

6
2
3
2
2

12
12
4
3
15
15
14

Chicago
Detroit
Boson
Toano
Tampa Bay
Anahem
Seatte
NawYoO&lt;:

2
11

Pet
690
600

600
57

57
500

48
480
444
444
440

2

8

400

1

18

9

19

379
32

N1tonalleague
W
L
Arizona
9
10
San D ego
a
10
New Yof1&lt;
5
9
Florida
5
I
S Lous
6
12
los Ange ea
5
13
Chicago
6
14
Aana
2
1
C nc nnat
3
3
M fwaukee
4
16
P ltsbu gh
2
4
Ph adelph a
13
Hous on
13
Co orado
15
Mont ea
17
SanFancsco
19

Pet
655
643

625
577
571
536
533
522
500
467
462
458

435
423
346
321

NOTE Sp t squad games coun n he
stand ngs games aga ns non rna o
aague teams do no

TUtldly I G•mn
N Y Mats 5 Mont ea 4 11 nn ngs
Boston 1 N 'f Yankees 2
TaKas 10 C nc nna 3
Atlanta 7 S Lou s 5 o nnlngs
Hous on 7 Los Ange es 5
De ro t 4 Cleve and 3
M rmasota 10 P hsburgh 5
Kansas Clly 9 Tall1'8 Bay 3
Seatt e 15 Anahe m 2

Chk:ago Cubs 6 Co oralio 1
Oakland 9 San Franc sco 5
Arizona 2 Ch cago Wh e Sox 5
FkJrida 6 Bah mo e 2
Ph adelphia 2 Toronto 0
San D ego 0 M waukee 3
Wtdn"day e Gamee
N 'f Me s S Los Angeles 3
Forlda5 Batlmoe3
Atlanta 4 Houston 4 tie
Texas 12 M nnesola 4
Toronto 6 Pittsburgh 2
Boa on 8 Tampa Bay 0
Ph adepha 4 De rolt3
Kansas C y 6 Cleveland 0
S lous 1 Montea 3
Anzona 9 San F anc sea B
Seatte9 Cooado9 e
Oak and 0 M waukee 9
Chicago Cubs 5 san D ego 5 Ue
Chteago Wh te So~~: 0 Anahe m 5
C nc nna 7 N Y Yankees 3
Thursday • Games
S Lous vs Mon ea at Jup e Fa

Ea1tern Conference
Atlantic Dlvt1ktn
W
L Pet
GB
K Ph adelph a 49
22 690
Mam
42 28
600 6 2
New Yo k
42 28
600 6 2
Orlando
39 32
549
0
Boston
32 38
457 16 2
New Jersey
25 49
338 25 2
Wash ngton
7 54
239
32
Centra D ..., a on
W
L
Pet
GB
K M waukee
44 26
629
Charlo e
40 3
563 412
Toronto
39 32
549 5 1 2
ndana
32 38 457
12
Cteveland
26 45 366 8 1 2
De rot
25 46 352 9 2
Adanta
21 5
292
24

W
20
5

9
0
10

NCAA Women I Bllkttball Taum•
mont
AlA Glance
By The AIIDCieted PrQt
AIIT!moo EST
THE FINAL FOUR
At The SIWII Center
SL Loulo
Notlonof S.O.Iflnolo
Frldoy Morch 30
Pu due {30 6) vs Southwes M ssourl
Sta e (29-5) 7 p m
Connact cu (32 2) vs No a Dame (32
2) 9 30 p m Notional Chall!plonsh p
Sunday April\
Sam na winners a 30 p m

Buy,
Sell

or

n shed apa tment has washe
and drye no pats depos &amp; ef
O&lt;encos 740-992 018~

All Tlme1 EST
THE FINAL FOUR
At The Hubert H Humphrey
Metrodome
Mlnneapo 1
Nat onal Sem f nala
S.turday Ma ch 31
M cl'l gan Slate 28 4 vs Arizona (27 7
542 p m
Duke (33 4) vs Maryland (25 10) onow
ng rs game Nat ona Champtonsh p
Monday April 2
Sam na wnners 9 8 p m

Oakland
Kansas C y
TeKSS

m

Fo rent one bedroom fu n shed
8plrtment n M dd epo ca 740
992-523

350 Loll a Acreage

ao~tDO

fiOMES FROM 1199 30/Mo I
3BR Ropoa/ l'cro; OIUrtl lao
4% down For L stings/Payment
Deta II l.fl00.719-3001xi!U

Sa.rl A Tr1vel Agency Receive
Ti a n ng Bus n.ess SlJpport Your
own T avel Web&amp; If and Travel
D scounrs Pe k• Ea n Big SIS
Nom na Sta up Cos 1 881 899
0901 o www Ea n8ucklf om
Home com

CRAIE 8 ue Voodoo 120 ha f
s ack good cond on S500 304
BB2 3437

for Rent

Focrory Goof 32•80 $1 o000 Dlo
count on y S1000 00 Oown De
Ivery 1nd setup pa d by Factory
.e777
FACTORY OVERSTOCK Now
Coub e Wid I On!~ SI 590 00
Cown Ano 1318 DO Per Monlh
Froo Doflvory
And
Sllup

. . . . . . . . . . . .11111-...1' I 88 Acre

Thll nl\'•ptJ!If' wHI not

Secu ty Off ca s Guardsma k
Inc 1 now aeeeptlng apfl catiOns
lo pa t 1me emp oymen 1o Sa
cu ty Oft cera tn the App e GrO\Ie
a ea Sta ng pay It 18 80 pa
hou gong 10 $1 oo aHe 90 days
If you a e ovtr 21 yea s of age
have a clta po ce ecord and a
high &amp;ehool d ploma o equ valen
we woud Ike to aka you A
employees e t equ ed o pass a
drug 1c 11n You may app y n
pe son a the M&amp;G Polyme s
plant n App.._ Grove a he Ma n
Ga e be ween 9 OOam and
2 OOpm tmerv ews w I be schtd
uled afle evlew ng he appl ca
lono EOEMIF

420 Mobile Homea

Musical
Instruments

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; trlebu n S ock
Ca Ron E ans 800..537 9528

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES
SO DR LOW DOWN! 1AX
REPO S &amp; 8ANKRUPTCIE91 OK
CAED Tl FOR LISTING C~LL I
1100-SOI 1777 11ct 8813.

s

DIVORCI Cau111 Cuatom or
Cl'ertd Sing ewlde t:tome To Be
com• Ava ilab t Save $$ Ca 1
aaa.!585.fl 17

One bed oom nt•r or has been
romodolld Sol995 1500 - n w1
financo 740-992 2187

Bllullful 3 IMdrooin 2 11111 en 8
Acrll 8td4cod Fo Ou Ok Safl
$1 19 OQO Sandh Rood Reollor
(300)57t-3056

CHOOSE
YOUR
OWN
MOURS You own homtflaed
bus nus M1 I order/In erntt
~oo $7 aoo mo PT FT Free
Info mortonl4r• 2110-9528
WW'N &amp;-your biz com

sea

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS liCENSEO
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG ae•BII.flfl02

make ony oucl1 pnoloooooco
Hmllallon or dlcrfmfnlllan

ATTENTION WORK FROM
HOME Our C~ d en Come To
T~e Off co Eve yday 1~00
$7000 mo P T F T I BB8 8 •
4778
www b-at home com

P ot Program Flente s Needed
(300)738-7295

Expe anced saams eas can
do w ndow t eatment1 some
bedd ng p lows badsk Is &amp; al
te at on on most ems ca Sandy
740 992 3220

Need eat mate to move nome no
prob am w ttl pe mils Powe ca
bill phone I nes no ln&amp;u ance
needed Col 740 U92 3~64

Po ~me oonploymant Of)po un ry
must have knowtadge of acooun
ng p ocedu es M croso t Word
and typ ng good o a and wr en
commun cat on sk a and enjoy
wokngw h he pub c Send e
sume c/o The Daly Sen ne P:O
Box 729 02 Pomaroy On o
45769

l VI y frtl SIIUP on y 18115 f
11213428

New
Ftlllwaod
181C80
$1911if100 3-oom 2 Bolh 1
877
4170

--·IUbflet

Own A Compute 7
Pul To Worl&lt;
$25- $75/h PT/FT
I 888 885-4325
www b-hap com

Dopolll No Ptll (300)676-5162

CONSDL CATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBTI Ral1uce monthly
paymen s Pay one b month
EASY o gat 111 ted Finane at
Freedom Ch at 1n Countellng
800 a•r 9757
o•l
CC3
www dab leeS o g (Non Prafll)

AI roal--.,gfn

PoSial Joba $48 323 00 y Now
h ng No tlCpe lenee pa d tra n
ng g; eat benet ts ca 1 7 days
800-4~3680 e•l J 365

PIT-FIT $15 $65/h
Ma Ordl
8()0.891 5197

Bualnasa
Training

Gallfpol •
Colllgo
(Ca ae s C ObB To Home)
Ca Today 740 446 4367

12 000 WEEKLY Mo ling 400

230

570

N ce 2 Bed oom Aere ence &amp;

1••10 SOUIIIern Oroam frN Do-

736-3409

EARN WH LE YOU LEARN
Wo k 1 om Home Fu 1T a n ng
$500 $4500 PT FT F ee n o ma
on (4 4) 290 6900 www home
bus ness systems com

ATTENTON I
n e natiana company Expand ng
Woril F om Home o Otrtet
$!00 $6000/mo PTIFT
Ms Orde lln e ne
Pod Tta nlngii/ICBIIOns
Cal 1-800-228 0317
wwwCashOnTheTable com

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME Bu ld you awn sue
ceuru bus nesa Ma I o der E
Comma oe $1000 $7000 PT/FT:
Free l'liO me on www FocusOn
Freedom oom 800.73B 2334

S FREE CASfi NOWS from
wea hy faml as unloedlng mUions
of do ars o hep mnmie the
tuea W te mmed 1lely WINO
FALLS 3010 W LSH RE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
N A 90010

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 y
Mtd ca lnsu ance 8 ng Need
ed lmmtd ate Home Compute
Needed FREE lnte net
800
291 4683 CepU 09

ANNOUNCEMENT S

005

S op wonyWig Abou Layoffs!
ThngsAeToGet
BETTER When Vou B&amp;COO'II
A Pro Drive ForTMC
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
5 Day Tram ng Program Ava
Put A COL &amp; Exce4 en Wages
n Your Walol Today
And Stop WORRY NGI
800-337 9009 M k8 o cnns
7 Days A Week

EARN $600 lo $900 por n
you bll~ obi &amp; IIIPPI I G Ill
oppa lun ty o secu e you ruturt
Low nvea men 1 80()..272 0193
awOsomearn nga corn

410 Houu• for Rent

320

Sac amento 08 l A Lakers
Thuradoy •

oulhom 3
Eastern
450 5lC ll -15 t 2
Southern
30000x x -3,3
Baley (W) and VeaguOf Chapman (L)
aM Say e
Calaway 3-4 Powe 2 2
Doub es-Ca away Chevale Sames
Trlple•--loowlck

205 p m
Fonda vs A anta at K ss mmee Fa
05p m
De ro vs Te~~:as at Por1 Charlo e Fa
05p m
Bos on s M nneso a a Fort Mye s
Fa
OSpm
Tampa Bay vs To on o a Dunedin Fa
05p m
Ph ada phla vs C nc nna a Sa aso a
Fa 05pm
Kansas C y vs Ce eand at Wne
Haven Fa 1 05 p m
Ba moevs NY Mesa PortS Lur:e
Fa
Opm
Seatt e vs San 0 ego a Peons Anz 2

pm

Anahe m vs Ch cago Cubs a Mesa
Anz 305pm
P ttsbu gh vs NY Yankees a Tampa
Fa 7 5 p m
Houston vs Round Rock a The De
Demond 830pm
Oak and vs Sac amen o a Sac amen
oCa 1 905pm
Los Ange es vs A zona a Las Vegas
005 pm
Friday 1 Gamet
M nneso a (sa vs TeKBs a Port Cha
o eFa 230pm
Mont ea vs P t sburgh al Braden on
Fa
OSpm
N Y Mats vs Ba mo e at FOr1 Laud
erdaeAa 105pm
Florida vs Kansas C ty a Hanes C ty
Fa 1 OSpm
De ro t vs Tampll Bay at 5 Pelersbu g
Fa 1 05pm
C nc nna vs Ph ade ph a at C eart.~a
e Fa pspm
M nnesota (ss) vs N V Yankees a
TampaFa
Spm
Cubs M no Leaguers at Ch cage Cubs
305p m
C eve and a Atlanta 7 05 p m

Boston at Houston 8 05 p m
Seattle Bl SOn Ftancllco. 8 05 p 10
ChiCago Wh t SoK at Milwaukee 8 OS
pm
Anahe m V&amp; Arizona a Phoen K 9 05
pm
San 0 ega V$ Lake E s nora a Lake
E sino e D~mond 9 05 p m
S Louis va Oakland a Oakland Calt1
1005 p m
ColOrado al Los An!j81so,

BASEBALL
AmM' c•n Leagu•
ANAfiE M ANGELS T adod OF Do
en Bake y o he New York Yankees lo
OF OH G enaHen H Re eased DH Jose
Canseco T ansferred 1B Mo VatJghn rom
the 15-day o the 60-day dlsabktd st
Op oned I B La ry Barnes and NF W my
Cace es o Sa Lake o he PCL Reas
s gned INF Jose Fe nandez o thel m no
eague camp
Cfi CAGO WH TE SOX-Op oned
RHP Lorenzo Ba ceo and RHP Jon Ga
and o Chao eo he ne natona
League
DETRO T T GERS Paced 38 Dean
Pa me and C M ch Me uskey on the 15
daydsabed s
M NNESOTA TW N$-Piaced OF John
Ba nes on he 5 day dlsab ed st e oar:
e o Ma ch 23 and 26 Jay Can zaro on
he IS-day d sab ed s e oac ve o
March 24 Reass gned AHP W e Ma
nez o Edmon on o he PCL and AHP
Sau Ave a o New Bn an o he Eas em
eague Sen AHP 8 andon Kn gh o he
New Vorl&lt; Yankees unde Au e V prov
sons
NEW YORK YANKEES Ass !)ned OF
Da en B akely o Norwich o he Eas em
League
OAKLAND ATHLET CS-T aded RHP
Oma 0 va as oPt sburgh o a paye o
be named o cash and 2B M gue Ca o o
he Ch cago Cubs fo NF Eric H nske
FlellJsed the Cubs offe o e urn Au e 5
RHP Sco 1Ch asson
TAMPA BAY DEV L RAV8-Ag eed o
arms WI h RHP A e P ~eto on a orie yea
con ract Reca ed RHP Ken H I f om
Dufham of he Internal ona League Des
gna ad OF Kenny KE y fo ass gnmen
TORONTO BLUE JAYs-Released C
Todd G eene and AHP Hecto Carrasco
Opt oned AHP Aoy Hal aday o Dunedin o
he F onda S a e League and OF Vernon
Wei s to Sy acuse of the n ema ona
League Reass gned OF Ryan Thompson
o he m no eague camp
TEXAS RANGERS-Op oned NF
Ke V Dransleld INF M ke Lamb and NF
M chae Young to Ok ahoma o he PCL
Ass gned RHP Pete Munro C M ke Hub
bard C Dave Steed and OF C a g Munroe
o Ok ahoma Paced OF Flick Ledee RHP
DanKo b AHP Franc sco Cordero and OF
Gabe Kap e on the 5-day d sab ed st
etroact ve to March 23 and LHP Just n
Thompson on the 60cday d ~ed st
Nltlona L11gue
ARIZONA D AMONDBACKS-Traded
INF Han ay Fnas to M nnesota for c Chad
Moele
ATLANTA BRAVES Paced C Edd e
Pe az OF George Lombard RHP Kev n
MeG nchy and RHP Scott Sobkow ak on
the 15-day dlsab ad s
C NCINNATI RED8-Roass gned OF
De on Sanders and NF Chris Seldon to
he m no eague camp Sent NF W ton
Gue re o outrlgh to Lou svl e of he nter
na ona League
COLORADO RdCK ES-Ag eed to
term a w h B TOdd Hatton on an 11 yea
cont tc extension Re)eased RHP Masato
Yos~

FLOR OA MARL Ns-Deslgna ed OF
Chad Mottos o asslgnmen
HOUSTON ASTAOS-8 gned C Scon
Serva s o a mno eague con act and
ass gned h m o New Orleans o he PCL
G anted C Jeff Reed h s uncondltlona
e ease Aeass gned C F ank Charles and
OF Sco Pose o m no eague camp
LOS ANGELES DODGER8-Wo ved
FIHP Ramon Mart nez o he purpose o
g v ng h m h s uncondmona e ease T ad
ed AHP M l&lt;e Judd o Tampa Bay o a
p aye to be named
MONTREAL EXPOS Reass gned C
Randy Kno RHP Bob Scan an RHP
Fe pe L a OF Mark Sm h o
o
J mmy
he n e na ona League and
Gonza ez o Ha nsbu g o h Eas e n
League Paced OF Te ry Jones on he 15
day d sab ed s and LHP Sco Downs
RHP H dek abu RHP Carl Pavano and
FIHP Anthony Te ord on he 5 day d s
ab &amp;d s e roac ve o Ma ch 23
P TIS BURGH P AATES-Ae eased
OF Thomas Howa d
ST LOU S CARD NALS-Qp oned
RHP Jason Kamu hand NF S ubby C app
o Memph s o he PCL
SAN DIEGO PADRES-T oded OF Eno
Owens RHP Matt C amen and AHP Oma
Ort z oF orlda o OF Mark Ko say and OF
Cess C espo Re eased NF Ed Sp ague
BASKETBALL
National Batketbatl AIIOC 1t on
NEW JERSEY NETS-8igned F Mo(k
St ck and to a to day con ract
HOCKEY
Nat ona Hockey League
CA GARY FLAMES-Reco od F
Banal G anon from Sa n John of he AHL
PHOEN X COYOTE5-Named Joce yn
Lem eulC commun ty NHL a umn lason
TAMPA BAY L GHTN NG-Reosslgned
RW Om ry A anasenkov and 0 M kko
Kupa nen o De rolt o ha HL
WASH NGTON CAP TALS-S gned
RW Chris Cornne to a two yea con act
and ass gned h m o Portland of the AHL

ft1awa

992of13:1

1111,1/IL~,

410 HOUMI for Rent
I
3 Bo~room• Fo oc o'ed
Homel From S\tt/1.10. 4% DoWn
30 Voara at B il% APR For Lot
lngi.IOD-31 . . . Ext 1109
I or 2 bodroom liouH fo rent In
Mfddlaporr garego baumonr
PIUI lergo out build ng, $300 a
monlh p1u4 diPOIII 740 91~

Home
Improvement•
Sollrllfu 1eoo 5&lt;1 Rea o ed
2nd F oor Aper ment n Hla1o c
0111 lei ldla Fo P oteu ono
Coup • A Modern Amen!l es 3
lloclroorns Spaclouo Uvong 1 1 2
B&amp;lhl floor CICfl HVA!r. $800/
mo P us Ullltlts Securlly And
Key Depost No Pt 1 Rtlt ences
Roqulrod (740)446 4425 0
(740)44fl-3938

311M

2 8odroom lioulo In Eureka nn
Pill UOQ/mont~ l300 Dopo11
Col Aftor S OOpm (740)384-2560
2-3 blllroom 11n1 Delhroom on s
2na Avenue Mlddloporl Call 1
...1M-37'18 ""'for JIMo
3 -.om 1 1141111 W.oh
or &amp; Dryar Now Corpal $480
monlh ~luo U~opoolt No
Fell I Milo U~
2 ld Olon
wood
(~I 78 Hit
Or

-m

(304)8~127

~' 2 IIIIi HoUH
I'Dr Rent (74011*-0128

4

Four Room Hou11

52 01 va

II'"~ pflOnt (F40144'"3fMO

Ool polls 3 8Wdruom 1 811~
Cenltal Air SIOYO l ROfr gti810r
CI&lt;POrt No Potl Depoll l All
eroncu 1378 Month (740)379
2773

Young r; aes SS 00 Each $7 00
Each De veed W h Mnmum or
5
0 de s Dogwood Oak
C~aslnut (304)895 3408

550

MEH CHIINDISE

51 0

Building
Supplies

Ho1.1uhold
GOOde

Ll t Modal A. mond GE wasl'le
StOO Other Wasl'le a S65 00
Eac~ W~he Rope D.ye 575 oo
Othe D yo s S50 00 Ano Up
(740)+18-9088

560

Pets for Sale

994 Dodge Shadow Good Con
d on
5 000 m es 52750
(304 617-Q976

Mo oh1n Ca pe 202 C ark
Chlpel Rd Porle OH Free Eo~
morn Eoay F nanclng o 90 days
ea1h 11 Mastercard
ACCIPIId (H0)446 7444 or I
877 830-9182

••m• ••

v

Main Str111 Fu nllurl
(300)675 1422
~ 1~ Men SlriOI Potnl Ptoesant
Ntw &amp; Uled Furnl ure

New

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
U cond ona e me gut'. an e8
loca efe ances ru n shed Es
lab shod 975 Co 24 H s 740)
446 OB70 800 2B7 0576 Rog
ersWaepoo ng

a P ect L. v ng oom Su les

$389 Buy Bell T -

Meigs
from Page 81
of M1chael Hawk to pull
the Spartans to w1thm 3 2
Alexander threatened m the
top of the Sixth no mg
puttrng the first two batters
on base Hawk and Jason War
ren both s ngled Le vo
reached back to stnke o It
M1chael D1llon and go a
pop up for the s cor d o
Justm Brooks the 1 s gl 1
to center fi ld bt t Ada
B lhngtm ca ue p th o 1g
and fired a strrke to Mat

Stewart at the plate to nail
Hawk and end the mmng
Mergs added an nsurance
run n the bottom of the sev
enth Bullmgton led off th e
1111 ng w th a smgle He was
erased however on a fielders
cho ce off the bat of Zach
Balm
Bolm then stole second and
ca 1 e nto score the gan es
final r
o a st 1gle by Jacob
l th

s

Le\\ s scattered sev
p k p tl e \tn H e

o t t v a d walked
b r
S 1 1th a 1d Bull ngto
p rr of s 1 gle to lead

Stewart added a double and
Runyon and Stanley eacl
added s ngles
Adam Ross \\as the starter
and loser for the Spartans
Ross gave up seven hm
walked four h t one and
t uck out four
Warren was three for three
all Sl 1gles to lead Al exa 1der
H a vk added a pa r of s ngles
and Brooks and Cro v had
&gt; e
gle eacl
hits to
Mcrgs v1ll travel to Trr nble
stru ck o Frrda) 31 d then plav at
a I k J ck o
a d ubi I e d m
San rdav
h da
M gs

86 Fo d Tempo e new pa ts
new as uns good $600 740
992 2 89
UKC Wa ke coonhound pupa 4
lema es 3 rna es sho s up to
da e mo&amp; blanke backs mo hllr
&amp; a he exce an b ood nes and
ea dogs $100 aacl'l 740 965
4 39

Subscribe today • 992·2156

�Thurtlday, March 29, 2001

Thursday, March 29, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.~

NEA Cro ..word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

re
Truckina

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

P/8
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

·New Homes

740-985-3948

·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen, Walls. Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drins • Slencil

CI'Ote Free Estimates
Servln1 Ohio ond W. V,

74D-992-1671

wv IOJI7ll

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH

BAUM LUMBER CO.
46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!1-3301

Trucks- Tractor Trailers·
Houses - Mobile Homes
- Decks -Driveways·
Equipment Cleaned &amp;
De greased

Jeff Stethem

(740) 985-4218
Email:
sterhcm@eurckanet.con

FrH Estlonatos

Cell· (7401 591·0477
Col 2· 740 591·2712

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport. OhiO 45760
Local 843·5264 ·
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
.

. PRINTING
Pl11se call

JJ.J .

n..-·
/ltr Hnrd'lbSwpA 'lhm~

1-800-lS0-!1077

1-304-675-7824

R..idential Commercial N••• Comtruction
Soles Senice lrutallation
Speciolirina In Sheol .Metal Du&lt;lwork
"T"""'" Soles &amp; Se"ke For

Advertise
In this space
for$25 per
month

Gallia, Mawn, •nd Meig.~ Counlies

Ucensed and ln.1Ul'td

WV005176

....,.. l!:u

Howardl.
Wrltesel

DIPOYIII

Roofing • Home

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Aulhorlud
Case-IHParts
Dealers
.

MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Fm EsUmstes

949-1405
591"5011

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

VI

• Room AddHiono &amp;

• Eloctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
• R-ng &amp; Outtore '

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pltlo ond Porch Dtcka
Free Estimates

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,

992·2975

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seals, car seats, headliners, truck ta~.
convenible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,
·motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, elc.

Romodollng

The Farmer'o Bank
and Savings Company
extended parking lot
(beside Powall'a Super
Valu), to sell for caoh
tho
following

and

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

• NIWOiriQH

Public Notice

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

(7!~;~;~e~~~o

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom.,-oy, Ohio
y

~
~

l&gt;II&gt;N'T SNiff.

Tt40lJGtiT YOU
SNIFF~r&gt;.

/F'/J

WINDOW SYSTEMS

Put
Pan

1•

Allptn

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

()C(J.)5f:ME,CHIEf...l

....

....

BUI N&lt;\ [TOO f.N:LY

.... ~·..._ttl\ nlO !.NE TO

TO

C.Ot-l~loa:£1::&gt;

_,.....,,. FI\Sf\\QWI.BL'1'

~415(.~\oat.D

Lfo..i~

7

m~~ ..~
•I•

·"'-·

42 Mlc*y

.....

45 "Cycle"

.

48 Compo..

~-

51 Endured

13 Orthodontlot'o

38 Sailor
40 Habltuete
dog.
41 Heap
18 Hor11 doc 42 Zero
20 Porte or
43 Gonut of
oiNk
olive,_.
21 Aquetlc
44 Deelanor
mammal•
C1ulnl
22 Envoy
46 Mill Kelt
23 Armbone
of the
24 Sonnet. e.g.
comlco
25 Rabbit toll 47 Gaoeouo
27 On bended
element
48 NoVIIIII
Ferber
28 The aame
(Lit.)
50 Sun.
speech
29 Operatn
31 Bunt
52 War hero
33 Cuollrd
53 Uaeo
apple
chair

.

becomes "wrong" --

--.

.__. .. -::er "

f-mVN...f()(

_Lo-Lo-lo.....lo.....~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
as here.
by Luis Campos
North pushed his
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from quotations by famous
partner into dangerous
people, past and present. Each tetter In the cipher sta~ds for another.
territory. South would
Today's clus: F equals H
have jumped to four
spades with a low
'FHZZR
CXHKBI
CG
RGA
I
spade instead of the
jack. (And, it musl be
AMCKB
JW
TWW, C
HOHKM ..
admitted, with the
I
FHZZR
CXH,KBI
CG
RGA,
spade queen instead of
the two black-suit
I
EWWZ
ITKBKMO
AMCKB
jacks, when seven
would be desirable.
CFWM.' - ·. SHBW
WUHMI
Maybe North-South
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In an ugly and unhappy world the
should take up Roman .
richest man can purchass nothing but ugliness and
Key Card Bl,ilckwoo.d~
'unhappiness: - George Barnard Shaw
which would let North .;_-------=-~~~-::::--7'-"r::"::::"ll~::":~:::;leam the exact trump 1,"'u111DAL11 Lr d. till
..fl.,. ( _ f) 'C ~s•
1 0~ 1-'QU ~~- '.!:! P&lt;l"
honors his partner
holds.)
- - - - - - I~H•~ ~r CLAY I . .POLLAN
After winning with
Reooronge leHoro of tho
four
scrambled words be·
1
t he heart ace, dec arer low ro form four ~rnple words.
must play the trumps
without loss. Well,
AIRYRT
assuming West has
2
seven hearts for his
unfavorable- vu In era·bility pre-empt,. the
C I EP E
odds ' change. Given
that the defense's
hearts are dividing 7-2
and the missing spades
-'ErG-n;N-'IrT.:,Y.
are splitting either 1-3 1A son toasted his parent's 25th
anniversary
by saying, "Any anor 2-2, East will have
n.ive~s.ary is a tes!ament to
queen-third of spades
40.4 percent of the
T L
peop e s . - - - - - - - -.
.
time, whereas West h-..:.r-...=-,.:---r-=-r"-r--1 Q Complele lhe chuckle quoted
bv filling in the missing words
will have queen-dou- L....L-l-.J....-,-L_J......J• you develop
from Slop No. 3 below.
bleton only 23.1 percent of the time. So, .:!!. PRINT NUMBERED
.
the moral play is clear: ~ LETTERS
Cross to dummy's . . . UNSCRAMBLE FORI
.
spade king, then lead a V ANSWER
low spade to your jack
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
(unless East produces
•
the queen, of course).
Here, because we
Annual - Leech - Inept - Impair · CAME IN
1
tried
to put a defective TV back into the box. What I
prefer happy endings,
needed . was a TV that lasts as long as the box it CAME
North 's overbid pays
IN .
off.

·::::

-n

(3) 22, 29, 2001
21c

Public Notice

~.m.,

0

NOT U"LESS
'(OU . BECOME
·rART OF A
COUPLE BV

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE: II hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, March 31,

FRIDIW.

VOUB

•

public eale wilt be held
at 211 Wnt Second

1 I I I' I

CONCRETE
CONNECDON
Quality Driveways,

Eastem·
frown Page 81
runs, the Lodwick doubled home two
mdre, and eventually scored on a 4-3
ground out, the score 9-3 Eastern.
Southern never scored the rest of the
although threatening several times and
'leaving runners stranded on base overaU.
Meanwhile, Chapman sat Eastern
down 1-2-3 in the third, and gave up
just one in the fourth. That came when
Wiggins singled, and Calaway doubled
her home, the score ·10-3.
Eastern broke the game open with
five runs in the top of the fifth inning on
four walks and RBI singles by Amy
Hager and Sandy PoweU. Calaway and
Chevalier each had RBI doubles and
Calav.':ly stole home for the final run,

15-3.
Bailey picked up the victory with four
walks, two hit batters, and six strikeouts, while hurling a one-hitter. Barnes
had the lone SHS hit, a double in the
first inning.
C hapman suffered the loss with 14
walks and gave up eleven hits. Wolfe
said of Chapman. .
" As a sophomore/ she is not far off
from being a great pitcher," said Wolfe.
" In a couple years she will have the success ofJuli Bailey."
· · Eastern hitters were ·Jed by Calaway
with a single and two doubles. Chevalier
had a double, Lodwick a triple, and singles by Wiggins, Bailey, Bissell and
Gibbs.
Barnes had the only Southern hit.
Southern hosts Belpre friday.
Eastern plays at Vinton County Friday.

Buckeyes
frown Page 81
Columbus, Ohio, playing in front of
3,000 people," said Lewis, with one of
the nets draped around her neck. "It was
a great environment. What better script
could I have written for coming out of
my senior year."
.
Ohio State's ftve wins in the tourna; ment provided a euphoric ending to a
season in which Burns at one point had
to recruit OSU soccer goalie Amber
Barnes and volleyball player Dana
Stearns to fill holes in her inJury-riddled
roster.

Now To
Reserve Your Lot

(740) 949-7039
or

(740) 992·3203

Tile

CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

(Factory Oullet)
All vertical blindt are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertiealt • Wood
• Minil • Etc

144111ni Awe. Galpilt

446-4995
Double Hung
Replacement
Windows

OSU trailed 36-24 in the opening
minute of the .s.e cond half, but used a · Welded Frame&amp;
14-4 run to close io 40-38 with just Salh 0-1 0 I United
lnchH
over 13 minutes left.
$199.00 ln~lalled
New Mexico built its lead back to 4840 on a 3-pointer by Miranda Sanchez,
but the Buckeyes raUied behind Lewis,
155 N2nd
center Courtney Coleman and fresh. Middleport
man C~icy Matter.
·
.
992-2772
Ohio State took the lead for good at
56-54 on Lewis' two 3-pointers.
Jordan Adams led New Mexi.c o with
20 points and had seven of the Lobos' 12
bloc ks . Sanchez had 13 points and 11 ·
rebounds , and Chelsea Grear had 15
rebounds.

J&amp;L

Racine
Mower
Clinic·

f1@[j!J@~ W](J](]@rrKf}~

''

'-~

~"~.?@ gpJrJ fJJJJ1 w~fft3flg
lbe Daily Sentinel
Subsatbe today • 992-2156
\

IEut

tNT

BY PHILLIP ALDER
H.L.
Mencken
claimed, "Morality is
lhe theory that every
human act must be
ei!her right or wrong
and that 99 percent of
them are wrong."
Well, in bridge, as
you are aware, we
have percentage plays.
For example, with
nine cards missing the
queen, perhaps A-J-xx-x opposite K-x-x-x,
the books tell you to
play off ihe two top
honors. However, this
is only about two percent better than taking
second-round
a
finesse . So, if you
know something dramatic about the deal,
the
"right"
play

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

· KEEPS
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 011.5%
· OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

~EMQY

2001, It 10:00

N..U.
DbL

Not always

GRAVELY TRACTOR

•

•II
tl111
•IDJ J I

Op!!rUn1lud: • K

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

Wnl
3'
Pau
Pau

40 o.tolrM

54 Stored unp.....ntly
15 Molle
55 Genua of
longer
onto
11 Rlvol ol
58 Moturtng
DOE
ogont
17 Mro. Peron 57 Bllbylonlon
18 Llrgo
hero
rodlnta
20 Sour chorry
DOWN
23 Unoxpected
1 Hewallon
win
food lith
21 -the llno
2 Tiny lkln
(obly)
opening
27 Actreoa
3 Rocedel
Boolngor
4 Likert' org.
30 Find tho
poolllon ol 5 Lllr
&amp; Bolton
32 African
Rodlind
34 Neither
. 7 "Glycerin"
auort
maacullne
nor
8 F"to bl
drafted
feminine
9 Bl11
35 Glouy
11 Bembl, e.g.
fobrlc
12 Envlouo
36 Qty.

Duler: Wut

Lawn atld Garden Equlpmtltt.
It our au ln... not Q sld•

EXCAVATING

_..

37 Sook (flu)
31Sworma

courteou1

Vulnerable: Eall·Wnt

I•
••

HAUUNG

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Public Notice

•QUI

740-985-4180

See Manning, Wayne or Jl"l
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

WICK'S

14 Smoothly

Eul

el

........

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally

· ~

.......btr

• AJ 1 I 1
'A 11 J

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

THl OUAUT't Qn et::»&gt;I'ANV'

In I high
ore

12 llecamol

WHI.
•KQJIJit
t IDI
•111

Before 6 p.m.
leave Message
After 6pm

740-985-3831

.....,

1D Hit (I bill)

6AI.Qt

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

35537 St. Rt. 7 North Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

CUSTOM SCREEN

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS .

6 KI I J

cllmbtr

••
tAI.QJ

huiil

WANTED

Prlntllg Is now

"Take the pain. out
of paintiflB·UI""'
do it for you"

-21:&lt; Hunter~ Pride Dog Food 56.75/50
-12" Wtllern pride horw feed SS.60/50
Sl.OO off Coupon makes next purchaw 54.60/50
laylf Crumbles SW
T.M. Sch Blodts $4.75/SO lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

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

8 SocleJ

LINDA'S
PAINTING

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In MrVIce"
-11.6" Protein li'llslodc/calllt Fttd 56.25/100

ACROSS
1 Overturn

~

PaUos, Skllwalkl.

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

PEANUTS
AS '(OU KlofOW, 11M RATHER
FOND OF

Sunset Horne
Conslluct1on
New Homes, .Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding. Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
· More
·
We Can Make Your
Dream A Reality/

44087 Wlpple Road

in this

Pomeroy

740.992-5344
· Frl

; Satll·1

!1211

FREE ESTIMATES!

J &amp; L SANITATION

Call lis flnt Or We Both Lose!

Locally owned and operated by
JACK &amp; UNDA PROVENCE

Ask For Mike Hindle

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 lears!"
• STEADY

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

740-985-4212
Now RHtkJa
A·JMINI·STORAGE
992·6396
992·2212

~~~
High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

(acro11 from Pizza Hut)

(740)992-1

,.

Full service auto center

,..,.•. .AU:• IlL

Hill's S11f

.

28170 Baahan Road
R1clna, Ohio

~40)

740·9,92·5232
Pdtmo.

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' ·X 10'
to 10' X30'
Houra
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
l

.

Cellular ·

48771

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

I

iI ITHURSDAY

'Your
'Birthday.

1·800·272-5179 or 446-9800

39583 Sumner Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE

'

•'

month.

BUT DON'T
1-!URT HIM ..

I I I I I I I I I

,..,a

space for rr.~mniiiiiii~;iiiJ
$!$0 per

CLOBBER HIM,

-t~,
L-.J-.1..J...I'_·I__,I__.'
._ E
• Kl' 91 cl . IE I

I'

Tire-Barn

Advertise

/

740-742-3411

Open
Mon-Frl 9-5:3o
Sat 9·1

949-2804

•111..111111111 , , . Eltllllllf
•IIIM&amp;III
• bblmWirl • TniiiiiiiiiR FIIIWI
• Bfllll Wlrl

25 years experience
Flit Eatlmat11

I

, Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
'

•

Friday, March 30, 2001
Life could become more meaningful for you in the year ahead
due to the fact that you'll tend to
have greater mental curiosity and
creativeness. taking you to new
horizons and heights.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) • No matler how dire a situation
looks today, you can !urn it
around by using a lillie creative
brain power, whether it has to do
with a personal issue or one
shared with others. Get a jump on
life by understanding the innuences that'll govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your AslroGmph predictions by mailing $2
to Aslro-Gmph, c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New York. NY 10156. Be
sure Jo state your Zodiac sign .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) • Your financial picture is a mixed ·
bag Joday. You'll reap ample
rewards for that which you work
hard, but you could lose your shirt
if you take the advice of just anybody.
. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) ..
It won 't ·be possible-to please
everybody Joday. In facl. you
could have a whopper or an argu-

ment wilh one in particular. Howcvcr.thc &lt;hoy sl.,uld end on a moSI
pleasant note .

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) ·
- Leave lhe door of opponunily
open t()(fay. e ven . if. everything
you anempl 10 do appears lo be
going wrong. A surprising development could turn things around .

LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22J .. For
results hxlay, kel'p t!vt:rything
on a purely social basis in all your
involvement with friends . Stay
out of their business and keep
them out of yours.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) -Success is likely in the long run
today, because you'll be rather
ingenious about circumventing
barriers or problems that would
olherwise bar you from your
objectives.
LIBRA(Sept. 23 -0cl. 23) --If
you're ne~ible and accommodate fluctuating c.ondilions by
revising your plans as circumstances dictale, you can still be
both. effective and construclive
today.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- You should be able lo manage
your own affairs with exception,
be~l

.

'

al effectiveness today, but should
you attempt to do so for others, it
could he a totally different story.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) .. This might be one of those
days when you'll need lo gel out
and do something wilh your
friends, especially if you've been
carrying a lot on your plate. The
change will do you good.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Although you may gel a
!&lt;low

~tart

today on a project

thai's important lo you. you'll
make Uf! for losl lime by using
your ingenuity lo tlcvi~ lahorsaving

t~chniques .

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fch. IQ)
~-

There 's u good chomcc you
might have to compete wilh
someone you'd n.uh~r beat more

Jhan win lhe lollery. If you relax
and don't rake the cwnt too ~cri ­
ously. you ' ll come out the winner.

PISCES (Feb. 10-March 211) •
. Tending to lhe needs of people
for whom you love will take
precedence over all your other
interem today. You won't let
aggressive ou~siders ta~e you ·
away .from your priorities.

•

'

�Thurtlday, March 29, 2001

Thursday, March 29, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.~

NEA Cro ..word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

re
Truckina

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

P/8
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

·New Homes

740-985-3948

·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen, Walls. Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drins • Slencil

CI'Ote Free Estimates
Servln1 Ohio ond W. V,

74D-992-1671

wv IOJI7ll

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH

BAUM LUMBER CO.
46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!1-3301

Trucks- Tractor Trailers·
Houses - Mobile Homes
- Decks -Driveways·
Equipment Cleaned &amp;
De greased

Jeff Stethem

(740) 985-4218
Email:
sterhcm@eurckanet.con

FrH Estlonatos

Cell· (7401 591·0477
Col 2· 740 591·2712

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport. OhiO 45760
Local 843·5264 ·
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
.

. PRINTING
Pl11se call

JJ.J .

n..-·
/ltr Hnrd'lbSwpA 'lhm~

1-800-lS0-!1077

1-304-675-7824

R..idential Commercial N••• Comtruction
Soles Senice lrutallation
Speciolirina In Sheol .Metal Du&lt;lwork
"T"""'" Soles &amp; Se"ke For

Advertise
In this space
for$25 per
month

Gallia, Mawn, •nd Meig.~ Counlies

Ucensed and ln.1Ul'td

WV005176

....,.. l!:u

Howardl.
Wrltesel

DIPOYIII

Roofing • Home

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Aulhorlud
Case-IHParts
Dealers
.

MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Fm EsUmstes

949-1405
591"5011

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

VI

• Room AddHiono &amp;

• Eloctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
• R-ng &amp; Outtore '

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pltlo ond Porch Dtcka
Free Estimates

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,

992·2975

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seals, car seats, headliners, truck ta~.
convenible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,
·motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, elc.

Romodollng

The Farmer'o Bank
and Savings Company
extended parking lot
(beside Powall'a Super
Valu), to sell for caoh
tho
following

and

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

• NIWOiriQH

Public Notice

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

(7!~;~;~e~~~o

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom.,-oy, Ohio
y

~
~

l&gt;II&gt;N'T SNiff.

Tt40lJGtiT YOU
SNIFF~r&gt;.

/F'/J

WINDOW SYSTEMS

Put
Pan

1•

Allptn

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

()C(J.)5f:ME,CHIEf...l

....

....

BUI N&lt;\ [TOO f.N:LY

.... ~·..._ttl\ nlO !.NE TO

TO

C.Ot-l~loa:£1::&gt;

_,.....,,. FI\Sf\\QWI.BL'1'

~415(.~\oat.D

Lfo..i~

7

m~~ ..~
•I•

·"'-·

42 Mlc*y

.....

45 "Cycle"

.

48 Compo..

~-

51 Endured

13 Orthodontlot'o

38 Sailor
40 Habltuete
dog.
41 Heap
18 Hor11 doc 42 Zero
20 Porte or
43 Gonut of
oiNk
olive,_.
21 Aquetlc
44 Deelanor
mammal•
C1ulnl
22 Envoy
46 Mill Kelt
23 Armbone
of the
24 Sonnet. e.g.
comlco
25 Rabbit toll 47 Gaoeouo
27 On bended
element
48 NoVIIIII
Ferber
28 The aame
(Lit.)
50 Sun.
speech
29 Operatn
31 Bunt
52 War hero
33 Cuollrd
53 Uaeo
apple
chair

.

becomes "wrong" --

--.

.__. .. -::er "

f-mVN...f()(

_Lo-Lo-lo.....lo.....~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
as here.
by Luis Campos
North pushed his
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from quotations by famous
partner into dangerous
people, past and present. Each tetter In the cipher sta~ds for another.
territory. South would
Today's clus: F equals H
have jumped to four
spades with a low
'FHZZR
CXHKBI
CG
RGA
I
spade instead of the
jack. (And, it musl be
AMCKB
JW
TWW, C
HOHKM ..
admitted, with the
I
FHZZR
CXH,KBI
CG
RGA,
spade queen instead of
the two black-suit
I
EWWZ
ITKBKMO
AMCKB
jacks, when seven
would be desirable.
CFWM.' - ·. SHBW
WUHMI
Maybe North-South
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In an ugly and unhappy world the
should take up Roman .
richest man can purchass nothing but ugliness and
Key Card Bl,ilckwoo.d~
'unhappiness: - George Barnard Shaw
which would let North .;_-------=-~~~-::::--7'-"r::"::::"ll~::":~:::;leam the exact trump 1,"'u111DAL11 Lr d. till
..fl.,. ( _ f) 'C ~s•
1 0~ 1-'QU ~~- '.!:! P&lt;l"
honors his partner
holds.)
- - - - - - I~H•~ ~r CLAY I . .POLLAN
After winning with
Reooronge leHoro of tho
four
scrambled words be·
1
t he heart ace, dec arer low ro form four ~rnple words.
must play the trumps
without loss. Well,
AIRYRT
assuming West has
2
seven hearts for his
unfavorable- vu In era·bility pre-empt,. the
C I EP E
odds ' change. Given
that the defense's
hearts are dividing 7-2
and the missing spades
-'ErG-n;N-'IrT.:,Y.
are splitting either 1-3 1A son toasted his parent's 25th
anniversary
by saying, "Any anor 2-2, East will have
n.ive~s.ary is a tes!ament to
queen-third of spades
40.4 percent of the
T L
peop e s . - - - - - - - -.
.
time, whereas West h-..:.r-...=-,.:---r-=-r"-r--1 Q Complele lhe chuckle quoted
bv filling in the missing words
will have queen-dou- L....L-l-.J....-,-L_J......J• you develop
from Slop No. 3 below.
bleton only 23.1 percent of the time. So, .:!!. PRINT NUMBERED
.
the moral play is clear: ~ LETTERS
Cross to dummy's . . . UNSCRAMBLE FORI
.
spade king, then lead a V ANSWER
low spade to your jack
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
(unless East produces
•
the queen, of course).
Here, because we
Annual - Leech - Inept - Impair · CAME IN
1
tried
to put a defective TV back into the box. What I
prefer happy endings,
needed . was a TV that lasts as long as the box it CAME
North 's overbid pays
IN .
off.

·::::

-n

(3) 22, 29, 2001
21c

Public Notice

~.m.,

0

NOT U"LESS
'(OU . BECOME
·rART OF A
COUPLE BV

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE: II hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, March 31,

FRIDIW.

VOUB

•

public eale wilt be held
at 211 Wnt Second

1 I I I' I

CONCRETE
CONNECDON
Quality Driveways,

Eastem·
frown Page 81
runs, the Lodwick doubled home two
mdre, and eventually scored on a 4-3
ground out, the score 9-3 Eastern.
Southern never scored the rest of the
although threatening several times and
'leaving runners stranded on base overaU.
Meanwhile, Chapman sat Eastern
down 1-2-3 in the third, and gave up
just one in the fourth. That came when
Wiggins singled, and Calaway doubled
her home, the score ·10-3.
Eastern broke the game open with
five runs in the top of the fifth inning on
four walks and RBI singles by Amy
Hager and Sandy PoweU. Calaway and
Chevalier each had RBI doubles and
Calav.':ly stole home for the final run,

15-3.
Bailey picked up the victory with four
walks, two hit batters, and six strikeouts, while hurling a one-hitter. Barnes
had the lone SHS hit, a double in the
first inning.
C hapman suffered the loss with 14
walks and gave up eleven hits. Wolfe
said of Chapman. .
" As a sophomore/ she is not far off
from being a great pitcher," said Wolfe.
" In a couple years she will have the success ofJuli Bailey."
· · Eastern hitters were ·Jed by Calaway
with a single and two doubles. Chevalier
had a double, Lodwick a triple, and singles by Wiggins, Bailey, Bissell and
Gibbs.
Barnes had the only Southern hit.
Southern hosts Belpre friday.
Eastern plays at Vinton County Friday.

Buckeyes
frown Page 81
Columbus, Ohio, playing in front of
3,000 people," said Lewis, with one of
the nets draped around her neck. "It was
a great environment. What better script
could I have written for coming out of
my senior year."
.
Ohio State's ftve wins in the tourna; ment provided a euphoric ending to a
season in which Burns at one point had
to recruit OSU soccer goalie Amber
Barnes and volleyball player Dana
Stearns to fill holes in her inJury-riddled
roster.

Now To
Reserve Your Lot

(740) 949-7039
or

(740) 992·3203

Tile

CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

(Factory Oullet)
All vertical blindt are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertiealt • Wood
• Minil • Etc

144111ni Awe. Galpilt

446-4995
Double Hung
Replacement
Windows

OSU trailed 36-24 in the opening
minute of the .s.e cond half, but used a · Welded Frame&amp;
14-4 run to close io 40-38 with just Salh 0-1 0 I United
lnchH
over 13 minutes left.
$199.00 ln~lalled
New Mexico built its lead back to 4840 on a 3-pointer by Miranda Sanchez,
but the Buckeyes raUied behind Lewis,
155 N2nd
center Courtney Coleman and fresh. Middleport
man C~icy Matter.
·
.
992-2772
Ohio State took the lead for good at
56-54 on Lewis' two 3-pointers.
Jordan Adams led New Mexi.c o with
20 points and had seven of the Lobos' 12
bloc ks . Sanchez had 13 points and 11 ·
rebounds , and Chelsea Grear had 15
rebounds.

J&amp;L

Racine
Mower
Clinic·

f1@[j!J@~ W](J](]@rrKf}~

''

'-~

~"~.?@ gpJrJ fJJJJ1 w~fft3flg
lbe Daily Sentinel
Subsatbe today • 992-2156
\

IEut

tNT

BY PHILLIP ALDER
H.L.
Mencken
claimed, "Morality is
lhe theory that every
human act must be
ei!her right or wrong
and that 99 percent of
them are wrong."
Well, in bridge, as
you are aware, we
have percentage plays.
For example, with
nine cards missing the
queen, perhaps A-J-xx-x opposite K-x-x-x,
the books tell you to
play off ihe two top
honors. However, this
is only about two percent better than taking
second-round
a
finesse . So, if you
know something dramatic about the deal,
the
"right"
play

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

· KEEPS
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 011.5%
· OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

~EMQY

2001, It 10:00

N..U.
DbL

Not always

GRAVELY TRACTOR

•

•II
tl111
•IDJ J I

Op!!rUn1lud: • K

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

Wnl
3'
Pau
Pau

40 o.tolrM

54 Stored unp.....ntly
15 Molle
55 Genua of
longer
onto
11 Rlvol ol
58 Moturtng
DOE
ogont
17 Mro. Peron 57 Bllbylonlon
18 Llrgo
hero
rodlnta
20 Sour chorry
DOWN
23 Unoxpected
1 Hewallon
win
food lith
21 -the llno
2 Tiny lkln
(obly)
opening
27 Actreoa
3 Rocedel
Boolngor
4 Likert' org.
30 Find tho
poolllon ol 5 Lllr
&amp; Bolton
32 African
Rodlind
34 Neither
. 7 "Glycerin"
auort
maacullne
nor
8 F"to bl
drafted
feminine
9 Bl11
35 Glouy
11 Bembl, e.g.
fobrlc
12 Envlouo
36 Qty.

Duler: Wut

Lawn atld Garden Equlpmtltt.
It our au ln... not Q sld•

EXCAVATING

_..

37 Sook (flu)
31Sworma

courteou1

Vulnerable: Eall·Wnt

I•
••

HAUUNG

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Public Notice

•QUI

740-985-4180

See Manning, Wayne or Jl"l
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

WICK'S

14 Smoothly

Eul

el

........

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally

· ~

.......btr

• AJ 1 I 1
'A 11 J

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

THl OUAUT't Qn et::»&gt;I'ANV'

In I high
ore

12 llecamol

WHI.
•KQJIJit
t IDI
•111

Before 6 p.m.
leave Message
After 6pm

740-985-3831

.....,

1D Hit (I bill)

6AI.Qt

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

35537 St. Rt. 7 North Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

CUSTOM SCREEN

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS .

6 KI I J

cllmbtr

••
tAI.QJ

huiil

WANTED

Prlntllg Is now

"Take the pain. out
of paintiflB·UI""'
do it for you"

-21:&lt; Hunter~ Pride Dog Food 56.75/50
-12" Wtllern pride horw feed SS.60/50
Sl.OO off Coupon makes next purchaw 54.60/50
laylf Crumbles SW
T.M. Sch Blodts $4.75/SO lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

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

8 SocleJ

LINDA'S
PAINTING

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In MrVIce"
-11.6" Protein li'llslodc/calllt Fttd 56.25/100

ACROSS
1 Overturn

~

PaUos, Skllwalkl.

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

PEANUTS
AS '(OU KlofOW, 11M RATHER
FOND OF

Sunset Horne
Conslluct1on
New Homes, .Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding. Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
· More
·
We Can Make Your
Dream A Reality/

44087 Wlpple Road

in this

Pomeroy

740.992-5344
· Frl

; Satll·1

!1211

FREE ESTIMATES!

J &amp; L SANITATION

Call lis flnt Or We Both Lose!

Locally owned and operated by
JACK &amp; UNDA PROVENCE

Ask For Mike Hindle

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 lears!"
• STEADY

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

740-985-4212
Now RHtkJa
A·JMINI·STORAGE
992·6396
992·2212

~~~
High &amp; Dry
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Friday, March 30, 2001
Life could become more meaningful for you in the year ahead
due to the fact that you'll tend to
have greater mental curiosity and
creativeness. taking you to new
horizons and heights.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) • No matler how dire a situation
looks today, you can !urn it
around by using a lillie creative
brain power, whether it has to do
with a personal issue or one
shared with others. Get a jump on
life by understanding the innuences that'll govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your AslroGmph predictions by mailing $2
to Aslro-Gmph, c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New York. NY 10156. Be
sure Jo state your Zodiac sign .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) • Your financial picture is a mixed ·
bag Joday. You'll reap ample
rewards for that which you work
hard, but you could lose your shirt
if you take the advice of just anybody.
. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) ..
It won 't ·be possible-to please
everybody Joday. In facl. you
could have a whopper or an argu-

ment wilh one in particular. Howcvcr.thc &lt;hoy sl.,uld end on a moSI
pleasant note .

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) ·
- Leave lhe door of opponunily
open t()(fay. e ven . if. everything
you anempl 10 do appears lo be
going wrong. A surprising development could turn things around .

LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22J .. For
results hxlay, kel'p t!vt:rything
on a purely social basis in all your
involvement with friends . Stay
out of their business and keep
them out of yours.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) -Success is likely in the long run
today, because you'll be rather
ingenious about circumventing
barriers or problems that would
olherwise bar you from your
objectives.
LIBRA(Sept. 23 -0cl. 23) --If
you're ne~ible and accommodate fluctuating c.ondilions by
revising your plans as circumstances dictale, you can still be
both. effective and construclive
today.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- You should be able lo manage
your own affairs with exception,
be~l

.

'

al effectiveness today, but should
you attempt to do so for others, it
could he a totally different story.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) .. This might be one of those
days when you'll need lo gel out
and do something wilh your
friends, especially if you've been
carrying a lot on your plate. The
change will do you good.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Although you may gel a
!&lt;low

~tart

today on a project

thai's important lo you. you'll
make Uf! for losl lime by using
your ingenuity lo tlcvi~ lahorsaving

t~chniques .

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fch. IQ)
~-

There 's u good chomcc you
might have to compete wilh
someone you'd n.uh~r beat more

Jhan win lhe lollery. If you relax
and don't rake the cwnt too ~cri ­
ously. you ' ll come out the winner.

PISCES (Feb. 10-March 211) •
. Tending to lhe needs of people
for whom you love will take
precedence over all your other
interem today. You won't let
aggressive ou~siders ta~e you ·
away .from your priorities.

•

'

�•

Page 8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 29, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

W.Va. lost ftlral population, Democrats press Bush for
youth during the last decade second set of C.ensus figures
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - West Virginia lost
. youth, remained largely white
and saw population booms ·
only in bedroom communities
outside the nation's capital
during the 1990s, census figures showed Wednesday.
The eight counties in the
Eastern Panhandle - the tip
of which is just SO miles from
Washington, D.C - gained
32,664 people over the last
decade, a growth rate of 17
percent.
At the same time, the rest of.
the state lost 17,797 residents,
led by coal-rich counties in
the southern half of the state.
Overall, the state's population grew just 0.8 percent
from 1990 to 1.8 million peapic last year. Only North

Dakota had a slower growth
rate.
West Virginia has the highest
median age in the nation,
38.7. The new census data
showed the state's population
over age 18 grew by 4 percent
as the number of those under
18 fell by 9 percent.
While the number of
minorities increased slightly,
whites still outnumber other
groups more than 9-to-1.
Berkeley County led the
state in population growth, at
28 percent. The area is close to
Washington, Maryland and
Virginia, but it also has growing local employers, ample
sewer ' and water service and
three high sc hools,
"Our climate is decent, and
our biggest wealth is our pea-

pie," Counry Commissioner
Bob Burkhart said. "We don't
have a lot of millionaires and
we don't have a lot of paupers.
We have a lot of blue- and
white-collar people."
Area officials have scrambled
to cope with growth that is
slowly turning farm country
into shopping centers and
housing developments. Nearby Jefferson County drafted a
zoning ordinance in i 988 and
has retooled a plan they hope
will guide them over the next
15 years.
County
Commissioner
James Knode said overcrowded schools are suffering the
most, but fire and ambulance
services are also stretched by
the boom in retirees and comnluters.

WASHING:rON (AP) Democrats
pressed the Bush administration Wednesday to
release a second set of 2000 census figures that
supporters contend would protect against an
undercount of millions of Americans, primarily minorities.
Population figures adjusted using statistical
sampling cannot be used for political redistrict•
ing, but many Democrats still want the data
used to distribute over $185 billion in federal
money nationwide. Census figures are used in
Various funding formulas that take population .
into account.
At a Senate hearing Wednesday, Commerce
Secretary Don Evans defended his decision to
release only data from the initial census "head
count" to states for redistricting, agreeing with
a Census Bureau recommendation.
Evans and William Barron, acting director of
the Census Bureau, told the Senate Commerce
Committee that there are still too many discrepancies with adjusted figures and that the
, bureau may be unable to determine until fall

whether sampled data was accurate enough to
be made public for other reasons - if at all.
The Commerce Department over.;ees . the
Censw Bureau.
Still, Democrats and civil rights groups
pressed on with arguments that all figures -;adjusted or not -should be released immecli~
ately to test Evans' assertion that the 2000
count was "the most accurate in the country's
history."
They pointed to a new study from members
appointed by former President Clinton to the
U.S. Census Monitoring Board. The srudy
showed states with booming minority populitions and large urban center.; tended to ha~
higher proportions of undercounted residents.
The study waS based on an analysis of census
data by Temple University statistics professor
Eugene Erickson, but was not sanctioned by
the Census Bureau. The report's accuracy was
questioned by bureau officials, and it was criti.:
cized by Republicans for being "inaccurate and
irresponsible."

WASHINGTON (AP) Center to Prevent Handgun
Former White House press Violence. She called reports of
secretary James Brady, wound- moving the fight exclusively
ed in the attempted assassina- to the state level "bizarre" but
tion of President Reagan 20 noted state efforts continue.
James Brady said 670,000
years ago, rejected claims that
gun-control efforts have Americans have been killed by
stalled.
firearms since March 30,
Brady, his wife, Sarah, and 1981, the day he, Reagan and
several lawmakers pledged · to two others were shot in Washfight for tougher laws even ington by John Hinkley Jr.
though Republicans, tradi- Hinkley bought his pistol for
tionally more . gun-friendly $29 at a firearms shop.
Brady blamed the National
than Democrats, control both
the White House and Con- Rifle Association for blocking
· legislation to mandate child
gress.
The gun-control advocates safery locks and close what's
heid a news conference called the gun show loophole,
Wednesday to note their which allows the sale without
accomplishments most background checks of firearms
notably the Brady Law, which at gun. shows.
requires that backgrounds of
"So why weren't those laws
gun buyers be checked - and enacted?" Brady asked. "The
to try to dispel reports that gun lobby, led by the wellthey've all but given up on financed National' Rifle Assopassing new legislation in this dation, called its allies in ConCongress. ·
gress, took out its checkbook,
"We've got more support and killed the effort to pass
now than we've ever had," said even these modest and ·reasonSarah Brady, chairwoman of able steps toward safer comHandgun Control and the munities."

Chao says injuries show
need for ergonomics rules
WASHINGTON (AP) Work-related repetitive strain
injuries and similar muscular
disorders account for more
than a third of all job injuries,
demonstrating the need for a
"solid,
comprehensive
approach", to new ergonomics
rules, Labor Secretary Elaine
Chao says.
·
Such InJuries, however,
decreased in 1999, the Labor
Department
· announced
Wednesday.
The latest numbers were
released a week after President
Bush signed a repeal of &lt;:;linton administration ergonomics rules aimed at reducing
such injuries. Congress passed
. the repeal after a legislative
fight waged by business inter·
ests and labor unions.
Chao said Wednesday the
new figures \how "the need
for a solid, comprehensive

approach to ergonomics. It
also points to a need to address
injuries befi&gt;re they occur,
through prevention ·a nd compliance assistance, ~ther than
just rely on rea.c tionary methods."
About 1.7 million injuries
and illnesses at private businesses required time off from
work in 1999, dropping slightly from 1.73 million the previous year, the agency said.
That followed steady declines
since 1993, when 2.25 million
job injuries were reported.
Of the total 1999 injuries
reported, 582,300 were caused
by repetitive motion, sprains
or strains.
Truck drivers had the most
reported total injuries, with
131 ,800 cases, followed by
laborers, with 97,200 injuries,
and nursing aides and orderlies, with 84,100 cases.

Luq cancer death rate climbing
'
.

Nea~y 68,000 woman in the Un~ed Slates

wUI dla ollung cancer this year.
aboot one In every four cancer deaths among woman, according to a new
report from the Surgeon General. The death rate tor lung cancer surpallled
that of breast cancer In 1987, and by 1997 the lung cancer death rate was
34.5 per 100,000 women.
Death rates for lung cancer and breast cancer among women
in the United States, 1930-1997, per 100,000 women
35
30
25

-.

Brea1t cancer

20
15
10
Lung cane•

5

1930s

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

NOTE: Death rltttl are •ge·ad}usttld to t~ T970 population.

1980s

1990s

.

~OJ GAU..JPOUS

, DESPERATELY

.

NUl)e THE I'OILOWING ~B-INS
Ford Tauru1 a Mercury SabiN .......... 111811 - 111111
Ford Wlnc~~t~r~a Mercury Vll...,. ... ,8f!'~,.
,AR Ford Multllr:lg8 ..........................4Cyl• VI• VI
F!'f'd Contou111 6 Mlf!)llry MysttqU,. .. 1-19111

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2000 FORD MUSTANG (3 to choose from)
2000FORDWIHOSTAR
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Details,

•
Melp (ounty's
Volume

s 1. Number

Married
couples
eta
reak

Friday
March 30, 2001

entine

. Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

178

WASHINGTON (AP)
-The House voted overwhelmingly Thursday to
cut income taxes for most
married couples and to
gradually double the
$500-per-child tax credit,
endorsing two major
pieces of President Bush's
$1.6 trillion tax relief
plan.
A few hours after the
282-144 vote, which
included 64 Democrats in
favor, the House Ways and
Means
Committee
approved a third component of the Bush plan: a
measure that would eliminate the estate tax by 2011
at a cost of almost $193
billion. That bill is expected to reach the House
floor next week.
· ..B~fore the votes, Bush '
told a news conference
that Congress was well on
the ·way to enacting
"meaningful, real, longlasting tax relief," even
though the legislation that .
is , sp~~c?ng .t~r9ugh the 1
··-lip~¢
1fa~~s • •lwosi .....,,_
•
taitl change in the Senate,
which is divid~d evenly
l;letween 50 Democrats
ahd 50 Republicans. The
, House has already passed
,; Bush's package of $958
billion in .a cross-the-board
income tax cuts.
Bush repeated that he
would not back away from
his S1.6 trillion figure
over 10 years and that any
short-term
economic
stimulus tax relief- such
as a $300 individual tax
rebate suggested by Senate
Democrats must be
part of a broader plan.
"I've been calling for
immediate tax relief. I
think it makes sense to do
· so. But we've got to have
long-term relief as well,"
the president said.
In the first congressional vote on the $300 rebate
idea,' the House defeated
by 240-194 a Democratic
measure that would have
substituted its $50 billion
in immediate tax relief for
the $399 billion over 10
years in the GOP-written
bill to ease the tax marriage penalty by 2009 and
increase the child credit
beginning in 2001.

Bradys say support for
gun control strong

Speciai'Puzzler' section tod~y
Southern beats Eastern, B 1

Sllturd.y
Hlp: 50s; Low: 40S

50 Cents

.•

.

Cou

peek at website

BY BRIAN J. REED

office, either by telephone, mail or the
department's new website, as well as to
POMEROY - . Meigs County touri~t information centers in Ohio
Tourism Director Karin Johnson and beyond.
shared an overview of the county's
The new website, found at
tourism efforts during Thursday's reg- "www.meigsc.ountytourism.Com,"
ular meeting of the Meigs County includes a number of areas for tourists
Commissioners.
to visit, including a list of attractions
Johnson presented the board with and events, local businesses ·with
copies of the county's new visitor;s tourism appeal, and lodging facilities.
Those who visit the website can ·also
guide, to be distributed to potential
tourists who contact the tourism send Meigs County postcards via eSENTINEL NEWS STAFF

mail, view a number of photos of
events and attractions, and visit other
Meigs County websites by way of
hyperlinks.
The site, which has only been up
and running for a few days, replaces
another tourism website.
Johnson also said that she had
attended trade shows in Columbus and
Marietta, and had begun mass mailings
to travel information centers. She also
said that a "bed and breakfast" seminar

was planned for local entrepreneurs
later this spr ing.
The tourism office is funded
through the commissioners' allocation
of Preventio·n, Retention and Contingency funds, administered by the
Deparonent of Job and Family Services.
Robert Byer, the county's Local
Emergency Planni ng Commission
chairman, met with the board to dis-

Please see Website. A3

Canton
awarded
connector
project
Beaver Excavating$
schedule not yet set
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Group discusses village's future
BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Gathered in a building which will
be abandoned soon, a group of concerned Middleport citizens began a
community-wide discussion of the
village's strengths and weaknesses,
and took the first steps toward
implementing a plan for the futnre.
The community's public forum,
held at Middleport Elementary
School, addressed a number of concerns expressed by community residents and business owners, including the future of the village's three
school building'!, which will be
abandoned once the Mei&amp;"&gt; .Local
School District's three new school
building'! are occupied.
The Good START program,
adnunistered by the Corporation
for Ohio Appalachian Development
in Athens, .will be used ·by Middleport's Planning Conunission- and

MARIETTA - The S22.3 million bid of a
Canton firm has been accepted for construction on the first phase of the Ravenswood
Connector project.
The Ohio Department of Transportation
a ~cepted the bid of Beaver Excavating Co.,
Canton, earlier this week. Bid proposals were
opene'd March 20 at ODOT's Office of Contract Sales in Columbus, and Beaver was the
apparent low bidder.
Kokosing Construction Co., Columbus, was
the second-lowest bidder, with a quote of
$23,515,993.96. The bids were well below the
ODOT estimate for the project of $30 million.
Now that the bid has been reviewed,
accepted and awarded by Cplumbus, ODOT
District 10, Marietta, will schedule a pre-construction conference to include Beaver Excavating, Beaver's sub-contractors and affected
utility companies.
The conference, although not scheduled at
this time, is expected to last two days as construction plans are reviewed and time lines for
work are established.
The first phase of the connector will start a.t
the Ravenswood Bridge · and travel about six
and one-half miles back to an interchange at
Ohio 124 and County ]{..oad 35 (Portland)
near Racine.
·

Please see Finn, A3

dleport's Board of Public Affairs, led
an open · forum and then small
Melody Sands and Jack L;J.verty, breakaway discussions on the topics
community development specialists most consistently expressed by resi. for COAD, pictured here with ·dents in a January survey: downPlease sea Future. A3
Myron Duffield, president of Midhopefully, concerned volunteers to track the community's future.

1117 LINCOLN COMTIHENTAL
(2to~from)

1118 DODGE HEOtl
111981JODGE 11M\ 1500
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11198 FORD CROWN V1Cl'ORIA
11198 FORD ESCORT(~ to"'- from)
1118 LIHCOLHTOWH CAR
11198 CHEVY 1500
11197 MERCURY

1jjg7 FORD RANGER
11t7 FORD ~ITJON E-111·
11t7 MERQIRYSWJLE
1jjg7 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
11t7 FORD ESCORT
19SI7 FORD EXPLORER
1!1118 FORO EXPLORER
1!MMIFORDFISO
11M JEEP CHEROKEE
11M FORDWINDSTAA
1IN MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS
11M FORD CROWN VICTORIA
1lt5 FORD EXPLORER
19SI5 FORD EXPORT
11t51EEPCHEROICEE
1liftS FORO WINDSTAA
111ff1 FORDF150

United Fund presents Checks
'
.

.

.

BY CHARU!NI! HOEfLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT
Checks were distributed to
organizations
awarded ·
funding through the United
Fund for Meigs County
Inc. at Thursday night's
anp.ual meeting held . at
Riverbend Arts Council.
Tom Dooley made the
presentations to Serenity
House, Boy Scout T!jpop
249; the Meigs Counry Risto rica)
Society,
Meigs
County Humane Society,
GOD's Net, Holzer Hospital for Meigs County, Boy
Scout Troop 299, Meigs
County Homeless Shelter,
Gallia Meigs Community
Action
Agency,
Meigs

PIIMt ... Cl11ck1. AI

Charter schools exempt
Sentinel from mandated help
Today's

] Sedlo."11- 111 ......

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Edjtorjals
Obituaries
Sports
weather

AS
84-6
BZ
A4
A3

Bl-2.S
A2

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 9-9-1; Pick 4: 1-3-9-2
81 d . 5: 2-8-29-30-34

RECIPIENTS - On behalf of the United Fund for Meigs County
Inc., Tom Dooley presents checks to agency representatives,
from left, Diana Coates, Dottle Selby, accepting a check from
Dooley; Sue Bowers, and Patty Pickens, and back, Bob Ord, Rev.
William Mlddleswarth, Angela Sharp, Jeremy Selby and Tom
Selb)l, Joe Bush, and LOra Rawson. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

'

W.VA.
Daily J: 7-2-5 Daily 4: 0{).9-3
0 2001 Ohio \/;IIIey Publishinp; Co.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Charter . schools won't be
required to help struggling students if the latest version of a
bill overhauling Ohio's proficiency test system becomes law.
The bill requires regular and
charter schools to assess students
annually to see whether they're
meeting acadenuc standards.
It also requires regular school
districts but not charter
schools - . to help students
whose assessments show they're
unlikely to meet the standards.
The Ohio Senate passed the
bill Wednesday, sending it to the
House.
·"Whether you're in a community school or a regular

school, the reason for the testing
program is to assess where the
student is and then intervene
and provide remediation;'Warren Russell.

Spring ahead
Don't forget to set your clock one
hour ahead to observe Daylight ·
Savings
Time.

- -:--:----""Olltltt•"
•

AP

.

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