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www.inydallyMntlnel.com

Page 8 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Bryant defeats Jordan on night of triple-doubles ~son

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
If anyone knows my game,
They weren't booing Kobe Phil knows my game."
Bryant in Los Angeles afi~:r
Celtics 110, Nuggets 93
this performance - a tripleWalker had eight assists in
double against Michael Jordan the first quarter and made
and the Washington Wizards.
seven 3-point shots in Boston's
Bryant had one of three win at Denver. He had five ,
triple-doubles Antoine triple-doubles last season, but
Walker
of none this season .
Boston
and
" Finally," Walker said. "It
Andre MiUer of took me 50 games to get it,
Cleveland ha4 but there is no better time for
the others - on a busy Tues- it to come than right now,
day night in the NBA, totaling especially with the start of this
23 points, a career-high 15 (seven- game) West Coast trip."
assists and 11 rebounds as the
Boston outscored Denver
Lakers rallied past the Wizards. 23-5 late in the third quarter
103-94.
and early in the fourth, openWalker had 30 points, 14 ing a 90-72 lead with 9:16 to
assists and 12 rebounds as the go.
Celtics defeated Denver 110Cavaliers 99, Raptors 81
93, and MiUer had 22 points,
Miller, lefi off the All-Star
17 assists and 10 rebounds to . team, had his third triple-doulead Cleveland past Toronto ble of the season for Cleve99-81. ·
land.
Jason Kidd just missed his
"Yeah, I want to be an Allsixth triple-double of the sea- Star," the point guard said.
son with 12 points, 14 "But I'm not going to worry
rebounds and nine assists as about . it. The accolades will
New Jersey lost 105-103 in come when this team starts
Adanta. ·
winning."
Bryant's triple-double was . The visiting Raptors were
the · third of his career imd without four key players,
came just two days after he · including All-Star forward
was .booed loudly in his Vince Carter, who was placed
hometown of Philadelphia on the injured list earlier in
during his M VP performance the day with a strained left
at the All-Star game.
quadriceps.
"It made me feel good to
· Kings 99, Spurs 86
come back to the Staples CenPeja Stojakovic scored 23
ter and have the fans appreci- points as Sacramento won easate you like that," Bryant said. ily at home.
The Lakers oul&lt;cored the
The Kings have been nearly
Wizards 43-11 to turn a 63-43 unbeatable at home, winning
deficit with 7:50 left in the their 19th straight game at
third quarter into an 86-74 Arco Arena and improving to
lead with 8:03 remaining.
an NBA-best 26-1.
Bryant shot 9-of-20 and,
Chris Webber had 20 points,
with a little over a minute to 12 rebounds and five blocks
play and the Lakers leading for Sacramento, which took
97- 89, Bryant hit from outsiae the lead early in. the second
over Jordan, drawing one of quarter and never trailed
the loudest cheers of the night again.
from the crowd of 18,997.
Tim Duncan had 24 points
· Jordan led the Wizards with and 21 rebounds for the Spurs,
,22 points, five rebounds and who have lost three straight 'to
six assists in his first game the Kings this season.
against his former coach, Phil
Mavericks 112,
Jackson.
SuperSonics 106
"This is definitely a lesson
Steve Nash scored 28 points,
for us. We're not quite in their including five 3-pointers, and
league yet," said Jordan, who Dallas won its franchise-record
led the Wizards with 22 eighth ·straight road game.
points, fi've rebounds and six
Nash had 15 points and
assists. "We folded under their went 4-for-4 from 3-point
pressure - and that's what range in the opening quarter
championship teams do to when the Mavericks shot 72.7
you.
percent
(16-f~r-22)
and
Defensively,
Phil
took scored 39 points.
options out of our game
Juwan Howard and Dirk
which open up things for me. Nowitzki each had 21 points

FLY BOY- Lakers' Kobe Bryant (8) drives to the hoop as the
Wizards' Tyronn Lue looks away Tuesday night
The Lakers won 103-94. (AP)

for Dallas.
Hawks 105, Nets 103
Jason Terry hit a pair of free
throws with 4.4 seconds
remaining, and Kidd missed a
straightaway 3-pointer as time
expired.
Shareef Abdur-Rahim led
the Hawks with 34 points, and
Terry added 21 Cor Atlanta,
which' has won three of four.
Bulls 96, Bucks 92
At Chicago, Ron Artest
scored 22 poiim, made a key
steal and hit a 3-pointer in the
Bulls' fourth~quarter comeback.
Chicago began the fourth
on a 20-4 run, erasing an 11point deficit. The Bucks shot
only 3-of-19 (16 percent) in
the fourth.
Magic 122, Knicks 114
At Orlando, Tracy McGrady
scored 36 points, including 20
in the second half, and Pat
Garrity added a season-high
29.
McGrady also had eight

In Los Angeles.

assists and seven rebounds.
Garrity shot 1 1-of-15 including 6-for-8 on 3-pointers - while Mike Miller had
18 points and a career-high 10 ,
assists.
'
Suns 99, Pistons 71 .
Rodney Rogers scored 19
points and Stephon Marbury
added 14 as Phoenix won at
Detroit.
The Suns had a 51-32
rebounding edge and forced
21 turnovers. Penny Hardaway
added 10 points, eight
reboun4s and five assists.
Jazz 98, Pacers 82
Karl Malone had 34 points,
14 rebounds, six assists and five
steals as Utah won at Indiana.
· Rockets 85, Grizzlies 78
At Houston, Cuttino Mobley scored . 26 points and
Moochie Norris added 21 as
the Rockets won for only the
second time in 21 games this
season without Steve Francis,
who was again out with a
migraine headache.

•

'

ATLANTA (AP) - Mike 'JYson has been licensed to !
fight in Georgia, putting the Georgia Dome in the run- ~
ning as a site for his heavyweight title light with Lennox '
Lewis.
The fight is still being shopped to several cities, th~ugh, !
and both the site and date of the bout are in question.
;
Georgia's top boxing administrator said Tyson received a !
license last week for a possible bout in Atlanta on Jupe 8. ;
But Thomas Mishou, administraior of the Georgia -Box- :
ing Commissio~. said other cities are also in contention f
for the fight.
:
"There are other cities in consideration- I think prob- ;
ably the lead city is L.A.;' Mishou said. "Now that thls has ;
gone this far I think that Adanta is being seriously consid- •
..
ere d.
The Denver Post reported Wednesday that Colorado •
Office of Boxing director Josef Mason was reviewing an :
application by promoter Marty Garafalo to hold the fight ~
in the statd.
·
.
•
.The fight was originally set for April 6 in Las Vegas, but
Nevada boxing officials last month rejected 'JYson's bid for :
a license.
Since then, promoters have scrambled to find another :
site, with several states saying they would not license ;
'JYson. On Monday, the Texas Motor Speedway said it was ·
withdrawing from consideration because it didn't .co.e_sider Tyson a wholesome attraction.
'JYson adviser Shelly Finkel said Atlanta was a prime
candidate for the fight:
'
"We cho&lt;e Adanta because there have been s01:ne big ;
fights there, it's a major city that has held several big events ·
and they have direct flights from London," Finkel told the
New York Daily News.
Mishou confirmed a license was issued to 'JYson. In
Georgia, a license costs only $10 and an applicant must
only prove he is physically fit for a match.
"June 8th is the date that I've heard that the match may ·
very well' take place;· Mishou said.
Tyson also has .a license application pending in Texas,
and is expected to apply for a permit in California. Pro-·
moters in Michigan also are bidding to stage a fight there.
"The fight will not happen on April 6," Gary Shaw,
Lewis' promoter at Main Events, said.Tuesday. "Lennox is ·
in a courtroom noW. He's not in training. It's Feb.12.Any- ·
one who i.s realistic will tell you that it won't happen on .
April. 6."
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:"'-'s inside

Langsville woman blames· legs.Brown, of Rutland, who was driving the
motorcycle at the time. of the accident, has
faulty tire for accident joined
as a cross-plaintifr in the case . .
BY BRIAN

:Weather
.

Details, A2

. ! NEW YORK (AP)
Relatively ·solid retail sales
figures inspired . another
q.Uy on Wall Street Wednestj_a'y as investors grew more
confident
about
an
•
impending
economic
'
re~overy.
The Dow Jones
· Industrials scored their best
close in more than a month
and their third triple-digit
g.;in in four sessions.
' ,
. l'y sts stt'11 , cau~I
·:•n
...,ur ·arra
'\'l'iln!ll ~rgaTri'st too much
· dptimism, noting
tliat
ill.ve1tor' sentiment remains
&amp;agile.
, The Do&gt;,V was Iess than
11 points from rega,ining
the 10,000 level after closil)g up !25. 93, or 1.3 percent, at 9,989.67. It was the
il,ldex's best dose since Jan.
H). The Dow rose 118
!'oints last Friday, and 140
on Monday.
: · : Brdader stock indicators
· also advanced. The Standard
&amp; Poor's 500 index climbed
:1 LOt, nearly 1.0 percent, to
q18.51, while the Nasdaq
composite index gained
. 2.4.95, or 1.4 percent, to
. 1',859.16 . .

S.Uptrlotto:

1·7·15-24-25-49
BOnusa.ll: 8
~r: 0-6-5-7-1-0

*".

Picks day: 4-1-2
4 day: 3-8-0· 1

. 1AI;VA.
Dally :s: 3-8·9

: Qill}' 4: 3·8·9·1

mgs.
And then there's the bronze, 9-foot statu.e of the
NASCAR champion. Unveiled last Thursday, it
depicts Earnhardt on the day in 1998 when he
finally won the Daytona 500 after 19 frustrating
years of competition.
A year ago at the Daytona 500, NASCAR's
biggest star w.tS killed in a last lap crash in the sports
biggest event. ·
Yet Eamhan:lts presence is still strong in the days
leading up to Sundays race, as if he's still bumping, ·
banging and intimidating his way around the 2 1/2mile 01131.
"Every day I drive in the runne~ I feei like I'm•
going to see him and he's going to come up to me
and poke me han:! in the ribs, like he alwa~ diu;•
_ ___,sa,i.d longtime friend and rival Rusty Wallace.
_!_.

: PcMerball: :Z..10.3B8413 (19)

•••

·• Name of tum: - - ----,---'----.:.___ __;__ _ _....;_ .I

eAddr...: ·- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - eCity: - - - - - • State: --"-- • Zip: _ __

e Telephone: (
·

&gt;- - -

• E·lllllll:

Plem fill-out form, dct.Ich and mail with team roster (8 men &amp; 8 women-maximum) and
entry payment. All checks must be made· out to the "Pleasant Valley Wcllness 'Center.•
Mill to: PlNIInt VIler Wlllneta Center, Attn: C.!d FliC Footblll Taramnt,

2120 v...y Drtve,.I'DIIIt PJuant, wv 21110

8v CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFliCHiil'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY,.,,.- .The sale
of buses. modYtlar classrooms
and other vehicles to the
highest
biqders
was
approved at Wednesday
night's meeting of the Meigs
Local Hoard of Education.
Approved for 's ale to
Roger Jeffers/jeffers Coal
Co. were three 1986 International buses at costs of
$987, $958 and $926, and a
1990 International bus at
$757; a 1985 3/4 ton Ford
pickup to Edson Dailey for
S300; ·a 1982 one-ton Ford
dump bed to Cecil See for
$900; a 1982 Ford van to
Gary McKnight for S300;
and a brown modular classroom for $6,101. and a blue
modular' classroom
for
$1,551 to Henry and

·,

I

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1

• f..

'

· ,: 2 SediHI,.. II Pllpa

~lendar ·
Classifieds

:comics

: Dear Abby
· Editorials
Movies •
bbituaries
Sports
Weather
·Q

Christy Horn. ·
The board also approved
change orders in the district's building construction
project in the amounts of
$74,432 for repair already
underway of the east slope
at the elementary school,
$54,000 for additional bus
parking, and $290,000 for
standing seam roof, both to
the RWS Building Co. it
was noted that the school
has
received a grant
through the
Schoo!Net
Commission in the amount
of$14,000 and anothdone
through the Washington
State Community College
for the purpose of expanding the tech prep program
offered ;&amp; the high school.
It was also reported

Pleese see ilus, A3 ·

Village: Debris

buming blown
out of proportion'
6

Joan and Bruce May

OHIO

I
• Name of captain: - - - - - - - - -- -- - - I

Meigs Local Board
approves bus sales

Hearts in Giving ·

. Jilek 3: 7· 7·5
· P.lck 4: 8-Hi-4

r--------------: .-----~--------, ·

ASK employees Joshua Eck and Todd Coleman, and Ackers, Inc. 'president Paul Ackers
took the stand Tuesday morning to testifY as to
their knowledge of the motorcycle's condition,
and as to whether company employees knew
the bike should not be sold in its condition.
Ackers said he knew the bike's tire and rim
needed repairs, but said the new parts had been
ordered from Suzuki and Brown was expected
to return to the dealership with the bike the
day after he took delivery so repairs could be
m~.de.
,.
.
,
.
Under ,the conditions, It was not agamst the TRIAL TESTIMONY- Seated in front of the Suzuki motorcycle
, dealershtp s pohcy to release the btke to at the heart of the trial, Joshua Eck, a former employee of ASK
Motorsports, Lancaster, answers questions from Defense
(Brown), because It was to be returned the Attorney Terry Miller, In a jury trial which began Monday. (Brian
Pleue see Suzuki, A:S
J. Reed)

· Hlp: 501, Low: 101

·'·. Wall Sb eet
=·,. rallies ·

'

Just a week before Earnhardt died, Tony Stewart
beat the master 'at his own game. He won the 70lap Budweiser Shootout on the 2 112-mile oval by
somehow keeping Eamhan:lt behind him on the
final lap.
"That w.tS _the biggest thing that had ever happened in my life;' Stewart said. "Seeing that black
No. 3 in· my mirror and beating him at his own
game w.tS incredible."
Stewart evoked vivid memories of that day last .
Sunday when he beat another Earnhardt in much
the iame way, holding off the red No. 8 of Dale
Earnhan:lt Jr. in -a last-lap Shootout duel.
"It w.tS the same tricks his father tried to pull last
year to get the lead;' Stewart said.
Next up is Thursdays Thin 125-mile qualifYing
races, an event in which the elder Earnhardt came
up a wjrmer 12 times in·the past 18 years, including
10 in a row fiom 1990 through 1999.
"Th,;i's a lot of live up CO:' said Kevin Harvick,
who w.tS 9pped by team owner Richard Childress
to replace Earnhardt the week after last year's 500
and responded by winning two races, taking Rookie of the Year honors ~nd finishing ninth in d1e
pomts.

REED

POMEROY -Did a Lancaster motorcycle
dealer knowingly sell a Rutland man a defective cycle?
A Langsville woman paralyzed in a 2000
motorcycle accident has sued the dealer for
damages and testified Tuesday before a Common Pleas Court jury, as testimony in the trial
of her case against AI&lt; Motorsports of Lancaster and Suzuki Motor Corporation began.
Crystal Wright, 24, alleges that ASK sold her
boyfriend Tim Brown a Suzuki motorcycle,
knowing that the tire and rim on the bike were
faulty, and 'that the faulty· tire and rim caused
the accident which left her without' use of her

roundup, Bl
.()fympic
.

• QO entry fH per team

DAYTONA BEACH, Aa. (AP) - The
remindm of Dale Earnhardt are everywhere.
Driving up to the · sprawling Daytona International Speedway, there's a pedestrL1n bridge dedicated in his name that spans the busiest street in town.
Messagt.'S about missing No.3 are spelled out on
storefiont marquees, displayed as decal~ on cars and
pickup trucks, or even scrawled as graffiti on build-

J.

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Double ellmlnlltlon

No.3's memory is alive at Daytona

Testimony begins in Suzuki trial

.

e Muat be 18 years or older

Hometown Newipaper

...

LGtteries
.

• Game• be.ln at' 8 a.m.

HONORED- Michael Waltrip, winner of the 2001 Daytona 500, speaks at the unveiling of the
Dale Earnhardt statue last ThOrsday in Daytona Beach, Aa. (AP)
·

Happy Valentine's Dayl

-

licensed to·:

box in Georgia

NBA

-

••

Wedneaday, Feb. 13, ~.

· AS ·
84-6
87

AS
A4

A3
A3
81
A2
,

Rutland couple honored
Bv CHARLENE HoEFUCH
HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Among
the 23 couples being recognized today by First Lady
Hope Tafi at ihe governor's
residence with a Valentine's
Day "Hearts in Giving"
obser:vance are Joan and
Bruce May of Rudand.
"The couples are being
recognized for long marriages and for sharing their
hearts with those in need
through volunteerism;• said
the first lady. "They devote
their lives not only to each
other but also to their come
munities, and our state is a
better ·place because of

them."
Joined Hearts in Giving
was created by the first !ady
to honor Ohioans married
50 years or longer, and who
share a commitment to volunteerism - particularly as
volunteers with children or
in' youth education.
·:rhe celebration took
place this morning. Special
certificates were presented
to the coup,les to recognize '
their volunteer efforts and
service to others.
Mr. and Mrs. May have
been married for 50 years
and volunteering for four.
The two have been involved
with numerous activities at

the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center and its
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program (RSVP).
Joan is on the Board of
Trustees and Bruce in on
the Advisory Board. They
dance with the "Swingin'
Seniors" perforniing at area
imrsing homes and in
parades. The two assist in
serving dinners at the center,help with health screen - ·
ings at the Meigs County ·
Health Departmen,t and
volunteer at the Rutland
Civic Center.
The other southeastern
Ohio · couple recognized

Please see Hearts, A:S

1002 Ohio v.Hey Publishlllf Co.

BY TONY M. LEACH
TLEACHCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -"Basically,
a positive thing was made to
look like something negative."
John Musser, president of
the Pomeroy Merchan ts
Association and former
councilman, explained why
officials with the Environmental · Protection Agency
(EPA) and a news crew from
WSAZ-TV were contacted
Tuesday about the burning
of drbris behind the fire
department.
"A resident of Butternut
Avenue contacted th e EPA
and a tele:vision news crew
to report the burning of
materials behind the fire
house, which was actually
the remnants of several
,derelict structures the village
has been demolishing," said
Musser.

BURNING ISSUE The
burning of several' demol·
ished buildings behind the
Pomeroy Fire Department on
Tuesday prompted a resl·
dent on Butternut Avenue to
contact officials from the
EPA. (Tony M. Leach)

"The presence of the news
crew · made the ·situation
appear more serious than it
actually was;· he added. "The
whole matter was definitely
blown out of proportion."
. Mayor john lllacttnar said
after investigating the in ci-

Piease see Debris, A:S

. ~· 1

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Ohio

The Daily ~ntinel

Page JU,

Frklly, Feb. 15

I Monotlold l2t'Ju· I •

-.
· ICoiUmbul 130'/50' I

. .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Uranium ' impacts the lives of hundreds of southern
enrichment company USEC Inc. said Ohioans;'Taft said in a statement. He said
Wednesday it would eliminate 440 jobs he will offer state help wherever possible
over a six-month period beginning in to families affected by the decision.
June at its idled uranium enrichment
USE&lt;:; which is .based in Bethesda, Md.,
·,ceased ~rifichlhent activities last year at the
plant in southern Ohio.
USEC spokeswoman Elizabeth Stuck- Ohiq ·plant, eliminating roughly 500 jobs.
le said the company was movjng its . · Abput t ,350 worlf:" still are employed at
.transfer and shipping operations from 'the facility, which the company placed on
Piketon, Ohio, to its enrichment plant in standby to allow for production to resume
Paducah, Ky. She said the company in the future if necessary.
needed to add only 30 to 50 jobs at the
USEC is a former government enterKentucky plant.
prise. Since it was privatized in 1998, it
Through consolidation, USEC hopes has seen its credit nting slide to junkto save $40 million year, Stuckle said. bond level and its stock price plummet.
"Much of-the people that are needed
One of USEC's problems is that its
already exist at Paducah;' she said.
gaseous diffusion technology is less effiUSEC currendy sends low-enriched cient than other technology used .by its
u.ranium from the Kentucky plant to the European competitors.
Ohio facility. The Ohio workers test, puri"This ·is a desperate move by a desperfy and ship the material to facilities that ate company that's financially strapped,"
prepare it for use in nuclear power plants. said Dan Minter, president of the local
Ohio Gov. Bob Taft, wh~ .is working union that represents the Ohio workers.
with USEC to find other uses for- the
In addition to producing nuclear fuel
Piketon plant, said the company's deci- at Paducal;t, USEC buys enriched uranium from Russia as part of a government
sion was disappointing.
"USEC has made yet another short- effort to keep bomb-grade uranium out
term business decision which negatively of the hands of terrorists. The company

a

~~-ViVA
0 2002 AocuWealher, Inc.

__

..o~a•, 1lft·••••
Cloudy

-

T-

Aoln

Fmloo

Snow

leo

Chance of rain returns Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

There is a· chance of rain .showers in the area Friday, fore·
tasters said.
The National Weather Service reported that temperatures
will remain mild Friday reaching into the mid 50s. A cold front ·
will move across Friday night.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:06, and sunrise on Friday is at
7:24a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Lows 25 to 30. Light and variable
winds becoming south and increasing to 10 mph.
Friday... lncreasing cloudiness. A chance of rain showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the mid 50s. Southwest winds around
15 mph. Chance ofrain 30· peri:ent.
Friday night ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of nin showers.
Lows in the mid 30s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mosdy cloudy with a chance of snow or ram
showers. Highs 38 to 42. Chance of precipitation 30 percent.
Saturday night ... Mosdy cloudy. A chance of snow showers
until midnight. Lows near 30. Chance of snow 30 percent.
Sunday... Pardy cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.
Washington's Birthday... Mosdy clear. Lows in the mid 20s
and highs 45 to 50.
Thesday... Becoming mosdy cloudy. A chance of showers late
in the afternoon. Lows in the lower 30s and highs in the mid .
50s.
.
Wednesday... Mostly .cloudy with ~ chance of showers. Rain
mixing with snow wednesday night. Lows in the lower 40s and
highs near 50.
'
t

Denture maker
faces charge
MEDINA (AP) - A denture-maker who tried to perform dental surgery in his basement faces 'charges that he practiced dentistry without a license.
Medina City Prosecutor
Sharlene Zee said George
Boskocevic, 49, of Hinckley
. Township, had illegally worked
on teeth, according to a state
· investigator who filed charges
in Medina Municipal Court.
He frequently practiced
dentistry in his basement last
year, investigators said.
Boskocevic described himself as a self-employed dental
technician who makes dentures and crowns and who
helped re!atives , and "people
down ·on their luck," The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer
reported Thursday:

Frank Gruttadauria, 44, .is
suspected of conducting a 15year scam while working as a
broker for various firms,
including SG Cowen Corp.
and Lehman Brothers Inc. He
disappeared Jan. 11 but surrendered Saturday to the FBI in
Cleveland.
He is in custody on a charge
of making false statements to a
financial institution. A second
court appearance was scheduled for Thursday.

County faces
sewer lawsuit

victim's best interest or the
school's best interest to release
her until we have more information," the magistnte said.
CINCINNATI (AP) -An
The girl is charged with
aggravated arson. A P.retrial environmental group plans to
hearing is scheduled for sue Hamilton County for
approving ·a setdement with
March 6.
the fedenl government over
illegal sewer discharges into
rivers and streanlS·.
County
comnusswners
voted 2-1 Wednesday to supDAYTON (AP) -An assis- port a consent degree between
tant city manager will get the the Metropolitan Sewer · Distop job for at least six months trict and the federal governwhile the city looks for a ment . The city also must
long-term replacement.
approve.
City manager Valerie LemUnder the agreement, the
mie will leave next month to sewer district would eliminate
take . the manager's, job in 17 overflows that allow the
Cincinnati. Assistant John most waste to spill into iivers
Thomas will fill in while a and streams. The improvesuccessor is chosen.
ments would cosi $7 4 million
The .five-member City .initially, financed through a 6
Commission
unanimously percenr increase 'in residents'"
chose Thomas on We.dnesday fees.
·
night during a private, twoThe Sierra Club opposes the
hour meeting.
setdement and has notified the
Thomas, 48, doesn't want county that it will sue.
the job full tim~. He has spent ·
25 years in the city's police
department and was director
of building services as well as
assistant city manager.

Dayton picks
interim manager

lhundlly. Fab.~•ry u. 1

PUBLIC IOTICE
FROM CDWIIBUS SOUTHERN POWER COMPAIY
AID OHIO POWER COMPAIY
Pursuant to the Companies' Capacity and Energy Emergency Control
Program approved by the Public Ulllnles Commission of Ohio, the Companies· .
hereby apprise !he public of the state of electric service In their service areas.•

EUCTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES

2002103.
Generatlng,capaclly reserves are required to meet unexpected
Increases In system load, to provide for an effective program of preventive
maintenance of generating facilities, and to allow for random shutdowns and:
loading curtailments of generating units.

EUCTIIIC UERGY SUPPLY

1

Approximately 99% of the AEP Ohio System's power generating- ·
capacity Is coal·fired and remainder Is hydroelectric. The Companies believe,
tllat their coal supplies are adequate to enable them to meet the anticipated
electric energy requirements of their customers during the year.
I

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IY CHARWIE HOEFLICH
HOEFI.ICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
• · POMEROY - Ways of
' 1prucing
up
downtown
•··Pomeroy in preparation for
. · spring were discussed at a
: meeting of the Pomeroy Mer: ·.chants Association Wednesday
Jlllo, k
. at ity National ":'l-n .
: : It was noted that a green
· ~nd white valance with an 18
• or 24 inch drop will be going
; up around the stage area soon.
The valance. is being donated by· Capital City Awning of
'Columbus, the company
which provided awnings for
, businesses during the down. ' ; town revitalization.
.
. , : John Musser, president, will
- ' ;write a letter of appreciation
· · to Capital City for the

c

valance.
A discussion was held about
the planters, many of which
need timber replacement, and
the painting of the junction
boxes in preparation for installation of artwork being prePared by Me1gs
. H' h S h I
tg
c oo
art students.
George Wright volunteered
to oversee the work and was
authorized to purchase whatever he needs to handle both
the planters and the junction
boxes.
· It was noted by Musser that
village worker Dale Riffie,
who was seriously burned sev· eral weeks ago, is back on the
job of kP.eping the downtown
clean, that the village is taking

POMEROY
Meigs
•· County Recorder Judy King
reported the following transfers of real estate:
· Thomas
Llewellen
Osborne, Nancy Osborne, to
Thomas Llewellen Osborne,
Janet Doherty, Rona]een
·. Gapetz, Martin' Osborne,
deed, Olive.
Stephen Todd Hood to
Sandra A. Hood, deed, Village
of Middleport.
Kenneth E. Conrad, Patty
L. Conrad, to Douglas B.
Moore, Sandra L. Moore,
deed, Olive.
Els'on F. Spencer, Dorothy
Spencer, to John ]. Spencer,
deed, Sutton.
James
Edward
Baer,
deceased, to Rebecca Ann
Baer, affidavit, Chester.
Victor Hannahs, Mazie C.
Hannahs, to Charles V Hannahs, Kathryn J. Thorne,
deed, Pomeroy Village.
Debra LaShaye Wamsley to

Home National Bank,' deed,
Sutton.
Clarence Fraley, Jacqueline
F. Fraley. to Travis M. Escue,
Stephanie ]. Escue, deed,
Bedford.
Brett L. Carl, Regina L.
Carl, to Brett Carl, deed,
Bedford.
James W. Nelson, Sandra A.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm,
·
affidavit.
Sandra A. Nelson, James W.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm,
deed, Chester.
James W. Nelson, Sandra A.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm,
affidavit.
Sandra A: Nelson, James W.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm,
deed, Chester.
James W. Nelson, Sandra A.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm;
affidavit.
Sandra A. Nelson, James W.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm,
deed, Chester.
James W. Nelson, Sandra A.

·--------------------------Hearts
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fnHn Page AI

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: were Charlotte and Paul
; Johnson . of Nelsonville. The
: Johnsons have been married
for 51 years and volunteering

for more than 15 years.
They volunteer at the
Scenic Hills Senior Center
and with the United Way.
Paul, a retired minister, and
Charlotte, a registered
nurse, have always made
helping others a way of
life.

I

~ ·MORELOGf\1 NE\VS.. MORE LOCALFOLKS.j
· -

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·Subs.crib,e today • 992-2156
'

; AeP-41.98 .
• Arch Coal- 19.85
. • :Akzo - 42.25
· • ·A mTech/SBC- 36.76
· Ashland Inc. - 44.17
-' AT&amp;T-16
. : Bank Ona - 36.88
• BLI-12.05
Evans- 27.o1
• BorgWamar- 67.31
: Champion - 3.10

:Bob

Charming Shopa - 6.29
. • t:lty Holding - 13.60
·= ~1-21.45
• t&gt;G -15.13

:ouPont-44

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Federal Mogul - 1
Premier - · 8.42
USB - 20
Rockwell :.... 18.57
Gannett- 74.09
Rocky Boots- 6.50
Genel'll Electrtc-36.10 AD Shell - 49.80
GKNLY - 4.25
Sears - 53.79
HarteyDavldaon-52.44 · Shoney's- .31
Kmart- .93
Wai·Mart- 60.12
Kroger- 20.55
Wendy's- 31 .43
Lands End- 49.97
Worthington - 14.69
Ltd. - 18.28
· Dally stock reports are
NSC - 21.33
the 4 f.m. . closing
OekHIFhlnclal-18.25 quotes o the previous
OVB- 23.65
day's transactions, proBBT- 36.34
vlded by Smith Partners
Peoples -19.35
at Adveet Inc. or Gal·
Pepsico- 49.62 ·
llpolls.

• The Dai1y ·sentme
• 1·

·r-·-----------------------,

•

•

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•

BY CHAIN STORES'
ClAI THAT THEY
HAVE THE lOWEST
PRESCRIPTION PRICESI
•

'TIII9

.
HOURS 1
Mon - Frl8om - 9pm
Sat. Sam - 5pm
.Sun. 1Oam - 4pm

Ohio V•lley Publl1hlng Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday

Correction Polley

through Friday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class

•

•
•
•

ssgggs

Newa Department•

••

The main number Ia 992·2166.
Department axtaotlona are:
Qennl manager
Ext. 1z

•
•

NIWI '

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

•

•

Other urvlces

•
•

AdVW11alng

Ext. 3

••

Clr11UIIIIon ·

Ext. 4

•
•

CIIMI!Ied Ada

· Ext. 5

To aand e-mail
niWIOmydallyaantinal.com

•"'

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Reader Services
Our main concarn In all stories Ia
to be accurate. II you know of an
error In a Blory, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2158.
·

· 3 Piece Oak Breakfast Nqok
w/ Storage Under Seats

EMS nns

Correction

Divorce,
dissolution filed

·Debris

.Suzuki

On the Web
www.tnydallyaentinel.com

Bus
from,Page A1
that a Title 1 carryover grant
of$99,065 ' has been received.
On recommendatio·n of
the sup(rintendent, the
·board voted to hire as substitute teachers Steven Little, David A: Hawk, Nathan
Dugan, Michelle · Miller,
Angela Adams and Amanda
Milhoan . The name of
· Robin
Cranston
was
removed from a listing of
substitute teachers because
of a reporting error by the
superintendent.
Catherine Hart was hired
as a tutor for a health-

postage pal~ at Pomeroy.
Member. The Ae80Ciated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Aaooclatlon . .
Poetmiultlr. Stnd addreu correctlone to The Daly Stntlnel, 111 Coun.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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UR ' lOAD

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Ont ~lr
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The Dally Sentinel. Crt&lt;llt will be given
carrier each week. No tl.b.a:ipdon by
mall permlttad In areas Whert1 home
carrier aervloe Ia avaMable.

TAX bV bANTU

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IS THE RIIHT CHOICE
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Rotao autoldo Mltgl COunty

13 Wteka
28 Weeka
52 Weoko

handi ca pp ed student at the
rate o f $15 an hou r, and
mater'n ity leave was granted to Melanie Quillen
with p enui ssi on to u sc her
accumulated sick leave.
The board approved the
granting of a Meigs High
School diploma to Earl
Denny Jr. in recognition of
his service during World
. War II, as allowed under
Ohio Law.
A contract was renewed
for the 2002-03 school
year to provide the Jobs for ·
Ohio's Graduates' UOG)
program at Meigs High at a
cost of not to exceed
$8,000. Al so renewed was
the co ntract with Ohio
University to provide an

DElli IIID TAXES· WHAT A IURDEII

Subscription rates

•

An action for dissolution of
marriage has been ftled by
Trina Dawn Young, Racine,
and Glenn Francis Young Jr.,
Racine.
A dissolution has been
granted to Brian Ritchhart
and April Ritchhart.

'
POMEROY
- Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered two calls for .assistance on Wednesday. Units
responded as follows:
CE~ DISPATCH
bids on trimming the trees from Nye Avenue to the
4:17a.m., Sycamore Street,
which line Main Street, and Pomeroy parking lot.
Dee D~e Powell, refused
that demolition of dilapidated
He said a request for an
treatment;
buildings and housos is under extension on a funding grant
POMEROY - The com7:10 p.m., Ohio 143,
way.
from the Ohio Department of Michael Lewis, Holzer Med- munity calendar printed in
Harry Leffie reported that Transportation has been made, ical Center.
Wednesday's paper was incorthe Artisan Association is, and that further funding possirect for this week.
moving its shop from the for- bilities are being explored. A
The incorrect listings of
meetings included the Eastern
mer Service and Office Sup- grant application has been
ply building on Main to Sec-· filed with the Ohio DepartBoard of Education and the
VFW 9053 at Tuppers Plains
ond Street in the building at ment of Natural Resources
POMEROY
A
divorce
on Thursday, the Widows Felthe corner of Mechanic Street and some decision on that is
has
been
filed
in
MeigS
action
lowship, a hymn sing at the
formerly occupied by Ken's expected in April.
County
Common
Pleas
Faithfl!l Gospel Church. and
Appliance.
Cost of the proposed project
· The building on Main has is $425,oOO ,. and the original Court by Beverly Rae Rose, the Meigs Counry Township
been sold and will house 'a gun grant is $327,000, Musser said. Middleport, against Ralph Association meeting on Frishop to ()pen later this month, He noted that the engineering Edward Rose Jr., Ashton, day, and a genealogy workshop Ol) Saturday.
it was reported.
contract of $77,000 has not W.va.
Musser also reported that ·yet been signed pending
plans are moving forward on extensions of deadlines and
was removed from the
construction of a walking path additional grant monies.
dereli ct str uc.turcs prior
to their demolition.
'The only thing burning
from PageAl
behind the fire department
dent, EPA officials said their was wood from the torn
concern
centered down structures, there was
only
around the movement of the no
hazardous
material
structures, once demolished, whatsoever," he said.
to another location so they
. ''We have learned from
our mistake and ate curNelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm, Haggy, to · John M . Haggy, could be burned.
"The village didn't real- rently working to rectify
Heather D. Haggy, deed,
affidavit.
ize that the EPA requires the situation," he added.
Sandra A. Nelson , James W. Rutland.
Nelson, to J&amp;S Nelson Farm,
James R. Lodwick, Karen all debris from a demol- "At the present time, our
deed, Chester.
Lodwick, to Harry N. Lad- ished structure to be fire chief is m eeti ng with
Hubert L. Wolfe, Judy E. wick, Juanita Lodwick, deed, burned on the site in another division of the
which it was destroyed," EPA to see if the remainWolfe, to Hubert L. Wolfe Chester.
said
'Blaettnar. "Consider- ing
debris
can
be
Corey L. Carnahan, Julie V.
and Judy Wolfe, deed,
Chester.
Carnahan, to
Erin
L. ing the close proximity of burned ."
Blaettnar said he wished
inhabited structures to
Hubert L. Wolfe, Judy E. McCorkle, deed, Chester.
the
demolition
sites,
we
the
resident would have
J. Todd Lisle, Christi A.
Wolfe, to Hubert L. Wolfe
the
village
and Judy Wolfe., . deed, Lisle, to Jason Thomas Allen, felt moving the debris to contacted
an
area
behind
the
fire
before
calling
the
EPA
Sarah Belinda Hill, deed, SalChester.
department was the safest and a news crew.
Hubert L. Wolfe, Judy E. isbury.:
"If this perso n would
LaSalle National Bank, thing to do."
Wolfe, to Hubert L. Wolfe
Following his discussion have came to us about the
and Judy Wolfe, deed, Bobby Moore, to Bob NorChester.
wood, sheriffUs deed, Mid- with the EPA, Blaettnar problem, I'm sure the
said the fire was immedi- issue could have been
Ryan D. Holden, AJ;)li J. die port Village.
resolved in a less dramatic
Green Tree Financial Ser- ately distinguished .
Dolden, to Arthur H . Dudfashion," said Blaettnar.
Blaettnar
added
all
hazdek, Betty J. Duddek, deed, vices, Conseco. Finance SerSalem.
vicing, to Joy L. Bentley,Jphn ardous material. if any,
Frank Nelson Reynolds, to S. Bentley, deed, Sutton/ViiRonald Timmons, Tammy !age. of Syracuse.
and her subsequent treatTimmons, deed, Olive.
David L. Huddleston, Mary
ment at St. Mary's HospiGeorge Rodney Holman , Ann Huddleston , to Michael
tal in Huntin gton, W.Va. ,
Peggy Sue Holman, to Carol Huddleston , Camelia
and at Dodd Hall at The
from Page AI
George Rodney Holman, Huddleston, deed, Racine
Ohio State University.
deed, Sutton.
Village / Sutton .
Confined to a wheelDelmar G. Pullins, Vicki L.
Thomas A. M cMahon , Gale next day for repair," Ackers
chair,
Wright • said
Griffin, to Delmar G. Pullins L. M cMahon, to Eric said.
Eck said he was aware Wednesday she is now
and Vicki Pullins , deed, Rankin, Rhonda K. Rankin,
that the bike's tire was unable to work as a nail
Chester.
deed, Scipio.
. technician., and tl1'at she
Minter V. Frya~;, Jr., Minter
William S. Brown to Peter leaking . approximately a
relies heavily on Brown
.V Fryar, to Conseco Finance H . Brown, David S. firown, pound of air every four
and
her mother to assist
Servicing, Green Tree Finan- Kristina E. Gislalon, John H. hours, and that he · was
"that
the with the care of her chilcia! Services, sheriffUs deed, Cislalon, deed, Middleport concerned
motorcycle was danger- dren and home.
Sutton and Syracuse Village. Village.
"I'm very depresse d and
ous to ride and should
Timothy Carmean
to . Doris Roof, Jerrold Roof,
not be sold," but said the very angry that this hapRobert T. Mullins, deed, . to Wanda Johnson, deed, Sutbike was placed on the pened," Wright said .
Orange.
top/ Racine Village.
The tri al is expected to
sales floor anyway, and
· Ord
Watson
Gatrell,
John W. Stobart, Jr. ,
last
two weeks, and will
sold to Brown.
deceased, to Camilla Gatrell, deceased, to Naomi Stobart,
Wright, in her Tuesday involve a number of medaffidavit, Village of Middle- affidavit, Sutton.
testimony, discussed the ical experts and other
port.
Noami Stobart to Jodi M. August , 2000 accident experts .
Lelia Haggy, Emery G. Cummins, deed, Sutton.

LOCAL STOCKS
•

v

LOCAL BRIEFS

.Meigs County land transfers

:;·.

Kenneth McCullouqh, R. Ph.
CLEVRIA ND (AP) - A Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
stockb roker suspected of Prescription Ph. 992-2955
defrauding over a hundred 112 East Main Street
c lients must appear in federal Pomeroy, Ohio

'

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•

Broker due back
in court

court on procedural matters
related his arrest.

=·~omeroy Merchants

l

The Companies' electric power supply facililies - Including power,
generating plants, major transmission facilities and Interconnections with:
neighboring electric utility systems- are expected to be adequate to provide', ·
reliable electric service to their customers, and, at the same time. '
accommodate likely load and capacity contingencies. Generating capacity ' .
reserve margins of the American Electric Power (AEP) Ohio System, of which'
Columbus Southern Power and Ohio Power are part, are expected to be 21%
or more of load throughout 2002 and Into peak load period of next winter ~

The Dally Sentinel• Page A 3

•

has lobbied the Bush administntion to
allow it to continue as the government's
only purchaser of the Russian fuel,
which USEC sells to utilities.
The administntion has indicated it i•
willing to let USEC continue as its agent
if the company promises to build a pla~t .
that is more efficient than the Kentucry :
plant. The . administration wants tl]e :
company to keep the plant open u~til
the new one is operational.
Rep. Ted Strickland, a Democrat who
represents the Piketon workers, says lho
administration should also require: ·
USEC to keep .the shipping and transf~r :
jobs in Ohio as part of any Russian dei!l. ,
"That's where I think this administ'ra~ .
tion has leverage and has the ability': to :
; : :
stop this job loss," Strickland said.
A senior adminisrration official who
spoke on the condition of anonyrriity: :
said the administration was surprised and
upset by USEC's announcement. lhe
official said the administration. was sup:
porting efforts to establish the Ohio
plant as the future home of a new hi g~- :
tech enrichment facility.

Proposal delays
school vote
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
vote on whether to keep mayoral control of the Cleveland
public scho9ls could be
pushed back a year, to
' November of 2003.
State Rep. James Trakas, Rlndependence, hopes to attach
his amendment to . a bill as
early as next week. Trakas said
he drafted the delay P'?posal
because he ·is concerned about
the possibility of an elected
school board managing the
school district's $1 billion
school construction project.
His amendment likely faces
strong opposition from officials in Cleveland,' including
Mayor Jane Campbell and
schools Chief Executive Officer Barbara Byrd-Bennett.

www.mydallyHntlnetco.m

consider
·440 jobs to be cut at Piketqn plant.
Spring spruce-up project

Ohio weather

8uronr Pt Cloudy

14,2002

$29.25
$56.88
$109.72

(740) 992-9355

•

athletic trainer to Meigs
High School nex t year at a
cost of $8,523.
Several parents attended
th e board me eting and met
in executive s·essinn with
board members to discuss,
as reported on th ~ agenda,
"parental concerns." Hiring of personnel was ~)so
discussed in executive sesSlon.
Attending the meeting
were
Superintendent
William Buckley, Treasurer
Mark
Rhonemus, and
board members Roger
Abbott,
Norman
Humphreys, Ron Logan,
Scott Walton and John
Hood.

�...
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{

nlon

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Honeymoon
a good time or amily trip?
. ·DEAR ABBY: I have a huge
problem. My fiance and I have been
together for three years and are
being married in October. The
problem is my soon-to-be motherin-law. She is a great lady and we get
along very well; however, She insists
on accompanying us on our honey- .
moon! She keeps pushing the idea
ADVICE
of making it a family trip.
My fiance told her the honeyPlease help. I don't want ~o have
moon is going to be just for us. He
tried to tell her we 'all could go to change my honeymoon destinasomeplace together another time, tion to someplace she may not want
BRIDE-TO-BE ~
but she got upset .. She abruptly got to go. NORTH
CAROUNA
off the phone with him, saying she
was "only joking;• but she'd work
DEAR BRIDE-TO-BE: It's
not a matter of finding a destination
on me.
your future mother-in-law
where
: This is a nightmare. She's normally a pleasant and reasonable person doesn't want to go. This "great lady"
whom !like a lot. That's why I don't seems to have control issues or a
understand why she can't see this is serious case of separation anxiety.
She's dead set on going wherever
.it huge intrusion.
·

OIL PRO~UCTION up•• ,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

/

Den Dlckeraon
Publl1her

o-.1 a..nt~ger

~_:Th_e_o_ai_Iy_Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _-=.B=-f---l_l_l.e
. .____Be
_____n
___d
________n._u_nc18J.......:.;;._..-b~-·~-="g-~..;.•• . .; ~. .;.;

14,2002

SAUPl ~YS O.L VROWCfiOf'l up...
SAUPI SAYS otL f~09Uc:tiQN POWN •• •

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

Dl1ne Kly Hill
Controller

Febftl81rY

5

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182·2118 • Fax: 740 1&amp;2157. •

Chlrlene HoeHich

PageA4

Dear
Abby

"

,,._w

DfUn,. ,., MJJor an wrkOM•· '17wJ
H lft1 tltM Jill wonlt. All ,.,.,
.,. 1d}lriU .ailt6 W ... , H IIJIIIfi•M
No .,.,,..., ,._, oil/ IH p•t/UMII. Ut#rr 11N&gt;will h ,. ,..4 - . _ . . ,

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w.n, ... ,.,..tHNIJd,,.

"

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1111 ,U.UJIU •Xpnlllfl lit IAI CoiMMII INlow .rw 11M nJfiHIUU .,1Jt1 01aJ. Millq
Co. 'I tdUorlliJ botlnl, ••Wu olll.rwil1 ~

NATIONAL VIEW

Breach
Tragedy, not sinister intent,
was behind sml:lll plane crash
• Los Angeles Times, 011 tile Tampa plant iash and troubled
teem: The student pilot who stole his flight school's plane and
crashed it into· a Tampa, Fla., skyscraper evoked not one but
two national nightmares. Before emulatil)g their depraved act,
15-year-old Charles ). Bishop wrote a suicide note extoUing
the hijackers who brought down the World Trade Center. But
he probably had more in common with the troubled adolescents who in recent years have acted out their alienation by
shooting classmates or teachers and, in at least one Calle, themselves. ...
·
Private pilots have been quick to distinguish the troubled
teenager from terrorists. What happened in Thmpa, said a
spokesman for the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Associat, was
simply a breach of trust between student and instructor when
Bishop took off without his teacher. Private aviation, the group
argues, doesn't need the level of security imposed on commercial airlines and airports after Sept. 11.After all, the stolen plane
was only about the size of a sedan and lacked the fuel capllcity
to pose the same threat as hijacked jetliners: All this is true - .
to a point. But if a suicidal teenager can hijack a small airplane
and fly it into a high-rise, so could a terrorist. And even a plane
.the size of a sedan could carry explosives - or cruh into a
commercial jetliner....
No measure can protect the public from every risk. It would
be impractical and probably impossible to subject the nation's
200,000 private planes and 500,000 pilots to the same degree
of security as commercial aircraft. But even the pilots association, when it is not busy protecting its members.' independence,
knows that security can and should be improved....
Investigators are right to try to reconstruct the past of a
teenll.ger described as both an honors student and a loner, but
they should do so with full knowledge that the next danger
will no doubt come from a different and perhaps more professional corner.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE

~SSOCIATEO

PRESS

Today .is Thursday, Feb. 14, the 45th day of 2002. There are
320 days left in the year. This is Valentine's Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 14, 1912, Arizona became the 48th state of the
Union.
On this date:
In 1778, the American ship Ranger carried the recently '
adopted Stars and Stripes to a foreign port for the first time as
it arrived in France.
In 1859, Oregon was admitted to the Union as the 33rd state.
In 1899, Congress approved, and President McKinley signed,
legislation authorizing states to use voting machines for federal elections.
·
In 1903, the Department of Commerce and Labor Wall esublished.
.: In 1920, the League ofWomen Voters was founded in Chicago;- its first president was Maude Wood Park.
In I 929, the. "St. Valentine's Day Massacre" took place in a
. Chicago garage as seven rivals of AI Capone's gang Were
. gunned down.
In 1945, Peru, Paraguay, Chile and Ecuador joined the Unit. ed Nations.
In 1962, first lady Jacqueline Kennedy conducted a televisecl
tour of the White House.
.
· In .1979, Adolph Dubs, the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan,
was kidnapped in Kabul by Muslim extremists and killed in a
shootout between his abductors and police.
·
In 1990, 94 people were killed when an Indian Airlines passenger jet.crashed while landing at a southern Indian airport.
Ten years ago: American speed skater Bonnie Blair won her
seconil gold medal of the Albertville Olympics, in the 1,000
meters event. The fon11er Soviet republics of Ukraine, Moldova and Azerbaijan rejected a proposal for a unified army, sharply
rebuffing Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin. ,
Five years ago: American Airlines and its pilots union contin. ued contract talks as the clock ticked down to a midnight strike
deadline. (The pilots di'd strike, but President Clinton immediately intervened, ordering a 60-day "cooling o_ff" period.)
One year ago~A Palestinian cruhed a bus into Israeli soldiers
and civilians standing at a bns stop in Azur, Israel, killing eight.
(The driver, Khalil Abu Olbeh, was later sentenced to eight life
terms.) The Kansas Board of Education approved new science
standards restoring evolution to the state's curriculum.
Today's Birthdays: TV personality Hugh Downs is 81.
Actress-singer Florence Heni:lerson is 68. Country singer
Razzy Bailey is 63. Jazz musician Maceo Parker is 59. Movie
director Alan Parker is 58. Journalist Carl Bernstein is 58.
Actor-dancer Gregory t-iines is 56. Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H.,
is 55. TV personality Pat O'Brien is 54. Magician Teller (Penn
and Teller) is 54. Cajun singer-musician Michael Doucet
{Beausoleil) is 51 .Actor Ken.WahJ. is 45.Actress Meg Tilly is 42.

her son goes. She could benefit from ' There is an uproar over this
counseling.
among the grandparents. Our sonAlthough I have printed letters in in-law !llys it's OK with him. Is this
the past from couples who included now an accepted practice, or is it
extended family on their honey- something new? - DESPERATE
moon - and a goQd time was had by GRANDMA
all - unless all parties are equally
DEAR GRANDMA: It's someenthusiastic, it is extremely pre- thing relatively new. It started when
sumptuous for all in-law to contin- · women began hyphenating their
ue to harp on it once the suggestion names and adding them to their
has been rejected.
husband's. Some husbands also
Unless you want your marriage to began hyphenating their names to
~
turn into a family affair, you and coincide with the wife's.
your fiance must stand your ground.
As your letter proves, there IS
DEAR ABBY: My daughter is more than _one answer to t.he quesexpecting a child soon and plans to tion, "What's in a name?" - pride,
use our surname because her hus- tradition, secial standing, money or
band's name is foreign and could be rrusery, depending on w[jat th e
interpreted to mean something . name is.
naughty in English. She wants to
DEAR ABBY: Recently a readspare her child the embarrassment er asked if a fifth anpiversary was
of being teased when she gets to too soon to renew wedding vows.
school.
You told her to go for it. I agree

Society Notebook

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Congress should act on an energy plan right notv
The environmt'ntal movciTlent, mighti-.
Given the worsening instability in the
ly influential among Democrats and holdMiddle East, Congress will be shirking on
ing a virtual veto over Democratic presiits duty to protect national security if it
dential candidates, has elevated ANWR io
stalemates on energy policy. Its rule should
almost holy ground. making the idea of .
be "Do it all."
' ·
drilling there seem s.1crilegious.
That is, Democrats ought to get over
But the fact is, drilling would be pet~
their almost religious attachment to the
mittt:d
in only 1 million of the 17 million
sanctity of the Arctic National Wildlife
acres of the refuge. And within that terriRefuge (ANWR) and permit oil drilling
tory, oil facilities would be. allowed to
there.
occupy
only 2,000 acres under the House
Meanwhile, Republicans should get
COLUMNIST
bill. Conceivably, tho "footprint" could be
over their opposition to gasoline taxes and
restriCted even further.
higher fuel-efficiency standards for autoAccording to environmentalist propamobiles. And inste1d of sneering, they energy plan, with ANWR oil drilling
ganda, ANWR would supply only six
should embrace energy conservation and included.
robust research on renewable energy
The Senate is now under pressure to months' of our oil need~. couldn't be
sources.
follow suit, and if it doesn't, the Democ- developed for up to 20 years and would
·
The American public will be legiti- rats who run the chamber will bear the endanger wild caribou herds.
In fact, the six-month figure assumes
and blame in the event of an energy crisis.
mately furious at Congress that
ANWR is supplying all U.S. oil
Democrats especially - if an interruption
After blocking debate last year - and
in Middle East oil flows causes another being accused in low-blow ads in his Another way of stating its. potential is that ·
energy crisis here.
home state ofkeeping Iraq's Saddam Hus- it CO!lld substitute for current Saudi Arir
The past, three crises - during the sein in power _ Senate Majority Leader · bian supplies to the United States for 30
1973 Yom Kippur War, the 1979 Iranian Thomas Daschle, D-S.D.. has put a years.
Moreover, drilling could \:&gt;egin within
revolution, and Iraq's 1990 invasion of Democratic energy bill on the calendar.
The bill, which Republicans attack as three to five years, according to energy
Kuwait - blew up suddenly and arguably
companies. And there is plenty of evi-couldn't have been foreseen.
having been written "in secret" with no dence that caribou and other wildlife have
In the aftermath of lines at gasoline sta- .
committee hearings, is heavy on energy ·
tions and sharp blows to the U.S. econo- conservation and support for renewable adapted to oil facilities at Prudhoe Bay
and in Canada.
my, various presidents and Congress
vowed to develop policies to reduce our energy programs a11d bars drilling in
Congress should also enact an "SUV
on gas-guzzling vehicles, with the
tax"
dependence on imported oil.
ANWR. . ,
.
But that dependence has only worsened
Repubhcans, aided by the Teamsters revenue used to help people with lower
over time, from 36 percent in the late . uruon, may have the votes to add an incomes hurt by the gas tax and to fun~!
1970s, to 56 percent now, to an expected ANWR p~mon to the bill, but Democ- energy research.
70 percent .by 2020 if nothing is done.
rats, mcludmg Sen~. John Kerry of MassaMembers of Congress will not want to
President Bush at least called for a new chusetts and Joe Lieberman of Connecn- face·voters without being able to say thai
energy policy before a crisis hit; in fact, cut, are threatening a filibuster .that could they did thei r best to ensure that th,e
before Sept. 11 he reminded everyene block passage of any bill.
nation is less dependent on Persian Gulf
how volatile the' Middle East is.
A recent Los Angeles Times poll indi- oil in the future.
in the now-usual legislative pattern of cates that registered voters now favor oilthe Bush presidency, House Republicans and-gas exploranon m ANWR by a mar(Mortot~. Kondracke is ,exealli'"' editor of
last year pushed through a variant of his gin of 49 percent to 43 percent.
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill. ) . ·

OVC honor roll

Stephanie
Jarvis,
Drew
Scouten, all A's; Kalee
GALLIPOLIS- Ohio Val- Edmonds, Crystal Thomas:
Grade 8: Sara Beckley. Cory
. ley Christian School a.t First
: Jlaptist Church in GaUipolis Kelley, Keith Peck, Zachary
.has 11amed students to its honor Weber, all A's; Vanessa Burris,
Jacob Eldridge, Joseph Esmaeili,
rolls for the first semester:
Grade 1: Corey Barlow, Kelli Irwin, Sarah Jenkins.
Grade 9: Hallie Carter, Sarah
Megan·
joshua
Blevins,
Cochran, Madison Crank,Aiex Eldridge, all A's; Aimee
Haddad, Elise Long, Riley Agustin, Kaleb Eldridge, Sarah
Nibert, all A's; Sarah Absten, Smith, Elizabeth Stevens.
Grade 10: Dianna Jarvis,
.jordyn Benson, Richard BowAlyssa
Zirille, all A's; Brody
man, Chance Burleson, Brady
Curry, Caleb · Curry, Oliver Blankenship. Lindsey Wheeler.
Grade 11: Christina Thylor,
Lentz.' Craig Terre-Blanche.
. Grade 2: Jennifer Blevins, all A's; Jeremy Evans, Kelsey
Salisbury.
·
.Katharine Blodgett, Peter CarGrade 12: Amit Agrawal,
man, Michael Fahmy, Micaela
Ginny Miller, Chad Mourn·Owens, Kimberly Sallee, Sarah
ing, Rachel Tucker, all A's;
Beth Syndor, Ben Tillis, all A's;
Andrew Blankenship, Demara
Bransen Barr, Chase Caldwell,
Brown, Sara Henry, Gabe
Alex Gagucas, Joseph Jarvis,
Jenkins, Michael Jenks.
Samantha · · McClure, Paul
The following students were
named to the "B" honor roll
Miller, Samll.ntha Westfall.
' Grade 3: Zachary B~low, · for the first semester:
'I}'ler Eastman, Allie Hamilton,
Grade 2 Hannah Brumfield
·~thleen Long, Lindsay · Pen- Kayla
Brumfield,
Eri~
pmgton, Kyle Scott, D1vya Mitch"ell Tori VanFossen
Shenoy,ValerieTerre-Blanche,all Andrew Voss Bill Workman:
A's; Joshua Curr_y..Alexi~ Henry, Grade 3, Sa~h Clary, Aaro~
Darnel lrwm, Elic1a hwm.
Dillard, Olivia Kostival; Grade
Grade 4: Rebecca Evans, 4, Joseph Beaver, Brooke
Heather Mahan, Lindley Miller, Bowie, Amanda Jarvis, Chelsi
'Natalie Stone, Melissa Stump.allAs; Kearns; Grade 5, Joey Absten,
'Hali
Burleson,
Ashley Jasmine
Gibeaut,
Alex
, Coughenour, Ricardo~ Pasquale, Koby Queen, Cara
Grade 5: Annee Carman, all Sandell, Kyle Scouten, Alex
'A's;' Grant Foster, Quinton Trent, Andrea VanMeter, Tara
·Nibert, Jamsmine Owens, Workman.
:Henry Patrick.
Grade 6, Sarah Clarke, Ashley
·· Grade 6: Richelle Blanken- Mitchell, Megan Sheets; Grade
ship, Lindsey Carr, Zachary 7, Emily Eldridge,Jade Gibeaut,
Carr, Vaneetha Christopher, Megan Mahan, Garrison Salis. Tyler kearns, Heather Moran, . bury; Grade 8, Kristi Davis,
Laur10l Stone, Brooke Taylor, Richard McCreedy, Luke StinHeather Wagner, Christopher son; Grade 9, Annie Carter,
Williams, :ill A's; Jonathan Kerry Carter, John Hussell,
Beaver, Matthew Christopher, Chris Terre-Blanche; Grade 10,
Nick Stevens.
Hannah Burleson, Joshua Jarvis·,
Grade
7:
J.P. Lindeman, John Moran,
CnrstalTaylor;Grade 11, Kevin

.,

.,

.,.,

Morton
Koncb:Jcke

.,

RYAN'S VIEW

Sept. 11 had deeper meanings for driven individuals
had died. Flowers, cards, little kids'
All we could do from 3,000 miles
drawings and flags covered the sideaway was sit on . our couches and
walk in front.
watch.
"That was really hard," she said, ·
We didn't breathe the gray ash that
" harder than visiting Ground Zero:
blanketed windowsills and sidewalks
Because we wcren 't prepared for it."
and cars like an early snow. Our noses
Between that 'moment and Thanksdidn't fill with the stench of burning
giving, Mindi and her husband decidwires and human remains. We sent
ed
to step off the work-mortgagemoney and prayed, but there were no
work conveyer belt,
bodies for us to dig out of the rubble .
"Sept. 11 was sort of the pinprick;
No firefighters to feed . No legions o f
COLUMNIST . the thing that made you say, 'Hell, we
widows to comfort.
· can do this,"' Mindi said.
Most on the West Coast weren't
· "We couldn't come up with a good
affected in a palpable way.
jobs.
· Except, of course, we were.
Mindi had become general manager answer of why •·lOt. "
Mindi's mo,ther thinks she's nuts. But
The fallout of the attacks in New of the San Jose Mercury News jus't
York and Washington spread as if on a two years earlier. You don't walk away co-workers said they had always
current of wind, barely noticed. We from a job like that,. especially not at dreamed of doing what she is doing. :
" People I don't even know that well
went to work, bought groceries, fold- age 45, when you're reaching the peak
were
sharing very personal stuff, their .
ed laundry. But the shock and horror of your earning power.
Last month, Mindi and Kevin traY- own internal debate of what's impo~tugged at us, loosening the strings of
.
something inside, like a cloth purse eled to New York for a niece's dance tant in their lives," she said.
Mindi
and
her
husband
have
no
long forgotten in a bottom drawer.
. recital. On their last day there; they
Some discovered that, for all their visited Ground Zero to try to grasp·. children and have saved well. They.
striving and searching, they had every- what had happen ed, maybe understand know most peopl e can't chuck their
jobs and uproot their lives .
thing of any importance already, it in some small }'lay.
I used to picture millions of unlived
everything that really mattered. They . "It was overwhelming, incredibl y
days
buried in the New York rubble
slowed down for the first time in a sad," Mindi said.
long time, maybe ever. They took
"I thought, 'People went to work · alongside the dead. Now I picture
walks and cooked waffles. They began that day expecting to return to their those days rippling out to kitchens in
holding hands again.
families.' It gives me chills just ta lking Florida, and boardrooms in C hicago,
and patios in San Diego.
For others, Sept. 11 was an awaken- to you about it."
They are ours now, all those unlived
ing to what was missing.
They attended a play near Times
Mindi Kiernan and her husband, Square that night. As they strolled back days, tu ggi ng at o ur sle eves. reminding
Kevin, had talked for years about what t9 the hotel, the couple turned a cor- us .to be watchful of th e possibilities.
it would be like to quit their jobs and ner and came upon a fire station.lt was
Oom~ Ryau is II 1COI1m111i.\t for tlie Satl
travel the world. They even talked to a dr:lped in black bunting. On the win- FrallCisco Chronicle. Snul commetJts to her
financial planner about how they dows were pictures of the dozen or so in wrc of this t~ewspaper or wid her e-mail
might swmg it : But' they had great firefighters from the company who at jcanrya11 ~[~ate. com .)

"

••

CommunHy Clll!ndllr 11
publlahed 11 1 lrM urviCI
to non-profit group1 wlahlng to 1nnou11e1 meellnga
1nd apeclal ev1nta. The
Cllendlr 11 not tlellgnlld to
promot1 ulea or fund-rlla·
era of any type. ltema are
printed only 11 lpiCI permila 1nd e~nnot be gUirlntlld to be printed 1 apeclflc number of dllya.

Quiet Day

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SATURDAY
PORTLAND - A Portland
community meeting will be
held Saturday at 10 a.m. at
the Community of Christ
Church.

Save it for
a rainy day,
witha · ~
Fa11ners Bank IRA!

====

Otm\001

nominatlonal pastor prayer
group, Friday, 8:30 a.m. Mid·
· dleport First Bllptist Church.
Use rear entrance to church.

MONDAY
. THURSDAY
POMEROY - Fraternal
TUPPERS PLAINS
Order of Eagles 2171 , Man·
VF.W 9053, ThurQday, 6:30 day, to vote 9n replacing the
dinner; 1 p.m. meeting at the roof and air conditioning unH.
hall.
.
MIDDLEPORT - Ohio
RACINE - Bethany Dar· Vl!lley Crusade lor Christ
cas Sonshlne Circle t at meeting, Monday, 1 p.m. at
church Thurlday, 7 p.m. Heath United Methodist
Mernbllra reminded to take a Church, Middleport.
bear lor the Sherlfl'a Depart·
ment bear project. Everyone
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Invited.
Chapter 186, Order of the .
Eaatem Star, 7:30p.m. Wear
POMEROY - PreC::eplor ·chapter dresses for lnHiatlon.
Beta Beta Chapter, Bela
Sigma Phi Sorority, home 01
LETART - Letart ToWn·
Eleano.r Thomas, program ship Trustees; Monday, 5
on memories. 6:30 p.m. p.m. at the office building.
Hosteaaea, Thomas and
Norma Custer.
ATHENS - Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
FRIDAY
Group, to meet 7 p.m. Man·
POMEROY - Pomeroy day, at the Athens County
United Methodist Church, Extension office, · 280 W.
Second Street, Pomeroy, Union Sl. Speaker will be
monthly community mlulon Dave Swanson research
outreach evant Friday when biologist, Walerloo Biological
a free and open to the public Experimental Station on
spaghetti dinner will be game species, primarily
earvect from 4:30 to 6:30 bear, deer, turkey and
p.m.
grouse. More lnformaton, call
Doyle E. Melick, 740·669·
MIDDLEPORT - lntarde- 3131.

Grange notes

9 ==--~

'

LOCAL EVENTS

Terre-Blanche; Grade 12, hearing aids. There are present,
Stephanie Buffington, Brian ly six types of hearing aids .
Gordon,Jessica Hamilton, ElizA discussion on hearing loss
abeth Rice, Cody Smith.
and hearing aids was held by
the members, and everyone
agreed that more information
should be made available to
SYRACUSE - Observance children at an early age to
of Quiet Day of Service, Prayer make them aware of the
and Self-Denial was held at the effects of noise on hearing .
The program ended with a
recent meeting of the Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist skit on hearing loss by Bill
Radford and Helen Quivey:
Women at the church."
Plans for the annual inspection
Hope Moore was in charge
with Jean Stout, Freda Wilson, to be held in March were disMary Lisle, E1ma Louks, Ruth cussed during the meeting conCrouch . and
Marie ducted by Mllster Rosalie Story.
C.WA Chairman Nancy
Houdashelt as readers .
The hymns, "How Firm a Wells reported that the cookFoundation" and "Nearer My ie-baking contest will be held
God to Thee" were read in in May. She also noted that
unison. Moore presented each cookbooks dare still for sale,
member with a Jesus rock, also and that collection of eyeglassused as a prayer rock, and an es, soda tabs and soup labels
continues.
offering was received.
It was announced that
Lisle had two readings,
'Don't Put Off," and "I Love Pomona Grange will meet
to Live." Crouch read "Free March 1 at Hemlock. •
A 60-year seal of memberAssurance."
Mary Lisle presided at the ship was sent to Charles
meeting which opened with Blakeslee, and an appeal for aid
"The Purpose:• prayer by from .Eaton Grange was
Moore, and group unison pra~r. answered.
Members discussed various
Officers' reports were given,
28 sick calls were reported, and activities that could be used for
community service projects.
Crouch's birthday was noted.
· Newsletters for Grange were
distributed to each member.
Leota Smith and Story will be
HEMLOCK GROVE -A janitors for March.
Rosalie Johnson, lecturer,
program on deafuess and its
cause highlighted a recent ·had a short program and quiz
·
meeting of the Hemlock on .. Trees."
The group sang "Let Me
Grange held at the hall.
Ann Lambert, deaf activities Call You Sweetheart" to ~lose
chairman, presented the pro- the meeting.
Sandwiches and salads will
gram naming several ca.uses of
be
served prior to the March
loss of hearing including medication, employment and loud meetin!!;.
mus1c.
Loss of hearing is a cosdy disability, she said, because most
do not
for

Joan
Ryan

.

with you.
l have a collection of ladies' magazil).es from the 1930s and '40s.
During those uncertain times, it was
fashionable to celebrate 50th
anniversaries, but they included 50
months, 50 weeks- or 'even 50 days!
Bring on th~ cake and punch! In
these uncertain times, any celebration «i&lt;love, commitment, family,
faith, joy or happiness should not be
missed! GAll.. A. THOMPSON, UBERTY MO.
P.S. We were married 30 years last
November.
DEAR GAll..: I agree. Belated
happy anniversary to you and your
lucky husband.
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY
TO MY READERS: Thanks to
you, writing this column is a love-in
every day of the year!

lrtngthla coupon In with you to Farmer• lenk wllet! opening
your new IRA •count end II It Ia opened IIIIDO.OII or mor•.
·
we'll ,t.. you • INe umiiNIIII

l!iJ
Fu~n B811k.
•••• ' w.· .. .a..Jcfor (,Y
v

y-

I~

�Nation ·• World

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON (AP)
President Bush says a Senatepassed farm bill "doesn't get
the job done" and pledges to
work with congressional
negotiators on a compromise
that would be less costly and
better for producen.
The
Democratic-crafted
bill, . which passed the Senate
58-40 on Wednesday, authorizes $45 billion in new
spending for agriculture, conservation and nutrition spending over the next five years, a
26 percent increase over current programs. ·
A House-passed measure,
also criticized by the Bush
administration, authorized a
$38 billion increase over the
same period.
.
The White House says the
Senate bill is too expensive
and certain to stimulate pricedepressing crop su rpluses
because of its increases in subsidy rates. The legislation also
could violate subsidy limits
under an international trade
agreement.

Bush pushes
incentives
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Bush is proposing an
array of tax incentives to
encourage businesses, farmers
and individuals to reduce pollution as an alternative to an
international global warming
accord he said would hurt the
US. economy.
Bush last year rejected the
Kyeto Protocol, which required
40 industrialized nations to
reduce the carbon dioxide
emissions the soccalled
greenhouse gases believed to
·cause global warming.
He said the treaty- worked
out by the Clinton administration but not ratified by the
Senat~ could cost millions of
American jobs. The pact commits industrial nations to roll
back greenhouse gas emissions
to 1990 levels.
Instead, Bush seeks to draw
more businesses into a "registry" of-companies that report
their greenhouse gas output to
the government. They then
could trade newly created
credits with each other, much
as they can under Clean Air
Act provisions aimed at curbing acid .rain.

· by the FBI revealed · that
Hamed wu interviewed previously by the agency, on Oct.
22. An FBI supervisor, Steve
Berry, would not elaborare on
the initial interview. Just hours afttr the FBI
issued a terrorist alert Monday
night, Hamed and another
man were detained by state
and federal law enforcement
officials as Hamed drove a tow
truck on Route 110, which
passes close by the Pentagon.
The route was closed to commercial and other big vehicles
after the Sept . 11 terror
attacks, one of which tore a
hole in the side of the Pentagon and killed 189 people.

Ba.,l,-und
-&amp;• v
checks change
WASHINGTON (AP) The Justice
Department
announced changes in how
US. officials conduct background checks for gun purchases, efforts aimed mostly at
preventing illegal immigrants
from buying weapons.
"Our paramount responsi. biliry is the safety of Americans through the prevention
of violence and the prevention
of illegal activity," Attorney
General John D. Ashcroft said.
Under the new system, the
FB1 will ask gun dealers
whether prospective customers are U.S. citizens. For
those who aren't, the Immigration . and Naturalization
Service will check its computer records to ensure they live
in the United States legally.
Under U.S. law, nonimmigrant i!liens - those without
green cards, for example can buy weapons if they have
valid hunting permits and
have lived in a state long
enough to declare residency. A
senior Justice official indicated .
Wednesday that even those
allowances were under review
in the wake of Sept. 11 :

Musharraf wins .
Bush's praise
WASHINGTON (AP) Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf, promising to stand
by the United States in the war
on terror, gained high praise
from President Bush but not
th: airplanes he says are needed to deter attacks from India.
Overcoming initial reservatipns, Musharraf provided valual;&gt;le ~trategic help in the campaign to rout the rulingTaliban
, militia and al-Qaida terrorists
. from neighboring Mghanistan.
· Hailed by Bush on Wednes. :day for showing"great courage
' and
vision,"
Musharraf
promised to maintain Pakistan
as a moderate Islamic state and
to . keep cracking down on
Islamic militants in the country.
Bush assured Musharraf the
United States will write off at
least part of Pakistan's .$3 bil·lion debt, the Pakistani leader
•said Wednesday night on PBS'
"The NewsHour with Jim
:Lehrer." But Bush dashed
; Musharraf's hopes foF trade
: benefits and advanced aircraft.
.

-

'lnlck driver
ordered held
WASHINGTON'(AP) Federal prosecutors mindful of
new
terrorism warnings
sought the identity Wednesday
of a man charged with carrying fake identification on a
road near the Pentagon. A
judge ordered the man held.
"There is a substantial risk
: o(the defendant's flight," U.S.
: Magistrate Judge Theresa
· Buchanan said of the man,
identified in ·court papers as
"lmad Abdel-Fattah Harned,
aka !mad Nimer."
A criminal complaint filed
I

Page A&amp;

.

.

Missing girl ·
case drags on
SAN DIEGO (AP) Nearly two weeks after a 7year-old girl disappeared,
police again searched the
home of a neighbor they have
called a potential suspect in
the case.
Detectives, who spent more
than five hours at the home of
David Westerfield on Wednes.day night, carried out several
boxes and other items but
declined to say if they had
uncovered anything lmporranr.

1hundlly,

-

' Thuredliy, Feb. 14, 2002

,..,.,'I 14.2002

1

1

www.mydallyeenttnel.com

e

The Dally SenUnel • P!A! A 7

--

Campaign spending bill clears House
WASHINGTON. (A_P) -

Congress

Congress ~n't changed campaign Supreme Court)," said National Ritle

took a major ·srep toward enacting the spending rules since" the post-Watergate Association Executive Ditector Wayne
most significant campaign spending bill in year of 1974 despite ~peated ell'orb in LaPierre.
a generation with House passage oflegis- tb.e past decade to do something about
Shays and Meehan note that the courts
lation to ban millions of unregulated dol- the explosive growth of soft money in have repeatedly upheld legislation to regulars flowing into national parry coffen.
the political system. These unregulated late vmou! aspects of campaign spending.
"Soft money just ~ceived a death ~en­
tence;· Rep. Martin Meehan, D~Mass.,
. S3id shortly after the 2:3Q a.m. vore Thunday that culminated a 11\-hour debate.
Meehan and his co-sponsor, Rep.
Christoph~r Shays, R-Conn. , succeeded
in defe•ting a dozen attempts ·to kill
· their bill or sidetrack it with damaging
·
amendments.
The measure, p~d 240--189, now goes
back to the Senate; which passed a nearly
identical bill last ApriL Forty--one Republicans and o.ne ind~endent joined 198
Democrats in voting for the House bill,
while 12 Democrats, 176 Repub~cans
and one independent were opposed.
Senate backers, led by Sens. John
M cCain, R-Ariz., and Russ Feingold, DWis., need 60 votes to stop a likely filibuster
and win approval for sending the bill
directly to President Bush for his signature.
The Senate vote last year was 59.--41 .
If the Senate does not accept the
House version, a conference committee
would be needed reconcil~ the differences - albeit minor ones - between
. the two measures.
Bush has stayed away from the congressional battle over campaign spending
and, despite some reservations about the
Shays-Meehan bill, is expected to sign
the measure if it reaches his desk.

donations that corporations, unions and
in!lividuals make to national parties,
often in hundreds of thousands of dolJan, pw from $86 million in the 1992
ptesidential election to $500 million m
the 2000 election.
Shays-Meehan would ban such donations to national parties, although it
would allow soft money contributions
to state and local parties, in amounts up
to $10,000. None of that money could
be used for political ads.
It also bans the use of soft money to
finance "issue ads" - that in effect are
often used to attack candidates - during the 60 days leading up to an election, or 30 days before a primary.
Republican foes said the bill would
weaken the. national parties and was
unconstitutional. "This bill strips citizens
of their political rights and unconstitutionally attempts to regulate political
speech," said Rep. Tom DeLay ofTexas,
the House's third-ranked Republican.
Affected groups said they were already
planning court challenges. "We'll be at
the courthouse door if this misguided
legislation becomes. law," said U.S.
Chamber of Commerce political director Bill Miller. "Ultimately I think this
issue is going to be decided by nine men
and women in ·black robes (at the

The Shays-Meehan bill emerged vir7
wally intact after the defe•t of two
GOP-backed substitutes and nine
amendments aimed at changing the bill
enough to force • House-Senate confer- ·
enc.e, where supporten feared the measure would !:ie stalled indefinitely.
. Among the handful of amendmentS :
approved were some designed to bring
the House bill in line with the Senate
version, and one barring the use of!eftover soft money for constructing parry
buildings, was approved,
The closest call on a so-called poison :
pill amendment that supports argued ·
would kill the legislation came when
lawmakers defeated, 219-209, a measure ·
that would have exempted soft· money
.Uvertising restrictions on marten per- :
taining to the Second Amendment,
which guarantees the right to bear arms ..
The House approved two amend- ments bringing the bill in line with the
previously passed Senate measure, One
raised · the limit on regulated, hard
money donations individuals can make ·
to candidates from the current Sl,OOO to
$2,000 for House as well as Senate can- :
didates. A "millionaire's amendment"·
raised hard money contribution ceilings
for candidates running against wealthy
opponents spending their own money. .

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Mom and Dad love all
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very much.

I wouldn't """' mode 1l
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Love you,ET
To our bat friead

Chrissy Walker

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Mommy &amp; Daddy

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Brady

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~

to our children
Diana and Bill
Jason &amp;_Tyson and Daniell:.,
Becky and Bill
VIctor and Llu
Mommy and Daddy
And to our Grandchildren
Just wait and see what
Randy, Emily and Shelby
a bundle ofjoy I'm
Bethany and Ryan
going to be.
Sandy and TraVlo
Love, Clayton Wamsle~ .4
And to our dear 11-lend
Mal"laret ·
We love you all very mu.ch
Rick A.
From Mom and Dad
Oops you did it again
~
Grandma and
Due date Aug. 2002
~ Grandpa Painter

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�...

.

:Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

:'wellston drops Meigs, Page B5
Southern reunion pix, Page B6

Page 81
11tundll)', Februllry 14, 2002

'THuRsDAY'S

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· !&lt;~nt St. 73, N. illinois 61
. 191edo 77, Akron 72
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· Purdue 79, Michigan 43
. Wisconsin 64, Indiana 63
: f'l!nn St. 71, Iowa 65
OTHERS
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: ~rginia Tech 78, West Virginia 63
: Q"ayton 82, Duquesne 50
· Missouri 87, Nebraska 71
Iowa St. 89, Colorado 63
·
'Tennessee 64. Arliansas 53
l&lt;entucky 67, Vanderbilt 59
l,SU 68, Mississippi St. 65, OT
. Maryland 85, Georgia Tech 65
· Miami 79, St. John's 56
: Clemson 118, Wake Forest 115, 20T
· Alabama 52, South Carolina 51
Auburn 65, Mississippi 62
J;loslon College 89, Providence 79
!-a Salle 71, Temple 67
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INDIANAPOLIS .(AP) Safety equipment manufacturer 'Bill Simpson sued
NASCAR,
claiming
it
wrongly blamed Dale Earnhardt's death on his company's
seat belt.
Simpson; the former owner
of Simpson Performance
Products, 1nc., filed the
defamation of character suit
ip: Marion County Superior
Court four days before
NASCAR's biggest event, the
Llaytona 5'oo.
.
· He is seeking $8.5 million
jil: actual damages plus an
!YJspecified amount for damll£..1: to his reputation, attorney
Rnbert Horn said.

....
'

•:~.S. Soccer falls

.'·:·.·

...

to Italy .

: :·CATANIA, Sicily .(AP) : l'or the first half, a lively
. (Jnited States tea!J1 kept the
: l!alian sup~rstars ·at bay, wasthi!; several chances to score a
$il) nning upset.
· 'fhen Alessandro Del Piero
came on in the second half
. . ;u,d quickly scored to lead
: : Italy to a 1-0 victory in th e
· · World C up warmup.
·
Until then, a jurprisingly
offensive-minded
team
h;iO dominated, even drawing
ch.eers frnm many in the
: ~paci ty crowd of 25,493.

u.s.

.

· Fiedler staying
: :with the Flsh
. MIAMI (AP) - Quarter: llack Jay Fiedler, who has
· played for four teams in six seasons, decided against testing.the
fi:ee-agent market and instead
siiued a five-year, $24.5 millij)n contract to remain with
ibe Miami Dolphins.
·· Coach Dave Wannstedt
signed a . one-year .contrac t
exteil'&amp;on through 200~.

Bob~ts
ATHENS (AP) - Brandon Hunter
had 21 points and Obio held Central
Michigan to 15 points in the first half
of a 64-50 victory
Wednesday night.
· Sonny Johnson scored
18 for the Bobcats (14-8 overal), 9-5
Mid-American Conference). J
Chris J{arnan plit in 13 points and
David Weber 12 for the Chippewas
(7-14, 4-9), who made just 4-of-20
shots in the opening half for 20 percent.
Ohio was 13-for-27 in the half for
48.1 percent a,nd led 34-15 at halftime.
Ohio never trailed, although the

MAC

outlast Central·Michigan
game was tied once at 2-2. The Bobcats then went on a 13-0 run, with
Hunter and Johnson scoring four
points apiece, to go up 15-2 with
12:09 left in the first half. Ohio led by
at least 11 points the rest of the way.
The margin reached 24 points, at
52-28, with 9:44 to play. An 18-6 run
by the Chippew~s cut it to 58- 46 with
2:25 left, but Central Mi chigan got no
closer.
Bowling Green 82, ·
E. Michigan 61
Keith Mcleod sco red 32 points and
Len Matela had .14 points and 10
rebounds as Bowling Green beat
Michigan 82-61 Wednesday night.

The Falcons (19-5, 9-4 Mid- Ameri,an Conference) moved a half-game
ahead of Miami of Ohio for second
place in the E:1.1t Division while handing the Eagles (5-20, l-13), who are
last in the West, their 11th straight
loss.
Bowling Green used an 12-2 run to
take a 28-19lead with 5:58 left in the
first half. Josh Alman son scored fo ur of
his eight points during the surge and
Mcleod added .five points on a 3pointer· and two free throws.
Eastern Michigan never got its
. deficit under eight points again.
Bowling Green led 39-26 at halftime
and increased its lead to 20 points in

the opening minutes o[ the second
half.
Markus Austin scored 15 points,
Ricky Cottrill had 12 and Ryan Stennett II for the Eagles, who committed 2 1 turnovers to nine for Bowling
Green.
Brandon Pardon had I 0 assists for
the Falcons.
Toledo 77, Akron 72
TOLEDO -Toledo's Nick Moore
scored 21 points as he made all seven
of his 3-point attempts to set a school
record, and the Rockets staged a second-half comeback to defeat Akron

. Please see MAC, Bl

Pairs medal

dispute clouds
other events
SALT LAKE C ITY (AP)Even on a day when Bode
Miller stonned back from
15th to a silver and Apolo
Anton Ohno began his bid for
four medals, there was no
escaping the dominant story
of these Winter Olympics: the
judging scandal in pairs skatmg.
The head of th e French
Olympic tea m said Wednesday
ni ght that a judge from hi s
.country was pressure d to " act
in a ce rtain way" befqre she
voted to give the gold to the
Russians over th e Canadians.
The admission came after
the International Olympic
Committee made the unu sual
move . of telling the International Skating Union to settle
the mess that began Monday
night and se ttl e it fast. Ho urs
earlier, th e ISU president said
he received "certain . allegations" from the Am erican referee who oversaw !he judging
and that h.e was tryin g to protect the integrity of hi s sport.
The controversy surely will
be on the minds of everyo ne
at the Salt Lake Ice Center on
Thursday night wh en the
men's pairs title is decided.
Miller's comeback was · a
great start on ge tting th e focus
back on the action .
THE AGONY OF DEFEAT - United States skip Tim Somerville slaps himself on the head
Actually. it was a bad start
after barely missing a shot near the end of the tenth end during Olympic curling match that made it so memorable.
against Germany Wednesday. (AP)

He fell durin g the downhill
pa rt of the combined and
ca me out 15th, roughly 2 1/2
minutes behind N orway's
Kjctil Andre Aamodt.
Then the event moved to
slalom, Miller's specialty, and
.his run of 49.73 seconds is
sure to beco me a staple of
future O lympic highlights.
His dash was more than a ·
seco nd f.1stcr than the nextbest time even thou gh he
·shatt ere d a gate en ro ute.
Aamodt held on for the gold,
his sixth Olympic medal, the
most by an Alpine skier. '
"! really didn't feel I had
anything else I could do,"
Miller said. "''d been trying to.
ski how l needed to ski all day
and it wasn't working. So I
decided to ski how 1 wanted
to ski."
Miller's medal was the onl y
one Wednesday for tbe United
States, upping th e host's total
to l 0. Germany earned six,
vaulting to top of the overall
list with 12.
·
Ohno could help make up
the difference.
The short track speedskating star got ofT to an dectric
start Wednesday by advancing
to the· I ,000-meter quartcrtinals and by helping th e U.S.
team move into the semifi nals

Pleese sH Medels, Bl

Southern hoo s .Cowboys drop Sooners
team honore
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

)

BY ScOTT WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - A hl!ge crowd was on hand for the 20th
reunion ceremony for the 1982 Southern Tornado State
runner-up team, who was honored last week between th e
varsity and reserve games between Meigs and SoutHern.
Southern girls coach Scott Wolfe ' served as master of
ceremoni es for the event, introducing each player to a
round of warm applause. Gordon Fisher, high school
princi pal, with the assistance ofTina Hill, presented each
player with a commemorative plaque and their 1982 uni:.
form .
Wolfe recognized the team for their acco mplishments
including their srcllar 26-2 overall record. Southern had
gone 19- 1 during th e regular season, Iosing only to Nelso nville-York during that stint. Regular season wins
including victories over Alexander, Ross-Southeastern,
Point Pleasant, and Wahama, as well as victories over some
pretty tough Southern VaU ey Athletic Conferen~e-teams.
.Southern's first tournament test came against Ea.~tern,
who was a very athletic team, coming off of o ne of its
best records in several seasons with a. senior oriented
team. Southern claimed .a hard-fought 48-44 win over
th~ Eagles, the went on to claim a 49- 34 win over Kyger
Creek to claim the Sectional crown at Rock Springs.
District and regional victories came over Peebles,
Unioto, Buckeye Trail, Southeastern, an d W indham .
South ern •cached its final demise in the state championship g~me, losing to Middletown Peilwick.
·] n attendance for the ceremony were players All en
Pape, Tye Brinager, Richard Wolfe, Tom Roseberry. Kent
Wolfe, Zane Beegle, Scott Frederick, Robert Drown, j ay
Rees, and manager Earl Pickens: Players absent for the

Pl-,.e IH Reunion, 86
I

Not mu ch was going right
for Oklahoma State heading
in to its game with Oklahoma .
The 16th-ranked Cowboys
had lost fi ve of eight games,
and
leading
sco rer Mauri ce
Baker was mi ssing hi s seco nd
straigh t game
because . of a
sprained right ankle.
The Sooners were ranked
N o.4 in the country and were
o n a four- game w inning
'streak that began with a 58-53
victory over Oklahoma State.
But the Cowboys, behind
the career-hi gh 22 points by
. Ivan McFarlin and Melvin
Sanders' 12 points and 11
rebounds, beat Oklahoma 79=74. in overtim e Wednesday
night.
" It's always a big win ov~r
Oklahoma," Cowboys coac h
Eddie Sutton said. " But when
you're playing the fourt hCbest '
team in the co untry and
you're staggeri ng like we've
been staggering. then it's extra
special."
r
McF ~nlin
sco red three
straight ~askets Jnd had eight
poinls in the overti me for UP AND UP- Vanderbilt's Matt Freije (35) tries to shoot over
Kentucky's Tayshaun Princ.r (11) Wednesday. Watching the .
PIHse ~ Top lS, Bl
v
action is Ke ntucky's Ke ith Bollfns (10). (AP)

TOP
25

•

�-

•
Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

www;mydallysentinel.com

Marlins, D-Rays were contraction candidates
WASHINGTON (AP) - Florida and
Tampa Bay were among the 18 teams originally considered for elimination this year,
baseball's top lawyer told the Senate Judiciary
Committee.
" There were a number of teams that were
contraction candidates, including teams from
the state of Florida," Bob DuPuy, baseball's
chief legal officer. said when questioned
Wednesday by committee chairman Patrick J.
Leahy. D-Vt.
Montreal and Minnesota eventually wete
chosen as the targeted teams, a move that
dominated the offseason until contraction

was blocked for this year in the courts.
Wednesday's 2 112-hour hearing was far
less contentious and far more informative
than a similar session held Dec. 6 by the
House Judiciary Committee, which also is
· considering legislation to further restri"c t
baseball's antitrust exemption.
Among Wednesday's revelations:
- Union head Donald Fehr committed to
increasing revenue sharing, but management
officials said the players' initial proposal was
to raise the amount ·o f locally shared revenue
from 20 percent to 22.5 percent, "rather than
the 50 percent in the owners' plan.

Top25

make defensive plays in order to make a big
gap in the game," McFarlin said. " Fortunately that steal, it made a 'big presence on the
scoreboard."
.
McGhee scored on a follow shot with
1:39 remaining, but Williams, who finished
with 13 points .. nd six assists, answered with
a leaner in the lane. The Cowboys closed it
out by making six straight free throws.
No. 3 Maryland 85, Georgia Tech 65
: Lonny Baxter had 22 points and l 0
rebounds, and Juan Dixon, despite missing
all nine of his 3-point attempts, added 14
points for the Terrapins (20-3, 10- 1 Atlantic
· Coast Conference), who are to their best
league start ever and matched the 1974-75
team for che best overall start.
Maryland has won seven straight since
losing at Duke 99-78 last month, and the
top~ranked Blue Devils visit College Park
on Sunday.
Isma'il Muhammed, Tony Akins and Marvin Lewis each had 15 points for Georgia
Tech (10-15, 3-9), which lost at Cole Field
House for the eighth straight time.
No. 10 Kentucky 67, Vanderbilt 59
Tayshaun Prince scored 20 points to lead
the Wildcats (17-6, ·7-4 Southeastern Conference) to their 18th consecutive victory
over the Commodores.
Matt Freije and Chuck Moore each
scored 17 points to lead Vanderbilt (14-10,
4-7), which has never won at Rupp Arena
in 25 games.

fJum Page Bl
O klah oma State (19- 6, 6-5 Big 12).
" We needed to win it bad," Sanders said.
" We had our backs against the ropes, to tell
the truth ·- 18-6, we didn't have our star
playe r. Probably nobody thought we could
win, but this is going to help us out a lot."
In other games involving ranked teams on
Wednesday, it was No. 3 Maryland 85,
Georgia Tech 65; No. 7 Alabama 52, South
Carolina 51 ; No. 10 Kentucky 67,Vanderbilt
59; No. 13 Miami 79, St.John's 56; Clemson
118, No. 19 Wake Forest 113 in double
"o vertime; and Wisconsin 64, No. 22 Indiana
63 .
Aaron McGhee had 27 points and 11
rebounds for visiting Oklahoma (19-4, 8-3) ,
which had ol)ly one field goal in the final
1:30 of overtime.
Oklahoma coach Kelvin Sampson didn 't
buy all the negatives surrounding the Cowboys, even though they committed. 25
turnovers in the loss to Fresno State, their
first game without Baker.
Mcfarlin scored consecutive inside baskets on assists from Victor Williams to give
Oklahoma State a o9-67 lead with 2:18left
in overtime. Mcfarlin dunked after a steal
for a four-point lead 21 seconds later.
" You have to make big plays and have to

medal collection by winning competing in Albertville in
the 120 meter championship 1992, won the 1OOth gold
· Wednesday in addition to his medal for Germany at all Winvictory in the 90 meters.
from Page Bl
ter games.
Poland's Adam Malysz, who
"Those were very tough
in the 5,000 relay, his every \vas third to · Ammann at the years, but there is nothing
glide cheered by 15,000 fans at shorter distance, finished sec- missing in my career now," she
the Salt Lake Ice Center.
ond this time. Finland's Matti sa:id.
"This is the opportUnity of a Hautamaeki was. third.
The German women swept "
lifetime,'' he said.
The United States team still the event, . with 'Barbara
On Thursday, medals were has a long y;ay to go. With Niedernhuber taking silver
to be awarded in men's cross , Alan Alborn coming 34th and and defending
Olympic
freestyle, Clint Jones 42nd, no American champion Silke Kraushaar getcountry
I OK
women's combined slalom, has been in the top 25 at the
ting bronze.
.
women's 500 meter speedskat- last three Olympics.
. Becky Wilczak was fifth, .
ing and men's figure skating.
HOCKEY: Canada and
equaling the highest singles
SHORT
TRACK Sweden will play Saturday to
finish for a U.S. woman.
SPEEDSKATING: South settle their round-robin group
CURUNG: The U.S. men
Korea's Ko Gi-hyun )Jecame in women's Olympic hockey,
lost
twice, falling 9-8 to Gerthe
youngest
individual Both improved to 2-0 with
Olympic medalist in short- victories by the same score: 7- many and 6-5 to Norway, to
track history, winning the 0. Canada beat Russia, elimi- sink near the . bottom of the
women's 1,500 meters at age nating the bronze medalist standings. Canada remained
15. Teammate Choi Eun- from last year's world champi- undefeated, beating last-place
kyung got silver and Evgenia onships, and Sweden beat France R-1, while Germany
lo~t for the first time, 7-6 to
Radanova o( Bulgaria got Kazakstan.
Britain.
bronze.
On Thursday, the U.S.
Also, Finland beat SwitzerThe South Korean men, women play China and Fin~
land 6-5, Switzerland beat
however, were disqualified land faces Germany.
from the 5,000 relay because
In men's action, Switzerland Sweden 8-7, ·Sweden beat
star Min R young took out an beat Belarus 2-1 and Ukraine Denmark 9-5 and Norway
Italian on a spectacular crash. beat France 4-2.· None of heat Britain 7-6.
Min was treated at a local hos- those teams are headed to the
The Canadian women
pital, then released.
medals round, which begins improved .to 4-0 with a 6-4
America's · women skaters Friday when the U.S. men play ·victory over the United States,
didn't fare well. Amy Peterson, Finland.
while Germany and Switzer·
the U.S. flag bearer during the
LUGE: Sylke Otto, who land both beat Japan 5-3 to
opening ceremony, "ran out of failed to qualifY for the previ- improve to 3-0. Denmark beat
juice" in . the 1,500 meter ous two Winter Olympics after Sweden 11-9.
semifinals and failed to
advance. Erin Porter was dis. qualified after causing an
opponent to fall.
...........
a
JOOO nipt and wtelctnd mtnutes
Ohno's teammate Rusty
6oo~ml·Smith also advanced in the
.... e-,..r ..............., ..... l:¥-' ...........
men's 1,000, setting an
Olympic record in the process.
BIATHLON: Now that
•-lUllS I
• Unllmtted niJht •nd wnbnd mlnutn
Ole Einar Bjoerndalen has
·NIIIonwldelonldibecome the first biathlete to
·SOO-ie-ID--mlnutes
• 'tOO 2-w~Jt te?rt rneuaaes
win three gold medals, he can
set his sights on his next target
- becoming the first biathlete
to win three golds at one
Olympics.
Don't bet against him. Bjo5aw lilt on I Noldl J16s,
erndaleri hit all 10 targets to
-of our popullr phonosl
Wo'l
....
-t!Je$!'1-ltt.
win the 10-kilometer }print
CIIIIMdlldiMIII ...,.....,..,....
Wednesday, two days after nailing t 8 of 20 to win the 20K
biathlon.
Germany's Sven Fischer was
second in the 1OK, while Austria's Wolfgang Perner won the
bronze.
In the women's 7.5K sprint,
Germans !Uti Wilhelm and
·
DIAUk
Uschi .Dis! went 1-2, with
'MIWIM~.......,WI'YefMfllll'ill'tnt
101 ~ ._... ,... • M..WII.... OH ' " "
Sweden's Magdalena Forsberg,
7~1111
the sport's dominant woman
for the ·p~st five years, winning
her seco nd bronze of · the
games.
SKI JUMPING: Simon
Ammann of Switzerland- an
engaging Harry Potter looka-'
like - added to his gold-

Thursda~Fab.

Sentinel•

''

14,209F

.
'

MAC

from PageBI
n -72 Wednesday night.
Terry Reynolds scored 16
poil}ts, Milo Kersh 11 and
Ricardo Thomas and A.J.
Shellabarger 10 apiece for the
R~ckets (?- 12 overall, 6-6
Mid-Amencan · Conference), .
who outscored Akron 49-30 ~n
the first half after trailing 42-28
at halftime.
..
.
DaVId Falknor had 26 pomts,
Rashon Brown 20 and Darryl
Pe
fc th Zi (8-l 6
terson 19 or e ps
•

4-~~led'o ·trailed

Buffalo's reserves 3119, led by 17 points from Chris
William,,
Williams didn't start for the
first time this season. Billy
Lynch took his place.
Buffalo (.10-14, 5-8) trailed
by as many as 33 in the second
half. The Bulls were led by
R'obert Brown's 13 points.
Turner Battle and Louis Camp·beD added 12 each for Buffalo.
Kent St. 73,
N.IDinois 61
DEKALB, Ill. ·- Andrew
Mitchell scored 28 points and
·
dde
d
Antoruo Gates a d 17 to lea
Kent State. to a 73-61 win
OUl'iCOrW

SS-44 with Wednesday night at Northern
13:24 to play, then went on a Illinois.
16-4 run to cut the lead to 6260 with 7:36 to play. The Rock- .
ets "went ahead for the first time
in th~ game on a layup by
Thomas that made it 71 -70
with 2:27 left.
Reynolds made rwo free
throws at the 1:59 mark · to
increase the lead to 73-70, ending a 9-0 run, and Toledo stayed
on top the rest of the way.
Ball St. 87, Buffa!" 63
MUNCIE, Ind. - Theron
Smith had 24 points and 12
rebounds for his 15th doubledouble of the season as Ball
State beat Buffalo 87-63
Wednesday night.
Lonnie Jones · added I?
points, six rebounds and a
career-high seven blocks for the
Cardinals (16-8, 9- 4 MidAmerican Conference), who
shot 42 percent .from the field
in the first half to grab a 41-28
lead.
Smith, who earned his ninth
double-double in the last 12
games, had 12 points and eight
rebounds in the first half
The
Cardinals'
bench

Behind 13-6, th e Go!~
Rashes (19,5, 12- 1 Mid-Amttican Conference) tied the salle
at 21, then used an 111-5 ruri ~t
the end of the first half to go: In
•• '
fiont 39-26.
·
'
The Huskies (10- 12. &amp;f)
trailed the entire second hall. :
Jamel Staten, Leon R~
and P.J. Smith each SfOred
points for Northern IDinois-! •
Rodgers had 13 reboualts
and Marcus Smallwood had 1
'
I
but Kent State _controlled Oje
boards 46-40, wtth Gates gnP?bing 14.
• :'
The Huskies were plaguell qy
'
16 turnovers and poor shooting. They were 36 percent fro~
the field.

The Daily Sentinel
· encourages your .
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

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• •

210

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· EAS/ONC Live WtiiiOO

12:30 p.m.

• NASCI\R This Week wrtter Monte Dunon ranks the

Bill Elliott , Ford , 2 10.364
mph , Feb. 9 , 1987

top 10 dft't'ers heading Into Sunday's D~ona 500.

1. Jell Gonion

2. Ton, • -

. . '

3. Dllel!lmhlnlt Jr.
4. Storlln&amp; Merlin
5. Kovln Horvlclc

B. DeleJormt
7. llobby ..-to

•
•
•

I. Ricky Rudel
B. Ruoty W.llece

Third In quollfyln&amp;
lind tile l;udt 11tir Shootout
-.dot~ vlctarr
In the Slloolqut
Can he do It one year lfter1

·1987

ever; both

Bodine. Pontiac, 157.137

rron~-row

Raoe NCord: Buddy Baker,

Oldsmobile, 171.602 mph,
.Feb. 17, 1980

starters

Wll..: EAS/ GNC UveWe ll
300
Wltere: DaYtona
International Speedway (2.5mlle track), 120 leps/ 300
miles
Me: 1 p.m., Saturday
Lut ,.•• , .. winner: Randy
LaJoie
Event qu•llfVIna record:

NOUible:,Dale Earnhardt Jr. Tommy Houston, Bu ick,
, Ms won the iast two races in 194.389 mph, Feb. 10,

Mootlntnlpkl

miles

Rae. NCOrd: Geoffrey

BUICHIERIU

Wlten: Green nag drops at
1 p.m ., Sunday
LMt yNr'l wlnnll':
Michael Waltrip
Event qllllllfylftC rHOrd:

• SuO)day • NBC

which restrlctor plates were
used . ... For the first t ime
will be In their fi rst 500.

miles

1 p.m. • 5atvrday • TNT
WIMiea Cop, DoyloM 100

TOP TEN

When: 1 p.m .. Friday

la•t yar's winner: Joe

mph , Feb. ,16, 1985
Notlble: LaJo ie has won
t hi s race three times , second
onty to the late Dale

Earnhardt, who won seven •
... Dar re l! Wattrlp also won
t hree .... On ly once hes a

Not*t: Runman has won
J)Oies In' both pre'lious
-.!:!!~~~~~- events .... The first Daytona
What: Florida Dodge
truck race, In 2000,
Dealers 250
produ ced a serlea-reCOfd 31
WIMre: Daytona
lead changes and was won
lnternatiDna l Speedway (2.5- tr; Mike Wallace.
·
mile track), 100 laps/ 250
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

PROFILE

of the DadC• drlvHe'll be on the front row
"HoplnC a q-~nch hoi..
Cloled 2001 on I hot ot...k
NeNr a wtnnet at Dayi:ORII
Hopee new crew chief
8111 Wilburn will holp

-

Wellace, Ford , 130.152 mph,
Feb . 18. 2000

Ford won this race.

Countdown
to Daytona

FROM LAST WEEK
... days left until
Sunday's

Jr. frustrated.
~ I felt like the n1ce was
DAYTONA BEACH, Fls. - So over with five laps t o go,·
much for an upsst.
Earnhardt Jr. said . "1 knew It
One day after a rookie ,
was over on tne first turn of
the last tap. He (Stewart)
Jimmie Johnson , wqn the
Daytona 500 pole , all
knew what 1 was Doing.•
elements of surprise ended.
Under the current rules,
In the Budweiser
passing Is difficult.
Shootout, a 70.Iep e~ehlbitlon Eamhardt hoped he could
designed t o begin building
back off a bit from the rear
enthusleam for the 500 a
deck of SteWart's orangeand-black Pontiac, bu ild up
week later, the outcome
came down tCJ a high-speed
some momentum just as he
was sapping a bit of
chess match among Jeff
Stewart's draft, and use the
Gordon , Tony Stewart and
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
ploy to move up al ongside.
For the uninformed, those
No dice.
•
three are the rei gn ing
"When l would let off, To ny
Winston Cup champion, the
would let off." Eamharcn
second-place finisher and
said. "Me getting by him
the driver who hed won the
would have been a stroke of
two most recent races on ' gen1u!l.- ''· '
· Junior and I had the
so-called •restrlctor-plate
tracks .~.
strongest cars, " Stewart
StewBrt has never won an
said. "It was just a matter of
official race on such a track , getting past him.
but he won the Shootout for
"It was the same as last
the second stra~ht ye ar. A
year," Stewart add ed.
· Junior and I wor ked
year ago, It was the late
Dale Earnhardt who Stewart
together au race long. At the
kept at bay. This t ime , It was end of the race, there came
his son .
a time when I knew he was
So often dismissed as an
going to try to win ~ It was
impetuous charger, Stewart
e\lery man for him self- but
used his head this ttme
you expect that:
arounD by t e~wlng Earnhardt
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••••••••••••
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2. What Is the hometown af Hershel McGriff?
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• HOTt Tony Stewart wins
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• NOT: Ricky Rudd~ .
transm ission falls before
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AROUND THE GARAGE

NASCAR gives Ford Taurus some aerodynamic help
NASCARThla'Neek
DAYTONA BEACH. Fla. - Se-ttral houri allet the end of the Bud·
weiserSh
NASCARpmidmt
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-- •
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The rear •potlct of the Tauru1,
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!shed higher tha n llMh tn the
ShooJm Oo StJ•!"B), when th e
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17 Daytona 500. no Ford1 ~re tti the
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"This move waJ bucd on what we
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(

WIIM: De~ona 500
WlttM: Daytona
International spiedway ~2 .S..
mile track), 200 laps/500

1 p.m. · Friday • ESPN

Medals

. . . . . . . . . . .

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'PAll! PAIIK1NQ
'Filii! LAYAWAY

from 399
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PHONE (304) 875·1371

FUR~ITURE

&amp; DESIGN

"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICKS"

AT.

992-2155

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QALLIPOLIS FIIIIIY
WY 25115

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Dave Harris or Debbie Cal~

from$999

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Qf;rtbune- Sentinel-

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..__ _,FORiiiiiiiii-mu:-_,,..1 1988 S·10 Truck, Jow. rider

1\egtster

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red woth blaci&lt;
Interior. Roll pan ltont &amp;
rear. Mag Wheels now llrol.
4ey1 5ap 30 mllos 10 the
gallon $~too. 13041773•
S054orlsavemessago.

V8fY sharp,

P
rea ane ups. 1Sl
$hot8 and wormed, Black.
ttariGQuln &amp; Mene . Born
I2126/0t . {740)38B·98t3

(304) 675-1333

1D

.

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Dally In-Column: l:OO p.m.
ttonday-Frtday for In ..rtlon

All Display: 12 Noon 2

In Next Day's Paptr

IQ.

WRITE Ali AQ.
Successfu I Ads
Should Include These Items
To Hel Get

Business Oevs Prior To

Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1;00 p.m. Sund1y Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays
For Sundays Paper

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116

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CN.t;s &amp; Roslc:tent Allis· Muolcl1111 and Vocllllll
tants. Applicationl Are Now needed for gospel commun-

Moon Ughl Escorts. Full Be1ng Accepted For CNA'I tty Cholr/mulk: for live per'·
Service Male and Female &amp; Resident Alsiatante. tormancH and rKOrdlng.

118

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P~a. Gaii740-446..01Q1.

area, river view, $450 per Carport, Private Deck, owner:
month, references required. $469 , Lease Required - - - - - - - deposit reQuired, nD pets. (740)446-29~7
Sue's SelactaDies on the "T"'

I

Seize the opportunity- Low
I'RoFEssloNAL
interest rates! Selling at
SI?.RvKD · $162,000, well below .appralsal. Great Neighborhood
In Ore'en School District
LOANS, LOANS, LOANS, cloae to Holzer. 4 Bed·
for good or bed credit, call rooms, 3 Full Baths, Intoll free 1-866-864-5758
ground pool. For more de···No up front fees
tails and appointment
"""Fast reliable service
(740)446-3139
···eankruptcleswelcome·
MOBD...E HOMES
TURNED DOWN ON
FOR SALE
SOCIAL SECURITY /lSI?
No Fee un
~- w WI 1
- e n $36,900.00·
'
28'x48'· lolal
1.aaa-582-3345
electric· 3 bedroom· 2 bath2x6 exterior walls- thermopane windows· skylights
·
and much, much more. Free
delivery- S(ttup- concrete
:
jooters· underpinning and
_1
· up to 50F of utility lines.
~11'11111 Ntltt ecrvertltlng Now through March 15th,
· In thfl: newapaper 11
choose your colors.
aubfectto the Federal
cote's Mobile Homos,
-,fr Houllna Act of 1118 15266 us 50 East, Athans,
s-·
·c~.'.•o. ' Oh
. lo, 45}'21.,1740)592-1012,,
~
,
r .
1 J. h-:_ J
,llmlmllon ar , 188~ Mansion Umlted II, 14
diKrtmlnetlon biMcl on x ~0, 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
r-. ..._,., rtf~
,. ion, oox whrr1pool tub, washer .&amp; dry·
flmillal•t.tul or l\lllonel er,
partial
furnished,
origin, or any lntenllon to $13,500.00 OBO 591 -1899
make 1ny lueh
1989 Sprucerldge 14x60,
·-~on
11m...
11
pretence,
, Of good condi!lon. Will help
diKrlmlnltlon."
with delivery. Call Harold.
740·385·7671 .
Th .. MW'fPiptf' wpt not 1994 14, 70 Oakwood, 2
knowlnn... ___..,
advltrtl~-;;:"',...
BR, 2 Full Bath, washer/
...... wh6ch ll in
Otyer, Stove, 3 Ton Heat
Pump, New Carpet in Wving
-lon
ol tho low. OUr
S
- • r o hlrltlr
Room, 14,000. (740)367·
0907
1 lormod,.., 11
n
I
-llnga-aod In
1996 Mirage. 2.bedroom, 2
thle newspaper 1re
bath, ref. &amp; stove, great
ov1llollll on on equal
ehape, 2 decks Included,
lly$16500 (740)949-4026
n
·
' '
Burchen Mollllo Home Lata

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740-992-6777 after Spm.
3 or 4 bedroom house in
country, yard w/garden
spot, all utlhtles paid, $800 a
month
plus
deposit,
(740)949.0312
4 BA HDUse on 9 acres.
Central Heat. Carpel, 1

~\~roompolls w!~; 1H;:;;Ieplt~l

$490/
I
U Ill I
mo.5726
Pus
t t es.
(304)863
·
Brick House, 3 Bedrooms, 1
Bath, Large Kilchen. Call
(740 )446_0722
.Pilot Program, Ranters
Needed, 304-736·7295.

Pomeroy, large 2 bedroom ,
Naytors Run, w/d, sire!, furnlshed , lg. yard-patiO , no
pets, (740)992·6866
Spacious 2br. 1ba. D_up!ex
WasherfDryer
Hookup
$450 month Oeposit/Aerer·
ances Required. No Pets.
(304)675-2046
.
Tara Townhouse Apa rtments, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
112 Bath, Fully Carpeted ,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
!lo, Start $:365/Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit
Required, Oays: 740·446·
3481; Evenings: 740-367·
0502, 740-446-0101 .

in Middleport. Dolls, glass-~ ·
ware, Aladdin mantels, and, ~
more . (740}992·0298,
.
M•o~ •• ·~~us
""~~..u..ru,I'.U
,
.
J.nUlCHANDISE
,
;
. f 0 rby ·
0
s1971id5CidsmRObil~~..l
$e'll~
0
ar, uns \,;!UU\1. ~;
~~.o.;,:,:rysta~~~.\ oogant~~·.· :
S100. (740)247-2304 no an- :
swer, leave message.

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I

mediclil COding/billing pre·
ferred. FAX reaumea lo
Beauty Conauttant, Bl'ldget latiOn staff to bett,er aervt
875·3713 or 522-3812 or
lplii'ICM'.
ourcustome111. Weare look· Quafl'icatlons; High SChool und to P.O Box 657 Bar·
Adu!t 3 wheel bike. $100:
lng for a person that hal Diploma/ GED required. Fa· tiourwvflle, WV 26554
!3ig Red Slide, Good Shape,
Shop Online 0
high energy level, Hit· motl· mlllar with Head Sllrt phi~
525. Turtle Sand Box, ss:•
www.youravon.com/lindahaiV v~led and enJoys working loeophy. Current or p..t
RN'I &amp; LPN'I
Small Microwave, S15 ~
or call Undo for all your Avon with people. Must have de· Hud Start pt~rent ~(304)895-3739
needa .. Orders, Deliveries, pendable transponatlon, ba· Mult have TB teat and an Evening &amp; Midnight Shifts
. brochures, info . (740)388- sic. computer knowled9t. initial physical before. •n~ Fantastic Starting Wages
3 story older home in town,
Ceramic &amp; Gift Shop Appier .•
8501
Thrs Is a full time salaried &amp;..... work Mull-lhl BCI Great Shift DlrferenUal at
great condition; Close tO II·
Grove (304)576-2800 Ce·'
position and offers aN com- k:..tl ·ion
lunbrklge Cere l Rllheb
bnvy; CaU library at 4416- Twin River Towers accept· ramie Molds t.!sed 70% off.'
.Wh8\ Are You Wetting For pany banefllt Including
gat ·
Far Putnam
READ, ext 235.
ing applica.tiDns now tor New 50% off, Moving Not
y~ know you wanllo lry It health Insurance. vacallon,
I
Call Wanda Taylor
Units available
taking molds . .
Start today. Jay Clark's personal daya. ancl 401K Nature O work: WOftc \.!P to
et 30&lt;4-757-6605
·
MORFO
·. ILERn~
March 1, 2002
,1
Kenpo Karate (740)742· plan. We are part of a lllrge 40 houra I WHk during
To SChedule A
tu.r&lt;il
• ~br. Hud Subsidized apt. for Elec. Smokerama pressure
2548
c~ny that offers exctt- echool yur It the Wood·
Proftlllonellnttrvlew
elderly and disabled EOH cooker. 220 volt. (304)576-'
lent career advancament •-'kl.-.
land 1-tudforStart
Sile. A•
Localed At
(304)675-6679
::27~0.:.3- - - - - operation
for
2 bedroom mobile home for
GivEAWAY
opportunltlae. For lnlervtew
Start kllchen. Pra300 SevlHe Road
rent, no pets, (740)992· Very nice, 2-3 bedroom Electric 3 wheeled Amigo.
L~------·· consideration send a cover parea nutrttloue meals and
Hurrtcane, WV 25526
5858 .
apartment. in town, large Scooter. 6 months old. Cali
..,
letter telling ua why you Ire .,.eke eocorcllng 10 tht
EOE
kitchen, LA, $500/mo. Ae1· (304)675·5236 Ask for
pertonwith
weyour
are rttume
lOoking mtnu. .,__
--•
2 I.M\J
-..~room trailer. $250 mo.. eranees &amp; depos r·o req ut·red . Jooe.
Chow PuppIes Io Good the
lor along
~ I&lt;:CUFI1t ~~- URGENTLY
NEEDED·
Home. Healthy, Beautiful. to Paul Bark8r, Circulation oounta and other neceuary piUrN donora, eam $50 to
ref &amp; dep, Minersville, Oh (740)446·3644
firewood for sale, 14• ban·
Mull He to t.pprecrate. Director at Ohio Val~ Pub- recorda for ~DA lnd pro- 180 ~r week for 2 or 3
(740)992-6777 after Spm.
WANTED TO RENT
saw, 2611. storage trailer,
(740)245•9372 after 4 pm. lishing Co 825 Third Ave gram. Meeta Ume frame for houra weekly. Call Sera~
2 bedroom, for sate or rent, New Publisher for the Ohio IDveseat hide·a·bed, vinyl 11.,
., meell lnd IMOU. [)emon.. 1i 740-592-88!1
1 304-675 •~•
FrM puppies: Seventeen Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
straiH IM uu of proper eo,
·
quiet community, nice clean Valley Publishing Company :::no::eu:::::m~::.:::.:.::~::::~~
to lind a home for.
aanltaUon. tect'lnkan~ for
hOme, (740}992-2167
seeks fumishad apartment Firewood.. 1/2 ton pickuP.
k all 6 ~
~ 7'" ••• .,_
load ~~1
nd
to rent for 3·4 months . load s 25
x- ~~
ADVERTISING
PltiOPO'o~-.
·-~· ng •
Mobile Home tor Rent Should have private bath·
•
or 1a e
·•.
·~
(740)446-1279
room and be close 10 Gallip· oords. $150. (740)992·6672 ·
Froe to good home. Small
SALES
. . - HDUN dOg. GOOd
Apj)IICIIIon.. rtiUITIIt mull
APARil\IENI'S
oils. Call Den Dickerson at
~~ Children. (740)441· REPRESENt···:r,VE be oont to: C.rot You~. Ol~lllpolll ~~~ CoiHolage
roan-{7401446·2342 (days)
• NEW AND USED STEEL
__.
"'
··•
aree111.......,.. 10 me)
.au.n1
•
St•el Beams, Pipe Rebar'
COl Hold $1111, PO Box
t Tbdayl 740-448·4367,
SPACE
For Concrete,
ChanFor waR established
1084,01111pollo,Ohlo4lll3t.
1-800-214-0452,
j
n-I Fil B S I G 8 I
~'!:r.kf'!f!!!.. 1
Local Co.
by _.;OOpm, Febru•ry 20 •
Reg 180-06·12748.
.;,~~s~ ~m~:~~d ~~ru~:
roa ~~
~:; o~arn:.'· D:ivewa~ ~
r""" """"""'' '.
. 2002.
nlohe&lt; socunly depot it reWalkways. L&amp;L Scrap Mol··
•-• D- ~~. Olk IIIU
I
~~ ~::~r~ ~!,~~~im~...-- qulred.'
no pats. 740.992· Moblle6HoWmldeeLoi,$Toke,s 12- als Open Monday, Tuesday;
S ERVING THE
Rick Pe•raon Auction Com..,..,,
,.........,
2216.
14· 1
s, 125 mo Wednesday &amp; Friday, sam...
pony, lull time auctlonHr.
TRI-COUNTY
HIM. OH Truct&lt;lng Company
Mlsaw~
Ibm!
0118 · Feny. (3114)1175·3689
Plus deposit. Good Reier, 4:30pm. Closed Thursday,.
11 lttklna ...,.rltnced ·
complete auction ·service.
_
·
FOR SALE
ask for Rosemary
106 Locust Street, unatalra ences. {740)446·0175
Saturday
&amp;
Sund&amp;".
Semi·
Traolor
Ortv·
e- - - - - - ·'- - -•
LlcenMd llee,Ohlo &amp; Wnl
AREA
Ill. ~ .••
,.. aTralilt'
•••, •~, .-J..._.
,
Limited
Or
No
Credit?
Gov·
gorago
apartment,
2
bed·
Sl
S
I
(740)446-73110
.
1.._...._.....121
vtrQinil, 304·773·15715 Or
..,..., """' n - . ~
ent B k Fin
0 I room, atove &amp; refrigerator orage pace or rent 4033
304-773-5447.
lloontnolpltaly, Clnollurl(7~u.~nd2
.,oo-125,000
wood10.5~~~ wllathHo1999 FNIHt· :~~akWO: In ~r:ou~~ tumllhed, $275fmo., $150 squarle feet. edwith C~etal Over 30 Bualntll Suits and
M It hi _....
· I
_,_, ' · CA8H WHEN YOU NEED
~u r
mo tar
rlepooll, {740)448·9061
. shelv ng . Local In ily ol Dresses, Size 20·22, 1325.
WANID&gt;
• u
ve.......
1773 or 1-IOHI3-0I04.
IT
Ollllpolle. E... llent Condi· ~llo, YN 304' 738' 34011·
Polnl Pleasant Inquire at 2· 62 quart tubl ol casual
10 BvY
Communlcatlan 11!1111
II1MA
tlon. Prtvato, Country SOl· New Double Wklo on Ptl· BEAUTIFUL
APART· ·(304)67.4.01 02
wear &amp; Ieana, slzo 20-22;
' Mllll hive good
. Plrt·dmt STNA noodld tor a~ 811 Wltor link wHh °!~~~
S
1"!'~
~·
IIAddbll·
vale
Proparty,
1-5
Acres.
MENTB
AT
BUDGET
PRJ.
$100.
Coli (740)245-5506
drlvi""IICIOIII &amp;
"ldl
YIIIIH I hoH oonnectlona, 1 ~• 7 .o -rao ~va 1 1· Coil (740)448·3583 to pre- CES AT JACKSON EB• ji;p;;:::;:;;;;::;;::;;::::::; alter 6pm or leave mosAltoolull Top Dollar: u.s.
.. ,
noW . . . . . ng Jn. UICing 11210 (740)1182·2414 Clil Janoll Call II C.Otury quail••.
TATEI 62 Woolwood Dnvo
811Yer, Gold Colno, Proof·
ptOVkle own
home_ lriJfinll 1o ..~ ~ IHvl .,....:1141 .
21 Homoo &amp; Land (Collullr
''
1rom sa97 to $363. Walk to
HOUSEH~
1· ::••:!go::;._ _ _ _ __
111· Dulloo lnctludo bul nat
lflln~portlllon
·
• (304)034-25N or Oltlco Ovor 10 uaod homH pnced shop &amp; movies. Call 740·
GooDS
Quilting Frames, $26. Ful~
·
Dllmondl,
Gold
Rlnoo,
u.s. Currency.• • MUll hive lblllly to llmltod lo: Alllll wlill 01 ~
1·800·731·&amp;011).
under $3000. Will help with 448·2588. Equal Houolng ,
. Size Mattress and Box
M.T.S. Coin Sllop, 1GI Soctraining pllno lnd Indollvory. CaU Nl~kl 740-385- Opportunlly.
Spnngs. $95. Truck Topper·
anti A..-nuo, Ollllpollo, 740bel TIAM pllytr
o irlinlng lo on giv·
9948.
Appllancaa: Aecondllloned eo·w , 91 " L, $50. Call
441-1842.
ora; Uliltln obtltlni!IG PlOP"
4·Srolo ~ Ranch Stylo
Wallflors, Dryers, Ranges, (740)256·1529
tr dooutnlnltllon t10111 ol~
H 1
·
3b
w11h Pllol Program· No CradiV Garage Apt on Rouoh St. Retngratoro, Up To 90 Days
enta, MNiol pf'OYidll, Mid- All Mikel at Lawn Mowers: 10°,:'. ~td ~''Patio ~rch 2 Bid Credit and Flral llme 1br., kitchen, living room, Guaranteed! We Sell New Rllkttntlal Home Ownlrt
Ptolftllonll .-k• land
lind RNUIM Ill:
lelld; ~~~ tor noecled lmth Englnto; K11011n1 Dlr garage. $78,000.' 4 Homo Buyoro. FA5 1nd furnlahod, rool nice quiet Maytag Appllorn:es, French Tappan HI offlclanoy 90 pluo
with home, option or
owner 11n1notd. 80-aOk llllpolll Dlllly TrlbUtll HrviOia: ., tntll dall Into Hllllll tti1d Srolomlndoro blooko lrom High Sohool Governmont Loano Avolio· stroll. $275. por month + CHy Maytag, 740·446·7795. gas lurnaces Including oil
program tracking ayltom; Ropolrtd.
Clll
Mlkt Gil Ohio Good view 01 blo. Own your n'!W homo in· utllltloo + Dopoolt {304)n3·
and eloctnc gao fumar~r&gt;go.
Clll Dan at
RI!: AdVII'IIIIng
mllntlln t!ltclloll ,_rao; (740~7004
(304)727-3318
oiNd ol ranting. Coli ~54
Bt&lt;lroom Suit, $150. Dlnotte cas. HI Efflcloncy Heat
1»!)675-1333, Ext. 18
llllllllp
publlo
All ol
home
I
.
(740)446·3218.
Graolouo living. 1 and 2 Sot, $75. Droosor, $75. Pumpo, faatunng Tappono
I d I I I I\ \I l
I
WTIIIrciAvtnut
C"~~·':ft:: d~r ramod~~:z:~; ~s~: ~b Ra;~~ StyJ~ Trollornol wllh nlco out bt&lt;lroom oportmonto at VII· {740).44ll-11742
Fres lncrodiOie warranty
I I"\ If I "
Qllllpollt, Ohio 4M31 II Ioiii tllfH VOir&amp; - " " tlflltrgonay otNiot. otnlor ocrat~l&lt;f 1 110 p;,.,~ 2 building. 4·1/l! milt out Crab lago Manor and Alvoraldo For Silo: Reconditioned ~~~'ri-r·a H!ATINQ 1
iO
onoollqUiretl.-"" ablt oltlzono dloaount. 22yra. oar garago 178 000 • 4 Crook Road. City wator Apartmonlo In Mlddloport. wulltra, dryere and relng· COOLIN!i 1740144..1411
tfrLPWANJm
lo -l10mltllaoltlottt ttCP· (304)57e-aoea
blooko from. High' School {304)575-5107
From $278·5348. Clll 740· orltoro. Thompoono Appll· or 1.80Q.I72·5N7.
..__ _ _ _ _ _..,~ 011101 Sroorallry Ntlded tor thlt tniY nat "" tltdlly 10- GtotvH Portablt Srowmlll Gal. Ohio. Good view of Wo have approKimatoty 20 882·508~ . Equal Houolog anco. 3407 Jackoon Avo· www.orvb.oomlbtnnott .
Looal V1ttnn1n1n 011101. Ollllblt:-"" ablt to 1111 tlanl hlul your loal 10 1 town. {304)721·3318
led homto tor under Opportunltllo.
nuo, {304)675·7368.
....
Will Aloo Porlorm Some lnd tranlltr olltnta: mull mill julloall304-e1'5·1057..
~2 000 call 1-800-837·3236 N. 3111 Avenue, Mkldleport, Largo Wooden Entertain · Free Goo F~rnacoo and AJt
IHOUA TO START
Cl11nlng and Konnol Ou· hlvt rtllablt tranoportltton;
2 bl&lt;froom, lurnlohod apart· ment center, Glass Door,
• 1'
oompllllon of training lito. D•r lnd &amp;vtnlng mull It&amp;.. ~~~ tntry com- LPN -1&lt;1 pnvlll oaro or Cozy 1.5 Story, 1250 oq ft., '1or 1no.
manl, da.potlt &amp; rotorenoea, $50. 3 place Coffee/ End Condlllonor Elllmaloo. Col!
tng tor • New JOI or Houro lnd oomt Wllk· pulor oldllo; mull ""ablt ,. lllplta poolllon, aollry Open Loft, I .5 aore, Porter
no palo. 740·1182·0185
Tabla Set, Solid Ook, $100. (740)446.8308 or 1-800·
CAliRI!???
tndl. P1n ume Polltlon 0,. oommurtlollt lflloi!Wiy. on duUu porlormtld, Aroa. Aoklng $79,000.
Lars &amp;
29Hl098. It you don'l oall
Then don1 min tlilo oppor· 1)1. Friendly lnd Wtrm Pt~ Bllrtlng Ullty:h 111.10/hr. ooil (740)1182-ee31
(740)367·7193
.
ACREAGE
. Newly Romodaled, 2. Bed· (740)446·7022
:u:.s:::"•:.bo:::;lh:.:l::o•::•:..l"----~
tunll)'lll
oonllll)' 1 Mull. Pitllt Mlxlmum alii r/Wtc. TravF R
~
• .rcom Apt., Stove/ Rolrigora·
Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; .
CALL: t-IIM7oWOII
bring Fl....,. to: RIVO""'nd II raqul""' with travol ralm• Moving lncl H1ullng: Clean or on1 or oa1a, oma 11
tor, Utlllllos . Paid. 5400/ GOOd used Appliances, Re·
If•
- - - - - - - - A n i m a l Clinic, 11520 Stilt! burMmlntii38.Sotntlper Out l'"ulldlnge, Butmentl, houM nr. $250. month+ 80 Acrta HtndtriOn on month. 48 Olive St. , condfl loned and Guaran - Repai rs. Problema? Hd
DATA ENTitY
Routa teo, Gllllpolll, Ohio. milo. DHrlllno tor IPPiiol• ll1ragoo, !otalto, Truh, Do~otlt
(304)727-3318 New Four Ltno at lnloraoc· (740)448-3945
loed. Washers , Dryere, ~~ n~ 1 _C • 11 The Plano Or.
0 446 4625_ _ __
Clal-•lor
Ooct•-.
lion
11
FtlbiUIIry
18,11\102.
Eta.
Odd
Jobo.
Call
from
6pm·11pm.
tlon
wnh
clly
wsllr.
$80,000
R
dA •
· :::.::::::.:::::
P· - ....
.,.
Submit ·
and rtf
(7140)4487SO.
04)937 2518 (304)545 Now Taking Applications- Bnges, an 8 1ngerators, Training Available, PC
Help w1nted caring tar tht
, t'HUmt
tr·
•
For · Rant or sale, •mall (3
· 35 Weal 2 Bedroom Town- Some atart at $Q5.. Skaggs Household Items &amp; Baby
raqulrtd.
oldtrty, Coral Group Homt. lnot~~in.on - r . .
Top to Bottom Cloanlng houN 1br. $2~ . monlh + 6491
houae Apanmenll Includes Appliances, 76 V1ne St. , Items. (304)675·2801
1-1100~240-1548. Dept 926 now poylng minimum wage. ArHAgoncy on Aging
!tMot. Proltlllonal Cllln· Deposit (30 41727-33!8 Lot 1.36 Aero on Crab Water Sewage, Trllh, (7401446- 7396
Independent Horballta Ole·.
Domlno'o now liking IPPII· new ohlfll: 7am-3pm, 11m·
Dlltttot7, Inc.
lng It afforclllblt prlcto. lrom 6Pm· 11 pm.
Creek Rd. Owner financing $350/Mo., 740·446·0006.
Hlda·a·bed tor sola. bu rnt tn butor, Call For Product O( ·
oatiOnl lor 1111 drlvlro 011· 5pm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm- F31 U~!i, PO 11ox 1100 ·
otllot, romo&lt;lol· For eale by owner: Nloo bl· wllh
down
payment. Upsialro 1 Sid room Fur· orange. $50. {740)992·1552 Opportunity. {740)441-1962,
llpollo ond Pomoroy '1oca. 71m,call740-8ia·~23.
AloQranrle,Ohlo45f74 lng ~-clean level homo on 1 aero near {304)675·4182
nlshed Apartment Located afferepm.
JET .
2 2879
10n1 only. Apply In poraon. Help Wlnttd· tl!Pirltnotd Equol Opporiun~ Em~ ~fl92 1381 al. eg .
Chester. Throo bedroom. Lot lor Sale: cltarl&lt;f, approx on S110ond Avo Beside Ll· Hldabed. $100. Lovoseat,
AERATION MOTORS
rooftr'l and oarpenttrt- Thl •--•
'
two baths, Ont-elr garage, 2 112
1 ct b
$3&amp;01
h 1 u 11
A
r1
lmpioyM !or llrgt wort&lt;lng mUll hlvo • Vllkl drtvor'oll· Dlltrlct-:.'~m.~n
i•m'""'•ta
flmlly room with flreploct,
acres, ~rave roa • rary.
mont Pua t . $100. Ouaan · Bo• Spring apalreo. Naw &amp; RebUilt I
rarm. ExperiJnoe wltn firm otnll, looll, ll'lneportatlon -""rtn ~. _...- ""......
aun room. Ntw Cltntral hut· water &amp; electr c avellabla, 11188 (water/ trash Is lnclud· and
Mattresa,
$t 00. Stock. Call Ron Evan1 , 1·
1 ••
oqulprnont 1nd cattle prollr· and roftrtnOH. Local worll ..,.... .... ·~ 1
lng &amp; 110 oyllom. Ono ml· Porter araa. $18,1100. Call ad In rent) . Coli Dobblo or (740)446·9742
600·537•9628.
Nd. Houolng 1v•ll•blo 11 ......., - ·........ 11 c·~! pro""'1or .,~f•.! h~~=
nult 011 Route 7, but 11111 prl· {740)448·4514 or (740)446· Judy at Library .(740)446·
to .,.... ~· """''
""- PI1
-·•
G248 afllr 5pm
. 7323
Mollonan Carpal, 202 Clork
.
· -· _., ,_.,~ : 1n'o Conotruotlon 1403 mull~ ~~·-nt n •me•vale. 1740)966·3981
·
Chapel Road. Pon&amp;r. Ohio. Large pickup load miKOd •
18
200 Mlln
81-, E·n lir'I 01•
- nguage,
,..
" w
Pon
I I Pi easan t Large n.,...
·•~ 3 -(740)446·7444 1·877·830· IIrawoo....
•
• II Vtrl
P~nt08~
WV 21515&amp;0
-·•m Avt., ...
I.
oan llgn
New Home. Vinyl Siding,
will .vt
:.:::.;;.;..;;;;;::;.;;:.
• ;;.;..:;;;;;.;.._ noo houra 8·
M·F, !he propar aittlbtton, lnd
ShinQio Rool, 3 Bodrcom..
lb:.At.FsrATE
bed., appllancoo. Furnished. il162. Free Eotlmates, Easy ·[740)949·2587 Evenings &amp;
(740)448-4814.
I oomplttt Hok;round
INOTICII
2 Both, $499 Down. Clll
WANJD&gt;
$265. month. Cop. At· llnanclng, 90 days sB)Ile oa ;.;W:;IOI&lt;:::::;en:;:d::•----AVONI AII,WUI To Buy Ol' ·Homo &amp; Olrcltn Plrty 1o Dhook upon tmploymtnt. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· {740)448·3570.
~
qulred. 13040675·7?83
cash. Visa/ Maslar Calli. Manress and eo, Sprin8l.
W . Shirley Spear~, 304- now hiring. ltatt your own Phone {740, ~~liM for lNG CO. rtoOmmlndl that
Looking for 2·3 bedroom
Drive· a- little save alot.
$95. Televfllon Clbineta 1
1711-l.a~.
homo """"' bulln111 whh lurtlltr lnfomtltlon. IOU do buiiMH wllh pooplt Old 3br. 2 110'Y homo ·69 house lo purchase. Quick Be110h Street, Middleport, 2
Osk, $50. 13" Telavlolon,
llnlo to no lnvHimtrtt Into~ Mnd lnqutriH ta Mr. JlmH IOU know 1nd NOT 10 oond aoro Iota ol old wooclworll loll
c 11 Jl
1 (740) bedroom, turnlllfltd apart·
Color, $35.· Call (740)258·
lotto &amp;roo. Amullmtnt vlowo oonducttd Mi.ndly Ltwranoo, lluplrlntandtnt, mont)' th;...gh lht mill until on Sliding Hill Crotk Road. ~92.;~87 a m a
ment, ulllltloo paid. depooll .
1529
Co. lllool&lt;lng tor tmhutlll• Man:h 4. Coli Pot Minor 10; Bouthom Loo11 lohoolo, IOU hlvl lnveltlglll&lt;f the {304)582·3554
&amp; reterenceo, no palo. 740·
:.=::.__ __ _ _ _ .
tla II'IGiviCittlll opnn~oum· an 1ppointmtnt 1 7 40 ) 37 ~. Box 178, Floolno, Olllo olllrlng .
·
Atal L~ Homeo Cabl
992·0t65
SPOR11NG
Miami Dolphin Pullover .
mot 2002. . Muol be 11 lelot 9887
~5771. SLSD lo 1n EIIUII
·
-·
·
ns
Goons
starter Jacket XLtrge. $~. _
1
11 yetrt 1nd abl1 1o travel. Opportunity Employtr.
to customs, Free Informs ·
Chrlaty's Family Living,
E ~tcal! enl
Condition,
WHiiJ)o PlY• living lacllilloa. McClure's Roatauront now
lllutnul l888 mobile lood tlon . 740·556·2393
33140 New Limo Rd., Rut·
· (7401441 ·0651 ·
Conllot Ul at 740·268·2;~ hiring Ill 3 loootlano, lull or Top Ton
• DOr&lt;:IIIIOI'l. Tri·oxlo 24 lool
HOUSFS
land Ohio 74Q.742·7403 MOdel 1938 Turkosh Ma usec
pln-dmt plok up IPf)llel· Convllnae 1tore m1nager, long. All aleln.Jela lteel 3 Bedroom on Route 2,
FOR lb.Nr
Apartment 'home and tralle; amm . Bayonet and scab· Waterline Special: 314 200
CNA·HHA, Ctrt. Homomtk· tton llioCIIion l bring blctk Full Tlmt &amp; P1rt Time oqulpmtnl with dtop fryer, 1304)875·5332
,
rentolo. C~mmsrclsl sloro· bard with 70 rounds ol am· PSI $2 1 00 Per 100; 1". 200
tr1 nudtd IO provide In bttwttn
8'30am
1 Cuhler, Full nmt a Part l hallow Pry.r, 4 bawl alnk,
,
rronta available for IEiase . mo on bandoleers Included PSI $35.00 Per 100, Ail
home llrviOt ' for thl 10'00lm Mcnciaw lhf'u Bit• Tlmt Booldcllper, Full11mt IMhiUII hood 1nd coHon W•nt your own home? ' 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Vacancles·now.
$100, (3b4675·2352
BnraeSs Ck.ompreaalon Fittings.
1 100
tltlllty/dlubltcl In Maoon, ·
•
'
Coo- &amp; Doll. Avlli~ to Cindy moohlno. Eight loot Own your own land? Wa dol Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
C.tteli. Wlynt. PUtnam urdly.
worlllll 1111111 ·Bend rtiUmt urvlng windOw and 1 cash Cl)l {740)446·3384 lo quail· Down. 30 Years at 8.5% Cl~an 2br. WID Hookup . Toytor mede Burner .Bubble RON EV.t;N' ENTERPFIIS.
Counlltl artl. Clll 1-888· NHd !ladlll ta uti Avcn. clo Dally aeAtlntt PO Box rtglsttr. Alklng $12,800 fy · for your new dreaq~ APR. For Listings , 800·319· Reference and Deposit. No Driver, 10.5 degree iolt ,.!lka ES JackBDn, Ohio, 1·800·
. • 49 41182 Will Train
(740)448·3358
728.08 Pomoroy, OH 45711f (740)742-3033
h$o.
3323 EKI. 1709. ,
Pols. 1304)675·5162
new. $11 0. {3041675-5458 537·0526
www.marykl~.comlbapancer47.
Your Mary Kay lndapandant We a re expaneling our cl...
...u. Head Stlrt Cook

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;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~)3';~~ 7311 '

AAnQVES

An!•·

ni:

g:une in the long time home ofWeU-

ston basketball.

Labeled with the name referring to
h tm D errow .L
coac
Ule
Rocketswillm&lt;&gt;VI'intoanewhome

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1ongtime

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next searon. Despite a v.Want cuon
"~·~ ••d
uum ·L
u•e u~~n
~· gold led by a 1 .,....,
25 - point performance by

:..5088:=·---..,::-:--::-- junior guard Buzz Fackler the
98 300 ex Good Mmuders feU 60-57 . WeD.
condition ·Aaldnu $a 000 ston used a 15-6 second pen'od run to
(740)37&amp;-2589
· ·
build a nine-point halftime adv:mea. Harley C.vldson, 1200
lit h
Fa ld
Sportoter/aport, low miles tage,
en ung ~n as
c er
104U, (740)742·3146
scored 21 of his 25 points in the
d half keep the "·- d
BoATS &amp; Mo10Rs secon
to
......u "'· · · lit
FOR""""
ers m e game.
Mei~ jumped to an early 6-0
2000 Baas Tracker, 14' , 1 d
•'- 6 02 "''""'
---'·
open V·hufl, 9_9 Evlnrude ._ ea at u•e :
as Fackl er,
atrcl&lt;8 trolling motor ·onap Matt Williainson and Ryan Hannan all
on c..;.,., aM accesaorieo Jn. scored oivm
· g·Le "--u~-- .Le ..;..o., lead.A
eluded. $4800.00 OBO.
,..
u1 tvoala "''" u1 ~•1
740-949-2727
quick timeout by Coach Derrow seemed to
CAMnRs &amp;
turn the tide as the Rockets scored the last
~ MoroRIIoMrs . lOpointsoflheperiodwhilelheMarauders
'Were held scoreless for the 6nal six minutes.
1Q88 Aegai1B' Flberglua,
4 cyilnde&lt; Meto-ruloer mo- Michael Ebem gave Wellston their first lead
tor, pltaoure 11&lt;1 boat, of the night at 8-6 with 1:52 to play in the
$3000; 19n ~nnebago firs
motor home, 24 camper,
t quarter.
$2000 OBO. (740)742-4800
Meig~ finally fou{ld the hoop at the 7:45
mark of pen·od two when Fackler brought

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1

100 WORKERS NEEDED Start Your Buslneso To· Ramodeled 3 bedroom. ln . 1 bedroom house In Aacine For the Discnminating Ten · Buy or sell. Rivenno Anti-, ·
Alllmbte craftl, WOOd
day... Prime Shopping Cen· Mlddlepon, call Tom Ander- $325/month {740)992-5039 ant . Deluxe 2 BA , Near ques, 1124 East Main onlltm1. Matet1al provided. tar Space Available AI Af· son after 5pm, (740)992Holzer, CIA, Appltancos SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- '
To S480+ wk.
fordable Rate. Spril'!g Valley 3348.
3 bedroom home Minersville Furnished Including W.&amp;D , 992·2526 . Russ Moore,~

Elcottt. Prompt F'rofesslo- Many Benefits Available PleaH contact: Olvld at FrMintonnatlon pkg. 24 Hr.
nal Ollcteet &amp; Confidential. Such As: Compelltlve Wag- (304)675-1~
1-801--428-4750
epm to Bam. {740)388- OS, Ftald Meals, Paid \laca·
1'119.
.
tions, Employee Olacountl NURSING IUPIJMIOM
Attention
- - - - - -- &amp; Available Insurance, In· SceniC Hilla Nursing Ctnter
Leader~ Wanted
Why wail? start meeting terest~ AppliCants May Ap- 11 R• Structuring for opU- lntetnatlonal mall order, free
Ohio alngles tonight, call toll ply Dally Mon.-Sun. 9... mal RN Supervilor CoYer· booklet printing proyldedl
rrae t-800·765-2623 ext Come See U1l Ravens- 1ge.
·
1821 . ·
wood Cart Ctnttr, 1113 we art lOOking for dedicai·
waahlngton St., Ravena· ed, dependabla, caring
1..80()~218-7543
..a. ........... ,..,....,.,. • ._~
wood, wv. Refertn&lt;lll Re- RN'a for the 3·11 and 11-7 www.Money-Oreams.com
"""""'""'............ qulred.
.
ahlft. NewWa.... andBene~..__ _ _ _ _ _...
th Package. 'P1eau Call
. COMfi GAOW
Pam Caldwoll at (740).4* RICtplionllt tor bu8)1 doc·
lllop Online 0
wtTH USI
71"" for~ ~~-·~·. tor'l olllce. Knowledge of

r.

orcancet., ..

TrtbunHientl'*
"•aJ•r
wtll ~ f'MPO"Iolble
tor
no ,_,.IMn
the coet Of tN .,..c.at
occupied
by the error Mel only tM first ln..rtlon.
POIJCID: Oh&amp;o v.llly
PubllaNng
......._ . .
tight
10 edit, Nfect.
. .,
rw.uaa frclfn tM publlcMion or omllllort or an .,.,..,....,,....L eorr.ctton will be mede In thl flnt n•llable ldiUon.
oonfldentW. • Current r.c. en._.. .... • All,... •t~~t~~ldVerUIIIIJMnta.,. ·~ lD the Feder11 Fair Hou1lng ~of 1HI.
IIIOipU ontr M1p Wlinlll::lldl mMUng EOE ...ndlrda. W. will not
IOMPt 1ny actvera.lng In vlol ..lon of ttt.law,

Ottcriptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl1tions
• Include Phone Number Ancl Addrtll When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 DIVI

-~1

6nal

lKC Reglstsred Labs , 94 Chevy 5· 10 Bluer. 4•4.
or
Black. 40. Tahoa/LT, Auto. A/C,
l:hocolate
f140)441.Q931
Leather, Loaded . Garaged.
•
.
Nice, 79K, 57200. (7401379. ~j(C Registered Pomoranl·• 2748
Puppies. Ready to Go. 85-SIQ.Pu. 350 V·8 Bored
7401441· 1182
30ovarRolltrCam.7SOED
~FA ~~m~an Kindeens. ~;n~~r~·· T~~ 1f~:
. ....a aner "'Y'" week ys. hausl, Ti'action Bara, Tan. l740)446-3 166
noau cover, new tires and
· tab Puppies, AKC, Shols wheols, Groat lntor1or, Naw
•nd Wormed. V•IIDw and P~lnt Job. Vary Nloe Trude
. !llack. Bolh parents on $4,000. Ph. {304)675-3101
. ~remises . $275. (740)258· .
· 1888. W~l hold with depo~t. 97 Chevy 5 "10• V6/Vor1ec,
·•
Auto.. AJC. PS/PB, AM·FM ·~;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r;.

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No commercial Ads
• No .Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Th ird

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

HOW

iJlV.Ided the "Derrow Dome" in Wellston
Tu-~-· night hoping to spoil the Rockea'

,.

~lock. brick, oewer plpn. 1958 lnternaUonal Oump
windows, Unlels. etc. Claude truck. Excellent Shape.
Wln1tro, Rio Grande. OH 1988 Chevy Van with Led·
Ill 740-245-5121 .
der Raol!. Phone (304)895-

REACH OVER 185,000 PROSPECTS
AD NOW ONLINE

.

.
.

F

LIVIXIOCK

·c
!IRB

~~

F-250 4x4, 351 5
speed, sunvisor, running
boards, bedllner, strong run·
nlng truck, best reaaonat»e
offer. 740·992·7456
1990 Oodge Grand Cara·
van, Auto: Front and Aear
A/C Heat, Ltather, Power
Lockst Windows, Moonroof,
Aluminum Wheels. 73.000
miles. $4000. (740)368·
8700
97 A81ro Van, 58,000 mllaa,
air, cruise, tilt, PW, PL,
AMIFM cassette, dual air
bags. ABS, oaats 7, like
new. Must Hill $10,000
:::"'.s.i:0401379-2134 · -

1

,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllonal lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished . Established 1975.
Coli 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870,
1·800-287-0578.
Rogoro Waterproofing

I- , . . , . . - - - - -

11988

5 yr. old blue eyed, blonde
paint gelding pony, $350.00.
Call oHer 5 p.m. 740·949·
~494
.
For Sale- ·AAnislerod Angus
-.,
·
Bull· Champion H11is Ext
. BloodHno. (740)446·7410
· Regls1ered Bleck Angus
. Bulls yearlings &amp; older.
Sires BDCC Traveler,
Champion Hill EXT, Cham·
pion Hill Wide spread. WLC
Clips, gentle guaranteed.
$1000. (304)372·2389

r'a ..I.Ml"Kl.h~u~
-I!~~ I

$S2QO . ,

For Sale: 65 GMC 5-16 SJ.
orra PU· V8. Aed. Auto,
New R.-r, Good Condl·
: T1me for Frost Seeding Pas- lion, $1600. 89 Ford Ranger
· ture and Hay Fields.
PU· Blue, Ext. Cob, 4 cyt., 5
ATV Broadcast Seeders, 12 Speed, Good Condition,
Voll, High Quality. Fila most $2000. Coil (740)446-4514
ATVs. $295.
or (740)446-3248 altar 6pm.
Jim's Farm Equipment Inc.
V.wo &amp;
40)4:16·2484
4-Wils

r

I

C&amp;C General Homo Malntenence- Painting, viny( sldlng, carpentry, doolo, windows. baths, mobile home
repair and more. For free
eltlmate call Chet, 740-992.:.632=3·-~----

Superior Home Malntance
We do ell Repairs ~
homes, Inside and Out tarpantry, Plumbing. (740)441·
0113

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Eu:cnu~
REiolUGERATJON

o.s.

the Marauders to within two at 1
williamson then tied the CDOte.f at 10-all

MIDDLETOWN, (AP) The U.S. WOllJ=I1°S curling team
has won two of its first three
matches in Salt Lake City and
made school bulletin boards in
soud1west Ohio.
Ann Swisshelm, a member of
the team, was born in Middletown and has fumily and friends
foUowing her progress in the
Olympic games. So far, she's done

go;·

IN THE COIIIMON
PLEA.S COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
.
PEGGY SUE STORTS
PLAINnFF
-va•
H. D. HIVELY, ET AL.
DEFI!NDANTS

Hay &amp; Bnght Wire Tla
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; Volume Olacount Available.
Heritage
Farm.
(304)675·5124.
ii{\\ ' 1'111&lt;1\IHJ\

I
LL.-..:FOR~S.;:Wl;;,...,J ·
AliTOS

1989 Dodge Dynasty 3.0
Engine. Auto, transmlulon,
new tires, new struts, all fluId changers, new fllter11, car
runs real good . $1,000.
080 or lrtdt lor 16ft. open
car trallar. (304)n3-~54 or
IMvem..,.ge.

1992 Camaro RS· teal, vary

good COI"'dlllon, T·tops, CO

playar. llntod wlndowo,
$4988 ooll (7401882·245~ or
304-882•3407.
1882 CUIIIII Clorl, 4 door,
''oollont condition. $2486.
l8~5 Orand Am, $3785.
18114 Grand Am, S3885.
1895 S-10, $37~5. 1~95
QMC lull olzo truok, S57tlli.
t ~ee Blazor. 4 door. loaded,
15485. COOK MOTOAI
(740)44e-01 0:1
I882 Nlllln Stlnzo. Fully
l.Oided, 11185. 11180 Ford
&lt;.tel a ve, 4 Door, 83,000
eot~•1 m1111, 1085. 1817
'lbyoll Coroll1, Auto, AIC,
l.ikt Now, Low Mllll,
$2100. (740)25MOI2
I~~~~~ Bulok Parll Avo. Ello.
. Condition, lolded, All Hrvlcal. Lt. Bronze metallic.
1oo,o3t mllto s~~oo .
(304)875·2&amp;24

~ 9114

Chovy camaro V·6.
Auto, tranaml11lon, 118,000
miltl, In good condition ~
· :nice lnttrlor, new 1\ru, red
noono. (304)862-3358
1eve Chevy Mont a C1no
za.4, tlntlj) wlndowo, C/D
l)llytr, loldtd. opona mod·
41, 15885 (7401085-4433.
1~85 Chryolor LHS. E•o.
• condition . Loadod. Ono
. Ownor. DIC/81/G~ w/Ch1r·
· cool lltlhtr. 133k mllto
. $11300. (304)875·7121
IIIIHI Fo111 Probe GT. Whlta,
58K, Power Stall. Win·
;ctowo, Door Lookl. Sunroof.
co , Loathor, Chromo
Whoolo. 17800. (740)378·
2311
. 1&amp;~8 Hondo Clvlo ox.
· otando111, 17,800.00. 740·
. 882-3117
1999 Hondl t\OCOrd LX. 40R, 4cyl., 911Vtr, 30,000
I"IIH, PS, POL, EIICIIIInl
Condition,
$14,&amp;00.
{740)379-2398 afllt 8pw.
98 Satum. Sl t , 4 Door,
5opd, AM·FM Cuoollo, TIH,
Cru loo. 76 ,000 mllaa.
$4200. 1740)368.0334

ltWIIIoton
Watlllon 1111. Malgo 57
Meigs
6
10
18
23
57
Wellston
10
15
22
19
ll6
IIEIGI- Travis Siders 4 2·7 10; Mall Wllfiamson 6 0.0
13;Ty Ault 0; Doug 0111 0; Ryan Frazier 1 1·2 3; Buzz Fackler 11 o-o 25; Ryan Hannan 3 o-o 6; Zach Bush 0.
TOTALS: 25 3-9 57.
WELLSTON- Dusty Fultz 1 0.0 2: Mlohaol Eberta 5 2·3
12; Tol Thacker 9 1-1 19; Brad Young 2 t-2 6; Brant Dei'·
row 3 3-5 12; Jordan Lackey 3 2·4 9; Travis Downa111 1 Q.
0 2; Collin Crabtree 1 2·2 4; Morgan Johnson 0. TOTALS:
25 11-21 58.
THREE·POINT GOALS - Meigs 4 (Fackler 3,
Wllllamaon 1) weuaton 5,(Derrow 3 Young 1 Lackey 1).

were shown on television .
" It was really interesting for the
first time to actually watch;'
Spurlino said. "Seeing there was
more strategy involved in it, that
was interesting to me.''
The team won . its first two
matches, including an upset of
Sweden; before losing to defending gold medalist Canada 6-4
Wednesday.

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DEVISEES,
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Addre11 Unknown: IXICUTOIII,
IPDUII!I,
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Unknown; LilA
OIDIIAL, Adclnll VlfiGINIA HOLZIR,

Add-•

H1ppyAd

50th

In Memory

ettete btl quieted In
1111 Plllntlll, Peggy
Sue Storta, and th•t
Peggy .Sua ltotll tie
found to be the
owner .In Ill tlmrle
abtolute ollhe ,..
••tat• d11crlbtld In
the Compl1lnt; 01 In
th1 event thlt the
Court ehould lind
thlt the Dallndlnta'
11111 11 euperlor to
Plaintiff'•• Plalntlll
,.q111tta thla Court to
Add~-•
tlnd
th1t
the
Unknown
Dalendante h•v•
You .,. h•r•bv bun
unjuetly
notHiecl thlt
hive anrlohtd 1nd th•t
bun
n•med Ptalntlll bl entitled to
Dtltndlnlt In the raoelve lhe YIIUI ol
lOtion • • • •
thll
unJuat
Peggy lUI Storti, enrtohment. Pl1lntllf
Plllntlft, VI. H. D. further reqUIIII thll
Hively,
11
11., 1h1 btl gn~ntlcl 00111
Del•nd•nt•. Thll 1nd 111 other relief,
utlon h . . blln lither In 11w or
llllgned
equity, whiOh 1h1ll btl
CIM No. 0 I •CV•
,.~~
171, 1nd 11 pending ~cr·
In th1 Court of dllorlbed In d11d
Common "••• ot rtntdld In Voluma
Mllgl County, OhiO.
37t, of th•
The obj1ot ol the OftiOII ll100rd1 ol
Complllnt dem1nd1 the Rtoorder ol
th1t the tltl1 to
MIIIJI County, Ohio,
being
•ore•
1-tlcl In llo. 24, T
In M1mory
7, 11. 14, lolplo
Townahlp,
end
llllgned Auditor••
P1r011 No. 17•
DECEASEO, AND
RICHARD HOLZER,
DECEASED, ·
Add~-• Unknown;
THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN,
DEVISEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS,
SPOUII!S,
IUCCI!880RI AND
AIIIONS OF F.R.
II!AILI!Y AKA FRED
II.
BIASLIY,
DI!CI!ASI!D,

rou

,.., .. ,,
.1. ,,r

,..1

00311.004.
You •~ required to
1n1wer
thl
Compltlnt within
twenty·llght (21)
dlyl lltlr lht 1111
publloltlon ol th 11
Notlot, whloh will btl
publlthld onot 11oh
Wllk tor IIX (8)

•••••••
•

,, ""'•7.0/

•

Jenlfer Roee •
"Bird" Sellen

•

•
•

•
•

B/1/MJ • 2/IWJ

•
•

Our preclouo an1el •
who will alw•1• brt. . .
wun~~h to cur hwl•. •

IU_Ivw_ke.

Mill JOU 10

muoh, toda1

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and alway111t

•

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Local GM Dealer seeklnQ
experienced
service advisor
Apply In parson

DON TATE MOTORS
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Thl
1111
publlo1t1on will b1
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ot l"abruery,
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eight (21) dlly• lor
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will
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your lellurl to
1n1w1r or olhtrwlll
n1pond .
••
rtqUIIIId bY thl
Ohio Rule• ol Civil

::Ia

• ,e ....
•
~
•

a.ua

I co,mt Into our lives,
quickly go.
stay for
and

a

,,, •• 1 Prooadurt, Judgment

lntvtr tht same.
you and
so wry much.
Love, Mom

by dellult will b1
l"llldlred qelnet you
and lor thl r11111
dtm•nded In th•

Cf!!nplllnt.
DliiiCI thll 3rd d•y
of J1n111ry, 2002.

Merllnt Herrl1on,
Kenny, Oirtnee,,l Cletk ol Courta
Orann~. Brian
17, 24, II, 2002
Shelly,
~ 7, 14.11.1002

:;:;j !!l

'

two fuUowed by a Fackler three cut the We Us!On lead in half and prompted a Wellston
timeout.The Marauders would get no closer than that the rest of the woy however as •
the Rockets converted 6-of-7 free throws ,
down the s!retch to seal the win .
:
Fackler led all scorers with 25 points, !
Williamson added 13, and Siders scored to '
with Hannan adding 6 and Frazier 3.
Thacker led the Rockets with 19; Derrow
and Ebem scored 12 each with Lac key hit- :
ring for 9.
;
Williamson pulled in 9 of the 24 Meig~ 1
rebounds; Fackler had 3 of the 4 Mei~ steals;
with the Marauders committing ) 2 ,
turnovers.
Wellston won the
game 78-48. Lee
Graham led Wellston with 26 points. Carl.
Wolfe led Mei~ with 15; David Boyd added
10 and Doug Dill 9.
· Meigs will wrap up the regular season on ·
Friday at Alexander and open sectional tournament play at Vinton County High School
ort Monday night when they face New Lexington .

very well.
mg.
"It is still amazing to me that
Cousin Abby Spurlino of
Springboro
also teaches schooL
she's ac:twlly in the Olympics and
we're actually going to
said Her second-grade class at SpringSara4 Markus of Germantown, boro Elementary has been studying the Olympics and is following
one of hef cousins.
Markus teaches fifth grade at the curling team through clips
Germantown
Elementary posted on the buUetin board.
The US. women won their
School, where students are p:uticipating in Olympics-related activ- opening match 8-7 over Japan
ities, including a version of curl- after trailing 4-0. Some highlighn;

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with 6:40 left in the first l)alf. B=t Derrow
and BradYoung both connected from threepoint =ge for Wellston with Travis Sider.;
scoring two straight two pointers for Mei~
to make it a 16-14 Wellston leaP with 4:11
to go until intermission. Jo!d:m Lackey hit
another Wellston three-point bomb followed by buckets tiom Eberts and
Lackey. Hannan brought Meig~ to
within seven late in the period but a
Dusty Fultz hoop pushed the Rocliet
lead back to nine at 25-16 at the break.
The Runnin Rockets came out of
the thinl-period gate with an 8-3
run. Tel Thacker accounted for six
of the points for Wellston with
Fackler hitting a three-point shot
for the only points for Meig~ in
the first 3:29 of the second half
Williamson and Fackler hit consecutive buckets to cut the Meig~
deficit to 33-2. After Mei~ got the
Wellston lead to under 10 points at
36-27, Wellston went on a 7-1 run
to increase the margin to 43-28.
Mei~ could get no closer than 13 points as
each time .the Marauder.; scored, the Rock·ets wauld counter on the offensive end.
Ryan Frazier :md Fackler wrapped baskets
around a Brad Young two pointer and the
count after three periods was Wellston, 4 734.
Mei~ did not fold in the final period. The
Marauders, playing catch-up. cut the WeDston lead to 10 at 53-43 on a Matt
Williamson three-point basket. A Williamson

Middletown native watched in Olympic curling

\

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Written oomment1
or propaHII mull btl
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1ubmlttad within 30
310
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thl lbOVt lddrtll,
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..

Sentinel

•,_,Thlll8day, Feb. 14, 2002

French official: Judge was
pressured before vote
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - France's
Olympic chief said the French figure skating judge was " manipulated'~in to voting
· for the Russians in the pairs competition,
· a stunning revelation in the sport's biggest
scandal.since Tonya and Nancy.
Didier Gailhaguet, also the president of
·the French figure skating federation, said
Wedn esday night the j udge was pressured
before she voted fo r the llussian pair that
barely won the gold medal over the Canadians on Monday night.
Hours earlier, the new president of the
lnternatioml Olympic Committee told
the skating union it must inm1ediately
solve its judgi ng controversy, which has
become the biggest story of the Salt Lake
City Winter Olympics.
"It's our games. too;' IOC director general Francois Carrard said in announcing
the highly unusual warning. "We are concerned J ar the athletes. It is our concern
that this be settled expeditiously."
Gailhaguet said judge Marie-R eine Le
Gougne "has been somewhat manipulated," but he denied any wrongdoing by his

federation.
"Some people dose to the judge have
acted badly and have put someone who is
honest and upright but emotionally fragile under pressure," Gailhaguet said. "We
cannot continue to let our judge be lambasted in this way. What is true is that
M arie-~eine has been put under pressure,
which pushed her to act iti a certain way."
Tliat "certain way" is at the center of
the maelstrom over judging at top-level
skating competitions.
Le Gougne is one of five judges who
favo red Elena Berezhnaya and Anton
Sikharulidze despite the couple's obvious
technical error in the free skate Monday
night. That was enough for a 5-4 decision
that gave the Russians the gold over
Canada's Jamie Sale and David Pelletier and enough to immediately raise the ire of
the fans, who booed the decision, and of
Canadians everywhere.
On Wednesday, the C anadian Olympic
Association appealed to the ISU to hold
an independent investigation of the judging.

Southern Coach Jay Rees, who then .
took over the microphone.
Rees recognized the late Dr. Kenneth
Woods who played a role in the team's
from Page Bl
success by treating two team members
event were Nick Bostick, Chris and preparing them to . play in the
Bostick, and Rusty Cummins. Also games . Next Rees surprised Scott Wolfe
absent was Dwayne Dill, manager.
for his many years of service to high
Also, recognized were cheerleaders school athletics and his contributions to
Missy Cummins Rees, Tracy Riffie the 1982 season. Rees cited Wolfe for
Buckalew, Lori Warden Brinager, Cindy his 22 years as a sportswriter for all of
Evans Brown, and Michelle Johnson . Meigs County schools, and especially
Graham, and advisor Megan Manuel.
for coverage of the state team.
Absent was Melodi Cundiff Easterling
Rees then gave an elaborate introduc·and advisor Rita Matthews.
Others recognized and introduced liy tion to the two men who made the sucWolfe were Laren Wolfe Riffle, score- cess of the team possible, tagging them
keeper; Jim Lawrence, clock; Chris as the itwo winningest coaches to ever
Wolfe, Purple Demon; Andy Hill, mas- sit on the Southern benchi-assistant
cpt; Tommy Hill, Bus driver; and Chuck · Coach Howie Caldwell, now the Eastern varsity mentor, and then head coach
Hannahs, Sta.tistician.
After all the cheerleaders, support Carl Wolfe, now head coach of the
staff, and players had been recognized, Meigs Marauders. As the two embraced
Wolfe asked fur a round of applause for at center court, a thundering standing
the team. The applause lasted several ovation emerged and lasted nearly a full ·
minutes as Wolfe introduced retiring five minutes .

Reunion

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\VI II t.: 11.1 ph:1~in• qu ,llitie~

to a ~·h i~, v~· ol'i~·(l i·~·t· ~ vou c-~ ~
1abli\h fiH yu~L r~· · l f. (:~nd for
vuu .

Bill's Tire
Shop

hut if Vt) \ 1
pu t Oli11tkn on .nul let ir ·bl•.
n o t h i 11~ \VIII l'Ona· of i1 :tnd

m·w~p.1p ~· r .

balanc:e, ahockl&amp;

11ru11, radiator new II

P.q. Un:-; 175H.

~ti'\t4.' )'~)\Jr Zodl.1l· ~i t-til.

_-. .

·,t ;- ljl.J.,ji...

'

.. '

,.

•

" '

1&lt;;,

_1,

1

Advertise your business on thls'page·. ,
for one month for as low as $2S · ~. ~ ·.
' '

Phone 992-21 55
.,

~om!

jump Ol l ·lirl' by

Mu~·r ay 1-lil l St ntiun, Nc""'
York, NY III !51" II&lt; sur&lt;· t11

' -lr, do ....... boll
Inti, etc.

iff",,.,,.

:1

ah c:lll. St· •ul fo r ~· om A~t ro­
G mph pn•di tti cm~ h~r maili n ~
$2 tn A strn ~ Gr.1ph, .;/o t h i~

•llanmentl, computer

...

wi ll h:wt• a

· tltat'l l ~uwrn yo u ill the yc.•ur

1y1tom, computer

~~· ~ -

~vcryo m·

tlmt". Cct

Ullck rsun t li ll~ tlw inn,, L,I Ircs ·

We'ye added to

• t

211-i'l'h.
tml.ly

~o i kd tl·ndo..· u t:il'~.

Complete esbauat

~

U'"·

~tKi: Lii71Ll~

~OIIH'O II C 111i gh1 ~·how ~Cll ll t'

our servtm;

••

th.tt

,Villcum riblHe tn vottr ~u tn' "~

(304) 273-3271

882·2342

r c lllrll

I

c uH0
Y

~~

•.

·N

I 1 16 7
•

•

Wife to husband, "It says on the
cover'of this catalogue if we don't
make a purchase they'll give our
address to every catalogue company in the · -. - • • -!"

I0

Compl~re

rh e chvclcle quoted
by fill ing in the mis\ ing wordt
you de\lelop from step No. 3 below.

@

PRINI NUMBER ED lETTERS
IN TII ESE SQU ARES

I

€)

UNSCRAMBlE .l ETTE RS TO
G El ANSW ER
·

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Afloat · Lymph · Fifty· Packet · CAP OFF
Whi le in the drug store I overheard the pharmacist
say to his customer , "Take thi s medicine every four
hours, or as often as 'you can get the CAP OFF."

T hi~ P'-'rSOil d v('SJ t't l ll'l'd .1
kd ur t.:; ~ h l' nr he needs \111-

f rid .1y, f l'b . 15, 2U02

Raventwood, WV

tt

the

~:rrrthday-----

IIJ) - -When

New Haven, WV
•Residential

of

EGT O NT

•

Sou th run s fo r ho m e
w ith o tiC spad e, o ne
h eart, five d ia m o nds
and two clubs.

. M./UAIUUS

FIELDS
PLUMBING

letters

lr----------,

du cks th e fi rst spade-,

740-992-5232

HOWAADL.
WAITESEL
Roofing· Home
MalntenanceGutterc-oown
·spout
Free Estimates
949-1405 TI'N

Rearrange

s

his rcmaini11 g h t.:·art : o ne
dow n.
No rc that if bs t

Advertise in ~~~
this space for High Bl Dry
Seli~Storage ·
s100 per
33795 Hililllil 1/J.
Pommy, Ohio
mo·nth

Voltaire

four scrambled words be·

KR E J

J-h..., rus la.•d to \Vin
with the spad e ac e

TIIAT?

JMNRCZ.'

WOlD
GAME
fdliod by CLAY R. POLL-"N -~----

.,
S0 L MYT
l--r,-r,-r,7
: :-r,-r,--l
ti &gt;Oi ed. lie kn ew how
__
.__.__,__..__..___,
to defeat the contract.
'

COULD BE
WORSE

MN

S© ~Jtl)A- ~ ttfS"

Huwevl'r, £~1st wa, u ' t

WMAT

CW

BCLU

' .I I'· I

o ne who w;1s about to

WEST SHADE
BARBERSHOP
Cto•IJon. 30,3111,

BGNE

CW

low to form four simple words.

holil i n ~.

dumm y's kin g. declue r immt• di atcly
c.1 ll ed for the spade
ja ck, fei gning so m e-

PEANUTS

Steve's Truck
Accessories

0

Afte r wi nnin g w ith ·

\I

'""""""'-"'"-----'

Bryan RHVII
New Homea, Room Addltlona,
Geregea, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofa,
Siding, Dtckt, Kltchene, Drywall
&amp;More

ABCUT

THAT'!!

lose 2·81bs.
euervweek
748-992-7036

We stock all major brands

sunset Home
Construction

heart

HfRBHllff
IRDfPfDDfDT
DISTRIBUTOR

•Good selection of new &amp; used tires
• 011 change $18.95·
Mike Hill
Owner

t\RS . GOD·

'~~:~:~'

h c;1rt t w o , anno Llll Cin g an initi al li ve.-c:ud

WILL YOU

NMIY

'E V U

of the universe can exist Without a clockmaker ... -

wnh her partner,
W e st drop ped th e

S.HUT UP

VDE

- GAECMAU
VPUE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I cannot Imagine how the cloctcwork

tl ol l

.· BIG NATE

unbecoming to
you. You should be
com1111 to us.

in this
Interior &amp; Exterior
space
Free estimates:
Insured
for
Wolfe Home
maintenance .$50 per
(740) 949·1521
month

nr

th e I.J ttL'r a nd to
main L1\n commtm ica-

If yeur weight Is

Advertise

EYU

th ret, -c rrd holding.
So , iu th e hop&lt;' it was

Salisttdb l g.amleed,

l-Ui
Pd. I Mo.

RMNUGNU,

ZGOGDBGK

WMPNE

th e sc vc11 . Th at card
w as consistl' n t wi th an
tw o -

G

ODPGVBU.'

o ri gina l

h is

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are· creatf'!d Irom quotations by famous
people, past and present Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.

he wou ld h.1vc rc - .

oflll Dlrt•Mulch

(walled)
51 "Doc:k the
Halla"
ayllablaa
52 Summer In
France
53 Edmonton
Oilers org.
54 Two, In
Tijuana

simple ami stra ig htfor. ward. And West led
fo urth - highest. from
her lu ngc•st and
strongest: the he&lt;1 rt
fi ve. Dc·,·larer tne d
th e ei ~ h t Ji·o111 th e
dummy, but East pro- ·

DO

•New Hames

• Top • ~&amp;moval • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Cellular

• Sind oTOPIOII

50 -tight

Th e au c ti o n w as

Tree Service

HOUSE
PHIDTIDG

Lama

29 Predlco·
menl
30 Mild brew
32 Politician
Landon
34 Herd of
whalea
37 Beyond the
uauel
38 PooUc
conlracllon
41 Clothoa

ttl~l

49 Soft color

co ntr,lct --.

I

JONES'

oH1ullng •Limntone

Tye Brlnager, Richard Wolfe, Tom Roseberry, Kent Wolfe, and Zane Beegle. Back· ·
Coach Carl Wolfe, Earl Pickens, Scott Frederick, Robert Brown, Jay Rees, Coach
Howle Caldwell. (Scott Wolfe)

earrings

51 Bank. often 21 Law

ouncet
27 Roe, e.g.

horoe
Pointed
45 Llvealock
oncloaulto
47 Columbua'
home
48 Kitchen
43

way tu d c·fe at th e
:1.~ in thi s
deal. How did th e
play gu)

l

.,

20 Tlbel'a -

22 Bump or
knot
23 Airline
employH
24 BaHery
terminal
25 Eight

w itl'1 111 in ds wo rki ng
in t ;ullh~ Jn t o li nd ~

YOUNG ·UN,
TATER
,!

'

product

46 Some

All th e .1 ir "' th y
1)ioc r se.
Good de fe nders are
li ke a n1.1rricd couple,

BARNEY

porta
5 Survey
choice
6 Graba a bite
7 Graceful
8 Khan of
note
9 Even 11 we
speak
10 Geneuc
loHera
11 Iowa hra.
12 Grlmr,
16 Profle,
briefly
18 Wood ash

choice

IS,

T.loiiS BELONGED TO

Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Casb Available

1982 SOUTHERN REUNION - Pictured are team members, front, l·r, Allen Pape,

F.a~1
Allp~u

~~:U..r

4

28 Uproar
29 Short limo
31 Well· .
founded
· 33 ·Marry
oecreUy
34 Royal
residence
35 Tu~
36 Commuter
vehicle
39 -to be tied
40 Curb
42 Can opener
1arge1a
44 Makea a

tin r m arri e d o n thi ~

fille&amp;.ttfterct14.,.
.. ,.,-1w' «m fJ4t

for

(740) 949-1521

COACHES
EMBRACE- What
became the two
wlnnlngest coaches
to ever sit on the
Southern bench,
Howle CaldWell and
Cart Wolfe embrace
after being honored
at halftime of the
Southern-Meigs
game last week
during a reunion for
the 1982 Southam
State runner-up
teem reunion.

·· ~: c~ 1\1~fl.

1'\urt h

OJ•~i1in"

3 Watermelon

1

1Nr

l'•u

1 N'r

213 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh 45760
Tonia Reiber
Licensed Massage
Therapisl

In this space

w...t

Su11th

(740) 992-1705

1-877-466-1234

CHEERLEADERS
-Missy Cum·
mins Rees, Tracy
Riffle Buckalew,
Lori Warden
Brinager, Cindy
Evans Brown,
Michelle Johnson
Graham. Back·
Megan Manl.lel
and Laren Riffle.

~arden

nj!o.lt:r· Scw1 h

o r ig inal

SUPPORT STAFF
-Jim Lawrence,
keeper;
time
Chuck Hannahs,
statistician; Laren
Wolfe Riffle, scorebook.

IU I

... QJ81:1

4 K Q76
¥ J I0 I '

L\ ~I:\ I'S
( 4)'\&gt;,

" '7 2J
Q

t
Stlu lh

mEIGS miiSSfl&amp;f
THERftPY

Advertise
125

... 10 I

••

Vul nL•t'l&lt;bl,• Uuth

www.mar)'by.eomlpaiCedeek

740.992-7599

t:.. .t

Cre&lt;c

740-992-2802

J:REE ESTIMATES

l.i~7~1

"' .\ 7 !

~

Free E$timates
Servin&amp; Ohio and W.V.
wv 11031712.

Cleek
Independent Beauty
Consultant
114 Hl&amp;h Street
Pomeroy. OH "'S769

COMMER&lt;W""' RBIOEIITIAL

~

r. 11W

~

Y All6$l

and Dri"cs• Stencil

lby Koy hOt 01 you

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Rooting

...

..

Replacemcnll, • Walko

acttanced901nll0t

BUILDERS IDC.·

"--.

,\unh
• J 10

We..&amp;
6 M5 3

Flal Wori&lt;.

.. -"""""' oldn

BISSEll

1,..

f

• Footcn, Walls, Steps •

a •mokeuo

•OCJIIOI~ to a:' r

-

ACROSS 54 Shaggy
flow•
1 Dried mMt 55 Goddeoa of
&amp; urge
wlldom
antelope 56 Uoe a
11 Singe&lt; Dlon
compau
12 Broadway'• 57 Pu1a on the
"Mill-'
block
13 Nota
58 Frighten
14 Canida"•
·
capital
DOWN
15 hchenge
16 Sllllnooa
1 Mock at
17 Sklit vent
2 Lamb'a
19 Eve's
allal

~~

CONCIEII/ILO&lt;K/Il!CX

-.-.good
...- .-.
·"'-"""'"""
·Paige

se.:
se.

Pomeroy fatles
1110602171
fverJ Tbiii'Sdly
&amp;SUnday
lloeB Open 4:30
Earty birds start
6:30
Prtgresslue ttlp One
Tlllrsdays
Progressive
Coueroll an Sundays

Beauty

COIITIAOOIS, IlK.
Racine, Ohio ~sn1

Fan;

PHILLIP

~ ,._ ,. ALDER

P/1

MARY KAY"

I

NEA Croasword Puzzle

·

PI SCES (F•·b. 211-Mordr 20)
-- ·rl'rnt wi th r ~' ·" P '-'L't Lh ~,~t·
t hin ~ thnl ,h,·~c.·rw to he l,lkl')l
u•rio~1~l y tc•llt1y. Till~ i~ ,·~pc.·­

diilly lnu• in inv(liVI'liWIIh ur
C IHI ~·~~v&lt;.H~ w\n•n· ld"'' ' lity
ri1 i~ht hmt 1
11U1lh ..·r.
AI~ JES (M.&gt;r&lt;h 21· A)'ril f'J) ·
-- "T'ry not t~l bt• om " I wld
ymt ~o" t(\lLiy II' \!llla•rhintx
ycHl w.m1cd .muthl·r .1~.1in't
h~·nr~ ~lt1 1 .1~ yt1u Jll l·• illll'd ,

.

I.IIJI\A (Sept.

J(·r~ta nd i n !J: .

TAU R US (April :!11- M.t\'
211) -- M.l i Llt:lill Ctl lttro l ~f
y{H ir

flll,LJH·i.d

a1r.11r~ •

.1n d

don't kr .o 1h er~ din•n you
(Jthl·rwisl.:'. T he y nuy llH',IIl
W&lt;' ll, but

dunn·s are they 'll

bt· wrona..

GEMINI (M"Y 2 1-J un c 20)

.. _ Be f.1 ir. lntt fir m todJ.V
wh t•n 11t.'gotiatu 1~ ~1r wmkin~
ot ht·r~ nn .1 dt.'nl. If ~my~
ClLIC.' i s .1\lmH·d HI )ll't .~dft~ h ,

with

th~·rc n,uJd h~· a fi n .~1 1t· ial l o.\~
. li.1 r .1 ll.
CANCE R (J une 2 1·J uly

22) - Sh u t ym1r llt Qu th to day
C(lllCl' t ll il l~

p iLked up by uth l·r~ an d Llll ~e
mi ~ m m uf you,

:m yt hinp; that hou

to dn wi th yn ur bmi ue~ \ af' fit ir~. he it wh,,t )'t.lll'rr du l n~
nr wh,1t yuur firm ~~ c n;w ti n ~.
L c.•11.k .~ lm ym1r bchJ\f m:~y be
dl· t rirm•nt :~l.
·
LEO (Jtliy 2.1- Au ~.
u~llitlly yml'rc II very II.'Vt•1-

·22) ..

2.1.(lc·t.

.l(~pu i ncm re of \'llll r s m ;JV
~l't'k your he lp rClr ~~u r dy H• lf:-

i\ h

fl\Holl~.

w.1y to

~ay

Yo u r an tind ;I
" no" :~nd still rt•·

11\ ,1111 a~~nc.· iarcd
~UlllfVotl Wi,h .

wirh the

SCOi l PIO (O r t. 2-4- Nov.
somt•t b i n ~

at wn rk

irtM:l iH

}.il't

~~IH1 f j ud).lll l~'llt,
V II~Gll (A11~.

h i~

nr

lwr

lhll a't

j11~t

22)

·-- 'rbt~ nnly way ·~ r wth~·r t' :LU

lwlit' \'t' in yo 11 wdt~y i~ if ym1
tit~l bl'lit'\'l' 111 your~,·lt'. Any
d1t11bt~ m1 ynur pMt \nll ht· )

to da y

rmdd be f.1r su perinr to the
id ('.\i of others w ith whom
you \vork .. lt m:ay mkt• a lm of
~ u ts on yo ur. pa n to prove
vol1'rc righ t. .
·
, SAG ITTAIU US (Nov. 23.
l&gt;i:!!c. 21) - - I t'~ impon nnt h l ·
Jay t h&lt;~ t you trt':lt an impurt:mt im 1e wit h j ud~rne n r n n~l
C~l r uh u: t tha t is riaz, ht nnd
prnp!!!r imtcat.l o ( rmtk illjl:, un~tr it.\ hlc conuuio m to n pp~·a~ e
~OI I1C frk mlt
C AP RI CO I~N (Occ. 22·

Jnn. l'J) -- Wlum

2.1-S,•pl.

J'l' f·

:!2) -- Yom wa~· u f dni 11 ~

hc,1ckd JWr~U il . but tml.ty ~'mt
cm1l J hri n~ c.•uto tiorl!l into the
l'kltlrl·, wlm: h wou lll di~tort
tht' pktiii'C fi,r ym1 :1n d duutl
.

2.1 ) - ·

- Be.• :1lert !otby. bt•cm~c :m

L'Qn lrac:t l n~

wm k nr 't'TVin• (nr anotlll'r
tnd.1y, \'u t ym1r tcnm in wri t·

il8r i!' ~' 11 WII t.

the m hl·r tO nffi x
,l~n :n ure

w lt.

r11:1h a v~· rh al

�'

'

NASCAR 2002 PREVIEW
•

•

: : :Whets Inside

Mllp County's

Hometown Newspal*'

.

•

Spotlig~ht: Alasting Love

'

Lentes

cleared of·
criminal
wrongdoing

;

2002

GRAND .

MARQUIS ·
i.C0212

2002RANGER

$21~470

2002 ZX2

#C0102

.

IC0096

$11J375

.

'

~

: : fierd tops RedHawks, Bl

2002 VILLAGERS
SAVINGs UP TO ·

$11J988

. : ft--aL ..

· "' llla!IID

~CI{lles L ~ash, 82

$4_,000
. .

Miller's 2001 report made
public this week

DetMis, A3

.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~

. 2002-liNCOI.lN..
.NAVIGATOR ··

$17;,662

ESCORT

MUSTANGS

2001

2001

.:Dow tops out

. at 10.000
. NEW YORK (AP) : Wall Streel stalled in lack. IC1ster trading Thursday as
i(lvestors collected profits
:' flom the market's latest
a11vance, but the Dow Jones
, ·~u&lt;!u.strials ~ scratched ouQ

15 Passenger

2001
2001
2000
2001
TOWNCAR NAVIGATOR WINDSTAR MYSUQ.UE
weoHer
Ford Motor
company's ··ESP"

. '

F·3SO ·

SABLES .

TAURUS

Details, A1

. . :.

2001

(two)

(two)

2001

': : : Hlp: 481. Low: JOS

00
$5700·
.'

$20495
(two)

2001

UPTO

VB, Automatic, A/C,
Tilt, Cruise

#C0163
•.

SAVINGS

504x4

2002 TAURUS SE

ll
N C ,O lN .
AMEIICAN LUXUIY .

2000

2000

COUGAR

.MOUNTAINEER

: ~,l;.ir , fir:s~ ,.,t41i .. . , ti&lt;We
·t 0,000 in more than a

· · n10nth.
. The Dow closed ·. up
: 1.2.32, or 0.1 percent, at
helped by a burst
of last-minute buying that
j!.ushed the index above the
rnilestone and to its best
close since Jan. 10.
. : The Dow has now risen.
· 376 points in the last five
.
sessions.

·m,oot.99,

·EXtended semce Protection on
all New and Used vehicles.•

'

2000 Lincoln
Continental

1996Ford
Explorer XLT

Auto, Y8, Power Equip,
Leather

2000 Mercury
Mountaineer

All Wheel Drive, Auto, Y8,
Leather, Mbonrool,

.....

IIOTORCRAFT

·' FAST · BE

or less • Diesel vehicles may be extra.

..

~

tt.ty up- U.. people

that know vour

••hlclo IMtat.

M.C1'CMW TMIMED

ss_,900

ss.,soo

• ServiCe In
s up to 5 quarts of Motorc;aft't!nd:..,w
Motorcraft oil filter • Perform Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Check and fUI necessary fluids • All In 29 minutes

ve• lftllntnaolftt to

$8_,900

Power Equipment

-----------------------

~tnaat

Auto, 4 Wheel Drive, AC

1996 Pontiac
GrandAm

Check and adjust camber and toe. Addnlonal parts and
labor may be required on some vehicles.

·

4 Wheel Drive, Auto, V6

1997Chevy
Lumina

WHEEL ALIGNMENT
2-wheel$2495 4-wheel $4995

$1 D.95

1997Geo
Tracker

ss. soo

: Q•lly 4: 4·9-Q-4

.•

----------------------M•torcraft..

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD

WIPI;R.",
Starting · ·

srorling

at

at

s45oo

Installed

sto:::ng

$

SPLASH GUARDS

Sta~ng

00

TIICMNICIANS

KEYLESS ENTRY

$1 0 .

Sta~ng

$180

\·

...

: : &lt; 2 Sect~'
· . ~alendar

' tlassifieds

:Comics ·•

. Oear Abby

FORD MOTOR CO.
FLOOR MATS

'

tnli 25: 4-10-11-12·16-22

.
. . .
Jndex

: Editorials

j;

-

12 .....

.
.,

· AS
82·4

85

AS

A4

: Movies

A3
A3

Sports

81

· ObituarieS

. Weather
r
A2
:. : :0 ~2 Ohio Volley Publishint C..

.

load limit lifted

t

COUNTY COMMISSION

Bv BRIAN J. REED

. )N.VA.

W. fNlute all mtr~or brtnde: Goodwar, Flr..tone, G.neraJ.
Mlohelln, Bnctu-R~M. Contlnenu.l, UNIROYAL, BF Goodrich.
Mounting and ~•nc1ng ~v t. txtr~~.

Span's weight

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· P•lly 5: 8-Q-7

We wll meet or beat an~ compelllr's
advertised price on 1he same.flllll.·

Rutland couple still
in love after 65 years

Sheriff makes request
for additional funding

. ~HIO
· elck 5: 3·9·7
: Pick 4: a-o-1-1 .
· Buckeye 5: 4·9·11·17-33
. Rick 5. dey: 7·8·7
:. .: P,lck
.. dey: 8·3-0-o
.,..

Auto, Y6, AC,

Auto, AC, nit, Cruise

Save Thousands
New Price/

. . Broader stock indicators ·
fell. The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index was down 2. 03,
: : Qr 0.2 percent. at 1,116.48,
and the Nasdaq composite
index lost 15.79, or 0.9 per: .c ent, to 1,843.37.

POMEROY -.A report from a special ' prosecutor has
cleared former Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes of crimiHAPPY COUPLE - Rutland Postmaster Margaret Edwards, right, presents Norman and Allegra ~
nal wrongdoing in the handling of assets seized in the Fred
Will with candy. balloons and stamps during the couple's 65th Valentine's Day celebration on ·
Priddy drug forfe.iture case.
Thursday. (Tony M. Leach)
The report, prepared by former Franklin County Prosecutor Michael Miller, was released to Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred W. Crow IH in July, 2001, after
an eight-month investigation which
included interviews with 23 witnesses.
Crow subsequently referred the report to
Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story. It was
only made public, however, after a ·Story.
appeared earlier this.week in The Columbus Dispatch .
In September, 2000, Crow ordered a
special investigation into the manner in
Lentes
which Lentes and his staff handled the
BY ToNY·M. LEAcH
for over 60 years and we're going to continue
seizure
and disposition of. nearly a thouTlEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
doing·so for many more."
sand motor vehicles, farm equipment and other property
RUTLAND - Sixty-five years ago, Cupid . According to Postmaster Margaret Edwards,
from the Priddy property in Rutland.
shot his arro"\' into Norman and Allegra Will Allegra and Norman can always be found
Miller was charged, Crow said, with investigating ''the
mailing cards to family and friends inside the
and the effects have yet to wear off.
location, possession and disposition of assets without court
The Rudand couple, who were married in post office.
•
order, and the Prosecutor's condttct."The investigation ulti1937, recendy celebrated their
a
"Those two are always
mately cost Meigs County taxpayers $53,,000 - Miller
i!Sth Valentine'saD
· _\oge.the~
Allegra and I l•ave toget,her and have been loyal
eventually reduced his fees from $55,000 to $38,000, and
by attendin~ .....~nJ~•.. ....£l!/l1Y!d.ta£1Li.!thel''s customcrs.pf,t!J.e pQSt. offi&lt;;e.,fur . . attorn~ys representing Lentes and other elected' o'fficlals
tton at tHe! ''. utland Post
compatly for over 60 manyyears,"saidEdwards,"We
charged S15,000 for their services.
~ffice. folloWed by a romantic
years and we're
just wanted to throw a sinall
The vehicles, guns, appliances, mechanical equipment,
dmner at the MeigS Seruor
,
party for them to show oqr
household belongings and other property in question were
Center, in Pomeroy.
golng tQ conti/IJIC
appreciation."
.
seized in April, 1999, by law enforcement officials during a
When asked what ~~e sc;cret
d11ing SO for rn.my
During the party, the couple
drug investigation, and Priddy later forfeited the property to
of their marriage was, both
more. ·"
was presented with heartthe county as a term of his plea agreement. L~ntes used
agreed · that friendship and
shaped balloons, candy, cookies
Norman Wl!l, Rutland
and an assortment of Valenunderstanding are the keys to a
Please see Lentes, A3
long,loving relationship.
tine's Day stamps.
''We've never had any knock-down, drag"True love is what has made us happy all of
out fights during our marriage, and we don't these years," said Allegra. "We have four chilexpect to have any in the future," said Nor- dren, six grandchildren and several great ,
man, as he put his arm around his wife. "Aile- grandchildren. It's been the best 65 years of
gra and I have enjoyed each other's company my life and I wouldn't trade it for the world."

HTIJr whole country is

talking about homePOMEROY
Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell land se1=urity ... My }11b
will need an additional· is to protect the people
$178,000 in order to operate
his office through the rest of of Meigs County ami I
intend to do tlrat."
the year, Trussell told the
. Meigs County CommissionTh da
Ralph TruaaoU,
ers on urs Y·
Melgt1 County Sheriff
Some pfTrussell's line items .,.
.
were subject to the cornmis- . not including $30,000 in bills
sioners' five percent cuts at the which were left unpaid
beginning of the year, and.he because of a salaries shortfall at
said ' yesterday he needs addi- the end of the year.
tiona! funds in all of his line
Trussell's $600,184.50 in
. items in order to contir:me appropriations, as approved by
serving the public through the the commissioners, and the
rest of the year.
additional a111ouncs he has
Last year, he spent $663,000, , requested be appropriated are

as follows: sala ries. $400,000
(28,000 additional); supplies,
8.000 (12,000); food, 9,000
(6,000); tires, 2,000 (2,000);
housing, 72,000 (38,000);
contract
repairs,
8,000
(17 ,000); gas and oil, 12,000
(13,000); contract services,
8,000 (9,500); training, 0
(1,000); travel, 0 (500); medical
for prisoners, 2,000 (7 ,000);
uniforms, 4,000 (2,200); and
other, 9 (2,000).
Trussell also made an
"optional" request of $40,000
to be spent for new cruisers
this year.
"I feel this is a reasonable
and necessary request to pro-

PI••• see Melp, A3

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The legal load limit reduction in etfect
on the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge since Jan . 18 has been lifted, the Ohio Department ofTransporiation announced.
ODOT's District 10 office in Marietta reported that
commercial traffic can now travel "Our earlier decithe bridge at 100 percent legal
si"n to reduce the
load.
"
..
The reversal is the result of a bridge's legal load
recent review of new load rating
limit was based ·
analysis.
upon the ctmml"Our earlier decision to reduce
tant's recommenthe bridge's legal load limit was
based upon the consultant's ~cdation prior
ommcndation prior to analysis to analysis review.
review," District 10 Director
felt it was
George M. Collins said." We felt it
was important at that time not to
important at that
. postpone the .issue of public safetime not to post- .

m

~·

pMe~~~~

John Coen,' an ODOT bridge
public safety. ,
engineer, said that after careful
review of the original bridge data,
the consultant found an error that GtiDrge M. Collins, ODOT
District 10 Director
had led to the load reduction.
"After viewing the corrected analysis. we found that no
load reduction is required," Coen said.
The bridge, built in the 1920s, is scheduled for replacement in 2003. The project is estimated to cost $33 mijlion
and ODOT expects a bid will be awa.rded in December.

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