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•

•
Page 86 • The Dtilly Sentinel

Monday, March 4, ~

.www.mydallysentlnel.com

BobCats bounced from MAC tourney...1

NEA Crol8wo.rd Puzzle
PHILLIP
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THE BORN LOSER

enlmtl

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(,L~O'&lt;~ I CAt-\ YCXJ DO S)t-JIE.

1f\lt{0 /\BOUT Tf\1:&gt; C.Po..T '?'

SO WHO'S
c;oiNGo

TEACH
rHYS . EO~

111111"111

fAq

1!liT

l'a~s

Plf~

ra~•

l •

Pal&lt;~

l'iii~J

pnt

15 Veldt herd

W PIII

16 Slangy
opprolllll

17

Opening lead: • K

R alph W aldo Em e rso n wrote? " A ch;t rael &lt;'r is lik e an acrostic
o r Akxanuri an stanza:
-- rea d it forward ,
backwJrc..l , o r across, lt
"ill sp ells th e same
thin g."
That's a hit like this
• ye ar, whi ch is palin • dro m i&lt;: the same fo rward a nd bac kward .
We have a bac kward
pl ay in brid ge to o .
Se e if yo u can spot it
in this deal.
When y ou ar e
competing ag;ti ns t a
stn)ng no -trump , th e
normal pr in cipl e is:
get into the au ction ,
find a fit , get u u t uf
th e att cti o n . H e re,
thou gh ; N o rth and
South pu shcu into
game.
After We st leads the
club king, check your
lose r,s. Having o n e
spade , one di amond
and o ne club clearly
apparent, the heart
•uit mu st be played
without lo". And
frum the bidding you
know th at West has .
th e qu een .
r'
.
....
Win with dummy's
DON.'T 1\SK ME.-YOO'~ '\1-\E
club ace and play a
()t.(C: Wf\0 ~D Tf\E: Tf\~
,trump._West will win ,
RC:OMf\ER
cash hi s club tri ck,
I'Po..W !
ami exit with his last
spade . .Win in hand
and lead a diamond
t o~vard the dummy,
hoping W es t will
mak e th e error of taking hi s ace . Howev er,
' as suming he duc ks ,
the unly chanc e is a
backw ard fi1ic sse in
hearts. (West cannot

=drum

)
1ll
21 Poet
Jonaon

... ~~

54 llonaOI
dweiTingt
55 GrMn
parrol
56 Harp on
colleciOII

56 NYC zone

-

2 Dad' I titter 24 Trickle
25 Singer
3 Till
Vlklil
4 Drlwlng
26 Border on
room
5 LabWOIIghl 27 Grand In
ocale
6 Bronza .
component 28 SEATO
counterpart
7 VIking
2ll Bed alze
name

31 Galaha'l
ICCHSOI"f
32Rabbit'l
loot
33 Feminine

=:oun

FOR OVR BASEBALL TEAM
LASTVEAR. CAARLIE BROWN ...

~~~~11

TO llAVE AN ENTIRE
SEASON RAINED OUT..

IOUnd

46 Cycle
47 ACtor
Montand
50 Yea, In Nice
52 Have
tupper

MARCH 4l

f.worit e palindrom es,
found at http:/ / palindront es .org : Do c,
note I dissent : a fast
never prevents a fat ·ness . I diet un cod.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

March 5.

~ 001

v&lt;.•ar ah e, hl

u ~ in ~ ~ n n u.• lin!~

k ml \\'11 t.1h•ms yo u f&gt;O~~t:~~.
I lon 't hide yo ur li p;ht umlt• r a
b us hel -- lt: t i l sh in e m1t
b ri~ h dy.

PI SCES (Feb. 20- M;m:h

20)
V i ~ ih ly

pro te ct

tlJ l' i u tca·~t~

of you~ :muciat&lt;-'5 :1lo ng with
you r own , ' b!!ca m c pcrsum

\Vith whnm you h:tvt' dt•al in~s
w dl try to st~·mil' your clfurts
if t hcy rhink yo u' rl' wo ~clf­
to p.1tc h up a

St'rlli n ~. Try i n~;

hru kcn rom:m cc? Th e

A ~trp­

G ra ph Mat chm akt- r t·;m hd p
yo u umlt• rstand w hat tn d o to
lll:tk t• tht' rcla t iq mh ip work .
M a il S2 .7S to rYb lchm ;tkcr,
c/o th is IIC\\' ~p;sp n. 1'.0. Uox
175M. Murra v Hi !\ Station ',

Nt•w York. NY 10\5(,.
All iES (M ardi 21-Apnl
19) lk yum own p c~on ami
j ud ~c pc&lt;Jp!t• for yoursel f. Ucing uml ul y in ll ucJKt'd by ;\11 o thl·r nnd d t·aiiW vou to t'rro-

lll't&gt;usly lonk nnt:;'"orably ou
~0 \ll t.'P II C .

TAU RUS (A1•nl ::'0-May
upl,cat. opt i tni~tk
.tn d n'.tlly tu rake un th t•

20)

Ft•d i n~

~-

Bridge, land which commJ s•ioners beli eve wo uld be an
ideal · locati on for industrial
develo pment.
"We think it's one of the
, best sites in southern Ohio,"
Commissioner · Jeff Thornton
said. "I t's directly across the
highway .frorn the bridge, only
a mil e and half from 1-77 (in
Ravenswood) and ha.&lt; threeph ase power and access to
other utility servi ces."
· AEP bou ght the land in the

1960' · ;u; a potential power construction . "We're trying to
plant site, buJ has never devel- be proactive by putting the
oped it. T hornton said th e infrastructu re in a site with
county has made an offer of great promi•e."
$1 ,000 per acre for 300 acres
T he com miss ioners are
from the tract of land, but has . seeki ng grant funds from the
hea rd no thing concrete from . U.S. Economic Development
AEP.
Admini,.ratio n and O hio
"Because of the new high- Department of Development
w ay co min g through that area, for the purchase of th e land
we think . our "future is right and for installatio n of t he
there," . Th o rnton said, refer- wate r lines, gas lines and other
ring to the new R avenswood in frastru cture needed to develCo nn.ec tor proj ect now unde r
Pluse see Fundlns. AJ •

GIRL SCOUTS

POMEROY

·

BY TONY M. LEACH

by Luis Campos

celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotatlons;by famous
peope, past and present. Each laner In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: R equals L
UNNE
RNWE
GBJ

'ZVK

L K.

VK

UNNE

ZN

LK

JZWNAU

B

UNNE

wxuvz

OKBP

LX A E.'

DT

B W L,

B

BAE

-

B

EX 0 •

EKBA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' My stroke has !aught me so much ...
we must overcome our hardships to become better people. We
must try.' -Kirk Douglas
WORD
GAM I

O four
Rearrange letters of
Krambled word.1

tke

be- ·

low to form fo •.1 r simple words.

I

1 1 1 1 1

I

A D L .I E

Is
I. 16. I.
.

AI a famou

there

1::
. ~ had been many accide nts resulting in broken bones. The Ski Patrol posted a s ign which read :

I~~:o?~: ~~~~rink

and ski may get

Comp lete the chuckle q uoltd
by filli ng in the missing word1 ,
you develop from .step No. 3 be low.

e r:i~iRrUMBFRED I' 2 3 I' I. 7 I" I. :I
8 ~~~~{RMBL~ FORI I . I I I .I I ·j I I
1

1

4

1

GE MINI (May 21-Ju nc
20) C han ce~ art' ·you'Jl be :1blc
to ~c..·n er.1tc J number of bcncfits bc..•c;wsc yo u' re .1b le to re~po n d quickly and a&lt;.:nmudy
to l'Venu. Um, bt• willin ~ to
share wh:lt's ~:tined w ith con
4

tri hl l tor~ .

C ANCER Qun e 2:-j uly
22) Ornat e :at a consistent
p:t&lt;.:c, :md t his c.m be ~ productive day for you. Even if
.~hou ld

m:tkt' il mista ke,
patit•ntly ,lii H;'lld li &lt;t ml don't
all ow ym11~clf t o ge t upset.
L £0 Uul y 23-Au g. 22)
You h:wc :1 lo t goi ng fo r you ,
you

but

ve:.· n t ~m.·s

that have. too
man y r hanCy elcni~nt s col,l d
b:~ckfirc on you. I t'~ bc~t not
to tah

flye r~

or bet in

tht~

blind. ,
VI R C:O

(Au~. 23-Scpl .
22) Not hint-~ is ever resol ve~
by airi11g one'~ pnlblcms
li t p ub lic, ~o it you ami your
mate h ;1vc ,, di~;t ~rccmcn t ,
w.1 it wd ~c..·ttl c it pri v.ltl'ly, out
ofvit.•W .1nd car;hot nf !lthcr~.

fut

LI BilA (Scpr.

~J-On .

Cri~icizi n g ~on H:o n ~

23)
tu l•thcn

w h o isn't present ;md able to

dl'ft•nd him or hl· r~l· lf woUl d
bl' a b i~ mista ke. What you
say wi ll be repeated, · and
what\ worse; it C\Juld be ex--

aggerated.
SCORI' IO (Oct. 24-Nuv.
2.:!) Ket'p d close eye on your
l'Xp(' n di tu rcs w hen you &lt;1 rc

out and e njoyi ng

yo ur~cl f.

The probability is that yo u'll
. end 11p ~p ~1 1 di ng more tha n
you

French Art
Colony
fund raiser
· GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony, Gallipolis, will present its 2002
fund ramng campaign,
"Everythin g's American as
App1e Pie," March 9 from
6:30 to 9p.m.
Tickets should be purchased in advance, but may
be purchased at the door.
C all the FAC at 7 40-4463834 for ticket information.
: The French Art Colony, a
non-profit organization, has
several fund raisers during
the year to help ·support the
facility. A special thank you
to all businesses and individuals who have donated items
to make this event possible.
Tickets are $25 per couple,
S14 per person.
All FAC programming is
offered through support of
tpe Ohio Arts C ouncil.

Lotteries
OHIO

Adjoin- Favor- Perky· Employ - MONEY
A talent agent sat stone faced watching a comic do
his routine. "Why aren't you laughing ?" the comic asked.
"If I do ," the agent replied , "you 'll want more MO NEY."

e ve r , lcttin,g ~ d ead be at t :1~
alonp; l"O tdd ~F~oil ;~II the fu n .

: Hlp: 60s, L-: 30s
f: Details, Al

1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

wo rld n111 p ro d m:e a r.tthc r
excititt g ~ b y tOr yo tt. Ho w -

.

.

UBHK

S NET,

..

TLEACH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

:.
.

,,
T u t'~ d nv,

development of an industrial
park in Lebanon Township.
Stri ckl and·, D -Lucasville,
met with th e commissioners
o n Monday to offer his assistance in working with AEP
atid to help the county obtain
grant funding for the purchase
of th e land and for the instal!arion of infrastru ctu re at the
site.
AEP owns 1,400 acr.- of
agricultural land across Ohio
124 from th e Ravenswood

Boat dock closer
to completion

______·-It)~~--~-~
T l1l'rt' ~ rr ~trlm~ indi c:trio ns·
yo u wil' d1' r.nhcr well in the

GREAT BEND U.S.
R ep. Ted Strickland will join
the Meigs C ounty commissioners in seeking land from
Ameri can Electric Power for

Details, A3

1--TI"'
--rl-,1--lr.e&gt;Tiog-'
0
.
.
.
_ _

is one of my

Bv BRIAN .J. REED

Raymond E. Rupe
Robert R. Hendrick. 70

West covers w ith the
qu ee n,
wtn
with .
dummy' s kin g an d

cc~!ere

I MONDAY

44 Hhch
45 Fallna

Deaths

thl~a~1J~rt )tc~~~L-'-L--JAL-.G-'-E--'R-V-'

run th e he art nin e
through East -- suc-

Strickland lends
support to Great
f3end project
Herd tames NIU, Bl

'-::~;:::~~~~~

I WONDER 11= IT's POSSIBLE

Funding·sought for~industrial site
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

takeout into two
hearts.) Play another ,..1
diamond, ruff West 's
diamond exit,'· and·

ACCORDING TO TllESE FIGURES.
OUR TEAM WILL BE EVEIII
WORSE TillS VEAR TllAIII
IT WAS LAST YEAR .. . ·

41 Blows hard

42 Meg of tha

23 Labor Dept.
movlee
dlvlolon
43 Smkljlen

bur..u

30 Bodies of

What's inside

3V Spackl of
dull

town

1 Ecol.

23 FUm award
28 Primeval

35 Shockt
IOITI8body
37 Kind ol
cube
38 Easy

lead-In
22 Oklahoma

DOWN

Ume

I

TIIESE ARE TilE STATISTICS

word
9 Clucka
11 -maid
12 Impromptu
18 Sullo' dago.
20 Vtrte

hav e the doubleton
S U L E T S
heart queen unless he ~-T;__,,1~r--T..:..T.,.2-1
opened one no- trump _ .
_ .
.
_
with 2-2-4-5 distribu - ~=;::;~;:;::~::;---J
tion. And then surely
0 N p ·I T
Ea st would have 1-j..-.-..,.-r- T ;.,rl
nude a weabte " .
1.
1.

PEANUTS

Hometown Newspaper

8 Maglcltn'a 31 , Scent

57 W-2

22 Period of

34

Melp County's

robbed! "
53 --lllndttlll

14 KltcMn

Vul nerable: Bulh

p,.~,

4t GlwWHer
51"--

13-~

.

s.-

...

- ·

I

=

42 HllllopO

45

11~

lk'aler· We!ll

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.

....

• Q'

..'..

I

40
41 &amp;nydag
Bulh't org.

GtoMer.
maybe

...

~O!N~! NoOQr

•

10

2

A KQJIIJ
¥ A J 2

ROBOTMAN

.

oholoe
M Downy trutt

7 ·
doct.lon

t

t:au.

Wf'M

.

PleiN
31 Georgia
4 lhlt. •• bOll
clly

Sttrtll
A II IS
•

as,...

ACROSS
1 WM, to

ALDER

~.!..

•

~houl d .

SAG ITTAIUUS (Nov.
2.3 -De:.·c. 21) Uc &lt;arcful not to
take thtnp;~ too seriously or·
t l}() penon.•lly If ymi do, you ·
cotdd blow ,1i1 inCident w:ty
o ut of proporrinn and s&lt;~y or
d o ~o m cth ing you'll regret
CAP ili COR N (D ec. 22·
Jan. liJ) Altho ugh you try to
he u pbe&lt;~t, yuu do have a tendency to be a bit nCgat ivc
from .t iiu c tu t ime. Today
could be one of thmc d;1ys.
and, unfortu nately. it will
guvem the W;J)' ym1 rc;,ct.
1\QUAR IUS Ua n. 20Feb . 19} Don' t try to mix
with plt::mtr'l', t·~ pe­
rinlly if t he ~ct-tu~Nht• r indudes both fric11d~ ami bmi:..
nt~~ .. ~~ut:iatL'S. T.1lk (lf llliHit')'

. P.lck 3 (clay):

~-5-5

W.VA.
3: 9-3-2

Dally 4: 4·1·8·3

~sh

ere

•••

Girl Scouts ready deliver
of 20,000 boxes of cookies

25: 4-7-18·2Q-23·25

Index
: 2 Sections - 12 Paps

AS.
Calendar
83-S
:Ciassifieds
·comics
86
Dear Abby
AS
A4
Editorials
A3
Movies
Obituaries
A3
81-3
Sports
Weather
A2 .
C2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - Dieting reader beware: Girl
Scout cookies were delivered to Meigs County Girl Scout troops on Monday.
.
More than 1,600 cases of Tagalongs, Tliin
. Mints, Trefoils and other varieties arrived at
Pomeroy Village Hall, and volunte,~rs were
awaiting the arrival so sorting ai[ctdelivery to
troops could get _unj;lerway.
·•
Sales were up by 41 percent in Meigs County, d~•pite the fact that twQ fewer troops were
in the sales competition this year. Tpe county's
Girl Scouts sold a11 average of 1 +6 boxe• of
,
cookies each.
1
Kristin Trader, a member of Mglgs County
Cadette Troop 1180, will receive a Gold Trefoil
certificate recognizing her as the top setler in
the Big !!end Servjce Unit.
:.
.
The Silver Trefoil award will be presented to
Lindsey Houser, a member of Salisbury Junior
Troop 1290, and the Bronze Trefoil to Nik
Law.an, a member of Middleport Junior Troop
1276.
..
'
1
"Troop Goal Achiever Challenge ' certificates will be presented to Racine Brownie
Troop 1120, led by Jerrena Ebersbach, Troop

Appalachia's neediest
counties to receive
more .ARC fundsFROM STAFF REPORTS

BY BRIAN J. REED

.

Please see Pomeroy, Al

er lri th.e Blb Bend Service Unit this year. (Brian J. Reed)

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pick 4 (day): 7-8-8-5
Buckeye 5: 7·12·14-32-37
Pick 3 (nlpt): 4-9-6
Pick 4 (night): 2-2-6-7
~ally

SORnNG COOKIES- Adult volunteers took on the monumental task o( sorting cases of Girl
Scout «rookies for. delivery to local troops . The cookies- 20,000 boxes in all - were dellv·
ered to the Pomeroy Village Hall auditorium on Monday morning. Sales were up by 41 percent
this year. 11nd Kristin Trader of Meigs County Cadet Troop 1180 was the "Gold Trefoil" top sell·

POMEROY - Co nstruction on Pom eroy's n ew boat
docking facility and walking path in ches closer as conj racts
for engi neering work are approved by Pomeroy Village
Council. .
.Jo hn Mu sser, coordinator of both p~ojec ts and for me r
·coun cilman, met with council Monday to update its members on the current progress of the new boa t docking faci lity and walki ng path projec ts.
Musser said the projects are "moving along as sc heduled"
and that the next step is to begin co ntracti ng fo r engineering work.
As presented by Mu.,er, co uncil agreed to a contract with
ME Companies in the amount of $30,000 fo r e ngineeri ng
work on the fir st phase of the new boat docking facility
" Th e four-yea r, $1.3 million project will entail four phases of constru ction," said Musser.
" Th e first phase, whi ch could begin as ea rl y as June, will
include a 250-300 foot con crete pier, similar in design to
the riverfront amphitheater, that will stretch down- river
along the flood ·, va ll," he said.
"Electri cal wock , water lines, lights aqd dock ing pins will
be incorporated during thi s phase of co nstru ction. Ph ase•
two, three and fou r will focus on th e up - ri ver portion of the

iso,

1
Jed' by Carol Fetty, and Reedsville
Juniors Troop 1042, led by Tami Putman, for
their outstanding sales achievements .
Cookie buyers will sample two new varieties
this year: All Abouts , a shortbread cookie with
a fudge coating, which celebrates Girl Scoutin g
activities, and Ole Ole, a reduced-fat, sugarcoated vanilla cookie with pecan chips, and
coconut.

POMEROY - · Meigs and Gailia cou nties are among the
10 " distressed" Ohio counties to bene fit most from legislation passed by C ongress last wee k reauthorizi ng Appalachian R egional Commission econ o mi c developm ent programs.
Th e bill al so creates a new technology initiative introduced by Sen. G eorge V. Voinovi ch, R - Ohio, to help the
regjon 's bu"!iiness conu1mnity access e-commerce opportunities.
·
It reauthori zes AR C fundin g of $446 mill ion th rough
2006 for deve lopm ent program s th:~t expired last year and
steers more AR C funding to the regio n's poorest counties
to help repair dilap idated publi c facilities, .Provide clea n
drinking water and sewer systems, as well as provide human
resources program s su ch as literacy trainin g.
Un der th e bill, 50 percent of all program fundin g wo uld
go to proj ec ts in Appalac hia 's poorest co unties, re ferred to as
· " distressed" co untit:.&lt; by the ARC. To tal funding for ARC
from 1999 to 2001 was $207 million .
Of the 406 counti es in the Appalachian region, 114,
in cluding 10 of Ohio 's 29 Appalachian c&lt;;&gt;m:ties, qualifY as
di stressed o n the bas is of low per capita in come and high
poverty and unemployt;tent rates.
" Having in trodu ced this legislation and · worked on it
since this summ er, I'm pleased to sec it fina lly passed by
Congress. It's my hope that with this new attention to the
technology needs qf th e region ~e ca n help br idge the dig-

Please see ARC, A3

March Is National
·Wutrltlon
MEDICAL CENTER

"Stdrt Today for a Healthy Tomorrow"

Discover the Holzer Difference

Holzer Medical Center encourages
·you to eat right today for a healthy tomorrow! ·

www .holzer .org

bu~incss

,,•ill bl' deemed out ofph1CL' .

I

•

I _,

�'

.

Ohio

'

The paily Sentinel
Wednesday, March .6

133'154~ I •

.1 Columbua 133"151" I

W.VA.
1('1,

02002

1\lesday. March

•

s. 2002

Cincinnati police inc;reasing foot patrols

Ohio weather .

I-

PageA2

CINCINNATI (AP)
Police hoods, was the scene of three nights of
increased foot patrols Monday in the rioting last April after a white police
downtown business district and the officer, shot and killed an unarmed black
neighborhood that was the center last man who was running from police on
spring of the city's worst racial unrest in misdemeanor charges.
decades.
Dozens of people were injured and
The patrols will supplement the offi- more than 800 were arrested in the
cers in cruisers in both areas lind the worst racial violence since the 1968
narcotics officers assigned to the Over- assassination of the Rev. M:zrtin Luther
the-Rhine neighborhood, police Capt. KingJr.
Gregory Snidersaid at a news conferMerchants in Over-the-Rhine have
ence.
been asking the city to step up law
No new officers will be hired in the enforcement, irt part to reassure some
1,000-olflcer department. The depart- customers who have stopped coming
ment will move in officers from other downtown.
areas or will remove some officers from
Snider acknowledged that there will
· still be times when the police. presence
their cruisers to walk a beat.
Over-the-Rhine, one of Cincinnati's will be no more than it is now. But, he
grittiest and most violent neighbor- said: "You have to start somewhere."

Cincinnati police said there are few
foot patrols in those areas now because
the &lt;l,epartment - like many others usually relies on officers in cars who can
be quickly moved around as needed.
The foot patrols will increase gradually as the weather gets warmer and more
people congregate on the streets of
Over-the-Rhine, he said.
More officers on horseback also are
being deployed downtown.
Police hope to continue the effort
indefinitely, Police Chief Thomas Streicher Jr. said.
Beginning in April, the department
will use federal grant money and overtime money to extq_nd the hours that
officers will be available to walk the ·
beats, Lt. Kurt Byrd said. ·

Inc.

&lt;&gt;•••·
·
···
--

Scalia told a law school gathering Monday night tnat the defi- charges against Staples. Staples, who pleaded innocent Friday~
nition of judicial activism changes with the· moods of both has been held without bail since his arrest Thursday.
Somy Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
Sllowe&lt;s T·"'""'
Rain
Rum..
Congress and the court. And he said Congress sometimes enacts
~ 'bizarre'' legislation.
"I think the court does a better job with statutory construction than it did 20 or 30 years ago," added Scalia, a Reagan
HILLSBORO (AP) - A fire that started in the stairwell of a
appointee viewed as one of the most conservative justices and a house early Monday killed three people, including rwo brothBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
and milder. Highs in the ]ower strict interpreter of the Constitution.
ers.
Some members of Congress contend the high court is maksouthw~sterly 60s. Southwest winds 10 to 15
Warmer
Authorities did not know what caused the fire that killed
laws
from
the
bench
when
it
strikes
down
legislation.
Scalia
ing
winds circulating around a mph.
Donald Buder, 55, Devin Buder, 32, and Adeline Davis, 24, all
high pressure center will boost
Wednesday night...Mostly takes the opposite point of view.
of Hillsboro, said assistant Fire Chief David Lowell.
"Before you can label a court as activist, you have to look at ·
local temperatures back into clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
Smoke inhalation was the probable cause of death, according
the statutes that are enacted by Congress," Scalia said. ·
the 50s and into the 60s on
Extended forecast:
to preliminary reports· from the Highland County coroner's
Wednesday, the National · · Thursday... Pardy sunny and
office.
mild. Highs near 60.
Weather Service said.
Fire Capt. Jeff Stethem said firelighters were called to the
Thursday
night...Partly
Daytime highs in the 60s
and overnight lows in the 30s cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s.
CANAL FULTON (AP) -A car pulled into the path of a home in this southwest Ohio city at 2:06 a.m. and found heavy
will be the rule through the
Friday... Partly cloudy and tractor-trailer Monday, killing rwo people and critically injur- smoke and flanw.
end of the week, but rain is mild. Highs in the lower 60s. ing one, the Canton Post of the State Highway Patrol said.
likely on Friday and Saturday,
Saturday... Mostly cloudy
Daniel Shilling, 15, of Canal Fulton, and truck driver Niles
forecasters said.
with a chance of showers. Blough Jr., 41, ofWadsworth, died in the 6:45-a.m. crash.
CLEVELAND (AP) -The ex-wife of a Syrian-born gas staJames Mayberry, 16, of Canal Fulton was in critical condition
A return to seasonal condi- .Lows in the upper 40s and
tions is expected by Sunday.
highs in the lower 60s.
Monday night at Akron Children's Medical Center, a nursing tion operator pleaded guilty Monslay in US. District Court to
providing false information to the 'Immigration and NaturalizaSunday... A chance of snow supervisor said.
.
Sunset tonight will be at
6:28, and sunrise on Wednes- showers during the day, otherMayberry was driving west when his car hit the southbound tion Service.
·
6
57
·
tl
]
d
c
Jd
·
tractor-trailer,
which was hauling cement, the patrol said.
Susan Hinzman, 42, of Cleveland filed documents that falseday ts at : a.m.
wtse par y c au y.
o er.
ly claimed she and her then-husband, Mohammed Refai, lived
Weather forecast:
Lows in the mid 3.0s and highs
Tonight.. .Partly
cloudy. in the upper 30s.
together in Cleveland, so he CO\Jldgain permanent resident staLows in the lower 30s. SouthMonday. .. Mostly clear. Lows
r
f
.- h h I
h tus iu the United States, prosecutors said. Hinzman filed for
WARREN. (AP) - A c_Jent 0 an ·agency t at e.ps t e. divorce after 16 months of marriage.
in the mid 20s and highs in the
west winds 5 to 10 mph.
"I · t 'd H'
d R f: · h d b
li
mentally handtcapped told hts mother that he ktlled a co-work- , Th d'
Wednesday.... Mostly sunny mid 4ps.
d h ·
d ·
r 531'd
e tvorce comp am sat
mzman an
eat a een v1
er.~n t eJr car poo nver, po ;~e
·
k d h
ing apart for more than a year. She told the FBI i'n January that
. d . h R f: . ~ ll .
. D 1d you shoot those people, Barbara Greer as e er son, h
h · A ·
8
John Staples, 24, ofYoungstown.
s e ne~er 1tve .Wit
e a1 '? .owmg t e1r pn1 199 marnage,
"Yes," Staples responded, according to an affidavit filed Friday afco_rding to an·INS affi~VIt.
.
.
by Police Capt.Jame5). Cerenelli of nearby LjbertyTownship. . Jimzma_n faces up to s!X months m pnson and a $5,000 fine
COLUMBUS (AP) -A federal court lawsuit claims a typThe affidavit was filed in support of rwo aggravated murder : on,- the rmsdemeanor. -aharge. Sentencmg has not been scheding error by a 'clerk in a sheriff's office gave a man's Social Security number to someone with a history of drunken driving
arrests and a murder charge.
As a result, Scott Lewis of Nelsonville says he couldn't get a
Comforting America One
job, despite his good work record in medical sales and adminisSeat At A Time
HOME FURNISHINGS
tration. One prospective employer called him an ."unsavory
'
.
character" after doing a background check on him, he said.
This went on for most of 1998, according to Lewis' lawyer,
SylviaArttalis, who said the background checks based on Lewis'
Social Security number kept bringing up the other man's name
and criminal record.
CHILLICOTHE (AP)
"Not only did the businesses think he was lying to them The loss of 350 jobs at Meadabout having a clean record, but that he was using an alias;· . Westvaco Corp.'s paper mill
Antalis said.
will rock the affected families
and put a pinch on city
income taxes, officials said
Monday.
COLUMBUS (AP) - A judge dismissed juvenile delinThe Stamford, Conn.quency charges of aggravated arson against rwo youngsters based paper company said it
accused of setting their grandmother's house on fire in a plot to plans to permanently shut
kill her.
down three paper-making
Frankiin County Juvenile Court Judge Dana Preisse on Mon- machines and related equipday declared the children incompetent to stand tria]. and ment at its mill in this southordered that they be sent to separate psychiatric-treatment cen- ern Ohio city of 22,000 to
ters for hospitalization.
reduce costs and increase effiThe grandmother, Judith Follette, 52, said that was what she ciencies.
was hoping for. Follette said she didn't want the children punWith about 2,100 workers,
ished and wished only for their treatment.
MeadWestvaco is the city's
The children, an 11-year-old boy and his 10-year-old sister, largest employer. .
admitted they poured kerosene in a bedroom of the Pleasant
"It is the heart and soul of
Township home on Jan. 21 and laid out 10 knives as they pre- our community," said Mayor
pared to kill their grandmother because she was too strict.
Margaret Planton. "Generations of families have worked
in the paper business. It's a
difficult time of adjustment.
AKRON (AP) -'-- Four sex-related counts have been dis- It's going to have a long-term
missed against a woman who still faces a"trial on a cJ:wrge of effect on us this year and
conspiring with her husband to impregnate their daughth with years to come.''
a syringe.
City Auditor Bill Morrissey
Assistant Summit County Prosecutor Brian LoPrinzi said rwo . said MeadWestvaco accounts
charges each of complici_ty to sexu~l batte.ry and .rape against for about $2 million of the
Narda Goff, 43, of nearby Stow, were dismissed Monday in the $9.5 million the city collects
interest of justice.
each year in income taxes.
She still faces trial Wednesday on charges of conspiracy to
"It's just terrible losing jobs
commit sexual battery and child endangering.
like this, the impact on the
. Her husband,John Golf, 40,faces a trial later on rape and sex- families,"
Morrissey said.
· : • ual battery charges alleged by his stepdaughter.
Matt Allen, the city's economic development director, .
said the cuts will likely also
affect suppliers and other
. MILLERSBURG (AP) - A midwife who works in the
businesses in the city, which is
Amish community o£ northeast Ohio illegally gave a patient a about 35 miles south of
drug to slow bleeding, prosecutors said.
Columbus. He said he hopes
Frieda M. 'Miller, a 47, of Holmes County, was charged last
the workers can be absorbed
week with practicing medicine without a license and possessby other area companies.
ing and selling a dangerous dr,ug. She could get 3 112 years in
"It's not a hori:ible blow to
prison if convicted. ·
our local economy, but it cerShe gave rwo dru.gs to a woman who was delivering a baby
tainly is to the families that
at Miller's home on Dec. 17, Holmes County Assistant Proseare affected," Allen said.
cutor Stephen Knowling said Monday. ·
Me;jdWestvaco
also
The woman nee.ded: ---~-!tapUcqjP1f W11~· :ll'lbOIHlced it will i:ut 75 jobs
she gave birth to a healthy baby, said 'MiUer,.e- midwi&amp;·for 1:1 .
when it shuts down a paperyears. She is not a physician.
making machine at its mill in
Luke,.Md. The company said
the shutdowns will begiq
April
1 and be completed by
CINCINNATI (,AP)- U.S,· Supreme Court Justice Aptonin
May' 31.

Three dead in house fi~

...

Warmer conditions in forecast

Two killed in collision ·

'-

Tueadav. March 5. 2002

www.mvdallvaentlnef.com

:Feedback all

Obituaries

:positive for
display
By TONY

M.

lEAcH

TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

POMEROY -A new display . board is helping the
• Meigs Tourism Board and
Chamber of Commerce bring
· ·both visitors and new business
· ·w the county.
Betsy Herald Nicodemus,
: · director of tourism and retail
·development, said the imple; mentation of the new display
·is drawing quite a bit of inter•
.est from thousands of people
wh o attend trade shows
· throughout the country.
"This new display board has
allowed both the tourism
board and chamber of commerce to effectively advertise
what Meigs County has to
offer," said Nicodemus.
"We've used the board at
numerous trad~ shows . in
Columbus, Buffalo, N.Y., and
Orlando, Aa., and the amount
of positive feedback has been
tremendous," she said. ·
The highly-visible board,
measuring 7 -by-1 0 feet, is
illuminated by rwo overhang., ing lights anjl contains a mag-

RaymondRupe

RUTLAND - Raymond E. "Gene" Rupe, of Richmond,
Virgirua, formerly of Rutland, passed away on Tuesruy, February 19, 2002, in Richmond, after heroically fighting a tough,
five-month battle.
He was born in Rutland on January 21, 1932. He was predeceased by his parents, Linzey Locke and Mabel Rupe
netic back for the placement Reaves. While very yoang, he was adopted by his grandparents,
of pictures, charts and various Worley and Alma Rupe.
reading matel:ials.
He is survived .by three daughters and sons-in-law.' Rhonda
"We currently have several R. Payne and Jimmy Payne of Richmond, Denise R . and Keith
colorful pictures of Meigs Dunlevy of Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, and Michelle
County businesses, events and L.R. and Art Hudgins ofWilliamsburg,Virginia; and the mothtourist sites on the board," · er of his children, Mollie Easter Rupe.
added Nicodemus. "I must say,
Also surviving are half-sisters, Janet Reaves of Crarist.o n,
the board has really helped us Rhode Island, and Judith Moore of Cuyahoga Falls, and halfattract more tourists and busi- brother, Max Locke and L. Rose Rumsey of Coon Valley, Wisnesses to out booth, which, in consin. Six grandchildren also survive.
the end, could result in a ·
He was a veteran of the Korean War, having served in the
favorable economic situation U.S. Marine Corps from 1952 to 1954.
for the entire county.'_'
He was a graduate of Rutland High School Class of 1950,
Besides its attractive appear- and was a member of the undefeated football teams of the Rutance, Nicodemus said the land Red Devils who were coached by the local legend, Jim
.board can also be convenient- Vennari. He will be remembered by athletes of the area and his
ly dismantled within a manner Red Devil teammates as "Big Rupe." ·
of seconds.
A private family memorial was held in Richmond, .
"The board can be comIn lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to
pletely disassembled and the Rutland Alumni Association, in care of Richard R. Rupe,
packed away in under a . 295 Wright Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
minute," said Nicodemus. ','In
fact, the case we store the
board in doubles as a table for
the placement of brochures
and other advertisements."
Nicodemus added the board
is jointly owned by the economic development offices of
Fairfield, Athens, Hocking,
and Meigs counties.
LETART, WVa.- Robert R. Hendrick, 70, Letart, WVa.,

Deaths
.Robe1t Hendrick

died Sunday, March 3, 2002, at his residence.
He was born March 27, 1931, in Waterloo, son of the late
Forrest and Justine McClure Hendrick. He was a former heavy
equipment operator for the Operating Engineers Local 132 of
Charleston, WVa., and was a member of the Smith-Capehart
American Legion Post 140 in New Haven, WVa., and Abundant Grace Church in Middleport.
Surviving are his wife, Janice Gibbs Hendrick; three sons and
rwo daughters-in-law, Rex Allen· and Viki Hendrick, Dwain
and Aimee Hendrick, and Bobby Hendrick, all of Letart; his
mother-in-law, Louise K. Gibbs of Letart; a brother and sisterin-law, ·sylvester "Vess" and Debbie Hendrick of Hurricane,
W.Va.; a sister-in-law, Gail Hendrick of Hurricane; a sister-in1law and her husband, Sandra and Charles Wise of Letart; and a
brother~in-]aw and his wife, Denver 'and Sharon Gibbs of
Letart; eight grandchildren and a great- grandson .
He was also preceded in death by his brother, Gerald Hendrick.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, March 7, 2002,
at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home ipMason,WVa., with the
Rev. Brian May and Pastor Teresa Davis officiating. Burial will
follow at Hoffinan Cemetery in .Letart.
Military graveside services will be conducted by SmithCapehart American Legion Post 140 and Stewart-Johnson Post
9926, Veterans ofForeign Wars.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 69p.m.

HIGH VISIBILITY

Woman pleads to falsification

Police: Suspect confessed

Faulty report yields lawsuit

Lane

MeadWestvaco
to cut 350 jobs
at Chillicothe

'·

Murder plot charges dropped

Judge dismisses some counts

t
,

1·
/

Midwife faces accusations ··

,_

I

Scalia discusses judicial activism

· -- ----:-·-···-L ---- --~------" - - - - - - - -----......-..:._·----·

•

.:.- -~-

ed by a NatureWorks grant
the village received last year.
"Even though we have a
S19,000 grant to pay for the
fromPiaeA1
playground equipment, we
do~king facility," added Muss- ·are still $6,000 short," said
CouncilmanVictorYoimg III.
er.
"The
playground equipment
Following the contract
approval, council agreed to would be an excellent addibegin applying for financial tion to the park and we must
assistance from the Ohio find a way to obtain the necDepartment
of Natural essary funds."
Young added he would
Resources for the project's
contact local businesses and
second phase.
individuals
who may want to
Council also agreed to
enter into a second contract donate . money toward the
with ME Companies for equipment purchase.
Council signed a letter of
engineering work and right
of way acquisitions on the vil- interest from the Meigs
Cooperative Parish about the
lage's walking path project.
As specified in the contract, fate of the Pomeroy ElemenME Companies will be paid tary School building, to be
vacated once the Meigs Local
$97,526 for their services.
Musser said the new black- School District's new ele- ·
top walkway will be more . mentary school .has been
than 9,100 linear feet in completed.
"Because the school board
length and 10 feet wide, and
will extend along the Ohio cannot donate the building to
River from the Pomeroy a religious organization, the
levee to Nye Avenue. Park parish has requested that the
benches, water fountains and · village ac~ept the building;•
lights will be placed' along the said Musser. "Once the building has been accepted by the
path at a later date:
village,
it would then be
The entire cost of the
walkway project will total donated to the Meigs Cooperative Parish.''
$494,186.
.
The signed letter will. be
.. lo other matters, plans for
the installation of playground presented to the scho6l board
equipment at Waterworks during their next meeting,
Park on East Main Street was said Musser.
Council also:
discussed as council eJ&lt;am•
agreed to have trees in the
ined the village's current
finances to see if the purchase downtown area trimmed at a
cost of $800;
is viable.
• approved the transfer of
The estimated cost of the
$7,000
from the general fund
equipment
would
total
around $25,000 with 75 per- to the street fund for current
cent of that cost being fund- expenses.

Pomeroy

:; DISPLAY BO~RD - Betsy Herald Nicodemus •. Meigs Counw
:• director of tourism and retail development, left, and Courtney
::Butcher, director 9f operations for the Meigs County Chamber
;; of Commerce, arrange several pictures on a new display board
•: used by both organizations for the promotion of the county dur·
:; lng national trade shows, (Tony M. Leach)
·
·

'
...

· · ------------------~~-----------------------

••
,.

,.,.,.
,.,.

LOCAL STOCKS

,.

'

,• AEP- 44.27
: : Arch COlli- 19.73
,• Akzo- 45.14
•: AmTech!SBC - 39.36

:. Ashland Inc. - 44.~
,. AT&amp;T -16.05
:: Bank
~.65
,• BLI- 12.39
;: Bob Evans- 27.S2
,. BorgWarner- 62.93
· •: Champion - 2:90
· · : • Charming Shops - S.05
•: City Holding- 14.09
:. Cot - 23.53
•: DG -14.70
: • DuPont - 48.65

one -

,.

Federal Mogul- .93 ·
USB- 21.75
Gannett- 75.90
General Electric- 40.20
GKNLY -4.10
Haney Oavldacn- 54.73
Kmart - 1.12
Kroger- 22.78
Lands End - 51.48

Premier- 8.56
Rockwell - 20.99
Rocky Boola - 7
RD Shell- 52.70
Saara - 53.27
Sho~ey'e - .34
Wai·Mart - 62.9S
Wsndy's- 31.19·
Worthington- 15.80
Dally stock reports are
Ltd. -1S.e6
the 4 p.m. closing
NSC-26.35
Oak 1:1m Ananclai-1S.40 .quotes or the previous
day's transactions, pro·
OVB-23.70
vlded by Smith Partners
BBT-37.99
·at Adveat Inc. or Gal·
Peoples - 20.55
llpolls.
Pepsico - 50.99

'·•:r--------------.------------~---------,

;~

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LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS ftlns
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered tour calls for assistance on Monday. Un its
responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH
5:42 p.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Carol Pape,
Holzer Medi cal Center.
POMEROY
6 :18p.m., Ohio 143, motor
vehicle accident, O scar Smith,
Steve Powell, refused treatment.
RUTLAND
'6 :10 p.m ., Uruon Avenue,
Debra Young, HMC.

SYRACUSE

.

26 Weoka

52 Weeka

WELLSTON
Ohio
H ills Ca tfish Club will be
accepting new members at
th e March I 0 meeting to be
held at 1 p.m. in the con(erence roo m of the Wellsto n
Ameri can Legion . Addi tional
information may be obtained
from calling Tom Long, 7 40596-9068, o r James Fox, 740596-2068.

Breakfast
to be held

Correction

RAC INE - Carmel-Sutton
United
M ethodi st
C hurch will be serving breakfast on Saturday, from 8 :1.m.
to 10 a. m. at the Sutton
C hurch on Bashan Road .
Breakfast w ill consist of pan·cakes,.sausage, homemade biscuits and gravy. Everyone
. welcom e.·

RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education is
currencly looking for a full time superintendent to fill the
position vacated by James
Lawrence, not an interim
superinte~dent, as reported in
th ~
organization's re cent
meeting.

Divorces filed

Citations issued

C HESTER - Two dri vers
were cited by th e Ga lPOMEROY - An action
for divorce has been filed in lia- M eigs Post of the State
Meigs County Common Highway Patrol follow ing a
Pleas Court by }ohn Arthur two- vehicle acciden t Fri Mcintyre Jr.,
Coolville, day · on Ohio 248 .n ea r.
against Darci Dee Mel ntyre, C hester.
Troopers said Kimberlee
Marietta.
A divorce has been granted M. Mayle , 21, 36324
to Ginger Stake from Ted R. Bashan Road, Long Bottom , was westbound at 8:31
Stake.
p.m. w.hen she struck th e
rear of a truck driven by
Jame s G . Dummitt, 43,
POMEROY -A marriage 1923 Tyn Rhos Road,
license has been issued in Thurman, that was parked
Meigs County Probate Court in the road .
Damage to Mayle's car ·
to Keith Franklin Allen, 33,
.Pomeroy, and Mary Clare was moderate, and slight to
the truck, owned by
Pombrio, 38, Pomeroy.
Schwan's Sales Enterprises,
Circleville. Mayle was cited.
for assured clear distance,
REEDSVILLE .Olive and Dummitt was ticketed
Township Trust~es will meet for parking in the roadway.

Issued license .

Meeting set

Funding
. from Plge A1
op the site.
A one-month deadline for
one of the grants looms
ahead, and time i! of the
essence, Thornton said.
Thornton said one major
employer looked at the East
Meigs Industrial Park in Tuppers Plains last year and
decided to locate elsewhere
because of the rolling landscape. The Great Bend site, on
the other hand, is tlat.

"We missed out on 500
jobs that time," Thornton
said. "Because of the landscape and th e location of the
Great Bend site, we might not
miss out the next time."
Strickland said he will work
with the commissioners and
AEP officials to set up a faceto-face meeting to discuss the
proposaL
Strickland and the commis- ·
sioners also discussed possible
remedies for an ongoing
flooding problem along Mudfork Creek Road in Scipio
Township,
Commissioner
M ick Davenport said.

the Internet to improve their
sal es and overall operations,
and encourage high ~ tech .
.co mpanies to locate in the
from PageA1
region.
The ' distressed".counties in
ita! divide and improve th~
Ohio
include Adams, Athen&amp;,
high-tech infrastructure and
opportunities for . e-com- Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, MonAppala chia," roe, Morgan, Pike, Scioro and
merce
in
Vinton. .
Voinovich said.
The bill also contains a new · Other Ohio. Appalachian
are
Belmont,
technology initiative to pro- coun ties
vide $33 million 1 over the Brown . Carroll, Cl-e r mont,
Coshocton,
next five years to help Colum~iaria,
improve affordable access to Guernsey, · Harrison , Highthe latest Internet and wire- land, Hocking, Holmes, J efMu skless communication services. ferson , La~ren c e,
provide education and team - ingum , Noble, Perry, R oss,
ing in information and high- Tusprawas and Washington.
tech communication te chnology, help businesses use

.ARC

4

DRAGONFLY

_..

~UHN 011111 OAMNID

JOHN Q
n1~
BIG FAT LIAR '~"

~

....

~

IICIIIM!I"• J

SUPER TROOPERS "';

, $27.30

$53.82
$105.56

CROSSROADS -~
Ill! MIIIIIUO"'!O!I

Rotaa outolde Melgo County
13 Week&amp;
·
$29:25
26 Weeks
$56.68
52 Weel&lt;s
$109.72

9:40
6:50, 10:05
7:00
7:05,. 9:55
7:15,9:55
7:20
7:35, 10:00
7:40, lo:o5
9:35

--_
...-·

"""~

RnY!II TO NMR IAHO

lnolde Malgo COunty
. •

Membership
open

9:23 p.tn. , Roy Jones Road,
motor vehicle
accident,
Ronald Walden, HMC.

. Mal subscription
13 Weeks

in regular session Thursday,
6:30 p.m . at the townsh ip
offi ce.

...

'

,,

~

ALL AGES. ALL TIMES $4.00

' ' 1.------------,--~

,,

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-Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

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PapA4

Bend
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Daily Sentinel

111 Court lt., Pomlfoy, Ohio
740 112·2111• Fax: 740oiiM117

,\

www.mydallyMntiMI.oom

Den Dl&lt;:keraon
Publlaher
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

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NATIONAL VIEW

KONDRACKE 'S VIEW

Ken Lay's refusal to talk
•
•
•
razses some senous questtons
~

Bradenton (Fla.) Herald, on former Enron
Chairman Kenneth Lay: Kenneth Lay made his already
un comfortable position worse by refusing the invitation to testifY before congressional committees looking into the collapse of his Enron empire. For someone portrayed by his wife as an "honest, decent, moral
man" who is eager to tell his side of the story, Lay
appeared instead as someone with something to hide.
His excuse that the minds of investigating Congress
members were already made up is a feeble one at
best. How better to defend one's character and
actions than by challenging the negative assertions
with clear, convincing evidence to the contrary?
It will be difficult for Lay to credibly claim to have
been "out of the loop" for this Byzantine accounting
mess, as he established the corporate culture in which
it flourished and personally profited from it to the
tune of millions of dollars in stock option sales.
Ken Lay can refuse to talk, but the whole story will
come out, one way or the other.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

I

\

'

Thday is Tuesday, March 5, the 64th day of 2002. There are
301 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Twenty years ago, on March 5, 19H2, comedian John Belushi
was found dead of a drug overdose in a ·rented bungalow in
Hollywood; he was 33.
On this date:
ln 1770, the Boston Massacre took place as British soldiers
who'd been taunted by a crowd of colonists opened fire,
killing five people.
In I !149, Zachary Taylor took the oath of office at his presidential inauguration.
In 1868, the Senate was organized into a Court of Impeachment to decide charges against President Andrew Johnson.
·Ill 1933, in German parliamentary elections, the Nazi Party
won 44 percent of the vote, enabling it to JOin with the
Nationalists to gain a slender majority in the Rcichstag.
In 1')46, Winston Churchill del ivered his famous "Iron Curtain " speech at Westminster College in Fulton, Mo.
In 1953, Soviet dictator josef Stalin died at age 73 after 29
years in power.
ln. 1963. country mu sic performers Patsy Cline, "Cowboy"
Copas and " Hawkshaw" H awkins died in a plane crash near
Camdm, Tenn.
In 1970, a nuclear non-proliferation treaty went into effect
after 43 nations ratified it.
·
In 1977, President Carter took questions from 42 telephone
callers in 26 states on a network radio call- in progr~m moderated by Walter Cronkite.
In 191'16, in Lebanon, Islamic Jihad issued a statement saying
it had "executed" French hostage Michel Seurat, who had
been abducted almost a year earlier.
Ten years ago: Nebraska Sen. Dob Kerrey dropped out of the
race for the Democratic presidential nomination. The trial of
four Los Angeles police officers charged with he·ating motorist
Rodney King opened in Simi Valley, Calif.
Five years ago: The O hio River rose to its highest level in a
ge neraiion, flooding the Louisville, Ky., area. Tommy Lasorda,
Ndlie Fox and Willie Wells Sr. were elected to baseball's H all
of Fame. North and South Korea met for the first time in 25
years to talk peace.
One year ago: Vice President Dick Cheney underwent an
angioplasty ~or a partially blocked artety after going to a hospital with chest pains. Two students at Santana High School in
Santee, Calif. , were shot to death, and 13 other people were
wounded. A .rudent, C harles " Andy"Williams, was charged in
. the shootings. A stampede broke out 'during the annual ha.ij
pilgrimage in Mina, Saudi Arabia, killing 35 Muslims.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Jame~ Noble is 80. Actor james B.
Sikking is 68. Actor Dean Stockwell is 66. Actor Fred
Williamson is 64. Actor Mi chael Warren is 56. Actor Eddie
Hodges is 55. Singer Eddy Grant is 54.Violinist Eugene 'Fodor
is 52. Rock musician Alan Clark (Dire Straits) is 50. Actressconiedian Marsha Warfield is 48. Magician Penn Jillette is 47. ·
Rock si nger Craig Reid is 40. Rock singer Charlie Reid is 40.
Rock musician John Frusciante (Red Hot Chili Peppers) is
32. Singer Rome is, 32. Actor Kevin Connolly is 28. Actress
Jolene Blalock '("E nterprise") is 27. Model Niki Taylor is 27.
Actor Jake Lloyd is 13.
Thought forToday:"Don't forget to love yourself."- Soren
Kihkegaard, Danish philosopher (1813-1855) .

.

I

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.'

Ch8rtene .Hoeftlch
General Ma1111ger

____;·l~f the

Surprise attacks could be coming before our next move ·
The barbaric kidnap-murder of Wall
Street journal correspondent Danny Pearl
evidently was an attempt to drive a wedge
between the United States and Pakistan
and brake U.S. momentum in the war
against terrorism. It should serve as a
warning to the Bush administration.
justifiably heady about its victory in
Afghanistan and now planning wider
attacks on President Bush's "axis of evil,"
the administration needs to guard against
COLUMNIST
further attacks dcligned to upset U.S.
strategy.
In his State of the Union message, Bush India to the brink of nuclear war.
announced the goal of eliminating not
At the nioment, the conflict between
only global terrorism but also the threat.of Israel and the Palestinians is contained
weapons of mass destruction in the hands within their territory, but there are a
of" evil" states such as Iraq, Iran and North number of possible scenarios leading to a
· regional .conflkt, diverting America's
Korea.
It's a laudable mission, but various non- attention from the campaign against the
governmental foreign policy experts fear "axis."
that the administration's arrogance or
Kemp, a former Reagan administration
hubris after Afghanistan might lead it to national security aide, thinks it was cou,nignore the possibility of surprise strikes
d
d migh
'bl dr'
·from those on the U.S. ''enemies list."
terpro uctive an
· t possl Y 1ve
traditional enemies Iran and Iraq into
One scholarly hawk, professor Eliot
Cohen of johns Hopkins University, closer cooperation against the United
States.
warns, "We're feeling powerful and comHe also believes aides to· Iranian l&gt;resi~
petent and we may think we have the initiative, but we could wake up and find that dent Mohammad Khatami when they say
someone else has seized it:'
that ifKhatami had more power, he'd curCohen worries that the terrorist group tail Iranian-sponsored terrorism and move
Hezbollah, backed by Iran and Syria, internally to liberalize islanlic rule and
might launch rocket attacks on northern move toward democracy.
Israel, triggering a massive Israeli attack
In Asia last week, Bush practically
and a regional Middle East war that could announced that North Korea was No. 3
upset the adtninisrration's schedule for on his "axis" action list by saying that he
welcomes South Korean efforts to negotiattacking Iraq.
Meanwhile, Geoffiey Kemp of the ate away the North's missile and nuclear
Nixon Center says . he can envision anti- threats.
On Iraq, administration officials gq out
American elements trying to assassinate
Afghan leader Hamid Karzai to plunge of their way to ~y that "no decisions have
that country into. chaos or staging terror- been made" and "no timetable has been
· ist raids in Kashmir to drive Pakistan and set."Yet they also say that the Ui1ited S~tes

Morton
Konchacke

is intent on "regi111e change" and will pursue the policy unilaterally if necessary.
Outside experts, such 35 retired Gen.
Thomas Mcinerney, say that tnission
would be "easier than Afghanistan"
because U.S. forces have been involved
with Iraq for 10 yean and know ·where
key military targets arc.
"Desert Storm took 42 days 10 years
ago;• Mcinerney told me. "Saddam's army
has half the strength it did then, and its
readiness is a quarter what it was. We have
more precision munitions and we have:
total surveillance of the batdefield. What's
more, we have just one objective. - get-·
ring rid of Saddam rather than
c:Xpelling ari army from Kuwait."
Mcinerney said it should take only
20,000 or 30,000 U.S. ground troops to
follow up the bombing campaign and that
the United States could expect assistance
from anti-Saddam elements in Iraq;
including Kurds, Shiites and dissident ele-·
ments in the mili!ary.
He said recertt reports of Hussein's exe-.
cution of 10 generals, including commanders in his supposedly dependable
Republican Guard, is evidence of de~p.
' restiveness within the Iraqi army.
· .
On the other hand, others in the U.S.
military and State Departmem are
thought co believe that the United States
needs to mobilize 200,000 or more troops
to be sure of success and that it needs to'
assemble.international support.
'
Besides, it wilJ take up to six months to
replenish the precision mUJritions expended in the Mghan campaign. So it will be,
awhile yet before the United States can.
strike. We need to be careful, though, that.
we doq't get hit first.
·

(Morton Kondraelte is extcutive editor
Roll Call, the newspap~ of Capitol Hill.)

'?f
·

WASHINGTON TODAY

New dark horse entertains dreams qflVhite House run
Bv WILl. laTER
WASHINGTON - Democratic Gov.
Howard Dean of Vermont travels the
country .these days talking to voters about
his opposition to deficit spending, the
need for universal health care and how to
improve early childhood care.
Dean, a 53-year-old physician and governor ofVermont since 1991, is the latest
in a long line of political dark horses with
an eye on the White House.
Never mind that few people know who
he is; Dean is confident he has a mes~ge
that will resonate with their concerns.
" In recent months, the consideration
has grown because of mist:rtanagement of
the economy;' Dean said during a recem
governors' meeting in Washington . "I
worry about the future of this country.
Somebody's got to deal with the future of
this country."
Dean opposes the $harp tax cuts he
thinks will sap the nation's strength and be
wants to develop a system of universal
health care, provide better health and
deyelopment programs for the young, and
improve insurance cover•ge for those suffering from mental illness. His political
philosophy, appropriately, has a health
theme - from health policies to the
health of tpe budget to the health of the
Social Security system.
Dean ~ys when he finally makes a decision whether to run, probably a year from
now, it will be based on the effects on his
. family and not on name recognition, geographical strategy or campaign finances.
Dean probably is one of the least
known potential candidates in a group
that includes A1 Gore, the 2000 Democratic nominee; Senate Majority Leader Tom

..

Daschle; House Democratic leader Dick
;,Almost all of the changes in the nom~
Gephardt; and Sens. Joe Lieberman of inating process have directly or indirectly
Connectic.u t and John Edwards of North made it much more diffi~ult for a long .
Carolina.
shot and less well-knoWn candidate to be
The move from little- known outsider successful;' said Powell. "The front-load·
to front-rmmer is tougher than ever, ~y ing of the process is chief among them." .
The primary seaso11 will be abbreviated
those who tried it in the past.
"It is much more difftcult to do that in 2004 with states allowed . to crowd to
thing now than it was in 1976," says jody early February just a vieek after New
Powell, an adviser and spokesman to Hampshire's opening primary. Dean says
Jimmy Carter, a former Georgia governor Democrats made a mistake in squeezing
who won the presidency."! hesitate to ~y the political calendar:
it's impossible, because some folks .would
"What happens often is that the person
with the most money gets the nomination
have said it was impossible in 1976:'
Carter is often cited as the modern and then there i,, a period of buyers'
model for the long shot candidate who remorse as other candidates start to win
catches fire with voters and wins the pres- primaries;' he said. Despite these odds,
· Dean is spending his time traveling, getidency. ·
" Among the Democrats, Carter was the ring to know constituent groups and shar-,
non -liberal, a nuclear engineer, a South- ing his ideas.
erner, .a peanut farmer," said Pat
"This i.~ the way you've got to begin;:
Buchanan, another outsider who ~id Michael Dukakis, the former Massaenlivened Republican presidential races in chusetts governor who won the 198B
1992 and 1996.
Democratic nomination. "All of us are
The key to Buch~nan's short burst of low profile at · first, even the prominent
success was his early understanding that governors:•
·
voters were deeply concerned about the
Some have found the going tough as a
economy' and his sharp eye for political political outsider.
·
opportunities to make a name·for himself
Lamar Alexander, a former Tennessee
·
governor and Cabinet member, tried for
in early come,st,o;.
1\vo decades earlier, Carter campaigned the GOP nomination in 1996 and came
on a message of morality and honesty in close· after virtually moving to Iowa for
the yean after Watergate, invested a lot of months then campaigning hard in New
time in Iowa before winning there, then Hampshire a!"d Florida.
had four weeks to raise money and
"You've got to keep your sense of
momentum before winning New Hamp- humor and ego intact;' said Alexander,
shire. Dean ~ys he gained his inspiration who now reaches at Harvard University.
for politics from Carter.
"It's ai'\Vays a fine line whether you're the
The political world has changed sub- toast of the town or toast:'
(Will ~ttr COI!tr.! politics and polling for
stantially since Carter won with his outsider campaign, however.
TI1e Assod4ted Prt1s.)

PEAR ABBY: You were a little
rough on "Tom" in your reply to
"The 'O ffice Gang," the letter about
the female trucker who kept commg on to the only man in the
office. You implied he was like a little boy who lacked courage. I must
disagree with you. Take it from one
who knows: I've been in• Tom's
predicament more than once.
In the .workplace when a woman
is interested in a man, she usually
lets him ~now discreetly. They can
then proceed with a relationship if
they're both interested, or quietly
let it go. Then there's the occasional woman who won't take no for an
answer. What starts as a nice ego
boost can turn unpleasant in a
hurry.
We men are taught from an early
age to respect women and not show
aggression toward them. Persistent
females who show sexual aggression

Dear
Abby
ADVICE,.
•

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when we're not interest~d present
males with a real problem.
I think Tom is trying his best to
defuse a delicate situation. He wants
this woman tO· back off, but he also
wants to be polite and not cause
problems for himself, the woman or
his co-workers. He is not being a
coward, Abby- he's trying to handle the situation with the least
amount of fallout. Give the guy a
break, huh? - BEEN THERE IN
ALABAMA

'

DEAR BEEN THERE: If I
gave the impression that I thought
the man was. a "wuss," I apologize.
However, an aggressive woman
with romance on. her mind is not
likely to give up if the target of her
affection sits there and says nothing.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I loved the story
about the female truck driver who
couldn't keep her hands off the
only man in the office. I had the
same experience.
During World War II, I worked
for a wholesale company, and my.
department handled government
business. The woman in charge of
sorting the · mail wo'u ld put .mine
aside so she could deliver it personally.
•
•
There were four women in my
department, and the mail sorter
would wait umil they were away
from their desks to bring my mail

to me. She would slowly bend over
DEAR ART: You got your point
my shoulder from behind and plop across. I'll bet she was sorry she
one of her breasts on my shoulder tried to make a boob out of you.
DEAR ABBY: My older brothwhile she kissed my ear!
er
is being married at the end of
This routine went on for some
time, until I finally discussed it with ·May. He has asked me to be his best
my staff. They devised a plan: They man .' What are the guidelines for
had me take off my coat, then they giving a " best man speech"? - ·I
stuck straight pins up through the WANT TO BE THE BEST
shoulder pads. When they thought BEST MAN
DEAR BEST MAN: It should
it was time for this gal ro deliver my
'
be
a short state of the union speech.
mail, they all trooped off to the
Save the inside jokes and naughty
washroom.
comments for the bachelor party. At • ,
Sure enough, she sneaked up
the wedding; congratulate the cou'
behind me, slowly bent over and ple, offer.. a couple of G-rated complop (ouch!). Abby, she never did it pliments, raise your glass, and wish
agai'n.
them a lifetime of happiness togeth- .
Of course, the ladies were watch- er.
ing what went on from the wash(Pauline Phillips and her daughttr,
room. ·W hen they finally returned, Jeanne Phillips, share the pseudonym
their faces were flushed from laugh- Abigail Van Buren. Write Dear Abby at
ing. - ART ROLLINS, PORT- www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
LAND, ORE.
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

•
\io'

LISTED IN WHO'S WHO- Stacy Eblin and Crystal Clonch, front, and Sarah Bowshier, Beth ere·
means, and Pamala Cross, back, left to right, students at the Rio Grande Community College
have been named to Who's Who in American Junior Colleges.
become a registered . Nurse at
Rio Grande. The Vinton resident enjoys being a part of the
nursing program and learning
about health care.
Bowshier is also studying to
become a registered nune. A
residem ofVimon, she enjoys
learning from the faculty and
working with the other students in the nursing program.
Clonch is also studying nurs-

Coolville TOP OH
Chapter 2013
·makes plans for
Recognition Day
COOLVILLE Plans
fo·r partici'pating in Area
Recognition Day to be
held on April 13 at the
Lancaster High School
were made when Coolville
TOP OH Chapter 2013
!net
recently
at
the
Coolville
Elementary
School. · '
Members who plan to
attend ' .are asked
to notify
.

Barbara Gilchrist this week.
Theme will be "TOP hearts
are Happy. Hearts ."
At tonight's meeting of
the club new officers will
be elected. Weigh-ins will
be from 5 :15 to 6:15 p.m.
and the meeti!lg takes place
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
At last week's meeting the
best loser award went to
Roberta Henderson.

~~~~~~~---•
CLY\lE. t &amp;A'Illt - - - - TII.Y Yt.tnt.v 'RI CI()Y
ANY age is a great age to

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.
"

ing at Rio Grande, but she took
a different route to the program.
The Bidwell resident completed
a pre-medicine degree, but discovered in her studies and in her
practical ;!xperience that she
was drawn to nursing. •
"I found that I really wanted
to go to numng school;' Clonch
said She is. now in the second
year of the nursing program, and
is very happy to be listed in the

DEIJI .UD

Tuelclay. Mllrch s. loo:J

)

.

Five.Rio Grande students
named to · o's
o
RIO GRANDE - · Five
Rio Grande Community College students have been selected for Who's Who Among
Students in American Junior
Colleges.
·
The students, who were
nominated by the faculty
members due to their outstanding acadeinic work, join
an elite group of students from
more than 1,400 institutions
of higher learning from across
America, as well as several
other countries, who are listed
in the book.
Those honofed by being
listed in the · publication this
year, are Crystal Clonch, Sarah ·
Bowshier, Beth Cremeans,
Pamala Cross and Stacy Eblin.
Eblin of Bidwell is studying
office technology at Rio
Grande and plans to become
an administrative assistant after
graduation .
Cross of Langsville is a
Licensed Practical Nurse, but
went back to school after ten
years so that she could study
nursing and adv~nce her
career. She works in nursing
and also is a mother of two.
"It's tough, but I really
Wanted to go back to school,"
Cross said. It was a litde intimidating at first to go back to
school after working for ten
·years, but she ~id the other
students and th'e faculty members have made her feel comfortable in the classroom.
Cremeans is studying to

Page AS

publication with the top college
students in the country.
The annual directory has
been recognizing outstanding
students from across the country and the world since I 966.
Students are nominated based
on their academic achievement, service to the community, leadership in extracurricular activities and potential for
continued success.

WHIT A

LO DANTU. liGHTEN

LOAD

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calendar
Is publlshe~ as a free
service to non-profit
groups
wishing
to
announce meetings and
special events. The calendar Is not designed to
promote sales or fundraisers of any type.
Items are printed only
as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to
be · printed a specific
number of days.

and Judy Bell, evangelist
and singers. Rev. Charles
McKer)zie Invites pulillc.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - . Salis·
bury Township Trustees
meeting, 6 p.m. Tuesday,
township . hall, Rock·
springs Road,

POMEROY - Meeting
of Meigs High School
junior class parents, 4:30
p.m. Wednesday in the
library· to plan for prom.
Parents urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM
7:30 p.m. at the temple.
All Master masons invited.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - . Scipio
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, Wednesday, 6:30
p.m. Pageville town hall.

BURLINGHAM - Bed·
THURSDAY
ford Township Trustees, 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
p.m. Tuesday, town hall.
Tuppers. Plains
VFW
Auxiliary, Thursday, . 7
ALFRED Orange p.m. at the hall. Potluck
township trustees, regular supper at 6:30 p.m.
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. home of Clerk Osie
POMEROY - Musical
program by Rita White,
Foil rod.
keyboard, Junior White,
POMEROY Child· vocalist, and Ralph Cooke
hood Immunization Clinic, violinist. Senior Citizens
Tuesday 1 to 7 p.m. at the Center, Thursday, 5:30
Meigs County Health p,m. To include waltzes,
Department. Call before country, polkas, hits of
going because .of short- yesterday and "name that
ages of vaccines. Take tune" · segment. public
shot records. Children ·invited, no charge.
must be accompanied by
parent or legal guardian.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Wido'll(.s fellowship, FriTUPPERS PLAINS Final signup for Tuppers day noon, Middleport
Plains,
Chester
and Church of Christ for a
Reedsville baseball and potluck dinner.
softball sign-ups Tuesday,
SATURDAY
6 to 8 p.m. Eastern Ele·
mentary.
POMEROY - Burling·
ham Modern Woodmen
p.m.
POMEROY - Revivar Saturday, . 5:30
service, Tuesday through potluck at the hall. Meat,
March 20, 7 p.m. Calvary bread, drinks and table
Pilgrim Chapel, Route service provided. Guests
143, Pomeroy. Rev. Tom welcome.

COMPDnRIZED ROIRNS AID ElECTRONIC FlUNG
WITH REFUN. IN I Ml1TD OF DAYS OR HOURS
DEPENDING 011 THE CHOICES YOU MAlE

TAX bV DANTAI
IS THE RIGHT CIOICE

.'

telebrciting_ ·Special
, · days wHh you/
' The Daily Sentinel

740-992-2158

You

To

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ce
-""0 Is
oon!

�I

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, March 5, 2002

.

The Daily Sentinel
•

Inside:
Elvis has left the NFL, Page B2
College basketball news, Page B3

News About Senior Citizens
.
1·n Meigs County·
"
)

PageB1

•

Evening Meals

The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Dally at 12:00

Creamed Baked Chicken
Masl)ed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered CaiHomia Vegetables
Sliced Peaches
Cranberry Sauce
WMe or Brown Bread

~ar&gt;l1~

~Air

Cooks Clio/c.

THURSDAY

5
Roast Beef Mashed Potatoes &amp; Creamed Baked Chicken
Parsley Buttered Polatoes
Gravy Sandwich Plate
Salad
Peas &amp; Carrots
Roll
Peach Pie
Bishop Cake
12
Pork Chop &amp; Dressing
Lasagna .
Seven Layer Salad
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Garlic Bread
Lima Beans &amp; Corn
Roll
Texas Sheet Cake
Fruit Crisp
•
19
Ham Loaf
Amish Vinegar Chicken
•
Scalloped Potatoes
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Mixed Vegetables
Seasoned Greenbeans
Roll
Croissant .
Cheese Cake
Mandarin Orange Cake

7

Chili
Tossed Salad
Grilled Cheese
Apple Dumpling with Ice Cream
I

Swiss Steak with Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Frozen Ambrosia
Harvard Beets
While or Brown Bread

Sub Sandwich

Omelet

Mealloaf
Mashed Potaloes &amp; Gravy
Peaches
Com &amp; Green Beans

.

21

25
'

Sausage Gravy
Hash Brown Potatoes
1
Warm Fried Apples
BiscuH
Orange Juice

Fish &amp; Shrimp
Potato Wedges ·
Coleslaw
Hush Puppies
Pineapple Upside Down Cake

ACTIVITY SCHEDULE
Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.
until noon.
Older adulls are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
Y\'U want from lhe a Ia carte
menu or you can . enjoy Ihe
regular meal, Ala Carte items
are individually priced. The
suggested donation for the noon
meal is $2.00.

St. Patrick's Day
Don't forget to wear your
green for the St. Patrick's party
on March 14. There will be
some Secret Leprechauns on
duty, so don't miss the fun.
Activities begin at 11:00 a.m.

POMEROY, OH

Mandarin Oranges

Pizza Rolls ·

15
BBQ Pork Sandwich
Polato Soup
Monroe County Broccoti Salad

Pears
Oatmeal Raisin Cookie

22
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossed Green Salad
Tropical Fruit
Garlic Bread
Cooks Choice

28

27

29

Salmon Loaf

Palty

Broccoli Soup

Potatoes a Ia Gratin
Buttered Peas &amp; onions

Cea'tft.[ C.~~td
/:lall.Q.Jl Ea~ .tArl

Pineapple Chunks
White or Brown Bread
BBQ Beef &amp; Onion Rin s

It's.Time For Trips
Make sure you mark your
calendar for Tuesday, March 12,
so you can attend a meeting wilh .
Betty Brent, Park Tours. Betty
will
have
information
concerning trips planned by
Park Tours for 2002. The
meeting begins at I :00
April 15-16 - Grand Victoria
Casino &amp; Resort.
June 14 - 16 • Lancaster, PA.
· You will , see two shows:
"Abraham &amp; Sarah" and
August 11-16 - Thousand Island
Adventure with visits to
Kingston, Fort Henry.
' Ottawa, Toronto, ' and
Niagara Falls.
August 23-25 - Renfro Valley
weekend with musical
shows, ''the Barn Dance,
Jamboree, and guest
performers the Statler
Brothers.
September 1-8- Boston and
Maine,
All the famous
Boston sites and the Maine
attractions.
September 22-24 - Atlantic City
with lodging at the
Tropicana Hotel.
October 6·9 - Victorian Cape
May. NJ
October 27-29- Caesers Indiana
Casino Adventure.
November 15 - 17 - Smokey
Mountains Christmas,
Pigeon Forge Winterfest,
Christmas at Dollywood,
Bitmore Estate Candlelight
Tour.
Several one-day trips are
scheduled fo~ the year and
they are listed below:
May - Amish Country with a
visit to Beholt Museum; a
train ride, dinner and
shopping.

Championship
Gonzaga 96, Pepperdine 90
The Meigs Senior Center would like to thank the Gallipolis
Elks Lodge lt107 for their recent donation. The money was
used to purchase tables for the Center. Ken Harris and Bob
June - "The Living ·Wild" ·' W.wds are shpw.n presenting the check to Patty Pic"ens,
outdoor drama, tour of the Activity Director at the Center.
Dickenson Cattle Ranch and
Cambridge glass factory.
June 18 • LaComedia dinner
!healer for a delicious buffet
dinner and the stage Nutrition Education Classes · March 12 ·Reading Labels and
production of "Annie"
facilitated by Becky Baer and Nutrition Facts
September - Fall foliage trip to Linda King, OSU Extension March 19- Reducing Sugar
central and Southern West Office, will · be held in the April 2 - Review and Questions
Virginia.
co~ference room at the Center. All classes are held from 10:00
December - Oglebay Park TJ!~ classes are as follows: ·
a.m. · noon. Registration is not
holiday light display and March 5 - Salt Sensitive.
required.
Wheeling, WV attractions.
Additional information and cost
for the trips will be available at .
.
the March 12 meeting.
The monthly birthday party
Alice Wamsley is the Volunteer w11l be he.ld on March 2 I.
Trip Coordinator for the Meigs .Enlertamment f?r t~e March
Senior Cenler and can be birthday party, wh1ch IS also the
Are 'you concerned that some
contacted at home at 992-3938 Easter Dinner, will be the of the medicines you take might
Please leave· message if ther~ Gabriel Quartet. . Yo.u may interact with each other. Bring
is no answer.
recogmze some of the smgers - your medications to the Center
Rick Kerns, Stacey Kerns, Mark on March 28 from 10:00 a.m. - ·
Coleman, and Paul Anderson. 2:00 p.m. and Michele Adams,
Come and join us for your RN, will check to see if they are
Pam Napper, from Middleport, ·birthday and celebrate Easter at
compatible wilh each other.
our friendly nail technician, will the same time.
Michele works for Buckeye
be at the Center on April 4 from
Hills in Marietta.
9:30a.m. - noon.
Pam will fllake your nails look
beautiful for Easter.
We appreciate Pam for
~.
donating her time a'ld supplies
for many months to the ladies at
The Red Cross Bloodmobile
the Center.
• will
v1s1t
the
Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center on
Wednesday, April 17 from 1:00
6
Prizes will be awarded to the
p.m. - :oop.m.
winners when we play BINGO
on the following dates - March 7
Tammy Quil'en will be the
and March 28. The fun starts at instructor for computer classes
11 :00 a.m. Maybe you will be at lhe Center. These classes will
lucky and win I
be held every Monday from 9:30 Representatives from the Athens
a.m. - 10:30 a.m. in the. Social Security Office will be at
Conference Room.
the Meigs Senior Center to
Registration is necessary and assist people with Social
p.m. in the conference 'room at can be done by calling Tammy at Sec~rit~ probl,ems and to
the Center.
Lia Tipton, 992-2681 extension 238. Don't prov1de mformat10n. The dates
Occupational Therapist, Holzer delay in registering,. class is are March 13 &amp; 27 from 10:00
Rehabilitation Center, . is the limited to five.
a.m. • 11 :00 a.m.
coordinator.
Nancy Stevens, from Holzer
Medical Center, is the facilitator
for the Diabetes Support Group.
The meeting will be held on
March 21.
·
A discussion on "Neuropathy"
"We C~re For You Like Family"
will be held at the March
meeting.

Nutrition Education

B. irthday Party

Medicine
Review

a

Nails by Pam

Bloodmobile

BINGO

Computer Class

Social Security

. SUPPORT GROUPS

.c:fp

Yoga

Classes

· ~ ~~

~~

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE

ftl: (.]II

·l fil.

S'UES &amp; RENTALS
FlEE DILIYIIY

446·2206
TOLL FilEt

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

1·100•445·2206

NCAAMen'a
Conference Toumamenta
Monday's Gamn ·
MAC
FlmRound
·Miami, Ohio 71, Buffalo 60
Akron 90, W. Michigan 83
Cahl. Michigan 65, Ohio 56
T$do 89, E. Michigan 53
Marshall 97, N. Illinois 93
·
At Gund Arena
Cleveland
Quartertlnala
Thureday'e Games
Kent St. vs. Marshall, noon.
Cent Mich. lis. Toledo, 2 p.m.
Ball St. vs. Miami, Ohio, 7 p.m.
Bowling Green vs. Akron, 9 p.m.
Colonial
Champlonahlp
N:C.·Wilo Ii l(1ci I 66, Va Con M1101 L51
Matro Atlantic
Championship
Siena 92, Niagara 77
Mld·Contlnent
Semifinals
ln.·Pur.·lndy. !ill, 0. Roberts 53
Valpo 71, UMKC 58
Mid-Eastern Athletic
Firat Round
Coppin Sl. 61, Norfolk Sl. 46
Molgan Sl94, FloridaA&amp;M 91, 20T
·
Missouri Valley
Championship
Creighton 84, S. Illinois 76
Southland
First Round
L&lt;tmar 53, Stephen F.Austin 36
Tx.·San Antonio 99, SW Texas 83
·
Sun Belt
Semifinals
la.·lafayette 67, Ark. -Uttte Rook 53
W. Kentucky 73, New Mexico St. 72

i;lij

:lfJ

I

• HOME OXYGEN .

• HOSPITAL BEDS

• CPAP MACHINES

• WHEELCHAIRS

• NEBULIZERS

•OXIMETRY

RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT

·Pro Basketball
NBA
Monday's Games
Boston 100, Philadelphia 94
Atlanta 95, Memphis 76
Utah 100, Denver 82
Portland 107, Sacramento 95

Pro

•

baseball

MLB
Spring Training
Monday'e Games
Montreal 4, Florida 3
Atlanta 8, Houston 7
Toronlo 15, Texas 5
Boston (ss) 7, Detroit 3
St. Louis 13, Baltimore 4
Boston ·(ss) 4, Minnesota (ss) 3
Kansas City 16, Cincinnati (ss) 6
Tampa Bay 7, Philadelphia (ss) 6
Pittsburgh (ss) 5, Cleveland (ss) 4
Philadelphia (ss) 7, Cleveland (ss) 6
Los Angeles 9, N.Y. Mats 4
Minnesota (ss) 7, NY Yankees 3
Anaheim 10, Chicago Cubs 9
Oakland 6, Seattle 5, 10 innings
Arizona 4, Milwaukee 2
CDiorado 9, San Francisco 3
San Diego 14, Chic. White Sox 9
Pittsburgh (ss) 7, Cincinnali (ss) 1

_. NFL opening

::: play on a
:.~ursday
night
.
: · NEWYORK (AP) - The
~I'L will open its season on a
. ":&lt;!eknight for the first time.
·· The league confirmed· that
the 2002 season will start on
l'hursday night, Sept. 5, most
lik,!!ly with San Francisco at
(h~ New York Giants.

.; Top three AP
:

spots

: unchanged
NEW YORK (AP) Kansas, Maryland and Duke
were 1-2-3 in the AP college
basketball poll for the third
consecu'tive week, while Ore-·
gon made its first Top Ten
appearance in 26 years.
. The top-ranked Jayhiwks
(27- 2) completed the first
perfect season in Big 12 history with their 95- 92 victory
over Missouri on Sunday and
stretched th eir winning streak
to:14 ga'mes.

•••••

. Send your local sports news
·ana comments to The Daily
Sentinel via fax at 992-2157
or
by
1'-mail
to
sports@mydailysentinel.com.

· 416 lurllntloa IHd
J1ckion, Ohle 45640

Herd earns trip·
to Cleveland for
.M4C second
round

ATHENS (AP) - David
Webber scored 15 points and
Chris Kam an had 13 points
and
14
rebounds as
Central
Mi chigan beat Ohio 65-56
on Monday night in the first
round of th e Mid- American
Conferen ce tournament. r
T.]. M eerman and Chad
Pleiness each scored 11 points
for the Chippewas (9-18),
who never trailed after halftim e and advance to meet
Toledo in Thursday's quarterfinals .
Steve Esterkamp led the
Bobcats (17- 11) with 18
points and Patrick Flomo
added 10.
Esterkamp made three
straight free throws to pull
Ohio within 55-50 with 1:31
left. to play, but Kaman, Webber and Pleiness c ombined to
make 10-of-1 0 free throws
and seal the win.
Central Michigan inade 75
percent of its foul shot&lt; for
the game (18-for-24), compared with 46 percent (6-for13) for the Bobcats, and also
outrebounded Ohi·o 40-30.
Field-goal shooting was a
closer match , with the
Chippewas hitting 45 percent, compared with 39 percent for Ohio.
·
The game was tied five
times in the first 11 minutes.
Then the Chippewas went on
a 10- 2 run to make it 21-13
and pull ahead for good.
AROUND THE MAC
Toledo coach Stan Joplin
told Keith Triplett to come

MAC

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.·
(AP) - This time, Ronald
Blackshear let his teammates
in on the fun .
Two days after Blackshear·
scored 44 points in the regular-season finale, Marshall got
big games from its top three
players to beat Northern Illinois 97-93 in the first round
of the Mid-American Conference tournament Monday
night.
No.8 seed Marshall (15-14)
advanced to meet No. 1 Kent
State (24-5) at noon Thursday
in the second round in Cleveland.
"Anything can happen
now," said Marshall'sJ.R.VanHoose. ·
Northern Illinois coach
Rob Judson said it wouldn't
surprise him if the Herd wins
the tournament.
"They seem to be playing
their best ball down the
stretch," he said. ·
Marshall has . won three
straight for the first time since
· a five-game winning streak in
early December, when it also
.beat Northern !Uinois.
Blackshear wasn't as dominant as Saturday's regular- season finale against · Akron;
when he tied an NCAA
record with 11 comecutive 3pointers in a 104-87 victory.
Tamar Slay scored a seasonhigh 29 points Monday night
while Blackshear and VanHoose had 28 apiece. Only PLAY HIM TOUGH - Marshall's J.R. VanHoose, right, guards Northern Illinois' Leon
Rodgers during their Mid-American Conference Tournament game Monday in Huntinilton,
Pluse sH Herd. 82
W.Va. (AP) ·

Please see Exit. B::l

Philly split-squad beats Indians, 7-6
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) field spots," Phillies manager Larry
Pat Burrell bit a two-run homer and Bowa said. "Hits like that don't hurt
rookie Jason Michaels had a key two- his chances. That's exac~y what we
run single to help the · Philadelphia want to see."
Phillies
defeat
the
Indians manager Charlie Manuel
Cleveland Indians 7-6 said Riggan, one of the players
Monday.
acquired in the deal that sent RoberBurrell .hit a pitch to Alomar to the New York Mets in
from Chuck Finley over the wall in December, needs more work to get
left-center for his first homer and a 3sharp. The right-hander allowed three
1 lead in the third inning.
runs, four hits and walked three in 1
Michaels replaced Burrell in the
2/3 innings.
fifth and delivered a two-run single in
"He's a little off right now," Manuel
a three-run sixth ofF Jerrod Riggan .
said. He has to pitch, He's not quite .
that put the Phillies aliead 7-4.
':Jason is swinging the bat well and there with his fastball or breaking ball.
"Finley pitched good, he might be a
trying to get one of those extra outlittle ahead of where we expected him .

MLB

right now. The homer by . Burrell
might have been a mistake pitch."
Finley allowed three runs and six
hits over three innings, striking out
two.
Philadelphia starter Vi cente Padiila
gave up two hits and one run - a
I
second-inning homer by Bill Selbyin three innings. He struck out three.
·"Padilla threw the ball well:' Bowa
said. "All our b"'YS pitched well, I
thought. Of their hits, they had a
bloop, a seeing-eye hit and a couple
the wind helped."
Marlon Anderson had three of
Philadelphia's 14 hits . Donzell
McDonald had three · hits for Cleve-

land.
Todd Pratt singled in the Phillies'
first run in the second inning. A sacrifice fly by Jimmy Rollins in the
fourth made it 4-1 .
Cleveland tied the score 4-4 with
three runs in the fourth. Donzell
McDonald, Greg LaRo cca and Matt
Lawton all got two-out RBI singles.
LaRocca had a two-run triple in
the ninth off Doug Nickl e, put made
the final out · when he tried to score
on a pitch that got past catcher Jeremy Salazar. The non-roster catcher
raced to the backstop to retri eve the
ball, turned and threw to Nickle covering the plate for the out.

~

.

1410 Jack1on Pike
Galllpoi!J, Ohio 45631

Reds' Silva, Booker ·have surgery OSU fires women's
basketball coach

CINCINNATI (AP) - .
Right-banders Jose Silva and
Chris Booker
underwent
arthroscopic
surgery Monday. Silva will be
.o ut about six weeks, and
Booker will miss the entire
season, the. Cincinnati Reds
said.
Team physician Timothy

MLB

Krernchek removed bone sota, Aa. Booker will be sidechips and spurs from Silva's lined for nine to 12 months.
right elbow in a procedure
. Silva's elbow problem was
that took about an hour.
Kremchek needed three aggravated on the last day of
hours to repair a torn labrum Mexican Winter League
and rotat or cuff in Booker's · competition . Booker apparright shoulder.
ently injured his shoulder
Silva was expected to begin
rehabilitation Tuesday at the during early 'Yorkouts 111
Reds' training camp in Sara- training camp.

Pirate~ drop

Cincy half-squad

· SARASOtA, Fla. (AP) -Salomon Torres
retired all' nine batters he faced, and .W ayne
Gomes pitched two hitless
innings as a split squad 1of
.
Pittsburgh Pirates beat a
Cincinnati Reds split squad 7-1 Monday
night.
Humberto Cota hit a three-run homer for
Pittsburgh, which also 1 got an RBI single
from D erek Bell and a sacrifice fly by Warren Morris.
Torres last pitched in the maJors on July
20, 1997, while with Montreal. He spent last
season with Sainsung in the Korean League.
· His last big league wi':' was Sept. 25, 1996,

MLB

with Seattle.
The Pirates added two unearn ed · runs
when Reds second baseman Ranier Olmedo dropped a popup.
Olmedo had two of Cincinnati's four hits,
including an-'RBI double.
NOTES: The Reds designated nine playen for assignment, sending them to their
minor league camp. They included catcher
Cesar King, and pitchers Justin Atchley.'
Chris Piersall, Scott MacRae, Mike Judd,
Javier Martinez, Willie Martinez, Paul Darnell and Bennie Lowe. Cincinnati still has,
27 pitchers in camp, along with 31 position
players .
·

COLUMBUS (AI') her original five - year. conOhio State head women's tract, which · expires June
basketball co ach Beth 30, might not be renewed.
Burns was fired Monday,
Geiger said he had no
three days one in particular in mind
after the to replace Burns and
Bu ckeyes
stressed there wo uld be an
completed a 14-15 season. op e n search with no·
Ohio
State athl eti c tim etable.
direc tor Andy Geiger was
Two returning members
vagu e on th e re asons of the team will be part of ·
behind the firin g, saying the searc h committee · to
th ere wa s no "s moking find a new coach. Geiger
gun."
.
•
said he had no strong feel"There isn't anything ings abo ut wh ether the
specific. There's no scandal, new co ach needs headno thing that's there," said coachin g experience.
Geige r, who met with
A m es~1 ge seekin g comBurns earlier Monday. "It's ment was left at Burns' ·
just an overall feeling that office at Ohio State.
we need to go in ~ differBurns, 44, is a native of
. ent direction for th e over- Chatham, N.J. , and a grad all welfare of the program. uate o f Ohio Wesleyan
1 feel strongly abouc if,! *"~versity.
that is ~vhy we acted the
Sfw h.ul a record of 151 way we did today.''
83 in eight seasons as the
Burns was 82-65 in her head co ach at San· Diego
five seasons as coach. 'Spec- State, unti l G eiger hired
ula tion had m ounted that
Please see OSU, 81

NCAA

,.
'

•

'

s. 2002

Bobcats
take
early exit

HIGHLIGHTS

wee

Watch for details later to
Mary Grimm, an exercise
find out what will be
physiologist from Pleasant
happening at the Meigs
Valley Wellness Center, will lead
Senior Center on May 21.
a de-conditioning aerobics class
We wi II celebrate Senior
for older adults. Classes will be ~Citizen's Day on this date.
held each Wednesday from 2:30
p.m, - 3:30 p.m. beginning
·
March 6.
The class will consist of
stretching,
flex .i bility,
The Caring and Sharing
strengthening, and balance Support Group meets the fourth
exercises. Bring a friend and get
Thursday of each monlh at the
in shape for spring and summer. Meigs County Senior Center at
1:00 p.m. 'Fhe meeting date is
March 28.
· Liz Ramsey with the Greater
Ohio
Valley
Alzheimer
Association will have brochures
and wants your input on what
they can do for our area. She
will be at the March meeting.
The Stroke Support Group
Beginning Yoga Class will be. will meet on March 13, at I :00
· held on Wednesdays from 5:00
' p.m . - 6:30 p.m. at the center.
Clas~ will begin on March 20
and continue through May 22.
;I,,~,
~ ~tlli ~
[j
Call Joy at 992-2681 extension
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUPPLIES and BRACES
233 for more informa!ion and to
register.
HOME OXYGEN and
WE HONOR

ST.

BLT

Orange Glazed Ham
Scalloped Polaloes
Mixed Vegetables

Baked Potato

Baked Potato

Our sympathy is extended to the famiUes of: Orpha Rouse,
Marjorie Brewer, Everett Hutton, Ruby Kelly, George
Holman, Henry Wells, EUa Osborne,' and Ruth Johnson.

Exercise Class

AARPTAXASSISTANCE
Income tax assislance will
be offered to low income
senior citizens (age 60 and
over) that cannot afford to
go to · a paid income tax
preparer.
Complicated returns or
returns that require more
than lwo forms or schedules
will be referred to a paid
preparer.
Persons using the tax
service must bring copies of
their federal and state tax
return from last year, tax
forms for the current year
and other relevant materials
s~owing income for the
year.
The tax assistance will be
offered by Herman Carson
through April 15 on
tuesdays and Thursdays
from 9:00a.m. • 11:00 a.m.
Taxes will b~ taken by
appointment only. To
make an appoinlment, call
740-992-2161.

White or Brown Bread

Bacon CheeseBu or
C~icken

Chili
Cheese Sandwich
Crunchy Garden Slaw
Grapes
Crackers

Cltklcen Sft'lp. &amp; Por.ro w.dfe.s

21

·chicken N' Noodles
Lime Perfection Salad
Cranberry Sauce
Brownie
White or Brown Bread

Tomato/ Onion I Leltuce
- Grapes
White or Brown Bread

"Daniel'~

Mel Mock, with Advanced Hearing or Gallipolis, recently
conducted a hearing screening at the Meigs Senior Center.
: Pictured is Mr. Mock, on the len, and one or the many
· participants screened is Dan Smith.
-----------------------·

Cooks Choice

20

26
BBO Rib
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Ripe Banana
Creamed Com
White or Brown Bread

Chlfl &amp; Punut Suffer Sandwich

.

14

·Roast Turkey, Dressing
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Peas
Mandarin Oranges
Cranberry Sauce
White or Brown Bread

Ham Loaf Dinner

19

Roll

Thursday March 7, Junior and Rita will play 5:30p.m-6:30p.m.
Tuesday March 12, Blood Pressure Checks 4:15p.m.- 4:45p.m.

The Meigs Multipurpose
:Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
Regularly
until 4:30 p.m.
scheduled activities held
throughout the week include
·sewing, quilting, pool, bingo,
. cards, and games.
: Dance team practice is held
each Monday at 1:00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knitting Circle meets on

Beef Stew
Apple Jyice
Biscuit
Cherry Delighl

Ham &amp; Soup Beans
Cornbread
Coleslaw
Pears in Jell-0

Baked Pork Chop
Parsley BuHered Potatoes
Dressing
Brussels Sprouts
Cinnamon Applesauce
White or Brown Bread
Pizza

13

12

Ham &amp; Cheese Croissant Tomato Soup &amp; Grillfil Chu..

28

26

11
Amish Vinegar Chicken
Mashed Polaloes &amp; Gravy
Seasoned Green Beans
Apricols
White or Brown Bread
18

14

...

~·• I••""Jo&lt;•toc,.

Menu's""' prepared by Cynthia McMannis, RD, LD

.

TUESDAY

'TtJFsDAy's

r---------~--------~r---------~
8
8
7

•it .•.

A suggested donation for the
meal is $5 .00. Attend 1he
evening meal program for a
good nutritional meal at a
reasonable cost with friends or .
meet new friends.

The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center evening meal
will be served on Tuesday and
Thursday. Fall hours for serving
are from 4:45 - 5:30 p.m.

MARCH 2002

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRI.TION PROGRAM

TlletUy. Mllrch

·-

\

,.

�•
I

P8ge a 2 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

Elvis has left the building
Former ·
Cleveland prep
star retires rather
than relocate
BALTIMORE (AP)
Elvis Grbac will retire from the
NFL instead of attempt to pby
for another team, the quarterback's agen't said Monday
night.
Released by the Baltimore
Ravens last week after rejecting a restructured cmitract,
Grbac turned down a proposal
from the Cincinnati Bengals
over the weekend. He. told his
agent, Jim Steiner, he was
· ready to quit football.
"He is going to retire,"
Steiner said in a phone inl.!:rview. "He's got family issues.
The thought of making an
additional move was not
appealing to him.... He's had a
great run in the NFL, and he
just feels like it's time."
Grbac, his wife and the couple's three children live in
Cleveland. Although Cincin~
nati is relatively close and the
Bengals made what Steiner
termed a "very satisfying
offer," the quarterback was not
willing to relocate for the
fourth time in his career and
third time in three years.
Grbac left the Kansas City
ChiefS last year to join the
Ravens, who signed the Pro
Bowl free agent to a five-year,
$30 million contract. But
Grbac struggled in his first season in Baltimore - finishing
with 18 interceptions com-

.

'

'

--.!

her to replace . the fired
Nancy Darsch before the
1997-98 season.
In her second .season,
Burns guided the Buckeyes
to a 17-12 record and a firstround loss in the NCAA
tournament. The next year
the team dumped.
More than its 13-15
record, however, the 19992000 ~eason was remembered for a mysterious
schism between .Burns and
the Buckeyes' top player,
Michaela Moua.
Moua was abruptly kicked ·
off the team in .midseason;
Burns didn't say why. Within
days, Geiger interceded and
Moua vias reinstated.
Burns and Moua barely
communicated the nrst of
the year. Burns remained .
aloof even when Moua was

at Cleveland St. Joseph's High School and at Michigan, plans
to retire rather than take a large pay cut. (AP)

pared to 15 touchdown passes
- and the salary-cap-conscious Ravens subsequently
asked him to rework his conrract.
"They asked him to take a $5
million pay cut, which is totally unsatisfactory;• Steiner said.
The Ravens signed Grbac
less than three months after
defeating the New York Giants
in the 2001 Super Bowl. He
was supposed to provide more
offensive punch than his prede-

cessor, Trent Dilfer, but his
quarterback rating of 71.1
•
ranked 24th among ' NFL
starters.
However, Grbac has thrown
for more than 17,000 yards in
his career and has 99 TD passes
compared to 81 interceptions.
"Elvis is content with what
he's done in the NFL," Steiner
.said," and he's just not ready for
another disruption of his life."

uators.
And not all the players 'w ho tested better
than scouts had expected are low- and middleJOUnd prospects.
Harris, for instance, is regarded as a possiole
first-round selection.
The most watched contest this weekend was
the one between two prominent quarterbacks
Oregon's Joey Harrington and Fresno
State's David Carr. .
_
·
Carr entered the weekend as the overwhelming favorite to be the first player selected at his position and the front-runner to be
the No. 1 choice.
Some scouts believe Harrington closed the
gap with his workout Sunday. Others, such as ·
LeBeau, never really had them that far apart
anyway.
"I think both are top prospects," LeBeau
said. "I think those two would be at home in
any offense, and I never really had too much of
a gap between· them myself."
,
Most coaches believed, however, that most
players did help themselves, although the combine is only part of the process.
"I think most people help themselves
because of the medical stuff and they answer
questions;' Tampa Bay coach Jon Gruden said.
"What happens between the lines is debatable,
but a lot of teams use the combine for what it
is - an information-gathering process. It's not
the No. 1 thing you do to evaluate a player."
But when that player is somebody like
Kendall Newson, it is significant.
"This can open up some eyes to kids; ' Tice
said. "It all boils down to how you play."

tie the score at 42-42.
"The press got us back in the game. For the
first four minutes of the second half, we domfnHn Pap II
inate&gt;!," Judson said.
Blackshear then got a dunk and a 3-pointer
one other Marshall player scored more than during a 10-0 burst, and VanHoose's layup gave
two.
Marshall its biggest lead, 59-48, with 15:05
VanHoose, whose point total was a season remaining.
But Marshall got sloppy with its passing.
high, also had 14 rebounds while Blackshear
grabbed 12.
Northern , Illinois turned several -offensive
"Everybody was having fun tonight," Black- rebounds into baske.ts down the stretch to cut
shear· said. "I hope we have fun like this for the deficit to 85-82 with 2:33 left.
· three more games.
Northern Illinois scored 31 poit:~ts off
"Everybody knows their roles. Tonight, we rebounds for the game.
"You take away their second-chance points,
were all in the right place at the right time."
Slay continued his solid play against the it would have been a 15-20 point game," said
Huskies. He scored 28 against them earlier this Marshall coach Greg White.
·
season.
Leon Rodgers scored 23 of his team-high
Marshall shot_ 65 percent from the floor in 25 points for Northern Illinois in the second
the second half and nearly 55 percent (30-of- half. He scored six in the final 34 seconds,
55) for the game.
including a 3-pointer with 1 second left to
The Herd never trailed after halftifne but make it 95-93.
·
h3d to survive its own. sloppy play. Marsh&gt;;~~
But Northern Illinois was called for an
committed 14 second-half turnovers.
intentional foul on the in bounds pass, and Slay
"We just started making silly mistakes," Slay · hit two free throws to complete the scoring.
Marshall scored 10 of its final 12 points on
said. "But once we settled down, I think we ·
handled it all right."
free throws.
•
No. 9 Northern Illinois (12-16) went to a
Jamel Staten added 19 points for Northern
full-court press to start the second half and Illinois . Marcus Smallwood had . 13 and P.J.
made three straight steals during an 8-0 run to Smith and AI Sewasciuk had 12 apiece.

out shooting - and the strategy on Monday propelled the Rockets to Thursday's
quarterfinals in the Mid-American Conference tournament.
Triplett scored 25 points to lead Toledo to
an 89-53 win over Eastern Michigan in the
first round.
"He did it all. He rebounded, he scored, he
' defended," said teammate Nick Moore, who
made three offour free throws to spark a 348 run that blew out the game in the second
half.
Triplett, who also led the Rockets (15-13)
with 8 rebounds, shot 8-of-15 from the field,
including 3-for-5 ftQm 3-point range, and
was perfect on six foul shots.
Ryan Prillman scored 12 points to lead
Eastern Michigan (6.24}, and Markus Austin
added 11.
The Rockets shot 50 percent (30-for- 59),
including going 11-for-22 from behind the
arc. The Eagles shot 32 percent from the
field, making 14 of 44 baskets, including one
3-pointer.
.
.
The second-half run, which included five
3-pointers, followed a double-technical
called on the Eagles bench.
The Rockets take on Central Michigan in
the quarterfinals.
Akron (10-20), the No. 11 seed, never

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Dickau, the conference player of the
· · year and tournament MVP. and fellow
:guard Blake Stepp took control during a
span of 7 minutes, 30 seconds. The Zags
.. (29-3) went from a 63-56 deficit to an
88-73 lead with 4:18left.
In the only other game involving a
: ranked
team, No. 18 Western Kentucky
' needed a buzzer-beater by freshman
Patrick Sparks to beat New Mexico State
73-72 in a Sun l;lelt tournament semlfic
nal. The Hilltoppers meet Louisiana. ·Lafayette for the conference's NCAA bid
· ' Tuesday night. The Ragin Cajuns beat
Arkansas- Little Rock 67-53.
Three more teams qualified for the
· NCAA field Monday night. Siena took
' the MAAC crown over Niagara, 92-75;
· Creighton won the Missouri Valley, 84-76
' .. against Southern Illinois; and North Carolina-Wilmington captured the Colonial
Athletic by beating Virginia Commonwealth 66-51.
Dickau started Gonzaga's 32-10 run
· when he grabbed a rebound and put it in
'with 11:45 left. He punctuated it with
, four 3-pointers, including a four· point
play.
Until then, Dickau shot poorly and
scored only six points, including two in
th.e first half
. "I wasn't hitting too many shots early
··in the game and I didn't have my
. rhythm;' Dickau said. "It was a thing
where I knew I had to hit one shot and
_bang, the basket's ·going to start looking

,...

..

GRAND NATIONAL
AU.UitHIO~C&amp;.IKA ,

AL.A.AMA

•

•
.

'

I

Devin Montgomery in the West Coast Conference title game
Monday in San Diego . Dickau scored 29 points. (AP)

COME DANCIN' guard Brett Bliuard, left,
celebrates with Stewart Hare after their 66-51 win over Vir·
glnia Commonwealth in the Colonial Athletic Association Tournament championship game Monday. (AP)

.Shaw top defender; Reed
:~named top MAC neWco·met
was chosen the top defender
in a vote . of MAC coaches.
With Shaw leading the w~y.
Kent State led the conference
in scoring defense (63.5 points
per game) in addition to fieldgoal
percentage
defense
(.411), scoring margin and
rebound margin.
Reed, a 6-3 guard, .helped
the Broncos (17-10) win 10

more games than a year ago.
He averaged 14.2 points and
6.3 rebounds a .game.
Joining Reed on the illfreshman team; as voted by the
league's 13 . head coaches,
were: Akron's Darryl Peterson,
Turner Battle of Buffalo, Kent
State's Nate Gerwig and
Danny Horace of Miami
(Ohio).

de~~~~:;

punitive action being taken by Chancellor
White or Mr. Broyles toward Mr. Richards.on," Walker said.
An appeal to Sugg was seen as a prerequisite for possible legal action by Richardson
against the university.
.
·
Sugg ,was not available Monday, hu office
said.
Walker characterized Richardson's departure from Arkansas -as a termination, not a
mutual ending of the coach's contract.
The school said ,it. "concluded" Richardson's employment . at Arkansas after he
refused to resign'.
Richardson said last Thursday that he
wanted to remain as coach. Walker said
Monday that White was wrong "when he
indicated that Mr. Richardson desired to
have Arkansas buy out his contract."
Abo Monday, assistant coach Mike Anderson said he had talked to his former bou and

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wrote letters to Sugg and White, that Richardson is "doing well."
the-university said. The content o f t h e Ietters . "We did have a chance to sit down and
were not released. The school said they per- visit, and believe it or not it wasn't about
: tained to a personnel matter and could. be _ qasketball," Anderson said on the Southeast. exempt from state Freedom of Information ern Conference teleconference in advance ·
Act .
h of this week's tournament. "Coach is doing
The university said it might release t e good."
letters later.
.
Anderson will coach the Razorback!
"Mr. Richardson ... did .intend to seek through the league tournament.
; review after being fully and completely
White c.alled Anderson a strong c~ndidate
·: informed of the .nondiscriminatory reas~ns to replace Richardson.
'. for the university's decision," Walker sal~.
"That's a promise that I will ma~e to
"He wanted to know ·what Dr. Suggs Mike Anderson, is, 'You're going to get a
involvement in the decision-making proceu very good look in the process,"' White
. was.
b' said. "He's got a grea1 relationship with
. "Dr. Sugg, as the reviewer, woul~ be un I - the players and 1 think the search com. - ased atld he would at least stand m the way mittee will take a real good, hard look at
: of ;rbitrary, · capriciou's, discriminatory or Mike and give him every chance."
,

1.800.949.4444
www. rtjgo/ffiJm

DRIVE- Gonzaga's Dan Dickau drives against Pepperdine's

~~:a;;;~~o;i:~~~a~th !~~·~i~;E~~ti~~

LITTLE ROCK (AP) - Former Arkansas
: coach Nolan Richardson intends to appeal
the university's detision to buy out his con' tract his lawyer said Monday.
; Arkansas bought out the remaining six
·
years of Richardson's con.tract
on
Friday. The
announcement came six
days after Richardson had
publicly said: "If they go
ahead and pay me my
money, th~y can take the'job
tomorrow.
Chancellor John A. White,
who consulted with Athletic
Director frank Broyles
was
Rloh1rd10n before Richardson
: bought out, said the ex-coach had until
· noun Monday to appeal to system President
: Alan Sugg. Richardson's · attorney, John
. Walker, said he did not believe there was .

Go(/ilfagazu1e
readers gave Tim
JUDGE at Capitol
Hill a 5 out of 5 rating. "' G,,(f ilfagm:iu:e ranked Grand
National in Auburn/Opelika arid Cambrian Ridge in
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"' G.&gt;lf Dig&lt;.~~· named
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Frc'lucnl F(vcr Ma,qaztl~&lt; listed the Trail as
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' 'stretc h"
.·

bigger."
Dickau said. "We were disap~ointed we
Dickau even tossed up an airball 3- didn't win the outright league title, but
point attempt, but by then it didn't mat- we knew if we came down and took care
t er.
Of the conference tournament that it'd be
"I've seen him do some pretty incredi- OK."
ble things," said Stepp, who scored 10
On a neutral court, they played a wild
points in the run, including two-3s, and game.
finished with 24. "When he gets on a roll
Pepperdine led 45-44 at halftime, and
like that, you just give him the ball and looked like it might get its fourth win .
get out of the way:·
·
this season over a Top 25 team after makSaid Zag forward Zach Gourde: ·:It's ing three straight 3s, inCluding two by
almost scary because most of the guys JUSt Mike Westphal, son of coach Paul Weststand around and watch in amazement." phal, to take a 58-51 lead with !3:41left .
The Waves feit almost helpless. ·
The lead was s~ seven after Miggins
"We had them under control;' Pepper- grabbed a rebound and emphatically
dine forward Jimmy Miggins said. "Then slammed it in with 12:00 left, but that's
he started. getting some good looks and when Dickau finally found his touch.
knocking 'em down. All you can do is
Gonzaga's big men, Cory Violette and
hope he misses."
Zach Gourde, scored 16 apiece, and VioThe game between WCC regular-sea- Jette had 12 rebounds.
son co-champions got testy in the final
minute when Miggins knocked down
Pepperdine's · Devin Montgomery
Dickau on an inbounds play. When ,an scored 27, and Miggins had 12.
irate Dickau went up to Miggins, he
f'Jo. 18 Western Kentucky 73,
shoved Dickau down again and was
New Mexico State 72
called for an intentional foul with 43.8
At New Orleans, with the Hilltoppers
seconds left. Dickau made one free throw trailing 72-7l, Sparks took the inbounds
for a 93-87 lead.
pass and launched a shot from j~st inside
Pepperdine (22-8) closed to 94-90 on a the 3-point line to give Western Ken3 by Craig Lewis with 6.8 seconds left:
tucky (27-3) its 17th straight victory.
It was a big day for the Zags. Earher
':That's definitely my biggest play this
Monday, they moved up on¢ spot in the season," Sparks said.
AP poll to No. 6, their highest ranking
Metro Atlantic (MAAC)
ever. Then they won their school-record
Surprising Siena, playing on its home29th game and ran their winning streak court in Albany, N.Y., got 30 points from
to 14, tying the school record.
Dwayne Archbold, who set a MAAC
The previous record of 28 wins was set record with 111 points in four games.
by the 1998-99 team that reached !he
The Saints (16-18) won four games in
NCAA West. Regional final before losmg as many days, the first MAAC team to do
to eventual national champion Connecti- so and only the eighth in any conference.
cut.
Missouri Valley
Gonzaga, the little school from
At St. Louis, Terrell Taylor scored 20
Spokane, has reached the NCAA region- points and Kyle Korver added 18, pacing'
als three straight seasons.
Creighton (22-8), which lost twice durCoach Mark Few said Friday he felt the ing the regular season to the Salukis (26Zags could get in the neighborhood of a 7). Creighton has reached the NCAA
No.3 seed in the NCAAs by winning. the · tournament the past four years.
conference tourney. In their previous
Colonial Athletic:
three NCAA appearances, the Zags were
a! h
Even though Virginia Commonwe t
seeded 10,10 and 12.
Pepperdine and Gonzaga shared the was playing in familiar surroundings in
Richmond, it was overwhelmed by the
1
Seahawks' fast start. Brett Blizzard scored
its homecourt. Pepperdine was top-seed- 22 points, and North Carolina-Wilminged in the tournament because of winning ton (22-9) won its second conference
a coin flip with the Zags.
tournament in three years. The Seahawks
"We felt all along that this is our league earned only the second NCAA tournaand· we didn't want to share anything," ment bid in school history.

:~ Richardson appeal.pending

G&lt;~(/ DigeJI Listed

PRATTVIU.E,

·-NCAA

CLEVELAND (AP)
Kent State's Demetric Shaw
was selected as the Mid: American Conference's top
: defensive player for the second
'. year in a row . and Western
' Michigan's Ben Reed was
announced Monday as the
league's top freshman.
Shaw, a 6-foot-3 senior
guard from Fort Worth, Texas,

OuR REPORT CARD

CAPITOL HILL

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Dan Dickau
may have one-uppe'!, himself this time.
When the star point guard gets that
·look in his eyes and starts sizing up long
3-pointers late in · the
·
game, his Gonzaga
'
teammates and
opponents - know exactly what's com' ing . .
: Monday night, Dickau was extra
· impressive. He scored 19 of his 29 points
during a 32-10 run, and the No.6 Bull.dogs rallied to beat top-seeded Pepperdine 96-90 for their fourth straight West
, ·Coast Conference tournament title and
-·automatic NCAA bid.
"I'm ~ot &gt;urprised, but we all should
be,"' coach Mark Few said. "You're not
, ·supposed to do some of the things he
-~does. He's got an amazing quality about
"him. I think he's magical down the

Burns' Ohio State teams Women's National Invitation
were usu ally competl·n·ve b u 1 Tournament championship.
seldom overpowering, due in
The Buckeyes beat Michipart to a string of debilitating gan State in double-overtime
injuries that always seemed . in the first round of the Big
to shadow the program.
Ten tournament last week to
Ohio State went 35-45 in stretch their winning streak
Big Ten play under h~r.
to three in a row. They were
Many of Burns' most eliminated in the quarterfiacclaimed recruits- includ- nals by Penn State, 70-55.
trailed in its upset and led by as many as 24 ·
points. Rashon Brown missed his career best
by one point, scoring 31, and David Falknor
added a career-high 30 points.
The sixth-seeded Broncos (17-13), who
have averaged more than eight 3-pointers a
game, were !).eld to two 3-pointers until the
final ininute, when the Broncos hit three in a 1
desperate attempt to catch up.
·
Anthony K.tnn led Western Michigan with
a career.high 22 points and 13 rebounds, and
Reggie Berry added a career-high 18 points.
The Zips face third seed Bowling Green in
the quarterfinal. The Falcons were one of the
five teams Akron beat in the regular season.
In Miami's win over Buffalo,Juby Johnson
and Chester Mason scored 15 points apiece,
Alex Shorts added 13 points and Doug Davis
.had 12. Eugene Seals was a perfect 3-for-3
from the field and 4-of-4 from the line for 10
points for Miami (13-17).
Thrner Bati:J.e led Buffalo .(12-18) with 16
points, and Clement Smith added 12.
Each team led by five at times in a seesaw
first half, wjth Miami ahead 27-26 at half·time.
Davis started a 15-2 second-half run with
a jumper and hit two 3-pointers for eight
points while Buffalo managed just one basket
in almost seven minutes.
Buffalo's leading scorer, Darcel Williams,
was held to one basket. Coach Charlie Coles
credited forward Seals' defense.
Miami will play No. 2-seeded Ball State in ·
the quarterfinals.

Mardi 5. 1001

•Dickau helps ·secure 'Zaga's invite

ve.

ftom Page II

Herd

••

honored as the team's only ing l.:&gt;Toya Turner, a former
senior in front of several - Ms. Basketball in Ohio,
thousand fans at her last guard TanY.., McClure and
home game.
guard Cairy Matter - susGeiger would not say if the tained injuries which either
Moua controversy had a shortened their careers or
bearing on .Burns' firing.
limited their effectiveness.
"I wouldn't say that was a
Geiger declined to answer
deciding factor, but it really,.. . when asked if the players
is a piece of the record;' became prone to injury
Geiger said.
because Burns worked them
He and Bums co;mtinued too hard in practice.
to talk after the Moua con"Everybody likes to have a
troversy, he said.
smoking gun or :t specific
"It was an awkward time, point;' at which the coach
but it was something we becomes expendable, he said.
worked through," he said. "Sometimes it ddesn't exist."
"Our relationship has always
k
A year ago, the Buc eyes
~e~';'; cordial and construe- went 22-11 and won the

Exit'

GOING HOME- Raven.s quarterback Elvis Grbac, who starred

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Kendall Newson
made a name for himself at the NFL scouting
combine.
Newson, whose name might not
be recognizable to most, had the
kind of workout at this weekend's combine
that forces NFL coaches to take notice.
·"The receiver at Middle Tennessee State
really helped himself," Minnesota Vikings
coach Mike Tice said Monday, the final day of
the NFL combine. "He caught everything and
some were Cris Carter-type catches."
.
Tice was speaking about Newson, a 6-foot2,185-pound receiver who appeared to be one
of the big winners in the rising . and falling
stock game that is played out annually in Indianapolis.
For SOI)le players, this is what the combine is
all about - an opportunity to shine.
Some do, some don't, some choose not to
even try
But Newson, who had 65 receptions for 796
yards and seven touchdowns as a senior, capitalized on the chance to work out in front of
·scouts from all 32 NFL teams, and he was one
player who clearly made an impression.
"He had a good workout," Cincinnati Bengals coach Dick LeBeau said. "Those kinds of
guys, from a lesser-known school, can really
help themselves here."
. It's not just the unknown players from the
unheralded schools who make -breakthroughs,
however.
Tice, who attended his first combine as head
coach this week, cited two other players Northwestern linebacker Napoleon Harris and
Auburl) offensive lineman Kendall Simmons
- who piqued the interest of personnel eva!-

NFL

osu-

Page ,B3

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 5, 2002

,. . . . . . .1

Some players make their
cases at scouting combine
..

'

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r

GivEAWAY

wantOd caring lor tho AN Houle Manager needed Sweeper buslnau tor oal• NOw houH- financing avail·

,_ lilllta: 7am·3f&gt;r11, ram-· dayohllt porltlon. E•collent
Spm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm- opponunlly lor tho rtght cen7am, coll740-91l2·5023.
dldala to wort&lt; willt an tx·
coptlonal nunolng tram. E•·
Golllpotlo:
Hotp Wantld: COOK
collont 111rting pay, oppor·
Moelcal Tranociptlonlll
Oallla COunty Council on tuniiiH lor profenlonal
Opltthalmlc Tach/ AN
Aging 11 talclng appllcatlonr growth and banelltl. Inter·
Houllio~ng Aide
lor a cool&lt;/ nutrttlon IIG. Thla ol\ould appoa111on It lull - · Exporl· ply ta: Rockaprlnge Rohabll·
Jaaklan:
once In lnoiiMional cooking tt.itlon Contor. 311758 Rock·
Nucloar - n a Toch
protrrrod. AppiiCaflona oro IQrlnal Ad, Pomeroy, 011tp
IIVIilobla at tho Sanlor R• 45780 or contact Kyla IM,
Alhana:
aourca Ctntar locatad at AN, SlaW Devolopmont CoCertified r.ttdlcol Alllotant 11117 State Route lBO. See ordlnator at 740-11112-BBDII.
0ane1o Plantz lor an appll·
Employor ollora Oli,CIIIent
oatiOn and oopy of lha job AN Suparvloor (FT), ooordl·
-~~~and wort&lt; tnYI!On· ~
hatlon·ouPtMtlon 01 patient
mont. ~ quallflod appi~ . GCCOA It an equal oppor· cara. Lloonord in OH and
centr naachDIJiy. An Equal lunlly employer
wv. Mull have P.P.S. ...
OpponunllyEmPioyor. Stnd
·
parlance and tamiDat w~h
-moolo: Muman
::'!",:l!,:luc\':,."'::t medicare and JCAHO
Rooour·
guldellnoo lor homo haalth.
;ri:,O~~
. flll3tJ~Oal· '\;::ur.:d~or'~"J:::/::0 ~~~~::1."11' aex.:::~~
Information
tact Pete Sommer, Modi
Coli (304)875,4005
Homo Hoalth, 430 2nd.
Klpll
Shoo Com
I Avo., P.O. 987, Galllpollo
CNA'o .~~~lonatn~ AuNowlo· ,_n~g
~'t,! OH 45531 . 81)0.481-8334
tantr. .,..~1
~re
for -•-Pol •Full blnclln package lncludBeing Mctptld For CNA'I
-at
nt lng haalth In au ranee and
I
Auldent Aoololants. Plrallnt
Gallpollo loca· 401 (k) Included. Also Hlr·
Many BenaiHo Available Hone. Apply at Store.
lng RN·FT Hold staff
Such As: Compatlilve Wag- Live In Mousekeopor 1
ea, Paid Meal1, Paid Vaca· Child Waloome Small Sat. URGENTLY
NEEDED·

cand-

porto to mention, $1,000. blllt, 3 8adroomo. cUllOm
(740)3117.QII12
oak trtm · 1 c:ablnelo, gao
flroploco, Iorge kltcharVdlnI'RorBSIONAL ling, 2 112 car garage on I
SE1McEs
1/2 acrn. 511g,900, Porter
~
• aru. (740)448-4514 til 6pm
or (740)4&lt;4e-3248 aftor &amp;pm
Will 00 Ironing In my
homo. (304)8YH383
New Root, Windows, Siding
•AX PROBlEMS? IRS &amp; Now llectc. Thtrt Bad•·
roomo, Ona Both, OOUbla
AND STATE Troubloa Cor Garage. Two Storage
Solvedl port &amp; p,_t No Bulldlnge, $82,000. Shadid
Coot Information, 1181 Morla)l l.ovtl Lot. (740}4&lt;48·114111
Book. Huny Callllob Myor
·
1-800-487·19112.
Partially Ra~lad hOme,
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full
1\IIINID DOWN ON
Buomant, Large UnattachIDCtAL IICUAITY /811? Od 2 ce~~· 127 KinoNoFHUnluaWeWinl
:a~'··
(740)4&lt;4! ·
1;888~5152~
.,
.
.
Want your own homo?
Own your own land? We dol
Call (740)448·3384 to qual"
, ly for your now dream
home.

j

AII-H-rch•lltfciU
In tttle 111 If npar 18
oulljlelto tho,_.
Folr ·""' oi11BB
wlllch maklt Hllllgclt10

lornlllll-..rororllln, or rnr l-Ion 10

currently aeeklng CNA'e or wood Cart Center, 1113 paraonable, communlolte Work At Home! PTIFT Free
STNA'I. PltaH apply ln Washington ~1., Ravana· well, muttlt.laklng, Hlf moll·

maManyiUCh

. .-•m
.,

r

contact Amber Clmpball

Computers/Internet Uaera lNG COMPANY hal lrnrne-

Found 2 OOgo Big 16 area. lnalructor at (740)4&lt;4e-7150' Wanted.

1 large BlackM'hlta male. 1
very small black &amp; Grav le-

'
Attention

$1500

$5000. ~·

mo/PT, dille Openings lor People

Hobaon train yanl. Reward.
1-801). 218 •7543
Phona 740-11112·1497
-~...,.....-....._.., www.Money·Oreama.com

~

Y.um SALE

I

"ATTENTION" Wor1c From
~:::::;::::;:::~· Homol Up 10 125·$75 HR
PT/FT Mallordar or lnttmoi
1118•248•1528 lor Frat
Y.um SAI.II).
Booklet!

.

GAUJPOUS

1
"--oiiiiiioiiiiil_.l

R~rf~J~~~·s

Rummage Saclo, Frtday Aroadlr Nurolng Cantor
Maron 8th, Groot .Unllod Fuii·Timt poelilono aro
Mothodlll Chun:h 8.00am· avallabla on afttmoon lhlft
~1~~;;-, and Part·11mt poolllono aro
avallabla on Midnight ohllt.
Wt ollll tMcolllnt banlllla
that lnttludo Hoa11n lnour·
anot, 401 K, Lilt lnouranoo,
Rick Paaraon Auotlon Com· compatlllvo Wlgll and op.
pony, lull tlma auotlonHr, po~unltltl ' lor advlnttt•
-pltla auatlan Htvlat. mont. II yau would lllct 10
Lloanaad -88.0hlo &amp; Wnt i~n ""'"-· apply In .PI~
YlrDinla, ao..·773·1711 Or ton btlwaen 8:00-4:00 or
301-773·14&lt;47.
~t16 NKltnryn lumttvlllt,

P

r

WANTI!D

ro BUY

I 'AioldltNuraln~Ctnttr

llpolla and Pomeroy loca·
tiona only. Apply In poraon.
.
Earn up 1o $350 In one day
pluo 1roa plcturH. Invito
your 1rtondl 10 your homo
for a prolooolonal picture
parly. (740)1178·2417
. EARN WHAT YOU AAE
. WOATHI
wonc From Homo
taB0-$7000 PT/I'T
One-on·Ont Training
Provldtdl

1

www(l=)ll_: ~oyNow.ao

m
IMPLOYMIHT .IIYIOII
aallla Mtlropolltln Hou~ng
AulhOrlty 111 luolc Aldge
Ad lldwell OH •1114
!7401.448·0aS1
~.,:
140 448...,11· will ~~
appl Olltona for 1 Mtlnlto
n1n111 lupetvleor. A rt•
eumunould ba hand dtllv-.

:.rad..:=l=~.tt~:

on or btloro Maroh 11.
~
1002. Tho Mllnttnanot
20·:10 Gallon Aquarium
parvlaor !Mil: plan, -~
Hood and Uallt Prtltrrod.
nalt and ovo- all ...
(30411152·:118f
latta lroa. Amuotmanl paoli of malnlananot, do;_..;__ _ _ _ _ _ Co. It looking for anllluolaa• valoprttwtt, ronovatlon and
Abaolula Top Dollar: u.e. tlo lndlvldualo oprlng/lurn· alto wortc on 140 apart•
Sllvar. Gold Colna. Prool· mer 2002 Mull.ba 1111111. trtenla. 121nctMdualltornttil
1111, Dlamonda, Gold 15 yoare inc! able 10 1ravo1. two bulkjlnga and
Ringo,
u.s. currency,· WM~Iy pay, living laallltltt, voniClllt and wiH b a M.T.S. Coin Shoo, 151 Saca· Contact ua at 740-2118-aaao olblt lor purohulng and Inond Avanuo, Oanlpollo, 740- .
vontory. llrong oomputor
Brlok Llyrro Noldod ror tkllla aro a muat. Tho lu·448-2142,
~-,-:-::-,--=:-:-:~- Now Oak HIU H.S. Call ]IIIVIoor wiH OYtrlll a 11oft
WantOd : Old Pinball Ml· (IOD)IIHIOO or Report to of31nd muat ba able to do
ahlntl, Jukt lloxre and Job lrtHor.
tho work of any mal nit•
Olhar Coin Oparatad Eq~~
nandt trnploytt 19QUiraa •
mont. Huntington. (304)4211- CABLE TV SA•E&amp;· Aogion· WOiklng knowltrlgo ln ge"'
3333
.
II 01blo martc.rlng &amp; audK· oral malntrnancr (bulldlnge
lng oompany It ottklng and tltH) tltctrlc. piuml&gt;
I \))'Ill~ 'II '\. I
n~hly motlvaltd rooponlf· lng, c:arponlry, htlflng and
-. I I~\ H I '
bit aaK..iarltrt for door·to- relrlgrratlon and vthlolt
iftiip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.. door oaltt In Point P - upkttp. Bu~aor and om·
ii&amp;
laraa. Valid drtvora lloonla ploy- .,;g lalca "on c.uIIFu W.oom and own dtpondablo trona- one - k at 1 Kme ovary •
portatlon art roqulrad. wHict. Muat ba abla10 111n
.•
SliM IMparltnttt protorrad. WOlle on or bafont April 1·
ATTENTION I W N d Floxlbl* houro paid training 2002 Good
f
II travtl opportunHiao 1111111!
·
·
Eaoo~
onvart ·naadOd lor
H•J!!!,!,• rn p"ft,io 1S1 000· bit. (1104)288·8830
$7~••0
ntornl·
Ovoralzad I.Oido Coli Lam•
tlonal Mall Ordar/E·Com· Core glvor lor Eldarty Man bah Trucking · (304)874•
men:t Com~ny Comploto In hlo homo. (740)448-4081 3113e
Tralnlng/Fraa Bookltt 1· or (740)448-3413.
'
800-885-11534
Full Tlmo I.PN, No WHk·
www.C.thF-.com
DATA eNT1IY
rndo, Holldayr, or Eve·
p - Cillrnolor Dooloro. nlnga ADoly In Paraon 11
AVONI All Ataatl To Buy or
WIN Train.
MOdiC.i ·Pilla, 831 St At
Sail. Shirley Speare, 304.
PC '*'!ulrod.
180 aalllpollo. (740)448·
575-t&lt;I.2G.
.1-800·240-1548, Oopt. 826 11!)20

·------pi
I

!Ut Mlln.llroal
Cootvlllt3 on
188)
7
(

40-f'Ji

au-

SiiY Home
Ba Your Own Boul
Earn up to
$500·$8000/M0
PT/FT
1 eoo-e 1o-o70li
..;... Cooh_And,
·
"""r.cam
NIW IDUCAIII CHILD
DIY, CIHTIII IN PT.

.

j

MoilllJ!Hot.u
FOR SALE

IHO

.
1

~

TRAINING

G lllpoll ~Coil
1
r ~rrrr
ega
(Carrero Close To Home)
Cell Todayl740-446-4367,

f-80Q.214.Q452,

dweUingaldv«ttttd In

thlo nowopopor '"'
llflillblo on •n equ11
opportunity-.

riO

HOMES

FOR., •• _

,-,.u.r..

10 Windsor Ct. Marga

rcoms .2.l/2baths,Full
Basement, Large Screened
Porch. Heated 2 car-ga·

remodeling, rooling, bath
100111s, drywall, Interior
painting, lrtm doors, !Mnctowo. Frwo Eotlmrtor.
(30411178-1138

roge.(304)675·2386

rio

~

r
I

lloo!P1i
FOR.,__
auna

$425/mo. (740)2.S.5084

Efficiency Apanment

een

Now through Ml
chooll your colora.

15th, Pilot

Program,

Neaded 304-738--7218

'
s Rooms, 2 Kltchlfll al)d 3
Bath, Nice. $SOOI mo ptu 1
dapoolt May 1111 on l.and
·
Contract . . (740)441 ·1337,
(740)448-4737, (740)387·
7015
S1 7 S
At
•4

Sadroomo,

j

MOIIIUHOMiili

FOR.,__
"""'

., __
FOR"""''

limited Or No Credit? Gov· 14ll70 2 bedroom, total

and
COB.

S

,.....,..

At Oakwood In Barboura· 150·00 deposit. No pets.
740•742·2 714
villa WV 304· 736·3409
'
·
Mobile Home with Frontl2bedroommobllehometor
back porch 1/2 acre ground rent, no pats, (740)992·
more or -.as. 1 large out 5858
·
building/bam. City water it 2 o-•
'~It ~-·
SOulltolde 304-875-3264
-room ~·• 1n

or 1.BQ0.87a-15967.

Farms,

LIVESTOCK

t

ttCi.aror.

40

M

r

!ITORCYIIEl

uw

1teii ...

r

r

r'o ... -- I

'

macks Pocket

Camper 21ft.

Hnlues &amp;CoRedlbles

pull
behmd
(304)882·3507

$3000...

trailer bunk house $8500.

reartines $650.00 304-675:
4230 after 6pm .

"

~;.:)448 ~

board

ft, Large Round Sales ol

I

7

!:..C==·~::.,..,-,-~.":: Wheat Hay,: $5.00/ bale.

}

on all orders
over 55.00
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
992-5908

Flat Work,

Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete

Free Estimates
5e · oh·10 dWV
rvana;

nn

' ·

Watocllne Special: 314 200
PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1" 200
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
Bran Compression Flitlnga
In Slock.
liON EVANS ENTERPRIBES Jackson, Ohio, 1-801).
537-9526

(740)245-5047

nllla,

r

elltracts, pepper, (304)875-5724.
spiCeS, desser1 mixes, sal·
S

veo and llnlmenta. C.ll740·
. 949-3027.

~

Stop &amp; Compare
740-992·1671

1 Lost 27lb.
in 32 days.
• Oil change $18.95
We stock all major
brands
Mike Hill
Owner

HOW'1\ARD L,

SPOUt

~-ee Estl'ma•es
no
11

949-1405 TFN

HERBALIFE
Independent
Distributor

100%
natural/Guaranteed

740-992-7036

I 04 Firth Stree~ Racine, Ohio

~

Pel 1 Mo

Hill's Self
Storage

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
35537 St. Rl. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720

Racine~ Ohio

12% Sweet Horae feed ................ $5.00/50
Sweet Stuff
12% Sweet Horae feed ................ $4.40150
Hunters Pride 21% dog food .........$6.95150
Economy Beef 12% stock feed ... $8.751100

4Sn1
740-8411-2217

Hours

Trace Mineral Blocka ...................... $4.75150
16% layer Crumbela ..................... $8.2515

7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1/1411

I

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

~~~:=~~~~:~

Carpentry, Masonary, Roofing,
Plumbing, Electrical, Painting, Decks,
Siding, Gutters, Pressure washing,
Heating/Cooling, Concrete

(740) 949-1521
1-877-466-1234

\""'ll•c-~&gt;1 ~·~ ...... ,~""""11 .. ~•~· , •., . ~......

_::.::...:=·! !

1111:\

iii•'• :

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Specializing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
·· ~
Garages, Pole Buildings. Concrete ~ 11 .
Roofs &amp; Siding
·
Commercial &amp; Res idential
~

(740) 992-39J87h D

Owner &amp; Operalor, o n ean

wom

village· offlceo by
March 20, 2002. The
bids ohould be eant
to tho auentlon of
Carol Howe Canlnlll.

LAI\11\I'S
( 11\S II{ I ( ll!l\
Snedgllzlng In:

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and
Additions

(3) 3, 4, &amp;, 2002

3tc

&amp;

.....!':!!!
·-ruu.....,...

1 Greenhouses

Formal Orassas lor Sile .

1116

Au:ros

Slzesi1· 1B. Can (740)379·
riFORiiiliiSiiAU:iiiia-.,1
2748
'
•
Frwo Gai Fumaces and Air 1988 Buick Skylartc V·B Au·

·

L.l_ _

•

Conditioner Estimates. Call to. 93,000 original miles. In
(740)448·6308 or 1-800· good ConditM&gt;n. Lootcs filca

291.oo911. 11 you don't call GTO/Chevlllo.
ua we both losel
(304)675·1192

$3650.

'

a:l tJ! :

; Classifleds.
I· • ·. Call
992~2155

:

DOG SHELTER
441-0107

.I

Many Income Tax Vehicles to Choose From Plus ·
A Great Selection.of Dependable Pre-Owned Cars
2 Blocks above McDonalds Lower Pomeroy, OH

33795 HilandJIJJ.
Pomeroy, Ohio

YOUR LAST STOP CAR SHOP
MON-FRI9 AM· 7 PM SAT 9 AM· 2:30PM

740-992-5232

WEST SHADE
BARJ;JER- SHOP
Closed Jan. 30, 31st,
Feb.lst
Open

HOURS 1·5 M·F

..

•'.

1991 Corsica, $1200. 1988
Mo,.,ury, $1100. 1887
BuM&gt;k, $750. Honda Cl~c.
$!1150. 18&amp;4 'GMC 314 Ton,
4x4, $7150. 1888 Foro 314
Ton Van, StOOD. (740)388·

mbc malt

1yr. llfl00
• baaglt pupt ,_It
10wkr

'·

• Res!denllal

ve,

auto., $2,600.

740·742·2367
1888 Grand Am, Rod, 4
cyl ., Sedan, Clean, Well
Kept, $4800. (74013117.()683

I 988 Monda Civic L.X, Auto.
Air, Cruiaa, PW, F'DL, 4
Door.
Black,
$6996 .
. (740)388•98711

YQUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room AddHiona A
Remodeling
• New G1regn
1 Electrical &amp; Plumbing
1 Rc:foflng &amp; Gutter•
• Ylnyl Siding &amp;: Painting
1 Patio and Porch Decka
1

Free Estimates
992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Sunset Home
tonstruction

WICK'S.
HAULDtrC and
' EXCAVATING

Garagea, Pole Bulldinga, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchen•, Drywall
&amp; More

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

Heat Mirror
Exclusive Dealer
Factory Direct

V. C. YOUNG Ill

New Hames, Room Additions,

11195 S· IO, $3495. 1888
Cnirokot, 4x4, $24D5.
1888 Corsica, S2tl86. 19114
Cavonor, 52495. 1997 Olda
AchltVI, Low Mllll, 14985.
CooK MOTORS (740)448·
0103
1ll95 Eaoon Wagon, 4 oyl.,
5 opood, 80,000 · mllre.
$2,200.: I ll90 Camero, rod,
\18, auto.. $1,800; 1992 Ca·
marc,

405 5th Street
New Hav,en, WV

Bryan Reevea

gfi06

·

FIELDS
PLUMBING

985·3616 Chrls

.,
•\

High&amp; Dry
Sell-Storage

P.ofl---i,

The, Frl 10·5:00 p.m.
Sat. 8:30 • 12:00
George K. Vac.
Feb. !·Marth I
Shop will be t'tl hours
&amp;: days Marth hi
Sorry ror you• lnconv.
111811 Ford Probe, 4 oyl. tur·
bo, Hl&amp;h Mlloa. Runs Good.
(7401 2·01184
.

740-667-0363

RIVERVIEW MOTORS ~~~
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE AREA

'

.

Factory Authorized
Case· IH Parts
Dealers

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

(740) 992-0739

Eve..Y•birdy
can find what
.
,·Jheyre
l~oking
., .. ,
forlnthe
Dally Se.ntinel

DEPOYSAD
PAB!S' .

All Makes Traclor &amp;
Equipment Parts

Owner: Terry Lamm

(304)895·

time only bought Brand 3740/(304)895·3769
now. can (304)875-2888 at·
IIi \\.., 1'11 1( 1 \ I lfl \.
ter 4pm or leave message.

!W
TFN

~1/fr.o...tfr...~~Jr...*'"'
!fl!!i fi!!!J fll.!!J fil.!~J IJII r} j II J\U

with shoe&amp;. one size 10 cot· Tobacco Plants for Sale.
ton Pink, Ona stze a Peri· Cal! Now and ord;er Plants!
winkle blue, One dress To reserve your earty spnng
bOUght at srtnany'aand one planting call Dewhurst
at tfia. Rose Tree.

mo.

~~~~~~
~:t~!!
~ It!~ ll!!l ll!!l ~·M;.'
il~!J ll~~-·

·i.J:7--::---~-,

For Sate : 2 prom dresses

1·.·.

/

29670 Bashan Road

Equine 12

estimate call Chat, 7&lt;10·992·
6323 .

•_

Remodeling

'~We

742-2455
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
M'· , t
8Jn enanceGutters· Down

'

• Complete

RftCIDE SERUICE CEnTER

Repairs 6 Parts
on all makes of
farm Equip. ·
and.Dozers

''"'""'"~ •"····~

Aound balae ot hay lor sale,
Tho Vlllago of
1200 lb.-1500 lb. bales. Middleport will be
740·B98·B2n leave mea- accepting blda for
tltlll0
property and llablllty
-H-=ay'-1-,B-rl-gh_t_·:-W-Ire-TI"'"e municipal Insurance
Strsv,:, Year 'Round Delivery coverage lor our
Walkins Products: Double &amp; Volume Discount Avalla· vlllagt. Sealed blda
atrength white and daltt va· bla.
Heritage
Farm. ntod to roach tho

.

r

10°o Discount

•New Homes
• Garages

7122/TFN

morris

= ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ,~

PUBLIC
NOTICES

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

FREE ESTIMATES

repair and more. For lree

r

• Bucket Truck

TFN

"mm madness" Equipment
217 E. 2nd

·New Craftsman Ullar 7Hfli

- - - - - ' - - - - wiring, new serv•ce or re99, Harley Davidson, 1200 pairs. Master licensed elec·
.$portstar/sport, low miLes trlclan. Rkl8nour Electrical,

Kiln dried and SUrfaced. $12/aa. (740)992·7458

S400i

rs

Jayc~

992-5479

month.

Stove. Elnplro Brand· "*II RAIN
• 1041 .4, (740)742-3146
WV000306. 304-675·1788.
lor dolalls. (740)379·2111 .
r::;;~~~~:=;iiii,;:~~;;;;;~;=;;:~""';;ru
Walnut Lumber. 800 ft. 111 . 1000 lb. round bales of hay, II
~ ~~Jj·,~ ~::u!!iltV~.l$. ~."L~ -~

*"'

.

1978

H

Authorized Agent

OMiili

OI'OR

77.1:10: •

=•

::2'

M

~

• Stump Grinding

in this

Jeff Warner Ins.

'

I

j

=-ltMind

r

CAMPERs &amp;

• Top • RemoYGI • Trim

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

space for
$50 per

I

1983 Goldwlng Aspencaae,
SETTLEMENT Low Mileage, E.collent

it.: &amp;
"• •· · G l'" .

Couerall on Sundays

Tree Service

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
(OMMEIOAL aoc! IISIDIJIIIAl
FREE ESTIMATES
7~D-992-7599

Cellular

ELECJ'RICAli
REFRIGERATION
SterllnQ Cartridge Electric FUNDING. FOR MORE IN· pondltfon, Lots of Chrome &amp; l.c~-riiilililiililiiiiiiiiililor-i·
Typewriter, 525. (3041895· FO CONTACT CHARUE .lghts, $3500. (740)386·
3739
10'v0 (101)7834418
9109 balare 8pm
"Residential or C?mmerclal

'-------Stova, Old S1yla Wood
Burning
Kitchen ·"·Cook

Progressive

lng, carpentr;, doors, win· ._.;...W.;....;,V.;;IIIl.:;;3;.;1.;;7;.;12;....~.~ .__;;....:.;:;...;~~-.1
dows, baths, mobile home

.,..:::====:.:-==::....
HEREFORDS.
THESE
Sears Kenmore Sewing Ma· BUUS QUAUFV FOR TOchine, $50. Smllh Cooona BACCO

Thursdays

JONES'

BUILDERS IDC.

Advertise

RS:i~ 'Kits 1r:b.~~5~56;;•

een: 339·3765:

·

f·

7

1

I

r

AUC·

a

·es

ACf'FSSO~

air,
cruise,
tilt, PW,
AMIFM
Cassette,
dual P~.
air - - - - - - - -

TION, MAYSVILLE, KV. BO
ANGUS, 15 POLLED

www.orvb.com/bannett

\II I' I II \ 'd 11-, I

1:

Auro PARTS &amp;

Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870,
1·800·287·0576.
(304)895: 97 Aslro Van. 56,000 miles1 Rogers Waterproofing.

gas tuma· 3319
HIelectrll
Efl~lency Heat

COOLING (740}448-9411 OK

982"2187 •
::---:---,----, '
Storage Spacalorrent 403:) •1
square feet. wUh metal
shelving. Located in City of
Point Pleaunt. Inquire at ~

(e.

j

or (740)446-3248 oiler 8pm.

package.
. SALE. MONDAY MARCH 21:M1eave message.
BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; 4TH. S:30PM AT THE NEW

..

(:!04)874-0102 ·

(741J) 992·3194
992• 6635

Progressive top une

(740)2&lt;15-5864

Chocolate Chip son and PS, PL.
CD
Player, sntee. Local references fur·
...... War Star Poco' black (740)441-1302, (740)379· nished. Established 1975·

.

Euery Thul'tdl!l
6 Sundlg
liGon Open 4:30
forty birds start

Ce~. Stereo, P?wer head ,
Completety Rebu11t, L~ or
Extras, Excellent Condition,
Cell Eve'nlngs after 8:00,

Pumps. featuring Tappans BOYD BEEF CATTLE baga ASS seats 7 Ilk' C&amp;CGaneraiHomaMalnta·
Frae Incredible warranty PERFORMANCE
BULL new ' Must' Bf!ll! {7..0)379·· nance- Painting, vinyl sld·

ern-- Sank Flna~· Only olactrlc, $300.00 a monlh, 18x80 oltoo, $100/mo. 740- .
'"'''"'

(lO'XlO' li 10'x20')

BISSELL

P1111e1111 fagles
BIIIG02111

6:30

E~"''fd'l molor, Now Seats, L-----....l~

• .
t1on. (304)895·3044 or
95. Ranger, Blue, 8 hft kit, Leave a Message (3041848·

I
I

.,.,..,'"""'

middleport,

ton, B ~t pI od ~

condition,
$14,000.
(740)371J.2427
FOld 8N Tractor new palm
12 vo~. purrs like a ~lien:
$329S. Caii(740)4&lt;4 1•5886 ,

gas furnaces Including oil s·ayre

'

~
SPACE

1985 Checkmate, 235 HPf

Beech\

eve· u.....,. r o
r•ntm 1•
nl~g. {740~88-0173 ~ay· b':"~ ~~~P.fs, ~s~ To

R - .ntlal Horne OWnera foundation also AOHA and 2798
Tappan HI efflclencv 90 plus APHA hOrses for sale

Uv· :

Ii

112

Allls·Chalmers Dozer HO..
11 ?ower Shih, EliCeuem time.

r

· (740 379·2111

{740)448-7300

2 bedroom 2 Full Bath&amp;,
Bath$7,Fully EqulpJ*i Kitch· 1b Hud Sub~lz.al:rc 1
' Central Heat &amp; Air. Includes on, 001 month. (740)387·
r.
· or '
elderty(304)87
and dlaablod
OH ••
stove, living room furniture, 0299
••
6 79

: 12x1B Elevated Deck ask·
' lng $25,500. OBO. Call
(304)675-6281 after 7:00
p.m.

·

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97

NEW AND USED S T E E L ( J I
-...tJnl41 '"1
StHI Beams, Pipe Roblr 4·H GOATS FOR SALE .
YANiWDs&amp;
P/I
For Concrete, ·Angla, Chan· Full Blood Boer, Percentage •
..,.
• tiiijp;;;;;-~---~
nel. Fill Bar. Stool Grating kids and females. Rooorvo
' r10
HOME
CONTRACTORS, INC.
For Draine, Driveways I now lor 4·H prolocta. Pro- 1994 Red F·250 4x4 '
IMPRoVEMENTS,
Racine , Ohio 45771
Walkways. l&amp;l Scrap Met· ven Champion Bloodli~s . 130,000 mn8s. $7,o6o firm : ..,
~~~~~~~.·~~: _(740,....,.,'2,.,45.,...Q48.,..,...5_•n..,•r_8pm.,....._ .c,(7.,..40,.,'388::-c·so-=ss=-c:-::--=--:BASEMENT
74D-985·3948
4:30pm. Closed Thursday, AT STlJD·AQHA StaiHons- 1999 Rod zR2 S.IO, 4x4,
WATERPROOFING
CONCREli/BLOCI/BR!CK
Saturday
I
Sunday. "Chlpolhls Zlppothar • Zips Loaded. Auto, 66,000 miles, Unconditional llletlme guar· • Footer.~, Walls, Sieps •

Opporiunltltt.
·.
Kltchan, Dining Room,
lng Room, Bedroom. 527151 ·
montn
pluo
depos1t.'
(740)3117·7015
~
._
···-·
:
Twin River Towor10ccapt· .
lng appllcatlona now tor ·•
Unilll available
'
2
Mareh 200

3 Bedroom on Route 2.
New Havan, (304)882·1107
(304)1175-5332
New 14x70, 3 brl2blh. Only
lillr"'""::~~~~.., '
down &amp; $189. per/mo. ~:,:'= ~~a::"'GOi' , rlO
HouaiHow 1·.·.'
3 bad room, In Mlddltpo ..• , ,$975
Coli Nlkk1740·385-7871
· •
GooDs
All Malcao ol l.awn Moworo; call Tom Andoraon . alter
lOgo, CIA, $2751 manth. · - - - - - - ·
Small Englnoo; Korootnt apm, (740)9112,-3348.
Now Double Wlda on Pri· (740)888·8405.
•
Haaltrt and Salomandoro 5yr old houot on 1.87 vall Proprrty, 1-5 Acroa. 2 Bedroom Troller on a; 8. Al&gt;llflancao: AooondlilonOd .
Ropalrad.
Call
Mlkt ooroo 2 mllaa OUIIklt Vln- Call (740)44G-3tl83 10 pro- f28Cimo Watw Furnlohad Wuhtri, 0~, flla'r:,
:~t.~~~~ aTE~~~~~ (740)446-7804
ton. :leA, 2 Bath, LarGe u.. quanly.
. ·
Dopoelt · and Aatoranttai ~':t=i 'lb
wHh -~~~. a part-time, 1 All of your horN ~Ira, ad· lng Room With FirtPIIOI, Over 10 used homat prlotd RtqUirad.
No
Ptlt. MIY\Ig ~ p..,.,
Bubolltutee. HI or G!O,. dKiono
romodtllng. 24hr tOdO Covered Porch, undor $3000. Will halp wHh (740)288-1001
Oily Mlylio. 740-448-77H. 1
qulrod. Mull bl 11 yHra amorgenoy Htvkll unlor 10xl0 out bulldlnQ, Aaldng dlllvtry. Call Klrona, 740- 2br lba In Count
,
old. IMparltnttt wlih pro· olllztno dlsoount.' Uyro. hi,OOO. (740)311•8830
315·-·
~ro~IAIIok' porohal u 7 ,or lale: llaoondltlonld
aohool ohlldron proltrrod. IMp. (:104)8711·2018
Capo Cod 8tylo Homo·
ma 1100. 01110111. ~tl. "" wlllttrl, fll)'trt and rtlrltt
101. land flltouma I oov,
•all alA Full lallmont
qulrad. No l"tlo. (104)1111-'' ara1011. Thitmpaoni Allllllor ltllor: Ptroon~ol, "" 1, ~~:~ ~f, 1AJPr 1 and'aara~ Atmodaltd In
3117or~ao..)Mt-1108
tnot. :1407 Jaoltaon,... 1
lo• 41, Pt. PI-nt, WV 1 u tlo g, 1740'\'i~" 7: n ' t gge (otrpot llnttltum wl.,.
"'nllf;.;.;.:.(7,ao.."""'.::7'-:lo""l'IN~.;..·--::- .
28880
"'l•
..
or
dOWI
turnaG.
control
air
3
'"·
1
t/1
bltlt
In
llotltr
"'
1740)44
·
otpllo and ,0 01/ ~tnoecl
- . You pay utllllltt and Clood Utllt.AIII!III-,,. ·
=I
P:g. ?u:"~ JI Hll' lltOtlltnt care lot _ . book ~I rd. lhoaa ~ng llldat
dtpooit, (740)111·11 Ia
OOndlliOilti lnd Olllrlll•.;
I'TII't ~:, 1 IM boolclai In my OMttlan oounlry "d. 1117 000. (740)44l·
...
"rift Yllw ldaal tHd. Wultlll, Drytlll,.
'
Par 1 01 II'IO!IIt ""'"""
Ia~
010 . IIOO)IH·~ or vlelt Home. Non-lmokor, Mo· 03111
ue imllno:
blla. (ao..)IU·3110 .
ft
oaa,
~·
No
~
~
llanaee 1171 y,.,.
·
0 11 110 12110
WWHoNIWCalh'lboii.OOtn
Cltorget Portaltlt lawmlll, ~Loft, 1.1· ..... ~....
::
or i!oartc, 740·4&lt;41· (1~441-nM
.. .
Pt~·lltrte "N and Part•Hma doni haul your logt to lha Aroa. Atklng 178,000.
I •
.
Mollohln ..,_ 101 Citric
LPN'• lor 100 bad nurtlng mill Jutt otlf 304-1111-1817. (740)317· 71113
~umlahOd one ballroom OhiPII AOiii'iiOrt.r Cllllo
laolll1y. lltOtlltnt Qpportun~ Moving and Hauling: CIHn For 1111 by owner: Nlot bl·
mobllt homo, t1to11to hilt (7401441·7&lt;144 , ..
tv for ontlltrlglng and rt- Out lulldlnga, lalamanll, loval homo on 1 aero naar
· pump,
II. 1:100.00 O!U. ~rrr . . , _ , luy;
warding fMptlltnot. llgn Oartgtl, !olattl, Troth ChHitr• . Thraa bedroom,
plut tit
I, roftrt-. ftnanttlnti, 10 IIIYt..,.. It •
on bonul, graa1 ota~ rotH, Ito. Odd Jobt. Cali two oath
740•HI
·
oaah. Vital Mllltr Card. •
tiCOol'*'t roguiiiOry oompl~ (740)448·7804
lamll .:;..,onol:rn~~~~·
•
Dtlv• 1•11111t 1101. •
· - hiiiOty, lntlrtllad
y
Nw
In111•
APAIIrMIN'I1
oandklatH llhOUid IPQiy to: Will labytlt In mr homo. tun room. ow oontra
'
1'011 Rr.Nr
Ntw and Uorct Pumllura ;
~oolcaprlnfll Ronalinlttuon Monday. Saturdey. COli ~~:o~:~:rbut~~~ PmJ: 55 Acrtl Htnderaon on US _
• llloro balow Holiday Inn 1&lt;1- :
Center, 311788 ~oclcop~ngo (740)317-o437 Alk lor Pog· vall. (740)11111·301
~!· 35 at lnllrototlon. 1 d a bad
nauga, Ohio. Ultd .,...._ '
Aoad, . Pomeroy, Ohlo gy Saundtro.
..e,ooo (304)548·S.81
an
room apart- lola, drtiHrt, ohllta, •
1
487te, KylaiM, AN, Dl.
Now Homo. Vinyl Siding, Count ltorntt n~ loll " : uml~
unlur• bttlt, aouohtt, bunlcbada, •
lor of llaff Oevtiopmont.
Shingle Root. 3 Bedroomil loca
A '
' n
• """'"' daooolt rt- baby badl, antartalnmont '
740·88a·8801. Equal Op.
a lath, S4H Down. Call P..:.roy~tho:_33 ~~ ~ ~\T'· nil pall, 140-M2· ..-_ _ , , dl-. 1· ;
port.unity Employer Enoour·
(740)448·3170
·
740 448 4111.
•·
112 211171or dali11o.
aging Workplaae Dlvartlly.
.......,.._
·
EMOtlltnt for bulldl a aoro
ll
~olllblt Poraen .wantOd lor
OftioRnJNITY Quiet lilting, yo~ oloaa 10 1111 lot 2 mllto lro~Autland ~.\,= Apart·
ANriQtJJII
,
llaht houotkaaplng &amp;gena~
town. Noar golf Q(llurH and on crlmtano Ad. (740)742·
• ''
I
•~
af halllh care monitoring of 11 AT6T Paypttona Aoulll oily pool. 3 IR, 2BA. LA 2803
Nawtr AamodtiOd, a Sad- .
,
oxpootlllg ltmalo. M·F, 8-4. 11 P~me locol oltao Hu with wood bumtlf large Ill·
room Apt ltovo/ AoiHfllro• luy or 1111. AIYtrlna Anti· '
(740)441.09IJII
q - 11114 lilt Main on :
11: Fraa Info. 800-800-:Mro In kltcnOfl wHh otk oablnrta, Lot lor Sail- ~""'· 2 112 tor, Utllliloo ~aid,
abovt ground pool w!th aoroo, oiHrad &amp; raa&lt;1y for month. 4e OIIYt 11 .. 1111 124 I. -roy. 740- ,
11
~=1 ~:!); 1 ;:::a'~'r!' Ftl~
dOOle .and privacy tanoa. building, grovtl drlvoway, (740)441-384&amp;
• M2·21H. Auoa Moore, •
Ctnaad ART/ CAT. MonINOTICII
SIO,OOO. (7401441-1813
&amp; oltctrlo avollrbla,
owner.
.
•
,
OHIO V'LLEY p B
Portor
area. · Alklng Tl•lnQ Appl~tlont:
dayFriday,
8:00am~
U LISH· Ranch Styit 3 Bedroom, 1 a13 HI Coli (740~48' 31 Wool 2 Bedroom 'Riwntho 'T' '
5:00pm. Co..,.utlvo Wage, lNG CO. rooommoncto that Bath, l.arge LA, DR, Kitch- &lt;l&amp;t4 I ' 8-B 1740 448 houfl APart~ I - I
,
Attlrorntnt Plan, HHHh ln- you do butlnau with paoplt on, CIA, 3 Clr Garage, 3 3248 ;.~ 8pm or
• wator
Bawogi Tralil
and '
euranoa. Contaat: Bow· you know, and 'lOT 10 lind AcrH, $711,000. (740)378·
113501Mo 740 445' 0001 '
l
man'r _ , . , 70 Pina money lltrough tho mall until 21527
RJw.J!'sr,\'11£ ~
''
· ~:lEi~;EJ
St.. Oallloollo, OH 48831 . you havo lnvotllgelad tho
· ""
Onr and · Two ladroom
(740)448-7253
ol1rrlng.
ArHrlng to oouth, otlllng
nANII!D
Alllrtmanto In Mlddloport.
• well balow 0-'lll. GrHn
·
(140)9112·111117.
r.,.11111i
Tlklng applloatlont for ox· Siart Your Bualntlf To· Sohooo. 4 badroomo, 3 lull Croctll "!!rtlty buyer looking ";;~;;;a-;;;;;;;;;:
parlonoad
malntononca doy., Pnmo Shopping Can- batho, ln(]tound pool, tor 3-5 btclroom houtl to P0111110y, Iorge 2 bado-.., . Antitlllf ladroom oulto &amp;
man for grHnhoutr -ra· tor Spaoa Available At AI· $182;000. For more detallo buy, Gollla, Maaon . or Naylora Aun, wl&lt;l, llror, lu~ baby FumlluN. Sot of
liOn, pay bllad on txporl· .fordabla Rate. Sprtng Vallty a appointment. (740)4&lt;48· Molgo, ploara call . Jim. nlohad, lg. yard•potlo, no MHrtlanct- &amp; onoo, (740)843-1248 ·
Pilla, Call740·448.fl10t . 31311
(7401992·3187
pall, (740)11112pi- to mcl1ah.
·

-lie ,

lion,

=·

892·6084. Equal Hou1lng .

'

.

33 Super Swampers, =82;::00.:__ _--;,--5spd., CD, Nice Truck,
..
$10 500 (740)753 3598
11997 lnsbruck 30 it. lravel

for ·

Apartmento In Ml
.'
Rtntlrt From $278-$348. Cell 740-~

beerlng1 .

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; Spreader (740)44B·2514
~00LINO · '740)""941•
'

rage. NattKal Gal &amp; City
Water. Pill end Chlldre~ :::;.;__ _ _ _ __
Welcome. Deposit. Rent Gracious living, 1 and 2 v
$350. Landlord- (91 0~5- bedroom apartments at Vlf.. '
7422, Manager· (740)446- loge Manor .and

looters· undt&lt;plnnlng ond
up lo 50F of uil~ llnaa. 31144

ax:le

rear

New. Very Clean., Exceuam - - -.- - -- TrLICk, $ 5000 _ (740 )44 1• 1997 F1flh Wh"l sprinter
lj.V 30ft. Very Good Condl·
0013

Aont. UtiiiUea Included, ..
$3e,llOO.OD- 28'x4B'· total 71 Trw Act. 3 Bedroom, 2 $300 Slnglt, $325 Couple. ~
oioc!rlc- 3 btdroom· 2 bath· Balll, Baremont and Ga· 1740)288-! 972 or (740)446-

2x8 exterior wall· thermopane wlndowe- ... akyllghts
and much, much mort. Free
deliwlry· aatup- concrete

F-150,

S1 000. (740)367·7187

~
'
-v
•
•
1-800-872·5187
Troy Bill Tiller Brand New.
'
·
•
'tfNW.orvb.comlbennett
Never UIICI. 5 H.P. $650. For Sale' 89 Ford Ranger
Murray Lawn Mower· 16 (304)e7s.3824
PU· Blue: Ext. cab, 4 cvl., 5
' HP 42" cut Good Condi·
Speed, Good Condition,
' $200 ' )
T -~.-K·
$1800. Coli (7&lt;10)448-4514

[
,

Spaclouo 2bl. I ba OUpiex ·
. Wllher/Dryor Hookup ·
. MSO. month. Dlc&gt;oei1IRtlor·
·1 ·3 Bedroomo Forooloaacl once Required. No Pota. In'
Momat From Sf 98/Mo .. 4% Point Plraoant (740)4&lt;48-'
Down, 30 Yrara 11 8.5% 4270
,
APR. For •llllnDt, 1!00-3111.
3323 Ext 170G.
IEAUTifUL
APART···
MENTI AT IUOOET PAl-,.
2 bedroom, 1 112 bath CIS AT JACKIDN EBhoure lor rant In Pornoooy. TATU, 152 w - Drive ·
Full wHh ~. tram t2V7 1o 1383, Wllk to ;
kitchen applirncH, wid ohop &amp; movlto. Coli 740hoolwpl, no pato. S42S1mo 448-2888. Equal Moualng
piur utllllirl rant Opportunity
llllllablt, rolaro""", de.
'
porlt, (740)11112-51502
Chrltty'o Family Living,..
33140- Lima Act Rut· "
2 BR Houtl, Chaal\lro, OH. land, Ohio, 740-742:7403. ·
Control Air, No Pota, Apartmant homo and trallar..
1375/mo. pluo depooit. rontail cOmmtftlltl •
(740)448 400 after 8pm
Ironto 'avail- for - · "
;
3 badroomhornaMinarovlllt v.canclttnow.
Clfta, river vltw, $450 par Clean 2 br. W/D Hookup. ,
month, raltranorr required, Roloranoci and DopooH. No
dapoolt 19qUirOd, no pall, Poll. (304)875-61152
.
740·11112-em after 5pm.
·
Cou Clean, Roomy 2br. quiet··
3 l!adroom - I n
"' buldlng In Paint P1raaanL
try, Uvlng Room, Kltchan, $300 month + AotorcmM ~
Bath, Laundry Room, Gar· +Doi&gt;oolt (740)446-2200 '
dan Spol,
No Prta,
.
'
~

.1984

E:

or,....

-2000--Be-nahaa--P-ro-c-ln:_u_lt
plpao, Never rcic:ad. Needo

&amp; electric fumaces In· New Holland 489 9ft Hayhl.
ding hi efficiency heat na, New Guards and Sickle,
t~M.mp syalems. wa carry 8 Excellent
Condition.
~pleta line ol Mobile (740)245--5815
!'Dme parta &amp; accassories. New Holland ManUre

I

PI•••, ltmltdon or
Booklet! 800•21 8- 1591
dltcrlmlnollon."
Colo'r Mobile Homoo,
15288 US 50 EaacllA~hano.
NaOd 5 IOdloo 10 rell Avon. ,
(740)448-336B
Thlt nawrpapor.not 1 Ohlo 45701 • (74015 2 1972·
1
knowingly·
(WANTED~
! 1980 Hllc10st, Nice Condl·
- - l o r lUI
lion, 2 BR, Gu Fum....
Sorlouo ooplo To Wortc
--ltln
I COfllral AC, 1 Owner,
From Homo Cal 1-888-e18- vlollllon olthollw. Our , $1500. 1740)256•1914
0694
orrllrNOy
,
-SI-...,.•slllllzcom
lnt-•--oll
· .. .,..._.
·
- · - ·~·
191111141170 o a -

to Process Claims. $16·
Reg 190-05·12748.
Free Booklet. 888·229-62,88 $45/hr. Pctentlal. Will train. 1.,
uJ
mala. Both have red collars.
Leaders Wanted
24hr. Recording or vlslt
PC Required. Call Now! 7 ·-nANII!D
1hi
"'o
Do
Can 304 •937·3118
lntern~tlonalmallorder,free ·www.weat syour'S.com
Days 1--800-935-3971 E~et
.ll
219
Lcat:
Brown, Slack, &amp; booklet printing provided!
Domino's now laking appl· •
White, old, male Beagle,
catiOns for aare driwlrs, Gal~ Mothera Oreaml
AE Construction

r:
r

ed'l'lltiM •any
pm.....,ce,llmltallanor
dlHrlmh\ltlon bUtd 011
,...., color, Nllgton. .._.

cera with a comprehensive ply Dally ·Mon.·Sun. 11-4. Looai . Buolnou: Saorrtary Tec,740-592-68111 .
rehab department. We are Como SH Uol Ravtno· Poaltlon Avallrbla. Mull ba Wantacll sOrtoua Pooplo To

parson or call Jane Oo~lng wood, VN. Aaltroncoo A• vatad. willing to wortc In
tor mora Information at qulrod.
waronouoa atmoaphero.
(740)446-7150
CNA'I LPN'I
Send Aaaumo to: W.VA.
•
Elactrlc, Atln: Human .Re·
Are you looking tor tho op- Do you Wanl mort Pay? . aourctO, PO BOll BBBB,
port lly 10 jol 8 win I
More Shllto?
unand
n
~ng
MoreCholoH?
Huntington, WV 25773.
=----,.,---'-- l:"nrow~~':ro I~
Cal Copitcl N ro1
EOEIMIFNIH
mix brord cutr pup.
•
...
'Tho p 1 - .:!__~
,
call740-9411-2127
·duolry? Scenic Hille NurolngtWWIW "~- MoCiurer R-uront now
=c.;.;;.;.;.-"-'-"'-"·= - Center 11 offering Nurae
ot nurolng oaiVIcoo.
hiring all 3 locatlona, lull or
House to Take Down for Ill ,Aide Training Claue1 be· Thi1 means we Pay rnor.. ptlrt•time, plok up appllca·
2324 Lincoln Ave. (304)875- "'nnl~ Mareh 11, 2002. It Ia We have mOfO cholcM. Col lion at location &amp; bn~ back
"a 75 ...
'..
1545 cr (304)875--6981
hour course, lasting for a Recru 1ter •bd
l'
ay. 1·800 • between
9:30a.m
&amp;
T
11 days, Monday lh10ugh
576·8348
!O:OOam, Monday lhru Sat·
~~
I Friday 8:30 to 4:30. This Ia
or visit uo Online
urctay.
FOUND
a groat opportunftyi Stop by
www.Capitolnuraa.com
· - - - - - - · toclay tor an application or
MEDICAIJOENTAL BILL·
Black &amp; Whlla Border
Colly/Colly Mix. Rod Collie
ltlol\- Mbt Young aduH
maloo.
Very
Loving.
,.75-4013 l.oeva """'"
(304,..
- ·

•·

1A r

Mav

I

.=

Ir'6

·

1979 Ford F·250, 4x4, PS.
PB, Auto, Excellent Condl·
lion. $6500. (740)446-6627

·
·
1990 GMC Club Cab, 350
tnglne, Automatic, 4x4,
Good Condition, High Miles,
$8500 OBO. (740)448·1021
· (740)448.9 742
leave menage, name and l99 1 GMC sonoma Ext
Ill HOME OWNERS phone number.
Cab, Topper, 4x4. 134K
rtherm &amp; Coleman gas,
.
mlils, Auto, AC, TIC, Lots

ciW111 881 tor .s5o·. can
tl40)448-4335 B.O!J.9.00pm
loveseat, $100. Hldebod ,
11100. Uvlng Room Chair,
. Full Size Mattress ,

dl1ion• (740)367"'15
~

I

20 Horse Yardman Riding

~ke New fur Mooton .Jackfit·. Slze:i medium (14 •1&amp;) .

1 1993 Honda 300 4-Tru:,
S2 !500. Both ver; good oon-

aHcrdabla used cars and
,
trucks 740-949-2451
99 FISher 16 open V Bot·
tom Boat with New Gal .
TRUCKS
Trailer. No Motor, $2000.
FOR SAlE
(740)245-9109
.

•

- - - - - - - Mower, 52" cut, $1.000. 42"
Size Watorbed, 12 sell propelled brush hog, 1!
awtrt underneath , mlr· Horse Honda Engine to
ed bookcase headboard , use behind 4·wheeler.
150. (740)448-6962
$I ooo (740)3B8.Q438
'

1999 Yamahll 350 Big Saar
.,. with txlrll, $3,100 and

j

I1)2 '

FARM

F.QlrJrMENr

. Coil Roo Evans, 1· ~
531-11528.

~~,Gi~o~m~ ~'"*$-~~on~.,.~~~r~~~§~

-..y, Darot Grcup Home. lor· 100 bad II!IIIOd nursing ,_Rainbow &amp; Kirby part., ablelo quaiUiod buyers. 0%
now paying minimum wage, facility. Tltio 11 a lullllme bago &amp; bolla and 10 many down. 1600 iq h, 2 112

Wed Frl 9.00am· HIRs Nursing Center offers a
or''
· 4o)3BB· wonderfulemplovment op- tiona, Employtt Oltcounll ary, Some eabvslttlng Ae· ptumadonors,earn$50to
0811 17
ponunlty, We provide elCctl· &amp; Avall~bllli lnaurance, In· ,.,ired. (740 )357•2308
$60 per week for 2 Of 3
So459.
Ap- houra weakly. Cell Sara·
lent skilled and inlermadlate terested Appllc:ants
T

E.

~c~1t

or.....,

IIFuW.oom

I

CRESS G E

JET
AERATION
&amp; Rebuilt

niHI
.. leiatlial" ............
far,......
no liNIN
thM
U. DOMoftt.
..... OOO'J!fllld
IIOLJCiea:
PuiiiiiNng ,.....tht
.. - .
Nflot,
• . . . . ...,
MY ume.by U..rrwMd
... only the flrtt lnllrUon.
_,.._ • ..,....INtPIIII6Aitatromthepctl! a noromiMionoflft ...atiw&amp;:OOIIL CorrwlticN,_.._,...Intt.ftNicu!! bktdltiOn.
MN _..... •A•,... ..-.
10 ... ,....... ,.., ttou.lntAat
·TN•

IjB6 Hw&gt;W.oom 11116

HFuW.oom

~

~~Ired, NewMOTORS In r10

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 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

All 01spt1y: 12 Noon 2

HOW IQ. WRITE Ati

FRuns &amp;

VECETAIIUS

i

Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740)· 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOdGJ... or Fax To (740) 4.cwooa
or Fax To ~~992~~2~1~57~-~~o~r~Fax~To (304) 675-52iiiiil'-34.;___::-----:--(}ff/ee lfo~~
t(rv-lcfafM
~u fll.r
Display Ads
Includes Free Yard Sale Sign! S '
Monday thru Friday
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Publlcttlon
Sund•v Dlsplav: 1:00
Thursday for Sundavs

·

j

Dally Sentinel• Page B 5

1

$3400/0BD. Muat sell.
(304)674-0292 (304)882·
=38::.c7.::B_·-:::::-:c::--::--,.Honda XR 200. E•collont
•lvoly'o Auto Sa""· 1991 Condition. (740)2&lt;15-5615
Ford Aarootar van, St400.
1989 Pontiac Fireblro. V8,
BoATS &amp; MaroRs 1
5opd, $1800. 1990 Pootiac
FOR SALE
Grond·Am; $1200. 1984

R ENS. You cut Mercury Cougar $1200
jRepaJra. Problems? N"eed 16.00 per bushel, AlreadY 1990 Pontiac Grand-Am:
l!funect? Coli Tho Piano Dr. cut $12.00 per bushel. $1200 111112 Pontile Grand·
~40~4~~~8~452~5~~;;(~ Available
Now through Am s1400 Sl
he
March. Charles McKean ca~ Call (740&gt;=:~ ap
t Harbalife Dis- Farm. pfaone (740}448-9442
·
'bulor, Call For Product Or
Star Auto Sales, across
~Jnlly. (740)4&lt;41-1982
from bank In Racine, Ohio,

Regt11ter

Sentinel

Business Ocys Prior To

•

~rubba Plano· Tuning &amp;

REACH OVER 285,000 .PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

)895-3

;, Comrtary Loto lor Salt.
""'"" Location, Mound Mill.

In one week With us

tltribune·

sea,

iS • (

C.UJ. C~t~o~tlly. OH

.To Place

~ 1r18 ~~ 1r MrniKcr~

r=:=lt

The

Bedllnen •Nelf Bar
• Tonneue Cover
• Vent~laor • 8ug

oHtullng ·~lmt11ont
oOI'Ivtt• Sand •Toptoll
•Mulch

Shield &amp;: Full Line
or Other Accessories
I

I ' \.' ,j ,,,

"

II Ill

Beauty
,10m

and
brains

gorg
II l'nOIIeup
.,_
. .I,C_
..In
..... .....gooct
r....,.a 10.. to 1Cio1nlotlftllc!Goaall ly,

II

advanc•d fDrmuka

I\ ,j \ I I j, II I til I II,,,

4/1 01

MARY KAY"

....., ...... hal .. ""'

(740) 99 2-5822

need to kJolt QfMII cn:l

llvewnart.

Paige C!bek

arir\A &amp; Rt 7 Pizza EXIlre!~sn;

Independent Beauty

992·9200 or 949·4900
Special 16" - 5 Item
FREE 2 Liter Pepsi
$14.99 '

Consultant

I I~ High Street
Pomeroy. OH ~5769

7 ..0-992-2802
www.mar~.y. c:omlpalpclttlt

l

\

�P-ee 8

I• The Dally SenUnel

Tuesday, March 5, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Eastem:_Whiteoak •tale of the tape,' 7

NJ:A Cro..word Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

ca-

ACROSS

•

H caution
40 Nell WMtld

1 l'ylllon

.1 c-IHirlp

4 OOeM

42 CP11ol!*1
8 T - wwd .. "Allie"11 Annex
•7 Pabonop
12 Thll ,..,. 51 Conlourid

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24 Walch
chllno

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DOWN
,

1 Rood

ohouldor
Bogus
buller
3 Puppy·
chow bronc!
4 Body trunk

27 Wol~

2

· Informed
28 Mac rtvola

Helen Rowland, a
U.S. journalist, wrote
in "Reflections of a
Bachelor
Girl"
(1903), "When a ·girl

32 Tick off

33 Wretched
M Vlllaln'o

10 Port ol MHz
otonp
14 Thuun
37 Ramole
19 Give
' buHon
medicine 39 Trouble
20 Alloo obbr. 41 Pub algn (2
22 WMII
wda.) .

cover

23 Common

onllupUc
2• Not buoy
25 Flxn o
oq-k

26 Rador

5 Rolkl..,

object
IIUgh
aub(.
28 Two of 1
35 Vole alum
8 Mone&lt;ode
· kind
31 102, 1o Colo
word
28 Unlv.
37 Conaumtr 7 Goller Ernie
d011r.•
ado
I About hoH 30 Detectlve'o
31 Mind INdol ua
oulgnmtnt
·tr'o oblllly 9 Hod debto
31 Tool

ex-

Whets inside

43 Dull
" LPo'

46 "OthiiO"

hllvy

48 Chitchat.
48 --for the
money

50 Bargoln

Lllt.TAiliANS
Allt CiOIN6

TO 60

IANANAl!
•,

•

,..

""'I

WI~FOI"C£ TI\()IQ{I'm.£,

c~~-.~ '&lt;ou TElL

US NMT
Tr\~IS?'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAiLYSENTINEl.COM

Deaths
Valerie Didenko, BB
Richard VanMeter, 90
Margaret Ellis, 92
Loshia Mitchell, 98
Details. 3

WE HAVE A l.EFT-FIELPER
""'"0 ISN'T THAT TALL ..

IHCI-IES FROM TOP TO &amp;OTTOM ...

Sout

-.a.
MARCH 51

!TUESDAY

was

the contract.

•
Wedm-sday. Marc:h 6, 2002
The I'OS~ibility of achieving
your goals ill the.· ·year aht.·ad
:m.• very s;ood. The types .of
projl'cts you select ro go after
· \viii ' determine ju"t how tntlch'
you produce. Scl'k o'ut the bi g

ones.
2()) Friend~ and assodate~ will
be glad ro ~ec you, btlt yo ur

could w~.·;•r out tasr
if you start toHing your
'\1 ei~ht arm111d, or start acting
,velr.:om~.·

and mi~hty. Know
where to ·look fnr romance
and you'JI.find it ; The A~tm~
hif;th

Graph

I.

L

I~

.

I.

y p I OC

I I I I I

-appear

"Our oven is on the blink.· one
woman told her friend. 'It's been
that way ever since my daughter
ldec1ded to bake a--- • -."

&amp;

.

Mat ~.: hm;lkl·r

imtautly

revc:~ls

which sigm are ro~
nwntic;\Jiy p~rft'l't for you.
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker.
c./o thh n..-wspaper, P.O: Uox
1758, Murr;ty . Hill Station,

New York, NY 1015&lt;•.
All..IES (March 21-April
19) In ordt:r to be ;lble to accomplish your goal~. prepare
501111.' alternative comsc~ you
could t;tke, just in. c;ue you
run into a few roadblocks.

The IJllexpccteJ can happen
I at thi~ time .
TAURUS. (April 20-May
20) At a g11tlu.·ring, ~onieone
. pte~~'nt 'ou.ld be more of ca
n1a11ipulativc busybody than · ~

~

Complore the ohuoklo

q~otod

. 1jii' by filling In the missing oword1
you develop from Slop No. 3 below.

Lotteries ·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .

:OHIO

Tussle- Point ·Ideal· Gravel- PLASTERED
At a famous ski resort there had been many accidents resulting in broken bones. The Ski Patrol posted
a sign which read: "People who drink and ski may get
PLASTERED."

'Pick 3: 3·1-8
¥ick c: 5-0-4-9

1

:auckeye 5: 1-12-16·20·30

i1 '8irtbdl\Y

:Pick 3 day: 3·6·2
'Pick C day: 2-Ei-8-7
W.VA.

A&amp;.. .
....u.~•r

conversationalist. Don't let
this penon use you for his or

her purpost-s.
GEMINI (May 2i-Junc
20) It's good to be lmpeful
and to reach for the ~tars, but ·
your optimism 111ust be ba~cJ
:~r hiev :1ble

objectives. If .
you're unrealistic, you'll b~

disll)Jpointt:d.
CANCEl~

Qunc 21 -July
22) Do the neces~ary stuff
fir~t. bccausc.• the 111orc tim'-!
p;l~Sl'~, the Krcatcr the dl ;mce~
an.: that you'll g:~.·t ~idetrachd.
and ne ver get bac~ to what
nccJs tube done .
. LEO Quly 23- Aug. 22)
No one can live up to your
demands if thev are filunlbl
upon fanciti1l eXp~.·ctatiuus. Ue
re:~listic, comider~rc and cooper&lt;~tive with all your friends
and f.1mily .:tlikc.
VlltGO (Aug. 23 - ~cpt.
22) If ~omething keeps your
mate from comp let in~ plans
)"0\1 ];JiJ Ullt, don't ;llluw :m
ar~umcnt to emue over it. Ue
undcrstandiu~ and toJcrant.
We all need our ow1npac.·e.

Llllll..A (Sept. 23-0't. 23)
Crit icizing the cfToru of pcr50115 who try ..w b..- helpfid ro
you wo,.J·d be totally out of '

Petitions
rejected

: POMEROY - The petitions of 10 Democratic and
P..epublicari . Central Comrruitee candidates were rejected by the Meig; . County
Board of Elections last week.
Those candidates will not
·oii' "' their respective
on
May 7.
ballots
Rita Smith, director of the
Board of Elections, said the
petitions of Democnts Kenneth E. Imboden, Middleport
2,Anna M. Layne, Racine Village, Joyce Quillen, Racine
Precinct, and Bobby J. Ord,
Syracuse Village, and Republicans Tom Reuter, Bedford,
Gary Dennis Evans, Lebanon,
Wilma J. Davidson, East ltutland,
Eugene
Triplett,
Pomeroy 2, Kay Hill, Syracuse Village, and Jason A. Baer,
Minersville, were disqualified.
The petitions were considered invalid because of
insufficient signatures or
because they were improperly completed -by the candidates, Smith said.

~~:

·..

'

•

~=·==·==·==-~
D I T MI

:Daily 3: 5-7-2

Daily 4: 5-3-2-0
(lsli 25: 6·8-11-13-15-18
line . If y~u aren't grateful,
they'll find n·i\~ons for to h•ydown th t'ir tools.'
.
SCORI'JO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Usually. you're a generous
person who · gladly .~hares
things with others. However,
you might be so protective o.f
yo~r personal interests, you
may bchotve in a tightwad

·Index
1 Section- 1D Pips

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Oear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

fashion .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Most of th• dav
should go well for you, bu·t

there's alw;1ys the possibility
that )rou could get too sl."'f-involvcd and create a problem
where 1ione should exist.
CAi'lt iCORN (Dec. 22J;m. I CJ) So long as ewrything •
is exciting and your pals share
thr;ir time and resomces with
you, all will be well. Once
Cveryb.ody goes away. the
gloomier f.1cct! of your personal ity m;~y ~merge.
AQUAIUUS ()an . 20•Fcb. 19) lfy9u choose to do a
favor for a Friend, make cer. tiin you do ~o in a m:mner
where she doesn't feel obli -,
}!;ated. It could mar the rela tionship if it isn't handled
triCLfully.

Pluse see Sprlnc, 3

Details. 2

.

13

I

upon semiblc and potcnti;llly'

PISCES (Feb. 20- Mnrch

i al Indiana Pacer! (Live)

uc Y

that West had only
three clubs. If West ·
had had four, he
could have continued
his attack on that suit,
fatally reducing de clarer's trump length.
And South was lucky
that West didn't consider a diamond shift.
at trick two, which
would have defeated

I

$2,1 00 for fireworks, representing a balance left over
from last year, and donations
received to date. $7,000 is the
fund-raising goaL
Mary Wise, a member of the
July 4 Committee, said· the
celebration will also include a
program and entertainment in
Dave Diles Park, a baseball
tournam ent
m
General
Hartinger Park, and, possibly, a

Hl(h:&amp;Os.Lowr:COs

I

I

day's monthly meeting. Committee members are Edison
Baker, Myron Duffield, Mick
Childs and Steve Dunfee.
The association kicked off
its "Bang for Your Buck" fundraising campaign for July 4
fireworks on Monday. Collection canisters have been placed
in local businesses and a thermometer measuring progress
on 'the project will be placed
on the '.'T."
The association now has

Weather

f----r.:.G""UrF-rE""D:;....-1

Now
declarer
couldn't be stopp~d~r
from ruffing his last
diah1ond
in the .
dummy,
drawing
trumps, and cashing ,.
13
the thh heart. I k
·s

PEANUTS
ACC911.DIN6 TO 'TilE RULES. A 6LOVE MUST
ME~RE NO MORE TloiAN TWELVE

I

Senior
guard
Chris Lyons, right,
who is averaging
points
per
. 21
game during the
Eastern basketball
team's playoff run.
shoots free throws
during
practice
Tuesday.
Lyons.
coach
Howie
Caldwell
and
the Eagles are
preparing
to
face M owrystown Whiteoak
in the Divi$ioh
IV district finals
Friday at th~
Ohio
University Convocation
CenteL Both
. teams enter
the game with ,
20-3 records.
Eastern hopes to
pick up the win
and a return trip to
the Sweet 16 at the
regional semi-finals
next
week
in
Co lumbus.
Presale tickets
for the game are
avai lable at the
Eastern
High
School office for
$5 apiece.
The tip-off is set
for 6:15p.m.
(Dan Polcyn)

Spotlight: Relay for Life

O

led another heart, discarding dummy's re- .
mammg diamond.

MIDDLEPORT Now
that Middleport's efforts to
raise funds for July 4 fireworks
are under way, the ·Middleport
Community Association has
turned its attention to Alumni
Weekend and a communitywide yard sale.
Special events to be hosted
by the association for visiting
alumni will be organized by a
committee apRointed at Tues-

Escobar out for season, 6

S©~JJlA-~t-~s·

Ir;-

Eagles get ready

52 Sever8l pll.

----

T~t

MIDDLEPORT

Community Association
plans spring events ·

IUCCIISOI'I

45 Middle
Eoo....,..

53 "hHp~changes the attentions
.. ."
54 Debt leHtrl
of all the other men
of her acquaintance
for the inattention of
just one." Sadly, that
is true, and explains in
great part why the divorce rate is so high.
In today' s deal, one
of those words is relevant -- and good luck
in working out which
one! You are in four
spades. West leads the
club ace, then tries to
cash the -king .. How
would you continue?
On round two,
North gives a second
negative with two
no-trump er three
clubs, according to
CELEBRITY CIPHER
partnership choice.
by Luis Campos
South ruffed the
Ceiebri1y Cipher cl)'piOgroma ano created from qootattono by famouo
second club, cashed
people, past and pre11nt. Each letter In the cipher stands fot another.
Todays clue: E squats K
his top hearts, and led
'JR
RXYDOH
YWHOH'N
RB
a third heart. When
West followed suit,
LSHFJNW
LDY
YWH
F J R Z;
South paid attention
to the possibilities. If
I
RBRH
I X R L H IXSSHZ
hearts were 3-3,
South couldn't fail.
ZHMBOFHZ
LDY
YWH
Dut what if East was
DREJRZ.'
now out of hearts?
Surely East could
NWXEHNCHXOH
overruff the dummy,
and things would be
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The QOOd lord was good lo me: He
gave me a slrong body, a good rlghl arm, and a weak mind.' grim. (They would be
OiuvDean
·
worse than grim; the
THAT DAILY
WOlD'
comract would be
'UZZIU
GAM
down.) So, exchang- - - - - - - ldhed by CLAY I. ,OLLAN _.;__ _ __ I
ing a dangerous ruff
Rearrange letters o, the
for a safe one, declarer
four scrambled wcrds be·
pitched a diamond low to form four simple words.
from the dummy. ·
West shifted to a
T 0 GUD U
1
diamond, but South
-,-12:;-..-,-..-,-.,-~·-.,-1--l
. won with his ace and .
.
.
.
.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TODI\'1, WE~
· G,OING 10 ~1'-1
' fl.roJ\ 1'&lt;\Ct-lE.'{,
C.Lt&gt;.5S ~

· ~lie.

oertner ·

' openlna:lead: • Q

THE
,.. BORN LOSER

at cononlzed

21 Aoh'l

SY

iuarnes,

110 Skltallp

viiOr

South

Hometown Newspaper

57 Hone'o pit
51 , _ _

18 F - of
a.lril
mind
58 Eorly Juz

\'ulnerabll.•· North·Sfluth

Melp County's

110fy

Uon toy

4 A 7J

•

"t''--·
51 l:onv

15=1c
11 FM nol•
17 Conotruc-

, A A K Q 10 I !

~alrr

Ill
52 Stop

-lype

13 lmpoll-

5
B-9
10

5
4
3 .

3
6,7
2

C 2Q02 Onlo Valley Publishing Co.

Wolfe
CORPORATE SPONSOR- Farmers Bank and Savings Co. is a corporate sponsor of this ye&lt;Jr's
Meigs County Relay for Life. PaiJI Reed, bank president, presents a ceremonial check for
$1,000 to Jennifer Hamon, American Cancer Society income development director, center, and
JoAnn Crisp, Relay for Life chairman. (Charlene Hoeflich)
'

Farmers Bank backs
this year's ·Relay for Life
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTiNEL.COM

POMEROY -Teams are being organized
and a corporate sponsor has been secured in
preparation for the local American Cancer
Society's annual Relay for Life to be held May
3 and 4 at Eastern High School.
JoAnn Crisp, chairman of the fund-raising
event, report's that more than a dozen teams
have already signed up to participate. Others
interested in organizing a team are asked to
contact her at 949-2365 for informacion.
Teams, she explained, consist of from 10 to
15 members with each one on the team committed to raising at least $100. The money can
come from team activities, inCtividual projects,
or solicited donations , Crisp said.
In the past, there have been as many as 20
team's participating in the ' Relay for Life, the
signature event of the American Cancer So.ciety. As in previous years, activities will begin at
6 p.m. on May 3, will continue through the
night and until noon on May 4, to symbolize
that "cancer never sleeps," said Crisp.
For the first time in recent years, a corporate
sponsor has been secured. This year it is Farmers Bank and Savill_gs Co. which last week met
with the committee.
Paul Reed, bank president, presented a cere-

As a kick-off to the spring fundraising activities the Relay for Life
Committee is seonsoring a
· ·'7ribute to Elvis night at the
Meigs Middle School on March 15,
7 p.m. featuring Dvvight ICenhower,
Elvis impersonator.
monial check for $1,000 to C risp and Jenn ifer
Hamon, ACS's income development director.
The bank has been a part of th e Relay for
Life 'program here through the luminary program for several years and moving to bei11g a
corporate sponsor is its way of co ntinuing that
commitment.
As a kick-off to the spring fund - raising
activities the R.elay for Lite Comm ittee is
sponsorin g a '1Tribute to Elvis" .night at the
Meib" Middle School on March 15,7 p.m . featuring Dwight Icenhower, Elvis impersonator.
Theme will be "A Night at the Movies."
Tickets are on sale at Farmers l:larik, the
Meigs County Tourism Office, Meig; County
Li cense Bureau in Pomeroy; Shear Illusions in
Middl eport, and the Home National Bank in
Racine.

Home National Bank
Bv TONY M. lEACH
TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
. RACINE. After 5~
years in the ban'king busine-ss, Tom Wolfe i~ retiring.
Wolfe, Iattner president
and current vice prc·sident of
Hom e Nation al Bank in
Racine, h:ts decided to
exchange his position of
bank executive for the more
subdued roles of grandfather
and outdoor enthusi ast.
When asked how he · got
started in the banking busic
ne ss, Wolfe said it ;,II began
111 1949 when his mother
spoke to C.ll Crow, ' former .
Home Nattona] Bank preSI · derlt, about posSible employmcnt opportunrtres wrthrn
the lo cal bankrng rndustry.
"My mother happened to
see Mr. C row on the str&lt;-et
one day and asked him if
there were any positions
open at the bank," said
Wolfe. "He said there was, so
1 went in, filled out an application, and the rest is histo~
ry."
'
. During his five decades of
service, Wolfe said he has
performed just about every
job imaginable at the bank
and is very· thankful for having such a long and succ essful career.
'Tve been very fortunate
to h ave had such an incrcdi-

. Did you know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation is
offering grant monies for Transitional Work Programs?
Oid you know this program can reduce your workers' comp costs?
Call Holzer Work Link to see how this pr6gram can be provided ot

'

from

~~----~"!"'~~..:no""c:=:.h~a~rg~e to state funded employers.
•
Call '

WOLFE RETIRES - March
30 will be Tom Wolfe's last
day on the job at Home
National Bank. In celebration of his career and com- ·
munity service, a party will
be held on March 16 at the
Southern High School gymnasium. (Tony M, Leach)
ble JOb &lt;lllsl to have met so
many nin· people dtiring my
career," said Walk '' However, afts·r 54 years in the businL·ss , I'm ready to rr-l;1x ;
spend more time with 1ny

wonderfu l grandchildren
and grc'.lt gr,md children and
COll(t'lltrat t'

011

llllllh.'fOUS

outdoor activi ties.''
Besides hr s produ c tiw
coreer with Home National

Ple•se see Wolfe, 3 ·

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover
. the Holzer· D(ffel'ence
www .holzer .org

446·5733 or
1·866·308·2266
I .

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