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'
, . B8 • The Deily Sentinel

www.mydllllyMnttnel.com

Monday, March 18, 2002

•

PHILLIP

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ROBOTMAN

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Vulner~ble :

Nortll

EISl

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AllpUI

Dbl .

Wdo.)

20 Twofold
21 Bllnd'o
bookl
22 Turf '111
23 Angol

Openln&amp; lt!lllt. A K

TI-l' FELLERS WOULDN'T LET UP ON

M'f "LEMONY• FRESM SCENT"!!

'

-...

.......

" ""
' "
'

Tf-IEY 5~Y
~i
YOU U'·l'\''i Wit-&lt; ;
TI-\U&lt;\ ~LL ...

.
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•

BIG NATE
I

r

All GETiti'IC.

&amp;oDV- !.LAMMED

oUT

THEI'.E! 501\E OF
THOSE GU'l'S OUTOIEIGH
liE SY Fll"TY I"OU!j\)S I

NEE C TO C.ET

B I GI&amp;E~

TO

31~
llnlmll

Melp County's

47 lllth proof
·

50 "COSmo"

rival
51 PortoiTNT
52

7 - Kippur
8 Fake .
8 Arm bono
1D Thwort

53 Wk. dey
54 Group
55 Go1z or

11 Govo

;.~:Iller

What's inside

S Gllhlr In, .30 !;l!'~kdroalft"
•• cropa
~

'C.HE.EZ.

DOODI.E"~

LIC. UP!

imfif'·t.

34 Tempa Bay

eleven
31 Boring
37 Rodeo gear
31 Mova

Last October, I paid
toppers
ouppar
28 Gellha'a
19 Not hlro
quickly
a visit to the Bay
lltlre
Musial
20 Bald hood 40 RaviN lhe
Area. When in Mon29 Toke-22
bookl
(.,_ recog.
DOWN
23 Pllgrlmaa- 41 BllniU
terey, I found a copy
nlad)
24 "lan1 lhol
laflliiiiiiO
'o f Milton C. Work's
30 Leafy
1 Singer
42 Store
vaaellble
Orblaon
much?"
43 Porta pepe
"Auction
Bridge
31 AW..
2 Declore
25 Eorrlng'a 44 Hold out
Complete" (John C .
Thurman
3 Zilch
place
45 NY biiiiJ*k
33 Triangular
4 ScoHiah
26 Welle&amp;'
48 Fait pltine
Winston Co ., 1926).
uu
por1
. "Cnlzen"
47 s....l piL
The book is fasci:¥ Cowboy'•
5 hemovs
27 Dtldln
49 Fooled
nating. for example,
..,..;b;.;le4id....,rr.-wlrelti~pa-"· "lr-2"P.8r-A-clor Sherif
Work recommends
ope1iing one of a suit
in first or second position when holding
ace-king- or acequeen-jack-fifth and .
out!
This sounds bizarre,
but in auction bridge.
there was no reason
to bid a game or slam.
If you stopped in one
heart and won I 0 or
12 tricks, . you received the game or
slam bonus; respectively. (If you had a
weaker suit, you were
expected to hold
compensating values
CELEBRITY CIPHER
on the side.)
by Luis Campoa
However, most of
Colobrily Cipher cryptogram• are croaiOd ~om quolatlonl by IIIIIOUI
Work's card-play recpeop{e, paat and· pre~t. Each lett~r In lha cipher 1tandl for ...ather1
ommendations . are
Today's clue: W equals M
still relevant today.
'TZJJ,
AFZ TZSAFZEWSG
for example: "The
NSYV
CYCAD
LZ.EXZGA
best way to fight a No
Trump is to try to esXFSGXZ
KC
ESYG
SGV
FZ
tablish a long suit;
against a suit contract
W Y IF A
uz EYIFA.'
there is little advantage in establishin~;' a
(NLKEAN SGGKPGXZE)
suit because the estabRZEED
VKIIZAA
lished cards will not
'
win tricks unless DePREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Be awful nice to 'em aolng up, be. cause ·you're gonna .meet 'em all comlng down.'
clarer's trumps can be
-Jimmy 01!'&amp;nte
exhausted; which is
rarely possible. ThereWDRD
THAT DAIU
fore, against a suit
GAMI
PUULU
contract the scheme
of the leader should
R:earrange laHars of
four tergmbled words
be to wil'\ tricks with
his own and his part- low to form four, simple
ner's high cards beB L E R I M
fore the Declarer can f-1 -,--r-r-rrl
1
discard."
. L-=1;:;::,1
In this deal, how r
should the play pro- . 1· S A L E I
I
......,;::;;
ceed in four hearts? •
2
3
What is the best de1
'
fense if West is the
"'
_.......,_~
o
· · My boss hired his riiece as his
declarer in four clubs?
0 GE S 0 .
assistant. To assure her that she
::-r--1
This is the auction
4
,.
I
1
'1would have to work very hard, he
.
. .
.lectured, "There is no elevator to
in the book, takeout
(or informatory, as
success. You have to take the
Work calls it) double
AQI NUT
and all. ·
s
I~
~:~·plate tho ehueklo Quoted
East must overtake
. .
by filling In the missing words .
you develop from step No. 3 b8low.
the club king with his
~ ~RINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
ace and shift to the
~
lHfSE SQUARES
diamond jack or nine.
When needing three
~i]t~SCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
quick tricks in a suit
_ _..:T~O;..,:;;G;;;,El;...:,A;;,N;;;SW=E;.;.R_ _ _
like this, lead high.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Similarly, against
Enamel- Young- Unwed- Circus- DANCING
four clubs by West,
Granny always gave good advice to youngsters who
after North leads the
were afraid to try something new. She told them that
heart jack, South
they couldn't be afraid of stepping on toes if you want to
should overtake and
learn DANCING.
switch to the spade~a
·
nme.
.

com......

I

~~~~:::;-1__.

As many as five
local deaths
blamed on dmg
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOGI&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
All-Star action at URG, 5

I

-r..,.-r:l

f-·

I COULDN'T SLEEP 'LAST
N\61-lT .. I KEPT WORRVING
ABOUT SCHOOL, AND ABOUT
LIFE AND ABOUT EIJER'r'THIN6 ..

1 DIDN'T

ALL Nl61lT LONG I KEPT
WORRVIN6 TI-IAT TI-lE MOON
GOIN6 TO FALL ON MV I-lEAD..

SLEEP
WELL, ElniER ...

I

l:~

I I I

':.&gt;_.....,....,_

I-0 "

_._._....I._.__._.__.

'1iJllr

~·
Ttte~day, March liJ, 2002
Events in the \'ear ahead
wuld plate you 0;1 an ex.c iting new path, which will !~ad
to much succeu and fulfill-

ment of yom desire~·. Move
fearlessly in the direction that

the f.1tes dictate.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
-- An important goal can be
achieved, but not nece~arily
thrOllg:h your traditional tactics. Let your imagln&lt;ttion lead
you into new realms of think- ·
ing. Trying to pat ch up a broken rom an ce? The AstroGr~ph Matchmaker can . help
you understand what to do to
m~ke the relatiQnship WQrk.
Mail S2.7S to Matchmaker,
c/o this m·wspaper, P.O. Dox

17SR, Murray Hill Station,
New York . NY 10156.

ARIES (Mareh 21-April 19)
-- Teiling it like it h will
prove to be very effective for
you , so don 't hesitate to speak 1
or write what you think. frills
will not be required to make
your point.

TAURUS (April 20- May
20) -- Although there m:ty be

nothing in sight to tell you
how to gcr what you ,._.~nt,
with a littl e bit of mental ma.,

.,

\
I

neuvt"ring, you should be able

to reel it in .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-~ Rely on your judgment
when in a competitive situation . Chances are that you 'II
possess analytical powers a trikeener than thme . with

ne

whom you 'll be associating . .
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- From thi§ day forward,
pro~ress involving a matter
you ve had to handle solely
on your own until now
should become mort! substan- ·
tial. Sorely-needed assistance
will come on board.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -De extra attentive to details
concerning a ' concept of
yours. Make sure that they 're
well thought-ou/t be cause
they're going to c.arry considenble weight with others, and
they'll act on them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi . 22)
-- You might be asked to rake
the lead in an arrangement

where you share a mutual in ~
terest with o thers . You'rC
well- equipped for this role, so
assume it enthusiastically.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)The exchange of idea§ with
progressive friends or associ -

an idea engineered by another. You might be the one
chosen to bring it into fruition .

AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb.
19) .. _ This should be a nice

day for you, because whe'rever
you go and whatever you do,
th ose. with whom you'll associate will find you an ex tremely charming and charilmacic: person .

able in 1996.
"We've seen a major change
in the last five years in those
cases where drug abuse is suspected in a death," Hunter
said. ''I'm not seeing high
Oxycontin levels, but I'm seeing signs of the drug in uutopsy lab reports, and sometimes
I'm · seeing the drug mixed
with other drllgs.
"There are also visible signs
of O")'contin abuse at the
death scenes." Hunter said.

Weather
Fund-raiser
planned

hoop banquet

Cleanup
begins

CHESTER -. Chester
Township will begin the
clean up of the cemeteries
on March 25. Anyone wishing to save flowers or grave
blankets should remove
them before this time.

COMPUTER CLASS -Helen Swartz of Coolville, front, and Dale Little of Pomeroy, work on their
computer skills as they participate In a beginner computer class currently being qffered to
senior citizens at the Meigs Senior Center. (Tony M. Leach)

Comput~r dass

helps
seniors develop skills
·~

"

W.VA.
Dally l: 2-0·8
D1lly 4: 7-6-3-9
Casli l5: 1-3-11-15-21-25

1. Section -·ao Paps
Calendar
2
Classifieds
7·9
Comics
. 10
Dear Abby
2
Editorials
4
Movies
3
Obituaries
3
Sports
5-7
c 2002 Ohio Valley Publishill8 Co.

ur recently purchased my first

New Senior Center
program a hit so far
Bv

OHIO
Pick l: 9-7-2
Pick 4: 5-6-1-5
Buckeye 5: 14-16-22-23-36
Pick l day: 2-4·3
· Pick 4 day: 0-0-0-7

Please SM ·Drup. l

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Eastem boys
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern boys basketballba~­
quet will be Sunday at 2:30
p. m·. at the high school
gym. Each family is asked to
bring a vegetable and
dessert. Athletic boosters
will provide meat, drinks
and table service.

Some of those signs, Hunter
said, include the drug in
homes where no prescription
has been issued, Oxycontin
tablets in bottles marked for
oth er medications, and, in one
case, plates' and straws which
;ndicated that the drug was
crushed and snorted ~·
common method of abusing
the drug.
"Misuse of the drug has clef-

Board hears
proposals for ·
use of buildings
BY

POMEROY - Southern
High School Biology 2' class
will hold a ful'\d-raiser on Friday at Wendy's in Pomeroy
from 4-8 p.m. Wendy's will
donate a percentage of the
"dine-in" sale to the Biology
class. All proceeds will be
used for the class' European
trip this summer.

Index
sively seek out knowledge and
creative thinking.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Several loose ends that
have been left danglins conceming an important finiancial
matter can be tied down.
Things are shaping ·up rather
nicely at this time.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- There 's a strong
po5sibility that you'll be called
upon to help a friend 'or asso- '
ciate who is in dire need of
yol.lr knowledge and creacive
thinkin g tQ help him/her sort
things out.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) -- EXciting conditions
could prevail at work -due to

according to the ODADASU
Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network.
Derived from opium and
containing the active ingredient oxycodone, thl' drug, originally created to relieve the
chronic pain associated with
cancer, back injuries, arthritis
and migraine, is produced by
Purdue ' Pharma, a Stanford,
Conn.-based drug company. It
received FDA appr~val in
1995 and became readily avail-

.

•
ates could prove to be veTy
fortunate for , you. Aggres-

POMEROY
Once
hailed as a "miracle drug,"
OX)'contin, a drug associated
with hundreds of deaths across
the country, is also responsible

for as many as five deaths in
Meigs County since its introduction, according to Meigs
County Coroner Douglas
Hunter.
The Ohio Department of
Alcohol and Drug Addiction
Services last month reported a
udisturbing incr4!ase" in the
abuse of the drug, across racial
populations, and in almost
every region of the state. The
drug has taken a particularly
vicious toll on Ohio Us youth,

GROWING KNOWLEDGE

I I I

PEANUTS

ntin abuse inaeasing

32 MIICIIIany

0

HOL..P MY

OWN 1\G.AINS.T THOSE
GOO"'$ OUT THERE'
r NEED To

Hometown Newspaper

-

abbr.
wile
41· Walklld'a
11 Get ciNn (2
loland

Neither

IJMII. . Wnt

·sw w..•

lhud
17 Oeralnt'l

KIT
10 I I

J&gt;toall!r. South

Vt&gt;MI'I% .

t_,..,..

hlppol
43 lril Clnlel'l
18 Comle&gt;book 48 Pllchert

• J tJ

•AKQ"

~,N\aTW/P-~NE ·
~'(Nt;:,l/&lt;l:)l)\006 .

•

31

12F_.....,. 31W13 Wlftloed
· 8erlel mo.
- · fizz 40
hMd
14 -gin
41 lAndi
Whorelo

'

.. It J 4

kits to be offered, 3

ACROSS 31 OoYI.
ln-lgalor
1 Pualled lhe
(hyph.)

ALDER

.....

Free cancer

NEA Cro11word Pu.n le

IIUD$111:

TONY

M.

WCH

.I

TLEACHctMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A new computer class is
being offered at the Meigs Senior Center for
senior citizens who can't tell the difference
between an e-mail and a mouse pad.
In today's society, computers have become as
commonplace as VCRs and cellular phones;
however, for many senior citizens, the thought
of QWning a computer, let alone operating one,
is stiU a scary concept.
fortunately, for seniors in Meigs County, a
new computer class is helping alleviate those
fears.
Tammy Queen, instructor of the new class,
said today's se11iors are, in fact, becoming less
afraid of computers and inore interested in
·how to incorporate them into their daily lives.
"This class is designed to eduqte seniors on
the basics of computer usage;' said Queen.
"Seniors are curious about computers and are
ready to make the transition from being scared
to prepared."
Queen said the computer class is becoming
very popular and seniors from all over the
county have signed up to participate.

computer and decided to take this
class so I could understand it better.
In the short amount of time I've
attended the class, I've already seen
a huge improvement in my overall
computer skills."
Dale Uttle, Pomeroy

"! recently purchased my first computer and
decided to take this class so I could understand
it better," said Dale Little of Pomeroy. "In the
short amount of time I've attended the class,
I've already seen a huge improvement in my
.overall computer skills."
Said Helen Swartz of Coolville, "This class is
a barrel of fun and, most importantly, I'm
learning how to use a computer. The whole
process is very exciting. I always thought operating a computer would be difficult, but once
r S.tarted, it was easier than I thought."
The computer class takes place every Monday, from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m., in the conference
room at the senior center. Those wishing to
participate must register ahead of time so as to
reserve a spot in the class, which iS limited to
five people per session.
For tnore information, contact Queen · at
992-2681; Ext. 238.

POMEROY -Two proposa1s for use of school properties to be vacated when the new buildings are completed
next year were present~d at Monday night's meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
A delegation from the Meigs Cooj.rrative Parish presented a plan for use of the Pomeroy Elementary School, while
Danny Dav·is of the Rutland Fire Department talked about
Rutland Elementary School site as, a plate for construction
of a new fire house.
Both were told that no decision on disposition will be
made until after April 1, the advertised deadline for accepting applications. It was noted that neither .property can be
transferred directly to either entity but would have to go
through county or village officials.
·
Letters from both the Village of Pomeroy and the Meigs
County commissioners were presented indicating their
willingness to accept Pomeroy Elementary School and then
donate it to the cooperative parish.
Brian Harkness of Racine United Methodist Church
used a slide presentation to detail plans for converting the
school into a place where the parish could consolidate its
food bank, clothing shop and God's NET youth program.
He gave cost projections and indicated funding could be
Please SM BulldlnJ. l

Meigs Local board
ponders photO ID
system for distrid
BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILI'SENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -A photo identificatiofl system could he
in place in some schools in the Meigs Local School District
next fall.
At Monday night's meeting of the Meigs Local Board of
Education, Superintendent William Buckley discussed with
board members the advantages of an . ID system, starting in
the high school and then eventually expanding to the middle school, and kindergarten through the elementary
grades .
.
He said that the ID cards would have bar codes whtch
could be used in the cafeteria and library, as well as in other
ways such as for recording absences, admitting students to
athletic events, and addressing security issues.
Buckley said that many schools are already using ID cards
and suggested that Meigs have the system in place by fall.
As for the cost, Buckley said a proposal he has suggests
about $12,000 to equip students and staff at the high-school
with ID cards. Action ~as postponed pending further information.
Treasurer Mark Rhonemus reported that the ·Meigs
County Budget Commission has reduced the bonds for
· school construction from 3.95 to 3.8 inills sincr only
enough money to pay the debt can be collected. A resolution accepting the amoun~&lt; and rates as determined by the
Please SM ID, l

Gallia County Senior Resource Center
1167 State Route 160 - Gallipolis
WednesdQ", March 20
1 OaOO am • 1 2 Noon
Non·Jutlng Cholesterol and Glucose

MEDICAL CENTER
Oiscover the Holzer Difference

Sponsored by rho Holzor Marlical Confer Communily Healrh ,and w.llnou O.parlmenl in
colloboralion wirh Holzor f}o•pice and rho Buckeye H;U, Ca'"' Cenler Polienl Care Technician Cfa11.

www.holzer.org

For more information, please call (740) 446-5679.
l•

•

••

�•

.IJ_..!!!.!!!!!_!!!!!!!!..!!!!L_ _ _ __.!~

The Daily Sentinel

'

Pap2
Ml dllt,HOJ

..

'

an leaves trail o wtves,
DEAR ABBY: After reading
"Used in Jonesboro, Tenn.," about
the woman who married a man
who had lied about his past, I feel
compeUed to share my story.
I. too, :iske~ aU the right questions.
Here's what I later found out:
His first wife left him and got the
child he didn't care about. The second wife, who gave him rwo children, got a thousand bucks and an
old car when he decided it was time
for wife No.3. Wife No.3 left when
it was time for wife No. 4. He ·sold
the house she had paid for from her
previous husband's life insurance.
Wife No. 4 got nothing except the
joy of meeting wife No. 5.Wife No.
5 is now deep in credit card debt and
wiU have to work a long time
because her retirement money is
missing. Wife Nd . .6 (me) lost 'not
only retirement money, but a house

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
and car that were paid for. It was his
turn to make the car payment, and
he let it be repossessed. (He did,
however, "fi.nd" the money to make
the payment on his pickup.) .
There's a lot more misery I could
share, but it would curl your hair..USED UP IN TEXAS
DEAR USED UP IN TEXAS:
I believe you. If it's any comfort,
you're not alone. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I have a male rei-

'

ative who has been legally married as we went. However, early on I
and divor:~:ed 13 times. He is in his caught an inconsistency in his mar50s, has three college degrees and is riage history, so I decided to check
very charming.
him out.
.
I've met many of his wives. What
Marriage, divor:~:e and property
amazes me is how gullible they are. transactions are aU public records, so
They are lonely. Christian women a trip to my county courthouse was
who believe everything he says. aU I needed. I discovered he had
What seems to trip them up is that been married not once, not twice,
he inunediately offers marriage, 'and but at least five times.
I also learned that he did not own
they see this as the ultimate commitment. Hal When they do start asking the home he claimed was his. There's
questions, he leaves them saddled no telling what other lies I would
with huge debts and takes off. have uncovered had I kept looking.
STUNNED OBSERVER
It gave me great satisfaction to tell
DEAR 1 STUNNED: Why are this guy in no uncertain terms that
you stunned? A conunon denomina- he'd. been "busted:'
tor with sociopaths is ·their abunLater, I began dating another man.
dance of charm. Read on:
Once again, he and I shared our life ·
DEAR ABBY: Ten years after my . stories, and I wasted no time in visdivorce, I decided it was time to start iting the.· courthouse. The people
dating again. I met a nice man. We who worked at the courthouse were
dated steadily, sharing our life stories most helpful. They directed me to

.

the proper offices and helped me
.find the in{ormation I wu looking
for. Abby, every detail was exacdy as
he told me. EventuaUy we married,
and we share a happy life. . ·
At first he was offended that I had
checked out his story. To this day, he
teases me about it. But I'm proud
that 1 went into our marriage with
my eyes wide open, and I encourage
everyone to do the
by tilting

same

advantage of public records. SMART IN CINCINNATI
DEAR SMART: Good for yo'u!
Public records can eliminate not
only private pain but public embal'rassment.

(PaulinL Phillips and her daughter,
]eannL Phillips, shart the pseudonym
Abigail V..n Buren. Write Drar Abby dl
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Beware o (identity the
Identity theft is when someone takes your personal information without your consent
and uses it to commit theft or
fraud. Credit card, bank
account and Social Security
numbers may be used to open
new accounts -in your name.
Items may be purchased on
these new accounts, then you
have to pay the bill. Even
though this fraud is against the
law, it is happening at an
alarming rate. The Federal
Trade Commission has developed some recommendations
to prevent you from becoming
a victim of identity theft.
Don't give out personal
information to · anyone until
you know how it will be used.
Find out if the data will be
given to others. Ask to be
taken off direct marketing lists.
• - Only catry in your waUet

,

and use one or two credit
cards. Cancel aU remaining
cards. Even though you may
not use these , extra credit
cards, the account numbers are
still in your credit report. This
information can be used by
others for fraudulent purposes.
Beware of mail thieves.
Remove your mail from your
mailbox as soon as pos5ible.
Mail outgoing letters at the
post office or at postal collection boxes.' Know when bank
and credit card statements are
due. If you don't receive your
bills when you should, notify
your lenders. Someone may
have stolen your biil.s or cards
and changed the addresses.
They may be using your credit accounts.
Never give personal, banking or credit information over
the phone unless you initiated

the conversation. Scam artists
may pretend to be government officials or bank administrators in order to "confirm"
your Social Security number
or account numbers.
Protect items with personal
information from identity
thieves. Shred all old bank
papers, credit card receipts and
any other statements that may
have confidential · ac~ount
numbers on them. Never
throw ATM or credit receipts
into a public trash can.
Have a list of all your credit
cards, account numbers and
customer service department
phone , numbers so creditors
can be contacted if cards are
lost or stole\). Do not keep this
information in your billfold.
Do not use a number for
your Personal Identification

Number (PIN) that could be
easily guessed. Avoid birth
dates, Social Security numbers, phone numbers, consecutive numbers; license plate
numbers, etc. Memorize your
PIN and passwords. Do not
have them on· your person.
Cover your hand wheri using
your PIN at an ATM or when
using your phone card·at public telephones.
If you have a garage dOOf
opener, don't . carry house keys. If they are lost or stolen,
thieves could enter your home
and steal personal information
as well as possessions. Similarly, keep car doors locked when
parked outside. Thieves could
use the garage door opener to
get'into the house.
Check your credit report
once a year with each of the
three credit reporting agencies

(Trans Union, Experian and
Equifax). Catch and correct
problems or fraud before they
destroy your credit rating and
personal finances.
If identity theft occurs, file a
police report immediately.
Send copies of the police
report to your bank, credit
card and insurance companies.
Keep copies of aU police

records for future reference.
Cancel all accounts and open
new ones with a new number.
Notify the three credit-reporting agencies in writing about
lost or stolen credit cards.
"

(Becky Baer is Meigs County.}
Extension agent for family ami'
consumer sciences/communilf
development, Ohio State Univer.
sity.)

NOTEBOOK

I

I

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calendar Ia
publl•hed •• a free •ervlce
· to non-profit groupa wlah. lng to announce meetlnga
and 1peclal eventl. The calen&amp;!r Ia not dealgned to
promotl 1ale1 or funcl-ralaera of any type. ltema are
printed only aa apaca permill ana cannot be guaranteed to be printed a apeclflc
number of daya.

records; children must be
aCCO'iJlanied
by
parent/guardian,
check
before coming to be sure vac·
cine Is available, 992-6626.
Wedneaday, March 20
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastem Local Board of Education to meet in regular session at 6:30 p.m., administration building.

Tueaday, Mareh 19
fJlday, March 22
POMEROY - ·Childhood
POMEROY Pomeroy
imMunization clinic, 1 to 7 Church of. Christ will hold a

----""'' -TRA SPECIAL
a Daily Sentinel

I
-·----~

·Dedicated to Ed Baer,
a colon cancer victim
•

by Holzer Clinic, Farmers Bank and the

BY CIWilBIE HOEFUCH
HOEA.IC~DAILYSENTINEL .COM

• POMEROY - Free colorectal cancer
·jtits to be used for home screening will be
distributed in the lobby of Farmers Bank.
this weekend by members of the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative (MCCI).
.· • CaUed"Screen for Life;' the emphasis of
the program is on early detection. The
event is being dedicated to Ed Baer who
recent:Jy died of colon cancer.
'
". Carol Jean Adams, R.N., and Diana
Coates of MCCI are chairmen of the
screening program which is co-sponsored

Meigs County Health Department. The
kits once used are to be taken to the
Meili' County Health Department where
they Will be evaluated. Participants will be
advised of the results.
Emphasis ofMCCI,made up of volunteers, is on encouraging people to take
charge of their health.
According to Adams, between the years
of .1994-1998, Meigs County reported
352 deaths;the highest percentage based
on population of cancer deaths in the
state of Ohio.
It was those statistics which inspired
health-conscious residents to form the
community group which focuses on local
cancer control programs including awareness, education, and early detection.

., ,
· RIO GRANDE-While their friends ety of styles of music on the tour includ- going," he added. The group members
Jre off soaking in the sun on the beaches, ing spiritual songs, Broadway tunes, jazz have been working since last September
members of the University of Rio standards and several arrangements of planning for the trip and raising money
'Grande's Grande Chorale will spend modern pop music. The Grande Chorale for it. The group took donations at its
'much of their spring break working hard regularly performs on the Rio Grande ,performances, sold candy, walked horses
·tx&gt; put on great shows and entertaining campus an'd throughout southern Ohio. at the Bob E~ans Farms festival and
At one stop on the spring break tour, accepted other private donations in order
audiences. The ·Grande Chorale members
enjoy the work and are looking forward the Grande Chorale · members will stay • to raise enough tponey to pay for the trip.
jo the tour beginning next week.
with host families.
"We'd like to thank the university and
1 1\venty-eight . Grande Chorale mem"It's fun. It's a different experience than everybody who made donations ·of
ilers are • about to begin their annual staying in a hotel," Caudill said. "You get money and time to help us put on this
ipring break tour. This year the collegiate to know the people you stay with. It's tour," Caudill said,
ihow &lt;;hair will make stops in Asheville, really nice."
"We kind of have to work for our
N.C.; Decatur, Ala.; Mobile, Ala.; New
This tour will be familiar to many of spring break, but it's really rewarding in
Orleans, La.; and Panama Ciry, Fla.
the Grande Chorale members, as the the end," Caudill said. "The last stop on
"We. ~'('; a totalo~ 'W::~n. ,perf,grmances ...,grouP, _visited many of the sa,me spots a the tuur, Panama City, Fla., is for fun," he
~t lsJ1' ·Venues."" ~atd ' @randec"'Chonk few years ago.
added. The Grande Chorale does not
jnember Jimmy &lt;;:~udill, a senior from · "A lot of people said that they liked it. have any performances scheduled at that
j:lidwell who helped organize this year's It was warm but it wasn't too hot," stop and the members will have a chance
tour. During the tour, the Grande Caudill said. One highlight of the tour to relax and enjoy their time on the
f=horale will perform at high schools, for many of the students is the stop in beach.
phurches and even an outdoor market- New Orleans and the performance at the
The chorale's spring concert is schedoutdoor market there.
uled for May 3, four weeks after the ·
place.
.
! The choral group will perform a vari- "Everybody's really excited about group returns from its spring break tour.

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22, 2002

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LOCAL BRIEFS
Malic shaw

EMS n1ns

GALLIPOLIS - A special
benefit . for Holzer Hospice,
the Second Annual Fantasy
Magic Show Spectacular,
originaUy scheduled for Jan.
19, has been rescheduled for
Saturday, March 23 at 7 p.m.
at Washington Elementary
School in Gallipolis. Tickets
for the Jan. 19 show will still
be honored, and tickets will
also be sold at the door for
$10 each. If you have any
questions, please caU Holzer
Hospice at 740-446-5074.

POMEROY - Unia of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered nine calls for assistance on Monday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:41 a.m., Point Lane,
Rhonda Stover, treated;
5:10 a.m. , Eagle Ridge,
Dora Hysell, Holzer Medical
Center;
11 :39 a.m., South Third
avenue. Rebecca Green,
HMC;
5 p.m., Brownell, Atricia
Randolph, HMC.
POMEROY
5:42 p.m., Zuspan Hollow,
April Spires, HMC.
REEDSVILLE
1:10 p.m., Ohio 124,
Tommy Bashan, CamdenClark Memorial Hospital;
First/Main
5:34
p.m.,
Street, Hilda Snyder, CCMH.

Driver injured
RUTLAND -A Pomeroy
man .was injured in a onevehicle :.Ccident at midnight
Sunday on CouJaty Road 3
(Leading Creek), the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Kevin Dugan, 34, was transported to Holzer Medical
Center by Meigs EMS from
the scene of the accident, the
patrol reported.
Troopers said Dugan · was
northbound, eight-tenths of a
mile south of Ohio 124, in an
emergency response when he
lost control of the vehicle he
drove after topping a hillcrest.
The vehicle went off the left
side of the road and struck a
ditch, rotated counter-clockwise and came to a stop on
the road.
The vehicle, owned by the
Meigs County commissioners, was moderately damaged.

Citations issued

Building
from

Publishing from the Middle
School activity fund for a
deposit on yearbooks, and an
overnight field trip for DEC
"to the state convention. A
budget commission · was donation of sand for ·the
Meigs High school Track
accepted.
Grants from Schoo!Net from Martin Marietta· AggrePlus in the amount of gates was acknowledged.
$70,680, and from Assistive
Technology Infusion Project
from Ohio Schoo!Net Commission for $8,180 for the
current school year were
acknowledged.
In personnel matters, · the
resignation for retirement
purposes of Mona P. Knapp
was accepted; Catherine Hart
was hired as a tutor for a
health handicapped student;
Janet Hoffman was granted a
medical leave; Allen Midcap,
·Michael Soroosh and Matt
Weand were hired as substitute teachers; and VInce
Rieber, .Jared Stewart and
Chris Stewart were approved
as volunteer assistant basebaU
coaches.
The board
j&gt;ay-

RUI'LAND
11 :12 a.m., HMC Clinic,
Marsha Kitchen, }ThltC.
SYRACUSE
3:48 a.m., Ash Street,
Robert Smith, HMC.

Issued licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in·
Meigs County Probate Court
to Matthew Fortest Morris,
24, Long Bottom, and Amanda Sue Quillen, 21, Long Bottom; and to Patrick Scott
Steele, 26, Racine, and Aimee
Beth Mills, 26, Racine.

Dissolutions
granted

RACINE Violet E
POMEROY Dissolu~
Werry, 31, 31950 Court Street
Road, Racine, was cited for tions have been granted in
unsafe speed for conditions by Meigs County Conunon Pleas
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Court to Martin L. Searles and
State Highway Patrol foUow- Tina F. Searles, and to Brett L.
ing a one-car accident Sunday Carl and Regina L. Cad.
on County Road 30 (Forest
Run) .
Troopers said Werry was
POMEROY Pomeroy
eastbound, two-tenths of a
Church
of
Christ
will
hold a
mile west of Sutton Township
Road 121 (Nease)' at 6:37 free community dinner on
p.m; when she lost control of Friday from 5 to 7 p.m. The
the car she drove, crossed over . public is invited.
the double yellow line, went
off the left side of the road
and struck a ditch.
MIDDLEPORT An
Werry informed officers
she had attempted to avoid Easter celebration and egg
collision with a deer at the hunt will be held at Hope
time of the accident. The car Baptist Church, 570 Grant
St., Middleport, for children
was slightly damaged.
·ages
2 to 12 years old.
KeUy L. Watson, 22, Rutland, was cited for failure to Refreshments will be served.
yield while turning left by the
patrol following 'a two-car
accident earlier Sunday on
MIDDLEPORT
Ohio 7 in Tuppers Plains at the
. Brooks-Grant Camp, Sons of
intersection with Ohio 681.
Troopers said Watson was Union Veterans of the Civil
northbound at 3:05 p.m. War, and Maj. D~niel McCook
when she turned left fo go Circle, Ladies of the Grand
onto 681 and collided with a Army of the Republic, to meet
southbound car driven by at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday at RiverElton A. Ritchie, 61, 42714 bend Arts Council Building in
Middleport. The speaker will
Ohio 7, Coolville.
Both cars were slightly discuss Civil War medicine.
Soup supper to follow.
damaged.

Offer dinner

Plan celebration

this year.
As for the Rudand school,
Davis said that the firemen are
not interested in the school
Page 1
building, but the }and on
secured for repairs · and which it is located. He said
improvements n,eeded to the current firehouse is locatmake the building suitable for ed in a flood area and the
use by the parish, which has department needs to move.
According to Davis, the
been in operation here for
more than :?5 years, and serves firemen would like to conthousands of adults and chil- struct a $500,000 fire station
on the lot. He asked about
dren.
The basic financial support · salvaging some of the kitchen
given by community church-. equipment before the buildes, organizations and individ- ing is demolished.
Rutland village has agreed
uals, along with grants from
Eugene Levy {Greg the Bunrzy)
various agencies, was dis- to accept the P,roperty from
was a vice president of the Me·
cussed by Harkness, who the school board and then
Master
University Film Board,
noted that the three minis.tries donate it to the Rutland Fire ·
and
that
led to his first movie,
are operating on a combined Department, it was reported.
Camtibal Girls.
budget of nearly $150,000

.

date Fri.,
41'1,;H 291 2002
Fri.

The screening kits can be picked up at
the bank from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday,
and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
The importance of screening fot early
detection was emphasized by Adams who
noted that colon cancer is the second
most deidly cancer with both women
and men at risk for the disease.
She advised that screening should be
started at age 50, that a history of polyps,
ulcerative colitis, and Crohn's disease
increases the tisk of colorectal cancer, as
does family history of any cancer.
Residents coming to pick up screening
kits will also be given the opportunity to
have their blood pressure checked. This
will be done by nursing students of
Margie Blake, Meigs teacher.

URG Grande Chorale's
spring tour to hit four
~ southeastem U.S. states

a

p.~. ~at~~~~~~Tlf~~~e~~~~~~~-t~~rnf!!~~~~~~~~~~~~
\

.'

flutnPap 1

Kappa Gamma

Date corrected

free .cancer screening set
this weekend in Pomeroy

Dnags

speaks to Delta

.

www.mydallyte!'tlnel.com

abuse of the drug, it remains a
~;afe and effective · pain treatment when taken as directed
by a . patient for. whom it has
been described.
'lnite!y been a contributing "It's basicaUy a good drug
ractor in four or five deaths for someone with chronic
here in Meigs County, pain, but it can be highly
because people have taken it addictive and potentially fatal
when it's abused," Hunter
improperly."
I Snorting the crushed said, "but that's true of almost
~blets, Hunter said, is a par- any drug when taken improp):icularly dangerous means of erly."
According to a news release
)ngesting · the medication,
from
· ODADAS, the drug
because it results in an immeiliate absorption into the often sells on the street for $5
to $20 per tablet, and is often
~oodstream.
diluted in water and injected,
1 "Oxycontin is like Perco~et;' Hunter said, "in that it is as weU as ·crushed and snortlong-lasting medication ed.
When abusers are no longer
:Which the body can absorb
ldowly. When it is snorted, it able to obtain or afford Oxy~ows the system so dramati- contin, they are likely to
~aUy that it c.a n cause breath- begin using heroin as a substitute, causing drug enforce~g to stop."
• Hunter said that despite the ment officials to see it now as
associated with the a "gateway drug:'

State president

a

.Tullday, --.rch 19, 2002

I

Meigs County
discussed. Next meeting will
be held at St. Peter and l,'aul
Church in Wellston, April 22.
Attending from Meigs County were Sandra Walker, Gay
Perrin, Marjorie Fetry and
POMEROY: - · Marilyn
Nellie Parker.
Slusser, president of Delta
Kappa Gamma of Ohio, was
guest speaker at recent combined mee.ting of area chapters
RIO GRANDE - Lunch
held at Christ United
with the Easter Bunny at the
Methodist Church in Jackson.
Bob Evans Farm will be held
Slusser spoke on recogniz.. on March 30 from noon to 2
ing and nurturing members to p.m. The
earlier
date
those attending from Alpha announced was incorrect.
Omicron, Beta Tau, the host
The bunny will be there for
chapter, Delta Epsilon and a cookout to include sausage
Beta Alpha. Sandra Wilkin and sandwiches, hotdogs, chips
Hope KeUer provided music and a soft drink. For minimal
, for the program which fol- fees, children can play in the
lowed a dinner served by Joy Jump, take a horse drawn
women of the church.
• gave the carriage ride and a lead ride
Sharon Needliam
on horseback. The egg hunt
welcome. Chapters held sepa- begins at 1 p.m. Childr~n will
. rate business meetings. Presi- hunt for candy and special
dent Pam Toon presided at the prizes in three age groups ,
Alpha Omicron meeting with infant to 4 years, 5 to 8 and 9
· Nellie Parker and Deborah to 12 years.
Hammond giving · officers'
For information, call the
report. Coming events were Farm at 1-800-994-FARM.

.

Groups meet

United Fund for
Meigs County
2002Goal

ID

Your

fromPap1

Is

,,

•

Help

11,501.29
to date

Send your tax deductible
contribution to:
Untied Fund For Mel91
P.O.Box424
OH45760

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t UDII. - - - - - .

Without GOOD AUTO
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you could be WALKING!
See us for AFFORDABLE
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•

PageA4;

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

.....d.,...... ~ 11, 2082:

.J(ent State no upstart, Page 7
•

..

PageS
......,. Mlirch 11. 2002

••

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-9112·2158 • Fu: 740-892·2157

SPWWKJNG

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

Rio track opens slowly at Ohio Early Bird

•

Den Dlc'*'-on

Publisher
Chllrtene Hoeflich
GeMral Manager

FROM STAFF REPORTS

01-. KllyHIH
Controller

lnMn, IIIII ,...,.Jidn.

n. ,..,"' cqtftl• Ill 1M cfllMIM Hlow,.. Ow~.,,.,., •JIIW OIUtJ lWlq
htliiiWft C11. 's MiJDrild IHMt( Mltlnl tJIIINrwilt ltotlfL

•

NATIONAL VIEW
'fuF.sDAY'S

Get to
··work
Unemployment beetifits
deserve to be extended·
• Times Union, Albany, N .Y., 011 unemployment aid: What
recession?
·
A year since it actually began and just three months after it
was formally declared, the recession of 2001-2002 shows signs
of losing steam already.
It's likely, the government says, that the economy is in a modest recovery. The fear now is that the end of the recession won't
necessarily mean the end of high unemployment - 5.6 percent as of January.
In that sense, we may be heading into the economy of 19901991' again. The recession that ended then was accompanied by
a jobless rate that grew to 7.8 percent by the summer of 1992.
But it also means that government hasn't entirely missed
what otherwise would have been a i.vasted chance to do what
it can to help prod the economy back to a more vigorous life.
The official phase of this recession began, remember, with a call
to at least do what government has done in prior recessions namely extend benefits for unemployed workers ·beyond the
26-week limit that exists in most states, including New York.
~hat much never happened this time. Not that Congress, or.
at least the Democrats there, didn't try.The call for further jobless benefits has been drowned out, mostly by a competing cry
fo,r ,m?re taX cuts that the country doesn't particularly need and
really can't afford, not in a recession or even the mild recovery
·suggested by ~n estimated economic growth rate of I percent
in the last quarter of the past year....
Washington is in need of some reality therapy. Nationwide,
about 11,000 people a day are exhausting .their eligibility for
unemployment checks. The jobless rate, meantime, is expected
to inch even higher, perhaps to 6.5 percent or so.
With so many people out of work, government needs to get
to work. Unemployment benefits should be extendedGet.
Even a mild recession has some rather severe consequences.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HIGHLIGHTS
.,

•.

•

Nl11onallnvltltlon
Toumament
Second Round
Monday'• Garnea
Syracuse 66, Buller 65, OT
Richmond 67, Minnesota 66

..

KILPATRICK'S VIEW ·

Dealing with those devilish homophones is tricky
A few weeks ago a columnist of my
intimate acquaintance wrote about a decision in the U.S. Supreme Court. The case
involved a marijua,na smuggler in Arizona
who was nabbed when his minivan triggered a censor planted by the Border
Patrol. Shortly after the first censor was
activated, the vehicle set off a second censor.
A quite re,markable number of the
columnist's readers immediately made
inquiry:Who were these censors, and why
were they hiding in the bushes? Alas, the
penitent columnist replied, they weren't
censors; they were semdrs, and they were
hiding in the bunker5 cif English composition. They were, in fad, homophones.
A homqphone is one of two or more
words that are spelled differently, sound
more or less alike. and have different
meanings. They are devilish critters, for a
computer's speD-check will not pick them
up. They creep mischievously onto the
page, usually as a consequence of in.attention (like those uncensored sensors), often
· from a combination of ignorance, overconfidence and sloth.
In the "Hi and Lois" comic strip, Hi
explairu; his preparations for watching a
baseball game on TV: "We've got reports
to read, pre-game analyses to watch, statistics to · pour over." By the third inning
those would be pretty soppy statistics. Hi
had to pore, not pour.
In Palm Beach County. Fla., the county
extemion agent announced a program to.
designate a well-mrintained lawn as a
"Certified Aorida Yard." A small sign
would be placed on the award-winning
property "to peak people's curiosity and
increase public awareness:' In a program
of this nature, the little signs fir5t pique,
passen-by then peek, and finally· public
interest peaks. Nice work.
For no reason that comes to mind, the
letter "P" attracts the most homophones.

say their product will"please your pallet."
Nope. A pallet is all kinds of things. It is a
straw mattress, a low portable platform, a
lever in a timepiece, a lip that engages the · ·
teeth of a racketJifieel, and a shaping tool ~·
used by potte~ut a pallet is not the roof' ;
of a mammals mouth or a sense of taste. ;
That's your palate, not to be confused·
with a palette, which is the thin tablet on
which artists mix their colors. And to
muddy the palette· further, remind yourCOLUMNIST
self every day that the armpit plate in a
suit of armor is·the "pallette."There is no
A manufacturer of cell phones says his charge for this service.
.,
gadgets promote piece ofmind.AperforThe Mount Vernon (Ohio) News , .
mahce by a stand-up comedian draws reported last year on road construction in ;
peel&lt; of laughter from the audience. A Knox County. Some merchants were los- •
sawdust evangelist advertises himself as ing business because of the inconve" .. '
"profit and healer." Peace, peals and nience, but the CVS pharmacy was doing" ·
prophet!
fine. "Drivers are not deterred by the pile-'.,
In Orlando, Fla., according to the oru; and orange barrels." Pyloru; or pile-·: ·,
papen, formet president Bill Clinton lee- ons? Like Enrons, they're something to .'·.
cures on the principle eventll of his presi- avoid.
.. "
d~ncy. In St. Paul, M.hm., a professor of
I've bee,n trying to think of a rnnemonreal estate writes · about taxes on one's ic device that would cure us of prostrate
principle residence. In San Dieg~~, an obit- canc;er, the lying~down kind, hut nothing
uary notice identifies the deceased as a comes to mind. Political candidates take:·
man of high principals. Sad to say; the polls; flag5 fly on poles. A rice cake may be
president and the professor wanted "prin- a patty, but a rice paddy is a redundancy.
cipal," and the eulogist wanted "princi- Aaarrgli!
.
.·
pies:'
The only useful advice I can offer is the 1
Another heap of Horrid . Examples advice you get all the time in this space: ·
reflects the confusion or'pedal" and "ped- Read your copy! Read it as many times as ~
die:' In the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, a a deadline will ,permit. Read intently. ·
columnist discusses reporter David Brock, Then, if you are paying close attention, '·
a one-time defender of Justice Clarence you will not write about censors mainThomas. Reporter Brock now is tained by a border patrol .Your editors will' ;
"backpeddling." (He is back-pedaling.) In salute your pristine manuscripts.They will'
the Palin Beach Post, a police officer not ~jUke obscene jester5. They will cry,·;"
describes a tangle of bicycle riders: "They "Here,'here!"
. ··
were ped&lt;jl,ing very rapidly." But they
(Readers are invited to send dated cita- .
couldn't pedal their way out of a group tioru; of usage to Mr. Kilpatrick in care of' '
· this newspaper. His e~mail address is kil-·· '
arrest .
Many writers have a problem with patjj(at)aol.com.)
palate/palette/pallet. In a newspaper ad,
James] Kilpatrick is a columnist.for Univer· '
the makers of President's Choice cookies sal Press Syndicate.
''

James
Kilpatrick

Today is Tuesday, March 19, the 78th day of 2002. There are
287 days left in the year. This is the daie the swallows traditiortally return to the San Juan Capistrano Mission in California.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 19, 1920, the U.S. Senate rejected, for a second
time, the Treaty ofVersailles by a vote of 49 in favor, 35 against,
falling short of the two-thirds majority needed for approval.
On this date:
In 1859, the opera "Faust" by Charles Gounod premiered in
Paris.
In 1917, the Supreme Court upheld the eight-hour work day
· BY WILL lEinDI
Rep. John Thune, the state's only confor railroads.
WASHINGTON -While the cam- gressman, now serving his third term.
In 1918, Congtess approved Daylight-Saving Time.
paign
for control of the Senate is just stir- President Bush personally courted Thune
In 1931, Nevada legalized gambling.
ring to life in several of the most com- to challenge Johnson, inviting the conIn 1941, Jimmy Dorsey and Orchestra recorded "Green
petitive
states, the two Senate candidates gressman and his wife to a White House
Eyes" and "Maria Elena" for Decca Records.
in South Dakota are flailing away as if dinner in April. Thune's campaign says his
In 1945, about 800 people were kUled as Kamikaze planes
elections were bein~ held in a !J13tter of election would give the state bipartisan
attacked the U.S. carrier Franklin off Japan; the ship, however,
weeks.
representation ill the Senate and a direct
was saved.
That state's combination of inexpensive connection to the White House.
In 1945, Adolf Hitler issued his so-called "Nero Decree,"
TV advertising, high-profile campaign
The South Dakota contest has become
ordering the destruction of German facilities that could fall
connections and two candidates who are the top one· in the Senate a~ "a proxy' fight
into Allied hands.
well-known in the state has the two par- between Daschle and the White House,"
In 1951, Herman Wouk's war novei"The Caine Mutiny"was
ties battling as if control of the Senate said Thune spokeswoman Christine lverfirst published.
.
.
depends on the outcome.
son.
In 1976, Buckingham Palace announced the separation of
It might.
That contributes to numerous ads in
Princess Margaret and her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, after
Democrats have a 50-49-1 edge in the the state paid for by outside groups, some
16 years of marriage.
body, which makes every close Senate . criticizing Daschle, others criticizing the
In 1979, the U.S. House of Representatives began televising
race in 2002 potentially pivotal. And Senate candidates. Recent negotiations to
its day-to-day business.
South Dakota's Tom Daschle, the Senate's ban ads financed by third-parties fell
Ten years ago: Democrat Paul Tsongas pulled out of the presmajority leader, has become the Democ- apart.
idential race, leaving Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton the clear
rats' leading voice to oppose President
Johnson spokesman Dan Pfeiffer said
favorite to capture their party's nomination .
Bush.
the third-party advertismg and the intenFive years ago: Following the withdrawal of Anthony Lake,
"The big gnys each have a dog in this sity of the attacks this early has been disPresident Clinton nominated acting CIA Director George
fight," said political scientist Ross Baker · orienting.
Tehet to head the nation 's spy agency. President Clinton
of Rutger5 University.
South Dakota has a population, of just
departed Washington for his summit in Helsinki, Finland, with
The Democratic candidate in South over 750,000 and two population centers
Russian President Boris Yeltsin. Artist Will em de Kooning, conDakota is the incumbent, Sen. Tim John- - Sioux Falls, a city of 120,000 near the
sidered one of the 20th century's greatest painters, died in East
son, a lim-term senator who recenrly eastern border, and Rapid City, a city of
Hampton, N.Y. , at age 92.
, toured the state with Daschle. They told about 60,000 in the west.
One year ago: California officials declared a power alert,
voters that Daschle, as leader of the Sen"One of the reasons they're in manic
ordering' the first of two days of rolling blackouts.
ate, and Johnson, as a member of the Sen- . mode is that it's very inexpensive to run a
Today's Birthdays: Former White House national security
ate Appropriatioru; Committee, are in the full-blown media campaign there and
adviser Brent Scowcroft is 77. Actor-director Patrick
best positions to deliver federal money sustain it;' said Jennifer DuffY, an analyst
MtGoohan is 74. Theologian Hans Kung is 74. Author Philip
of Senate races for the Cook Political
and projects the state needs.
R:oth-is-69;-t\ctress-R:enee-'faylor is 69;Johnson 's Republican challenger is Report.

WASHINGTON TODAY

Basketball

NBA
Monday'• Games
Portland 100, Boston 91
Charlotte 113, Milwaukee 110
Detro~ 98, Denver 91
L.A. Clippers 93, Houston 86
Washington 99, Golden State 96

.

f

wru::

.

•:

DISTRICT

events. Jenny Lykins was sixth in the
javelin throw (90 feet, 2 inches).
Other Redwomen results: Amy
McCoy, ninth in the 100-meter dash
(13. 72) and the 200-meter dash
(27.45); Kristin Barnett, 12th in the
800-meter run (2:51.56); Amanda
Wolfe, ninth in the 3,000-meter run
(19:38.41); Mindy Gardner, ninth in
the shot put (33-8); Esther Rafftery,
ninth in the javelin (74-9).
Rio Grande finished fifth (out of

13 ALL-STAR

six) as a team witli 35 points. Ohio
won the event with 186 points.
On the men's side: Landon Coate
finished fourth in the shot put (43-4).
He was sixth in the discus (124-6).
Glenn Arnold was fourth in the hammer throw with a measurement of
135 feet, 10 inches. He also finished
eighth in the javelin (133- 10) and in
the discus (1 19-8).
Matt Boyles was sixth in tbe

•.

....... _

BASKETBALL

A
n wave almost Small-school
nets a win for WoHe players rule
· Belpre's Kline scores 14,
Eastern~ Lyons 12 in boys' win

PUT IT UP - East·
ern senior Stacy
Watson puts up a·
shot during Mon·
day's District 13
all·star game.
(OVP)

BY BUTCH CooPER
BCOOPER@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM •

,

· RIO GRANDE - Head coaches Howie Caldwell of Eastern and Joe Garrett of Belpre sat in the
first two seatll of the Division III- IV bench together,
talking about ... what ever it is that head coaches talk
about.
Neither of these coaches, nor their players, were
even a part of the District 13 all-star game last year
as their'teams were in the state tournament, which is
usually played during the same week as the all-star
game.
This year, though, the talent of these teams paid off
for the III-IV squad in their 98-81 win over the 1-11
team Monday at the Newt Oliver Arena.
For Belpre, Pat Kline scored 14 points and Nick
Morey, the coaches' Division III district player of the

MLB
Spring Training
Monday'• games
'N.Y. Mets 7, Florida 7, tie
Boston 8, Bahimore 3
Pittsburgh 6, Texas 4
Toronto 3, Minnesota 1
Atlanta 0, St. Louis 0, tie, 10 innings
PliNy 4, Kansas City 4, tie, 11 innings
Anaheim 4, Oakland 3
Colorado 6, Seattle 1
Milwaukee 8, Chicago Cubs 2
Arizona 16, Wh~e Sox 13
Detro~ 1, Tampa Bay o

·"

Please see Bays, 6

';: Williams, Bird
.take top honors
'.
. ATLANTA (AP) -1 Duke's
:jason Williams and Connecti,cut's Sue Bird won the Nai,smith Awards as the top col· ~ege basketball players in the
country.
;,. Bird's coach at UConn,
'· Geno Auriemma, and Pittsl!urgh's Ben )-lowland were
, i\le Atlanta Tipoff Club's
,choices for top coaches.
::; Williams has led the Blue
Devils into NCAA Tournainen t Sweet 16.
:;: Bird's Huskies have spent
the entire sea.&lt;on as the No. l
ffam in the nation, having
~pmpleted the regular season
;without a loss:

•••

'

pair of fourth place finishes in the discus. (134 feet, 9 inches) and the hammer throw (136 feet, 4 inches).
Senior Amy Kline was third in the
hammer throw with an effort of 139
feet, 1 1 inches. The Logan, Ohio
native also finished 11th in the discus
(97 feet, II inches). Fellow Logan
native Heather Mace had two strong
performances in the 800-meter
(2:23.35) and 1,500-meter runs
(4:55.62). She was third in both

Pro Jaseball

~ Local Bowling

•.

'
Third-party advertising by political:,
interest groups shows up in South Dako-".
ta because "this is a state the national,• :
media is watching;' said Jim Jordan, exec- utive director of the Democratic Senato- ~
rial Campaign Committee.
•·
· South Dakota is among a handful oL states where . the November · electio~ , ~
could decide control of the Senate.
,~
Incumbent Democratic Sens. Pattlr•
Wellstone in Minnesota and Jean Carna-·• ,:
han in Missouri are other leading GOP· ·
targets. Democrats are eyeing incumbent: :.
Republicans Bob Smith in New. Hamp-' :.
shire, Tim Hutchinson in Arkansas and,' ,
Wayne Allard in Colorado.
,,
With elections approaching in · six..
months, Ginny Wolfe, a spokeswoman for: •
the National Republican Senatorial
Committee, said: "All the campaigns are; •
incredibly focused on both sides."
But the work in many states is focused·~
..
.
~
now on raiSing money. campa1gn orga- .
nizing for la~er and preparing for pri..:;
maries. In some states, candidates have puc:·
up advertising that focuses largely on!:
their accomplishments and personal::
background. .
.
:;
Bush's visit to Minnesota thls month!i
and .planned visits to states including Mis-;•
souri, South Carolina and Georgia on!:
behalf of GOP Senate candidates
raise both mane)' artd public interest.
::
(Will Lester covm politics. and polling .for;'

The AJSociated Press.)

Pro

..

South Dakota first out ofgate in Sena.te campaign

I

ATHENS - The outdoor track
and field season began for the University of Rio Grande on Saturday at the
Ohio Early Bird Invitational at Ohio
University.
Junior
Ashly
Roberts scored a second-place finish in th~ women's shot
put with a measurement of 39 feet, 3
inches. Only Jody Borges of Dayton
was better at 44 feet, I 0 inches. The
River Valley product also claimed a

'Jrack

~ W 1M ftl/kJr lilY wkHI•. :rtw, •~ llf '-" .._ Jill wnfl. Allldm
.,.. 1Uj«t 1o alililer u4 ....W h llfiiMIUUII-.thiM lllltlrn1 tuM Wq•a•t lltUihr.
No .,.,~_,-., ..uJ 6&lt; pob/UW. '-""" ''"""" 6&lt; hi ,_, - · _ . , ,

-

•

JstahlerOcincypost.com

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

The Daily Sentinel

": Maton Bowling Lan"
'" W.clne8de!f Night Mixed
••
SUMMARY
ai.Powell's Super Value 62·34; 2.
:t'az's Marathon 56-40; 3. Syra·
buse Country Market 54·42; 4.
l,lllle John's of Pomeroy 52·44;
5. Pine Hills Golf Course 40·56;
6. Meigs Industries 24· 72.
THill High Game and Serlee
~ Pine Hills Golf Course 653·
1912
Men'• High Game - Sam
Smith 21 8; Steve Burton 189;
Jim Board 184.
Men'• High Serl.. . - Sam
Sl'nith 563; Steve Burton 517;
Jim Board 498.
Women'• High Game- Dollie·
Will 203; Margaret Eynon 190;
Debbie Sayre 179.
Women's High Serlea - Dot·
tie Will 517; Margaret Eynon
491; Shirley Simmons 423.

BY DAN POLCYN
OPOLCYN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE- In Monday's District 13
girls all-star ba.1ketball game, a sea of green almost
carried the Division III-IV team coached by
Southern's Scott Wolfe to the win.
However, a pair oflate baskets by South Gallia's
Holly Haner, a layup by Gallia Academy's Cara
Dunkle and a driving basket by Rock Hill's Jordan Edwards broke a late 48-48 tie to give the
·
Division 1-11 :ill-star5 the 56-52 win.
The small school squad featured four of its 6ve

players clad in green - Fairland's Jeana Diamond
and Brooke Fisher and Eastern's Sarah Mansfield
and Stacy Watson.
Diamond, a 5-11 center headed to Shawnee
State to continue her hardwood career, dominated the inside game, scoring a game-high 24
points to lead the Div. III-IV team .
Fisher added 13 for Wolfe's troops, while Watson finished with eight.
Ed'X'Irds and Dunkle both scored 12 points to

Plean see Girls, 6

lndi·ans counting on Brady Anderson
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - .
Brady Anderson, a three-time All-Star
in Baltimore, is deter- ·
mined to make the transition (rym a Baltimore
Orioles fixture to the Cleveland Indians outfield at age 38.
"I never doubted my skills last year. I
· al t rou bl e an d cou ldn 't
go t ·m t ec h me
get out," he said.

•be
Tn

The Orioles released Anderson last
November after . ne . batted .202 with
eight home runs and 45 lUlls in 2001.
He had been with Baltimore since
1988.
' Anderson is now trying to find playing time among soine much younger
outfielder5 in Cleveland. Indians man-

Please see Indians, 6

•

ONE LAST Go-ROUND - Eastern senior Chris
Lyons lays in two of his 12 points in Monday's District 13 all-star game. (OVP)

Stewart out of hospital
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) Tony Stewart was released from a
hospital Monday, a day after he
hurt his back in a wreck at Darlington Rateway.
Stewart underwent an MRI
exam on Monday morning
before doctors released him from
a Florence hospital, track spokes-

woman Cathy Mock said. Results
of the test were negative, ~he said.
Stewart, 30, was injured .in a
crash while he was leading Sunday's Carolina Dodge Sealers
400. He was approaching Buckshot Jones to make a pass on lap

Please -

Stewart. 6

•

Comm itv Resource Fair
11r112. 2102 • 10 1.01. to 2..... Wellnas Center leroblcs' Roo11
•
•
•
•

Medication Assistance Program
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
Domestic Violence Risk Assessments
Skin Damage Screetiings

•
•
•
•

Cholesterol Screenings
Blood Glucose Screenings
Blood Pressure Screenings
Informational Booths &amp; More

MICrtlnl. . an •nldld lnlll -I'll • IIIIIIIIC •.lin

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

•

�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Stewart
......... ,
227, Jones' car bobbled and
I110Yed into Stewart's path. The
1\\Q collided, sending Stewart's

Indians
from PapS
ager Charlie Manuel said he
expects to use Anderson at all
three outfield positions as well
as designated hitter.
Anderson brings experience in the leadoff spot in the
batting order to a team without a true, tested leadoff hitter.
"He's going to get his .at-

bat$," Manuel said. "He's
swinging the bat well this
spring and he's got experience we can always use. Brady
.
can still play."
Anderson made 1OS of his
112 starts in 2001 at either
right or left field.
Cleveland signed Anderson
on the urging of new hitting

~.March

www.mydellysentlnel.com

~ aixl when he CUll&lt;!

Pontiac into the w.dljelfGordon
hit him from behind.
. After hitting the w.D, Stewar(s
car went back down !he track as
cars continued to collect behind
him aixl he was hit haid on !he

to WolS complaining of1ower back

p:iin and nwnbne!' and tingling
in his ldi foot.
He was airlifted to !he hospitll
aixl tesiS Sunday night were negative, but he was held &lt;=might

~side by JimmY Spencer.

He

was briefly knocked

coach Eddie Murray, who was
with the Orioles last year.
Murray told the Indians he
could help Anderson begin
spraying his hits to aU fiel'!s,
again.
Anderson is a career .302
hitter at Jacobs Field.
"I think it's a good sign
when you use the whole
field," Anderson said. "You
shouldn't try to pull everything. But I think if you try to
just hit the ball to the opposite field, you're going to be in·
as much trouble as you would
be if you ttied to pull everything." ·
Anderson was batting .306
for the Indians until an 0-for-

fur ob.ervation.
feel good technically, you can
forget about everything else
and concentrate on what you
should be thinking about,
which is thinking about see· ing the ball."
agnmg Anderson was a
low-risk move for Cleveland.

~ha~u:::re~~~s:p~~:':~~

ing average to .269 .
"[ feel good technically;·
Anderson said. "Once you

s· ·

The Orioles released Anderson with a year remaining on
his contract, so they must pay
him nearly $4 million this
season.
" [ think Brady is a good
player who had a bad year;'
Indians general manager
Mark Shapiro said. "He's a
competitor, and I don't think
Brady wants to go out on the
kind of year he had last year.
I'm .willing to bet on his
competitiveness
and
his
pride."

not to play. She will parttc1pate in the
North/South
all-star game and the
Ohio/Kentucky aU-star game.
Oak Hill's Anna Ramey, the Division III
PapS
winner, sustained an injury late in the Lady
take team honors for the big school stars. Gal- Oak's run to the regional tournament.
. lia Academy's Meredith Addington, who will
· Watkins wins shootout
continue her career at the Naval Academy, fin·River Valley junior Nicole Watkins. hit all
ished with eight.
·
five of her playoff attempts from beyond the
Haner and Waterford's Cassie McKown both arc to take home the Three-Point Shootout
scored seven while playing with the bigger- tide at halftime of the girls' aU-star game.
school team coached by Gal!ia Academy's Kim
Watkins and Trimble guard Allory Hooper
Adkins.
had been forced into a shootoff after each had
The small school brigade seemed to have drilled five of her ten opening-round attempts.
better control of the inside game, with Watson,
Hooper hit one of her five playoff attempts
Diamond, and Coal Grove's ,Cassie Ball con- before Watkins coolly drilled every attempt to
trolling a significant number of the rebounds.
take the title.
Fisher also controlled the pace for the · Watkins hit 10-of-15 attempts in the conWolfe-led squad, running the offense and on
test.
·..
, ·
several occasions, taking the ball the length of
Cara Dunkle, jennifer Jones of Fairland, Lisa
the court to dish it off or finish it herself.
Perry of Chesapeake, and Cassie McK~n ~
Mansfield drilled a pair of treys down the
tied for third place, hitting 3-of- 10 attempts m
stretch in 'the second half for the small school
the preliminaries.
stars in finishing with six points.
at Rio Onlndo
The Adkins-coached big school squad took
Dlatrtct 13AI~Sblr - I I game
a 26- 19 lead into the half, having begun to
Dlvlolon HI H, D IIHV 52
AddlllQIOO 8,
pull away on a pair of three-point baskets from DIVISION loll (58l- JO!dan Edwards t2,
cara Dunkle 12. K~lll Hayes 6, Koran Boll 4, Hclly Haner 7,
Dunkle.
Cassia McKown 7.
'Two district player of the year winners did DIVISION IIHV (52l - .Ieana Diamond 24, .Braol&lt;o Flllher 13, .
not participate in the game. Gallia Academy's Mandl Rusoell1, Stac1 w.- 8, Seroh Monllleld 8, CeUe Ball
0.
Brianna Johnson, the Div-1-11 MVP, elected HALf'!IME SCORE - Dlv. Hl26, Dlv. III-IV 19.

Girls

from

-lth

18, 2002

Redmen drop·opening ~c ~~FROM STAFF REPORTS
MTVERNON- The Rio Grande baseball team began the American Mideast Conference porhon of the s~ason
on a bad note, droppmg a
doubleheader to Mount Vernon Nazarene, 4-0 and 5-3 on Monday afternoon at Cougar Field.
Rio Grande (8-B, 0-2 AMC) was held to
only to iwo hits in game one. Senior Cory
Maynard and freshman Lance Davis e~ch collected a single. Redmen southpaw Trm Sutton (1-2) took the tough luck loss, yielding
eight hits and four runs (two e.a rned) in six
innings.
·
Justin Clarey had the big game at the plate
for the Cougars (4-0, 2-0 AMC), going 3for-3 with a double and three RBI. Adam
Rowe impt:t&gt;ved to 2-0 as he tanned six and
walked four in seven innings.
Game ~ saw the Redmen fall behind 2-

NAIA

dosed.
Hawkins, 26, had been an
unrestricted free agent. Other
teams had expressed interest
in him, and he had a weekend
workout with the Oakland
Raiders before reaching contract agreement with Cincinnati.

no upstart team

l&lt;ent
..

;

0 in the first inning and they could never
recover. Rio scored single runs in the secoJOld
and third frames and then cut the deficit to 43 in the fifth. but the rally fell short.
Senior lefifielder Josh McMillen went 3for- 3 with three doubles and an RBI to lead
the Redmen attack. Jake Sperry and Brent
Ewing also knocked in runs for Rio. Sophomore second baseman Gabe Devono was 2for-3.
Dan Hepler (2-1) suffered the loss as l!e
gave up aU five runs in 5 1/3 innings on the
hill. The Rootstown native walked four and
fanned one.
Chris H oily (2-0) scattered eight hits in
yielding aU three Rio runs in_5 1/3 innings
for the Cougars.
'
The Redmen had nine hits in game two.
Rio's gam~ forThesday versus Bluefield lw
been postponed. They now gear up for the
Florida spring trip.

&lt;•

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Something else Tagliabue them minor, such as starting
Changes in the NFL's televi- expects in the future is an the clock on kickoffi when
sion schedule outdoor Super Bowl in a the ball is touched on the
are
in
the northern city. It can't happen field of play - something
works. Stability before 2007 - the next four currently done only in the
in the league's TV dealings is are in San Diego, Houston, last two minutes of halves.
ahead, as well.
Jacksonville and Detroit,
It also recommended the
On a busy Monday at the which has a dome - and the dock not be stopped on ·a
NFL meetings, commissioner commissioner supports play- sack in the last two minutes
Paul Tagliabue admitted ing that game in either New to reward defenses for makowners will· discuss switching York or Washington.
ing good plays. Under curimportant late-season games
The competition commit- rent rules, the clock stop·s. to
from Sunday afternoon to tee presented nine changes in have the ball respotted.
·
Monday night to attract more the rules or bylaws, most of
viewers.
Tagliabue also said the
league's television future
remains with over-the-air
networks, not cable Publk Nolifts In Nrwspopm.
where the other three major
Yoor ltpllo Know, Ildi•md Rlgbllo Your
pro leagues have the bulk
their telecasts.
.
When the 2002 schedule Scipio Township will A g n as
Gall Lot No. 513; thence
·
h
d f accept bids for a Ohlinger aka Agnes north 78 degrees and
as released before t e en o contract for tho care Ohlinger's Unknown 30' weot 50 feet;
March, Tagliabue wants pro- and molntonanco of Helra, Credltoro, tho nco north 20
visions in place for the final the township Iota and Dovlaooa, Legatees, degrees and 30' west
.
da cemeteries for 2002. Administrators,
140.5 foot to tho
four weeks aUowang Sun y sealed blda will be Executors
and north line of what
games to be moved to ABC's opened at tho rllflular Assigns, whose laot wea formerly Rena
lot;
· e showcase. The township meeting to placeofrealdencaao Elaelotoln'o
Prl.me trm
.
.
. .
be held on 4/3102 at wall aa whose !honea north 70
1dea IS to ehrmnate- or at 8:30 p.m. at the present place of degree• and 30' east
least limit games that Pogevlile Town Hall. residence
are 123 foot to · tho
look enticing noVl, but f o r ---· _ 1 u! 1 her.. un known, wIll I a ka northeaot comer of
Information contact: notice that on what woo formerly
become duds w h en t h e Randy Butcher 81 742. January 15, 2002, Rona Eloolstaln'a lol;
teams involved have disap- 2302 or Phlllft Erwin 81 CITIBANK N.A. AS thence oouth 8
30"place
we•t
Pointing
seasons.
698-6717. Thet-&lt; truoten TRUSTEE 111 d Its degree•
180 feat end
to tha
,.
.
h
reoerve tho right lo Complaint In Case
We wall en.sure tat there relectonyorallblda. No. 02.cv-o051n tho of
beginning,
will be attractive games in all (3 15, 18, 19
Court of Common containing 20/100
PI eu 0 f M• 1go acre
moreaor leas.
the time slots on Sunday and
·Also
Iormor
,
gl
'
Public
Notice
County,
Larry
E.
,
h
h
on Monday nig ts, Ta 1Spencer,
Melga gran too Ia to eve
free along
and undisputed
. k we can ·THE STATE OF OHIO c ounty Cl or k 0 f use
abue said. "I t h m
the north
·
·
· ·
·
CO
OF
Courts, P.O. Box 151,
k
rna e 11 a wm-wm SituatiOn.
UNTY
tOO Second Street, aide of what wu
•vr
CUYAHOGA
Rone
we wou )d rnake su re , that
.
IN THE
COURT OF . Pomeroy, OH 457u
v•, formerly
f
1
Elaeloteln'a
ot
o
CBS and Fox both have
COMMON PLEAS soaking foreclooure rlght·of-woy •• now•
·
1
·
MEIGS COUN~
and alleging that the
k
strong programmmg ate m
• '•
Defendanto, Agneo located to Poococ
the season."
OHIO .
Gall Ohlinger aka Street.
Reference Deed•
The new plan must still be CASE NO. 02·CV.OOS Agneo Oh 11 ngor ••

NFL

li "I wouldn't say we're surprised, because we
; 'have prep-d for this;: Ienior guard Antonio
Mitchell said Monday before
. Kent State (29-5) practiced
'
for its first-ever regional
-·semifinal game. That will be Thursday at Rupp
&gt;\rena in Lexington~ Ky., against third-seeded
''Pittsburgh (29-5) in yet another must-win
game for Kent State's four seniors.
' ' "Our players have a lot of NCAA experi' 'ence," coach Stan Heath said. "This experience
has helped us be very focused throughout."
Heath also has NCAA experience, but not as
"11 head coach. He's in his first year at the school
; after three consecutive Final Fours while an
assistant at Michigan State - including the
~2000 national championship team.
• "We've . been to the tournament, but coach
Jieath has won it," Mitchell said. "He knows
- and
we believe in him."
·
I
•
"' Seniors Mitchell, Trevor Huflinan, Dernetric
' 'Shaw and Eric Thomas have gone 9- 1 in the
••Mid-American Conference tournament, LEADER OF THE MAC -Kent State's Trevor
i where an automatic NCAA berth is on the' Hoffman (24) will lead the Flashes into the
NCAA Sweet 16 this week. (AP file)
,line. They were 2-1 in the National invitation

'N
' CAA

He led the secondary with
44 solo tackles last season as
the Bengals ranked No. 9 in
NFL total defense, the team's
best finish since 1989. He
played in 14 games overall,
missing two because of an
ankle sprain and a bruised
. shoulder.

.• Tournament in 2000, the one time they failed
,,to make the NCAA. And they are 3-2 in the
t.•NC~ tourney- making them 14-4 in door-die games.
"On demeanor alone, we could win a
..national championship," Heath said. "When I
• compare seniors, I think our demeanor is very
-~imilar tc:i what we had at Michigan State. I see
a lot of championship mindsets."
Still, none of Kent State's p~rs have ever
·been in a regional.
"We're in a new setting, but so is every team
b k "H b 'd "0
·
ur .
. ,except Duke "':our rae et, eat 531 •
~.team really believes and ~~ be honest we still
•· have soflinanme roohm to 1g6toW·
.
ds
~ , Hu
, w ose
.2 sconng average 1ea
th
b
'
the team, has see ned. e team grow ut IS
6
1 nowhere near sans
• al
be
"h 531· d "We
• "Th
:i
ere s · ~ys a rfctter ga!lle,'Il eb h · t
0
; ..try thao get, tob t at 1
Pe ebct garnthe ..
hae t monakes s'
we vent een c ose ut at IS w
e

game midway through the sec~nd half on·a
Morris 3-point goal that gave his team a 5857 advantage.
·
The III-IV team, though, went on a 10-1
run, capped off by a Josh Davis (Oak Hill) 3year, added 11, while Eastern's Chris Lyons pointer.
Later in the second half, the 1-11 team
scored 12 points :j~~d Garett Karr, the coaches' Division IV district player of the year, managed to make it a two point game on a
added eight.
Mollohan 3-pointer, 72-70, but the III-IV
Meanwhile, Ironton St. Joe's Bill Drbsell, bunch managed to slowly pull away for the
the media's Division IV district player of the win.
year, also scored 14 points in his team's vicOther scorers for the 1-11 squ~ w~ Davis
tory while Jeff Trace of Trimble pitched in and teammate Jamrny Dan Persm wtth five
with eight.
points each, Brad Fulton (Chesapeake) and
Meanwhile, for the 1-11 squad, Marietta's . Chuck Lukowski (Vinton County) ~th four
John Farr scored a team-high 13 points, fol• each, and Logan's D~rek Harden ~th two.
lowed by Ironton's Tommy . Lutz with 11,
For the III-IV team, B~n Magga~d
Warren's Curt Morris and River Valley's Jon (South Point) scored seven pomts, Dallas Hill
Mollohan with nine each, and Gallia Acade- (Southern) five points, Brando~ Waller (Co~
my's Tony Moore with seven.
Grove) three pomts, and M1chael ~berts
Mollohan had two 3-pointers to go along (Wellston) and Darren . Colburn (F:urlan\1)
with Morris' three treys.
with two each.
.
.
David Finney of Gallia Academy and
Prior to th~ . game, ~aVIS wo~ the sJ:un
Meigs' Matt Williamson each added six.
dunk competltlon, while at halftime, ~me
The I-ll squad took its last lead of the won the 3-pomt shootout.
,

.Boys

from PageS

"'· fun"

'

at Pitt; burgh presents another hurdle, yet
Heath b~lieves Kent State will be prepared for
!~ the match up because the Panthers play a simi1

L

1'

l~~.~;e: a lot of similarities, that's why 1 think

Git is going to be a terrific game:' he ~d. "Both
. teams emphasize defense so much. We're going

11 .

to have to make some shots. Fortunately, we
have some shotmakers."
.
The winner will face the Duke-Indiana winner in the regional final Saturday.
"We're not looking past Pittsburgh believe
me, but to play Duke, now that would be
something," Shaw said. "We're a team that
always seeks to be better, so playing the champions would be a dream."
·
With 20 consecutive wins and 25 of 26, the
Golden Flashes have been called a Cinderella
t
al dy
.
_
s ory rea ·
"I don't believe. we're Cinderella," Huffinan
said. "But if people want to call us that apd it
gets some attention for the little guys, I'll take
. ,
lt.
Pittsburgh won the Big East's West Division,
·
·
h
~
but lost to Connecticut m t e con.erence
tournament final two weeks ago. The Panthers
beat Central Coimecticut State in the NCAA
·~
·
· b h
first round, then ousted Cah.orma ot at
Arena in Pittsburgh, less than two miles
from t etr campus.
. . ,
.
"They are veryhstrong alnsadke, Hehath said.
"Right now, you ave to oo at w at teams
have accomplished,
Pittsburgh
be
the favorite. But there 1s so much panty m college ~;asketball that we are not a fish out of
water.

° ·

approved by Fox and CBS,
although Tagliabue can unilaterally approve it for the
NFL.
.
A CBS spokesperson
wouldn't comment Monday.
··
h · d'
In the past, Fox as m 1cated a strong opposition to
·h
1
sue a proposa ·
Both the NFL and ABC
·would like the flexibility to
·
h
make a swatch so t at surprise teams such as the 2000
Ravens or 2001 Patriots can
· d·
d. f 1
be telev1se mstea o a esser club that was previously
scheduled on Monday night.
· h d
The games to b e SWttc e
would have to be consistent
with the two network s th at
carry Sunday games, mean. a Fox mateh up cou )db e
mg
moved to Monday night
only to~ replace another Fox
game.

Mello~

a~d

sho~ld

·~·~-----------------------------

Comforting America One
Seat At A Time

NEW YORK (AP) A
ruled Monday that the
!=30110t force a $200 million lawsuit into
arbitralion by saying · that a union

$7.5 million signing bonus.
Brown's lawsuit alleged the .
league tailed to properly supervise and enfotce rules that flags
be properly weighted and
irto~ttract~·a .playtr's claim thrown in a proper fashion.
Brown has said he still feels
hi$ career waJ ruined when
· -was hit : by a referee~
ilenaltv flag.
.
The.
Mt U.S.. District
Gerard E. Lynch m Mail'm~ .'the case brought
former ,tieveland Browns
....,r!Nno
tackle Odanllo ,13rOYvn,!fiom federal to state

The Dally &amp;tntlnel • Page A 7

Flexible MNF sked in works

KENT (AP) Kent State's impressive
NCAA tournament run might be a surprise to
~eryone in the nation - except the Golden
-'Flashes. ,

CB Artrell Hawkins signs 3-year contract
CINCINNATI (AP)
Cornerback Artrell Hawkins,
who started 13 g:un:es for the
Cincinnati Bengals last season
and tied his career high with
three interceptions; signed a
three-year contract Monday
to stay wiih the team.
Contract terms weren't dis-

w¥tw:mydallyHntlnel.com

-

'

pain and sees white flashes
wheneVer he exetts himself, and
that he didn't learn of nerve
damage and damage to the viscous in his right eye until doctors in New York examined

him.

ruJina

rej~ct~ ~erus

He
from
NFL that the case should be
of the courts altogether,
deciided instead by an arbitrator
to the terms of a colagreement
and NFL

Al.IATARS -Participants In Monday's District 13 all-star girls' baske~ball game included,
from left, front: Holly Haner, Brook Fisher, Mandl Russell, Sarah Mansfield, Brlanna Johnson.
Back: Coach Larry Howell, coach Kim adkins,. Cara Dunkle, Jeana Diamond, Mer~dith Adding·
ton, Cassie Ball, Stacy Watson,

c~oa!!c!!h!!S!!c!!!o!!tt!!W!!o!!l~!!e!!.!!(D!!VPI!!!!)!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

the 800-nieter run (2:10.13).
Other Redmen results: Tim
Sykes, 11th in the 800-meter
run (2:06.06);Jerod Arms, 131h
in the 800 (2:07.35); Scott Littrell, seventh in the 5, 000
(15:42.20); Josh Fogle, 13th in
the 5,000 (16:12.57) an1 Brian
Hill WolS 19th (17:35.74); Derek
Baker, seventh in the 3,000meter steeplechase {10:34.31);
Adam Grim, eighth in the
shot put (35~11) and 10th in
the discus (105-9); Chris Watts,
lOth in the shot put (31-4) and
11th in the discus (76-t).Jeremy
Cron was ninth in the ja~
(131-6).
Rio Grande was fifth (out of
5) overall with 13 points.
Cincinnati won the event with
:235 points
Rio Grande will travel to
Atlanta, Georgia next week to
compete in the Emory JJniversity Invitational.

"::~sujlpliea pr001idodl Rush

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·••·
AGNES GAIL
OHLINGER
aka AGNES
OHLINGER'S

HEIR~~~~~~ORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
· ASSIGNS ate I.
Defendanta
Samantha
s.
Joseph, being first
dudly sworlnh, dephose•
an
a1 1 e 11
the aayeplalnllff'o
Attomey In the above
entitled action for
Foreclosure, Money
Relief &amp; Judgment,
that aorvlce . of
aummono cannot be
made upon lho
Dofenda nta Agneo
Gall Ohlinger aka
Agneo Ohllngar'o
Unknown Helra,
Creditor• Devlaeee
L.egateea '
'
Admlnlot;atoro,
Exocutora
and
Alllgno· that plaintiff
haa
'eurclaed
1 11

Aehobottl
Beach,Lander.
OE, Member
Equal
Oppcxtunity
Call 1'4van"•l
Nowl H!OQ.540.8435.

ot

,_
a ooo;ch of tho
Probata recorda, and
that the residence of
eald defandenta are,
other than herein oet

33105 Hiland Road . Pom eroy, OH

(740)
992-9355
..

Volume 294, page

W.f:

forth, unknown, and

Raymond Eisel stein

by deed dated
February 24 • 1938
beginning 11 the
•oulhwaat corner of

(4) 2, 9, 16, 2002

a lot formerly owned

Sfol~il~nmen~~o;~1l~ by Rena Elooloteln

and/or 31 OS.06 of the the same being tho
Revl- Code of Ohio northwoat corner of
and purouant to Ohio
Rule
of
Civil
Procedure 4.4(Al.
SHAPIRO &amp; FELTV,
L.L.P.
Samontha S. Jooeph
(0070824l
Attomey for Plaintiff
800 Weal St. Clair

Avenue, Second

Floor
Cleveland, OH 44t13
(2t6l 821-1530
(2t8) 821·7846·fiK
SHAPFELTOLOGS.C
OM
SWORN
TO
BEFORE ME, and
subocrlbed In my
preeence thla 12th
dey of
Fe!lruory, 2002.
Marl Lendlno
Notary Public, Stale
ofOhlo .
My Commlnlon
explreot~26-04

CITIBANK N.A. AS
TRUSTEE
AGNES GAIL
OHLINGER aka
AGNES OHLINGER'S
UNKNOWN HEIRS,
CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS at al.

IS TIE liGHT OIOIOE .

Heirs,

cannot
wllh
raaoonable diligence
be aocertafnad· and
that thll caae I~ one

...y ...

TU bV DAITAX

'·'

(

Money All Expenaea Paid. Call Toll Free

1 (-)1111111.

IUOAAIUITERS COOKIES
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EXPERTS PFII!DICT TRILLIONS

..

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Burllnglon Corrie,.
IN·-• D~'-Trll-. Nowl No Up Front
No COL, No P-ml

hln up .. 12,111111 porF. oulln~~n.,.. tonno lrum home.
No txptrlanoo. CoM toll IIH:

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(24 hra.) ~

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•

IICO

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4, P.O. Box 1438, Anlloch, Tn.

I'J
QOOD WEEKLY INCOME

-992-2155

CITIBANK N A
· ·
ASTRUSTEE
Plaintiff

realdonce of the eald

Moiling OUr Salol Brocllurtll

To advertise your church's
Easter Services here
Call Dave or Debbie

PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO OHIO
RULE OF CIVIL
PROCEDURE 4.4(Al

~-fandento,· lncludlng

Rio
s,OOo-meter run with a time
of 15:27, Scott McNutt finished fifth in the 3,000-meter
steeplechase (1 O:l 0.6 7), Kyle
BrookoVer was sixth (10:26.49).
McNutt also finished 14th in

A~~~:.~J :~R

~:··~~~~~t:lln ga~~=

F.,. Suppllos, f'ollagel
Stlrt lmmoclatelyl
Gonulno Oppmtunltyl

from PapS

Unknown

Cradltoro, Devlaeos, 56t, Molgs Counly
Leg~toes,
Deed Recorda.
Administrators,
Auditors Parcel
Executors
and No.18-Dt288
Aulgno have or
Parcel Two: Baing
claim to have an a part of Lot No. 500
Interest In the reel In Sugar Run In tho
estate deacrlbed . LIn coIn
HIll
below:
Annexa·tlon
to
Situated In the Pomeroy,
an d
VIllage of Pomeroy, beginning at the
Ohio · County of Southeaat corner of
Melgt and state of a lot now owned
Ohio:
Rena Elaalateln the
Parcel One: Baing same being the
·a part of Lot No. 500 Northwest comer of
In Sugar Run In Lot No. 5t3; thence
LIn caIn
HIll South 78 · 30' wast
Annexation
to 50 feetthanca North
Pomeroy
2~30' weal t40.5
1 nd
ducrlbed ae follows: · feet, to the North llno
1
•
Beginning at a stake of Rona Else atoln s
In tho ooot side of lot; thence. North 70Peacock Str .. t, 30' Eaet 123 feel to
which stake Ilea the Northeast corner
I outh 5 degrees 44'
of Reno Eloelotoln'o
weal 111.4 feet from lot; thence, Saulh 8·
the northwest cornar 30' Weal 180 feat to
I
of Lot No. 501 , whic h lh •
Pace
of
was formerly . owned beginning contelnlng
by
Eberatiach V alentlne
Estate· 20/100
Ieee. acre, more or
'
A dl •
p
1
thence
along
u lora
arco
Peacock Slreelaou t ~ No.16-01858
5 degreeo and 4 4
The Defendants
waat 17.8 feet; thence named above are
oouth 74 degrees and required lo answer
10: e11t 263.3 feet to on or before tho 141h
the northwest corner Cd~Tyi~AM:J·
AS
of Lot No. 5t3;
thence north 8 TRUSTEE
4agreoo tO' aosl t90 BY:
feet along tho west SHAPIRO &amp; FELT'l,
line of Lot No, 5t2ta
a largo locuat poet; L.L.P.
thence south 70 Samontha S. Joseph,
degreeo, wast 289.8 AHomey at·Lew
feet to the place of AHorney for Plaintiff·
beginning,
Petitioner
containing 82/t oo BOO Weal St. Clelr
acre
Avenue, 2nd Floor
EXCEPT
the Clevoland,OH441t3
( , t t530
following from the 2t 8 , 82 •
above deecrlbed
premises sold to (3l 12, 19, 28, 2002

BINGO
Tues. March 19,6:00 p.m.
Tickets • $20.00 (21 games)
·
Extra games 3 for $5
Sponsor· Salisbury Elementary
Refreshments Sold
at

2 Avg. Size Rooms Cleaned
$29.99 ea. rm.
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LEGAL NOTICE

~-

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•

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Paige A 8 • The Dally Sentl•l

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carto. uK,

Kid-........, t33.DO

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ANNouNCEMEf\ITS .

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
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In Next Dav·s Paper
In- Column : 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m .
.•• c· ·--- Sundays Paper
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sweepers, tOOls, Beryl Wit·
son, Reggscrest above
Easlem,
(740)985-3585
rain/shine.
.
AUCI10N AND

oo;.

r

--

Fu:A.MARKET
.

·

LSW Required . Call Andy

PoMERoviMIDDLE

Thompson, (740)533-3140
Are you an energetic motlvated person looking for a
rowarding career? Scenk:
Hills Nursing Centeroffers·a
wonde.rful employment OP·
portunlty. We prov ide excellent sklllod and Intermediate
care with a comprehensive
rehab departmont. We are
currently seeking CNA's or
STNA's . Please apply . in
parson or call Jane Darlmg
lor more lnformalion at
(740)446-7150
Part-time Secretary needod
approximately 20/hrs pe;
week with availabiliry to
cover' whole days as need·
ed. Dulles include answer·
lng phones, copying, ancJ
Hi h School 0 1.
11 ht typi
ptma r~~irJ. Sand n~sume to CLA 554 c/o 825
.
. .
~~g,Avenu!l, Gall•pohs OH

Rick Pea~ AuctiO~ COO'!·
pany, 1full time. auciiOn~er,
compete auci!On service.
Uconsed N66,0 hlo &amp; West
VIrginia , 304-773-5785 Or
.,., .. 773 5447
~
·

AVON I All Areaal To Buy or
Soli. Shirley Spears, 304675-1429 .
·
·
Block-brick layers only $100
sign on bonus/ $50. relorral
bonus. Apply at job alto Oak
Hill High School 5093 St.Rl
93 N Oak Hill, OH.

.:..:...cc.;__;.,::._ _ _

WANTED SERIOUS PEDPLE TO WORK. Ba oalf·
employed. No door·to-door
sales. Mal~order~nlernet
Full tralnln~ &amp; auppon.
www. ARHomeFree.com 1•
666 22" '567
• ~

..

company.

Call
1-877•
463-6247
ext· 1841
0

L.------,_J
,

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1·800-214-0452,
Reg N90-GS-1274B.
u~ ... ~·lY~.LI....I.J\.1~

176
1

1

20¢

Days

Per Word

6

• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Anlm~ls
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

.

·--

All Makes Lawn Mowers
and Outdoor P-•er Equip
m••t
...., , Repalred .•F"ree Pickup.
and delivery available. Call
Mike (740)446-7604.
All ofyourhomerepalrs,additlons &amp; remodeling. 24hr
emergency serv~. senior
citizens discount. 22yrs.
exp. (304)576-2065

Clinical Director needed
for an outpati~nt alco~o!
and other drug counseling
and P!'e~.e;ntlon agency. Responsibil1t1es Include: diagnosing, screenlngslevalua -

7914x70 Bayview (w/ Den),
New SinCe 97, CIA, Water,
Heater, Furnace, Front
Porch, Shed and Wooden
Fence, Lots o1 Remodeling,
Must •·· $8000 (304)67&amp;-

H

3008 ~.

.tvertiel .._.,
.,....,.tce.llrnlllll:lon or
dllc:rlmlnatlon bald on

ortgln, or •ny Intention to
make any auch
piafMance,llmlbldan or
dlacrtmlnltllon."
• not
• new P P w
knowlngty accepl

villa,

vlolatlon of the law. Our
retderatre hereby
Informed tho! all
dwalllnga.cfvertludln
thla~pertN
lvtlllbleon•nequtt

HOMIS
roRSAl..E

'

c

Patriot. References/ Oepos- drawer
chest,
H. No Pets. U40)379-2540 (740)448·9361

=,
I

$25 ..

I

Fullllze 4 poater bed Wilh ,
sprlnga and mattreu $125.
Large antique marble top
.
chest (needs some wort&lt;,)
2 bedroom mobile home for $300 or both for $400. 2
rent, no pets, t740)992· Large cases of aaftlng sub- ·
5858
plies both for $50. ~29
betwHn 12pm- 6pm.
·
2 bedroom mobile noma f
rent In Middleport, '$250 d: Good Used Appliances, Reposit, $250 rent, no pelS, conditioned and Guaran~
(740)992·5039
teed. Walhm, Oryer11,
!:.:::!::::::::::__ _ _ Rangel, and Rlfrig9rators,
Beautiful RIVer View ldtal Some start at $95. Skaggs .
For 1 Or 2 People, Roferon, Appliances, 76 Vine 51.,
ces, Deposit, No Pets, Foa- (740)ot48-7398
tar Trailer Park, 740-441- ::..,::::..:._;::_:.=:.__;__ _;_
0181 ."
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, ONO.
A1'ARlMI;Ms
(740)446-74«
. 1-877·830fOR RENT
9162. Free EstlmaiH. Eaoy
financing. 90 days same I I
cash. VluJ Maatar Carl!.
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Orlw- a- mtte IBWI alot. ,
mants, fumlsh..:l and unfur·
·
nlshed, security deposit re· New floral prinl couch and
quired, no pets, 740-992· chair, paid $1300 will soli tor
2218.
$800. 258-9366

MOBILE HOMES

wv 304_738 •3409 .

New 14x70, 3 brfl.blh. onty
" $976 down &amp; $189. per/mo.
Cal Nikki740-38S.7871

~;•:P:P:~~u;n:lty:":·:·:u:.
r10

3323 Ext. H09.
==------::~
2 story fann house, 3 bed· For Sale: Six- drawer ~
room. newly redecorated, mirror, $35. Matching flvt-

:.m~:= ~na~rbo~~

~t!."::~:lnrnl

For Sale: Aoeondll~ned
washers, dryers -and refriberators. Thompsons Appiiance. 3-407 Jackson Avenue, (304)675-7388.

1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclooed
Homes From $199/Mo., &lt;4%
Down. 30 Years at 8.15%
APR. For Ustings, 800-319-

Inventory Reduction Sale
All new and pre-owned
homes reduced tor quick
sale. No reasonable offer
refused. 18 new and 10
prO-owned
homes
to
choose from . Cole's Mobile
Homes, US 50 EeSI, Athens OH 740•
•
592 1972
'·
LlmHed Or No Credit? Gov-

: :..~.:.::'::.

Thl

~

.,t_MoB
...

All,... ntat.~ng
lnthleMWiplf*'lt
•ubfecttothefedtntl
F-~ ~-~- •ct o1 11111
_;'~--;;:, lHegal to

No Credit/ Bad Credit/ 1st

. FORlbNr

r

Time Home buyers/ FAS
Loansl Govemment FHA
Loans
Available.
Call
(740)446-3218.

I

I

j

L.,------...;11·

r

I

i

I

9

oeo.

r

For sale by owner: Nice bllaval home on 1 acre near
Chester. -Three bedroom,
two baths, one-car garage,
family room with fireplace,
-sun room. New central htat·
lng &amp; ale system. One ml·
nute oft Route 7, butslll privale. (740)985-3981

~r~ e~~b~~-~i~c~~:."Ca~~
(7~)~·30931oquallly

·

.

j

3 bedroom home In Middleport wHh 2 car garage, newer .,_,.
-Mralalr &amp; heat &amp; windows, (740)992·3278.
3 Bedroom House for sate,
camp Conley Roush Ferrell
Lane.
(304)Ba 2•3565
(7401992•56n
.
·
New hous8·11nanclng available to qualllled buyers. 0%
qown. 1600 sq ft, 2 1/2
bath, 3 Bedrooms, custom
~k trim &amp; cabinets, ~s
fireplace, large kltchenldmin~, 2 112 car garage on 1
1 acres. $119,900. Porter
area. (740)446-4514 till5pm
or (740)446-3248 attar 6pm
Partially .Remodeled home,
2 Bedroom, t Bath, Full

wllh no credil to buy a new •
home. Must meet minimal
requJremants.
Call
{140)446·3570.

:S::~'ga'~grgee. ~;78~~~~:
on Dr., $60,000. (740)441·
0465
Ranch Style 3 Bedroom, 1
Bath, Largo LA , OFI , Kitchen, CIA, 3 Car Garage, 3
Acres, $75,000. (740)379 2627

run.

.

- """

talnod. Aoof Air, G-.IOr,
Full Bath, Sleeps 6 . Good
S~. $4000 or may lrldo.
(740)245-5235

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

1':'94:"J2&amp;

• ..,....

•

Complete

CnniOII!Crai.
reflcxoloa:y, MyofuciaJ

Remodeling

and Y011 Therapy Gift
Certificates Available
$30-4,: nUnutes

Stop &amp; Co mpare
FREE EsnMATES
.

'tV"lJ&lt;J"'"

7/22!fFN

HERBALIFE

SERUICE

1 Lost 27lb.

a

buy 100- 10 !rae 258"''" .
·
6504,258-9247
NEW AND UIED STEEL
StHI Baema, Pipe "Ribar ·
For Concralo, Angle, C~
net, Flat Bar, Sleet Grat.w
For Drain~, Driveways ~&amp;
Walkwaya. lAL Scrap M&amp;lala Open Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Rim41:30pm. CIOHd Thufldty,
Saturday
&amp; Sundtly.

lng appNcatlone tor

, (740)446-7300

,

Hn..JLOEOC

~FOR~ 1

JU...oL

I

~br. Hud Sublidlzed '"Y'
.. nt.aJI
util. paid f~[~~ and
England·

abktd

e:H.O 3().4

75-8879 :

SPA.a:
t'OR.IbNr

2br. House $250. A month+

'

Utilities. References re- 18x80 attes, S1001mo. 740qulrod. (304)675-2&lt;495 after 992-2167.
·

6pm.

·

3 bedroom house In Chestar, dr, carpeting, remodeled
bathroom, many Improvementa, references, depolits,
2000 Dutch MobUe Home evenlngs(614)501·8339.
3 bedroom, 2 full bath,
porchos, Decks. Very nice Charming, Historical Home
home 16x80. $34,000 or tor ·rent April 1st. $600/mo.
someone Interested fn tak· L.ow Utilities. Kitchen FurI
On
nished. In town, close to
1
!~,e~t~d Tow~lc:.::l~ schootd. Call (740)258-8433
H
p k Movl N
or (740)339-0562.
orne ar .
ng eed to
Sell for Pay Off. (304)675- Colla 1
t b ki h
4135
bath. \~ :,:~ih: U~iti:~:
f:tef. R8qulred . (304) 675 _
39K27 1994 Fairmont Oou· 2495 after 6pm.
blewido, 2BR, 2 Bath, Must
move.
(740)256-6128 , Pllol . Program, .Aentere
(740)258-1597
Nseded, 304-736·7295.

:3

7

r

.'r

Storage Sp8ce for rent 4033 .
square feet. with metal
shelVIng. Located In CJty of
Point Pleasant. Inquire at
(304}674-D102

;;;;::::~;:;::;::::;::::;:::::;
r10
u ...... ___..............

~Gooos
.
,

Corsair
Couchlloveeeat e month
old. floral wllh plltOwa. Paid
$1400
uklng
S7CJ,O.
(304)675·7022 after 6pm. ,
Free Gu Fu-- and ••
.. -...
,.
CondiUoner Eltlmatee. Call
(740)446-6308 or 1-8()0.
291-oo98. It you dOn't c&amp;JI
us wo both IoBei
Grubb's Plano· Tuning •&amp;
Ropalrs. Problems? Need .
Tuned? Call The Plano Qr. ,
7o40-446-&lt;4525

::::..::::..:=:___.,.;_

Hewlen Packard Printer
Br.tnd New. $50., Umiuc
Scanner, brand new, $50.
.Bundy Sax"""""e 2yrs. old.
$600. (304)875.'3765

L-------..,1 ==::..:::::..:::::.:..:::.=.__
Appliances: AecondiUoned ·
Washers, O.yers, Rang11,
Refrlgratora, Up To 90 Days
Guarantee&lt;!! We SaM New
Mayta~ Appliances, French
Clly Maytag, 740-446-7796.

Independent Herballfo Dist lb 1 C 11 F Product
0'
r u or, a or
Opportunity. (740)«1 - 1982:
smell p1Ck'4) load of toya,
crafta, mlac ltema, $100.
(740)992·5979 (740)448,
0196

··--·· ·-·-·•-'--

·~·

DEPOYSAG

PUTS

(740) 591·2173

Coolville,

740-667-0363

I

V. C.

Ill

Hill's Self
Storage

J..---lliiiiiiO._.I.

-r

~

.e

o...

;======:::.

Kl~ball

~~

LA l\11\I'S !M li1!!J ll!!J It!!!

o...

I

.t \

1

A

il..!!J li!!i

morris
Equipment
Repairs 6 Pilrts
on all Rlilkes of
fann Equip.
and Dozers

742-2455

i/
_ f:t
• t.

!fi_IIJ IIlii!

fi! 1

33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Knlues 6Ctlledlbles
"lllan:h mildness''
10°o DI SCOUn t
o n al l ord ers
over

Can Count On"
Owner
Gene Arms

55.00

217 f;, 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

992·5908
WERRY'S
WITTLE ONES

Now accepting .
children

Day, evening,

"Service You

and weekend
care available

992~6975

992·3174
1 mo 311:3
pd

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
Free Estimates
949-1405

TFN

macks Pocket

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
Sanitation
SERVICE

.•E"'. c"',....
Rl_......,-:-.,

I

Authorized Agent

YOUNG'S

1IIBBB••••••••••••

TFN

or email@
~@ctagorUJa.ccm

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

740·985-3948

CONCRETf/BlOCK/BRICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Aat Work,
Replacements, • Walks

und Drives • Stencil
Crete
Free Esti mates
Serving Ohio and W.V.
WV#031712
N

RIVERVIEW MOTORS
FOR THE

BEST DEALS IN THE AREA

Many Income Tax Vehicles to Choose From Plus
A Great Selection of Dependable Pre-Owned Cars
2 Blocks ahcve McDonalds Lower Pomeroy, OH
YOUR LAST STOP CAR SH0P
MON·FRI 9 AM 7 PM SAT 9 AM • 2:30 PM
I

Memory Of

Eddie

Patrick

.:l.-.Jri!il:::,_.J

1;ee GMC 1500 Pickup,

2WD,
ve, · run1
automot~.
120,000 mila,
good,
$2,600.00. Call 304-773,
·, . _ Forguaon 382, 55 5305 evonlngo.
• hp, 7f7 hr., llko new, 1991 Chevy Z71, 4•4. OX·
•15.800,(740)9811-3643
a.llent cond~lon. new 3110
. ~l1ma for Frost Seeding Pea- cl. onglno, (740)~2·8027
ture and Hay Flelda.
:a:.:ft•::r..:4":pm~.~~--=­
ATV Broedcaat Saedara, 12 1991 GMC Sonoma Eid
VOlt, High Ouallly, Fila moll Cab. Topper, 4•4. 134K
' ATVI. $295.
miles, Auto, AC. T/C, Lota
~ Jlm'l Farm Equipment Inc. New, Very Clean, EKcallem
· (740)446-2o484
Truck, $4800 . (740)441·

10-2-68 to
3-13·02

r

&amp;

__

.a
,;))!,,

.......
"Quality Home
Improvements"

Coft9tdll•• Prka
New Homes • Remodelln1
Rooftna • Room Additions
Sldlna • Pole Botns

Decks • Gti'IPS
Ftte Eldmllltl' WVG3291t
1 '86 GMc suburban, 4x4. ·
.
&amp;'U\J~~.U..CoA
• auto. 454, 73K actual miles,
l '--....;.iiiiiiiiiiiii;;.,,P 4• lift, 3/4 ton, $6800
'
(740)992·3141 leave mea·
.,'.Tobacco Pienta for .Sale.
·
. - - - - - - - - - ,-....,~~....,....,~...
1' Call NrYN and order Plantol -~u~ge~
' To raoerve your Mily spring 92 lauzu RocleD, 4 WD, 4
planting call Dewhurst ·or, Fuellnj., 5 Spd, 120,DDD
•• GrHnhouool
(304)895, mt, ss.500 obo. 13041876•·"3740/(304)886-3789
.3964.:::::.__ _ _ __
(Syracuse; Ohio)
I I{\ \"!'1 1 1 ~ I\ Ill l'\
1994 Aed, F·250, 4x4,
Bulldozins,
13D,DDD mllea. S7,DDD
Trackhoenaackhoe,
AUTOS
(740)388-9055
land cleafing, Septic
1
li1)R SAt.E
1998 Chevy Blazer LS, 4)(4,
lank, ditching; water
4 door, V6 vortiJc, automat·
lines, site work,
1978 Dodge Diplomat, lc, 78,000 mllas, PW, POL,
basements/foolers,
78,000 ae1ual miles, vary cruise,
AWFM/CO,
' tloon, vol)l good shape. $7,995.00. Call 304-773·
driveways, ponds
5305 IIY8ninga.
'
;.,(740)446-9780
(Insured)
::11188 Bonneville, AC, power 1998 Explorer XLT, 4x4,
Free Estimates
~~ wlncloWe, tilt, ve, new tires, loaded, casal&amp; dlso co,
740.992-3985
:,.bettol)l, good mllaa, good hlghor mllaa, $8900.00.
. condtllort. 448-0779
740-949-2221

'.· j

~~

oeo. (740) 992-2753
(740) 992-1101
WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION

nrm.

liU8t
Cettai1t8ed, Sirii.nlptpll'll

Siding, Gutters, Pressure washing,
Heating/Coo(ing , Concrete

~

(740) 949-1521
1·877·466-1234

l.ileli'rre Wan8l1y
FreeEs11eils

Pomeroy Eagles

BISSEll

610602171
Euery Thursday

BUILDERS IDC.

6 SUnday
Doors Open 4:30
· Early birds start

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemenl
Windows • Roofing

COMMEICIAL and IESIDEHIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

Happy
Birthday

....tt_. .......
POP.SI

Business Services
• : Square Bales of Hay lor 1993 Pon!lac Transport Mini
· Sail: Localklrl· Palrlol Rd. van, power lockalwlndowa.
·'.•·· ~(7•")37"
-··
..,::_r_~--,.,.--New Stereo. Real Nice.
Ha~ &amp; Bri~ht Wire Tla Askln~304$3)6~~:i7~~04)674,
· Straw, Year 'Round Delivery 023
:::::.:1 ,.,1'::.::.;=~=-:::-:­
Volume Dlacount Avails- 85 lnlemallonal school bus,
Herlttge
Farm. 345 gas engine, ready to
c-(304)675-5724.
go, $2500. (740)949, 2700.

Bn!nd I'1IIIIII1II )OJ can

Plumbing, Electrical, Painting, Decks,

~

I,

miles on engine, Aeal Sharp
' ven Champion .Bloodlines. Truck, $5500. (740)689(740)245-0485 alter 6pm.
0302

Carpentry, Masonary, Roofing,

)!liP' d

It broke our

· heartsto
unexpectedly lose
you but you
didn't go alone.
For part of all of
us went with you.
Thanks goes to
all Eddie's
friends
and
,.~~~----~=00~13~-------W.AN11'DBUY
1997 Chevrolet 314ton 4•4
family that
10____.1• well
Exllnded Cab, short bed,
contributed to
L.,__..-;
equipped, 311DV8, 71 K
funeral expenses
WOnted: Pop Machine and miles, $17,500. 740-446,
2684
a Food Vending Cart. Cal :.
::.::.;_ _ _ _ _ __
artd flowers.
.-.·r740)446
. ,[JVmOCK2515
72 Ford F-350, 4 ooor.
Also lhanks to
Crew
Cab,
$2000.
Fisher
Funeral
(740)388·9073 after 4pm
•
Home
for
all th.,irl
95 GMC Sonoma, Eid. Cab,
help in Ibis time
' 4,H GOATS FOR SALE. 2.2. 5 speed, Bed cover,
hood.
Racing
·,; Full Blood Boer, Percentaga Raised
of tragedy.
Sirtpea, CD Player, New
,ldda and females . Reserve tires and clutch, 82,000
1~"'-'l:f' .tuM It .tt
' now ID&lt; 4-H projecta. Pro-

bed tobacco trays, new
$1 .80, used .50 each; or

house

·

LIMESTONE

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

7•n-""" 1671

in 32 days.
100%

,a

Cellular

oGI-

riO

\'

--.·--- ----.-·-- -· - -

Motor hOme, 2611, oelf con-

u~--- ~

New and used 242 cell, ftoa1

ment. (7..0)446-()390
Newly Remodeled 2 Badroom Apt., Stove/ Retri,..,.•-·tor,· Ulllllles Paid, $4001
month. 46 Olive ·st.,
(740)448-3945
-~ - _
Now ' Taking Appllcatlono35 Watt' 2 Beclroom TO'MlApartmentl, lncltJ:dll
Water
Sawago, Traah,
$350/Mo., 740-446 0008.

Twin Rivers Tower accept·

I r10

1985 WindSor 14x70 with
12K24 add 0 36R 28A
Centr&amp;l AC ~ridge 'stove'
microwave '' &amp; dlsh'wast1er'
outbuilding, new ·roof, froni
and rear porches wfhandi·
cap ramps. 740-441 ·1670
leave message

I

Credit worthy buyer Sooldng
f o r - IO buy. Gallla, Ml•
son or Meigs, please call
.Jim, l740) 992·3l87
'wanting 10 Buy, Aont or
Lease at 18881&lt;4 acres clear
barn, with mobile . hom&amp;
hookup or llva In already
thera. Call 304-675·6200
74D-441-1DI5 leave mes·

Wanted: 10 people wanted sage

MOBD.B H~
..-nnS .... .,.

REAL FsrAm
WAN'Im
'

--

,....,------~

r

r

41

I

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing , 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

6
16
I!UR•ILE•s•lfu•--•l.,t.'_ .....RENr-•._.l..,r__".0Uillii0LD•Gooos--.""'""1

10

Disney Beach Vacation. 6 ~r,:~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~
nights great hotel sacrifice rl.O
HOMFS
lor$199.00614-523-8792
"··FOR ~
Doing spring cleaning? Donate reusable Items to 1994 Sunshin&amp; Home on
ReUse lndustrlesl N. .Co- .corner lot 50 x 100 ·ft .,
lumbus Rd., Athens High- washer dryer stove ralrlgway 50, Albany. 740-698- . erator ' centr81 air' water
8200.
sotte,n8r, storage b~ildlng 8
1180
WANTED
X 10 , $35,000.00. Daytime
992·2696, Evening 992,
To Do
0092

Certified Daycare provider,
2 openings, in Pomeroy,
~(7:_:4.:Dic:99.:2:.·3.:5:0:.:9_ _ __
Oavld's• Home Repair.
Plumbing, Electrical, Painttlons, rce~nlewor .cllentcharts, lng, etc. (740)256-9373 or
c85e
sulta.t'?na, quality (740),...1·5707.
assuranc~. tram1ngs, super·
vision. chen! caselo~d, etc. Moving and HaP-ling: Clean
Experience m chemical de· Our Buildings Basements
pendency LPCC USW or G
E '
T h.
AN whos~ declar~lion st~te- Et~rage~dd at~~~$ r~ali
ment includes substance 1740·)446 _7.".
·
d
......-.
Domino's Pizza Of Point abuse assessment an
Pleasant/EioanoriWlnl leld counseling requirec:t. Send Top to Bottom Cleaning
now hiring Full-Time &amp; Part-, resume by March 27, 2002 SeNlce, professional; resiTime safe drivers. Competl- lo: FAC} S, 45' Olive Street, dontial, office cleaning at
tfve Pay &amp; Flexible Sched· Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or an
affordable
price.
ule. Apply In person 420 VI- FAX to (740)446-8014 . (740)992-2979 or (740)992·
and Slreel. Pi. Pl.
EOE. M'F/H
1391

I

Words

3

"'""'""..........,
or Mil $22,000. Oay
(304)075-11638
Evonlng
(304)075-6737
1878 Jayco Camper 21ft.
pull behind, Now NC.
95 Ford Aangor XLT, Bluti, aloopt 4, Mint COndftlori.
4.0. ve. 8" lilt. 33" Super $3000. (304)882,3607
s - . Eltt. Cab, $9595
080. (740)245-0135
1978 Poco ArrrNt (Dodga)

o New Homll

ilor7".;:,.,.,
"'"":at. s5o.

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced

Ovar10usedhomeaprloed
• undor $3000. Will help with
•
delivery. 'Call Karena, 740Two day promotion. Every- 385-9948.
1hlng musl go! save Thou~ wa'nt a new home? Own
sands! Roglster for freo
nd? W dol C
11
1
gifts. This weekend only at y(our)~ ~~ru I e
a
OakwoOd Homes of Galllpo.- 7-40 -o-.,._. or your new 1 br. Fumlshed Apt. Living
lis. (740)446·3093
home today! Trade Ins wei- room, kitchen, bath. All u~llt·
~
1
come
IH pd. Except Electric.
3 Bedroom on Route 2,
(304)675--1365
(304)675·5332
we have approxlmalely 10
Buy or aell. Rlv8me Antiused homes for under 15 Court Street. Very Nee ques, 1124 East Main on
3cl BedrooCOm, I lbalhloca
in Ra· ~:.·:::call 1-80().837-3238 Baapelhrt,meNnetw, 2GasBRF,ur1nac"e2, ~9A2-~~t6E ~:.
ne.
nven ent
liOn
Swaeper buslnesa lor sale- $37,500.00. 740-949-3228
NC, Spaclouo KIIChtn, Oil owner.
new Rainbow &amp; Kirby pqrts,
8ts:NEs;
Street ParKing. OVerlooks ~~~=~~:.-~:
bags &amp; bella and to many 3 bedroom, in Middleport,
AN&gt; lh.Jn.J:MNGs
Park and River. No PBts,
parts to mentton; Four call Tom Anderson after - $595/mo. plus utltltlu, debeauty salon stations and 5pm, (740)992·3348.
Office building In Miners· posit
and
references.
24 bulb Wolle Tanning bed.
ville, eoo ~. ft., •'c, COY• (740)448-4926
(740)387-0612
357 Roush Lana . 2BA, SUn·
~
w•
_.-~~--.;' --t room. 1.5 Bath. Scraened In orad perkin~. calling lan, BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MoNEY
Back Porth, Fenced Back $300/mo., 614-11711-11161.
MENT8 AT BUDGET PA~'
LoAN
Yard, New Siding. New
l.ms &amp;
CES AT JACK80N ea____
Building; (740)441-1033,
.
TATESj 52Weetw00d Drive
(740)387-()514.
'
ACIIE.WE
from $297 lo $383. Walk lo 12K3 It pcol $26., Infant car
' ··n ol All
•""" &amp; movlea Call 740- - t . swing, bouncer. wal&lt;·
3BA 2 Balh Localed Near
--..
•
nd other baby 11om1
rypn AYIIIIblel
Ewl~g\on, Situated on 4 2 lcm, 33475 BaAey Run «e-215158. Equal Housing ;~~-2217
.
No Feea, all Credit
acres. $750 down payment. Ad., water &amp; l8ptlo atreactv :O.:!:p-!:pa::orh::u::n!:!ly:..- - - accopted
W.A.C:, No Payments tor 60 In, 1 14•900• eKcellent build- Christy's Farnlly Living Bunk Beda with mattrell88
t~~':~;;
days, No Pofnts, No closing ing site, (937 )396-o25B
331.0 New Uma Ad., Rut: and dreuer $75.00 7.0.
costs. Contact Oavfd. 1·
land, Ohio, 740-7&lt;42-7403. 258-6800
800-333-1!910.
COuntl)l homea, nice Iota, Apartmonl, home and t"'ller ;;:;:...;.;;;,:._ _ _ __
Problema Paying Billa Call -:--'-'"""-'----:-::: located on Rt 33 b e - rentals Commercial slor&amp;- Chain Link Dog Kennel
Toll Free 1-866-699-3064. 6yr old house on 1.67 Pomeroy/Athans. Call 740- lronta 'evaUabll ID&lt; ltaae. 10X1Dx6 $100. 080. Rabbil
We can Help. All lypes ol acres, 2 mNes oulskMI Vln, 1192·2167 for dalllll.
vacancies now.
Cago $20. Smal Dog Craie.
loans. Good, Bad, No Cred- ion. 3BR, 2 Bath, Largo Uv·
$40.
(304)675-4662
It Bankruptcy Welcome.
lng Room wHh Fireplace, Lac lor Sale- Approx. 2 112 Furnlohld Apartment 2
1
10~&lt;20 Covered Porch, acres. cltartd &amp; l'tlldy for Roome and Bath. Clean. No
PRg~ 110,10 out building, Aa~ng bulldln~. ~ravar dMveway. Pels Atftrencoa and De lovesaa~ $100. Hldebed,
,,.,,...~
$65,DDD. (740)388-8630
walar &amp; ~leclrlc available, poali Aaquired. (740)446: $100. MlcrDMYt, $25, LJ\o.
·--iiiiiiiiiO._.I
Porter
area.
Asking 1519
.
ing Room Chair, $35.
Completely rebuilt new, 3 $13,995, Call . (740)446·
Swaepar, $15. Car Seal,
Gel Cash Fsstll $100·$500. badroom, 2 new baths, 4514 lrom 11-6 or (740)448- Fumlahed ERiclaocy, All $25. (740)448-9742
Easy Qualifications. Never Kllchen, Oak Cabinets, 3248 after 6pm.
UUIItlea Paid, downstairs,
LeaveHomaiFundsDepos- Large Living Aoom, Sun· Lola lor 8810 , (I) 0 _377 $215/month. 919 Second~~~~,-~!f!S
lled.Checklng Accounl Next room, Lois ol decks, Front acrali- $14,DDD &amp; (1) 0.459 Ave. (740)446·38olll
olnlle&amp; ~-"'r~c"'::::.':':~.fllllll~
Day. Loans By Counly Bank pon:h, $127,DDO. (740)245·
_,
·~·- ,,.
of Rehoboth Beach , D~ 5064
acros- $15,000. Airline Ad, Gracious living. 1 and 2 eluding hi elflclency heat
Member FDIC/EOL
- - - - - - - - Porter area, llat &amp; ready to bedroom aj)llrtmenta at VII· pump~ we cany a
1-800·397-t90B.
For Sale at this price until set up on. AEP electric, lage Manor and Rlveraldo complete ·Unit of Mobite
May 31. 2500 sq fl ., 112 central sewage system, &amp; Apartments In Middleport. home par1a &amp; accnaJde8.
TURNED OOWN ON
acre, 4BR, 3 baths, In· water
available.
Call From $2711-$348. Call 740- BENNETT'S HEATING '&amp;
SOCIAL SECURITY tsSI? ground pcol. 44 Beech St., (740)446-4514 M,Ff 11-5 or 992-5064. Equal Housln~ COOLING (740)448-Mll
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
Green Schools. S8rious call (740)&lt;446·32&lt;48 after OpportunHies.
or 1-100-812-5N7
1-888-582-3345
buyers only. (740)4411-3139 Eem
Mod
. em
"·"room
•'"rt·
www.orvb.cam/bonnett '
1

111j

Accesslo a computer?
Eam $450-1500 pt;
$2000-4500 lull-time
www.OurAnawer.com
I-BDD-585-D780

want to
earn a
$500 •
B~
,
Sign•. 11!6 'flwNING
on bonUS? Qlltllpolla C1reer COllege

W

~======~

15

Words,

$

Ads Must Be Prepaid

Roaplrotory Therapllt Full Georges Portable Sawmill ,
Time Position. Ohio Ll· don't haul your logs to the
censed RAT/ CRT. Mon- miU just cal1304-675-1957.
dayFriday,
9:00am---.:.:::.:.:.=..::.:.:..:.;..:=..:=..
5:00pm. Competitive Wage, Will babysit In my home,
Retirement Plan, l'jealth In- any ages, any time ·740·
surance. Contact: Bow- 367·7826
man's Homecare, 70 Pine ' - ' - - ' - - -.- - St. , Gallipolis, OH 45631. Will do odd JObs, paint,
(7o40)446-7283
clean up cemetery!church
- - - -:-:-- - -::- lots, clean out buildings,
Commercial insurance Cus- (740)992-9314• 1-304 •882 tamer Service Represents- 1121 , 1-740-590-0141.
tl (CSR) Join the team of
ve
·
.
Will pressure wash hoUSBS,
a growing Independent In· trailers, and decks. Call
surance agency. Position 441·4238 ask for Ron or
available April tst. Must leave message.
have eKperlence In an lnsur·
ance ottk:o se«ing, superior Wotk Wanted! Will care for
cUstomer relation skills, elderly day/night. Exp. Refkno.wledge of commercial erence. (304)675·7961
Insurance. Acord appllcations, and basic computer
skills. Salary commensurate r"'"IO,.;.;.-,~-----t
wHh exj)llnence. Sand re•
n1.lSINE'&gt;l&gt;
sume and references to,
: OPPoR11.1NliY
McFadden Insurance servIces, Attn: Commercial
INOTICEI
Lines Oopt. , 46 Public
Square Nelsonville Oh OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHr
i1740- lNG CD. recommends that
45754
. ques IOns ca
you do business with people
753·1905or(eoD)962-7553. YOllknow,andNOTtoaond
computerellntemet Users money through the mall until
wanted. $1500 mo/PT, you have Investigated the
55000. mo/FT.
offering.
Free Booklet. 888-229·6288
AAA Greeting Card Route.
24 hr. Recording or visit
www.wealthlsyours.com
48 Prime Loc's, $1000 wkly.
Pot'l. 1-888-504-7664
$Earn what you are worth
from home.
Start Your Business ToInternet/mall order.
day... Prime Shopping Cen·
$1500-$5000 per month. lor Spac:o Avallabll AI AI·
Free Booldet
fordable Aate. Spring Valley
1-800-241·7754
Plaza, Call740-44e-D101.

L9ST· 3 year old male
HEl..PWANTED
Golden Relnever, lriendly.
GaMia/ Lawrence line. Reward. Call (740)886-6488 IWANTEDI
leavemessaga.
Serious People To Work
From Home, Call 1·688·
Lost: Male Chihuahua. Bu- 616-0694
Iaviiie Pike area. Reward www.SimpleCashBiz.com
$100. Call Oorsil McCoy at
(740)446-4122 or come to
2126 Bulaville Pike. (Would Help wanted caring for the
person who called Marth 6, elderiy, Darsl Group Home,
e are paying
please cal back, we could now paying minimum wage, at
sJ·gn-on
not locate acklress).
new shifts. 7am-3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm·l1pm, 1tpm-.
bonus to
Reward of $500. Each for 7am, call 740-992-5023.
any Information le8.dlng to
recovery ot 2 2001 4·wheal· McClure's AestauTant oow
ers. Aad 250/400 EK. Sport hiring all 3 locations, full or '.
•
EdiUon were taken on Rt part,tlme, pick up appllcaare Interested
tion allocation &amp; bring back
218. (740)446-1830
between
9:~0am
&amp;
working for
10:00am, Monday thru Sat· .
urday.
'
a professional
YARD SAlE
telen.arketJ'ng

r
:r;

Over

15

AUCI10N AND

All yearling bulle and 1 9:00·4:00 or call kathryn
maJority ol
the other SomeNilla, D.O.N.
citlle quality for Tobacco
Arcadia ·Nursing Center
settlemenl Monies.
East Main Street
Coolville, Oh
..
5elll~g 68 Heed
(740-667·3156)
Sire Groupl Rapreaented --~--EO.:.E:__ _ _
Summitcrest EX"T: 088G
•Henry" • SAF Adam 5522- Moonlight Escorts Now
6t48 • Twin Valley Preci- Seeking Female Escorts
slon Millcoulee 6807-423 • and Dancers. Call (740)388·
TC St9Ckman 365 EXT · t799.
WoodhiU Supreme • Cham· M thers o
I
plon Hill Travel8f B-52 ·Fa· 0 Hom~eam
mous 7001 • Papa Equater :~our Ow~ Boss!
BT UllravOK
E
up to
arn $8000
All bulls will .sell ' with a $500FT/Mo
BreedingSoundnessExam PT/

L~-------..r-

Up To

~ow MAIOO.T

OFFERINGS
8- Coming 2 Bulls; 20- Long
Yearling Bulls; 10- Open
Purebred Heifers; 10· Open
Crossbred Hailers; 10· Bred
Heifers; 10- Bred Cows

...,

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!

Display Ads

~0

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740.992·7036

• Start You,. Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrtptlol'\ • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addfess When Needed
• Ads ShOuld Run 7 Davs

Stroyor
Formo
Since 1923
Angus PrOduction S.le
March 23, 2002~ 1;OOpm
Union Stockyards,
Hillsboro, Ohio

Moon Light Escorts. Full
service Male and Female
Escorts. Pron;~pt Professional Discreet &amp; Confidential.
6pm to Sam. (740)388~
1799.
-------Why wait? Start meeting
Otlio singles tonight, call toll
free 1-800-766·2623 eKt
1621 .

t(O/I'rlcfo.~

Oeo.rl/1irec

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to s:oo p.m.
HOW

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

r111&amp;"-:'i5i;;i;i'i'jl
. ";_'!._

--~=~=-:::~

1983 Haney Dsvldson
Sportatar lor sale 14000. 1999 Brockwood UMra Llle
997
~h(304)468-I after 5pm 1999 Lincoln Continental, (740)441 "9521 ·
~-=:
aarr
Independent
UllfllltiiiHomeOwnera Just 21,000 miles, loaded, 1995 Yamaha WR250 dirt
"I H\ I( I "
IPPO" HI ef!lclency 80 plus excallent condition. call 740- bike, 740-367-D222.
Distrib._tor
&lt;gaa fu"*OI Including oil 446-1759
l!lnd olectrfc goa luma'996
Yamaha
Virago,
HOME
i&gt;Oa. HI Elllclency Heat 2000 Ponllac Sunllre, Red, I I OOCc, toal &amp; cream In colo
IMI'RoVEMI!NTS
1'umllo, loaluring Tappana 21,000 miles, 2 door, CD or, I .•20 miles, lots of facto- ·-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..r
J:ree· Incredible warranty Player, Sspeed, Aluminum ry chrome, padded back
!li&lt;ciocl&lt;age.
wheels, A/C, (740)441-1547 resl. now battal)l, 2 malch- All types or masonry brick,
• 011 change $18.95
;.,'IIINN"liTS HEATING
$3,500. block &amp; stone 20 yro. axpe2001 PT Cruiser. Black, In~ hafmeta,
UNG (740)448-M11
(740)388-8506
nonce.
lroe
estimate,
We stock all major
natural/Guaranteed
5,500 mUea, $16,500. 740(304)773-9550
1_,.,.11167•
brands
441-1583
1999Honda400EX. Parlecl - - - - - - - - -.orvb.CC11111bonnott
Condition. $3850. •Call
2001
BASEMENT "
PT Cruiser. Automatic, (740)446-DDI21n evenl"'iTelovlolon 13" co~r $35.
WATER~ROORNG
Qu"""" I
525 Talevi 7,0DD miles OBO, $14,DDO.
2001 CR . 80 ~Ice bike. Unconditional lifetime guar- '----..lollllllt.llllwlilill
Cali (740)258-6169
Never been raced. New Fat- antes. Local reforences fur· 740-256-1529.
82 &amp; 84 Cullassea. Both
ty Pll&gt;ll. Vel)l good s~. nished. Established 1975.
lWin Bed, S8D New Six c
Need Work. See Behind $1,900. (304)675-4135
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446blc RaffiQofa~, 5125 _ F~j 2018 JeRorsoo Blvd., PI Pl.
0870, Rogers Basement
Size Bed Coqliale, SIOO. ~a-Her_spm:.______ 2001 Honda Shadow VLX Waterproofing.
llatJv
OeluKe 600, 1,500 mites.
#7-12 Swing, $15. (740)4411- 1990 Plymouth Acclaim. StiK under warranty $4,500. -::-::-:-:-:-:-- - Runa Good. $1 ,100. 080. (304)6751800
C&amp;C General Home MalnteAll Makes Tractor &amp;
• Room AddHione &amp;
'Watarllna Spacial: 3/4 200 (304)67&amp;-21163
2001 y mel!a OaM
Blue nonce- PalnUng, vinyl sldDelivered &amp;
1
Equipment Parts
ll' PSI •""1 00 Per 100· 1• 200
.-.,..or,
• lng, carpentry, doors, wtnRomodollng
.,,
"' •
•
1992 Aed Chl)laler LeBaron Noel Bars, Skid Platea, Low dows baths mObile home
Spread $15.00
· Factory Authorized
•NewGII'IIgel
=--~$3c!:~~'f~ All COnvertible, 88,000 mHos, Hours. $4750 OBO. repal; and more. For ~ae per ton, 8 to 10
• Electrical &amp; PlumblriQ
wJ Slack.
nga V-6, Air, Tilt, Cruise, $1800. (740)441·1547
eollmatecall Chet, 740-992,
Case-IH Pans
tons,
limited
• Roofing &amp; GuHera .
1652
.,., EVANil ENTERPFII- ( 7401258 "
'99 GasGaa EC 250 Dirt 6323.
Dealers
• Vinyl Siding a PalnUn~
area, call for
JIICkaon, 0n1o. 1-800- 19941ladge .splnt v-e. high blka. 12100. (740)446-1662 •rir~E
• Patio and Porch Decks
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
, 537·8528
,
mllaage, no major mechani\...lUI
details. Cell:
Free Estimates
OH 45723 '
I
.
cal problema, runs good.
BoA'!'!R&amp;
..~~ •
Rmu
. GI!RATION 1
r Wing Back Chair, $80. End $1 ,100. (304)695-3422 after
•v .,..,.,
YOUNG
2
516
Or leave name
Tallie, sat
$20. of World
Lampo, BoeHl:
Aealdentlal or commercial
992· 6215
• leach,
.._epm!:;;;:_______
·
and number
Encyclopedias, 175. Smell 1994 Ford Tampo 2-dr ~ 15 ft. aluminum boat, V-bot- winng, new service or reT&lt;N
~~~'t~! TFN
. ,Jioya BIM, $20. 6 loot Sat, 5-spd. Red with grey lnteri· tom &amp; trailer with new ec, pelrs. Maoter L~anaed eleo'
_.afllte Dish Syolom, $100. or. $1300 (304)882-3973
cnsorlls. Call 740,992, trlclan. Aldanoor Electrical,
(740)446-7928
6672
WV000306, 304-675-1786. •
ii!IP.;.;.;,~;_--., 1994 Martul)l Topoz, white, -,-.,.-,.--,--,--::-- , . - - Shade River AG Service
2 dr.. auto. air, BunooiG
.... 67 Bayllner with 87 Eocort
SuPFuF.s
sene, 79,000 miles, S2495 trailer. 50 terce outboard
"Ahead In Service"
OBO, call (740)9112-3490
motor, 2 gas tanks, ski and
35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomeroy, OK 45720
other
8)(tras.
$2,900.
Block, brick, plpea, 1994 Toyota TIOO truck,
29670 Bashan Road
(304)87&amp;-7645
leave
mea• 4-H feed for lambs, hcgs, steers, chicken s and
, ·windows. llntaro. arc. Claude V8, auto, A/C, 1 owner,
Racine, Ohio
sago.
rabbits.
Winters, Rio Grande, OH $4,700; 11192 Toyota Paseo,
45771
,~CIII7~245-5121.
sunroof, AJC, CO, $2,600;
• Seed Potatoes
740-949-2217
,
1992 Nisaan Stanza, $1,250
• Onion Sets
(740)258-8012
• Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds
1 1995 Cavalier LS, S4DDD,
• Fertilizer Specifically Designed for parden Crops
'call (740)992·2077
• New Fenilizer Buggies
wk old r&amp;Qistered Cockar
Sj)llniol
puppies,
tails 1995 CheYy cam~ro Gold
Hours
•
All buggies have been pattern lested to meet
Edition, T-topa, auto, air tilt,
. docked, lat shots &amp;
cruise, sharp, $6995.00
given
that
on
Agronomy Association
Standards
7;00 AM • 8;00 PM
NOTICE OF
•
TFN .
- · 740-742,2525
OBO call (740)992·3490
1/1411 mo.
Wodneadly, the 23rd
DISSOLUTION OF
day of J•nuary, 2002,
~i'emele Slbertan Husky, 3 1995 Oodga Spirit, ~ood
GREEN·UP
n-Up Roclomatl.o n
yaers. Call (740)446·35116
condition, $2650.00, 1DBK
RECLAMATION
~Jin..Af:,.,//;:t.;Af:..M:o.k:o.
Stirvlcea Inc., an Ohio
. Rolweller Puppies, Full :,:17..:.40:::l.::.94cc9-..:322=8c..- - - SERVICES INC.
!Ill~ lll.!~ ~_,,
. lllooded, Graat Looking, 1997 Pontiac Grand Am,
Notice le . hereby corpof8tlon, having Its 1 ll'\ S !Ill I I Ill'\
principal offlco at
-Would mai&lt;e a graat Easier 4DR, AfT, PL, Dual air
J.D. CONSTRUCTION
3BOU
n-Up Lane, .
Spcclgllzlog In;
l)lft. Mother &amp; Father on baga, AIC, AM'FM Cas·
In Memory
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Long BoHom, Molgo
Roofing, Dec:ks
,prtntlaea. (740)288-1788
sette, PS, TIIVCrulae, 76K
"
Specializing In Los Homes
Ctiunty,
Ohio
45143,
·
miles, asking $8800. 740Remodeling,
[
~
441-1670or740-446-1769.
by reaolutlon of Ito
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
Drywall, and
1
ahareholdof8 elected
Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete
Addilions
to dlllolve and wind
Roofs &amp; Siding
Prafudei'AI
· FD&lt; 8111,
up lte affairs, and that
Conaole
Plano.
Dark
Commercial &amp; Residential
I ClrllfiCitl of IUCh
. (chany) Flnlol!. $1,500. Call 1982 GMC plck·up lull·alze
dlllolutlon waa flied
[jill!
(740) 992·3987
~.~
; after 5;00 304-675-6474
bed, 89,000 mll~s. new
In the office of tho
Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean TFN
paint Job, white apoko
Secretary of Still of
Owner: Terry Lamm
&amp;Af:,.l/l:t.'lll:t.~~l:\
Faum &amp;
lwhMis, alum. toolbo•, uk·
Ohio on Friday, the tot
VII'.GEll\IIUil!
lng $1950, (740)~9-2621
-~Jl.ll!~l
ti
dey of February, 2002.
(740) 992-0739
Richard F. Flck Jr.
·
1984 F-180, 4x4, 144,000
Annette Kayo Flck
CRESB CIAEENS. You cui miles, $2500. Call44e·921 9
fe.OO por buohal, Alrudy
(31 12, 11
out 112.00 per buohol. 1988 F-2110 4x4, 361 5
AVIIIIablo Now through apeed, 14,200 080. 740Happy Ad
• :March. Chari11 MoKoon 9112-7488
;~F!Iffll. phono (740)Ue 8442 .:.11188:::_-,F.::.o:.rdc:F:-,Ic:l10:-,c:E:-id-a-nd~i0d
I \ I t\ I...,, 1'1'1 II'-.
Cab with lappor, VI'Y good
,\ I I \ I '-. I I H I\
oondlllon. 740-367-78~
Sldln(l

'
i

?-, -·

loclhr 10&lt; 'lbl*

f1lo 1117 ond up 1

o u - . 8018

6 lniill lnd 11181 Hondo Clvla LJ(, AulD, 6, 7,1500 mlleo. wiUt
TV IIO Fafd OUt Air, Cruloa, PW, ~DL. 4 Sli'm · T,..,...r al
'
'
Door,
lllock,
18~5 Equity It $412. por month

CIIIIr lod.llolgo,IIO. RC.\ (740)3811-8878
·
~ 21 lnah TV,
(304-1987 lftor 1~7 Bonnovllle SE V6,
llpm
Front Whoal Drtvo Air
: Prom 0... l!loek 0 Poww Windows,
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Athens, Ohio
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'

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.P9 A 10 • The Dlllly ~tlnel

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www.mydallyMccUMI.com

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Can you guess the
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ttAIN ON
first · declarer-play
technique he disYOUit PAttAt&gt;t, ,UT
cusses? It's on page
'PORt: fUTU,~S"
264 -- bidding OCCU·
pies the first 232
1&gt;0 NOT
pages, card-play the
lt~~~lt
next 173 pages . The
lt~TI#tb1~NT
51 2-page book ends
PLAN.
with a description of
• •
duplicate, the Laws of
•
Auction Bridge•. and a
HAHNt:Y
glossary.
Work was · the first
YOU SWEAR 1:0 TE.LL TH'
famous
figure of
TRUTH, TH' WKOLI. TRUTH AN'
NOTHIN' BUT TI-l' TRUTH?
bridge. Mter gaining
three degrees from
the University of 'Pennsylvania, he became a lawyer. But in
1917 Work took a
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
leave of absence to
~ Cipher cryptograma are created from quolatlcna by larrious
tour the country with
people, put oncl .,._,, Each letter In the cipher olanda 101 - r.
Wilbur C. Whitehead
Today's clue: H equals P
to .. lecture on bridge,
'V EN VZP XMP OVCP vzx
THE BORN LOSER
organize tournaments,
· and promote the sale
f.\~W'( e,1 R.Tf\01\'{, MOMM.Y 1
WT
XMP XUPOXFPXJ\11
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of Liberty bonds. The
Tf\E. ~ OE\a~ I
OPOXIZA,'
t.our was so successful
YVZNMVRR
and his books were
YORIMVO 'X M P SPNX VE
selling so well that
Work abandoned law
FN v BWWE HZWEIGX.'
for a bridge career. Dy
1928, he was being
VRVO M. YPAPZ
paid S7 ,000 per week
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Wall, lhe weatherman uld fifty perto give brieflectures.
cent chance of rain and he might ba ~ghl.' • (Sports announcer) Jerry Doggen
As you will surely
have guessed, Work
starts by introducing
T~~:t:~v
Bh• .( ~ f) "C ~s•
budding declarers to
"U ~S. ~
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HEV
this deal as the exam·
Roarrango holton of 111'
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ARE TOO

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IN TMIS BOOK, AND
TOO MUCM 601N6

ON .. I CAN'T KEEP
TRACK OF T~EM
ALL ...

bidding. In auction
bridge, South would
open one no-trump

I LIKE A BOOK
WHERE TI-IERE'S
ONLY ONE CIIARACTER
AND NOTI-ll N6
HAP'PENS TO HIM ..

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correct from queenemployment agent asked the fel·
jack·empty.fourth or
E N y T I N ~ ~o;: ~~~~~~.~."he laughed, "I have .
-fifth, no nine or 10), 1---,rir-"r.";,.~_;,;,,__-l
8
declarer wins with his
Comploto rlio chuckle quoted
.
~
.
.
.
.
by fllllng in t~ut mluing worda ;
king and plays a spade
you develop from srop No. 3 bolow.
to dummy's jack.
A PRINT NUMB~RED
When that finesse
'I;J LETTERS IN SQUARES
wins, he tries the diaUNS,iAMI!LE LETTERS
mond finesse. And af- .
· FOR ANSWE.R '
1
ter four successful
SC:IAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
pointed·suit finesses,
Menial • Noose • Bliss - Ninety- INSOMNIA
,
South finds that he
"Why do you think you're qualified to be a night watch~
has nine tricks: three
man?"
the employment agent asked the fellow. "Simple.~
spades, two hearts,
he
laughed,
'I have INSOMNIA."
three diamonds and
one club.

I' 1 I I· I

0

6

!TUESDAY

MARCH19I

Sabathia plays it cool, Bl

· Robert Elberfeld, 90
Eugene F. Hart, 70
Details, A3

OpPortunity to add to your re-IOUrt"es. The trouble is, if you
haven't been diligent, p~st
billS and new obligations may
negate your sains.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ·
•• If you have any hope of
getting along with someone
who is pertinent to your immediate ploms, you must find a
way to have a meeting of the
tnlndt. Without it you'll lose
his/her support.
CANCER Oune 21-July
22) -- It's viully important
that assignments are evenlydistributed when working in
conjunction with another on
a menully tedious job. Otherwise, dtfection can result.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22) Don't expect a friend to fulfill
a commitment' that was shaky ·
to begin with. It most likely
won't. happen, so be prepared ;
to go 1t alone.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
... Be a good sport :md look •
the other way if someone
with whom you're involved
can't set their act together.
This penon should be -con-

soled, not chastised,
LlllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •

You're the last person wh·~· ·
usually needs to be to.ld to
keep an open mind when
o~hers can't agree with you.
You 're one of the peacemakers of the world. Don't make
war.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) --I n most case!, switching
horses in midstream is not a
good idea. However, if something isn't working out. you
may have to do ju!t that if
you hope to re:~ch your goal.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) -- It won't be due to
a lack of good ideas that
you're held"back. Chances are
,j,~, ·it'll be iiiepeople with
whom you're involved who
will cause your plans to naU.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Today's obmcles
might be more than you can
handle. If you take you't eye
off wh at you're dding, you
could trip over your own feet.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb.
19) -- If it•s up to you to team
peopJ_e up for a social activity, ·
be careful of who you mix to-.
gethei. One bad combi nation
, can ruin ir for everybody.

Caution: High water
FllOM STAFF REPORTS
POMEROY
Classes
· were canceled in the Meigs
Local School District Wednesday as high water continued to
creep across local roadways.
The Meigs Coun~ Sheriff's
Department reported'ar.Tiany
as 18 roads closed or partially
closed this morning due to
rising flood water, but the list
of roads closed or water-covered continues to change by
the hour, according to a

department spokesman.
According to a list provided
by the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol, the
following roads in the county
were closed this morning:
Ohio 124 (Painter Ridge out
of Salem Center), New Lima
Road out of Rutland. County
Road 7A (Forest Run Road),
Ohio 124 (Be:ich Grove
Road), Ohio 143 (nlile post
0), US. 33 at Burlingham,
Ohio 681 (mile post 6 in the
Snowville area) and Ohio 681

Story: Highway
progress the result
of 'good foundation'

in the Alfred area.
In
neighboring
Gallia
County seven roads were
closed this morning due to
high water.
The Army Corps of Engineers reported that the Ohio
River had risen to 47 feet '
three feet below flood stageat the Robert C. Byrd _Locks
and Dam south of Gallipolis.
Heavy rains are expected to
continue tonight and possibly
into Thursday.
1

the 2006 funding cycle
Projects to be because
of cuts in funding
the federal leveL
·
completed prior on"We
were in a similar situation 10 years ago," Story
to funding halts · said of the days when the
final push for funding of the
Capitol Corridor began.
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM "We saw the projects
POMEROY "This bypassed even when funding
proves that . preparing a was available because we had
foundation helps get high- no environmental studies
ways funded and built."
and no engineering work
Pomeroy attorney Steven completed.
l. Story said Monday the
"We learned you can't
progress on Meigs Co unty's build a house without a
four major highway projects proper foundation .You learn
is the result of a lot of plan- from those experiences, and
ning and a lot of you learn that funding is an
'ebb and flow' process.
patience.
Continuing construction When funding finally came
on the three phases of the along we were ready to go .
Ravenswood
Con nector Other projects were ianand the new portion of US. guishing and ours wasn't.
Route 33 between Athens
Story added, "The Neland Darwin top the Ohio sonville bypass has always
Department of Transporta- been considered a high pri"
tion's 2002 construction ority because of the traffic
schedule for Meigs County, count, but because there was
releasei:l last week.
no local consensus on alignThe Ravenswood and ment, it didn't take on a
Athens projects, in their sec- 'buildable' status and look
ond year of construction, are where it is now. It's still on
part of a larger "Capitol Cor- the drawing board.
:
ridor" project involving the
"As little as five yean
construction of modern high" (ago) we were struggling
ways between 1-77 in Jackson with environmental issues,
County, W.Va., and Colum- and if they had had their
bus.
~,
ducks in a row, it probabl)'
The Lancaster Bypass pro· would have been built first."
ject- also under construeThe . first phase of the
tion now - and a proposed Ravenswood project - 6.5
Nelsonville bypass, are also miles from the Ravenswood,
W.Va., bridge to Portland
part of the corridor.
Story said that because fed- Road - is expected to be
era! funding has been cut, completed in Decem.ber. The
those projects may be com- second phase, four miles
pleted at a time when major from Five Points to Morning
highway corutruction across Star, is scheduled for comthe state is put on a back burn- pl etion in November of
er.
2003, and the third phase, 4.5
The
Transportation miles from Morning Star to
Review and Advisory Com- Portland Road. is expected
mittee, which approves to be completed in June of
major highway projects for 2004.
funding, announced recent- · The , five cons tru ction
ly it would not approve projects carry a total price
additional projects . beyond tag of over $125 million.
BY BRIAN

Spotlight: Poison .Prevention Week

Focus·
•
Weather
Hlp: 50s, Low: 40s
. Details, A2

Correction
A story in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel regarding C-8
contamination in two wells
at the Mason County Public
Water Supply contained
inaccurate infOrmation. The
two wells that tested positive
came in at .06 parts per bil·
lion and .07 parts per billion.
The minimum detectable
ievel is .OS parts per billion.

Stocks finish
'higher
NEW YORK (AP)
Wall Street's appetite for
stocks held steady Tuesday
after the Federal Reserve
left interest rates unchanged
for the time being but lndi·
cated that an increase was
possible later this year.
.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed up 57 .SO, or
0.5 percent, at 10,63S.2S,
after rallying as much as 95
points. It was the Dow's
• highest close this year.

OHIO
Pick 3: 8-5·4
Pick 4: 1·7-8·0
auckeye 5: 9·1 1-16·23·28

Pick 3 day: 5-9-6
Pick 4 day: 0-6-1·6
W.VA.
Dally 3: 8-4-1
DallY 4: 7-3-0-2
casli 25: 1·5·9·12·18-20

2 Sections- 12 Pilps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby.
Editorials
Mo~es

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

'Children Act,
Fast ... So Do
Poisons' is theme
BY 8RIAN .J. REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENT/NEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT - · Poison
exposure is one of th~ leading
causes of childhood injury in
America, so the Ohio Department of Public Safety's Division of Emergency Medical
Services is promoting "Children Act Fast ... So Do Poi·
sons" as the theme for Nation·
al Poison Prevention Week. ·
The week's observance will
continue through Saturday.
Unintentional poisonings
kill an estimated 30 children
under five annually; and generate a million calls annually to
poison centers.
"Poison .. exposure is one of
the leading causes of child-

HOME SAFETY - Tye Herman and Jeri Lynn Hawley of Mid·
dleport keep their children, Tyson Herman, 4, and Raynee Herman, 7, safe from poisoning by keeping medications in Childproof containers and in secure medicine chests away from the
children's reach. Here, Herman checks the caps on the family's medications and explains that they shouldn't be tampered
with. (Brian J. Reed)
hood injury in America - an
alarming yet preventable statistic," said Ohio Lt. Gov.
Maureen O'Connor, director
of the Ohio Department of
Public Safety. "This week's
observance
serves as a

reminder ·that uninten tional
poisoning is avoidable with
the help of parents, grandparents and caregivers."
The department urges par-

J.

REED

Pluse see Polson, A3

Meigs ' ocal board

'Stream Sweep' set for April 20 approves personnel

Lotteries

Index
Wednesday, March 20,
2002
UnuSual, circunuunce5 ·
could bring about a realitation
in the year. ahead that you
must rclinqui!h old unworkable plans to make way for
new ones that can take you to
the places of your dreams.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcb 20) .
-- Ueating your head against a
brick wall and ·hoping that it
will cntmble will do norhins
but give you a headache . Try
to find a circuitous route to
bypass it Pi~ces, treat yourself
to a birthday gift. Send for
your Astro-Cr.aph predictions
for the year ahead by mailing
S2 .and SASE to Astro-Graph,
c/o this newspaper', P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York. NY I 0156. Be ·
sure to state your ZodiaC sign.
ARIES (March 21-April19)
-- You tend to draw both
weaknesses and !trength! off
of your friend!. If they are optimistic, you'll be productive
and happy. If they are negative, you can be fruitlen and
grumpy.
TAUitUS (April 20-May
20) -- You'll have plenty of

HometoWn Newsp.per

eo 0u1c11e

31 Hell a c.b
34 One, for

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" ~002 Ohio Valley Publishing co.

BY ToNY M. leACH
Firemen's Park by the Civic
TLEACHOMYDA/LYSENTINEL.COM
Center and will help clean up
RUTLANI:&gt; - In conjunc· several pre-selected sights
tion with Earth Day, the sec· along Leading Creek and Lit·
ond annual Leading Creek tie Leading Creek.
Stream Sweep will be held on
"Last year, about 65 volunApril 20.
teers spent the morning makThe event, which occurred ing a difference, and having a
for the first time last spring, is little fun at the same time,"
sponsored by the Meigs Soil said Freeman. "The volunteers
and Water Conservation District (SWCD) in partnership picked up enough trash from
with the US. Fish and Wildlife the creeks and surrounding
Service, Rutland Township areas to fill up Rutland TownBoard of Trustees, Rutland · ship's du!llp truck and trash
Volunteer Fire Department, dumpster."
Meigs County Recycling and
Those participating in iast
Litter Control Office, and year's event included the Boy
other agencies.
Scouts, Girl Scouts, 4-H and
According to Jim Freeman, church groups. .
watershed coordinator with · Groups and individuals are
the Meigs SWCD, volunteers invited to participate in the
for the Stream Sweep wiU Stream Sweep by stopping at
meet at 9 a.m. at Rutland's the park beforehand, or at the

Meigs SWCD office in
Pomeroy, and filling out a reg~··
istration form and waiver.
Children under the age of
18 will need their forms
signed by a parent or guardian.
Cleaning materials, including garbage bags and work
gloves, will be supp.lied by the
Meigs ·County Office of
Recycling and Litter Prevention. Rutland Township will
assist with the collection and
removal of filled garbage bags. ·
"The Stream Sweep target1
different areas of the watershed each year and is modeled
after the Ohio River Sweep, .
which is held in Jun e," added
Freeman.
For information on the
Stream Sweep, contact the
Meigs SWCD at 992-4282.

FROM STAFF REPORTS
POMEROY- Administrative and other personnel
for Meigs Local . schools
, were hired by th'e Meigs
Local Board of Education
following an executive session at Monday night's regular meeting.
Contracts were awarded
to the following individuals:
• Wendy Halar, five years,
assista nt superintendent;
• Rusty Bookman, four
years, elementary principal;
• Kristin Acree and Scot
Gheen, three. years, elementary assistant principals;
• Dave Gaul, four years,
high sc hool assistant principal;

e Marilyn Mei er four
years, director of food ser- ·
v1ce;
• Paul McElroy, five
years, director of maintenance and transportation;
• Rusty Bookman, one
year, safety coordinator;
• Steve Ohlinger, one
year, Middle School athletic director;
• Dan Romuno. one
year. safe and drug-free
schools coordinator.
During the exec utive session discussions continued
on negotiating the purchase ·
of property. adjacent to that
on whlch the. new ele men.tary school is being constructed. Plans were made
to have the property
appraised.

For
HOLZER
CLINIC
'

.,

I

MEDICAL CENTER
.

I

'

•

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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22902">
              <text>March 19, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
