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                  <text>Plge 8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

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FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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5~C.UiliTY?

THE BORN LOSER

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THERE"' LL \3Ei. NO
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THIS IS OUR WOitST

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IWEDNESDAY

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'' IF THE HEART OF A MAN
15 DEPRESSED WITH CARES,
THE MIST 15 DISPELLED

WHEN A WOMAN APPEARS"

MARCH 20 I

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Melp County's

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Dtaler:South
Vulaerable: Neldler
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It is interesting how
much excellent cardplay advice is in Milton C. Work's "Auction Bridge Complete" (John C. Winston Co., 1926), Admittedly whist books
had been published in
England since the
early 1700s, and the
leading players had
carried out copious
card-play analysis.
Also, a form of bridge
began in the late 19th
century.
In this deal from
the Work book, how
would you try to land
12 tricks in no-trump
after an opening spade
lead?
Obviously, one
wouldn't wish to
reach six no-trump.
And in the days of
auction bridge, South
would open one notrump and buy it
there. But he would
try to win 12 tricks
because if he were
successful, he would
receive the smallcslam
bonus. Today, South
would open two notrump, and North
· would raise to three.
Y oli wish to lead
four times toward the
closed hand, twice to
take heart finesses and
tWice to collect a pair
of diamond tricks.
Dut this requires four·
dummy entries.
After winning the
first trick, lead the
club nine and overtake with dummy's
queen. Take a heart
finesse. Next, overtake the club 10 with
dummy's king. (If
someone discards,
play East for king- .
doubleton of hearts or
ace-doubleton of diamonds -- both unlikely because West
would probably have
led that suit at tnc
. k
one, not a spade.)
Take a second heart
finesse. Now overtake
the club jack with
dummy's ace, and
Play a diamond to the
king. Finally, return
to dummy by leading
the carefully preserved two to the
three (the deuce to
the trey!) and call for
another diamond.
Here, you rake in
those 12 tricks.
' Yes, it's lucky West
didn't lead a club, but
always watch your
entries.

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31 IUMith org,
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37 Lawyer"•

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31 AcquiNd

31F

I Dupt VIP

tailor

Somcthfng imide you that
needs expression will be ac~
ct.•ntuated in the year Jhead. lt
cuuiJ act as a magical power
thht intensifies your fl'dings
for one who is or will be near
il!ld dl'ar to you .
AlliE~ (Mor&lt;h i 1-April 19)

--

Dein~

too set upon doing

everything your way will
draw rebuke from ot)tcrs.

Fortunately. you' ll start co
cousidl'r their need!. as well.
Know where to look for fomance anJ you 'II fmd it. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker in. stancly revt:'ab which !.itQa are
romantic:11ly perfect for you.
Mail $2.75 to Mat&lt;htnaker,
c/o this newspaper, ·P.O. Uox
1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156.
TAUil US (April 20-May
20) -- Help· from other~ that
you didu'l expect ·Could be
there for you whenever you
find yourself in over your
head. Where your ~lals draw
the line, however is wi't h

work you &lt;.:ause

you~df.

GEMIN I (May 21-June 20)
--Spending big aud puuing on

•

I

--

aest at Radne on Friday

reopened early today, according
On Wednesday, some towere
Jones:
POMEROY - The US. Army residents were evacua~ed
A number of county and secondary
Corps of Engineers expects the Ohio
are also closed.
from their homes by .roads
River to crest on Friday at 33.4 feet
Authorities in four southern Ohio
at the Racine Locks and Dam.
boat and stranded
co unties where creeks overflowed
Lockmaster Larry Circle said the
·banks were concerned that
motorists were plucked . their
crest at Pomeroy could be as high as
more precipitation forecast for
35 or 36 feet. The flood stage here is
from atop.cars after as tonight could cause more floo.ding.
46.5 feet.
·
Numerous rural roads remained
much
a
6
inches
·of
rain
School in Meigs Local School Disunder water in Lawrence, Meigs, Galtrict ~re back in session after closingfell overnight
" lia and Scioto counties. Mudslides
FROM AP, STAFF REPORTS

=~

35 Financial

Ho111etown Newspaper

34 E -

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for high water on Wednesday.
Ohio 124 at Langsville and Ohio D epa rtment ofTranspurtation.
248 at Keno remained closed at
State routes 143, 681 at Snowville,
presstime; according to Brett Jones, 681 at Alfred and U.S. 33 at Hurlingcounty man&lt;tger for the Ohio ham were closed un Wednesday but

blocked some roads that overlook the
Ohio River.
On Wednesday, some residents were
evacuated from their homes by boat
and stranded mororists were plucked

from at~p cars after as much a 6 i11ches of rain fell overnight.
Authorities evacuated residents
from 30 homes in Lawrence Counry,
most of them in South Point, and
Ohio River towns of about 3, 700
people. the sheriff's department said.
One family was rescued before the
hillside under their home collapsed,
sheriff's dispatcher Shirley Mannon
said.
·
"It's just hanging there," she said.
Damage assessments will not be
completed until the waters recede,
Ohio
Emergency
Management
Agency spokeswoman Kelli Blackwell said.

.
Pitt not owr-looking Kent, BI

Deaths

A HARD WoRKING DoG

Nadine Barton, 79
Minnie lyons, 93
Details, A3

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Clphor cryptogromoore C~Mtod lrom quolatlono by '"""'"'
people, put
Eaclttettor In the cipher atando for • - ·

end,_.,.._
Todsy's clue: w equals F

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'Ads are the cava art of lha twenll·

•

'The bell ad 11 a good product.' - Alan H. Mayer

Weather
• Hip: JOs, Low: 101

Details, A2

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the
be·
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W0 R T G H

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16

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papers dueare
during the course
term
of

.this semester.' the-professor told

the law students. An aspiring law·
yer asked, "Can we negotiate
T Ny K 0 T
those three down to-··. -- -?"
Complete the chuckle quoted
l.-L..-L..-L..-L..-1...-.J
by filling in tho mlulng wordo
you dovolop from J!tp No. 3 below.

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

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POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission will
meet on Monday at 9 a.m.
at 117 E. Memorial Drive.

OHIO

Pick 3: 9·3.0
SCRAM.J.ITS ANSWERS
Limber-Aisle- Goose- Quaint- STAIRS
My boss hired his niece as his assistant. To assure
her tllat she would have to work very hard, he lectured,
"There is no elevator to success . You have to take the

STAIRS.'

Pick 4: 0.6·5·9
5upe~:

22) -- lt's wonderful that yqur
popularity is at a hlgh point ac
this time, bUt if you ignore
your responsibilities in order
to bask in the sun of acclaim,
you'll end ·up in trouble with

CANCEit &lt;J•me 21-July
22) -· Unfortunately, your
usu.1l ability to assess challenging opposition might not be
operative. Be careful not to
get yourself in a situation

where you're oven1tatched.
LEO (July 23-A•ig. 22) -·
Talk is cheap unless it is
backed up with action. So, if
someone comes to you for
help, demonstrate your compau~o.n. Don't just pay it lip
5CfV1Cf'.

VIJ\GO (Aug. 23-~ept. 22)
-- Don't desert your principles to go along with a group
who wants to do something
that isn't kosher. You know
better.

LlllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -

-Unless you're absolutely certain that the persons with
whom you're involved are focused on the same objectives
as you are, go it alone. You'll
do better being your own
penon.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

1

A handsome new bullet proof vest will help protect Thor, a native of Netherlands, In his work at Meigs County crime scenes. (Submitted)

A new vest for Thor •••
BV BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY A new
bulletproof vest will keep one
of Meigs Count)r's hardestworking law enforcement
workers safe while he performs his police work.
Thor is a registered Belgian
Malinois, and the latest member of the Meigs County K-9
Unit. The vest was purchased
through donations
from
Farmers Hank and Savings

Co., the Meigs County
Humane Society, and other
donors, according to Janet
Ambrose of Pomeroy, who
spearheaded the drive to
properly protect the working
police dog,
Thor
was
purchased
through donations, and is
trained and cared for by
Mark Boyd, K,9 Unit officer
for the sher iff's department.
The handsome dog was
first purchased to assist with

the investiga ti on of drug
cases, but earlier thi s month,
he was the first member of
the police force to ent er the
home
Eric
Middl eport
Qualls allegedly escaped to
following the death of Becky
Ackerman.
But even before his work at
the Qualls crime scene, he
was a valuable member of the
team, participating in a number of felony arrests- some·
times in the lin ~ of fire.

1·25·30.38-41-45

Kkker: 9-2·&amp;4+7
, Pick 3 (nlpt): 844
, Pick 4 (nlpt): 2-o-4·6
W.VA.
pally 3: 1·9·2
Dally 4; 8·1·1-4

Anderson named Pome~ Drew
Webster's Legionnaire of the Year
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Index
2 Sedlan• - 11 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds

your boss.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) --Even though you
may mean well, your methods
or procedures could cause
problems for the person chat
you're trying to help. Don't
complicate thing.t.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- •
Jan. 19) -- Should any dome•· .
tic disagreement occur, stifle it
immediately, or it coul~ rUin
the rest of the day. Be a conciliator, nther than a combat ..
ant.
AQUAI\IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. - ·
. 19) -- Your powers of concentratio n might not be up to •
their usual ability. Temporar~ ...
ily shelve any 1nental project
that c:ills for close attention.
,
l'ISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) •
-- h)Stead of utilizing your ~
usual stro11g suits, you may ~'
waste a lot of valuable resources doing nothing.

SAFER NOW -

Bonus Bill: 26

Pllw..rt.ll: 4-20.25·30-49 (37)

alfeclatiom to impre~!i prople
will end up belng self-defeating. Y9ur natural, channin~
self is all they want to see.

(UnlAND

TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

URI P J

eth century.'- Marshall McLuhan

.

·'

Bv ToNY M. LEAcH

OPJT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -

,~

Council eyes
funding for
sewer.upgrades

'

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Thursdav, March 21, 2fl02

en tne

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ALDER

FEEL \\ It-1

Meigs honors winter sports; B4

REA Cro11word Pua:de
PHlLLIP

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Wednnday, llerch 20, 20(,2,

www.mydallyMeetiMI.cosn

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POMEROY - Announcement 9f the
Legionnaire of the Year was a highlight of the
American Legion's 83rd anniversary observance by Drew Webster Post 39 at the Senior
Citizens Center Thesday night.
Tom Anderson, second vice commander of
the post, was selected for the award. He was
presented a trophy by Joe Struble.
, Fifty year ce rtificates of membership were
named Legiorr
awarded to Don. Mullen, Bob Crow, Paul . PRESENTED TROPHY - Tom Anderson
naire
of
the
Year
for
Drew
Webster
39
at Tuesday
Kloes and Elmer Newell with Mick
nig)lt's
obsen~ar)Ce of the 83rd anniversary of the American
Williams, first vice commander, making the
Legion. W~h Anderson from the left are Fritz Goebel. post'
presentations.
commander, Joe Struble, .adjutant, and Mlck Williams, first
connm&lt;llld!!T. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Please SH Andenon, A:S

. RUTLAND - A new sewer revitalization project for
Rutland inches closer to reality after village council discussed possible funding scenarios during its recent meetmg .
Mayor Richard Fetty informed council that Rutland
is currently on the list for funding from the Ohio Public Works Commission's (OPWC) Issue II, which would ·
go toward the village's proposed sewer revitalization project.
, Fetty said the proje'ct would entail replacing every
grinder pump, ball check valve, and floats per customer
whose on the sewe r system.
"Currently, these parts are failing and their useful life
is approximately eight years," said Fetty." At this point,
most of th e parts are about 12 years old. This issue has
been an ongoing problem that has put the village's
finan ces in despair."
"Hopefully this project will allow the village to get
back on its feet," he added.
Co uncil also discussed possible changes to the sewer
system so as to avoid problems such as this in the future .
In other matters, council agreed to talk with the
RCAP about possible funding for a new water storage
tank project. The current water tank is slipping over a
hill.
Fetty said the village will be obtaining ·a state planning
grant to start the project and that the second phase of the
project, the design stage, will hopefully be funded
through a Community De.v elopment 'Block Grant
(CDBG).
Fetty added he will hold several meeting.; w determine if the new ta11k will ne ed to be elevated or not.
The village will also be applying for a Federal CDBG
grant and an Appalachian Regional Commission grant
to pay for the tank's construction, which will be performed by ME Compani es.
Proposals for the village's trash service was discussed
after two local trash service companies spoke with council about the village hiring one trash provider for all residents.
During February's council meeting, it was decided
that . anyone interested in collecting the village's tra.•h
should submit a bid for review.
Following the discussion, counci l agreed to keep the
trash service the way it is.
Council also:
• discussed the idea of moving the village office inside
the Harder Cabin. Council members agreed to inspect
the cabin for any necessary changes needed to make the
transition a s."uccess;
• reviewed ftmding possibilities fo r future renovations
to the Civic Center. Plans are currently peing drawn up
for the replacement of the gym nasium floor;
• examined a list of suggestions left by a loss control
specialist sent by the village's new insurance;
• discussed trash problems at a Main Street residence
and delinquent water/sewe r accounts;
• discusseq Rutland's current FEMA project;
• announced June 1 as the date for Rutland's community yard sale.

Area
Did you know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensalion is
offering grant monies for Transitional Work Programs?
Did you know this program can reduce your workers' comp costs?
Call Holzer Work link to see how this progrom can be provided at

!~~---III!I~!IIII!,_P-~no:!..c~h!l::o!!.lrg;~:::e to state fundedCallemployers.
· •
Holzer
WorkiJuk

446·5733 or
toll ".. , -866-308-2266

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
I

.www.holzer.org
--··· ·--·. ·--·- ·~

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,

-~·~· ---·-

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'

Thuractav. March 21, 2002

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
I

Friday, Merch 22

COLUMBUS (AP) - Hope for a
settlement in Ohio's decade-old school
funding fight appeared dim Tuesday,
•ccording to officials on both side of
the lawsuit.
House Speaker Larry Householder
said he- does not believe the state and a
co&gt;lition of schools suing over Ohio's
school funding system will reach a setdement by Thursday's deadline. He said ·
the coalition wasn't willing to compromtse.
" My feeling is that they're sort of
going back to their original high bid
- they want everything," Householder said Tuesday.
William Phillis, the coalition's executive director, said the court-ordered
mediator left Columbus Tuesday with

-

•••
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Spring is here - well, sort of
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Spring is here, but you
wouldn 't know it around the
regton .
Snow showers and flurries
' were forecast for tonight.
Temperatures tonight will
. plunge into the 20s, with
winds at 15-25 mph making
it feel even colder.
Friday will be mosdy sunny
with temperatures reaching
the low and mid-30s.
Sunset tonight will be at
6:45, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:32a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Partly cloudy. A
chance of rain showers early,
then a chance of snow showers from late evening on.
Lows 20 to 25. Windy. Northwest winds 15 to 25 mph
decreasing after midnight.
Chance of precipitation 30

percent.
Friday... Partly cloudy and
colder. Highs in the mid 30s.
West winds 10 to 20 mph.
Friday night ... Mostly clear.
Lows 21 to 26 ..
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 50s.
night .. .Partly
Saturday
cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy .
with a chance of rain. Lows in
the lower 40s and highs near
60.
Tuesday... Mostly
cloudy
with a 'chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 40s and
highs near 60.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance ·of showers.
Lows near 40 and highs in the
upper 50s.

Pentagon backs off .after
suggesting evidence of link

Applicant dlalgecl with rape ·

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

992-2155 .

Probe yields resignation

Eastern Kentucky

One

hit with

Lane

'

another round
of flooding

•

Dow.Jonaa

WASHINGTON (AP) The pronouncement struck
a chilling chord: possible
new evidence of a link
between al-Qaida terrorists
and Somalia, the lawless
land some think is a future
battleground in the war on
terror.
Trouble is, the Pentagon's
suggestion of such a link
· was based on an odd case of
mistaken identity.
At a Pentagon news conference to update reporters
on the war, Air Force Brig.
Gen. John Rosa announced
that U.S. soldiers searching
abandoned al-Qaida caves in
eastern Afghanistan
on
Monday had recovered a
handheld Global Positioning
System navigation . device
Wl' th the name "G. Gordon"
on it . .
Rosa said the Pentagon
was searching for more
. details . but believed the
:device .pnce belonged to
·Master Sgt. Gary I. Gordon,
an Army Ranger . killed in

market. If that were the case,
he said, ·"we don't know
. how it would have gotten"
to the al-Qaida cave.
The real story: It .had been
used by an American soldier
who fought against the alQaida at the .o utset of Operation Anaconda, the largest
U.S. ground offensive of the
war in Afghanistan. It was
lost in the heat of battle
March 4 and recovered by
al-Qaida fighters, officials
said.
The U.S. soldier, a memher of the Army's 160th
Special Operations Aviation
Regiment, had received the
device from another soldier
in Afghanistan who was
headed home. It had "G.
Gordon" written it because
·
the soldier who brought it
to Afghanistan earlier in the
war uses that as a nickname,

a reference to G. Gordon
Liddy, the former FBI agent
who helped plan the 1972
Watergate break-i n.
Rosa was not aware of
Mogadishu, the Somali cap- these details at the time he
. ital, in October 1993.
: "There's a couple of con- announced the discovery
· elusions . you may draw," and suggested a Somalia
' Rosa said when asked the link. The Pentagon issued a
significance of the dlscov- brief statement Wednesday
.ery. "In fact, this piece we night saying subsequent
.currently think originated research had determined
.from Somalia will obviously that the initial suggestion of
· tie - could obviously tie a possible link to Somalia
al-Qaida to Somalia."
was mistaken .
The episode had ·nothing
An alternative explanation, he said, was that the to do with Gary I. Gordon
: device might have been or Somalia or an al-Qaida
:stolen and sold on the black link to Somalia.

The Daily Sentinel

On Over.to Bob's...
For_All Your Spring t1.
, Plantine Needsl ·"'L

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motor-

Subscription ratas
l l y - ...

OMOM month
OMr-

10,000

·1.26

-

13W-

$27.30
S$1.82

SHIUe
_....lololgt County

$28.25

:leW-

$58.88

S2W-

$108.72

..

8,000

low
10,469.10

High

10,626.85

RlJTLAND
11:57 a.m., Main Street,
structure fire, no injuries;
1:18 p.m., County Road
10, Nellie Michaels, PVH.

Issue advisory
REEDSVILLE - Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District
has issued a boil advisory for
the Reedsville community,
and on Ohio 681 from 1,000
feet east of No. 9 Road to
Reedsville.
Residents &gt;re asked to boil
their cooking and drinking
water for -three minutes
before it is consumed: A water
sample will be taken and the
resu lts announced.
·

introduced post officers, past
·commanders and distinguished guests, including P.J.
Irwin, serving with the U.S.
Air Force at Offutt Air Force
Base in Nebraska.
Gladys Cumings representing the Ladies Auxiliary of
Post 39 introduced that
group's officers and guests.
The dinner was served by
George Harris Sr., Anderson,
George
N esse! road
and
George Harris Jr.

Record high: 11,722.98 !............,...!--~.:.:.~~-:-::-::- 7,000
Jan. 14, 2000

DEC.

JAN.

FEB.

MAR.

Low interest rates, good
weather help push housing
construction to highest level

1,400
1,300
1,200

1,151 .85

1,100

Pet clw'QO from p!8VIous

·1.58

High

1,000

low
1,151.61

1,170.29

Record high: 1,527.46

900

Malth 24, 2000

DEC.

MAR.

FEB.

JAN.

3,500
3,000

2,500

1,832.87
2,000

Pa. clw'QO from ptOYioUs

·2.55
High
1,861.79

low
1,832.87

1,500

Record high: 5,048.62

1,000

Malth 10, 2000

DEC.

MAR.
AP

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP - 45.30
Arch Coal - 20.21
Akzo- 46.14
AtnTech/SBC- 39.02
Ashland Inc. - 44.80
AT&amp;T- 15.23
BankOne-41 .65
Bll- 13.96
Bob Evans - 27.60
BorgWamer- 63.53
Champlon-3
Charming Shops- 7.85
City Holding- 15.20
Col-23 .96
DG- 17.03
DuPont- 46.93

Federal Mogul - .81
USB-22.49
Gannett - 76.71
General Elec1ric- 38.80
GKNlY-4.25
Harley Davidson- 5424
Kmart - 1.68
·
Kroger - 22.45
Lands End - 45 .09

Ltd. -18.59
NSC- 24.85

Oak Hm Financial- 1a.eo
OVB-23.70

BBT-38.68
Peoples -24
Pepsico - 50.55

I'

LD DANTU LIGHTEN

YOUR

Premier- 8.62
Rockwell - 20.75
Rocky Boots - 6.90
AD Shell - 54.67
Sears - 51.70

Sh&lt;&gt;ney's -

.35

a

Wai·Mart - 63.1
Wendy's - 33.58
Worthinglon - 14.50
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quo1es of \he previous
day's transae\lons, pro·
vlded by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. ol Gal·
lipolls.

- ·--

'·

-~

.; r

...
\"""
IRS

.,.1

a rate of 264,000. Economists
WASHINGTON (AP) Housing construction, bol- believe that drop reflected in
stered by low interest .rates .part weaker demand for
and good weather, climbed in rental housing as low mortFebruary to its highest level gage rates and solid appreciain more than three years.
tion in home values have
Home
builders
broke made buying a home attracground in February on 1. 77 tive.
million housing units, at a
"Builders are still seeing
seasonally adjusted . annual home .buyers really -excited
rate, which was 2.8 .percent about the investment aspects
more than in January, the of home ownership and
Commerce
Department about good financing condireported Wednesday.
tions," said David Seiders,
"The Energizer Bunny of chief economist for the
the economy, the housing National Association
of
market, keeps on going and Hpme Builders.
going and going," said economist Joel Naroff of Naroff
Economic Advisors.
larger-thanFebruary's
expected increase pushed
housing construction to its
highest level since December
1998 and followed a .strong
7.4 percent advance in January, even bigger than the government previously reported.
All of the strengtp. last
month came from singlefamily home construction, .
which rose 7.4 percent to a
rate of 1.46 million in February, the highest level in more
than 23 years.
The number of apartments,
condos and other multifamily
housing fell by 12 percent to

.~

CIIPIIUIZED IETUBNS Ul EUCTRDNIC FlUNG
WITH IEFUNIS IN I MinER OF DAYS OR HOBS
DEPEIDI. ON TIE CHOICES YOU rD~!U

I

$2
$6.70
$104
DillY
50 cents
Subocrtborl not dHirtng to pay the
Dllrrier may remn In advance direct to
The Dolly Sentinel. Credit will be given
oomtr tach will&lt;. No oubocrfptlon by
mall pormlnod In &amp;rtal whert h&lt;&gt;mo
Dllniar ..rva 11 avalltible,

13WHka
2e WHI&lt;o
S2W-

9,000

Pet clw'QO from p!8VIous

•

MID
subsatDIIan
lntlclt Mtlgl COfiftiY-..

Frank Vaughan and George
Harris Sr., were presented silver star membership awards,
and others recognized for collecting membership dues
were Ray Jewell, Jim Frye,
G~rald Rought, Ken Harris
and Lenny Jewell. .
Fritz Goebel, commander,

11,000

lndustltals

DElli IIID TilES· WHIT A

Ohio Volloy Publlohlng Co.

Four \'11rielics ol Se('cf Potatoes
TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: ·
Mason, wv (304) n3-5721
Mon-Sat 8:00-6:00
Sunday 12:00-6:00

· ftomPapAl
12,000

10,501.57

to avert layoffs

PARMA (AP) -The city council of Cleveland's biggest suburb
acted to avert layoflS of police and firefighters and cuts in city services
amid a $3.8 million budget deficit.
The Parma council voted Wednesday night to halve a 2 pen:ent
income-tax credit for 23,000 residents who work outside the city.
That will cost a resident working outside the city and earning
$40,00l about $400.
The counP! also will ask voters in November to raise the 2 percent
income tax for all residents to 2.25 percent.
Last week, Mayor ,Gerald Boldt announ,ed a 10 percent cut in
every city department and plans that included laying off 15 police
officers and 18 firefighters, closing swimming pools and eliminating
snow removal and grass tutting for seniors.

Anderson

March 20, 2002

betWeen Somalia and ai-Qaida

Kirwan porwkws new job

Panna

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
POMEROY- Nadine S. Barton, 79, of Pomeroy, died on answered eight calls for assisSaturday, March t 6, 2002, at Sorrento, Aorida.
tance on Wednesday. Units
She was born on July 23, 1922, in Princeton, West Virginia, responded as follows:
daughter of the late Hugh and Louise Belcher Strader. She was
CENTRAL. DISPATCH
member of the First Baptist Church in Gallipolis and formerly
12:01 ~.m., Ohio 143,
attended the Middleport First Baptist Church.
assisted by Pomeroy, water
She was a homemaker.
rescue, nothing found;
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Billy L. and .Carol
5:03
a.m:,
Limberger
Stafford of Sorrento, Florida; a granddaughter, Kelley Stafford Ridge, assisted by Reedsville,
of Orlando, Aorida; several nieces and nephews, including Wal- Christy Jordan; Holzer Medter Karnes of Marietta, Goergia,Judy Epperson of Gray, Geor- ical Center;
gia, Louise Jones of Monroe, Michigan, and Ruby Bunch of
8:47 a.m., Ohio 124, Paul
Temperance, Michigan.
· Baker, Pleasant Valley HospiBesides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus- tal;
band, Lacy Barton; on June 21,2001.
11:12 a.m., Keebaugh-FollServices will be 11 a.m. on Saturday, March 23, 2002, at Fish- rod Road, April Stephens,
er Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Pastor Archie Conn and HMC;
Pastor Alvis Pollard. Burial will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery
2:56 p.m., Laurel Street,
in Cheshire.
·
Margret Bowles, treated;
Friends may .call at .the funeral home on Friday, March 22,
2,002, from 7-9 p.m.

Markets roundup

KENT (AP) - The city council in this university community
voted Unanimously to strei'tgthen a crowd dispersal law aimed at
reducing rowdy off-campus parties.
The measure approved Wednesday night would allow officers to
arrest and take into custody anyone who ignores police warnings to
leave the area.
Mayor John Fender said he hopes the measure will discourage students fiom getting involved in an activity that could get them arrestADELPHI, Md. (AP)- Ohio State University President William
ed.
Violating the old minor misdemeanor law was punishable by a Kirwan likely will decide by early neXt week whether to take a job
ticket and possible $100 line.The new law makes failing to disperse a as head of the university system in Maryland, an Ohio St1te
third-degree misdemeanpr, allowing officers to arrest a person who spokesman said.
Lee Ta&lt;hjian, vice president for university relations, confirmed on
would be liable to a $500 fine and rwo months in jail ..
Wednesday that several members of Maryland's board of regents have
approached Kirwan about taking the job as the state's chancellor.
mcJVeS

7:56 p.m., Third Avenue,
Elizabeth S~lser, treated.

EMS ftlns

Nadine Barton

HENDERSON, W.Va. - Minnie E. Lyons, 93, Henderson,
W.Va., died on Thesday, March 19, 2002 at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
She was born Jan. 25, 1909, in Graham Station,W.Va., daugh. ter of the late Everette A. and Mary Ellen Pool Elliott. She was
a homemaker, and attended Grace Baptist Church in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Surviving are two daughters and a son-in-law, Violet and
John Barker of Point Pleasant, and Anna E. Swartz ofAddison;
three sons and daughters-in-law, Billy and Elsie Lyons of Leon,
W.Va., Donald and Beverly Lyons of Point Pleasant, and Ernest
and Judy Lyons of Rutland; a sister, Marie Roberts of Long
Bottom; a brother, Roy Elliott ofVienna, W.Va.; and a lost
daughter, Lois; and 19 grandchildren, several g~at grandchildren and several great-great grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Joseph E.
Lyons; four children; four brothers, two sisters and two grand. children.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, with. Pastor Harold Tl'acwell officiating. Burial
will follow at Union Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends may call
a the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Thursday.

A Cuyahoga County grand jury returned an indictment Wednesday charging Marc Evans, 29, of nearby Parma. Heights, on charges of
rape, kidnapping. gross sexual imposition and intimidation.
The Parma school district has placl'(! him on leave without pay
A 36-year-old elementary .school teacher accused Evans of sexually assaulting her Feb. 5 in the parking lot of the Parma school board
building.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A school administrator who had applied
for a principal's job in suburban Parma has been indicted on a charge
CINCINNATI (AP) - A second Cincinnati police officer of raping a member of the hiring screening cormnittee.
cleared of criminal charges in the death of a black man has quit
the force before answcnng all questions in an internal investigation.
Comforting America
Officer Robert Jorg, who had earlier said that he would resign
Seat At A Time
April! to take a job with the Pierce Township police in Clermont
;County, resigned on Wednesday.
: A jury acquitted Jorg on Oct. 30 of misdemeanor assault in the
'}'Jov. 7, 2000, death of Roger Owensby Jr., 29. The jury dead1ocked on a felony charge of involuntary manslaughter, and the
:Hamilton County prosecutor later dropped the charge.
• • Police said Owensby died just after officers wrestled him to the
:sround and handcuffed him as he tried to flee when police
Full story on AS
.attempted to question him about drug trafficking. A coroner's
report said Owensby suffocated.

VEGETABLE PLANTS
, Cabbage , Broccoli ,
Cauliflower , Head Lettuce
, Brussel Sprouts

Minnie Lyons

no meetings scheduled before Thurs- the t&gt;lks in November to try to settle a
day.
.
lawsuit filed in 1991 by the Coalition
The mediator, Madison, Wis.-based for Equity and Adequacy of School
lawyer Howard Bellman, called the Funding, a group of about 500 schools.
coalition's lawyer Nicholas Pittner The suit orgues that Ohio't schoolbefore he left, Phillis said.
funding system favors rich districts
"The gist of the conversation was he over poor.
had done all he could in Ohio," Phillis
Negotiations began in December.
said.
The state has made at least two offers
Bellman would not comment to the coalition, although neither side
Wednesday. He said he would submit a · - including Householder - will disbrief final report Thursday.
cuss details.
Bellman said he would not seek an
"I just don't think the mediation
extension for the talks, Pittner said. process has worked out t0 at least the
"Given the time frame for the remain- point we had hoped that it would,"
ing mediation, I don't think there's Householder said.
going to be a settlement within that
He said the state offered something it
period," Pittner said Wednesday.
"could afford to do and. something that
The Ohio Supreme Court ordered was responsible."

Town aacks down on -parliers

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

Thund.y, Mardlll, 2002

Officials say school-funding settlement unlikely

Ohio weather

""""' Pl """"'

PageAl

The Deily Sentinel • Pege A 3

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.

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Mon·Sat. 9:D0-7:00
Sunday 12:00-6:00

Medication Assistance Program
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
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111screenln11 1111111VN1d fnllf c1111111 u 111111111c service
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I

PLEASANT
VALLEY .
-H OSPITAL

. 1

�---=-By the Bend

PageA4

_The_o_any_Se_ntin_·e_l

,1hunbf. Mlirch 21. 210J

Creative recyclers discover new uses for old pantyhose
DBAil ABBY: It loou Jib the
laugh is on me. Months ago, while
reading your colunm in the morning paper, my husband and I had
quite a laugh about the 90-ye~r-old
woman who recycled everything
and found an unusual use for the
"panty" part o( control-top pantyhose. She said she used them "to
keep her 90-year-old breasts under
control." (She'd cut off the legs, cut
out the crotch and wear the
remainder like a straplesl bra.)
A couple of weeks after that letter
appeared, I broke a rib in a horseback riding accident. Aside from the
~ pain and shortness of breath
involved, I couldn't wear a bra
without great discomfort. I tried
every bra on the market to no avail.
Being well-endowed, going braless
was out of the question. I may not
be 90, but I'm no teen-ager.
Thanks to that letter, I was able to
return to work without embarrass-

,.

Dear

Abby
ADVICE ·
ment and in relative comfort while
mending. I salute that woman and
you, Abby, for letting the world
know. You provided a workable,
economical answer for both men
and women in similar situations.
Broken ribs, breast surgeries, you
name it. When you need light support without binding, THIS
WORKS. - GRATEFUL AND
NO LONGER LAUGHING IN
OREGON
DEAR GRATEFUL: Vtanks
for the testimonial. Recycled

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
CommunHy Cltendllr 11 publlahed a • flw 1411'VIce to nonllroftt group• wllhlng to
111nounce -'lngl •nd lpeclll -m.. TM Clliendar II not
dlllgMCI to promota uln or
funcl-nliMrl of any type. lte1111

SATURDAY
CHESTER - Chester Base·
ball-Softball Association holding
slgnups for boys and girls for
summer league, Saturday, 10
a.m. to noon at the balllield In
Chester. Further lnfonnation call
.,. prtntlld only u ~~ per- 985·9835 or 985-4345.
mill and C811nol be glill111nleed
to be prtnlad • •pecmc number SUNDAY
ofdayl.
RACINE - Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church, Carmel
Road, Racine, Easter cantata
FRIDAY
POMEROY
Pomeroy AWare 'You ThereS on Palm
Church of Christ will hold a free Sunday, 11 a.m. Public lnvHed.
CQf111111jf1lty dinner on March 22
from 5 to 7 p.m. The public is
TUPPERS PLAINS- Eastern
ii)Yited.
boys basketball banquel, Sun·
day, 2:30 p.m. at the high school
SYRACUSE Syracuse gym. Each family to take vag·
Baseball slgnup at Syracuse VII· etable and dessert. Athletic
lage Hall mayor's office, Fnday 5 boosters to provide meat, drinks
to 7 p.m. and Saturday, 10 a.m. and table service.

to noon.

·

·

academy

MONDAY
POMEROY - Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, VBS meeting, Monday,
7 p.m. at the church. Members of
other area churches involved
involved in last yearUs VBS or
others wanting to help invited to
attend. Any questions call 949·
1316.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Alumni Association planning session,
Monday, 7. p.m. at the home of
Yvonne Young.

Stacey Ervin, Racine; BenCOLLEGE jamin
Ewing, Pomeroy;

NEws~

•

COOLVILLE - Amanda
McKnight of Coolville, a student at Easa:rn High School,
has been named a United
S~tes National Award Winner
by the United States AchieveNELSONVILLE The
ment Academy in band.
She will appear in the following local students were
USM Officia!Yearbook,pub- named to · the Dean's List at
Hocking College for the winliJhe4 ~uaUy.
McKnight is the daughter of ter quara:r:
Jamie Adams, Rutland;
Dean and Shirley McKnight
of Coolville, and was nomi- Bridget Browning, Reedsville;
nated by Chris Kuhn, her' Monna Burdette, Coolville;
te~her.
' Charla . Burge, Middleport;
Willie Collins, Racine; Benjamin Crane, Middleport;

Named to
dean's list

I

Middleport Church of the Naza.
drene, Sunday, 6:30 p.m. featuring Brenda Phalin and Joe
·McCloud. Pastor allen Midcep
invites public. Refreshments.

POMEROY - Veterans Ser·
vice Commission will meet on
Monday at 9 a.m. at 117 E.
MIDDLEPORT- Gospel sing, Memorial Dr.

Hono~by

.I

pantyhose can be a godsend in
more than one kind of "medical
emergency." Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Not everyone
will have a use for this, but it is a
solution for the person with a mastectomy who wears a breast
enhancer in the bra.
The breast form is slick, and it
can be very embarrassing if the bra
is a little loose and the form slides
out and drops to the floor. This happened to me twice.
I took a clean knee- high nylon,
slipped it over. the form, and folded
the top across to make a little more
filler for the bra. After that, I had no
more worries. It was the perfect
solution for me. - ANOTHER
RECYCLER. SUGAR CREEK,
MO.
DEAR RECYCLER: Bless you
for sharing your solution, and bless
the inventor of nylons and pantyhose. Something tells me there may

Heather Ferrell, Middleport;
Chasity Fowler, Pomeroy;
Traci Heines, Pomeroy;
Courmey Hill, Long Bottom;
James Howerton, Athens;
Jamie Hupp, Long Bottom;
Kevin Keaton, Coolville; Kelli
Lightfoot, Pomeroy; Lynn
Mallory, Racine; Nathan ·
Marcinko, Long Bottom;
Patrick Martin, Middleport;
Todd McDade, Middleport;
Leah Morrow, Middleport;
Barry O'Brien, Racine; Franco Roinuno, Pomeroy; Jeremy
Rowe, Langsville; Lisa Rowe,
Middleport; Leah WeD, Long
Bottom.

Society news and notes
Scout cookies
still available

ond annual fantasy Magic
Show Spectacular to benefit
Holzer Hospice will be held
Saturday at Washington Ele- .
mentary School in Gallipolis.
The show originally scheduled for Jan. 19 was postponed
due to inclement. weather.
Tickets for that show will still
be honored, it was reported.
They will also be sold at the
door for $10 each.

Mildred Hart.
Receiving money were the
scholarship student, the Murrow Indian Children's Home,
Kodak Baptist Mission in Alaska, God's NET, Meigs Senior
Citizens, Rayton Christian
Center, and Bacone College.
Mary K.Yost conducted the
)lleeting and read a Lenten
devotional theme with an article entitled "The Urge to
Spring House Clean." Naomi
Stobart had the progratn
"Women of God Dream, Dare
and Do." She used Ephesians 3
for her scripture.
Refreshments were served
RACINE - Contributions by Mildred Hart. The next
were made to several agencies meeting will be at the home
at the recent meeting of the of Marjorie Grimm at which
Bertha M. Sayre Missionary · time bandages for overseas
Society held at the home of will be rolled.

MIDDLEPORT
Brownie Troop 1271 will be
having a Girl Scout cookie
booth sale at Vaughan's in
Middleport Saturday beginning at 9:30 a.m.,April. Smith,
leader, announced today. '
The troop ordered several
extra cases of cookies ·for the
sale as a way of making extra
money to help pay for an
overnight trip to the Columbus Zoo. There are 23 active
scouts in the troop.

I
I

Hospice
GALLIPOLIS -

The sec-

snag the ones I'm wearing, whicll
never fails to happen when I'm
determined to look my best.
DEAR ABBY: Last faD my doc:.
tor prescribed a splint for my wrisf;
however, it had Velcro fas?tnen that
caught on the sleeves of my fleece
jackets.
I cut off one leg of some ol8
pantyhose, cut a hole for fingers and
a \humb, and pulled it up over th~
splint. Prescol-No more problenu.
IMOGENE KANE, AVA,
MO.
•
DEAR IMOGENE: Very clever.
I've also known doctors to pre~
scribe a sock or the leg of hose be
used over a cast or splint to protect
it from becoming soiled.
•

SHERIDAN, WYO.

Pauline Phillips and htr daughter,
jeanne Phillips, share the pseudonym
Abigaii'Van Buren . Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Bole
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. '

DEAR
CLEAN: CUT
PAINTER: That's for sure! I've
been known to carry an extra pair
of "sheers" in my purse in case I

Financial protecton av~ilable for young workers·
BY

EuZASETH CRUMP

For more information on
• how Social Security protects
younger and older Americans
alike, log onto our website,
www.ssa.go ; call our toO-free
number at l -800-772-J213
or visit your local Social
Security office.
Questions
and answers
Q. After I sign up for direct
deposit, do I have to stay with
the same bank?
A. No, you can use direct
deposit at any federally
insured · bank, savings and
loan or credit union. When
you open the new account,
make sure your d.eposits are
going to the new account
before you close the old one.
Q. I understand that some
states will issue a Benefit
Security Card for people
who don't have a bank
account so they can receive
their benefits via direct
deposit. Is this truer
A. The Benefit Security
Card is available in Alabama,
Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Missouri, North
Carolina and Tennessee. To
sign up for the program, just
call the Customer Service
Help Line for your state,
which should be available in
your telephone directory
under uState Government."
The number also can be
found .
at
www.fms. treas.gov I ebt/Fact-

Sheet.html.
Disability
Q. I am 53 and had a stroke
recently. I applied for Social
Security disability benefits. ·
How much will I receive
monthly?
A. If you are eligible for
disability benefits, they will
be based on your average
earnings. Although we cannot tell you. the exact amount
without knowing your earnings history, the average
monthly disability benefit in
2002 is $815. If you have a
spouse and one or more children, the average family benefit is $1,360.
·
Q. My wife, who just
tu·r ned 60, ;recently had t0
retire after 38 years of work~
ing because her diabetes had
resulted in the amputation o'f
both her legs. Can she get
disability benefits?
·
A. She certainly should file
an apj)licatiort · for .. Sad:il
Security disability benefitS. A
person is eligible for disabil~~
ty if they have a severe med~
ical condition that is expect'ed to prevent them from
working for at least 1?
months or to end in death.
For more information, visit
www.ssa.gov, call us at 1-800:.
772-1213 or visit your local
Social Security office.

Most young people don't
thipk a lot about Social Security, and those who do perhaps think of it as retirement
for their grandparents' generation.
They should know that
Social Security provides
mu~h more fban just retirement benefits.
Social Security provides
benefits to young workers
and their families if they
become disabled. Social
Security's disability coverage
is equivalent to a $208,000
insurance policy for a young
worker with average wages
and a spouse and two children. The average monthly
disability benefit paid to a
family of this size is S1,3b0.
In addition, Social Security
provides benefits to survivors
of deceased workers, including their children. About one
aut pf seven Americans can
expect to die before reaching
age 67.
Social Security's survivors
insurance is equivalent to a
$403,000 insurance policy for
a young worker with average
wages and a spouse and two
children. The average monthly survivors benefit paid to a
family of this size is $1,764.
A young worker can obtain
both disability and survivor
(Elizabeth Crnmp is manager
insurance protection very
of
the Social Security c?ffice in
I easily. A worker under age 24
Athens.)
·
who pays Social Security
taxes for just 1-112 years is
May the sacred heart of Jesus be adored, glorified,
covered. A worker under age
31 who pays Social Security loved and preserved throughout the world now and
taxes for . half the time forever. Sacred heart of Jesus "Pray for Us" St. Jude,
elapsed since age 21 is also worker of miracles "Pray for Us".
covered.
Say this prayer nine times a day for nine consecutive
days and your wish _.will be granted. It has .never
known to fail.
Upon receiving your wish, this prayer must be
published in an active newspaper within one month.'

Ohio news in brief

pageA2

r·

_
.·--·---

Nation • World

•

jhe Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration will compensaU: the family of an American missionary and her infant
!laughter who died when their plane was shot down over Peru

.last )'eat.

The Whia: House expmsed regret for the deaths but stOpped
short of admitting respomibility.
• "It should never have happened,"Whia: House press secretary
¥i fleischer said in a statement released Wednes&lt;!ay on the eve
9f President Bush's trip to Latin America.
A Pennsylvania-based missionary group's Cessna float plane
was shot down by a Peruvian military jet in April after a Cl.c\·operated surveillance plane misidentified it as a possible drugi,muggling flight.
.

.

' WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration is propos• ing a more robust campaign against taX shelters created by cor.porations and wealthy people to evade billions of doUars in taXes .
"The complexity of our taX code has created opportunities for
abuse:• Trusury Secretary Paul O'Neill said in a statement
Wednesday. "These proposals will help us find and stop
unscrupulous promoU:rs who are marketing questionable transactions to taxpayers:•
. The proposals by the Treasury Department, some of which
inust be approved by Congress, were released ahead of a Senate
l'inance Committee hearing Thursday on taX shelters.The committee also is investigating whether Enron Corp. escaped taxes
by creating more than 800 offShore affiliates.
Some tax shelten are legal. The government loses an estimated $10 billion a year, and probably more, to complex, questionable taX avoidance schemes aggressively marketed by accounting
and law finru to companies and wealthy people.

Finn recalls 1as ranges

OLIVE HILL, Ky. (AP) Streams overflowed their
banb and hundreds of homes
and businesses were inundated as flooding caused by
steady rains spread throughout eastern Kentucky.
While residents of Harlan
and nearby towns cleaned up
Wednesday, heavy
rains
spread into nOrtheastern
Kentucky, causing flooding
along a 90-mile swath from
Ashland to Winchester.
Up to 70 percent of the
homes and businesses in
downtown Olive Hill were
damaged when the usually
placid lYgart Creek turned
into a raging torrent. Severe
flood damage also was
reported in Morehead, Rush
and Cannonsburg.
Officials in 12 counties
declared emergencies and
were asking for state and federal help in the cleanup.
Rain had stopped in much

of the Appalachian region by
late Wednesday afternoon,
leaving a toll since the weekend of seven deaths and hundreds
of damaged
or
destroyed homes. There was
no precipitation in the forecast until late Thursday.
The National Weather Service issued flood warnings for
Carroll and Owen counties
in north-central Kentucky,
where the Kentucky River
had overflowed in some locations after receiving 2 to 4
inches of rain Tuesday. The
river was exwtted to remain
high through Friday.
Gov, Paul Patton toured
southeastern Kentucky on
Wednesday to assess flooddamaged
areas
aro1,1nd
Pineville and Harlan with a
disaster assessment team. An
estimated 300 homes were
affected there.
Flooding hit downtown
Morehead for the first time

CNN suit up for review

B~.RGAIN

TRt\IL

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A lower court has been direct.ed by an appeals court to reconsider its dismi.ssai of a defamation
suit filed against CNN by a source for a report alleging the U.S.

The mutual distrult between
government and the media
daa:s back to the Very first
American newtpaper in 1690,
when a three-page publication,
called Publick Occurrences,
Both Foreign ·and Domestick,
wu suppressed by the government after one issue. A number
of newspapers sprang up during the pre-Revolutionary
peri~d and .by 1775, the
colonies, with a population of

..;

.

'

Weather Service.
In Olive Hill, a housing
complex for the elderly and a
daycare center had to be
emptied when murky water.
rose.

FORT DRUM, N.Y. (AP) - Without warning, two errant
artillery sheDs from a training exercise exploded near a group of
soldiers eating breakfast, killing one soldier an'tl' injuring 14 . .
" It sounds like this is just a tragic accident," said Lt. Nelson
Cattarall, who was at a store outside the base at Fort Drum. "I
mean, what are the chances of missing your target and hitting a
bunch of your own guys who weren't anywhere near where you
were shooting?"
The shells fell short during the firing exercise Wednesday
morning, landing near soldiers from the 1Oth Mountain Division's IIOth Military Intelligence Battalion . The soldiers were
about 200 yards from the edge of the 90-square-mile intended
target area, the Army said.
"These guys had major shrapnel wounds,".said Maj. Kenneth
McDorman, a spokesman for the lOth Mountain Division.

And Wfn

·

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The Daily Sentinel

we~

2.5 million people,
served
48 weekly newspapers.

&gt;Y

in at least 25 years, forcing
Morehead State University to
close Wednesday. The town
received more than 4 inches
of rain in a 24-hour period ·
ending Wednesday morning.
according to the National

f1op ON DOWN TH~

Tapes &amp; CDs

BY 'IHE ASSOCIATED PRESS \
Mutual Dfatruat .

FLOOD WATER - A flood waters cover a mobile home court
near Dayhoit, Ky. Drenching rain flooded rugged sections of
Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia, forcing people to evacuate
low-lying areas and unleashing mudslides. (AP Photo/Rhonda
Simpson}

. Accident kills soldier

Jury reaches partial verdid

~

TllursUy, Me dl21, 2002

...

military used nerve gas on Viemam-era defectors.
The 1998 report, which was later retracted, said the military
used sarin gas on a Laotian village in 1970 as part of a secret mission - Operation Tailwind - to k:iU American defectors.
Military experts disputed the report, and it became a major
embarrassment for CNN and its corporate partner, Time magazine, which had published a corresponding story based on the
investigation.
·
CNN said Robert Van Buskirk was the "primary source" for
the story. and gave inconsistent statements during interviews and
took medication for a nervous disorder.
·

lnveston approve merger

ment by at least one of two huge presa canario dogs kept by the
couple.
. KnoUer is accused of second-degree murder, involuntary
!f13nslaughter and keeping a mischievow dog that k:iUed a per,son. Noel faces only the latter two charges. He was not at home
when the attack occurred

PageAS

Kentucky hit with another round of flooding

WASHINGTON (AP) .-A California company is recalling
about 7,200 gas ranges because they can tip oYer if a heavy
weight is placed on an open oven door, poa:ntiaUy spilling hot
items and cawing burns.
. Jade Products Inc., of Commerce, has not received any reports
.of i~uries, the Consumer Product Safety Commission said
,Wednesday.
- The recalled gas ranges are aU 30-, 36- and 48-inch units with
' model number DGRSC located on a serial plate beneath the
right hand cooking module on the range top. The brand name
.
"Dynasty" appears on the front of the range.
HOUSTON (AP) - A company founded in a California
· Stores nationwide sold these ranges from January 1996
garage
and a rival that started ~ a sketch on a restaurant placethrough December 2001 for between $3,000 and $7,400.
mat a.re a step closer to forming a rnass!ve new computer company.
Shareholders of Compaq Computer Corp. overwhelmingly
approved
Hewlett-Packard Co.'s $20 billion acquisition of their
, LOS ANGELES (AP) - After two days of deliberations,
jurors managed to reach verdicts on four counts facing a San company on Wednesday.
The vote, in which 90 percent of Compaq shareholders
Francisco couple charged in a fatal dog attack.
backed
the merger, came a day after HP claimed victory in one
... But they still have one charge left in a case that has seemed
of the most contentiow shareholder elections in history. The
like TV crime drama at times.
final
results from HP's shareholder vote could take weeks
"When the jury comes back with aU the verdicts we will read
aU the verdicts;' said Superior Court Judge James L. Warren because it is so close.
The Compaq meeting received a ho- hum reception in comWednesday after reading a handwritten request from the jury
parison
to the HP meeting ,o n Tuesday in which investors began
~0 rernan to a&lt;ljourn after some 10 hours of discussion.
·. Robert Noel, 60, and his wife, Marjorie Knoller, · 46, are lining up before dawn to get seats. About 200 Compaq shareholders fililed to fill a Houston hotel ballroom during their
charged in the death of neighbor Diane Whipple, 33, who was
fatally mauled on Jan. 26, 2001 in the hallway outside her apart- meeting.

...

Missionai'Y
Society malles
donations

Benefit for

be a run on both.
DEAR ABBY: While we're on
the subject of pantyhose, here's my
experience:
I was driving down the highway
in the 1950s with my fiancee by my
side, when she decided to look into
my glove box. Much to her surprise, she found several nylon hose
of various shades.
I assured her that, since I was a
painter, I carried them with me to •
use as paint strainers. I would cut
off a section and tie a knot at one
end.
After 60 years in' the painting
business, I s.till carry hose in the
glove box of my truck. You never
know when they'll come in handy.
- CLEAN-CUT PAINTER IN

•

Brought to you by:

Couric Contract

Rocky
Hupp

McClure's

"Today" co-host Katie
Couric re-upped with NBC
for $65' million over five years,
or $13 million per year. She
will continue to provide additiona! reporting for "Dateline
NBC" and for prime-time specials. The contract leaves an
option for a syndication show
on NBC, though nothil!g is
currently planned. Suitors from
AOL Time Warner to Dream-

Family

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•

The Daily Sentinel

•

•

•

'lhllndliy. March 21.2002

.~ Thul'ldly,

•

111 Court St., Pomel oy, Ohio
740 1112-21118• Fu: 740-ti2-21S7

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

LIMA, Peru (AP} - Til=
days ahead of a visit by President Bush, a car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in
Lima. killing at least nine people and injuring dozens. The
State Department said no
Americans were killed in the
blast, which was widely condemned as a terror attack.
In the chaos following the
blast Wedoesday evening, the
victims - including at least
two police officers and a young
man wearing roller skates lay in the rubble-strewn street.
Prosecutor Maria del Pilar Peralta said at least nine people
were confirmed dead.
The car bomb ripped
through a district of upscale
shops and restaurants at about
10:45 p.m. EST, damaging
buildings and cars, but not
harming the · fortress-like
embassy, which is set far back
from the street.
Bush is set to arrive in Lima
on Saturday for a meeting with
Peruvian President Alejandro
·. Toledo and leaders from

Den Dickerson
Publisher .
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay HIH
Ccntroller

•

lAfUn to tlu Milor an wrkoltw. l1rq $ltflld4 H ku tlwt J(J(J Jltl{)ft/$; AU ldnr
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hbiUIIbtt Co.\' ftllltHWI boGnt .,,un ot•nwi11 r~otetl.

·-

NATIONAL VIEW

.

.

Enron scandal has provided the
momentum for finance riform
• The News Tribune, Tacoma, Wash., on t/1e campaign
finance reform bill: The House passage of a sweeping campaign
finance reform biU is a heartening ·recognition of the public's
growing desire to check the influence C)f special interest money
. .
in politics.
'But let's not mistake the real reason the Shays-Meehan btl!
banning "soft money" contributions to political partie~ finally
cleared the House. Nor should rhe likely benefits of the bill be
oversold, should th e Senate follow suit as it should.
The Enron scandal, of course, provided the final politic;U
momentum needed for the bill's passage - despite fierce,lastminute obstruction by House Republican leaders more concerned with maintaining fat party coffers. Enmn gave millions .
in perfectly legal "hard" money contributions to lawmakers of
both parties but got no help from the Bush administration
. when it counted. Even so, it was obvious that Enron's mon ey
had bought easy access to key legislators and regulators, and
that this access paved the way for loose. regulatory treatment
that helped the company build its chimerical empire . .. .
The Supreme Court may well find the soft-money ban an
unconstitutional restriction on political speech - although a
high court ruling last year suggests the court might uphold
some restrictions on party spending. And the special interests
that now give cash to the national parties could simply choose
to pay for political advertising themselves.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, March 21, the 80th day of2002.There are
285 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 21,1965, more than 3,000 civil rights demonstrators led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. began their march
from Selma to Montgomery, Ala.
On this date:
In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Germany.
In 179&lt;l,Thomas Jefferson reported to President Washington
in New York as the new secretary of state.
In 1804, the French civil code, the "Code Napoleon," was
adopted.
In 1806, Mexican statesman Benito Juarez was born in Oaxaca.
In 1871,journalist Henry M. Stanley began his famous expedition to Africa to locate the missing Scottish missionary David
Livingstone.
In 1945, during World War II, Allied bombers began four
days of raids over Germany.
. In 1946, the United Nations set up temporary headquarters
at Hunter College in New York.
.
In 1960, some 70 people were killed in SharpeviUe, South
Africa, when police fired on demonstrators.
. In 1963, the Alcatraz federal prison island in San Francisco
Bay was emptied of its last inmates at the order of Attorney
General Robert F. Kennedy.
In 1972, the ·Supreme Court ruled that states may not require
at least a year's residency for voting eligibility.
.
.
Ten years ago: During a debate in Buffalo, N.Y., Democratic
presidential front-~unner Bill Clinton sought to turn the tables
on rival Jerry Brown by accusing the former California governor of hypocrisy on the issue of campaign contributions. President Bush and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl met at
Camp David, Md.
Five years ago: President Clinton and Russian President
·Boris Yeltsil) wrapped up rheir summit in Helsinki, Finland, still
deadlocked over NATO expansion, but able to agree on slashing nuclear weapons arsenals. A suicide bomber blew himself
up in Tel Aviv, killing three Israeli women.
One year ago: Space shuttle Discovery glided to a predawn
touchdown, bringing home the first residents of the ·international space station. The Supreme .Court ruled that hospitals
cannot test pregnant women for drug use without their consent. The U.S. ordered 51 J:3..ussian diplomats to leave, in retaliation for Russia's use of an FBI spy, Robert Hanssen.
T~day's Birthdays: 'Actor AI Freeman Junior is 68. Actress
Kathleen Widdoes is 63. Actor Timothy Dalton is 58. Actress
Marie-Christine Barrault is 58. Singer-musician Rose Stone
(Sly and the Family Stone) is 57. Singer Eddie Money is 53.
Rock singer-musician Roger Hodgson (Supertramp) is 52.
· Rock musician Conrad Lozano (Los Lobos} is 51. Rhythmand-blues singer Russell Thompkins Junior ('fhe Stylistics) is
51 . Actress Sabrina LeBeauf is 44. Actor Gary Oldman is 44.
Actor Matthew Broderick is 40. Comedian-talk show host
Rosie O'Donnell is 40. Rock musician Jonas "Joker" Berggren
(Ace of Base} is 35. Rock M-C Maxim (Prodigy) is 35. Rock
musician Andrew Copeland (Sister Hazel} is 34. "H ip-hop DJ"
OJ Premier (Gang Storr} is 33.
Thought for Today: "Skeptics laugh in order not to weep:'Anatole France, Fre.nch author, critic and poet (I 844-1924}.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Movies make the case for American health care riform
The critics h•ted 'john Q .." but it's still
a gripping movie, and one that should
have more influence on a Congress that
may pass little or no significarlt health legislation this year.
Academy Award winner Denzel Washington pl•ys a father driven to toke over a
hospital emergency room at gunpoint to
secure his son a heart transplant that's been
denied because he lacks adequate health
insurance coverage. "John Q." is a cinenlatic argument both for patients' rights
legislation and for better insurance protection for low-income workers.
Patients' rights legislation has a chance
of passing this year; insurance coverage for
the uninsured has virtually none, despite
the fact that about 40 million people lack
coverage.
Movie critics panned '1ohn
as "propagandistic" and overly simplistic, but I
know of a real-life case that's also a compelling argument for patients' rights.
The central character in this drama is a
61-year-old woman I'll caU Amy S., who
was diagnosed two years ago with a rare
form of lymphoma, a cancer of the blood
and immune system.
Her insurance company has paid for
seven rounds of heavy chemotherapy, but
the cancer has returned, and now she
needs a bone marrow transplant or she'll
die. ·
·
Basically, there are two kinds of transplants available, both costing in the range
of$300,000 to $400,000. For persons her
age, one procedure, involving more toxic
chemotherapy, ha' a fatality rate of 40 percent to 50 percent.
'
The insurance company will pay for
that but not for the less-toxic procedure
that the company considers "experimental" even though it's been in use since
1994. This procedure has a fatality rate of
20 percent to 25 percent
·

q:·

..

COLUMNIST

Two cancer doctors I consulted about
Amy's case believe it's inappropriate and
shortsighted for the insurance company to
decide what form of therapy she may have
- shortsighted because if the transplant
fails, the company will have to nl&lt;lke
expensive outlays for intensive care at the
end of her life. ·
One of the doctors, who practices at the
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, said declaring procedures "experimental" is "one of the many ploys insurance companies use to avoid paying for
transplants. We fight them aU the time."
Amy's case is a particularly compelling
argument for patients' rights legislation
because if either the House- or Senatepassed version of the bill were law, insure
ance companies would be required to pay
for cancer clinical trials, including the lesstoxic marrow transplant recommended
for her.
Negotiations are under way between
the White House and Sen. Edward
Kennedy (D-Mass.} to resolve differen ces
between the bills on what cap to place on
damages plaintiffi could win if they sued
their HM Os or insurance companies for
denying coverage.
The House bill favored by the Bush
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of
administration calls for a $1.5 million cap.
The Senate bill originally sponsored by Roll Call, tire newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

We had stopped n.oticing that our waU
dec01:ations were still on the floor three
years after moving in, much the way one
stops noticing ·a chronic rumble in a car
engine. But something happened last fall,
the kind of subtle shift you recognize ortly
in retrospect.
The mirror went up in November,
quickly followed by .the two African
spears, the flat oversized clock purchased
last summer and the Ansel Adams photograph of a cemetery. We bought ficus and
corn plants for the living room and cydamen for the outdoor pots. We draped chenille throws over the couch.
I took a sudden and .unprecedented
interest in cooking magazines, tearing out .
recipes for fried chicken and stew and
marinara sauce, picturing myself at the
stove a&lt; the windows darken and my son
sets the toble.
When the experts say America hasn't
changed in the six months since Sept. 11,
I know they're wrong. They're looking
through a wide-angle lens. They see we're
traveling again, that we have returned to
silly television sh~ (Tonya Harding versus Paula Jones, as one example), that we
again are avoiding our churches and synagogue~ and flipping off slow drivers in the
fast lane. We have, in other words, returned
to o1,1r pre-Sept I 1 routine.
"Nobody can live in a crisis state forever," a Stanford historian told Chronicle
staff writer Louis Freedberg in March 10's
paper. "The pressure to live life normaUy
reasserts itself pretty quickly."

Colombia,
Bolivia
and
E~. It was unclear how
the attack might affect the president's travel plans. White
House spokeswoman Anne
Womack declined comment
early Thursday.
U.S. Embassy officials issued a
statement condemning "rhe
barbaric terrorist bombing."
Toledo, speaking from a U.N.
development meeting in Monterrey, Mexico, also condemned ·
the attack.
. "[ will not permit democracy to be undermined by terrorist attacks;' Toledo told Peru's
leading radio station, Radioprogramas. "We will not give
one centimeter. I am going to
apply a hard-line policy within
the framework of the law."
There was no claim of
responsibility for the bias~ . It
reminded many Peruvians of
the guerrilla violence of the
t980s and '90s, when hundreds
died in attacks by rhe Maoist
Shining Path rebels and the
smaUer Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement.

·..TERROR- A car bomb explodes infrontof the. U.S. embassy
·., in Lima. An explosion outside. the U.S. Embassy in Lima late
,.Wednesday killed at least four people, local media reported .
_, The blast comes a few days ahead of a visit by President
.., George W. Bush. (AP Photo/SIIvla Izquierdo)

...- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - -

;.~ Campaign

finance bill ·
.: heads to presidential . .·
·.:· signature, court challenge

WASHINGTON (AP} ,,. Lawmakers who have been
; fighting for 10 years to reduce
-" rhe influence of big money in
,,. politics savored victory, while
. looking ahead to a presidential
· signature and a court chaUenge
' to the campaign ·finance bill.
"Passing this bill will likely ·
have a profound impact on
each of us for the rest of our
time here," Senate Majority
Le~der Tom Daschle, D-S.b.,
said shortly before Wednesday's
60-40 vote that sent the bill to
the president. Just what that
impact will be may be unclear,,
he said, "but we know this: the
But it isn't normalcy . that has been rying 60 pounds of gear, the firefighters
; status quo is not acceptable,
reasserted- at least, not exactly. It is uber- could climb eaclj. floor of the World Trade
,; and today it will end."
normalcy, an "Ozzie and Harriet" normal- Center in one minute. So they knew they
President Bush said he will
cy, a normalcy almost abnormal in its zeal. couldn't reach the stranded workers on the
'' sign the measure. Senior advisIn New York and the Bay_Area, the new top floors in less rhan an hour. In the
" ers . reluctantly
decided
big thing to do on Sundays isn't visiting meantime, they're hearing bodies crash to
,.,. Wednesday that Bush has to
museums or going to movie matinees. It's the pavement. They're blinded by swirling
~ stage a bill-signing ceremony
strolling through real estate open houses, , debris and panicked by radio cries of
'" because he cannot afford to be
picking up decorating tips and imagining "Mayday! Mayday!" They can't save pea· labeled an opponent of politioneself curled up in the window seat with pie.
cal reforms.
a book.
We might have returned to normal dur.' "The reforms passed today,
Despite a recession, home-improvement ing these past six months, as the experts
· · while flawed in some areas, still
companies are flourishing. The Chronicle say, but the fear and chaos of that day shift: improve the current system
reported recently that Home Depot's ed something within us, something deli· overall;'' Bush said in a wntten
fourth-quarter earnings are up 53 percent cate and unacknowledged and, for now,
..: statement.
from last year. Retailers Pier I and unresolved.
The legislation, which
Williams-Sonoma both reported that
Like the New York .firefighters on
,,. passed the House last month,
fourth-quarter profits would exceed WaU "9/ 11," we can't get control of what~ hap- ,
bans corporations, unions and
Street's expectations. And professional pening in the world. Osama bin Laden is
•I individualsd f~o~
makin~
remodelers say business is up about 20 per- still on the loose. Our soldiers are dying in
,,1
unregulate
so t money
cent from last year.
Afghanistan. Our president is talking about
'' donations to the national parWomen, who are cutting back on spas · nuclear ·weapons. Friends have lost jobs,
" ties. Those contributions, often
and other indulgences, are splurging and we wonder if we're next.
in five- , and six-figure
instead on aromatherapy kitchen products.
But in our homes, we can create order
v amounts have baUooned from
There is a burgeoning market for green- and safety. As the world goes crazy, at home
. '• zero in ;he 1980s to 586 miltea patchouli countertop cleanser at Crate we can be aggressively normal, tightly
.,; lion in 1992 and nearly $500
&amp; Barrel, and lavender-pine window wash holding to daily rituals, ·fixing the loose
,, million for the 2000 election.
at Williams-Sonoma. One can choose dish baqister upstairs, planting bulbs for spring,
:~ The bill doubles, to 52,000
·
1 d
soap in either citrus mint ylang-y)ang or sitting down to pot roast at 6:30 p.m. and
jasmine lily.
watching "Everybody Loves Raymond" at·
:::
"People are back to cocooning and to 9.
an individual can rnak e to a
spending· on their homes:' the president of
Yes, we are who we have always been,
." candida'te.
one boutique cleaning-products company ortly much more so.
"With th e stroke of the
recendy told the San Diego Tribune.
Ryan is a columnist for tire San Fran:· president's pen we will elimiAs I watched Ike powerful. CBS docu- cisco C!Jronicle. Smd comments to her in care l?f
:.; nate hundreds of millions of
mentary "9/11 " on March 10, I was most this newspaper or send her e·mail at joan.. dollars of unregulated soft
deeply struck by the fear and chaos. Car- ryan@s.fgate.com.)
money that has caused Americans to question the integrity
.... ·- •!!. .. }_, - ·•- .......~ ,• .,., , of thei11, elected reprcsenta-

RYAN'S VIEW

Normalcy- of a sort

-...,..------------- -----· --"· - - '

Morton
Kondracke

Kennedy and Sen. John McCain (RAriz.) aUows for damage awards of up to
$5 million .
The two sides ought to be able to come
together and produce a bill that Bush can
sign - unless Republicans and their allies
in the insurance industry balk at too-high
caps, or Democrats and their allies in the
triallawyers'lobby reject caps that are too
low.
Democrats will also be tempted to
block a less-than-ideal bill to make ·
patients' rights an issue in the faU Congressional'tampaigns.
If the two· sides can't or won't come to
terms on the liability issue, at the end of
the day they ought to agree to pass a biU
that includes agreed-upon items, such as
mandates for clinical trial coverage and
emergency services,
When 'john Q." came out this year, the
American Association of Health Plans, the
insurance-HMO lobby, pre-emptively
took out ads adopting the film as an argument in favor of expanding health coverage for uninsured workers.
That cause also is being championed
with an expensive advertising campaign
conducted by the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and a consortium of groups
ranging from the U.S. Chambet of Commerce to the AFL-CIO
It's a worthy effort, considering that 39
million people lacked health insurance in
2000 and 2 million more may have lost it
amid the 2001 economic downturn.
As with the patients' rights issue, if Congress can't agree on a comprehensiv~
approach to the problem of the uninsured,
it ought to resolve to simply expand coverage to more peopk each year - to do
something even if it can't do everything..
Lives can be saved in the process.

.returns to .domestic scene

P.~~rdel~~i~;y·" t~~na:~, !r: ~~at

avan

1

~

The Dally Sentinel • Paae A 7

www.mvdallveentlnel.com

Car bomb
outside u.s.
in Peftl, nine killed

The Daily Sentinel
-.mydallyMntiMI.com

Mllrch 21, 2002

Terrorism tribunals would look like courts-martial
WASHINGTON (AP} -The military
lribunals set up for terror cases will offer
defendants many of the same rights as
regular trials, a U.S. official says - a move
apparently designed to answer critics who
complained the courts would Qe stacked
against defendants.
Defenchnts will be presumed innocent
and may be represented by lawyers. On
the other hand, defendants will have limired right of appeal and standards for evidence will be looser.
"The world now will begin to see what
we meant by a fair system rhat will enable
us to bring people to justice (and) at the
same time protect (our) citizenry;' President Bush said Wednesday.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld was to announce detoils Thursday
about how the tribunals would operate. A
government official described the rules
Wednesday on condition of anonyinity.
Rumsfeld has said the panels, ordered
by Bush in the aftermath of the Sept. 11
attacks, would be used in rare cases, if at

WASHINGTON (AP} In an effort to deal with resurgent federal defi cits, Senate
Democrats are .rejecting new
tax cuts while prescribing more
debt reduction and spending
than PreSident Bush wants.
The chamber's majority
Democrats plannedJ.\9-push a
S2.1 trillion election-year budget reflecting those priorities
through the Senate Budget
Committee on Thursday.
Party-line approval was expected for the blueprint, which is
for the federal fiscal year that
SWIS Oct. I.
Budget paner Chairman
Kent Conrad, D-N.D, said his
proposal "addresses aU of the
challen~ facirig the countty
- the war on terrorism, the
· need to get ready for the baby
boom generation's retirement
and the .other significant challenges facing this country:'
Though they don't expect to
stop Conrad, the committee's
Republicans planned to force
what they hoped were politicaUy painful votes on amendments. Included were proposals
to exempt popular progranis
- perhaps Medicare - from
savings rhe Democrats would
force as part of a five-year plan
to balance the budget without
using Social Security surpluses.
Conrad would not require
lawmakers to write the five-

tives," said Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., who has defied his
own party leadership and
gained national prominence
while championing the issue.
McCain
teamed
with
Democrat Russ Feingold of
Wisconsin in rhe Senate, while
Republican Christopher Shays
of Connecticut and Democrat
Martin Meehan became partners in the House, to win
acceptance of their legislation.
Momentum began to turn
in their direction in recent
years because of the fund-raising scandals during the Clinton administration, McCain's
focus on the issue during his
WASHINGTON (AP)
try for the 2000 Republican
States importing milpresidential nomination and
lions of tons of trash
last year's collapse of Enron,
should have more of a say
the energy trading company
over what other states
whose executives were promisend them, Sen . George
nent political donors.
Voinovich said at a Senate
Bush, who in the past
hearing Wednesday.
opposed the soft money ban,
Voinovich,
R -Ohio,
stayed clear of the fierce conintroduced
legislation
gressional d~bate. But ~e
this
week
that
would
grudgingly embraced the bill
allow states and munici- ·
in the end, making clear he
palities to freeze waste
would accept whatever Conimports at 1993 levels
gress eventually came up with.
and immediately begin
"Had he said anything differlimiting how much outent we wouldn't b.e here
.
side
waste a landftll could
today;• said Shays. ·
·
receive.
While Democrats were the
Ohio is one . of the top
main supporters, they couldn't
importers
of solid waste,
have succeeded wirhout sizalong with Pennsylvania ,
able Republican support.
d
Virginia, Michigan and
Forty-one Republicans joine
Indiana. Lawmakers from
Democrats in the 240-189
those states say their resiHouse vote last month. Eleven '
dents pay higher taxes
Republicans and independent
and
environmental
Sen. Jim Jeffords ofVermont, a
cleanup fees as a result. ·
former Republican, backed
"It's not just a matter of
the bill Wednesday in the Senenvironmental concern,
ate; ·
it's also a matter of transBut Republicans, led by
portation," said Sen·. John
Sen. Mitch McConnell of
Warner, R -Va. "Hundreds
Kentucky, have also made clear
of trailer trucks come
they will move swiftly to chaldown from distant places
lenge several major provisions
dripping waste and causin the bill on the grounds that
ing accidents on their
they violate First Amendment
way
to landfills."
' free speech rights.
,.

States.

want

more say.
over trash

~

aU, and ortly if the suspects' home couritries do not take over protecution.
"The tribun.W are just an option for us,
and we'll be using rhe tribun3ls if, in the
course of bringing somebody to justice, it
would jeopardize or compromise national security interests:' Bush told reporters
during a visit to a Virginia elementary
schooL
The Pentagon has spent 'four months
drafting the rules .
No defendants have been chosen for
tribunal justice so far, Bush said.
In many respects, the panels would
resemble criminal trials in civilian court
· and the parallel military system of courtsmartial.
The defendants, 'generaUy suspected
members of the al-Qaida terror network,
would have rights to lawyers and to see
the evidence against them. Milit~ry
lawyers would be provided free, and
defendants could hire outside civilian
counsel if they chose. Defendants would
be presumed innocent.
·

The panels would include three to
s~n oflicen, as do many courtt-martial.
Proceedings would be largely open. to
reporters, although without television
cameras. If prosecutors wanted to present
classified materw, the courtroom would
be closed.
There are also key differences fiom
other American judicial exercises.
Prosecutors could use evidence that has
"probative value to a reasonable person,"
which is a looser standard than required
by either civilian courts or military
courts-martial. That gives prosecutors a
freer hand in introducing evidence.
Hearsay evidence would be allowed, as
would documents or materials wirhout
the neat chain of custody required by traditional courts.
"That is a very subjective standard" that' '
could mean evidence aUowed at one tribunal would be barred from another, said
Frank Spinner, a ciVilian lawyer who speciali zes in representing milit.ry defendants before courts-martiaL

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The Daily Sentinel

All-Ohio 'Basketball, Page B2
Meigs winter banquet, Page B4
'Baseball news, Page B5

Pap B1
lllundly, . .rch 21.2002

.

HIGHLIGHTS

2002 LINCOLN
NAVIGATOR

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ihiureday• •meet:
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wtngton, Ky.

CaldWell AP Coach of the Year
Karr and Cbril
ment. Ki'}g will try to
boys high school basCOLUMBUS (AP) Eastern
Lyons, were also recduplicate that feat
ketball team, also
head coach Howie Caldwell was hon~ized for their part
when he leads Bristol
announced Wednes ored by the Ohio Associated Press as
in the Eagles' 20-4
(24-1)
against
day.
one of five basketball Coach of the
season.
Karr was a
Delphos St . John's
King, a 5-foot-11
Year award winners in Division VI
special mention win(19-6) in a Thursday
senior, contributed
announced Wednesday.
.ner while Lyons
night semifinal at
17.2 points and 8.6
Caldwell led the Eagles to a 20-4
received honorable
Value
City
Arena.
assists a game while
district runner-up finish after losing
mention. Karr and
Russia (23-3) plays
shooting 42 percent
four starters off last season's state s~mi­
L
.
.
.
1
Lyons
were also both
Mowrystown
mi 3-pointers.
Karr
finalist team. He led his team to t.hat
Lyons
special mention winCaldwell
Witt is a h-0 senior
Whiteoak (23-2) in
successful season despite losing his
ners on the 2001
the other game. The
who averaged 34.7
house to a fire over the holidays.
points, 4.5 assists and 4.5 rebounds a winners of Thursday's games decide Division VI All-Ohio football team.
Bristolville Bristol's John King!(nd game for Bethel.
The other coaches of the year are
who cuts down the nets in a 2 p.m.
Windham's
Marty Hill, Brian Clark of
Matt Witt of Tipp City Bethel snare
showdown
Saturday.
Witt also shared the . outstanding
the spotlight on the 2001-2002 Asso- player award at last year's state tournaEastern's senior guards, Garrett
Please- Coach, ...
ciated Press Division IV All-Ohio

Duke (31-3)',vs. Indiana (22·11),
7:38 p.n;.
Kent· State (29·5) vs. Pittsburgh
(29·5)

'

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past Kent State

·west

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pklahoma (29-4) vs. Arizona
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COLUMBUS (AP) The 13-year-old girl hit by a
puck :it an NHL game died
:from a rare injury to an
:artery .. that' was · damaged
whe!J lwr he.a d snapped
back, a coroner said.
: Brittanie Cecil died Mon(iay, two days after she was
~truc k in the forehead by the
:Puck at a game between the
:Columbus Blue Ja ckets and
;Calgary Flames.
: The damage to the artery,
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):o. the back of the brain, led
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·Franklin County Coroner
:Brad Lewis, who performed
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• The NHL is looking at
'attna
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NHL
spokesman ' Frank Brown
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Se~pnel.
,,

lEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Mitchell, a senior guard who
Pitt point guard Brandin has started a school-record
Knight isn't buying into all the 128 career games. "We have a
talk
about lot of confidence in ourselves
Kent
State and what we can do as a
being one of group.
the
overachieving teams
"We felt when we got into
remaining in the NCAA tour- the tournament that we could
nament's round of 16.
get a few wins and mike it this
"They deserve as much far. We'll let the media handle
respect as any other team that's who is the Cinderella team
still playing, even though they and who isn't."
don't get it," said Knight, the
Third-seeded Pitt, . which
Big East's co-player of the yeat ·advanced with victories over
with Connecticut's Caron Central Connecticut State and
Butler.
California, also was over.. Any team that's playing looked much of the season
right now is a good team. I and was considered somewhat
don't know how many more of a surprise entrant in the
games th e media or anyone round of 16.
else has to watch Kent State
The Panthers (29-5) are
win before they_'r~:ilize ~his is enjoying tho;:,.· be~t ;::~ -ih
not a Cinderella team."
school history '· behind the
T he Panthers - and the crafty Knight, an aggressive
rest of the nation -will have coac h and an unrelenting
another opportunity to ·see defense that allows fewer than
just how talented the 1Oth- 61 points a game.
seeded Golden Flashes are
The only other time Pitt
when the two teams meet in won two NCAA to urn ament
the South Regional semifinals games was 1974, when . it
Thursday night.
reached the East Regional
Kent State (29-5), which has fina l before fallin g to eventual
_won 20 straight and 25 of 26, champion North Carolina
isn't new to the NCAA tour- State.
namcnt or postseason play.
" Neither one of our teams
The Golden Flashes lost to is familiar with m~king ~ run
Temple in the first round in in the tournament like this,"
1999 and fell to Cincinnati in said Knight, who averaged
th e second f\'Und last year, 15.5 points and 7.2 assists durwith a trip· to the third round ing the regular season.
of the NIT sandwiched
"Kent State is a little more
between.
experienced in that they've
"I don't think we have any- been here before, but I just
thing to prove to th e media or
PREPARATION- Kent State's Trevor Huffman shoots foul shots· during practi ce at Rupp th e fans," said Andrew
Please see Kent. 12
Arena In Lexington , Ky. Wednesday as coach Stan Heath, background right, watches. (AP)

NCAA

Meigs' Bartrum · Larkin expeded back soon
signs with Eagles
FROM STAFF REPORTS

UNDATED - Meigs County native Mike Bartnim
will continue his National Football l eague stint in
Philadelphia next season , according to
reports from the Eagles' organization.
The reserve tight end, regarded as one
of the best long-snappers in the NFL,
recently signed a one-year (leal to spend
his third season in the C ity of Brotherly
Love.
Financial terms of the deal were )lOt
disclosed, per club po licy.
Bartrum won th e snapping job immeBartrum
diately upon joining the Eagles in 2000
and is credited with helping to improve
the Eagk kicking games. The Eagles finished 11 - 5 last
season, winning the NFC East.
· Bartrum, a graduate of Meigs High School, recorded 12
special teams tackles while with the Eagles last seaso n. He
also caught one pass last season, a two- yard co mpletion
from quarterback Donovan McNabb fo.r a to~chdown
against the Minesota Vikings .
Bartrum, an All-America tight end on th e 1992 Marshall Division 1-AA football team, has three career receptions in the NFL, All three of them have been for touchdowns .
Bartru~1 has appeared in 96 regular season games and
10 playoff games in his career. H e has hed stints in N ew
England, Kansas Cir,y and Green Bay. Bartrum was part of
the Patriots' Super Bowl XXXI team in 1997. .
·
He has 48 career special teams tackles and still resides in
Meigs County. ,

I.

. SARASOTA, Fla . (AI') Shortstop Darry Larkin was
relieved
Wednesday
after a med-

Reds

ical

exa m

He came out of a game last
Thursday when he felt discomfort in the groin and has
been sidelined as a precaution .
Dr. Timothy Krem.chek examined him Wednesday and
found no serious injury.
" It just scared me more than
anything at first ," larkin said.
" I didn't think I'd aggravated
. but I wasn 't sure."
t hc gro111,
The 37-year-old team cap-

found inflammation, but no
serious injury to his groin.
Larkin, who missed most of
last season with torn groin
mu scles, is expected back in
the Cincinnati llcds' lineup .
by this weekend and should be tain tore groin muscles du ring
sprmg training last year and
ready for openin g day.

was lim ited to 45 games
befo re he aggravated the
injury, ripping the muscle
from the bone.
While treaiing the groin,
doctors detected a hernia ·that
was unrelated. Larki n had season-ending surgery Aug. 24 to
fix the hernia.
· Doctors used mesh to,
strengthen and support the
area around the hernia . Krem-

Pleas~

-

urkln, U

Racine youth baseball slates
summer league sign-ups
RACINE - The ll..acine Youth league
rece ntly held its organ ization meeting and
will be holding sign-ups
this Saturday, March 16,
2002 from 11 :30 to 1 :0.0 at
Southern Elementary.
There will be a secondary sign-up date
on Saturday, March 23, 2002 from 11 :30- 1
I
p.m .
.
There will be a sign-up fee of S20 per
child for in surance, plus a $10 concession
fee.
:
For families with m o re th an one child,
th e family fee is $30 plus a 10 concession
fee. Anyone interested in coac hing a team

Youth

s

I)

should no tify the president at sign ~ up time.
There are eleven different age groups for
both boys and girls: T-ba ll , ages 5-6; Girls
Minor league, ages 7-9; Boys Minor
League, ages 7 -8; Pee Wee Girls, ages 1 0-12;
Pee Wee Boys, ages 9-1 0; Boys Little
league, ages 11-12;Jr. Girls Fa1tpitch, ages
I 3- 15; Boys Jr. Pony, ages 13-14; boys Pony
League, ages 15-16, and Girls Fast Pitch,
ages 16, 17, and 18 if retu rning to the varsity squad.
If there are any questions. call Ryan Lemley of the Racine Youth League.
Sign-ups will be held on ly at ·the
announced times.
1·
I

'

,,

�r
•

Tllu

Merch 21, 2002

PageB2

The Daily
. ' Sentinel

Matrch 21. 2002

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

LeBron James takes Mr. Basketball, again

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Marion Local, 6-6, sr., 16.9; Adam
&amp;slngor, · 5-9, 11.. 15.5;
Kl'ie Vulgamore, BeaV&lt;If E._,., &amp;-0,
OOjlO., 15.5; Jooh Meyer,. Covinalorl. 6-5,
sr.. 21.4; Michael Sulens, t a -rans, 6-2, sr.. 18.8; Jesse Alc!1ardG;
Malvern. S..7. sr.. 18.9; Mala&lt;:hl Hall, Minoral Ridge, 5-10, sr., 21.8; Andy F .......
Mogadore, 1$..2, sr.. 17.1; Mercua
McCants, Cots. Wettfnolon, 6--1 , jr., 20.2;
Klaus, llelphoo St. Jol\n'a, 6-0, jr.,
13.0.

SpocloiMellllol•
JIM Guthrie, Csn-rg; Dan Sliorl,
WOIIhlnQion ChMhn; B.J. Theloon. l..llnFloher Cath.; Dsrreck C/ooppll,
Cloloe. Hta. I.J4fi. E.; Chris Day, ~
Molt - Klillond;· Antonio
Newbury;
David
Conotanlina,
want,
Oberfil);
Ao&lt;y Kroll, New Matamoras Fronllor.
Jored Mike, Weilallillr. Kylt G - .
8oltaH St. John's; Bart 1 - . llurg.F-; Devoo - - · Sidney
Flillawni Bron&lt;Jon Moon&gt;. Now Tri·VIIItge; Travl&amp; Klelmar, l'oi1Mooulh
Clay; GWrwtt Karr. A• 1r..U. In 1 n.
Jooob Yarnell, Franklln Fumaco a..n;
Orow Gllietto, Old Fort; Ryan Rtonor,
Upper Solc&gt;to \llllloy; AQb
v.n
Wert unooln•lft; c.ctrtc T....,, him; Dan ~- !lob\: GNg . . . .
Brl&amp;totvllle Briofol; KeVIn ~

__
1!-.

_,,..._,
'

ewt. ~

ltanoi N .......
Nathan Andtioon, CorrierbtJra; • •

Block, t.ancum Fl!lhM

Cottl.: Au1111n

l!loclc, Colo. WO!II!1gton; Chrie VIIi $c:toep.
en, Colo, Troe ' of Life; Dllo7n Wltldne,
SUgar Grove Bomo Oniorl:

Ar4t

t.largliortt. i&lt;lrlland; Juan LinCh.
FOirpOrl Harbor Hat&lt;flng; Jc11n Zlnnlclier,

Fllrpciil Harbor Hanflrlgi Adam flldfly,
Thompaon Ledge•nont; Brandon ljql,
~ Joneo,
lln~I&lt;Jng;

l,oraln Cath.;

Cltve. """

Flyen - · Z1ln9&amp;\'lfiO ~ .... Pit
Tidball, Z.noovlllo R-ans; laoh

Thomas, Tb!ont9: Juan Opn, .,..,..
St. Joton'a; Evtn - · 811111'/ 1I :
D8ntk Sktwel. 'CIIdWII: W. M:: Sl ,
~F••IIdln; ChdD "
pnaos,
110-n
ValleY; ~
Autflor101d, ,.,_ ~ Fron!lor: .

c_,.

Ktitlo' Clark, S. Cha~ S~: Shelley, Hamilton Hew ~ Adllrll
Ward. 1Jt1ion Cit)' - - VIler,
Juan Boob, Anno; Brion esnow.y,
Country Oay; M1ck. Stoonnon, Cln . .,_.

a..

mart&lt; Chriatian;
Jameo Bishop, New Boston Glon!iriiOct

Jeff Trace, Glouster TrlmtHei Cfwle_
lyona, A1Jda,._ &amp;llerf\; ~
FO\ICII, ~ Fairtllld: •
Qt1111,
Poo:flrnoutli Clay; Coriell. s. Well'
tl1tr; CW.... Hunt. W~klw Wood ~

All r - ,..,.,
• luMh ......, c........ ock 250
1 p.m. • Saturday • FX

...

Oklahoma coach breaks down
before appearance against ~zona

.''

::.:"'la

::.4

. U~shota,4.8-porgamo;_!jl1.1
-fle\(t goa~. 37-" ~- ...

"He's a tough guy like his son," Arizona forward Luke Walton, the son
Schnebel said. "He said it was nothing, of former NBA great Bill Walton.
but I said I thought we should probably
"He's very talented," ' Oklahoma
get it taken care of."
guard Ebi Ere said. "He's a great passer.
The surgery to drain blood from his - You've got to shadow the ball so he
brain took about an hour, Sclmebel doesn't make some of the passes that he
said.
normally makes. Offensively, I'm going
The elder Sampson, who suffered a to have to go after him."
stroke 20 years ago, was speaking but
Arizona, making its fifth appearance
not yet walking, and a full recovery was in the regional semifinals in the past
expected, Schnebel said.
seven years, defeated UC Santa Barbara
The physician adde&lt;J that Ned Samp- and Wyoming to return to the round of
son could be out of the hospital by Sat- 16 after making the NCAA champiurday, when the winner of Oklahoma's onship game last season.
game faces the winner of Thursday
UCLA's meeting with Missouri pits
night's other semifinal between eighth- two talented teams that: got their games
seeded UCLA (21-11 ) and No. 12 Mis- together just in tin1e.
souri (23-11 ).
The Tigers, who upset Mia111i and
Agalnst Lute O lson's quick Wildcats; Ohio State to get to San Jose, are led by
Oklahoma will rely on the physical play junior Kareem Rush and senior
that has taken the Sooners this far.
Clarence Gilbert. Missouri was ranked
"We're stubborn about certain things, as high as No. 2 this season before
your effort ·level , how hard you play, falling out of the national polls.
how hard you compete - those things
UCLA, led by Jason Kopono's 16.3are nonnegotiable," Sampson said. "1 point average, beat Mississippi and
can live with you not being the most Cincinnat.i to advance in this season's
talented kid in the gym, but 1 can't live tournament.
with you not being the hardest work-_ Missouri hasn't beaten the Bruins in
fiJVe tries, and UCLA won the only
er.••
The Sooners, with early round wins tournament game l?etween the two
over Illinois-Chicago and Xavier, arc back in 1995.
paced by guard Hollis Pri ce, Okb- ' "I think our teams are really kind of
homa's top scorer with an average of similar," UCLA coach Steve Lavin said .
16.5 points." O lson praised Price as one "Both came out of tough leagues, both
of the most underrated players in the played tough schedules, and both are
country.
playing really well at the right time of
Oklahoma is focused on high-profile the year."

1985- Damon stl1(fger, Cle\ellnd' Htal~ Sio
It, II., 24.5 poio18, 7 -, 5 . . 1101'

1994 -

Aaron Hutclitnt, Lima centtaJ

c.thOIIc, 6-10, 81,. 25.8 polnta, 7 . 8 - .
5.1 -per game; 51 peroent flold goal, 57
~
190(1 - Gfn!&gt; For&lt;~. Coll'illrldge, 5-91 at.,

82 """""11 free""""'

_,,

P&lt;Hnta, 4.5 robounds, 4.5 ·osolo!$ per
gamo; 2,880 ....., points, hlgt)eot jrl

JS.9

Olilo.

1!iii2..,Grtg SltrlieOn. i.Jma Senior.'Il-l, or..
il6.3 polntl, 8.7 .-..... 6.8 . . . . 3.1

-

~

_ , $1.0 _ . fllfli goal, 51

- a pct:lwra. nA"""""* 1r1t thrM

...._.,..,.Cftllll-'1'.......

45 "'"'" ~. _ , hiiO giiiiM

. 18111-C!Ng""-,.Ltma .....,II-T,j;,
3U po1n1t, ·8.1 ~ 6.7-. &amp;.1
~ gema; 50.2 """""* litlol pfl,
47.2 -

3opoli .... 72 -

...

"'-' 1 3 - wttli ~- 30 polnlo.

IGtio -II¢ P - YoongoiOWn LIIeny, 6-

0, .... 21.8 pofnta, S:3Uililtll. 4 roboundli ~
- ; 82 ~field goal, 88 pe-.1 !reo

tl!ro\Y~.
tiltl9- Jim ~acl&lt;oon, 'roloelO

.

M-. e.
e,ei.,3t.&amp;polnta,11.2owlloundi,6R-.
3-~-

111118-.MI-. ~-.s.

•

e. f., 25.7 pcoln!s per -

·

• -ton Cup, Food City &amp;00
12:30 p.m. · Sundey · Fox

The Fighting Irish, who won the last two Division lll state
tides, play Poland Seminary in the semifinal• Thursday at Value
City Arena.
Janles is confident his team will win a championship for the
third year' in a row. · .
" We're trying to go down tO Columbus :md take nothing for
granted and come out with our best game;· he said. "We haven't
been playing this year just to play. We're-playing to win titles."
James has been through a year unlike any other in the history
of Ohio high school basketball.
Using the headline "The Chosen One;' Sports lliustrated made
James the fu.t underdass high school basketball player to appear
on its magazine's cover.
He's gotten to meet several players among the NBA's elite :md
played in Cleveland~ Gund Arena before a sellout' o£20,562 fans,
the largest crowd to see a high sehool basketbaU game in Ohio.
Scouts also have pegged James as the No. I pick in the 2003
NBA draft and shoe companies are lining up to sign him to :m
endorsement deal.
So what's it like being a 17-year-old who knows he's going to
be a multiinillionaire?
"Its amazing. It's kind of unexplainable. It's a dream come true;'
he said. "To be recognized :md to be spoken of highly by the
greatest players in the NBA right now, it's great. 1-just have to
make sure I stay focused and play hard."
Despite aU the attention heaped on James, his teanunates don't
get jealous, coach Dru Joyce said
"The media has hyped it to where everyone thinks it's just
LeBron;'Joyce said."The kids understand they can play the game
too, and they're enjoying being a part of it. Our kids recognize
who the man is. They understmd it :md they find their role:'
Among the other players considered for Mr. BasketbaU were TWO-TIMER - Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary's Lebron James, left, drives toward the basket Chris Quinn ofDublin Coffinan,Jamar Buder of Lima Shawnee against Warrensville Heights' Roderic Wilson, right. James is the winner of The Associated
and Matt Witt ofTipp City Bethel.
Press Mr. Basketball award presented annually to the state's top male player. (AP)

MR.

--

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

stat.e tournament.

SAN JOSE, Calif {AP) - Overcome
by his father's sudden illness, Oklahoma
Day; JIM Tldroba&lt;:k, ~ Control; lJtJOtfn ac.m.. coach Kelvin Sampson wept as he
oter. Blent SCiinlpke, aaovtllt; Kirk Llcltt'
reflected on how his
enlttiger. Convoy Crestview; T.-n
TA911aPietra. Van SUren: ~ Kelly,
experiences
shaped
Holgate;
.
him.
Jon . Raddlah, Mo~Jador•i John Pember"' ,
ton, Windham; P~M JofoOfl&lt;)n, Csnton ller·
John W. "Ned"
itage Christian: Kyle Beun, Kklron Qenl.
ChrloUon; T~s Dunn, Kkto&lt;ln Qenl.
Sampson underwent
Chrlstoan; Joa.h Oton.
,
emergency surgery at a
Joetl Gerbet P ltbh, Ctiril Andefton,
Mineral Ridge; Shawn Her.hbtrger,
San Jose hospital late
Kidron Csnl Ctvlalian.
Tuesday when blood
~
collected on his brain,
according· to OklaBAs~
Sampson
homa team physician
Brock Schnebel.
WINNERS
The next morning, his son met the
2WJ- Le1!ooo - · Almln lk ~~iran~media as the second-seeded. Sooners
6
~~~i ~~~'"=:.: (29-4) prepared to play No.3 seed Ari..,.. • game ~ 811 - "
zona (24-9) in the NCAA West regionllo!!i 1ti0. 'rhid , _ _ t,tr. B ;t . .
*"*'- Led'""' "11lod ~- .,.., al semifinals Thursday night.
--•..,.Wiij'IDiviionlllllleao
"My father, growing up, was a high
hW••••
and IOphomore.,
h
2001- LeBion -iamoo, 1-/wto S t . sc oo l basketball coach," Sampson said
St. ~ ~ 112, 001l'1.. 25.5 .Jllll'-..:w;..t=c
-::hefore breaking down in tears.
~~-~~. lllpl1o"I'm sorry," he said, ,covering his eyes
2000 -:tl:,""~ Studcman, l.14!dlno. e,t;
with his hand.
~ ~t ;,~~~~
Several moments passed before he
ad pooqn free t\lrOW8. 39.7 IJIIllllll a.
continued.
"'**"'~ Maoon, Clriollnd - .
•• "
.
h
e-'1, w, 25 po1n1a, 13........., 11 • our expenences s ape who you
~·
are. He's a worker. He was tough. The
1
- Emil'iflfiiJel Smith, Eidd, &amp;-3. .,.,
adversity that you were raised in shapes
2M PDin!O. 8.3 "'*"""!do'. 3.5 . . - . 4.5
~ageme.
you as you ·get older," he said, his eyes
TM- Wl!lclm 'Sonny" JohrtliOO, Ga111ekf,
red witb tears. "I've always appreciated
Hta., U, sr, 34.0 pointa, 17.6 robou"'II""
game.
·
that." .
·
1997-~Goegpoy. COIU11'1o&lt;Jalndepen- ·
Schnebel
said
he
noticed
that 72&lt;liii\CO, 6--4. or., 211.1 points, e.e rebouncfo. a 1
- · 1.8 -per game; 6 4 . 7 year-old Ned Sampson was walking
=~"10:2:=· cath. . strangely at the Sooners' practice Tuescent, HI, sr.. 25.3 points, 13.4 ~
day at San Jose City College.

. OHIO

•

COLUMBUS(AP) - Playing basketball with Michael Jordan.
Getting shoes fiom Kobe Brymt. Shaquille O'Neal watching
fiom the sands.
Getting attention fiom the NBAs superstar pla}"rs is just one
way Learon James is different fiom every other high school basketball player in Ohio.
Here's :mother.
A state media p:mel .on Wednesday unanimously selected
James, a junior fiom Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary, as Ohio's Mr,
Basketball for a second straight season.
.James joins Jim Jackson (foledo Macomber) :md Greg Simpson (Lima Senior) as the only !WO-tirrle winners of the top individual honor for a high school hoopster, :m award in its 15th season.
"To be named the best in the state is great. But I wish (the
award) recognized the team, too. I'm aU about the terun;' said
J:m1es, who also was the fi~tsophomore ' to be selected as Mr. Basketball.
l11e 6-foot-7 James averaged 29 poi~ts. 8.3 rebounds, 5.7 assists
and 3.3 steals chis se-ason while- leading SVSM (22-3) to the No.
1 spot in the Division 11 rankin!;' and a third straight trip to the

Yaltay;
JolliRidtkln,llaumM~

.Duke nat ·a crowd favgrite in Lexingtoln
LEXINGTON, Ky.
Duke got more than its share
of boos when taking the
court at Rupp Arena for
practice on Wednesday.!
Kentucky fans have long
loathed the Blue Devils, ever
since Christian Laettner's
game-winniilg shot knocked
· the Wildcat1 o ut of the
NCAA tournament in the
1992 East Regional fina ls.
Duke's 104-103 overtime
·win is considered by many
to be the best game in tournament · histo;y. The Blue

83

The Dall Sentinel • P

•

Devils also beat Kentucky
95- 92 in overtime this season.
"I don 't think the game•
will be decided by what
happens in the stands," Duke
coach M1ke ~rzyzewsk1 sa1d.
"T do see t ese K --&amp;gs all
over and I thought It was a
welcome for me. Being Polish we're simple minded and
that's the first reaction I
had."
A few dozen Duke fans
stood up and cheered when
the Illu e Devi~s hit the

co urt, but most in the
crowd, many wearing Kentucky hats and T-shirts,
booed loudly.
"We're for lndian_;t," yelled
o~~ f,an. .
/
.
lt -....go.iug-iO be an envtronm ent, besi?e our families .
behind our 'bench, where
everybody else is goi ng to
wnnt to see us lose," Mike
Dunleavy said of the. semifinal matchup with Indiana on
Thursday night . "I think
peopl e arc getting tired of
Duke''

The Hoosiers aren 't exactly liked in this part of Ken tucky either. In fact, Indiana
coach Mike Davis was quoted earlier in the season as
saying he hated Kentucky.
Davis
backpedaled
Wednesday.
"1 apologize if I've eve-r
said anything to offend any
Kentucky fans. I eve n let my
little boy wear · blue so metimes," Davis said. "1 am
hoping they cheer for us. We
need all the help we can
get."
·~

''-"'!"l

• Crttt.rnan Truck, Advance Auto
2 p.m. • AprU 13 • ESPN2

BANKS
Larry W. Banks,
OWner/Operator

7. (8) -

Fast start
shows-Sadler
is a contender
this' season

"' Darflo1llon
.... 1.0
lt.,..t Ollt o f Cou&amp;hlln 1M 111&amp;Alan hod • flOOd run r.o 1011r ·
-

Mlrtfn

8.
(&amp;) - ·
•• (10)11yon
N_,

PuttlnJ( on qUite •

.a.w

NASCAR This -

Elliott Sadleda a native
Vlralnlan drt'ltne,IQf tJJo

-tttc'omoot

10.(-) - -

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken
228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

from Page Bl
think that people aren't payil)g
much attention to our game.lfs
going to be exciting and a steppingstone for both program&lt;.'~
Pitt coach Ben Howland said
the Golden Flashesrexpcrieni:e
against quality opponents . ~rs
prepared them for the !'anthers'
swarming, physical defense. '
"They saw great defense in
the first two games of this tournament against Okbhoma State
and Alabama," said Howlan~i.
the Big East's coach of the ye~r.
."They played Kentucky, th~y
played Xavier, they play in : a
tough and very underrated
conference.... Our defense :is
probably the least of their wor-

992-5432

See us for Your StihP
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

to"""" .... ~- .

-hfiiNmmotH(

~--. u ~ SOc!ler,
-I'Gfl n11 llrtt Wlnaton
evp,... 1 yetr
Ia on
th6 .... rtf brtnclnq the

.ao.

FROM LAST WEEK
WINSTON CUP
DARLINGTON, S.C.- As
the laps wound down In the
Carolina Dodge Dealers \
400, most of tt"te drivers at
the front of t he field were
young and Impetuous.
All except one.
,
If a veteran cannot win a
race at Darlington Raceway.

Oarllngtonraceway.corn 200,
starting an the pole and
leading all 14 7 taps .
Another Taurus, driven by
.Greg Biffle, finished second,
and after J,;tff Green brought
his Chevrolet home in third,
yet another Ford, driven by
Jason Keller, finished fourth .

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
DARLINGTON . S.C. _ With

the oldest of NASCAR 's highbanked superspeedways,
just where can he win?
someone in the 40-and-

12 laps to go In Friday's
Craftsman Annh1ersary 200,
okief set had to do something. one ._-eteran, Ted MUsgrave,
Sterling Marlin was the
pulled off a pass on another
VE!teran, Robert Pressley, to
man .
i
.
.
The records will fore\ler
seal v ctory m a rousmg
note that Marlin won the
Cra~sman Truck Series race
race after starting 11th, and , at Darlington Raceway.
the records will be forever
The declsl\'e pass was the
wrong. Because he changed
stuff of legends. Comln~ up
the engine In his silver No.
on a slower truck In the
40 Dodge on the day before narrow end (turns three and
the race was run, Marlin had four) of the 1.366-mile
.
ta start dead last.
track, leader Pressley took
his Dodge law and runner-up
Musgra\le tack his Dodge
BUSCH SERIES
high, and by the time they
DARLINGTON, S.C.- Jeff
reached the wide end (1urns
Burton drove his nuarescenl- one and two), the positions
grMJn Taurus to a fl&amp;g·to-flag had been reversed .
victory in the
'

FEUD OF THE WEEK

Wootl Brothera ~· to the
~ 1'•1...,.
... rtfpre'!lws
~··~·
11 ~an,
hN ·won ~n · I!
raeet Mr tN years( ,,,
SS&lt;Ilor nntlhed ueQIId 11
Danti\flton, hit tO&lt;:C&gt;nd top.

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

ofU..iH• in ttie l!!loch

- -

.

.-

-. . . .•

After 11n t.mevtn. l:tart, · tehtl!) ,,
Sodlili"t 2Q01 vloioly ot
i How ..... -. ........
Brtltol Motor Speoct.v&amp;f . . . . . ._II,CI •' ·"rttars
wu the firet for.hJa team a real 1100£1
t tlllnk
alnce a Moraan Shepherd the Wood Brothera have
OJk:tory at Atlanta Mot:w
tteen 10 victory lane ei&amp;ht
Spoedwoy In 1993. The
tlmH here. but Sterllnll •
tNm had !'lever •
et
{Ma~tn) lindlllOH Cill'l
Brtatot Un\H Sod:Or's
hid llltlr ltut'l' IQPther on
~io)C&gt;f)' ,lhar•·
long runs1 and I knew that.
....,, 26 (wltl turn 27 on · ... We had great pit stops,

"-'*'•• Emporla Va.
·c--Pat"1

!10!: No. 21 M.-rOft

FOrd Tturus, owned tly
WOOCI BrothJH• Racln'

-'lllrloC ....
-tooltftoCioot•W.
have to cerry this car to

I

Texas, so they warned me
before the race start6&lt;1. We
actual!)' had a car lo.cled
~P

• deCided to ~k It off and

Are,.. etartlnC .....

IUOtltlf!M7 •t hOPO so.
.TI'I!sle a stretch of three

here, wa love 8rhalo1 1 and
So thi!J IS a
fortune.of aOOd thfn&amp;&amp; to

one wlr1, four top-

'iYe love Texas.

·. five 'flnlihes, six top-10

eoine.

ftnlatiQs, 0 polet, over
$7.2 mlHion 1n aarnlnqs
F110to: Start (M~ 24,
. 1998, at ContOJII, N.C.),

on ttoa trailer to ;orlnq K

h8ro Tl}4rlldiY ~nd nl1 C8l'
owner; t(tdle Wood,
· 1::

day!

•rhla Js&amp;reet momentum

&amp;OinC Into Brittol, a place
we think we can realty win
the race at. Ttlls Is the
momentum we need for

bl'ln&amp; this car. This Is
dtflnlttty my favorite car

and It at~ hea been. So
lnttead of eiVil'IC It tor
Ta~&lt;as', .,.. deeidtcl to brlfli
it hera and tt paid off. I'm
just ~Ot.ld Qf mY luya for
ma"'nq tliot ~ialon •.Thla,:

I• tile most luo I've hid In ·

a tona time. To run·ln the
top five 111&lt;0 that 011 cter
lonq ot Darllnqton pretty fun. I hod o Ifill
time."

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985·3308

• NCrn Sterlina; Marlin,
two wins and top-10
finishes In e\lery race to

1. WhO was· mast faniaus for driving the
"S,koal Bandit "?
.
2:. Who preceded H.A. "Humpy· Wheeler as promoter
at Charlotte Motor Speedway?
3. Who succeeded Jim Huriter as president of Darlington
Raceway?

'

date.
• NOT: Tony Stewart,
from vh;tory lane tci the
· hospital In one eventful

week.

·

St1Jn9 MQJPUV '£
p~el.lOI~ ·~ lU99 AJJeH ·1

p;eMOH

SH!lMSNV

·

••••••••••
Jeff Gordon marriage is on the verge of breakup
11 t 0Bytonn International Speedway.
The fou r· time Winston Cup champi·
on declined ~omment but s~id h18
Brooke Gordon filed for di\'on:e m11.rital problems have hd no effect
March IS after &amp;e~.'en years of mill'- on his performance this season. •
riage to four-time Winston Cup •
X
champion JeffOordon.
.
Accordina to the document. filed
NEW SETVP At.T BRISTOL:
in Palm Beach, Fla., the marriaje is · NASCAR Officials have changed
"ntetrie\lilbly broken u a rnu I of the yellow-flag pitting procedure for
the husband's marilal misconduct.~ next week's races al Brislol (Tenn.)
Amnng other considerations, Motor Speedway.
Mrll. Gurdon i• ukinw for exclusi...C
The pace car will be stationed in
use of the couple's S9 million,,. tum three rather than tum one, us in
23,093~!KJU&amp;re·fnot ocean-front the past. .\fltT the leuder tokes the
home m HiKhl~~ont.l Beach, Fla., yellow flag on the frOnt Slfelch,the
alimony, severn
. I vehicle!l and usc of pace Clll' will nolopull out until the
the couple's boats fl_nd an llirplane can reach the backstretch.
owned by one ofthe1r comPMI~tCS:· .
When therits arc opened, the lead·
. The Cfordoos have been m_arn~ IMp cll/1 wil ha"e to go down both
.'IInce NtN. 26, 199&lt;1. They met tn V1~- ph roads. finton the backstretch and
tory lane afler 1 February 199) race
By Mont• Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Co~r1&amp;M 2002

Ruth Crunw
Elkhart, Ind.

X
DeiU' NAt.SCAR Thll Wftk ,
My wife and I enjcry Watching
lhe ~on the Fox stBtion .
Darrell Waltrip i ~ Mn e.u:ellent
comment~tor. lk\ng a retired driv·
t r. he really gtl5 intn lh~ race~ , is
more informative and is entenain·
ing. He puts 11 little ll'l(ft into being
~ comllll'lntlltor between the driven
and lhe lana with his Blang thllt
mOll! of !he dri\·en; Ul!C.

then on the front, while pining under
yellow 11Bi! ~- Then the Sllflte proce·
dure will be u!ICd for th eca~ tftat are
not i'utll)ins on the lead l~p.
The pn-11aa procedure will be
unchanged.
Team• were s1ill tryi ng to I!IIUKC
' tht impact oflhe new rules, but sev·
era I keen obser\'el'!l exprtssed the
vie•· thai lmckstretch p1111ng "''Ould
be less of a disadvamaKC th3n in the
put. Many othcrslll'!l also·mnccrncd
that the pmctice ofmakmg every ell!'
go down both pit roads coul d be dangerous and fraught with problems .

X

HELTON DEFENDS DECISIONS: NASCAR pm idcnt Mike
li ellon defended recent controver·
sial decision s made by the ruhng

body, eSpecia lly in the ca lls Ihat
ended races in Da}ltona anti Rock·
1n~am

'I waSn't nearly ILll confused rn.·er
calla we made a. othcr!i were," Helton said. "II made all the sense in
the world to ll'l. 'it' being the difrcrence Detween D11yto111 and Rock·
ingham. l mean, when tou're out of
laps. you're oul of laps.'
He lion 11lw denic:d lhe suggestion
tlwl S()-(alled "common lcmplllles,"
01' identical bodies for al l the curs.
would be in plo« in the ncM future .
" I don't kuow !hut we' ll ever .
rea~h a poinl where there 's dcfini' tive ly 11. sel of temrlatcs that ar~
uniquely common." he Sllld. "I think
thei'CI is a henet:it forChevroh:t. Pontiac, Oodge and Ford to have brand
identity in theS£: garnKc areal."

mike Bing, Owner
Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician
740·992·1998
740·667-6133

FanTips

a Bill Fleischman and AI
Pearce have written and
compiled a great handbook
for fans, The Unauthorized
(VIsiOie Ink, $24.95). Kyle
Petty wrote the foreword •
It's~ great combination of
e){ce llent writing and the kind
of facts and records that
etJery fan needs access to in
order to fully appreciate the
sport. It's unfortunate that
NASCAR's official
.
publications do not pro11ide
the record-keeping expertise
that is routinely provided
from independent, but
Informed, sources.

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992·1135
E-Mail )masOkognot,net
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Call for hours or to ·
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In his ~arty days racir~~ . Wal·
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ttnd~"rit.r lo /a/J: 11 fol .

XCIIWOF

AROUND THE GARAGE

-

a11alystJ ."

NASCAR Fan Guide 2002

••••••••••••

Who's Hot...
Wilda Not

~l f-~ppoimed "e~per1

'·.'

-lt-IIIMrou .

&amp;ood raoetracka. We love h

c-·-uo

~rta,

areat calls .•. It was a tun

Drar NASCAt.R ThJB Weet,
Thanks to Waym•n Reinhard!
for tht suueslion of uuning off the
:0011nd on the TV and listening w
the race on the 1'1\d\o.
You get better covaoge on the
~:~ntirc field, not just Mfew drivers.
And best of 1111 , you don 't hue to
listen to Darrell Waltrip . Larry
MacReynolds and the res1 of !he

1

that racetrack.• .

""'lin&amp;·

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Ridenour
Supply

Kent State tirst-ycar coa~h
Stan Heath, who coached in
three NCAA tournaments add
won the 2000 national championship as a Michigan State "-"~'­
tant under Tom Izzo, said shr\tting down the versatile Knig!Jt
will be the key to the game. :
"You look at them an.:\ it lll
. starts with Brandin Knight;' be
said. " He's one of the best
guards in the country and c~n
control the tempo of a game.:
"We have to do a good j~b
containing him. You kno~
going in you're not going io
stop hirn.You just haw to try io
slow him down a little liit." :·
Howland chuckled' wh~n
asked hmy to keep his teain
motivated ag:linst a team mcist
people expect them to beat. :
" Frum what I've heard t~ e
last twO days, ! thou ght we were
the underdog," he said. "Tnist
me. we know-how talented tliis
team is &lt;lt;d there will be no let-

---........
.,...._..,
..........____......

John~JI!il-

~.

Se~...

.. X

_._,

""'
llnlshIsrtffrom
ttie a""''·
S8lhr
racine
fomlty. Hta brother,

pole (none), wtn (March
25, 2001. at Bristol,

·

•

DurNA.SCAR Thll Wetk,
I some1imes wonder If the NBC
- b~d~utina crew is watching lhc
same race th• ll am.
I ~an1101 believe how many mis takes are made u'h week . Many
times, Benny PanoM is e,;:plaining
a situation ~gllfding a wreck and he
is talking about a e~r 1ha1 wasn't
even part of !he !ICC ion. He is foreva milking mislakcs.
Am Idle only one '4'ho notices
this7 Why ~an'l we have the fo~
crew all year long? I can't help but
think olher people have to feel!h e
same way I do.
I.uA.nn Meblm110
L11wndlilr, N.C.
A.s pori of lht new reln&gt;ision
drul, NBC OfHMd t·owrusr of rh~
2002 UU.I'1lll witlr tlrt Duyrono 500.
Then F'oA look o~tr and will air
rocrs rhnml;lh the July 6 Peps/ 4()()
a/ DaytotJO. On July 14, NBC will
!Y.fiUII&lt;! itt ClN.ml§t with lht 1'ropicana 4()() or Clt/cagoJOIId.

- ...-..... ., __
............,._
-

1.(1)SterllrClorttfnl•
""""
2. (2) T a n y Probllblr .t.Juld
have won
3.(4)-l.oltn.-tape
4. (I) D. lanWidl Jr.

1.(7) - -

Kent

'
ln the 6rst: game Thurscf4y
night, top-seeded Duke (31-?)
will take on fifth-seeded indiana (22-1 1) in a meeting of ~o
of coll ege baskctb;oJl's most succes&lt;ful programs.
·
, The Hoosiers arc 12-point
underdot\' to th e defcndi,;g
natiOnal chJn1pio'n l~lu l' J)cvlls,
who are making their fifth
stra ight appearance in the
round of 16 under Mike
Krzyzewski. :

lotion r- .,. ........

TOP TEN

5.(3)--

·~ -

ries.''

Your1Um

'

Elliott SaCIIer·
are In parentheses.

-

••••••••••••

PROfiLE

• NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the top 10
drivers heading into this weekend's race. last week's ranklngs

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

Noblbae: Until Sadler's
125.264 mptl, March 23,
Whn:: Advance Auto 250
WheN: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor U!Jset victory, the Wood .
2001
White: Martlns\lllle (Va.)
Brothers had never won a
S~av t .533-mile track),
Hal• MCOI'd: Harry Gant, . Speedway (.526-m lle track),
race at Bristol.
500 taps/266.5 miles
Sulek, 92.929 mph, Apri l 4,
250 laps/ 131.5 miles
Whtn: Green flae drops at
1992
When: 2 p.m., Apr1113
BUSCHHRIES
1 p.m.. Sunday
Notable: Mor&amp;an Shepherd
LMt yMr't winner: Scott
Lat year'l winner: Elliott
Whit: Channellock 250
has won more races here,
Riggs
Sadler
WheN: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor · four, than any other driver....
Event ouatlf)tnc ...a..t:
E..., qoollfl'llll record:
Speedway (.533-mlle track).
Kevin Harvlck, Brett Bodine,
Mike Bliss, Ford, 94.275
Steve Pan&lt;, Chevrolet,
250 lapS/133.25 miles
Todd Bodine, Matt Kenseth
mph, Aprll 1999
126.370 mph , March 24,
When: 1 p.m., Saturday
and Mark Martin are among
Rae• record: Jimmy
2000
t..t yur'a winner: Matt
the drivers who have won two. Hensley, Dodge, 74.282 mph,
R.ce ..oord: Charlie
Kenseth
Aprll1999

736 E. Main St

(740) 992-5009
. .

EYent qualtfJinl record:
Kevin Harviel&lt;, Chevrolet,

Wliot: Food Cily 500

CONSTRUCTION
Pomeroy, Obio

Glotzbach, Chevrolet ,
101.074 mph, July 11, 1971

WINSTON CUP

. ..

.

••

/

�.

, Thur!cley. M1rch 21, 2002

www._m ydallyHntlnel.com
.

........

Vauglm.julltin ~ R011 Well 13 honors and !he top reboundand Charlie Williamson. Mrs. er aw:ud. Fackler received !he
It w.as Kari Run)'On presented · each HXWo aw.uds as well as District

w.as' held.
Coach Dave Wilcoxen introduced the members ofthe.girls'
vanity basketball team and !he
members of the junior varsity
team on behalf of Coach Amanda Ellison, who was unable to
attend
.
Wilcoxen commended the
team for their behavior throughc
out th~ «&gt;ason. Introduced were
lint-year basketball letter winners: Brook Bolin, Maria Drenner, Michelle Drenner, Katie Jeffers, xantha Smith, Samantha
Pierce and Chrissy Miller and
second year aw.uds to Mindy
Chancey. Shannon Soulsby,
Jaynee Davis, Kayte D.Ms and

Alicia Werry.
Special aw:mls went to Jaynee
Davis - first team All TVC and
top "'bounder; ~tha Pien:e
- second-team All-TVC; Katie
Jeffers - highest free throw percentage; and Mindy Chancey team captain. Coach Wilcoxen
also ptesented !he 100'/6 awmi to
Lindsay Bolin who Wilcoxen
temem~ as being a dedicated
player and ouiSianding student.
Bolin died in a car accident im
February while returning liom
.!he boys' sectional tournament

name and number on it in
remembrance ofher son.
Boys' Junior Varsity Coach
Travis Abbott presented members of the junior vanity team.
Receiving JV certificates were
Brandon Ramsburg, Ty Ault,
Doug Dill, avid Boyd, Carl
Wolfe, Jason Coleman, Jordan
Williams, Corey Woods, Jeremy
Blackston, Eric Cullums, Matt
Holley and Adam Snowden.
V.m ity Coach Carl Wolfe
conu nr ntL·d on the 5l'ason JS J
whole as one in which " everything that could possibly happen,
did." He praised the players s:rying they all gave their maximum
effort and were a ·group that
seemed to enjoy being together.
Wolfe also commented on the
)'OUth of the team and the number of players that had to play
both JV and varsity ball of freshman and JV ball so they could
field enough to play.
Introduced were team members, senior co-captain Matt
Williamson, juniors, co-captain
Buzz Fackler and Jeremy Roush.
Sophomores,Ty Ault, Ryan Hannan, Doug Dill. Freslunen, Ryan
.Frazier and Zach Bush.
Special awards went ~o
Williamson, who · was secondteam All-TVC, as well as District

. game at Vinton County
- Junior Varsity players introduced were Justine Dowler,
MCJ!illl Garnes and Renee Bai~ Brandi Thomas (stats), Tyson
Lee (scorebook) and Bill
, . Ohlinger (6lm) were also honored fur their efforts.
rnshman Coach Bruce Ward
introduced .the members .of the
freshman
basketball
team.
~eiving certificates were Jeremy Blackston, Eric Bumem, Eric
Cullums, Justin Coleman, Matt
Holley. Adam Snowden, Dustin

TVC ALL-ACADEMIC -Front, from left: Nick Mclaughlin, Brook Bolin, Mindy Chancey, Ketle .
Jeffers, Back row: Matt O'Brien, Zach t;lavis, Jaynee Davis Kayte Davis. Lindsay Bolin was also.
named to the TVCali-academlc team. (Jim Soulsby)
'

· BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS - From left, front: Samantha Pierce, Katie Jeffers, Jaynee
Df!vis. Back row: Buzz Fackler and Matt Williamson. (Jim Soulsby)

SPRING SPORTS ARE COMING!!!

WRESTUNG AWARDS From left: Zach Davis and
· Nick Mclaughlin. Not pictured
Is Joe Rupe

t

_Huggins m·eets with WVU
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - Cincin· nati coach Bob Huggins has met with West
Virginia athletic officials about the Mountaineers' vacant coaching job, accoiding to
media reports.
W~st Virginia athletic director Ed Pastilong
and other officials met with Huggins on Tuesday in Pittsburgh, one day after receiving permission from Cincinnatj to talk with him,
newspapers in Charleston and Fairmont
reported Wednesday.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported the meetings continued Wednesday in Morgantown.
Details of the meetings were not immediately known. Huggins did not immediately return
telephone messages left at his office Wednesday
by The Associated Press.
Pastilong's office issued a statement Wednesday saying the search was "going well, but it is
inappropriate to discuss specific candidates
while the search is ongoing."
Huggins won his SOOth game Friday and finished his 13th season as Cincinnati's coach on
Sunday when the Bearcats lost to UCLA 105101 in double overtime in the second round of
the NCAA tournament in .Pittsburgh.
Huggins, 48, wa.S born in Morgantown,
f layed for West Virginia from 1975-77 and

~

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

Larkin
I:

'i

began his coaching career there it:~ 1977 as a
graduate assistant. He has told Cincinnati president Joseph Steger he would someday like to
coach the Mountaineers. .
Cincinnati set a school record with 31 victories this season. The Bearcats annually dominate Conference USA and are a fixture in the
NCAA tournament. West Virginia was 8-20
this season, including. a 1-15 record and lastplace finish in the Big East Conference.
Pastilong has spoken with about a dozen
candidates. Assistant coaches John Pelphrey of
Florida, Doug Wojcik .of North Carolina a,nd.
Ronriy Thompson of Georgetown have
acknowledged meeting with Pastilong.
Pastilong has said he would prefer someone
with head coaching experience.
·
The West Virginia job opened when Gale
Catlett, also a former Cincinnati coach, retired
on Feb. 14.
Huggins' package · at Cincinnati includes a
$115,700 annual salary, a $50,000 annual
·bonus, S125,000 from radio and TV shows,
bonuses for getting his team into the NCAA
.tournament, a country club membership and
use of a car.
,
Catlett .received about $300,000 a year in
total compensation.

Coach

from PageBl

from Page 81

chek said the. mesh is causing the inflammation and discomfort.
"Is it a major.setback? No," Kremchek 1aid.
"If the season was going on right now, would
be play? Yes."
Kremchek said the mesh might continue to
annoy Larkin 'rhen he moves, but won't cause
an injury: DoctOr's try to avoid using the mesh
to repair athletes' hernias, -but had no choice
with Larkin.
"In my case, the hole was so big that they
needed td reinforce it;' Larkin said.
' Larkin reported for spring training in excellent shape and had no problems until the mesh
start~ causing discomfort and raising concerns.
"I didn't want all .the work I did to go for
naught;' he said.
Larkin is in the second year of a three-year,
S27 million contract.
·

Sebring McKinley, Zanesville Rosecrans'
Todd Rock and Centerburg's Jim Simpson.
Hill's Windham squad went 18-2, while
Clark guided Sebring McKinley to a 17-3
m ark. Rosecrans went 16-4 against a tough
. schedule under Rock, with Simpson taking
his senior-laden team to a 19- 1 record.
Joining King and Witt on the first team
are Centerqurg's Zach Ross (6-2, sr., 28.3);
Se~ge Gentile of Shadyside (5- 11, sr., 19.0);
Patrick Phillips of Sandusky St. Mary's (6-3,
sr., 20.5); Ironton St. Joseph's Bill Dressel (62, sr., 21.0); and Tori Davis of Elyria Open
Door (6- 4,jr., 23.4) .
.
Whiteoak's Justin Michael is listed on the
second team along with Russia's D ane
Borchers. Brian Cooper o_f poll champion
South C harleston Southeastern also was
listed on the second team.
,
, Delphos St, John 's is represen ~ed on the
third team by Nate Klaus..
·
..

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) :-Jason Marquis pitched five
: Shutout innings,Vinny Castilla
homered and
the
Atlanta
Braves
blanked the
: Cleveland
Indians
6-0
: Wednesday night.
Marquis, set to take over as
the Braves' No. 4 starter, has
nine straight scoreless innings
: after struggling in his first two
; outin8' of the spring.
- He allowed only three hits,
: struck out seven and didn't
~ walk anyone.
~ "I'm liappy with every: thing,'' said Marquis (1- 2),
· who lowered his ERA to 4.73.
: "I w:as putting the ball where I
wanted to. I was getting ahead
; with the fastball, which
allowed me to use my other
pitches."
; The · 23-year-old Marquis
: gave up seven runs' in his first
: 4 1-3 innings of the spring.
: Gary Sheffield had an RBI
·' single in the first against
Danny Baez (1-2). then
Atlanta struck for three
. unearned runs in the second.
~ After consecutive singles by
: javy Lopez and Keith Lock. hart, Marquis attempted to
,'move the runners over with a
bunt. Baez fielded and threw
·to third, but Russell Branyan
. dropped the ball, allowing
:.Lopez to come home.
The Braves loaded the bases
: with two outs, setting up a
: two-ruil single by Chipper
Jones.
Julio Franco made it 5-0
with a fifth-inning single,
· picking up his team-leading
:ninth RBI.
Ca5tilla hit his third homer
::.- also a team high - leading
'off the eighth against David
Riske. It was the first run
:allowed this spring by Riske,
·,who had limited opposing
·batters to one hit in 21 at-bats
•
,before Castilla's drive over the
left-field wall.
Braves closer John Smoltz
WQrked the ninth for the first
'time this spring. He set down
:the Itldiltns in ''tifder;· striking
:out the final two hitters.
NOTES:
!RHP
Jaret
'W right, who left Cleveland's
icamp on Thesday after experi~encing tightness in his right
:shoulder during a minor
:teague start, was still waiting to
jlee Dr. Lewis Yocum in California. Wright has made just
;16 maj~r league star~ the past
po years after undergoing
~o Shoulder surgeries. ... The
~ellout crowd of 10,731 was
:the .second-highest of the
)pring at Disney's Wide World
"of Sports . ... Braves leadoff hit-

:MLB

team member with a medallion 13

inscribed with Brad RUII)'Onis

honors. Fackler and
Williamson ~eived awards for
their roles as co-captains.
Denny Run)O)n .then presented the first ever Brad Run)'On
AWard for 'Excepence going to a
senior member of the Meigs basketball team. Matt Williamson
was presented the awani that Mr.
Runyon stated would be an
annual aWard.
Coach Troy Bauer, who
recounted the season action,
introduced the wrestling team.
Members on the Marouder
Squad was Z.Kh nwis, N ick
Mclaughlin, Joe Rupe, Bruce
Adkins, Jon Diddle, Casey Dunfee, Matt Mullins, Matt O'Brien,
Curtis Arnold, Annette Sheets,
Jathan Templeton. and Matt
Wadling.
Seniors Davis, Mclaughlin
and Rupe were presented senipr
awards. MVP and most pins .Y.-ent
to Zilch Davis, Most lmprrnied to
Matt Mullins, Out5tanding
Senior awards to Joe Rupe and
Nick Mclaughlin who was also
recognized as most dedieated
wrestler.
Coach · Rick . Ash presented
TVC all-Academic Awards to
Jaynee Davis, Kayte Davis, Katie
Jeffers, Mindy Chancey. Brook
Bolirt, Lindsay Bolirt, Zach Davis,
Nick McLaughlin, and Matt
O'Brien.

The Dally Sentinel• Peqe B 5

:Tribe dull against Braves; Durazo's hot spring halt~d

SENTINEL OORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS : m ~ming laced wilh emotion
; 1\Jesday eYening 2.1 M~ Hjgh
: School. The Wmter sports banquet honoring the ~uder
~ and ~ athletes

•

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entor

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tr
News·and information for
Senior Citizens of the Tri-County...

~ordan

•

Aprilll, 2002
• ~alltpolts ~ail!' mrthune
·• l)otnt
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Senior Citizens
makeup 65%
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the Tri-County.
To reach this
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contact your
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Advertising Deadline i!) April 2, 2002

~alhpolis JBailp

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740-446-2342
740~992-2156

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~oint ~leasant

3L\e1Ji!lter
304-675-1333

•

ter Rafael furcal was 2-of- 3
and has seven hits in his last 10
at- bats. ... RHP Omar blivares, competing for the No. 5
starter's spot, is still with th~
Indians. He could have left the
team for a better offer if they
didn't promise him a spot on
the 25-man roster by Wednesday. Cleveland GM Mark
Shapiro said he isn't yet ready
to make that decision.
ARoUND SPRING

TlwNING
Erubiel Durazo's bid to play
more for the Arizona Diamondbacks hit another bump.
Durazo, baseball's leading
hitter this spring, hurt his right
wrist Wednesday night in the
Diamondbacks' 6-4, 11- inning
loss to the San Diego Padres.
Durazo, batting . 535 (23for-43) with six home runs,
was injured when he swung
and missed at a pitch from
Dave Londquist in the sixth
inning. He called for the trainer and left the game.
He was taken to a hospital
for X-rays, which provided no ·
clues to the injury. Durazo
planned to go to Phoenix on
BOMBERS - Cincinnati
Thursday to be examined by
Reds Sean Casey, right, Is
specialist Dr. Don Sheridan.
greeted by teammate Aaron
Durazo underwent two
Boone (17) following a solo
operations on the wrist during
homer In the third inning of
the 2000 season, when he
Grapefruit League action off
played in just 67 games. HowTexas Rangers starter Doug
ever, trainer Paul Lessard said
Davis Wednesday in Saraso- ·
ta, Aa. (AP)
the new injury was in a different part of the wrist and was after that.
tinez hit two homers and
unrelated to Durazo's prob"We're just going to have to drove in four runs , and Mike
lems of two seasons ago.
wait," manager Don Baylor Cameron also homered as
Last year, Durazo was both- said. "Three months or six Seattle beat the Cubs' split
ered by a sore back and was months, it's just a guess."
squad.
sidelined for a time by a conIn other games:
Cameron, who had an ~I
cussion.
.ATHLETICs 13,
single, had missed eight days
His strong spring led manGIANTs (ss) 10
because of back spa1ms. He .
ager Bob Breruy to talk about
At Phoenix, Scott Hatteberg said he still doesn't feel 100
the need ,t o get him into the hit a grand slam .and drove in percent.
lineup more often, ·either in seven runs for Oakland.
GIANTS (ss) 5,
place of Mark Grace .at first . Hatteberg was far from
CUBS (ss) 3
base or in right field. Durazo being the biggest hit at the
At Scott5dale, Ariz., David
expressed a willinglltis to ballpark - not with Muham- Bell and Benito Santiago
work in the outfield, but has mad Ali in the crowd.
homered, and San Francisco
sp~nt little time there because
The game was delayed for beat the Cubs in a game
ofa sore shoulder. · ·
several minutes in the top of between split squads.
Cubs closer Tom Gordon, the first inning when an
Fred McGriff homered for
meanwhile, is feeling so g(&gt;od aepearance by Ali prome~ed a the Cubs.
he's talking about making ·an · spontaneous standing ovation.
BREWERS 11,
early return two weeks after Ali held court in the Oakland
WHITE SOX 8
tearing a muscle . in his right clubhouse after the game,
At Phoenix, Raul Casanova
shoulder.
signing autographs and posing hit his third homer of the
"I'm really optimistic about for pictures.
spring to lead Milwaukee past
this. I think everything's going
PADRES 6,
the White Sox.
to go .well," he said at Mesa,
DIAMONDBACKS 4
After the game, Casanova
Ariz. "I feel very strong. The
At Tucson, Ariz., Luis Gon- learned that his fellow catcher
muscle in my shoulder is very zalez . homered in .his fourth and dose friend Henry Blanco
strong. I don't have any sore- straight game for the Dia- had been traded to Atlanta for
ness in my arm. Hopefully, mondbacks. Mark Sweeney reliever Jose Cabrera · and
that's a good sign."
was 4-for-5 with three dou- catcher Paul Bako.
Gordon is scheduled to bles for San Diego and drove
ASTROS 12, DODGERS 3
meet this weekend with Dr. in the go-ahead run in the
At Vero Beach, Fla., Daryle
Michael · Schafer, the team 11th.
Ward hit two home runs and
doctor, and the Cubs will have
MARINERS 9, CUBS (ss) 4 Houston pounded Terry Mula better idea on his timetable
At Peoria, Ariz., Edgar Mar- holland.

Derek Lowe pitched four
scoreless innings for the Red
Sox, giving up three hits and
striking out six.
REDs 5, RANGERS 3
At Sarasota, Fla,, Jimmy
Haynes gave up nine hits in
five innings, and Cincinnati
firmed up its pitching plans
following a win over Texas.
Manager
Bob
Boone
annqunced that Haynes had
made the rotation and Joey
Hamilton will be the opening- day starter.
YANKEES 6, PIRATES 2
At Tampa, Fla., Mike Mussina scattered three hits in six
innings as the Yankees beat
Pittsburgh .
New York has won eight
consecutive games after managing just one victory'and a tie
in its previous 14.
CARDINALS 8, TWINS 6
At Fort Myers, Fla ., Jim
Edmonds homered, tripled
and doubled as St. Louis beat
Minnesota.
Edmonds came out for a
pinch-runner after his doubl e
in tht top of the fifth inning,
so he didn't get a chance to hit
for the cycle.

retums, Laken and Blazers lose big

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l•theCallNBA.
it the night of the unexpected in
: One surprise after another came along
:Wednesday night, from Michael Jordan
f1aking an unexpected return to Shaquille
•
O'Neal being . held to
two basketS to the Port;
land Trail Blazers finally
:
looking human a~in . ·
: Jordan made an unexpected return ~m
:knee surgery, but did not start for the first
-time in nearly 16 years, scoring seven
7points in a reserve role as the Washington
'Wizards routed the Denver Nuggets 107-

jNBA

. ~75 .
~ O'Neal didn't have a field goal - or
pen a field-goal attempt - in tbe second
:half as the Lakers lost decisively for the
~econd night in a 'row, dropping a 108-90
:decision to the Sacramento Kings.
: Portland, which had won ,15 of 16
1.games, ran into a New Jersey team tha_t
· ,seized upon its lingering anger from the
:events of the night before to ~efeat the
•Trail Blazers 97-82.
: In' other NBA games, Charlotte defeat:C:d Indiana 94-88, Miami downed
:Philadelphia 82-77 and Boston beat
:cleveland 96-70.
•
1
• Jordan, playing for the first time since
!having surgery on his right knee Feb. 27,
:made two of his first four shots before
;missing five straight. He finished 2- for-9
"with
two assists, two steals and a rebound
•
, "in 16 minutes.
; "I felt ~ good and was moving
;well, but /?,bv~ously my rhythm wasn't
:quite ti}ot'e," said Jordan, who wore a pro:tective sleeve on his knee. "I felt good and
:the guys weren't looking for me, and they
:were still being aggressiw., which )s what I
:wanted to happen anyway:•
i Washington has won-three offour after
• J

A day earlier, Ward hit a liner
off Kevin Brown 's right knee
that forced the Los Angeles ace
out of a game. Drown felt no
pain throwing on the 1ide
Wednesday and should be
ready for hi1 nextstart.
EXPos 3, MARLINS 3
At Jupiter, Fla ,, rookie Josh
B-eckett pitched five innings of
one- hit ball for Florida in a
10-inning tie with Montreal.
Beckett struck out two and
walked two iQ his lon gest out- .
ing of the spring. Jose Vidro
homered and doubled for the
Expos.
PHIU.IES 5, BLUE jAYS 5
At Dunedin, Fla., Chris
Latham's leadoff homer in the
bottom of the ninth inning
lifted Toronto into a tie with
Philadelphia.
Phillies starter Terry Adams
allowed one run and four hits
in five innings. He struck out
four.
·
RED Sox 4,
DEVII.'RAvs 1
At St. Petersburg, Fla .,
Michael Goleman's three-run
homer snapped an eighthinning tie and sent Boston
over Tampa Bay.

losing five straight. The Wizards are ·2 1/2
Keith Van Horn added 14 points as the
games behind Charlotte for the final play- Nets handed the Trail Blazers oruy their
off spot in the Eastern Conference.
second loss in 17 games. Rasheed Wallace,
. Spurs 108, Lakers 90
who played oruy seven minutes in the first
At San Antonio, the Spurs he!d O'Nc;al/ half aft~r picking up three fouls, led Portto just two field goals - both 111 the llrst land With 17 pomts.
half - and led by as many as 34 points.
Kidd scored the final10 point5 in a 15The . Lakers had beaten the .Spurs six 0 second quarter run that staked New Jerconsecutive times, including a four-game sey to a 48-40 halftime lead. A 3-pointer
sweep in last year's Western Conference by Wallace closed Portland to 69-64
finals.
entering the final quarter, but the Nets
''I'd venture to say that this one won't blew the game open with a 20-4 spurt.
matter much come April;' Lakers coach
"Having Rasheed ou t of the game was
Phil Jackson said. "But I bet the Spurs feel tough, but w~ just got b'iat," Damon
better about themselves playing us."
· Stoudamire said. "They played a good
San Antonio, which held the Lakers to a game and we just didn 't come out and
season-low 15 points in the second quar- match their energy."
ter, was led by Tim Duncan with 25
HoRNETS . 94, PACERS 88 . ,
points, ·while Malik Rose added 19.
.At Charlotte, Baron D aviS h" a 3-pomtThe Spurs have won 10 in a rOw- the . er with 15 seconds to play as the Hornets
longest current streak in the NBA - to tightened the Eastern Conference playoff
move within one game of Dallas .in the· race.
Midwest Division. The Lakers were comCharlotte holds a 2-1 edge in the series,
ing off a 16-point loss to the Mavericks a with the final meeting between the teams
night earlier.
set for Sunday in Indiana. Both teams are
San Antonio started to pull away mid- a game behind Philadelphia for the sixth
way. through the first period. Duncan spot.
connected on three straight jumpers to
Davis finished with 25 points and 10
key a 15-6 run that put the Spurs up by assists for the Hornets. Jamal MaShburn
11. The Lakers made oruy three of their added 19, including a pair of free thi'(1ws
15 shots in the second, and the Spurs built with 2 seconds to play that sealed the win. ·
their advantage as high as 23.
Jermaine O'Neal led Indiana · with 20 ·
"We hadn't beaten them in a while," points and 16 rebounds.
San Antonio's David Robinson said.
CELTICS 97, CAvAUERS 70
·"When you get on a little streak like
At Boston, Paul Pierce had 22 points
we 've been when you're playing goo an 10 rebounds, scoring 11 during a 141
basketball, this is one of the games yo 0 fourth-quarter run as the Celtics comfeellike you have to come and get. for us, leted a sweep of the season series.
·
it'! a good win." .
.
Antoine Walker had 17 points, seven
NETS 97, TRAIL BLAZERS 82
rebounds and nine assists for the Celtics,
Jason Kidd had 28 points, 11 assists and who used a 21-2 run in tQe fourth quareight rebounds as New Jersey won its ter to turn a nine-point game into a
eighth straight home game.
bl&lt;:jwoUt.

-99PONtiAC

TRANS AM

CARLO

$19 ~ 900

$9950

JJ

#5327A

#5332

450

#5076A

97·0LDS
: DELTA88

2000CHEVY ~
LUMINA '""

6950 '$9900''

2001
·CHR'(SLER
CRUISER

�I;Th;;u~;;d;•Y;·;M;•;~;h~;;·~~~~::::~;::;::;:~~;:::~::~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiii
r
Ir• ~~ Ir~.,__.rANS.wns-",__.

r ==

CLASSIFIED

~

Grubt&gt;'o Piano- Tuning &amp; 1095 IAonto Cerlo, 891&lt;, 05 Ford Rongor XtT, - ·
Ropoifl. Probloma? $4,405. 1111111$-IOOUIOmlt· 4.0, VS, II' 111t. 33" Super
"' Tuned? COli The Plano Dr. ic, $3885.
Doctgo Von
Ext. Cob. $0505
ll
l.lka - · $2,385. 20 lddltlonal vehk:&amp;H In stock,
HowteH Packard Printor Cavallero - . _ CoralBrand Now. $50., UrYIOll cas. CoOK IIOTERII 740MaroilcYan
...

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

'*

7~525

i=

~NM&lt;. ~

MW,

t

:J

t

(304) 675-1333

For Sundays Paper

;.. One Kid

=

20 Words 7 o~ys • ~ach Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

::
:"
••
•
"'
, .

Moll To : Ohio Volley Publishing, 825 Third

Avenue , Gallipolis, OH 45631

HOW IQ_ WRITE AN_ AQ.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

.•r.r;....;..;;;===~ t
~
I
·------·
Moon Light Escorts. Full
SeMco Malo and Female
Bam.

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

stlayer AniJU• Forma

Babysiller·
Responsible
Teenager or AduH to watch
2 school- age boys In my
home 2 hours after school
and
summer
months.
(740)367-7152, leave mossageitnoanswer.

Since t923

Angu• Production Sale
Mlrch 231 2002· 1:OOpm
Union Stockyards,
Hillsboro, Ohio

Eocoru. ProrJ'4)1 Professional Ollcroot &amp; Confrdontial.
8pm to
1799.

{740)388·

OFFER! G
.
N S

B- Coming 2 Bu)ls; 20- Long Block-brick layers only $100
Yearling Bu!ls; 10· Open sign on bonus/ $50. referral
Why walt? Start meeting Purebred H81fers; 10- Open bonus. Apply at job site Oak
Ohio singles tonight, call toll Crossbred
.
Heifers; 10· Bred HUI High School 5093 StRI.

r.

lrH 1·801).768·2623 OXI H H
10.BredCow
1621
e ars;
s

93 N Oak Hill, OH.

.

I All yearling bull~ end 1
majority of the other
-o quollfy lor ~o~co
1
' ~
.._11111111111111111111111111111_ . ca ...
·Sealemenl Monies.

· .ANNouNcEMENrs

Bored Wtth Your Workout

·

Computers/Internet Users
Wanted. Si500 mo/PT.
$5000 oiFT
• m
·
•
Free Booklet. 888-229-6288
· It
24h r. Reco rd.mg or vtS
www.wealthisyours.com
Domino's Pizza of Point
PleasanllE.ieanor/Winfield
h"
F 11 n· &amp; P
now lnng u - me
artTime safe drivers. Compelitlve Pay &amp; Flexible Schadule. Apply in person 420 Viand Street. Pt. Pl.

Selling 88 Heed
Sire Group• Repreaented
Summitcrest EXT 086G
"Henry"· SAF Adam 5522·
6.148 •. Twin VaHey Preci·
Slon Mlllcoulee 6867-423 •
TC stockman 365 EXT
Woodhlll Supteme • Cham·
pion Hill Traveler 6·52 • Fa·
700
' 1
Sentlnel, PO Box J29.20, rnous
• Papa Equater Drivers wanted to drive cars
45769
·
Pomeroy, Ohto
BT Ullravox
to &amp; from auctions. call bePosted No Trespassing on All bulls will sell with a tween 10 am • 5 pm. 740Richard Fehnnann Proper· Breeding Soundness Exam 992-9716
tios 4249 St. Rt. 7N, 4309
,
St. Rt. 7 N, 1004 HOOey·
Auctioneer: Ron Krell
suckle Drive OJ· Shadyside
Gampground 4250 St. ~t
7N
For catalogs a(ld other
inlor·
matlon contact:
Young, 5 yr, Old churoh In
William C. Slroyer
Gallla County, looking for
anointed &amp; experienced mu· 10270 Zion Church Road
Elida, Ohio 45807
alclans tor Praise &amp; Worship
Phone: (419)339·4845
teem, any Instrument. Info &amp; E-mail:
strayerCwcoU.com
Appt. call {740)448·9043
Tue.. Wad., Fri. 9:00am·
Bronl L. Englloh
1:OOpm or call {740)388·
9659 Zion Church Road
9469.
Elida, Ohio 45807
PhOne: (419)339·3417
GIVEAWAY
E-mail: benghsllOwcoil.com
I

Routlne.
Exercise your
mind and body. Start tOday.
Jay Clark Kenpo Karate
740-742-2546
-------C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale, Chester Township,
MeiOB County, send letlers
of Interest to: The Dally

·

DO YOU

Want tO
earn a
•
$500 Slgn

00 bODUS?

r

r

~~

are paying
I atWe$500
sign-on

• month old black lab (mix)
house trained (740)446· --1619 After 4:00 or leave Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. .
meosago
'
sn,er, Gold Coins, Prool·
sots,
Diamonds,
Gold ,
......,, AND
Rings,
U.S. Currency, •. ID
~.o.--·F·DUNDiiliiiioo-_.11 M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Soc·
,
.
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·

,_

i

3 black pupa approximately 446-2B4~.
8·8 waaka old found In the Wanled: Old Pinball MaWhite/Duly Rd. area.
chines, Juke Boxes and .
74().448.2359
Other C&lt;&gt;n Operated Equipmant. Huntlng1on. (304)429Black and orange puppy 3333·
found on Ann Dr. rad oolar,
I \ 11'1 11\ \II\ I
docl&lt;edlall. 740-448-2657
'-I I I(\ H I ...,
Blaclc and Whlla Huslcy

1110

u..,.. .. n.lu....,.;on.

I

__...
_
~_,.~_·pJ
'-·_ _........
•
!WANTED!
Serious People To Work
From Home, Call 1•888 •
Courthouse area.
61 6-0694
448
•.:::..·32=48=------ www.SimpleCashBiz.com
O'Dell Lumber.
448-9525
.
Black and white puppy
found In tho Pomeroy, Ohio
-

LOST· 3 year old male
Golden Retriever, friendly.
,,_..
R
11
Go" ,_,
ne.6488
ard- ·..:."renee
11 (7'40)686
wo · a
•
laavalll88&amp;8ga.

$Eam what you are worth
from home
'
lntemeVmail order. ·
st~$5000 per month.
;,vv-Froo Booklet

Reward ol $500. Each , for
any lnlormatlon loading 10
rocoveryol 22001
.,.. Red 2501400 Ex Sport
Edhton were taken .on R1
218 (?40)446- 1830
:

._whoef.

.

YARD SALE

1 nr....~vSAL£..1MJDDLE I

.r. .nmli!.KV•·

March 21, 22, 23, s.4,' mov·
ina out of atata, boat, let
lkltt, camper, micrOwave,
ale, bedding, weedeatera,
cran suppllea, CMstmaa
trHs, and decorations,
" - " · loots, Baryl Wll·
eon, Aeggscrnt above
Eutarn,
(740)985-3585
raln/ohlno.

r

~~~

.I'LI!.IllT.IIUUU!.I

I

Call
1-877.
463-6247
ext. 1841

L--------'

Good Pay. GOOd Benefits.
LSW Required. Call Andy
Thompson, (740)533·3140
ATTENTION· AN'S AND
. LPN 'S
Arcadia Nursing Center

Postal positions: Cle11&lt;slcar·
Mars/sorters. No. Exp. re·
qulred. Benefits. For exam,
salary. and test!ng lnlormar
tlon call. (630)393-3032 ext.
782 8am-Bpm 7 days.

Full· Tlme/Part·tlme
posllions are available on afternoon and Midnight shifts.
We offer excollenl benefits
that Include Haalth lnsur·
ance, 401K, Life Insurance,
competitive wages plus shift
dlfferenttal arK! opportunities
for advancement If you
would like to join our team
apply in person betwe~
9:00·4:00 or call kathryn

Put your PC to wor1&lt;, Stay
home
Make
Money.
1 • 6 0 0 • 50 1 • 1 8 4 3
.;obthatpay.com

I

Rick Poaraon Auction Com·
pany, tulf time auctioneer,
complete auction aervlce.
Llconood 11811,0hlo &amp; West
VIrginia, 304·773-5765 Or
Somervllo. O.O.N.
3CJ.I.T73-5447.
Arcadkl Nursing Center
Ealt Main Street

Respiratory ThtrlpiiL Full
Time Position. Otlio Ll·
censad RAT/ CRT. Monday·
Friday,
9:00am5:00pm. Competitive Wage,
Retirement Plan, Health lnsuranco. Contact: .Bow·

~n·~ ':f"\'CI!r~

70 Pine
t., a I pol a, H 45631 .
7
( 40}446--72B3
COOlville, Oh
WANTED SERIOUS PEQPLE TO WORK. Bo oeff.
(740-867·3168)
EOE
empklyed. No door·to-door
ATTN: Pomeroy
aales: Mall·orde'r/lntemat.
Postal poaftlons. Ctarblcar· Full training &amp; support.
rferalaortera. No axp. re·
WWN. ARHomeFree.com. 1qulred Beneflls Forlxam 868-228-4567
salary ·and teatlrig Informs-'
tlon eall (630)393·3032 eld URGENTLY
NEEDED· plasma donors, eam $50 to
7151 81 •8
7d
· m pm ays
$60 per week for 2 or 3
AVONI AN Araasl To Buy or hours weekly. CaN Blo Ute
Sell. Shlriey ·Spears. 304· Plasma Service, 741).592·
B75·1429.
6651.

I

.,. *-Y• conrldent.... • cu..,..,. rete en WIN. • All ,..l ..tate acf¥1rl1MnMnlt.,.
8CCeplll only help w.m.ct M1 mMifng EOE ...nc:a.n:ta.

The Meigs County Sl\&lt;!riff's
Office Is accepting resumes
for a luh·time Administrative
Assistant candidate must
posseas an Associala Degroo and/or oquivalon1 work
experience .with a background in offiCe procedures.
Experience In Microsoft Offlee, accounting and budget
administration is required .
Candidate must submit to a
strict confldenllallty. Must
Blso be abkt to work In a
fast paced envlronmenl,
work well under pressure
and work well with the publie. Please suDmlt by March '
29, 2002 a tetter of Interest,
a resume and three letters
of recommendation to: PO
Box 729-53, C/0 The Daily
S f I P
OH
:~~~e N ~~roy, C 11
PI
·1
one a 8
ease

4

•°

DRIVERS WANTED·Now
taking applicallons tor Truck
Driving position. 2 years experience, Haz-Mat and
Tank ondonlemenl required.
Coil (304)853-4213 lor an
application and questions.
Ralph H. Bu"" &amp; Son, Inc.

rMOB~~~e ~

Moving and Hauling: Clean
Out Buildings, Basements,
Garages, Estates, Trash,
Etc. Odd Jobs. Call

All ,... ......

"-':C..:..:..::...:...:..:.:..::...-,-Top to Bottom Cleaning
Service, professional, realdenlial, office cleaning at
an
affordable
price.
(740)992-2979 or (740)992·
1391

dlterlmlnatlon t.Hcl on
,.., colof, Mllglon, 161
lomllla11101Uioror~ln, or eny Intention to
~
· meb 1ny auch

any agas, any. lima 740·
7
"38.,-7_·..:62:-:6=-----,--.,:-:
WiN pressure wash houB81,
trailers, and docko. Coli
441·4238 ask for ~or1 or
leave mH8Bge.

·--iiliiiiiiiiiiliiii,_rJ l!~r--~'~----,
INOTICEI
HOMmi

i

l'l'l:r--~:----

MONEY
ro loAN

LDIIn of All

Type• Av.lleblel

1 • 866• 294.~ 379

r

WV 25550 at once. Include it. BankruptCy Welcome.
your mailing ·address and
telephone number. An appll·
PRo~
cation form will be mailed to
SERVICI!S .
you by return mall.
-Get cash Fastll $1()().$500.
E
Ouallll 11 · N
B~
I L!~e HomeF;u~~· De~=~
ltod-CheckingAccount Next
1 KAirumJI
Day.
By County Bank
of Rehoboth Beach, DE
O.lllpoll1
Coli-- Member FDIC!EOL
......
(Careers Close To Home) 1-800-397-1908.
c 11 ~~ 1740 448 ~•~7
a •vvay
•
-.N •
1·800·214.()452,
TURNED DOWN ON
R:o190-05·127-46.
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
n:.~::lL.:~::;;~;:...., No Foe Unlass We Wlnl
Mlscnl.ANEOliS
l-188·582•3345
•

· ~Bo~a~rd=OI~DI:recl=o=rs==:;

L,-------_.1

Loans

c.,..,

I

1'70

r,o

Disney Beach Vacation. 6
nights great hotel sacrifice
for$199.00614'523·8792
, '

,

HOMFS
FoR SALE

WANTID

To Do

A&amp;E Construction
remodeling, rooting, bath
rooms, drywall, Interior
painting, trim doors, win·
dows. Free Esti~tos.
(304)875·7738

1994 Sunshine Home on
corner lot 50 x 100 ft..
washer, dryer, stove, refrigerator, central air, water
softener, storage building 8
x 10', $35,000.00. Daytime
992-2696, Evening 9920092
I
·
3 bedroom home In Middleport with 2 car garage, newer central air &amp; heat &amp; windows (740)992 3278
•
•
··
3 Bedroom on Route 2,
(304)675·5332

3 Bedroom, 1 bath In Ra·
cine. Convenient location
All Makes Lawn Mowers $37,500.00. 740·949·3228
and Ou1door Power Equip·
ment Repaired. Free Pickup ~:mA. ~~;h ~~.e~=~~_!A~~
and delivery available. Call
~
Mike (740) 446 •7604.
Back Porch, Fenced Back
Yard, New Siding, New

8

5

Ranch Style 3 Bedroom, 1
Bath, Large LR·, OR, Klichen, CIA, 3 Car Garage, 3
Acres, $75,000. (740)379·
2627
--,.,--,,..-..,..,--..,----,.
Sandhill Rd, MeadoWbrook
Addltl 7
ld 2100
ft 3 bon. 2yrbl
. o I~ .
SQ.
·
r. '
·• IVtngroom,
diningroom &amp; famnyroom 2
cargaraga304-674-4S77
Tanned Cape Cod house In
~~~..,n noa'r n·vor and walwta
mart. Fenced Yard. 3 to 4br.
(304)n _
3 5452
-'--'--'---'-----· Two day promotion. e~.
.... ,
thing ..,,t got Save Thou·
sandsl Register tor free
gll1s. This -kond only at
~k(7wood40)'~."~!!,01 Galli!»
s.
"t"tV".;JVfN
TWo StOI'y home on Main St.
In Vinton, OH. Newer sld_......
contract. Can call 74o-742·
8601, leave nama and numbar and will call you back.
wantad: 10 people wanted
with no credit to buy a now
home. Must meet minimal
requirements.
Call

2000 Dutch Mobllo Home 1 ·3 Bedroomo Foreelosed
3 bedroom; 2 lull bath, Homos From $199/Mo., 4%
porches, Oecllos. Very nice llown, 30 Years a( 8.5%
home 16xBO. $34,000 or APR. For Ust!ngs, 800-319someone lnteresled In tak- 3323 EKI:. 1709.
ing over loan. On nice rent-

Newly Romodolld, 2 Bad·
room Apt., Stova/ Rolrlgora·
tor, Udlltles Paid, $4001
month. 46 Olive 51.,
(740)446:3945

ed lot, at Old Town Mobllle 2 story farm house, 3 bed- Now Taking ApplicatioosHome Park. Moving Need to room, nawly redecorated, 35 West 2 Bedroom TownSell lor Pay 011. (304)675- Patriot. Retoronces/ Dopos· house Apartments, Includes
Sewage, Trash,
4135
II. No Pots. (740)379·2540 Water
39x27 1994 Fairmont Doublowido, 2BR, 2 Bath, Must
'move.
(740)256-6128,
(7401258·1597
79 14x70 Bayview (w/ Don),
New Since 97, CIA, Water,
Heater, Furnace, FrOnt
Porch, Shed and Wooden
Fence, Lots of Remodeling,
Must See, $8000, (304)675300
__
8-:---::-:--:-:-:--:·
Inventory Reduction Sale
AU new and pre-owned
homes reduced for quick
sate. No reasonable offer
refused. 16 new and 10
pre-owned
homes
to
choose from . Cole's Mobile
Homes, US 50 Eas1, Athens, OH 74(1..592~~972

3 br. house located at 3408
Mossman Ave. Pl. Pleasant
$350.00 a men. 304-576·
2247
h

$350/Mo., 740-446-0008.

Twin Rivers Tower acceptIng applications for

ibr. Hud SUbsidized apt.all
Channing, Historical Home
utlt. paid for eldarty and
tor rent April 1st. $600/mo.
• disLow Utilities.. Kitchen Fur- abled E.H.O 304 675-6679
nlshed. In ·town, close to
schools. Call (740)258-6433
SPACE
or (740)339.()562.
FOR RI!:Nr

i

-

MoBIUnl!~
FOR "'""I

116x80 sitos, $100/mo. 740• 992·2167.

r•o

r

RENT

No Credit/ Bad Credit/ 1st
FOR
Tlme Home buyer!/ FAS _
•
Loans/ Govamment FHA
1
Loans
AvallaDie.
Cal 1 and 2 bedroom apart(740~3218.
ments, furnished and unfur~
nlshld, security deposit roOver 10 used homes pri&lt;:ed qulred, no pets, 740 _992under $3000. Will help with 2216 .
delivery. Call Karena, 740- - - - - - - - 385·9948.
1 br. Furnished Apt. Uving
cwc.a:..n.:.t:..ac:::...
n- · ""ho_m_o-:?c-::Ow-n room, kllcllon, both. All ulillt·
your own ~;;d? We dol Call . lea pd. Excepl Electric.
(740)446-3384 fOf your new (304)675· 1365
tlome today! Trade Ins wei· 15 Court Street. Very nice

washers, dryers and refrigerators. Thompsons Appllance. 3407 Jackson Avenue, (304)67S.7388.
Good
. Used Appliances, Roconditioned and Guarantoed. Washers, Dryo,.,
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
Some at~rt at $95. Skaggs
Appliances, 76 Vine St.,
~(7_40:-:):..448.:.:.·7.,-3:.:98.:.__ __
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.

_oo_m_•- - - - - - - : : : apartmen,, 2 BR,
H2
Bath, New Gas Furnace,
We have approxlm~tely 10 AIC, Spacious Kitchen, Off
'1(Sed homes for under Street Parking. Overlooks
::~: call 1-800-837- 3238 Park and River. No Pets,
l!::ll!'..;.,"":~~~--, $595/mo. plus. utiHtiss, dellt\&lt;;INE5S
posit
and
references .
AND BUILDINGS
(740)446-4926
·
___

(740)446·74.44 1·877-8309162. Fr&amp;e Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa! Master Card.
Drive-- a- little save alot.

"--------

~

r

~ 1= 72~:~~8-MI&amp;
www orvb com'bennett

i

l.oo

A!mQUES

rims, IXCellonl condlllon,
114
591 -4053
·()(X), (l40}
1997 Bonneville SE VB,
Front Wheel Drive, Air,
Power Windows, Locks. &amp;
Seats, Compact Disc, Dual
Front Air Bags. 68.800
miles, excellent condHion10,000 74CJ.446.1619 attar
4
:00pmor leave mossaiJU
1997 Ponllac Grand Am
'
4DR, /VT, PL. Dual air
bags, AIC, AM/FI.4 Cas·
~Ita, PSimnttJC$6800rulse, 7~
miles, as or g740-446-1769.
·
441-1670
·
,1999 Lincoln Continental,
JUSt 21,000 mites, loaded,
exoalent condHion. call 7401759

446-

2000 Pontiac Sunftre, Red,

ToYow Pick-up

111113 4x4 Foor Trax,
very good condition,

I"'~

$2500

740-367.()415

(CIIoohlre)

~~~~--

I

1973 Star Craft Camper,

Good Condition,
For more lnlormatlon

Kris
Kaniecki

Le' me :lc t' f:r y:ut

LICENSED MASSAG E

COl~

Never

riO

~~

I

raced.

27 lb.

iii·.

SJS&amp;Up

in 32 days.
I()()%

74n992·7036

i

b

lS

co ••~

21 ,000 miles, 2 door, CD ~
FOR .,.......
.
Player, Sspeed, Aluminum
wheels,AIC,(740)441·1'547 1986 17' Bass Boat 115
Mere 8ale or trad8 $3000
·
2001 PT Cruiser Black, 740-256-6365
5,500 miles, $16,500. 740- ---,.-,--=..,..,-441·1583
Ba F
220 N
1986
Ja orce
: ew
95 Cavalier LS. 4 cyl, amlfm motor and out drive $10,000
C/0 , aIr, ~ t Ires, ........,
'
"""""" (740)446:1012
condition,
,000, (740)992· Boat For sale or trade, 20
2077
foot Rinker Cuddy Cabin, V6 engine, 185 Horse Power,
1990 Plymouth Acclaim. good condit+on, new uphols·
Runs Good. 11,100. OBO. lory ln"'do Phone (740)256(304)875·2683
6926 ~

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

r

II::'~~---~-,
EucnuCAIJ

I

REI'lUGDlATION

•

Residential or commercial

wiring, new service or repairs. Master Licensed electrician . Aklenour Electrical,
WV000306, 304-675·1786.

Ll ME

•

STONE

All Makes Tractor &amp;

Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
tons, limited
area, call for
details. Cell:

(740) 591-2173
Or leave name
and number

1992 Pontiac Sunblrd, 4 cyl.
auto. runs and drives great
$1250. 740-441·1083

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

SuPI'I.II:s

:,r_ ~ ·r
~

OBO. 304-675-4363

1

Female Siberian Husky, 3
( years. Call (740)446·3568
-..,..,---:------:· Miniature Poodles In time
' lor Easter. 2 AKC, 1 not
· (740)379·2639
n~-~~~--,

; r76

MUSICAL

INsntUMmlli

~~

•

1989 Ford 'f-150, EX1ondld
wittl topper, very good
condition. 740·367-7530

·-oiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiOiil.....1 Cab

,. For Sale, Kimball Prelude
.- Console
Piano .
Dark 1991 Chevy Z71, 4x4, ex(cherry) Finish. $1,500. Call collon1 condition; now 350
cl . engine, (740)992-6027
·after 5:00 304·875-6474

~r~~~FR~~~~&amp;~-~I:aft~s~r~~m~-~------VEGETABLE&lt;;

·
; (:RESS GREENS. You cut
, $6.00 per bushsl, Already
cut $12.00 per bushel.
, Available Now through
March. Charles McKean
Farm. phone (740)446·9442
I \ l&lt;\ 1\ l 1' 1'1 II ...,

,'\.I I\ I '-1 101 h.

1991 GMC Sonoma Ext
Cab, Topper, 4x4, 134K
miles, Auto, AC, TIC, l.ot8
Now, Very Clean, Excellant
Truck, $4800 . (740)441·
:00:.1:.:3'-'------1995 S·1 4cyt. 5 speed.
112,000 miles. Mostly Inter·
state. Serviced regularly.
Extra clean. Runs like new.
$4,600.(304)937·2343

o

TFN

( '0\S'I Rl

All ol your homo repairs, ad, r;~:3:l'r-o \~40)44H033,
dltlone &amp; remodeling . 24hr
.
emergency Hrvlce, senior 6yr old house on 1.67
22
citizens discount.
yrs. acres 2 miles outside Vln oxp. (304) 578-2065
ton. a'BR, 2 Balh,l.argo Uv·
Ctaaa . A COL Driver, not lng Room wllh Fireplace,
' much experience, looking 10)120 Covered Porctl,
for local job. ~-1657
10x10 out building, Asking
,
$65,000. (740}388-8630
Davids
Home
Repair.
Plumbing, Electrical, Paint·_Completely rebuilt new, 3
lng, etc. (740)256·9373 or bedrOOm, 2 baths, Kitchen,
(740)441·5707.
Oak Cabinets, Large Living
Ao9m. Sunroom, Lots of
Georges Portable Sawmill, docks, full basement w/ga·
don't haul your logs to tho rage $127,000. (740)245·
mill just call304·675·1957. 5064

r--::7~~===.~==-~!h:;:!
In /ov•'n.u memory .r
0~

ELEANOR R. WINGETT
Who passed away on
· March 21, 1997

22 Yssra Local

pd 1 mo3113

TFN

Hill's Self
Storage

HOWARD L.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

29670

45771
740·949·2217

"""'.. ::;fzes
"""' .•.s•x1u'
~~
,,

'

to 10'x30'
~

Spout

&lt;

Free Estimates

Hours
7:00A.M· 8:00PM .

949•1405 TFN

1/ 14/1 mo. pd

Day, evening,
and weekend
care available
992~6975

or email@
wany1 Ochgtrilbt.com

P/8
CONTRAOORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740-985-3948

CONCREIE/BLOCK!BIICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete

Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W.V.

wv 11031712

Additions

~

She left w •uddenly her tl10ughts
unknown, But she left us memories we
are pro~ to own. Treasure her, God,
in your garden of rest, For here on
ear1h •he was the besl.

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

iA

oou·

Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean

TFN

~Jir... ""'~ 6-- ..,._.~
lt Jll.

rflll fi\U [ftll [(11

;i ; It :'f:U

JONES'

Tree Service

Sadly missed by daughter,
Ruth Strode , and soriS,
BiU and Bob Wingeu.

lns1 7 d
Biard rmoes yoo em
ln.tst.

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

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

Cellainleed. Siri"ggm
Sa!istda1 g.aranleed.
IJfetire Wananty
Ftee Estirrales

(740) 949-1521.
1-877-466·1234

r

Pomeroy Eagles

BISSEll

Business Services

BIDGO 2171

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

LARRY SCHEY

• Replacement

/cHfVRO,~T/ '

740-992-7599

I

750 East State Street

"QIIIIlily Home
l171Provements"
Compdllln l'tkn

New Homes • Remodeling
Roofing• Room Additions

Sldlrrc • Pole Borns

DKks • Garages
Free F_MirMtH• WVIJI91'

(740) 992-2753
(740) CJ92·1101 .

FOR SAJ.E

m:r-":':,_---,

riO

EXCAVATING

SHOWFIOOMI

St.

-·---·non

(740) 992-4119
1-800-291-5600

.

1 1996 Chevy Bla:zer l.S, 4X4,

lw-•FORiiiiiiiiiSiii,uxiiiiio~rl·

driveways. ponds

4 door, VB vo~oc. automat·
( lnsu red)
,
lc, 78,000 miles, PW, POL,
Free Esllmates
·1988 Meroury Grand Mar· cruloo,
AMIFMICD, ·
quia. $800. Cell after 7prn. $7,995.00. C~ll ;104-773· L-7·40--9•91'"21.1-311J19 811l5~
(~)675·3069 .
5305 evonlnga.

01 1

e:;:; (304)0
882·2343
WV Uc 1025243

1 11'1111

•Hauling •Limestone
-Gravel• Sand •Topsoil
•Fill Dfri•Mulch

•Ba;s

" 740-742·3411
Steve's Truck
Accessories
Steue H. While, Owner
Formerly of Zeo1 1s RV

Bed liners •Nerf Bar

• Ton neue Cover
• Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line

of Other Accessories
~I

(740) 992·3470
.
.

&gt;--l .;, \;,•hk

S U i\11\llt

Rd :\1 Hldkpt 11 ! c )hi(J

(740) 992·5822

Advertise your business on this page
for one month for as low as $25

I H ''"'I 'O IU \I I O\

Auros

fit. 33 at CR 18

6 Miles North of Pomeroy

•Resldenllot
•Commercial

~...-· ~10

FREE ESTIMATES!

[740) 992-3194

•405 5th Streel
New Haven, WV

r?:LE'!tractrlc

Pomeroy, Ohio

[10'x10' 610'x20')

· FIELDS
PLUMBING

-=:::::C'-':'-3=..:.:.:.:....._

33795 Hiilmd Rd.

D

992-6635

TFH

Sunset ,Home
Construction

740-992-5232

.t;;:=

Phone 992-2155
,a

Progresslue
Couerall on Sundays

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

Replaceme11t Wi11dows
•
America11 Li1•imrl
Patio Rooms WICK'S
Exclusive De,alerl HAULING and

MOBILE J1oMEs

_O:.:ppo'-'-rtu;c.n_lt-'lo.:.s._ _ _ _ :-:-::---:-:-:--,---McDonald beanln, Glory,
2 Bedroom Apt. tn Centana- Qrltlanla, Er1n &amp; Maple, 4 full
ry, appliances furnished, sets plua extraa, Longe.·
utiNIIH pold O&gt;cepl electric bOrger, (740)7·2·1011
clean· $285 month- call
{740)256--1135alter5:00pm
~NEAl
o~ e&amp;
tumac:.~:
Pleasant Valley Apar lmenta
dl
hi ff
.
1
Are taking appllcaUons tor cu ng
8 lclency heat
2BA, 3BA &amp; 4BR . i,\ppllca· pump syatemt. We carry a
tiona are taken Monday oomplete line Of Mobile
FOR»-through ~riday. offloo locot· home porto &amp; accetoo~oa.
1992 Palm HarboUr 14)170
tel at 1151 Evergreen Dr. BENNEn"8 HIATINQ 1
Excollenl Condition New
Point Pleasant, wv, Phone COOLING (740~8411
Washer &amp; Dryer. Located Pilot Program, Renters Number .Is (304)875·5808 or 1-aoo.e7HII7
on Jay Dr.(740)245·9492
Neodld, 304·738·7295.
E.H.O.

Phone (740)593-6671

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
.middleport, OH

Thursdays

Athens, Ohio
"We sell Che S (or Jess"

~~~

--

fuel'lJ Thunday
6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Pregresslue top One

BUILDERS InC.

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and REIIDENIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

j

/

992-3174

Ohoo

&amp; Rubber Roofs"
!'(:'Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete ~f:i ~~
Roofs &amp; Siding
·
' •
Commercial &amp; Residen ti al
~
(740) 992-3987
lit!'.

s

..

awner
Gene Arms

"Specializing In Log Homes

Drywall, and

Owner: Terry Lamm

near

•-•iiiiiiiii""""iiiiiioo'_..

on all orders
over SS.OO
217 E. 2nd

_.1

r

Wanting lo Buy, Rant or
Lease etleast 4 acres clear,
·
barn, with mobile home
Windsor
)1
with
hookup
or live In alrea~y
1965
14 70
lhora. Call 304·675·6200
b!~~~arc.m;~~·.~'!:: 740-441 -1015 leave mes·
microwave &amp; dishwasher,. sage.
outDulldk'lg, new root, tront
and rear porches wlllandl- .
7404411870
cap ramps. ·
leave mesaage
Hotm
I

• Service You
Can Count on•

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,

(7 40) 992-0739

' 111111111111111111111111

Office building In Miners- Applications being taken tor Antique 4 drawer dresser
very nice 2 bedroom located with beveled mirror, great
For Saki at ttlla price until ville, 600 sq. fl., ale, cov- in country setting yet close . shape! Bought for $300, sell
May 31 . 2500 sq ft., 112 ered parking, calling fan , to town. Very large kllchen for $260, (740)7~10,
acre, 4BA, 3 Daths, In- $300/mo., 614-878-1661.
wllh stove, refrigerator, .
ground pool. 44 Beech St.,
L&lt;ns &amp; . I dishwasher. Washer/ Dryer Buy or sen. Riverine Anti·
Green Schools. Serious
A
included Tenant pays elee· quos, 1124 East Moln on
buyers only. (740)446-3139
CRF.AGE
trlc . rOta! electric heat! SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740F 8818 by
Nlcabl
AIC. Garbage pickup and 992·2528. Russ Moore,
or
owner.
• COuntry homes, nice tots, water Included. No pets al· owner. ·
level home on 1 acre
:--:-:--:-:-:c-.,-'--,.._
Chester. Three bedroom, located on AI 33 between lowed. S400 deposit, $450 S , S
bias
two ....... 0- -ar garage, PomeroyJAthens. Gall ]40- month, (740)446-2205 or
u~_.s e1ecta
on the "T"
1
101 '"&amp;Suaul3
·~
992 2167fordotallo
(740)".9585 •-• 1 VI 1n Mcldleport
family room with fireplace,
•
·
"t"t'"
• , . _ , or
r· Dolls• v...
glnla
wars, Aladdin mantels and
sun room. New central hftat- 2 acrea 33475 Bailey Run - - · - - - - - - - mot'&amp;. (740)992-Q298 '
lng &amp; ale system. One ml· . Rd off,Ohl 124 l/2 lie
0
nute off Route 7 bul still prJ·
·•
m
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
•
vat (740)985·J981
West 01 Route 7• water &amp; MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
Ml!QliANIDIJS
septic already In, $14,900, CES AT JACKSON ES·
MFiteHAI'III!E
For sale or lease with option excellent building site, TATES 5? Westwocxl Drive ·--;;;;;~::;:;:;:;,.1
to buy: 4 bedroom, largo (937)396.()258
.
Irom S297 to S3113. Walk to
kitchen, 1 112 baths,
shop &amp; movies. Call 740- Beautiful prom dresses, ex·
F.A.N.G. hellt·central 'air, Lot for Sale- Appro)(, 2 112 446-2568. Equal HoUsing cellent condition., In Style
river vtew tram large front acres, cleared &amp; ready for Opportunity.
bought at Brittanys In Galporch, lease references &amp; building, gravel driveway,
llpolls, ctyed to match sand
11
t
740 992 water &amp; electric available,
. ,
·
dais, selling 112 price, $50
~~s • no PBs.
•
• Porter
area.
Asking Chnsty ~ Family Llvlng, to $200, ,(740)591·40S3
13 ,995 , Call (740) 446• 33140 New Lima Rd., Rut- ::::-:--:-:-:-:---New Doublewlde on private 4514 from 8•5 or (740)446• land, Ohio, 74Q..742·7403. Chain link Dog Kennel
property, 1-5 acres. Call 3248 after 6pm.
Apartment, home and trailer 1Dx10x6 $100. OBO. Rabbit
(740)446-3093 to qualify.
rental&amp;. Commercial atore- . Cage s2o. Small Dog Crate.
Lots lor sate· '(1) 0.377 fronts available tor loaoo. $40.080. (304)675-468
2
New house· financing avail· acres- $14,000 &amp; (1) 0.459 Vacancies now.
.
able to qualified buyers. 0% acres- $15,000. Airline Rd, F
,
Engfand
Corsair
down. 1600 sq It, 2 1/2 Porter area, flat &amp; ready to urnlshed. Apartment. 2 Couchlloveseat 6 monttl
bath, 3 Bedrooms, custom sel up on. AEP Blectrlc, Rooms and Bath. Clean. No old. Floral with pillows. Paid
oak trim &amp; cabinets, gas central sewage system, &amp; Pets. References and De- $1400
asking
$700 .
fireplace, large kHchen/dln - water
available.
Call posh Required. (740)446· (304)675-7022 after Bpm. .
lng, 2 1/2 car garage on 1 (740)446-4514 M·F/ 8·5 or 1519
12
$
.,:.;...:...._______ Frve Gaa Furnaces and Air
!r.ea~{;~)~J!s~·tlft~: call
(740) 446- 3248 after Furnished Efficiency, All. Conditioner El1lmatea. Cau
or (740)446·3248 after 8pm 6Pm
Ulilltlos Paid, downstairs, (740)448·6308 or 1•
•
800
RF..AL Est'Am I $215/month. 919 Second 291-0098. If you don't
call
Pa~lolly Remodeled homo,
nr
,A.;;vo::..!-:(7.:40::!).:446-:::..:3::9.:45::..__ _ us we both ~ ..1
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full
n:AHIED
~ ·
"""'
Basement, Large Unattac~Gracious living. 1 and 2
ed 2 car garage. 127 Kine· Credit worthy buyer looking bedroom apartmenls at VIIJET
on Dr., $60,000. (740)441- for house to buy, Gellla, Ma- ~pagert~oa~~~ t"n~'IRddlvelerspold_.e,
AERATtoN MOTORS
0465
please call
IYI
••
Repaired, Naw &amp; Reb\llft In
1 son or Melr10.
.
..,...,
From $278·$348. Call 740· Stock. Call Ron E~ens, 1·
992
3187
·
Jim, (140)
"
992·5064. Equal Housing 800-531·9528.

i

33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

&lt; 1'10\

Spedal!zlng In ;

lnMemqry

"

10°o Di scount

LAMM'S

imiiiiiiiiiiilit

I

1968 GMC 1500 pickup,
2 WD,
V 6,
automauc,
120,000 mUH, runs good,
$2,500.00. Call 304·773·
5305 evenings.

Pom1110~,

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
1 4-H feed for lambs, hogs, s1eers, chickens nnd

I

BIJIUJING

1m

992·6215

TFN

1995 Dodge Spirit, good
condition, $2650.00, 108K
(740)!MQ..3228.
1999 cavalier 4fi.OOO Miles.
4dr., Auto, Air. $8,500.

.

and Dozers

V. C. YOUNG Ill

740-667-0363

( Block, bricll, sower pipes.
~· windows , lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Call 740-245·5121.

~

Repairs 6 Parts
on all makes of
farm Equip.

WERRY'S
WITTLE ONES
Now accepting
children

Free Estimates

.

r

Equipment

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
Sanitation
SERVICE

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

FOR RENT
14X70 Mobile Home
2 Bedrooms, 2 full -baths, ·
utililie!l paid. $650.00/month
On Rt 7 naar 143 ·No Pats
740·696·1227

TFN

morris

YOUNG'S

Coolville, OH 45723

• Onion Sets
• Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds
• Fertilizer Specifically Designed for Garden Crops_
1 New Fertilizer Buggies
• All buggies have been pauem tested to meet
Agronomy Association Standards

~

992-54 79

Pomaroy, .Ohlo
992-5908

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; GuHers
• Vlnyt Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

1994 Toyota T100 truck,
VB, auto, AJC, 1 owner,
$4,700; 1992 Toyota Paooo.
aunrool, AIC, CD, $2,800;
1992 Nlsson Stanza, $1 ,250
1994 Bonnovllo SSE, 1
owner, $4600; 1987 Toyota
Corolla, 4dr, auto, AJC
$1695. 740-258-6012
.

,
,
·
•

Authorized Agent

742-2455

Equipment Parts
Factory Authori zed
Case·IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

rabbits.
• Seed Potat.oes

.

Jeff Warner Ins.

HERBALJFE

5·spd. Rod with grey lnlari·
or. $1300 (304)682·3973

Watoritne Special: 314 200
PSI $21,00 Per 100; 1' 200
PSI $35.00 Per 100; AN
Brass Compression Fittings
In Stock.
RON EVANS ENTEAPRIS,
ES Jackson Ot;o 1·600·
537·9528 '
' ·

Cellular

10 Years Experience
Specializing in : Deep
Swedish. Shia!Sc•.l
Craniosacral,
renexology, Myofasda l
and Yoga Therapy Gift
Certificates Availabl e
$30-45 m inutes
$45- 7~ minutes

Ull1 Pllllll

• Ga111ges
•Complete
Remodeling

.ALUR

THERAPIST

740-992-1671

(740)446·3570.

°·

•New Homes

Taf.e '.he Pi-.IN
:Ju' :f PAINTING'

FREE ESTIMATES
1999 Btockwood UHra Ute
740-98~-3345
21 ' traitor, lowo ~YL sell
1995 Yarnoha WR250 dlr1 contained, 740-949-3228
bike, 740-367~.
7122/TFN
.., I H\ It I ..,
1998
Vamaha
Virago
1100Cc, teal &amp; cream In
HOME
or,1,420mliotl,lotaol1octoIMI'RoVEMENill
ry chrome. padded bock
~oot, MW boHery, 2 malehIodependenl
" We feature Valvoline Products"
"'II helmota,
$3,500.
BASEMENT
D•·lri"bulor
(740)388 8508
WATERPROOfiNG
~
"We Install headUners2001 CR. 80 Nice bike. Unconditional IHotimo guar·
Lost
beeri
New Fat- ~:~.'-':'ta:::~nce:9~~~
TowlnQ Service Available
ty Plpa, Very good Sl1ape. Cell 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
$ 1,900. (304)87 5-4 135
0870. Rogers Basement
·
2001 Honda Shl- VI.X Waterproofing.
• Oil change $18.95
Deluxe 800 • I,500 miles.
natural/Guaranteed
We stock all major
StiU under Wananty $4,500. C&amp;C General Home Malntebrands
1304l6751800_ _ _ _ nence- Painting, vlnyl sld·
"-'-"-'...'-.;_
u2001 Yamaha Aaptor, Blue, lng, carpenlry, doors, winNeef Bars, Skid Plates, Low dows, baths, mobile home www.herbs41fesDe.c
Mike Hill
104 Fifth Street, Racine, Ohio
Hours,
$4750
OBO. repair and more. For free '----O.:.::I:ollilww.l .,ollwiinlle,;,r
.7 • 4
Pd 1 Mo
1111111111111111
(740)441·1M7
estimate call Chel, 740-992...
&amp;M
I 6323 ·
.------''----,

.

::-:--::--:--::-::::-::=

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUOION

Stop &amp; Compare

~1740-256 · 1902

.
'
Small pickup ~d of toys,
cralts, mise items, $100. 1994 Dodge Spirit V-6, high
. (740)992·5979 (740)448· mlloogo, no major mochenl0196
cal problems, runs good.
$1 ,100. (304)895-3422 after
Wanted: Dish Network Sys· 6pm.
~5 call anytime, (740)949- ~1994:::::;_Fo_rd_t_e_m_po_2_-d_r_4-cyl_

------

2 bedroom .mobile home for Storage Space for renl4033
rent, no pats, (740)992- square feel with melal
5858
shelving. Local~ In City ol
- - - - - - - - Point Pleasant. Inquire at
Beautiful River View Ideal (304)674-0102
For 1 Or 2 People, Reteren\ 111{( 11 \ \ Uhl
cos, Deposl~ No Pols, Fos·
Umltod 0&lt; No CrodR? Gov· tor Trailer Park, 740·441· l~l""~........,.....;;;;;...,
emmenl Bank Finance Only 0181.
HOOSUIOI.D
At Oakwood In BarboursGooa; .
ville, VN 304-738-3409.
Mobile home, 1o min. from ~-------•
GaNipoiJs, available April t .
Mobile .Horne &amp;. lot. Beale 740·643-2483 or 740-25&amp;- Appliances: Reconditioned
Meadow Road Gallipolis 8176 after 6 p.m.
Washers, Dryers, Ranges.
Ferry. Lola of Extras.
Refrigratora Up To 9Q Days
(304~75-3282 ,
Tuppers Plains, 2 bedroom, G
'
lncludas stove &amp; relngara· Muaranl=:: Sol~!:
New 14)170, 3 br/2bth. Only tor, .$250 per month plus de- Clatyyt,~g
740a..s~.c~7795
$975 - n &amp; $189. per/mo. posll/utilitlos (740)687·3487
Maytag,
~
·
,..._,1 Nlkkl7'"385-7671
'
~~,-----~---Aoom.tEms I For Sale: Rocondlllonld

:.:._:.::.:c=:,::::_:=-:--':c--::-:-

One ' Strap,' See through
stomach. Red Dress, Alyce
Design, size 4, red !lowery
sequins, shoulder dress.
black dress. black, silver
and gold sequins, size per11 tit&amp; medium, 2 straps.
• {304)458·1997 after 5pm
•
:., Residential Home·Own.,.
Tappan HI effk:ierr.v 90 plus
·-•
· · gas fumaces including
o~
~ and
eloctric gas tuma1 ces.
HI
Efficiency Heat
' Pumps, featuring Tappans
Free incrediDie warranty
packaga.
. BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;
0

•

•

lor

lludgot , _ ll'onomllAll Typoo, Acceu To
Over 10.000 Tronom~A~ono,
!,,. . . . . . . . . . . .~ Robulkl Kill. 740-245-5877,
.
Celt: 3311-3765.

1998 Honda Civic LX Au10 1993 4•• Four Trill&lt;,
Air Cruise PW PD. L 4· vary good condition.
•
•
'
'
$2500
Door,
Black,
$8995 · 740-367.()415 (-Ira)
!74013811- 9878
1998 Mustang GT. convert!b1o black leather Interior
loaded American racing'

-

1111 1997 and up 740-2459019

I

Doing· spring cleaning? Donate reusable Items to
ReUse lndustrleal N. ColumDus Ad., Athens. Highway 50, Albany. 740.6988200.

lliD

~

FOR SAu;

~~~~n~ ~~lbi:S~~

No Fees, all Credit
aceepted
Call Toll Free

.,...·--·~

riO

1

-------Problems Paying Bills Cell
Toll Froe 1·888·699·3064.
Water Association, Inc.
We can Help. All ty~a of
PO Box 485 Pt. Pleasant Scans. Good, Bad, No Cred·

1{:;)

vlol•tlonollhellw.Our
.......,. we hereby
lnformtdthlhll
dwelling• Mlverdsed In
thla newap~per.,.

~

(740)367·0612

Need 5 ladies to sell Avon.
(740)446· 3358
Office Biller Wantld. Posl·
live, Punctual Person Needed for Part-time position In
Doctors office. No Experi·

Thla n.warwpor
wUI not
rknowingly eccepl
actvenlumentt for rul
Htllte whlc:h l1ln

1
IVIIIbfe
on •n equll
opportunity baa.

Sweeper business lor salenew Rainbow &amp; Klrby"PBrts,
bags &amp; belts and to many
parts to mention: Four
beauty salon stations and
24 bulb WoHa Tanning bed.

Earn up to
~
PTJFT
I·800·B 10.()705
www.CaehNowA.ndForever.com

dloetlmlnotlon."

":
riO . OProimJNnyo
........ ,...,.......,

.,,

$500 $8000/Mo

..,.,....nce,llmltltlon or

Will work for $(.00/hr, do
odd jobs. Will oltan out
buildings for tree. (740)9929314 1-740-59()..0141
•
•

1

~8~0~~~ Boss!

.._.,ng
11

In lhle newtptper
aubfecttothiiFIIdttal
Folr ttouo1ng A&lt;:t o1 IHI
whlchrMMeltlllegllto
ldVertiN "MY
INhttM&gt;t,llmttiUon ,or

~740)446·7604 .

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG co. - - 11111
you do business with people
you know, and NOT 10 send
monA\1 through the mall until
McClure's Restaurant now
-h~
.
11 ~ lh
hiring all 3 locations, fUll or you ave tnves ga vv
e
port-limo, pick up applk:a· offering.
ti 8 t 1 tl &amp; b · ba k
on
oca on
nng c Stan Your Business To9
bo~woon
:aOam
&amp; day... Primo Shopping Cen·
10.00am, Monday thru sat- ter Space Available At Afurday.
"tordablo Rate. Spring Vall101
MolheroOreaml
Plaza.C.I1740-4Ml.()
·

tM r:.cteraJ F•lr Houelng Act or 1M&amp; • Till•
of U. ....
'

we will not knOWingly ICcepl

'i~ ·I

BCIIFBI background check Will bab Blt 1 m homo
and be able to work undOf
Y
n Y
•

h
•
d
are mtereste
in working for ~'.:onN~e~~Pie~6a:~
•
10A Airport
a professiOnal Chiropractic,
Ad, Behind Burger King.
•
teJemarketmg Office Manager/Malntenanco Worker
company,
lllntorestld ,write J·2·V·35
lVI Ua S W 0

Help wanted caring for the
oldarty, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,
•
new Shift 7
7
1·800-24t-n54
s: am-..,pm, am·
- - - - - - - - 5Pm, 3 Pm·l1pm, 11 Pm·
100WORKERSNEEDED 7am,call740-992·5023.
Aasembla crafts, wood
Hems. Material provided. . Part-time Secretary neodld,
To $480+ wk.
approxlm8t81y 20ihrs per
Free Information pkg. 24 Hr. week, wittl availability to
1·801-428-4750
cover whole days as needed. Duties include answer·
Aooesa to a computer?
lng phones, copying, and
eam monthtv $450·1500 pi, light typing. High School Dl$2000-4500 full-time
ploma required . · Send rewww.OurAnswer.com
sume to CLA 554 e/0 625
1-800-585-0760
Third Avenue, Gallipolis OH
Adolescent
Counselor. 45631

c

i

bonus to

d' 'd

biUOibrown eyes
male, found In town near

~Untf.Retll•ter

~ llua ~wANmJ ll..a ~wANml .I I'll

\ \ \ I ll \ 1 I \ II \ I "

I'ERsoNAis

POLICIES: Ohk) YaNey Publlthlng NMtYW tM right to edll. Nfect, or c.noet.-.y Ml .. .,y ttme. ErrvN m"** t. reportlld on U. ftrat dly of •
wnr be rapoM~ble ror no more than 1M co.t Of the ..,.oe occ:yPild by U. ..-rorlnd onty U. first ln.rtlon. w.
•ny lou or exptnM tNt reeUb from the pubNcation or omiUfon Of an .:twrtlw:eauL eon-cuon wiU 1111 madtlln U. ftrtt .val...,.. edtuon. • Bcu:

• Start Your A.ds With A. Keyword • lncluele Complete
Description • Include A. Price • A.vold Abbreviations

4053

S33 00 S

t

Private Party Ads Under $100

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

Drlvawa~ 1

Fo~

t

l\egtster

Dally ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.
Honday·Frlday for Insertion
In Ned Day's Paper
In·Column: 1:00 p.m.

iioaor;·.;.(7~40.;:l2;.4;.;s-o.;.;.;135;......,

~ - ~1ro

.. Now and uood 242 cell, float
bed tObacco trays, new
) $1.60, used .50 each; or
" ooy ttlo got 10 tree. 2566504, 258·9247
'' E
AND
•' N W
USED STEEL
itt Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
" For Concrete, Anglo, Channot Flat Bar Stool G ti
.r,
Drains,'
Walkways.l.&amp;L Scrap Met·
51 a1s Open Monday, Tuesday,
¥- Wldnosday &amp; Friday, Bam~ 4:30pm. Closed Thursday.
W Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
~ (740)446-7300
Rock Ttcket
(304)576·4195
·
..
.
., Ponable 5 1nch Black and
• ·· While TV, $10. Fold Out
:Chair Bod, Balga, S10. RCA
-.! 21 inch cok&gt;r console TV
•' S25 · (304)458·1997 afte;
,.
., 5pm
Prom Dresses, Black Dress
,., with black aild silver se,.. quins size 8 Alyce Design

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW

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

r.,

., 5600. (304)675-3765
1998 Chevy Cavallo&lt; ...t 2
•
• '
fl lrdepoudont 01o- door, aulo, pw, locka,-·
lo' lriru1ol, een For Producl O&lt; ing, air, c/d cruiM, good
'I Opporlunity. {740)441-1962 cond111on• $5000, (740)591·

In one week With us

Djso.lay Ads

s-.

Bundy Sexophono 2yrs. old.

:~-~~==

Word Ads

2

21

~------~------------~-------r----~

'
4118101

MARY KAY"

.Beauty
and
brains
From gor;.Ou1 mak.up

to tw.otdtuougn tkln
care. FHI·good
frOgranCM to teiMltlftemly
actvancfil formulol.
Mary Kay has all you
need tc look great and
live smoJt.

Paige Cleek
Independent Beauty
Consultant
I I 'I High SJreet
Pomeroy. OH '15769

740-992-2802
www.mar-,ttay.comlpa!Jedeek

�••

•

..

Pill B I • The Deily Sentinel

J

c;:-

...

• J.

6

w...

PHILLIP

ACROSI

ALDER

1• a
Ill fl-I

....

11~111

.......

....

W'

• At 4
...... J
•• 3 1

/,OT.f

:::::\\---.
~

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.,-/,_,~_.

Of

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fiNGttt·POINTING ..

~ ~.: 'Y'-·- .N
BARNEY
'[14AR'S .JEST

I HEARDVOUWUZSIC

GINQER ALE.

DRAPPED BV
TO HELP L.IFT"fO'tli
SO

I

IN TI-IAR

NOWADAYS

SPIRI'tS •.

SORRY,
LUt&lt;E'V ...

THE BORN LOSER

,...141Le&gt;E.I':.F()!I:(£, ::.TOP I'OOI...IN6""''
AAOlJ~I,) f\~0

COME. OOW!'-1
1-\EI&lt;.E. Tl-\1:) I~STI&gt;--1-11 1

· L'~ N.OT
fOOL IN,l;, ['tv\ :)TUCK.!

""''

I r 1-\1\VE. ro

! CNL U\E.tv\

I FOI&lt;. r.\'&lt;

NOPE .
r'VE.

60T TO
SULK
UP~

I 'f1. IHROLI&amp;H 8EiNC:,.
T&gt;&lt;E SMALLEST GUY
ON THE FLOOP- 1. NO
MORE GETTING.
PUSHE\) "'i&lt;DUNt&gt;'

shamrocks.

you notice,
though, that East
cou ld have made life
· very difficult by inDid

OoF~

::.. 'TWEET~

IIEvllpllle

MVIill9

11 Bau....

II 118rahy

2!1
28
30
31

EIIJ
All IIUI

tricks: one spade, two
heart~, one diam01.1d
and one club. The
other four will come
from clubs, but if that
finesse loses; maybe
the defenders will
cash too n1any spade
tricks. So, hold up the
spade king until the
third round, then take
the club finesse, and
everything is soda and

a1

1Une

15 Fl'llllranl
wood
17 Non-In~«-ung
It Bwana, In
India
20 Brain:

DOWN

llwlln

AiiYA
In !he -

1 Goal

2 Bikini MH

Tanlacle
11111)1

Longing

: Tanclarvegole (2

illarlllplal
32 Br......,.

33 Popeye'a
OliVe -

35 P111p111t
NqUI,.

t Hydfox

ment

37 Stomach
muaclel

rival
10 SUnglng

:11 Ponder
lniKI
40 F,_,
14 Part of .
· g;;,"11one
SASE '
~I'I"""'Tr"""''::"""T-

I CAt.ir DECIDE IF I LIKE
'&lt;OU OR NOT... '&lt;OU I-lAVE
FUNN'&lt; LOOKING I-lAlR ...

ESPECIALL'I' W~EN TWE TEACMER
CALLS ON '&lt;OU ..

t' .•

MARCH 21

Scf.ll ...tl
44 .....
.

poaclli

45 ACIOi' Al8n ·

24 Ballpark
. . olftclal

44 DllllaaiO .
and ,..riztw

47 Movie

25 8ncH
2e nny

no-.

'

amounta 41 Enallnd'a •
V Wrench or
F8f
.•
acmodrlver 81 KltcMn
2t Funny
118m
DeLuiM
52 Yale gnlll !
34 Sgt.
53 Slngar Klklc

FATAUTY SCENE - Betty Maynard died in the blaze which
destroyed this Syracuse home early today. Her husband and
two volunteers were injured. The Ohio Rre Marshal will continue an investigation into the cause of the fire. (Dave Harris)
Kent in the elite eight, B1

Deaths

by Lull Campoa
Colobrily CIPMor cryptogroma are crutecj from quolalfono by flmoua

~. put and p - Eac:lllolttr In lila clphor otancll

.

'IV N

Todlly's clue: X equals G

RVL

MLLM

TVNRNXHCTVLH,
PKHHNH

NH

~

..

•

Weather

RVL .

Hlp: 501, L-: 101
Details, A1

RVL

•

RVL

TCKSRLH?'
TCYZN
TKGCMMN
~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'A man has every ...on, while a t
woman haa only the ;tghllo sprtng.' - Jane Fonda
~
lUT DAILY
PUZZLIR

d ftl:i ~ ,fj'h,, ,( _ fl. "fj ~a, • WORO
0~ ~Q'U ~).
~ };J(,r 0
8AMI ~
l~lio~ ~, CIAY a. 'CLLAN _;;:_..:,._..:,;__;;

J

0 four
~earrange letters of
scrambled W&lt;&gt;rdo
low

10

the

bo·

form fcur !lllmple words.

r---::--::--:-:--:--:--::---,

~-r;F-=,E_Y.:....,G~I:,-;F-...-1

II I

12

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Our local gas station is nowchari,
::::·;::·==·=~·=::...., ing us to put air in our tires. When",!
r
complained he shrugged and repliea,
0 I R0 EL
!'Blame It on ·· .. -· .. ·'
"

I

7

No. 3

FOR

'U

~

1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
~
Growth • Lynch - Cloak· Knotty • ONLy TWO
~
"There are 3 extensi~e term papers due during the ;·
course of th1s. semester. the professor told the law slu· ;
dents. An asp1nng lawyer asked, "Can we negotiate those ::;
three down to ONLY TWO?"

-·

•

•••
~

Wurking on t'TldCil\'On
brick by brick could offl'r
so1m~ r:uher fortunate dcvd~pnll'rm

for you in the

~'Cilr

r~.head .
~hould

Shortcuu or risk-taking
be avoided, no matter
what the rirrum~tanccs.
'A RIES (March 21-Ap&lt;il I'J)
-- If you're scBking :m agreement on something very important to you, don't rely on
verbal conunitmenu -- get all

tenm in writit1~· Get a jump
t1\1 life by unrler~tantling the
influcnct'~

that'll llovcm yon
in the year ~lu.·~ d. Sc11d for
your Astro-(;raph predic:tiom
by m~iling $2 to Astro-Graph.
c:/o this JICWspaper, P.O . Uox
175S, Murray Hill Station,
New York', NY 10156. llc
sure to ~t~tc your. Zodiac sign.
TAUI~ US (April 211-May

20) -- Thi~ i~ one of those
t!"y~ when who you know
might mean little. Rely solely
on wh:u you know to get you
where you w:~nt ro go.
GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20) .
-- .1\JJiann·~ formcJ for busiJws~ purpose~ may not he rclinbk· a~ tilllc gue!'i on. Ue more
,clc"·tiVL' than mual, so that

. .

you won't bt.• hdd ac:c:ountabl~ for mist:akL'5 made by :t
partner.
CANCER (Juno 21-July
22) -- Rathe-r th;111 show
compassion. friend~ will be
turned off if they think that
you 're weak . They only thing

they'll rcspec.:t is a large dose

or self-reliance.

LEO Ouly 23 -Aug. 22) -·

Chock out anybody who is
introti~Jccd to

ym1 before getting involved, even if the peris .t friend of a friend.
There nrc many false colon

MH1

being t1Qwn.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Don't mat~h your languag~
to that which is being lasheJ
out over a domestic dispute.
Overkill will only make

nut-·

ten wonc, not better.

LlllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Unfortuna(ely , you might
use your gre;~t powers of observation ro focm on the f.tults
of Othcn rather than on the-ir

good points , as you u~uall~
do. Get back in character.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22). ·- If a casual friend approache5 You with a mOI{cymaking propo~al, ym1'cl better

Rachael Downie
receives 4-H
setvice award

foi onothor.

VOPCS

ONHHLGRZF:

DCOL

honored

.,

~

friday. M11n:h 22. 200.!

I

Details, Al

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Jo a bit of homework on · it
fint. This person may not be
all that they appear to be.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)
Your directives
will be reproached if you ptesent thern in a dictatorial
manner. A~sociatc5 will emulate your behavior, so you hlld
bccr~r set a good eXample.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22Jan. 19) -- Attempting to take
on things that you do not
fully unde"""d &lt;ould load to
c.haw. Take th~ necessary
tune to fint read imtructiom,
and then follow them to the
leiter.

::

AQUARIUS Oan . 20-Feb.
19) ··Hopes built upon unrealistic premises dl- On circum5tances that o.re not in accord
with your highest ideab will

•

a a

lead to a rath of quicksand
and be da~hed befotc yo\lr
very eyes.
I'ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Its
' a Iways to your bL·ncfit
to learn from post mistake5,
but it is even more critiCal
that you do ·n~t repeat an unproductive pattern .' The con}plications could be soberinR.

:
•'

1

"'•
~
~

~~
1

~
'
v·

DOWNIE
HONORED
Rachael Downie, front center,
was awarded the Ohio 4-H
Volunteer award for Meritorious Service . She is pictured
with the state's four other
honorees, and , back row,
. Bobby Moser, vice president
and dean of Ohio State Uni·
versity's College of Food, Agri·
cultural and Environmental
Sciences; Mary Cusick of Bob
Evans Farms; and Keith
Smith, director of OSU Extenty, distri ct or state 4-H prosion. (Submitted)
grams.
Downie, along with two
arhers, started Meigs County's
first 4-H horse club more rhan
40 years ago. Since then, she
has continued to promote
youth leadership, hard work
and sound decision-111aking.
Downie was .one of five
Meritorious Service honorees
recognized at the Bob Evans
famis Ohio 4-H Volunteer
ltecognhion Luncheon · in
t'l'
Colutnb\IS. The event was part
of an ail-day 4-H volunteer
education conference helping
to mark 4- H's 100th year. ·
Rachael Downie

•

Therill 5. R;;mdolph Jr., 44
Harrison G. Lovsey, 89
Clifford Coleman, 84

ble that the 'Declarer
is called upon to
make more frequently, and consequently perfect familiarity with every phase
of the hold-up is essential."

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I . 18 I I' I e Comploit iho chuck!~ quotod :
L.;:·;~·;::;~·;~·;~-;:::~·;:.;:b~v
~fi~u,~·ng~ln~th~e~m~i~"'=·ng~~below.
w~a~rds•_:
you dovolop·
from Slop
~1~rteu~~ne~Oi~~ • m~JRfUMBfiED'I' 12 13 ,. 13 I' I' I' I' '
mented: "There no
..
c
I I I I I I I I I ~~ .
play at the Dridg; ta~~~~~MBLE
trick one.
In teres
tingly,points
ne ither
of these

ITHURSDAY

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PEANUTS

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31 a.lllnd

22 COIIW, In

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What's inside

Pm1on'a
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8 Gelluuy
7 Com
MrYing
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serting
spadeHere,
nine r
at tricktheoi;e?
you have to duck, but
that would be silly if
West started with ace- .
queen-fifth .of spades
and the club king.
However; you can
avoid that by correctly playing dummy's spade jack at

etown Nflwspaper

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23 Wile, In ·

,..0\1-\E.I&lt;. Pf.Ol'L£ CJ.i..L TI-\E. FIRE""'. · now?
You haw ·five top
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CXJTOf \R£1~... ,-,__...

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· The history of
bridge is clouded in
mystery. A version of
tht· Jpme beg;m in the
late 19th rentury, and
in London at that
time it was de rigueur
to h;wc a bridge room
available at dinner
parties. A columnist
m.e ntioned this, adding that the tlll would
last about a year -·
. another of the world's
great predictions!
Auction
bridge
started in 1903 or
1904 -- authorities are
still in disagreement.
Contract bridge was
codified in 1925 and
ruled _the roost by
1929. More on that
tomorrow.
Look at th~ NorthSouth hands in today's di:~gram, taken
from Milton C.
Work's "Auction
llridgc Complete"
Uohn C. Winston
Co., 192C&gt;). Against
your three-no-trump
contract, West leads
the spade six: two,
ace, five. Dack comes
the spade nine. What

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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21 Tamsa Bunchn
COINe
57 Writer
22 Figurine
Dillard

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Vulnerable: Neither
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·Indiana knocks off No. 1 Duke, B1

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Thu~y, Much 21, ~

www.mydllllyaentlnel.com
81UDOI:

tiOw THAT wfVt
LtAttNtl&gt; TO wALl'
UPttiGHT THtttE '
y/1/,L PltO,A,LY

•

Plan services
POMEROY .._ Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy
will hpld the following
Holy Week services: Holy
Thursday, Mass of the Lord's
Supper, Holy Communion
and Procession, 7:30 p.m.,
Visits to Repository until
midnight; Good friday, Stations of the Cross, noon,
Liturgy of the Passion and
Death of Our Lord, Holy
Communion, 7:30 p.m.;
Holy Saturday, Easter Vigil
Servies, Mass, 8 p.m.; and
Easter Sunday, Mass, 9:30
a.m.
The Rev. . father Walter
Heinz is the pastor.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 4·3·8
Pick 4: 6-2·4·0
Buckeye 5: 4-1~·18-19·20
Pick 3 (night): 5-&lt;l-6 ·
Pick 4 (night): 6·3·1·6
W.VA.

D•lly 3: 7·5-B
Daily 4: 7·8·1·4
Clsli 15: 1·2·5·14·16·18

Index
2 Sections - 11
calendar
Classifieds ·
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather .

h.AS
83-S
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

C 2002 Ohio V•liey Publishing Co.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

ACINE - Rachael
Downie of Racine
was recently honored with one of
Ohio's five Ohio 4H Volunteer ·awards for Meritorious Service.
The award recogilizes adult
4-H volunteerS for long-term
meritorious service or a significant contribution to coun-

R

Donation continues service to seniors
BY TONY M. WCH
TLEACH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY A new
washer and dryer has ' be_e n
donated to the Meigs Senior
Center for use with its program
geared toward providing laundry services for home-bound
seniors.
The new appliances were
recently donated by the fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie 2171
after the club received information that the preeJCisting washer NEW APPLIANCES - Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie 2171
. and dryer, used by the center recently donated a new washer and dryer to the Meigs Senior
. Center for Its In-Home Program's laundry service. From left
for its In Home Program laun- · are Bruce Teaford, member of the Eagles' charitable donations
dry service, needed replace- committee, Pam Davis, supervisor of the In-Home Program,
ment.
Mary Hlndy, laundry technician for the In-Home Program, and
· Susan Oliver, executive direc- Adam Young, representative for The Appliance Man store.
tor for . the Meigs County (Tony M. Leach)
Counc~ on Aging, said the
Oliver added there are more cations and criteria (not able to
laundry service is designed so
that home-bound senior citi- than 20 local seniors enrolled in do laundry or no accessibility
zens can get their personal the program, and that an aver- to a washer and dryer).
11
clothing and linens washed, age of 40 loads bf laundry are
The consumer must provide
dried and folded on a weekly washed, dried and folded every soap, bleach, fabric softener or
or bi-weekly basis.
week.
dryer sheets," said Oliver. "The
"The laundry service at the
"We are very grateful to the suggested donation for the sersenior center is another impor- Eagles Club for their tremen- vice is $2 per load and senior
tant part of the continuum of dous generosity. The new wash- center personnel will pick-up
care we provide to Meigs er and dryer will definitely be and deliver the laundry."
Oliver noted the senior cenCounty's seniors;• said Oliver. put to gO:od use," said Oliver.
"Many seniors in our area are . Eligibility requirements for ter does not wash or dry rugs
and, if requested, blankets can
unable to do their laundry and the service are as follows:
our service aSsists them with · • must be 60 years of age or be washed once a month.
doing so,"
·
older or disabled; ·
·
The new appliances were
"It also he)ps maintain per- . • must reside in a private res- purchased through various
fundraising activities sponsored
sana! hygiene and good tden ce;
·
• must meet fundihg specifi- by the Eagles Club.
health;' she said.

·Woman dead~

three injured
in house fire
Fire marshal
to continue
investigation
BY BRIAN J. REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - A Syracuse woman is dead, and her
husband, a neighbor and a
volunteer firefighter were all
hospitalized early friday, following a structure fire .
Betty Maynard, 46,'died in
the fire at her home at
Fourth and Crook streets,
according to Mayor Larry
Lavender.
Her husband, William
Maynard, is hospitalized at
the University of Cincinnati
l3urn Center. He was transported to Holzer Medical
Center from the fire scene,
and to th e burn center later
by medical helicopter.

The
two -story frame
hous e is owned b~ Mary
Murray, Lavender said.
The ' Maynards' neighbot,
Phil Weaver, W&gt;' also hospitalized at Pl easant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant,
WVa., from injuriq he sustained, Lavender said, while
attempting to rescue Betty
Maynard from the burning
house.
A member of the Syracuse
VFD, Jeff Bable, was treated
and rel eased for injuries
resultirig from th e fall of an
exhaust fan in the house.
The Ohio fire Marshal's
Office is cxpecred to continue an inves tigation into the
cause · of th e fire today,
Lavender said .
In .addition to 10 Syracuse
firefight ers, nint' men from
Racine
and
10
from
Pomeroy were also at th e
sce ne.

Jeff Thornton
hospitalized again
BY BRIAN J. REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY

Meigs
County
Commissioner Jeff
Thornton

rcmams m
senous
co ndition
at
St.
Mary's
Hospital '
in Huntington,
W.Va., following surgery on
Wednesday.
Thornton, who serves as
president of. the bo ard of
county commission ers and
was first elected in 1996,
underwent a similar surgery
in Jan uary.
Hi s condition . was di s. cussed at Thursday's regular
meeting of the Meigs Cbunty Co mmissioners.
During their business

meeting, the com missioners
authorized Hou sing Coordinator Jean Trussell to apply
for 25 additional rental assis- ·
tance vouchers through the
U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development.
Commissioners authorized
a letter of support for
Trussell's appl ica tion .
In other business, commissioners also:
• Approwd th e payment of
county bills in th e amount of'
$309,021.87 as co ntained in
the week"sedit list, as well as
a bill from Johnson Controls
111
th'e
amount
of
$10,061.34;
• Approved a transfer of
funds for the county sheriff,
rep resenting the balan ce of
the Furtherance of Justice
appropriation for 2002 .
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
attended.

;
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:
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Physical Therapy • Occupational Therapy
Speeeh Therapy • Massage Therapy

Monday • Friday • 8 AM • 4:30 PM

MEDICAL CENTER
Di~cover the Holzer Difference

Ex'fmded hours by appointment
Medicare, Medicaid and Privale Insurance !including AETNA) accepted

www.holzer.org

Call today for

on appointment·

I

(7401 992-2104
'

Jl

,

•

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