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Pill B I • The Deily Sentinel

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PHILLIP

ACROSI

ALDER

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BARNEY
'[14AR'S .JEST

I HEARDVOUWUZSIC

GINQER ALE.

DRAPPED BV
TO HELP L.IFT"fO'tli
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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

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fOOL IN,l;, ['tv\ :)TUCK.!

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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 ..

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MARCH 21

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

poaclli

45 ACIOi' Al8n ·

24 Ballpark
. . olftclal

44 DllllaaiO .
and ,..riztw

47 Movie

25 8ncH
2e nny

no-.

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amounta 41 Enallnd'a •
V Wrench or
F8f
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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

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Todlly's clue: X equals G

RVL

MLLM

TVNRNXHCTVLH,
PKHHNH

NH

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Weather

RVL .

Hlp: 501, L-: 101
Details, A1

RVL

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TCKSRLH?'
TCYZN
TKGCMMN
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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
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0 four
~earrange letters of
scrambled W&lt;&gt;rdo
low

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the

bo·

form fcur !lllmple words.

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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

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No. 3

FOR

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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

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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.

:
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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."

I

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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

a

liang

Ihs:-rl-rl...,.
ART DI I
.4

PEANUTS

31 Squire
.,.....
31 a.lllnd

22 COIIW, In

,

What's inside

Pm1on'a
bN1

l1orml

wdl:)
5 Arid
8 Gelluuy
7 Com
MrYing
I Sump1uou•

0

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

IIC IIIIJ

23 Wile, In ·

,..0\1-\E.I&lt;. Pf.Ol'L£ CJ.i..L TI-\E. FIRE""'. · now?
You haw ·five top
~Pf\(Z.\r.\E.~ITO &lt;£T Cl\1~
CXJTOf \R£1~... ,-,__...

I

liliMrlal

· 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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T_.,_.,......

II Juelahollow""
21 Tamsa Bunchn
COINe
57 Writer
22 Figurine
Dillard

Dells: SOllth
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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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
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News

· The Daily Sentinel

PageAl

FridaY. March 22. 2002

Frldlly, Minh D, 2002

- ~~~~------------Ohio weather

Sonshine Circle 4-H clothing workshop
planned
for
April
6
a
donation
RACINE -A $3,000 contribution was made to the
church building fund when
. the Bethany Sonshine Circle
. met there recently.
The benefit for Ted Coppick to be held at the Long
Bottom Community Center
_on April 6 at 5 p.m., and it was
noted that the group had been
asked to bake pies for the benefit.
The group is currently taking orders for noodles to be
availabk on March 30. Orders
can be placed by c:alling Lois
Sterrett, president, at 9490032 or Kathryn Hart at 949. 2656. It was reported that the BONNET WINNERS - Winners In the Easter bonnet contest
last bake sale was a huge suc- staged at last week's meeting of the Sonshine Circle were
from the left, Ruth Simpson, most original; Jo Lee, prettiest,
cess.
Sterrett pfesided at the and Avis Harrison, funniest.
meeting with Hart and Lillian
Hayman giving officers' Pugh, Robert Hart, Ronald Rainer, Edie Hubbard, Martha
reports. Mary Cleek, corre- Hart, Naomi Neville, Fred Lou Beegle, Kathryn Hart,
sponding secretary, reported Smith, Janet Theiss, Esther Jennifer Lagore, Evelyn Fore. about phone calls that she had West, Doris Wilt, Ethel Orr, man, . Kas Bissell-Seckman,
· received in response to cards . Ted Coppick and Mr · and Sheila Theiss, Mabel Brace,
that had been mailed. .
Mrs . bwain Casto.
Gladys Sterrett, Edna Knopp,
The group signed cards for
Sterrett was in charge of the Thelma Walton, Lois Sterrett,
Dorothy Johnson, Abbie Strat- program reading, "It's Friday Linda Russell, Mildred Hart,
. ton, Carol Manuel, Jim Werry, but Sunday is Coming," East- Bernice Theiss, Shirley Beegle,
Violet Fisher, Marjorie Salser, er Trivia, the story of the East- Mary Cleek, Avis Harrison,
· Ann Boso, Margaret Ann er lily, and "The Easter Bon- Letha Proffitt, Mona Neece,
Johnson, Roger Grace, Keith net." She held an Easter bon- Fran Sayre, JoAnn Proffitt,
Rader, Donna Sellers, Mr. and net contest and winning were Betty Proffitt, Julie Campbell
Mrs. Glenn Tucker, Ellen Ruth Simpson, most original, and Jo Lee, and Marilyn Sayre,
Arnott, Douglas Circle, Maria Avis Harrison, funniest, and Jo guest.
. Delgato, Chary Cordero, Mr. Lee, prettiest.
Door prizes were won by
and Mrs . . Harold Hager,
Each member received a Betty Proffitt and Letha ProfMartha Stutler, Elizabeth Car- shamrock made by Mattie fitt. Next meeting will be
· April 11, with Letha Proffitt
penter, Bill Rice, Ruth Smith, Beegle.
Sterrett read the poem and Jo Lee having the proVicki Boso, Delbert Patterson,
Reynold Lagore, Edison "Then Laugh," and had prayer gram and reli"eshmen!S. May
Bract;'\:laudia Roush, Mr. and before refreshments were meeting will be May 9, with
Mrs. Jll.arlan Ballard, June served by Mattie Beegle and Mabel · Brace and Mildred
Turner, Danny Shain, Valerie Janet Theiss to Ruth Simpson, Hart having the program and
Neigler,Audrey Ours: Herbert Lillian Hayman, . Blondena refreshments.

Local student honored
at state DAR conference
'

POMEROY Zachary
Carson, a student at Eastern
Elementary School, was honored for his American history
essay at the 103rd State Conference of the Ohio Society
· Daughters of the American
Revolution held at the Marriott Hotel North, Columbus.
Zachary's essay was judged
best among I 040 entries in
. the State of Ohio. He MS presented a certificate and a monetary gift at the · Honors
· School luncheon . . He was
accompanied by his parents
Steve lnd Renee Carson; his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Trussell, and Anna Circle Cleland, representing the
· Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, DAR.
The topic for the essay contest was "As Editor of the
Philadelphia Gazzette, interview at least two signers of the
: Declaration of lndep.endence
· and write an article for the
·July 5,1776 Edition."
The DAR State Conference
opened with the National
.Defense banquet in the Pavillion, (allowed by a meeting in
: the ballroom. Honorary state
: regents, distinguished guests,
board of management members, and chapter regents were
presented. Greetings from the
. Sons of the American Revolu. tion were given by Roger P.
: Jones, SAR state president,
: with a response, by the slate
vice . regent, Marcia Seifert~ A
tribute to Ohio's outstanding
juniors was given by Suzanne
Vaglia, chairman of junior

HONORED - Zachary Carson, ·Ea,tarn Elementary student,
was honored for his history essay at the recent State DAR conference held In Columbus. Pictured with him from the left are
his parents, Steve and Renea Carson, Marilyn Va&amp;lla, Ohio
DAR raaent; and a state offlcar, Anna Circle Cleland, Return
Jonathan Melas Chapter.
·
membership. The National
Defense speaker was Col.
Lynne Vermilion (RET.)
At the Saturday session,
reports of committees and
chairmen were given. Students
who received awards for the
American History contest,
Good Citizen Award winners,
and.DAR Scholarship winners
were honored at the luncheon. Roberta Roush, state
DAR historian and a member
of the French Colony Chapter
DAR, Gallipolis, presented the
Outstanding Ohio American
History Teacher award.
The program on Sunday
morning opened with a
Cameo Society breakfast and
meeting with Jane Duerk,
president, presiding. Anna Cleland, Cameo Society membership chairman gave a · report

which noted that there are
approximately 541 active
members with a number of
. new member applications
being processed. Patriotic colors decorated the room and
each member present received
a flag pin . The annual Cameo
Victorian Tea and meeting
will be held on April 27, 2002
at the Marrott North.
The annual memorial ser-·
vice was held on Sunday
morning with June Elizabeth .
Circle Gray, a member of the
Return Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter, being ' one of th,ose
remembered.
The Ohio DAR Conference closed with the Waldschmidt Homestead Luncheon and general session
with the singing of Auld l:ang
Syne. .

POMEROY - A South
District 4-H clothing workshop has been scheduled by
the Ohio State ExtensioJt
Services for Saturday , April
6.
Becky Baer, Meigs County's
extension
agent,
announced the workshop
program which will be held
at the Ross County Extensian Office, 475 Western
Avenue, Chillicothe. Registration will begin at , 9 a.in.
and the program will run
from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Baer said that 4-H memhers, advisors or parents who

are looking for new,- creative
ideas for 4-H clothing projects, those who would like
some hints to help them prepare for project judging this
summer, or answers to any
questiom pertaining to
sewing or cooking projects,
should plan to attend the
workshop.
Topics of the day will
include: Basic Alterations,
Skillathons, Color Selection,
Creating A Costume, Putting
Together a Sewing Basket,
Matching Plaids and Stripes,
'-Advisor Update, Basic Hemming _and Seam · Finishes,

Elizabeth Troup

Daniel Troup

alfford Colelllan

Demonstrations, presentation
by State Clothing Specialists,
Sun Safety, Spring Fashions
and opportunities to . share
ideas and learn new skills.
Speakers will include extension agents from Southern
Ohio, the State 4- H Fashion
Board, fabric store owner,
Master Clothing Volunteers,,
and two State Extension
. per'
sonnel.
Door prizes will include
gift certificates for stores, a
collection of assorted threads,
!-shirts, a sewing basket and
other items.

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Snow

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'

Residents in Appalachian
counties clean up from ·
:days of.rain, flash floods

Mediator fails to settle
Ohio's decade-old.
school-funding fight

LOCAL STOCKS

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.._erill S. Randolph Jr..

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•

Roil, •

NEW MARSHFIEf,.D - - Harrison G. Lovsey, 89, of New
Marshfield, died Wesdnesday morning, March 20, 2002, at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital .
Born at Beaumont, Ohio, Dec. 31, 1912, he was the son of
the late Harry and Blanche Cochran Lovsey.
A graduate of The Plains High School, he formerly was a
typesetter at'McBee Corporation for 29 years, and a farmer in
the New Marshfield area.
He was a former member of the Hocking V:alley Credit
Union, a board member of the Alexander School District, and
a member of the Farm Bureau of Athens .
He is survived by daughters, Arlene (Wayne) Keirns of
Batavia, Phyllis Qohn) Bundy of Groveport, Charlotte (Larry)
Jones of Reynoldsburg, Marilyn Johnson of Nelsonville, Linda
Johnson of Middleport, and Sharon (Roger) Black of Middleport; and a son, Gilbert Lovsey ofWilkesville.
Also surviving are his grandchldren, Todd (Karen) Keirns,
Chad Keirns, John, Trevor and Ryan Bundy, Craig (Stacy)
Jones, Bryan Jones, Eric (Tara) Jones, Cheryl OCJ Schroer, Jennifer (Chuck) Sullivan, Amy (Kevin) Gwinn, Heather Lovsey,
Wendy (Mjke) Merrifield, Jeremy Johnson, Summer.Johnson,
Melissa Werry, Alicia Werry and Shelley Oefl) Orworth.
Great- grandchldren surviving are Alexis Jones, Makayla
Jones, Katelyn Sullivan, Sheridan , Sullivan, Sydney Jones,
.Rachael Gwinn, Mackenna Merrifield, Collin Otworth,Jarrett
Otworth,Ashley Bundy and Ryan Bundy.
Sisters surviving are Shirley (Dean) Gabriel of Groveport,
Norma (Roger) Bartlett of Albany, Blanche Efaw of Athens,
and Ladonna (Don) Haning of Albany; and several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Frances, in 1998; a son,
Harrison Gail Lovsey; sisters, Alma Rho rick, Margaret Hunter,
Gertrude Lieuellen and ]\!anita Lovsey; and brothers, Johnny,
·
Herbert and Gilbert Lovsey.
Services will be held Sunday, March 24, 2002, at 2:30 p.m. in
Jagers and Sons Funeral Home, Athens, conducted by Pastor
Tim Stout, with burial in New Marshfield Cemefery. Friends
may c:all at the funeral home on Saturday, March 23, 2002, from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

5 to 10 mph.
Skies will be dear to partly
Saturday
night ... Mostly
cloudy tonight, the National clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
Weather Service said.
Extended forecast:
It will cold again, with lows
Sunday.. .Partly
cloudy.
in the teens and low 20s.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Saturday will bring a warmSunday night ... lncreasing
ing trend to the region, the cloudiness. Lows in the upper
·
weather service said, with 30s.
· sunny skies and temperatures
Monday... Mostly
cloudy·
reaching the 50s.
with a chance of rain. Highs in
It will remain dry Saturday the upper 50s.
· night, with temperatures
Tuesday... Mostly
cloudy
falling to the low and mid-30s. with a chance of showers.
. . Sunset tonight will be at Lows in the lower 40s and
6:46, and sunrise on Saturday highs in the upper 40s.
IH
is at 6:30 a.m.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
REEDSVILLE -Therill S. Randolph Jr., 44, of Reedsville,
with a chance of showers.
Weather forecast:
' Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows tows in the lower 305 and died Thursday, March 31,2002, at St. joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, West Virg'inia.
· in the lower 20s.West winds 5 highs in the mid 50s.
He was born September 5, 1957,in Mason,WestVirginia,son
to 10 mph.
Th~rsday... ~artly clo~dy. ofTherill S. Randolph Sr. of Reedsville, and Claudette J. Wolfe
Saturday... Sunny. Highs in ~ows 10 ~he ~1 d 30s and highs , Pickens of Racine. He was captain of the Robert T. Bolt towthe mid 50s. Southwest winds m the lllld s.
boat for the Ohio River Company.
Besides his parents, he is survived by his maternal grandmother, Sylvia M. Wolfe of Racine; paternal grandm'other,
Lorerta Long of Reedsville; one uncle, Claude Randolph of
Reedsville; several other aunts and uncles; a fiancee, Jana R .
Williams of Rutland; five caregivers, Teresa, Terri, Jessyca, Liz
and Sharon; a step-mother;Wanda Randolph; and a step-father,
William Pickens.
He was preceded in death by his maternal grandfather, Wilson M. Wolfe.
Services will be held 2 p.m. on Sunday, March 24, 2002, at
White
Funeral Home in Coolville, with Pastor David Wiseman
COEBURN, Va. (AP) tion yourself," said Virginia
Under dry skies Thursday, Gov. Mark Warner, who officiating. Burial will be in the Randolph Cemetery,
· Appalachian residents cleaned tour~d here amid one family's Reedsville.
Friends may c:all at the funeral home on Saturday, March 23,
. out muddy homes and .mildewing carpet, · ruined
2002, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
assessed damage from days of framed pictures and soaked
heavy rain and flash floods.
mattresses.
Governors of Virginia and
Rain that began over the
. Kentucky asked President weekend flooded Appalachian
Bush to declare portions 'o f counties from Tennessee to
. their states major disaster West Virginia before dissipat.areas;with each estimating the i11g late Wednesday. At least
.numb.er of damaged . or . seven deaths have been
destroyed homes was in the blamed on the flooding. The
hundreds and sure to climb.
Federal Emergency Manage" It's one thing to lly over ment Agency plans to visit the
.and see pictures of :all this. It's region Friday to determine
.another to go into someone's what federal assistance is
COLUMBUS (AP) - A able history of conflict over
court-appointed mediator on that.
. home ... and see this devasta- needed.
Thursday declared the state's
"I think the combination
school-funding talks dead, of the effects of that history
meaning the constitutionality and the depths of their comof Ohio's education system is mitment to the principles just
back before the Ohio overwhelmed my capacity to
Supreme Court.
extricate them from all of
Premier- 8.40
•AEP-46.34
Federal Mogul - ,84
"While the parties have that," he said.
Rockwell - 20 .4 7
USB -22.27
Arch Coal - 21 .25
Rocky Boots- 7.06
Gannett- 76 .20
Akzo -46.62
worked hard and been coopBellman said debate over.
, AmTech/SBC- 38.63
ge~~l E~-37.45 AD ShaH - 54.35
erative
with
nie
in
every
way,
educational policy will always
Seara- 51.16
•Asllland Inc. - 44.82
I must report that my media- be controversial and will
Harley Davidson- 54.28 Shoney'a ...:. .35
' AT&amp;T.,-15.80
Wai·Ma~-'
Kma~-1.72
: sank One - 41 .88
tion has. not produced a reso- probably never be fully
Wendy'a ·
.24
Kroger - 22.30
' BLI-13.57
lution," Howard Bellman, a resolved.
Worthington- 14.85
Lands End - 44
:Bob Evans- 28.19 Lid.
;_ 18.03
Dally stock reporta are lawyer based in Madison,
•BorgWamer - 61 .92
"I don't evl'r see a 'point in
the 4 p .m. cloalng Wis., said in a three-sentence
NSC-23.48
:champion- 3 .01
time
when it's done, like a
- Charming ShOps- 8.09 Oak Hll Flnanclal-18.60 RUoti!S of the pravlous
report'to•the
court.
day'a
transactions,
proOVB-23.80
: city Holding - 15.42
cake, 'OK, we've got educavided by Smith Partnera
BBT-38.34
"Thank you for the confi· Col .;... 24.29
at Advest Inc. of Gal· dence that has been expressed tional policy now,"' he said.
Peoples - 23.95
; oG ....: 16.79
llpolla,
Pepsico50.41
"The real issue is, how do
. DuPon1- ·48 .19
by my appointment. I am
you address these controververy sorry that I could not
achieve the desired end," sies in the most productive

•

Associates ,. (740)
"

T·""""

The Daily Sentinel

a// 510 W. Union Street

Medical

Showenl

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Queen
Elizabelh II

Urgent Carel!

Cloudy

Clear,/dry weather in forecast

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Troup of Hamilton, the former Mary Mora of Pomeroy,
announce the birth of twins on
Feb. 19.
The infants
have been named Elizabeth
Lauren and Daniel Eugene. Elizabeth weighed five pounds, one
ounce, and Daniel weighed five
pounds and seven ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Don and Barbara Mora of
Po111eroy and the late Maidie
Mora. Maternal great-grandparents are the late Maye and Pearl
Mora. Paternal grandparents are
EUgene Troup and Becky Wondus of Northumberland, Pa.

LONDON (AP)
What to give the monarch
who has everything for her
Golden Jubilee?
Blade makers Wilkinson
Sword came up with a solution Wednesday: a $75,000
jewel-encrusted sword that
will not look out of place
among Queen Elizabeth II's
other regal paraphernalia on
ceremonial occasions.
"As royal warrant holders
since 1804, we were keen to
mark the occasion of the
queen's Golden jubilee in a
very special way," said business manager Rob Hadley.
He said the sword "combines the delicacy and quality associated with precious
stones and jewelry with the
strength and symbolic
power of a sword. It u a
unique memento of a rare
occasion and, we feel, a fitting tribute to Her Majesty's
50th year reign."

W. VA.

KY. , · ~~~ o

Celebrates first birthday
of Point Pleasant, W. Va .,
Beverly and Dalton Jarrell
of Gallipolis. Annette Bare
and Michael McKenzie of
.Pomeroy, Debbie Belville
of
Gallipolis,
Sondra
Weaver of Pomeroy; Greg
Peck, Michelle Ramsey
and Tommy Long Ill of
Cheshire; Shannon Morarity, Dalton McCloud, Carrie Morarity and Shelby
Dailey of Syracuse.
Chuck, Sherry, Emily,
Kyle and Andrew Kinnan ·
· of Middleport; Karen, JilKenton Remeey
lian, johnathan and jennifer Casto of Cheshire;
CHESHIRE - Kenton Linda and Jillian Harrison,
Dale Ramsey, Jr. of Savanna and Ron Capehart
Cheshire celebrated his II of Pomeroy; Megan and
first birthday on Jan. 29 Jeremy Johnson of Middlewith a party at McDonalds
port; Arica and Destinee
of Pomeroy. He it the son
Blackwell of Pomeroy,
of Kenny Ramsey and
Tammy Johnson, Tysen
Michelle Jarrell.
Attending
were
his Pullins,. Austin and Madibrother, Craigory Long, his son Hendricks, Jacob and
gral!dmother, Karen jarrell Elizebeth Hook and Shaina
Roush.

Deaths

Saturday, March 23

Couple announce birth of twins

: __ _..J

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Bellman wrote.
The
Supreme
Court
ordered the talks in November to try to settle a lawsuit
filed in 1991 by the Coalition
for Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding, a group of
about 500 schools. The suit,
named for Perry County
school boy Nathan DeRolph,_
argues that Ohio's schoolfunding system favors rich
districts over poor,
Negotiations began in
December. ·
Thursday was the deadline
for Bellman to report on the
talks' status. He did not ask
for a'n extension.
"The 'parties h~ve very
deep-seated ,princiP,les about
educ,_ational policy and about
th.e roles of the various institutions of government:' Bell
man said in an intervie . ·
"They also have a consider .

BLAIRSVILLE, Ga. - Word has been received here of the
death of Clifford Eugene Coleman, 84, Blairsville, form erly of
Meigs County, on Thursday, Feb. 28, 2002, at the Union General Hospital, following a brief illness.
He was born in Long Bottom on April 1, 1917, son of the
late John Howard and Mary Elizabeth Coleman. He wa.&lt; a
1935 graduate of ,Chester High School, and a veteran of the
U.S. Air Force.
Surviving are his wife, Mary Josephine Amsbary Coleman;
two daughters and sons-in-law, Karen and Hamilton South Ill
of Matinus Island, Maine, and Stephanie Coleman and Marvin
Colton of Greensboro, Ga. ; a brother and sister-in-law, R onald
and Betty Coleman of Mooresville, N .C.; and five gra ndchildren.
Services were held on Sunday, March 3, 2002 in Blairsville.

LOCAL BRIEFS
..

POMEROY -Actions for
dissolution of 111arriage have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas C ourt by Lisa
A. Sellers, Long Bottom, and
Ernest Sellers, Long Bottom;
and by Timothy A. Bissell,
Long Bottom, and Lea A. Bissell, Athens.
A divorce ·action has been
filed by Pamela Suejohnson,
Middleport, against Henry
Douglas Johnson, Middleport.

'

·'

•

Two injured
RUTLAND -

Two per-

sons were sent to area hospi-

tals (allowing a one-car accident Thursday .,.on County
Road 3 (Leading Creek) near
Rutland, the Gallia- Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
Driver George E. Search,
76, and his passenger, Margaret Search, 76, both of
36; 79 Leading Creek Road,
were injured in the 11 :44
a.m. accident, the patrol said.
George Search was transported to Holzer Medical Center
by Meigs EMS, while Margaret Search was taken to
Cabell Huntington Hospital,
Huntington,
W.Va.,
by
HealthNet.
Troopers said George
Search was northbound, fourtenths of a mile north of CR
12 (Titus) when the minivan
he drove went off the right
side of the road, over an
embankment and struck a
. railroad embankment.
The vehicle was moderately damaged, troopers said.

Issued license
POMEROY -A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to John Lester Suttle II, 24,
Long Bottom, and Sari Elizabeth Colleen Putman, 20,.
Coolville.

Men sentenced.
POMEROY - · Three men
have been s~ntenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court: Dustin Lee Fellure, to
18 months and $10,000 restitution .on a charge of receiving stolen property; Donald
Smith, to on.e year in prison
and $1 ,54.85 restitution for
breaking and entering; and
Michael Bing, to one year in

More delays expected
in death penalw cases
overall has improved by moving more cases then ever into
the federal appeals process.
"Despite the improvements
we ·are seeing in federal sys-

COLUMBUS (AP)
More death penalty cases will
. be st:alled as state co.urts send
more cases to a federal court
system already riddled with
needless delays, Attorney Genera! Betty Montgomery says in
an annual capital punishment
report she is to release Friday.
A year ago, Montgomery
criticized the Ohio Supreme
Court for its handling of death
penalty cases. The new report
says the state court system

tem, you're seeing more cases

entering it, which could cause
a .backlog in the future,"
Montgomery said Thursday.
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Di strict will be flu shing lir,c s
beginning Sunday, March 24 at II :00
PM through Friday. March 29. ~i nce it
will take two weeks to complete th.ere
will be anot her list in ne11t Friday 's
paper. Li sted below are location 's for
thi s week.

MONDAY, MARCH 25:
Athens County : Coumy Road 48 and

New England area, Meigs County:
Longbottom to Riebel Road on SR
248 and CR 2R to two miles north of
Bashan, Long Bottom, Ri vervie w,
Bigley &amp; Mt. Olive, Cunis Hollow, #9
Road and Osbo rne Road, SR 681
Booster or Reedsvi lle.
1

TUESDAY, MARCH 26:
Meigs Count'y: From the intersecti on
of Success Road and Rt. 7 to the fi re
hydran ts in Tuppers Plai ns, Rt. 7 to the
Water Office, The Water Office to the
end of Silver Ridge. At hens County :
From St e wart th ro ugh Kilv en ,
Broadwell , and Haga

Rid~e .

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27:
Mei gs County : From the intersecti on
of Riehel Road and SR 248 to Chester.
Chester to Five Points. Athens County:
Rt. 50 from Vanderhoof to River Rd.

way?~ '

THURSDAY, MARCH 28:
Me igs Count y: Fro m the Bashan
Booster to Bashan. From Ba shan to
Tackerv ille. From Five Points to Crew
Road- incl udes 'Royal Onk Resort,
Wipple Road, Crow Sub-Division,

Golf Course Hill, Forest Run Road off
Roure 7 to Block Pl ant . Eag le Ridge
off SR 7, Sand Ridge, Pine Grove
Road, Vinegar Street, Roy Jones Road,
Amberger Road. Morning Star Road,
Court Street, Salser Road, Forest Run
Road, Yost Rand, Minersville Hill, and
Welchtown. Meigs &amp; Athens County:
TuPpers Plains to Rt. 50 Booster.

FRIDAY, MARCH 29:
Athens County: River Road off Rl. 50
through Guys\'ille. Meigs Coun1y: Rt.
7 around Tuppers Plains, TP to Alfred
and Bearwaljow, TP to 68 1 Booster.
Arbaugh Addition, and TP to Coolville.

Most of the flu shing wi II be done at
night and some custo mers may
experience low press ure. Ple ase he
aware that the wate r may be discolored
for several mil es around there
locations. lf the water is discolorrd for
lonscr than a few hours, please cont act
the office so we wi 11 be aware of the
problem .

••

-~--

prison and S90 I.85 restitution for breaking and entermg.
Smith was ordered to perform 500 hours of community servi ce.

File dissolutions

i

�..

PapM·

Opinion

The,Daily Sentinel

" ••,.. Mlrch 22. 2002-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-9112·2158 • Fu: 740 11112·2157
www.mydllllyMntlnel.com

..'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlcker8on
Publisher

General Manager
~n.n Itt ,,,. etlilw tue

••

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich

n.,

wekoml.
tllo•ld .. "" IAa JOO worth. All kttm~
.,. 111.bjut to tdili111 tuUJ mMst be llflltd and lrrciMU ruldnn tutd Nkpllo111 ,.• .uu.
No 1mligntd kltn! will IH p11bllllltd. Lmur tltoMid IH Ill ~ tiUI~, ~•btl
UtMeJ, ltol pn'IONilJtitl.
711e op/11hHII upnntd in dtt ~olum11 hlow~~rtllu tmi.IIIUIIJ of tile Olt/.o lbUq
hlllilldng CD. 't edhoriJll bD4J'd, IUtkJI olll~rwlJt IIottA

· NATIONAL VIEW

Got it

• The Victoria (Texas) Advocate, on breast cancer test confusion: With all the conflicting information on when and whether
to have mammograms that can catch early breast cancer, it's not
surprJsing that many women find it difficult to make a decision
about the medical procedure.
A Danish study that got major publicity after The New York
Times reported · on it indicated that, contrary to previous
research, mammography screening was unjustified, in part
because false positive readings caused women . to undergo
needless and · potentially dangerous niedical procedures. An
American follow-up study repcmed similar results.
The methodology and finding$. of the Danish study and the
American follow-up immediately came under attack from
groups such as the Nationai ·Alliance of Breast Cancer Organizations, which includes most of the prominent anti-cancer.
medical research and educational agencies.
This kind of back-and-forth arguing. which is all too common in medicine today, is confusing at any time.... .
Now, however, the federal Department of Health and
Human Services has announced that it strongly recommends
the tests . In · making the announcement. Secretary Tommy
Thompson also suggested lowering the age at which women
should first receive them to 40. That recommendation is in,
agreement with many top medical organizations. The government had previously recommended 50. Most women who are
screened by mammography do not have breast cancer. They get
peace of mind. At least 10 percent· have suspicious test results,
but 80 percent to 90 percent of those do not have cancer. They
suffer mental anguish and, usually, further medical tests, only to
find they are cancer-free. At the moment, this is the best that
medical science has to offer.
Then there are the women whose mammograms reveal can~
cer, often significantly earlier than it might have been caught
otherwise. .. .
'
Estimates indicate that dekEamong women with breast
cancer have been reduced 20 ercent to 30 percent by early
mammographic detection of c ncer....
It seems clear to us that Thompson and his department have
it right.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED'I'IfE\5

Today is Friday, March 22, the 81st da\_ of 2002. There are
284 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 22, 1765, Britain enacted the Stamp Act to raise
money from the American colonies. (The Act was repealed the
following year.)
On this date:
In 1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel
with Commodore James Barron near Washington D.C.
·
In 1882, Congress outlawed polygamy.
In 1895,Auguste and Louis Lumiere showed their first movie
' to an invited audience in Paris.
In 1933, during Prohibition, President Roosevelt signed a
measure to make Wine and beer containing up to 3.2 percent
alcohol legal.
In 1941, the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state went
into operation.
·
_
In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adoption of
a charter in Cairo, Egypt.
In 1946, the British mandate in Transjordan came to an end.
In 1972, Congress sent the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution to the states for ratification. (It fell
three states short of the 38 needed for approval.)
In 1991, high school instructor Pamela Smart, accused of
manipulating her student-lover into killing b.er husband, was
. convicted irt Exeter, N.H., of murder-conspiracy.
In 1995, convicted Long Island Rail Road gunman Colin
· Pergu~on was sentenced to life In pri!on for killing six people.
Ten years ago: Twenty-seven people were killed when a USAir jetliner crashed on takeoff from New York's LaGuardia Airport; 24 people survived. France's governing Socialist Party Will
rebuffed in regional elections. President Bush and German
Chancellor ·Helmut Kohl wrapped up. a weekend of informal
talks by reiterating their resolve to break a deadlock on global
trade talks.
.
Five years ago: A day · after .a suicide bomber killed · three
women in Tel Aviv, Israeli troops dashed with hundreds of
Palestinians in Hebron. Tara Lipinski, at age 14 years and ten
months, became the youngest women's world figure skating
champion.
·

--

-----·- ... --·--------- -

DEAR ABBY: In the past, you
have printed letters from men who
have been physically abused by
their wives. We want to thank you
for helping to make the public
aware of this aspect of domestic
violence. Make victims of domestic
violence face grave diffi culties.
Chief among them is having few
places to turn for information and
help.
One of the first things these men
need to know is that they are not
alone. A national survey funded by
the Centers for Disease Control
found that nearly 40 percent of all
domestic violence victims - or
835,000 men a year-. are pHysically abused by th~ir intimate partners.
· SAFE (Stop Abuse for Everyone)
has a Web site where male victims
(straight and gay) and lesbian
women can share their stories with

........

FriUy. Mllrch 22, 2002

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

'

others. It is www.safe4all.org. The
Web site lists services that are sympathetic to this underserved population, as well as a number of highly qualified professionals ready to
provide training to law enforcement, health-care providers, social
service, crisis lines. etc. in how to
identify, support and properly refer
male victims of domestic violence.
SAFE also provides a brochure for
male victims and their concerned

family and friends. It identifies enfOrcement agencies are sensitiVe IN MISSISSIPPI
domestic violence.·lists typical reac- to the issues concerning female-toDEAR READY: Some women
tions and provides specific advice.
male abuse. I am pleased your orga- ask their mothers to escort them
Anyone wishing a copy of this nization is providing training to law down tl)e aisle when there is no .
brochure should send a self- enforcement for this ugly, often male relative available. Others ask a
addressed, stamped envelope along ignored problem.
respected male friend to do it, or
with a $1 suggested donation to
I;&gt;EAR ABBY: I am being mar- walk down the aisle alone and "give
SAFE-Male Victims Brochure, P.O. ried in June and have no one to themselves away" as a feminist state.Box 951, Tualatin, ' OR 97062. walk me down the aisle. My father
ment.
SAFE is a 501 (c)3 charitable orga- is deceased, and I have no brothers
Do as you wish, dear. It's your
nization and donations are tax- or male fltmily members who can
wedding
and your decision.
. deductible. - PHIUP COOK, escort me.
CONFIDENTIAL TO
NATIONAL
VICE-CHAIR,
This isn't so much a problem for
SAFE
myself as it is for my mother. She FEELING UNAPPRECIATED
DEAR PHILIP: Thank you for insists it would be "horrific" (her IN RANDOLPH, NEB.: Real
your important letter. The complex word) if I go it alone - ·which is generosity is doing something nice
for someone who will never find
problem of domestic violence will exactly what I want to do!
not be resolved until government,
What do you think, Abby? Would out who was responsible.
Pauli01e Phillips afld lrer da.&lt;ghrer,
private agencies and the public it be acceptable for me to walk
become aware that domestic vio- down the aisle solo? I have been jeanne Phillips, sl1are the pseudo,.ym
lence is not gender issue - but a reading your column since I was lit- Abigail VtmBuren. Write Dear Abby a!
human one.
tle, and I'm eager for your opinion. www.DearAbby.com or · 'PO. Box
My mail tells me that not all law - READY TQ GO IT ALONE 69440, Los Aflgeles, CA 90069.

a

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Evidence backs need for testing
to provide early detection

,

_The_o_any_Se_nti_·ne_l

Men suffering domestic ~buse can find the help they need

The Daily Sentinel

-

-----=-Bf the Bend

Page AS

SAINTS AND SINNERS

'"-Christ is trnly alive when we take time to remember :
(

In Maeterlinck's lovely fantasy, "The
Blue Bird," (Olympic Marketing Corp.,
1988) two little children, Mytyl and
JYltyl, are transported by the fairy into
the Land of Memory where they once
again meet their grandmother and
grandfather.
The children are surprised their
grandparents are not dead. When Mytyl
mentions this to her grandmother,
Granny Tyl tells her, "fu long as you
remember me, I am alive."
COWMNIST
This is the universal Easter message. It
is the message to those who believe that
We also know people who have
Christ rose physioally .from the dead as de_EYted ~life bl't whom we rememwell as to those wbo h~ve their doubts ber almost ~ve':y' day. As 'long as we
about that, but beheve m the resl'rrec- . remember them, they are alive to us.
non JUSt the same - they beheve Chmt Remembering them cheers our lives
1s alive today as surely as he was when he and provides companionship to us in our
walked the dusty roads of Galil,ee with loneliness.
his disciples..
.
I
AU the scholarly arguments in the
But to beheve - or ev~n to know world, proving or disproving that these
that Chnst IS ahve tod_ay tS not enough. loved ones are alive somewhere today,
He 1s truly al1ve only 1f _we remember make no difference to us one way or the
him.
other.
.
We all know people' who are walking
To us they are alive and we feel their
the earth today, but whom we never undying presence. And nothing can disthink of from one end of the year to the prove .what to us is so obviously true.
next. They are as good as dead to us.
· So it is with Jesus in our lives.

G
eorge
Plagenz

He is more truly alive to those who
remember him and love him- no mat- ,
ter what they believe happened on that .,
first Easter morning or even if they·, ;
believe nothing happened - than he is·~
to those who unquestioningly accept the
Easter miracle but who seldom think of
Jesus or remember him as they would a:-·
dear and loving friend.
· ·~
The most .touching words of parting';
are these: "Don't forget me."
"
. This is what Jesus was saying to his"'
disciples just before he took leave of
them on Thursday evening of the first;
Holy Week.
. '" ~:
"Remember me.'' he said, "remembet:
me"
·
•
If we remember Jesus, he will live for-~
ever. If we don't remember him - if w~
remember only a miraculous event!:
which took place "as it began to dawn'':
on Easter day - we will miss the most:
.marvelous miracle of all - the miracle:
Jesus was - and is.
:
"fu l~ng as you remember me, I
.. alive."
:
(George R. Plagenz . is a columnist Jo~
Newspaper Enterprise Association.)
:

WEST'S VIEW

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

SATURDAY
CHESTER Chester
Baseball-Softball · Association holding signups for
boys and girls for summer
league, Saturday, 10 a.m. to
noon at the ballfield in
Chester. Further information
call 985-9835 or 985-4345.

SUNDAY
RACINE- Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church,
Carmel Road, Racine, EastFRIDAY
er cantata "Were You There"
POMEROY -- Pomeroy on Palm Sunday, 11 a .m:
Church of Christ will hold a Public invited.
free community dinner on
TUPPERS . PLAINS
March 22 from 5 to -7 p.m.
The pubnc is invited.
Eastern boys basketball
banquet, Sunday, 2:30 p.m.
. SYRACUSE - Syracuse at tti'e high school gym .
Baseball · signup at Syra- Each family to take vegcuse Village Hall mayor's etable and dessert. Athletic
office, Friday 5 to 7 p.m. boosters to provide meat,
and Saturday, 10 a .m. to drinks and table service.
noon.
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel

sing, Middleport Church of
the Nazadrene, Sunday.
6:30 p.m. featuring Brenda
Phalin and Joe McCloud.
Pastor allen Midcap invites
public. Refreshments.
MONDAY
POMEROY
Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, VBS
meeting, Monday, 7 p.m. at
· the church. Members of
other
area
churches
involved involved in · last
year's VBS or others wanting to help invited to attend.
Any questions call 9491316.
POMEROY -- Pomeroy
Alumni Association planning
session, Monday, 7 p.m. at
the .home of Yvonne Young.
POMEROY -- Veterans
Service Commission will
meet on Monday at 9 a .m. at
117 E. Memorial Dr.

PEOPLE
LONDON (AP)
R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck
denied prosecutors' suggestions that he lied about taking a sleeping pill on a transAtlantic flight to avoid accusations of drunkenness after
his alleged rampage on the
plane.
In his second day on the
stand in lsleworth Crown
Court, Buck said Thursday
.that he couldn't explain why
he didn't mention downing
the tablet with a glass of
wine when police inter- ·
viewed him in a cell at London ~s Heathrow airport.
The 45-year-old, who
lives in Seattle, denies charges
of being drunk on an aircraft, assault and damaging
British Airways crockery.

Fifth birthday celebrated
served with ice cream .
Among the guests were several from Pomeroy, including
her paternal grandmother,
Marcia Houdashelt, Brian.
and Traci Houqashelt, and
Trey and Lauren H ed rick~
Jenna is the great-granddaughter of Myrtle Grover
of Pomeroy. Her maternal
grandparents are Bob and
Ann Carvile of Marion, and ·
her great-grandfather is Delbert Lichtenberger, Marion.
Jenna Ann Houdashelt

POMEROY -Jenna Ann
Houdashelt, daughter of
Brent and Beth Houdashelt
of Marion, observed her fifth
birthday with a party on
March 16.
A Barbie-themed party
was held with a cake being

am:

S

..•

•••

~

i

Tapes don't jibe with Nixon~ public ·policy approach ...."."
.."

Like the Ghost of Politics Past,
record on Jewish affairs, including hiS:
Richard Nixon made some headlines
staunch pro-Israel stance?
:
This falteting connection betwee1
this month as the National Archives
released another 5 million hours internal conversation and historica
sorry - 500 hours of his tape-recorded
record applies to an exchange wit!Jl
conversations as president. "Nixon
Henry Kissinger in which Nixon raiseso.
Defended Envoy's Groping," which is
the notion of using a nuclear bomb i""
how the Washington Post saw fit to
Vietnam, Kissinger bats it down. "I just!
headline the story, jusr about says it all
want you to think big," Nixon replies.:
concerning the barrel-scraping signifiEnd of story? Some 30 years later, hyste~
cance of this batch of tape.
ria has ensued. The Associated' Pressl:
Or does it? The notorious White
COWMNIST
reported ''the taped comment broughlt
House tapes of the Nixon administrarevulsion from many in Asia;' with the:;
tion - the continually .taped coverage term to reflect the population _which, Vietnamese Foreign Ministry denounc-e
of a presidency in action - stand alone it must be said, is inversely reminiscent ing the "formidable cruelty" of thO::
as a weird sort of political precursor to of Bill Clinton's efforts to make his cab- Nixon administration; a Japanese profes..;
Reality TY. One main difference, of inet "look like America.:'There is also an sor noting that an A-bomb would havc:i;
course, is that Nixon secretly taped his interesting earful from former Federal jeopardized U.S. use of Okinawa; and l.
presidential life without an inkling that Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns, who retired Thai general concluded, "Thi:
one day ~nyon~ and everyone would be predicted that "Wall Street Jews" would proves that Americans care nothinJi:
able to lis.ten m .. Thu g1ves th~. ta~ed be voting Republican in 1972. As the about other human lives." A New.
record a~ Immediacy and a spec1al. ktnd . Washington Post recounted it, "Mr. Zealand m,inister said he feli'"quite sick'':
of veracity that a speech or memo1r, for Burns who was Jewish said he was about Nixon's comments, adding thao_':
example! never has. Still, while there is comf~rtable about that. ·in all the years they show "the decision-makers were;!
an ~mou~nal ~uth to th~se tapes -- t~e that 1 have known you: he told Nixon, not only callous, but racist u well."
:
stort~d Nl]{()ntan parano1a~C1.1m-Machi- 'I have never heard of what even
They do? Vietnam historian Stanlt):
avell1amsm, for example, I! on center- remotely resembles what could be inter- Karnow - no Nixon booster - ~ol(E
stage -· the "news" they contain indi- preted as a touch of anti-Semitism or the AP he doubts Nixon gave ser1ou11,:
cates that off-the-cuff comments may anti-Catholicism."'
. thought to using. atomic ,weapons. "Jusc
sometimes be exactly that.
Mr. Burns of course never heard these because he said It doesn t mean .it waC
Despite the Washington Post's head- tapes On th~ other h;nd he and Henry · really an option." Historian Stanley Kut~
line stress on "groping"- a sign of lin- Klssi~ger, two rather pn:minent Jewilh ler added th~t "the tapes are replete wit~
gering Clinton fatigue? - the CWO main Nixon appointees, did manage to hold Nixon blurtmg out ,outlandish remarka.':::
stories to emerge from the tapes concern · their jobs into the second Nixon term M~ybe these tapes tell us a lot about thll'.:
two very bad things: anti-Semitism and _ and beyond. Are Nixon's sentiments, ·pr1vate man, but we ~till have to lao~
nuclear recklessness. These tapes include as the Los Angeles Times' leftist colum- elsewhere for the pubbc meaning.
.,.
nasty comments about "untrustworthy" nist Robert Scheer recently wrote, real,.
Jews at the Justice Department, and ly "echoed in the surviving cells of AI
(Diana Ui!Jt Is a column/It a11d tdltorlaC
Nixon's plan to reduce the percentage of Qaeda"? Are they borne out by Nixon's wrlttr for Tht Washlngion Tlmts. Shr can bl
Jewish political appointees in the second
contacted viii dt~~~st@washlngiOIItlmrs.com.) :

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P!A! A6 • The Dally Sentinel
Sunday School 10 llllMomina v.l.hh.ip II am Ev~niiiJ - 1 pm

Sunday Sc'hool - 10:30 a.m.
EftrliftJ - 7::10 p m.
RiVfl' Vlllty
Aposiolk WoMip Cemrr
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middleport
K~vin Konkle. Pastor
Sunday. 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednt&amp;4a,y, 7:)() p.m.; Yoolh Fri. 7:30p.m.

nt JtiiH Chrhr
Apotitulk FaitJ1
New lima Rood
Sunday. 10 a.m. and 7:10 J'l .m.
Wedn&lt;'!iday. 7J Op.m.
Ct.Yrdi

"~l' lllhh

Jo.,.

Apple lind S&lt;mnd StL
Pastor: Re\1. Dlvid R\WIC'U
Sunday School ond Won!Hj&gt; I 0 LDL

W~y7p.m.

tl_._

CModt
OriolA.......
VanZandt ..d Ward Rd.
Putor. JaJne' MiUer

Puwr. Bob R•odo!ph
Wonhip- ~JO a..m.

.__

Scrvic:n.- 6:30p.m..
Wednesday StrvK'cs - 6:30p.m.

-.Sctlooi-J0:30Lm.

Churrlt ol God ., ...,...,
OJ. WhiiC Rd. oii Sl. RL 160
P'ISlor PJ . Chapman
~nda)l &amp;'hool - I0 a.m.
Worship -. II a.m.
We~y Sc-rvR:cs - 7 p.m.

Sundly School · 9:30a.m.

E~·eoq

( .tt lwlil'
S.Crtd HHirt C.lltollt Cburd
161 Mulbr:ny Ave .• Pnmtroy. 992-5898
Pulor. Rev. Walter E. tkinz
Sat Con. 4 :45-~: l~p .m.: Mass· .5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:1 5 a.m.,
Sun. Masi - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 8;3Q a.m.

-...

Wonhip ~ 9:30a. m .
Sunday School - ID::30 a.m.
FU'il Sunday of Month - 7:00 p.m. sen dee

1\qlpHa -St. Pul
Pulor. Jane lkallie

( hurl'h ol ( "hri't

S uoday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 1:30 p.m.

Trinity &lt;:.lturtb
Secood &amp; lynn. Pomeroy
PiiStvr. Rev. Cnig Crossman
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.

Hendodt Crov" Christian Churdt
Pastor. larry Brown
Worship · \UO a.m.
Sunday Sd)(lol · IO: JO a.m.
Bible Study - 1 p.m.

Centnl C1ustff
Asbwy (Syracu"')
Putor. Bob Robinsoo

-..m.

Bapti-.t

Hopt Rsptist Chu l"("h tSourhern J

570 Gram St.. Midlllcpon
. Sum.la y 'iChOOI -9: 30a.m.
Wur•hip - I I a.m. and 6 p.m.
W~dnesda y Service - 7 p.m.

Rutland Fin;t Baptist Chun:h
Suntluy School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
l'omeroy F irst Baptist
Easr Mai n St.
SunJuy School -9:30a.m.
Worshtp - 10:30 a.m.
··inl Southern Baptist

41872 Ponu:my Pike
Pastor: E. LamarO' Bryanl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wors hip ~ 8: 15 &lt;1.m.. 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.
Wcdn~sday Sen•ices · 7:00 p.m.
lllnit Raplisr Chuft'h
Pastor; Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. Midd leport
Sunday School · 9: 15a.m
Worship - IO: l:'ia.m..' 7:00 p.m.
WcdneM!ay Service-7:00 p.m.
Kwinl' First Baplist
Paslur: Rick Rule
Sunday School · IJ:JO a.m.
WoNihip - 10:40 u.m., HIO p m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m
Sih er Run Baplist
Pasto r: John Swanson
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Wor.ship- II a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Werl nesday Services-7:00p.m.
Mt. Union Bapllsl
Putor : David Wiseman
Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6;30p. m.
Bethlehem Baptht Church
Great Bend, Route 124. Raci ne. OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m..
Sunday Worship - 10:30 ll .m .
Wednesday Bible Stud)· - 6:00 p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Haplist Chureh
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
E ~·ening ·7:00p.m.
Th ur!ida y SeT'\' ice~. 7:00

Hillside Baptist Church
St R1 . 143 just off Rt 7
Pastor: Rn. James R. Ac ree, Sr.
Su nday UnilieJ ~rv h:e
Warship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p. m.
Wednesday Se~es -7 p.m.
Vldory Baptlsllndependenl
~2 5 N. 2nd St. Middleport
P&lt;~~tor: James E. Keesee
Worship · IOa. m.. 7 p. m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Ra.i lroad St. , Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 J'l.m.
·Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Foresl Run Bapllst
Arius Hun
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

"m.

Pomero)· C hur'l'h of Chrkc
212 W. Main St.
Miniolter: Anthony Moois
Sunday School • 9:JO a.m.
Wur.;bip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedilcsday Services· 7 p.m.

Grace E~l Churd
326 E. Mai n St, Pomeroy
Rev, James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Fosrer
Sunday Sehoul and
Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m.

Pomeroy Wr:&lt;ii tslM Chur'l'h ol Ch rist
33226 Chi iJn:n·., Home Rd.
Sunday School · I I a.m.
Worship - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wr..·dnesday Servict's- 7 p.m.

AndquJty S.,llel
Sund u.y School - 9:30 a. m.
Won hip - 10:45 a.m. c
Sunday Evening • 6:00p.m.
Pa.~lor: Mark .McCom as

RuU.nd Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pasmr: Rev. Pnul Taylor
Sunday Sc hool - !0 o..m.
. Eve ning- 7 p.m.
Wedne.sday &amp;rvices. 7 p.m.

Second S.pl!sl Church ·
Ravenswood, WV
PMrnr: David W. McClain

Enterprlle
Paseor.-Keilh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonh.ip - 9 a.m.

FlatwPaslor: Keith Rader

llolill l'"

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WORhip - II a.m.

Community Cburth
Pastor: Rev. Amos lillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Wors hip- 10:00 a. m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Middleport Church of C hrist
5th and M11in
Pasto r: AI Hanson
Yooth Minislt"r: Uill Frnzier
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.
Worship- 8 : 1·5. 10:30 ~u n ., 7 p.m.
Wi,::4JncMiay Services - 7 p.m.

Ftlftll Rua
Pastor: Bob Robjnson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worshi p . 9 a.m.

D•nville llollnesa Churcll
31057 Slate RoUic 325. Langsvlle
Pastor. Gary Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer ~rJ i ce- 7 p.m.

Keno Chul"("h of Christ
Worship - 9:30a. m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jc tTrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Cah·ary Pilartm Chapel
HarrisonviU(' Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Dtar\lo·• llow Ridge Church or Christ
Pas10r:Tcrry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic~s- 6:30 p.m.

l'e!lriChapol

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship -9:30 a. m.
Sunday School- J0:3S a.m.

Rock Springs
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9: 15 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youlh Fellowship, Sunday · 6 p.m.

Pin ~

Grove Bible HoUness Church
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O' Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed nesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Thppen; Plain Cllurch of Christ
Instrumental
Woijlrip Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a. m
Sunday School · Ill: 15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Bible S1udy Wednesday 7 pm

or

Hysell Run Holiness Churdt
Rev. Mark Mir.:hacl
Sunday School -9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and YoUih - 7 p.m.

Rutland Church ot Chri!!t
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Laurel Clltr Free Methodist Church
Rev. Les Smmdtand Mym l . Strandt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a. m, and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Bndrurd Chun:h of Chrisl
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Yuuth Minister: Rill Amberger
Sundlly School : 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

l .allrr-lhn Sainh

Hickory Hills Chur.;:h of Cbrlel
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wm hip • 10 a.m., 6:30 P:m·
W~dn esday Service5 • 7 p.m.

SD~nn"i~

Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

East Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday ScOOol • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

llldne
Pastor. Brian Hlllkness
Sunday S!=boo1· 10 a.m.
W(lrsbip · II a.m.
Wedne~ay 7 p.m.

Worship • 9:00 a. m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran ChurCh
Walnu t and Henry Sts., Ravenswood.
W.Va.
Pastor: David Ru ii..~ell
Sunday School • I0:00 'a.m.
Wors hip · I I a. m.
St. Paul Lutheran Chun:h
Comer Syc~orc &amp; Second St., Pom~:roy

Coolrille UnUed Methodlsl Parilb
Past(lf: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Maio &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday SchoOl • 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.
Tuesday Serricea. 7 p.m.

Betbtl Churtb
Sunday School • 9: 4~ a.m.
Worship - ·II a.m.

Town ship Rd., 4(i8C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

('hrist ian l' niun
Hartford Churcb of Christ In

Graham United Metbodllt
Worship - 9:30a.m. (lit &amp; 2nd Sun),
1:30 p.m. {3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Chrbtlan Union
Hanford, W.Vn.
Pu.stor:Jim Hugh~s
Sunday Schqol - I I a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wed_nesday Services- 7:30 p.m.

Mt. Oll'o'e United Metbocllal
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
PllStur: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
Thur.;do.y S e rvice~ - 7 p.m.

( ' hureh or ( ;od
ML Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: l ames Satterfield
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday S~ rvic es -7 p.m.

Meigs CooperaU.-e Parish
Northew;t Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
. Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II u..m., 6:30 p.m.

Rutland Chun:h of God
Pastor: Ron H~:a t h
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p:m.

Chuter
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m. ·
Sunday School - 10 a. m.

., t:.."t.lll'dl tltlw Nu:aftw

Hocklniamrt Churdl
Grand Street
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

'!Orcb Church
Co. Rd. 63

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
'N

h". 1030

'\~1/;)l"l' lll'
Middleport Churdl of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Mldcap
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WednCsday S~rJices - 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

R...t..nte Ftllowoblp
Church of the Nazarene

Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

992·3978
Davls·Qulckel Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance

·

Products+
Financial
ENCI ES Inc. Services

212 E. Main Street

Pomeroy

•

Funeral ~ome
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740-667·3110

.

740·992-S 141

lru!t R. fhltor· Dlrtdlr
590 IA1l._. StrHI• P-oy, 011 45769

74G-992-S444
992-3785

tn:eaforb
laeal Qf~tate

Brogan-Warner

216 E. Second Pomeroy

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

740-992-3325
Marketing Pro_perty

. Since 1971

\•

264 Stuth Stc...t AWl. • Mll.lport, ON 45760

'?tt-tee~tal. ';l/tJ.'*'e
174 Layne Stre~t
New Haven, WV 25265
H. Anderson
Director Fax:

INSURANCE
SERVICES

EWING FUNERAL

W«nhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m..
Weduaday Services - 7 p.m.

HOME
b1gnlty and Service Always
Established 1913

992·2121

Middleport, OH

Friday• .W.rch 22. 2002

Rev. Roger W'tl lfotd
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Woohip- 1 p.m..

MADNESS ... TAKES ITS TOLL

While's Chapel Walryaa
Coolville Road
·
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
SIUKlay School - 9:30a.m.
WotSh.ip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Rudaod Dtud ol tbr N•Ul'fllt
Pasror. Rev. Samuel W. Basye
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wond\Jp • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvice!l - 7 p.m.

Kent State drops Pitt in OT

Fairrirw Blblt Churda
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School- 9:30'a.m.
Worship-7:00p.m.
Wednl:sday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

nrst Chu~h of the N•urtne
Pastor. William lllSiis
Sunday Schuol -10:00 a.m.
Morning Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service- 6:30 p.m.

Portland

Community of Chrkt
Purtland- R~te ine Rd.
Pastor. Michae l Duhl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
· Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servi ces- 1:00 p.m.

Calvary Blblt Churd
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor. Re'l'. Black.wood
Sunday School · 9:30a. m.
Worshij'11 0:3 0 a. m.• 7:30 r .m.
Wednesday Service - 7;30 p.m.

-·

FRIDAY's

Stlvtrsville CommoDity Churth
Pastor. Wayne R. Jew~ ll
Ash Stftd Church
Sunday Services - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Ash St., Middleport- Pastor: Glenn Rowe
·
Thwsday • 1:00 p.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
·
SW)day Service - 6:00p.m.
IUJoldna Life Churth
Wednesday Strvice. 1:00 p.m.
·500 N. 2nd Av~: .. Middl~:po rt

Abundant Grace R.F. I.

Cllflon Tllbemacle Church
Clifton. W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Friday'• Game•

Southern Illinois (28-7) vs.
Connecticut (26-6), 7:38 p.m.
Ma!Yiand (28·4) vs. Kentucky

Full GO!lpel Chun"h of the UYing
Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor. Jesse Morris

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Lcmg Bonom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 1 p.m.

Services: Saturday 2:00 p.m.
God 's Temple of Praise
31665 McQuire Rd . Pomeroy, Ohi(l
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 1:00pm
New church No Sunday service
established.

New Lime Rd .. Rutland
Pastor: Re v. Mugaret l . RObinson
SerJices: Wednesday, _7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

•
1

Bail1:y Run Road
;..
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 1 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

WEST
Semifinals
Thul'8day's Games
Oklahoma 88, Arizona 67
· Missouri 82, UCLA 73
Championship
Saturday, March 23
Oklahoma (30-4) vs. Missouri
(24-11), 4:30p.m.
Nattonallnvltatlon
Tournament
Owtrtarltnai•
Thuraday'• Game
South Carolina 82, Ball State 47

l'n·o,h' ll'rian
Syrtte:ute First United Prabyterian
PaslOI': Elder Robert Crow
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Syncu. Mission
1411 Bridgemllll St .. Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson, Pa ~tor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
EveniriJ; - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pro Basketball

Harrisonville Prtibyterl•n Chui'Q.
Worship -.9 a.m.
..~
SundBy School · 9:45a.m.
Middleport Dmbyurtan
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worihip - 10 a.m.·

1.

Dyesl'iUe CommunUy Churdlt

("\( 'Jtlh - ll&lt;t .\ \d\("Jlli 'l
•

Mone Chapel Chun:h
Sunday sc:hool • I 0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

I

'

'

Mulberry HtB. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship- 3 p.m.

· Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.
Ft!lllt Geopet Chan:h
Long Bonom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip. 10;4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

.

Mt. Hmnon UnJted Brtth~n
in Chrlat Churth
Texu Community off CR 82
PaBtor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Mt Ollfe Community Church
Pastor: Lawret~Ct Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.

FuU G01)1&lt;1 Ll1blhoua&lt;
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Ro)' Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Theaday &amp; Thuraday - 7:30p.m.

;tI rt &amp; •afetp

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

992·7028

.... vc.•

Frlday'a Gamea

1

Ft!lllt Valley Tob&lt;rnacle Chun:h

United Faith Chu~h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

SOUTH
Semifinals
Thul'8day'a Games
Indiana 74, Duke 73
Kent State 78, PillsbUJgh 73, OT
Championship
Sell!rday, March 23
Indiana (23-11) vs. Kent State
(30-5), 7 p.m.
MIDWEST
Semifinals

Kansas (31-3) vs. Illinois (26-8)

Patceo.t.l A
tly
St. RL I24, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
· Sunday School - 10 u.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sunday School I0 a.m.
Ev~na • 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

(22-9)

Oregon (25-B) vs. Texas (22· .
11), 7:55p.m .

Salem Community Churth
Lieving Road, Wes1Columbia, W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday Sehool9:30 am
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Wednesday serrice 7 pm

Mlddloporl Commuatty Cnn:h
515 Pwl St., Middl•port
Putor= Sam A.l'ldenoo

Haul Community Chun:h
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

NCAAMan's ·
Tou11111mant
Regional a
EAST
Semifinals

New Life Vktory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pasror: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m.&amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p . nt~

923 S. Third St., Middlepon
Pastru Teresa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service. 7 p.m.

·HIGHLIGHTS

Paslor: Mike Foreman
Pas1or: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- I0:00am
Wedne&amp;lay Services- 7 p.m.

lla.--1 Ou- Mlolstrt..
47439 Reibel Rd., O.Cster
Pastonl: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
A.ppe Life Ceater
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Secmld Ave. Mason
713--5017
Service time: Sunday 19:30 a.m.
Wednesday 1 pm

Flashes' win+
Duke loss=
Final Four?

Fmth F~Uowshlp Crusade for Chrilt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Servir..-e: Friday. 7 p.m.

( )thl'r ( "hu rdH''

•nauffer1•

.,.......171

Page 81

P~or:

Paur. Rev. Helben Grate
Suo:lay Scbool- 9:30 un.
Worship · II a. m.• 6 p.m.
Wa!nesday Services - 7 p. m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
PHARMACY
106 BUITERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY,OH 992·6454
Prescriptions
'Flowers for all occasions'
992·2955
Pomeroy
169 N 2nd Ave.

Huggins mulls WVU job, Page B2
Le1Jron, .SVSM movin' on, Page B2
BGSU cuts four menj sports, Page 83

F......_Golpol_
Bald Knob. oo Co. Rd. 31

c--.. O.Mrdi .t the N~~Um~e

Blessed are the pure ~rnull'c Family Restaurant
"Feeturlng Kentucky Fried
in heart; for they
Chicken"
shall see God.
W. Main St., Pomeroy
Matthew ·J •o:1 • 992·5432

Ingel's Carpet

The Daily Sentinel

Sundlly School- 9:)0 a.m.

Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Edea Untied Bretltren In Chrill
2 112 miles rnmh of Reedsville
on Sta le Route 124
Pasmr: Rev. Robert Markley
Sum,Jay School - ll a.m.
Sunday Wollihlp - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m,
Wednesday Servtces - 7:30 p:m.
Wednesday Y(luth Service • 7:30 p.m.

NBA
Thul'8day's Gam.
AUanta 118, New York 89 .
Minnesota 95, Memphis 93
San Antonio 105, Dallas 102
Utah 94, Washington 79
Detroit 95, Phoenix 82
Sacramento 118, Denver 82
Clippers 116, Golden State 96

Pro Baseball
MLB
Spring Training

.Thul'8day'l Gam.
Detroit 3, Florida 1
AUanta 4, Toronto 1
Montreal4, Tampa Bay 3
Boston 9, St. Louis 6
N.Y. Mats 12, Los Angeles 6
Baltil:nore 6, Cincinnati 5
Houston 5, Cleveland 3
Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 4
Colorado 7, Anaheim 3
San Diego 7, Milwaukee 6
Arizona 4, San Francisco 3
NY Yankees 7, Kansas City 4
Seattle 5, Oakland 2 . .

Gund Arena will
host 2003 prep
star game

~=============Se==rvi~-7

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

Inside:

Wcnhip Service I0:30 a.m.
E\·cnina SM'ice 6 p.m.

Puwr. hn Llvcndcr

Harrllonvtlle Community Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday. 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

Sacrament Serv ic1: 9-10:1!' fl.m.
Homemaking mecling, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Pine ·Gmve

Church of Chris I
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study- 9:30a.m.
Wo rship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

,

Cannei-Suuon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio

SL Jnhn Lutheran Church

Dexter Chun:h or Christ
Pas tor: Nathan Robinson
Sunday school 9:30a. m.
Norman Will, superintendent
S uu~ay worship - I0:30 a.m.

Sunday ScbooJ -9:30a.m.
Wanhip - IO:lOa..m.., 6 p.m.
Wtdnctdly Scnia:s - 7 p.m.

The •nuen' Ftllowthlp MlnlstJ}

noon

I ,ulhl'ran

Sun. W&lt;nbip- 10:10ua.., 6 p.DL
Wedfttsday Service - 7 p.m.
CarktoB flllerd w ieedg. •I CII Drda
Kin1obwy Rood
Pa5tor. Roben Vatu
Sunday School - 9:JO Lm.

llotboay

Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

R~sville

---

s,_Citordttl,..-

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
· Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Mornlo1SU1r
Pastott Dewaync Stuller

'

Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunda)l School: 9:30 a.m.
Wors hip Service: I 0:30a.m.
Bible Study, WednC!l(lay, 6:30p.m.

S.k-m Ceater
Pastor: William K. Marshall
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Worship- 9:15 a. m.
Bible Srudy: Monday 7:00pm

Pastor: Dewaync Stutier
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:4.h .m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

The Churt:h ot JfiUJ
Christ ot l.aller-O.y SllniS
St. Rr:_ I(10, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20- 1I a.m.
Relief Soclety/Pri esd'oOOd II :05· 12:00

Langnllle O.risdan Church
Pastor: Robe rt Musse r
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshij'l · 10:.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School -·9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Scr:vices • 7 p.m.

S&amp;lver Jtidee
l'ltolor. Rob&lt;n 8 SUftday Scbool · 9 ...._

10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvica: • 1 p.a

Rutland

Wesle)'an Bible Hollaes5 Chun:h
75 Pearl St. , Middleport.
P..t.~ lOr: Re\'. Doug Co K
Sunday Wun;hip - 9: 30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7: 30p.m.

Bradbury Chun:h Chrisl
Pastor: Jim Ea ton
39558 Bradbury Rood, Mirldleport
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won:hip : 10:30 a.m.

Mlnemlllo
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
W(lrship - 10 a.m.

Lead ing Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sund ay worship -7 p.m.
Wednesda )' pmye r meeting- 7 p.m.

Zioo Churth of Cbrbl
Pom~roy, Hani500ville Rd. (R t.\ 431
Pastor: Roger Watsoo
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30a.m.
, Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday S~rvk~s- 7 p.m..

H'*tb (Mlddleport)
Paslot:_R.ob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 11:00 a.m.

Word:Up - 10 a.m:

Rose of Shamn Hollnns Chun:h

Pa~ tur :

Mt. Moriah BapUsl
f ourth &amp; Main St .. Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - J 0 :4~ fl.m.

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip - II
Wednesday Service5- 7:30 p.n/!

Friday, March 22. 2002
W&lt;nhip ~

WoniUp · 10:30...,_

or (;od

Liberty AMembly of God
P.O. Bm. 467, Dudding Lane::
Mason. W.Va.
Pa~t~ Neil Tennam
Sunday Scrvkes- I 0:00
anti 1 p.m.

}

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

rtulrds Florist
·M•is• County~ Olde•t Flori"

EastMain
Pomeroy, Oh

~

W

"lett Ill lttld yOtH fhoughta with t!*JI•I ette"

740-992·2644 740-992-6298

arace sufficient
for thee: for my
strenath Is made
Perfect In weakness.
11 Cor. 12!9
Office Service &amp; Supply ,
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992·6376

106

II

CLEVELAND (AP)
Gund Arena will play host to
next year's McDonald's AllAmerica high school basketball games, the sponsoring
fast- food chain announced
Thursday.
"With its ri ch basketball
tradition and devoted basketball fans, the city of Cleveland, Gund Arena and
M cDonald's owner/operators
make for an excellent team to
host these prestigious events:'
said Mike Donahue, vice
president of McDonald's
USA .
The boys and girls games
will be played on the same
night in spring · 2003, on a
date to be announced later.
This year's 25th anniversary
boys game and inaugural girls
game will be April 4 in New
York's Madison Square Gar·den .
·

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)
- Don't talk about Kent·
State in fairy tale terms . .
One sign
in
the
stands
Thursday
night said it all: "We don't
wear slippers .. . we wear
Nikes."
The 1Oth- seeded Golden
Flashes played smothering
.defense and slowed the
tempo at every opportunity to stun No. 3 Pittsburgh
78-73 in overtime in the·
South Regional semifinals.
Kent State (30-5) never
had advanced beyond the
second round of the
NCAA tournament before ·
this year. Now it's one victory away from the Final
Four after knocking off
higher-seeded Oklahoma
State, Alabama and Pittsburgh to stretch the country's longest winning streak
to 21 games.
"This is definitely a validation of our place in his~
· tory," s~id Trevor Huflinan,
who scored 17 points. "We
want to be known on a
national scale, just like
Gonzaga and other schools
that have to earn everything they get."
Antonio Gates scored 22
points for the Golden

74-73

NCAA

Pll..se see Kent. 82

Hoosiers
surDrise
Due,
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) It shouldn 't be too tough to
get a team
pump ed up
to play th e
defending
champion m th e N C AA
tournament.
Still, Indiana coach Mike
D avis seizt'd on some motivation al material a couple of
days . before playing Duke in
the final 16. He was stru ck by
somethin g that was said during a me etin g among coaches
and administrators from th e
scho9ls.
" One of the guys from
Duke asked what time they
played on Saturday," Davis
said.
"I told my guys, 'You know,
they've got a great basketball
team - no doubt about that
- but when someone disrespects us like this, we've got to ·
come out and fight. It doesn 't
matter if we win, lose or draw
- we need to come out and
fight."'
Unshaken by a 17- point
deficit in the first half. the
fifth-seeded Hoosiers came
back to knock off Duke 7 473 Thursday night and reach a
regional final tor the first tim e
since 1993.
Indiana - whjch improved
to 6-1 against No. 1-seeded
teams in th e NCAA tourna ment next · plays t Oth seeded Kent State for a spot in
the Final Four. The .Golden
Flashes beat Pittsburgh 78-73
to reach Saturday 's South
Regional final, th eir first . .
Duke(Jt-4) lost to Indiana
(23- t 1) the way it dropp ed
two of its three regular- season
defeats - with Williams missin g at the fre e-throw line.
With the Blue D evils trail ing 74-70, Williams seemingly
came through with a miraculous play, helped by a blunder
froni Big Ten defensive player
of the year Dane Fife.
Williams, a unanimous All American selection , sank a 3pointer wh ile being fouled by

NCAA

NOT IN MY HOUSE -'- Pitt's Chevon Troutman blocks a shot by Kent's Trevor Huffman in
the first half during an NCAA South Regional in Lexington, Ky, Thursday. (AP)

Missouri and Oklahoma advance
SAN JOSE, Calif (AP) - Kareem
Rush and Clarence Gilbert demon strated what everyone
in the West R egional
already suspected: Missoun JS no ordinary
12th seed.
Gilbert scored 17 of his 23 points in
the second half, and Rush scored 20
points to help the Tigers roar to their
third upset of the tournament, beating
eighth-seeded UCLA 82-73 Thursday
night.
Arthur Johnson had 14 points and 13
rebounds for the Tigers (24- 11), who
advanced to face Oklahoma on Satur-

NCAA

'

day in an all-Big 12 regional finaL
Missouri, ranked as high as No. 2
early in the season before slumping
during conference play, hasn't been to
the final eight since t 994.
Matt Barnes scored 16 of his 23
points in the second half for UCLA
(21 - t 2), which ha.&lt; reached the region· al semifinals in five of six seasons under
coach Steve Lavin, but won there just
once.
The Bruins led much of th e gam e,
but wilted und er the second- half pressure of Missouri's remarkable outside
shooting.
UCLA was ahead 57- 54 with 10

minutes to play, but Rush and Gilber t
- wh o each hit four 3-pointers propelled a 19-6 run that put it away
before the final minutes.
OKLAHOMA 88, ARIZONA 67

Arizona wouldn't let Oklahoma play
its inside game, so Hollis Price went
outside.
Price scored 26 points, including a
season" high six 3- poincers, to lead No.
2-seeded Oklahoma past third- seeded
Arizona 88-67 in the West Regional
semifinals Thursday ni ght.
Oklahoma (30-4) hadn 't reathed a
regional final since t 988. N ow th e
Pl. .se see Advance, 82

Please see Hoosiers, 82

Reds
lose
on
late
homer
-R dm n

Redmen back on track
RIO GRANDE - Th e
Rio Grande Redmen baseball
team began its Florida spring
trip on a winning note by
edging New Jersey Tech 7-6
on Thursday afternoon.
Rio Grande (9-8) snapped a
two- game losing skid with the
win.
Offensively, senior right
fielder Cory Maynard and
sophomore shortstop.' Brent
Ewing were . the hitting stars,
collecting three hits each.
Maynard . had a RBI whil e

I

I

Baseball
Ewing ripp ed a double and
had an RBI among his' produ ction . Senior left field er ·
Josh McMillen also roped an
RBI double.
Sophomore Jason Wheeler
(2-t) picked up the win in th e
reli ef.
N ew Jersey Tech fell to 6-8
with the defeat.

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Tony Batista hit a
wind-blown, two-run homer offJose R.ijo in
the seventh inning, tallying the Baltimore Orioles to a 6-5 victory Thursday over th e
C incinnati R eds.
The Orioles scored all of th eir run s off four
hom ers, the last by Batista. His third homer of
th e spring also was th e first hit
all owed by R\jo, who retired all
18 batters he faced in his first
three appearances.
The R eds were without center fielder Ken
Griffey Jr. and short&lt;top Barry Larkin, held out
of the lineup as a precau tion. Griffey has a sore
right knee and Larkin has some discomfort

ReelS

where he had a hernia fixed last August.
Griffey, a late scratch fi-om th e lineup, said he
bumped the knee while makin g a diving catch
last week. The knee has been sore, so manager
Bob Boone decided to give him a few days
off.
Boone is being espediall y cautious with
Griffey anrl Larkin , bo th of whom go t hurt
in spring training last year and missed a lot
of playin g tim e. He said Griffey will ge t a
few days off.
Larki n worked ou t Thursday and felt
good, bu t will get at least one more day off.
Larkin hasn't played since feeling di scom fo rt a week ago.

Hamilton speechless over O~ning Day start
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - · still belonged in the maj or
Joey Hamilton, opening day leagues. On April 1, he'll 'be
starter.
fiont-aod-center for the final
Sounds straqge, doesn't it?
opening day at Cinergy Field.
When Cincinnati Reds
"I really couldn't conceive of
manager Bob Boone broke the coming out of this as the open. news . by phone, ·ing day starter;' Hamilton sa.id
Hamilton
was Thursday. "It's really gratifYing
overwhelmed.
for me, considering what I've
1
1
Only a . C.hew b een through the last three
weeks ago, ·he was a puc er years.
without a guarantee.
"There were a lot of people
He came to camp as a nonroster player; trying to prove he who didn 't give me a chance
not only of making a team, but

RedS

of gett:ing back to where I used
to be. I can't wa.i t to face some
of those teams who felt that
way.' '
No orie could blame them. It
wasn't long ago that the Reds'
opening day starter was sizing
up other lines of work, figuring
his surgi cally •repa.ired shoulder
might never be the same.
The Padres' first-round pick
in 1991 went 15-9 in 1995 and
seemed to be headed for a solid
career.Then, problems came.

Hamilton had to mjss so me
starts in 1997 because of a sore
shoulder. He got through 1998
and wa.&lt; traded to Toronto, but
the shnulder got progressively
worse in '99.
By that September, he couldn't go on . He had surgery to
repa.ir tears in his labrum and
rotator cuff.
He spent the next two seasons trying to get back in form
- he couldn 't - and getting
shuffl ed around. Toronto

released him last season after he
went 5-H with a 5.89 ERA in .
22 starts.
" It got to ·the point last year
when I got released that I was
contemplating trying to find
anoth er job;' he said. "I wam't
having any fun , I wasn't doing
my JOb. I had many conversations with my wife."
Angie Hamilton listened to
his frustrations and gave him
some advi~e: Don't qui t ba.&lt;eball just yet:

�P8ae B 2 • The O.Uy SentlfM!I

/'

Friday, March 22, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, March 22, 2002

www.mydallyNntlnel.com

·Bowling Green drops four men's sports
Prep

•

stlte of Ohio the last three

seasons.
LeBron James isn't about to
let thetll do so now.
James scored 32 poinls - many of them
on long 3-pointe~. spectacular layups and
high-flying dunks - as the Fighting Irish
(23-3) beat Poland Seminary (23-3) 76-36
Thursday in a Division II state semifinal
game.
"I don't want my team losing and I know
·they don't want to lose," James said, "and I
ain't gonna let it happen:·
Any pressure on the tw&lt;&gt;-time state champions?
. ..
"We're the defending state champto~~
James said. "They go[Q come and beat us.
St.Vincent-St. Mary will mc:et St Bernard
Roger Bacon for the champtonship Saturday morning.
The Irish broke it open in the third quarter with an 18-0 run for a 58-26 lead.Jan:es
had only two points m the surge, but 1t didn't matter
·
Dru Joyce made two 3-pointm and
Corey Jones and Chad Mraz each hit a 3
during the run Using a full-court press,
· scoreless for more than
SVSM held Poland
five minutes.
Poland committed 15 turnave~ in the
game, compared with five for SVSM.
David McGarry led Poland with 14
points.
James saved two of his best plays for late in
the game. Standing under the basket, he

back before going up for a
layup. Two possessions
I later, James took a pass
fium Travis and finished a
fast break with a reve~
dunk.
St. Bernard Roger
Bacon gave Itself a shot at
James
SVSM,astheSpartans(24.
3) blasted Columbus
Beechcroft 82-31 in the other Division II
semifinal.
,
The Spartarts scored the games first 17
pomts as the Couga~ (18-9) 1111SSed therr
first 13 shots - . Roger _Bacon blocked_ five
- . before Danueu Harns made a 3-pomter
WJth 26 secon~ left,m the fi~t quarter:
Roger Bacon s 51-pomt margm of VlCtory was the largest for a state tournament
game. St..Henry held the old record of 48
pomts WJth a 93-45 Win over Richmond
Dal7 Southeastern m a ·1990 DIVISion III
semifinal.
.
. ..
Beechcroft set a DIVISIOn II tournament
·
d Th
rd
record for fewest pomts score . e reco
had belonged to Columbus East, which lost
to Kettering Alter 88-35last year.
M onty st. Clai r' had 18 pomts
· an d elg
· ht
·
fc ld had 15 pomts and
re bounds,Josh H aus.e
Frank Phillips scored II points - all in the
first half- and had 10 rebounds five assists
and two blocks for the Sp~s. Roger
Bacon also got 12 points fium Beckham
Wyrick and I 0 fium Leonard Bush.
Roger Bacon lost 79-70 to the Fighting
·

Whiteoak and Russia played the only game
of the day decided by less than 27 points in
the first Dtvmon IV senufinal. Russ1a won
58-46 as Jay Borche~ scored 17 points and
Dane Borche~ had 16 poinls and 11
rebounds.
Jay Borche~ scored 9 points in the third
quarter, when the Raiders (24-3) outscored
the Wildcats (23-4) t9-4.With Russia .trailing 37-35, he hit a 3-pointer to give the
Raiders a 38-37 lead with 3:34 ]eft in the
quarter. Neither team scored again until Jay
Borche~ drilled a 3-pointer with about
seven seconds to play. Jay punched the air
and screamed in celebration as the Russia
bench and cheering sections came to their
feet.
In the last game of the day, Delphos St.
John's kept its chance of being the second
team to win boys and girls championships in
the same season alive by bli~g Bristolville
Bristol 80-53. McGuffey Upper Scioto ValJe.y won both tides in 1993-94.
K .h R k
red
. 17
· ts " th
e1t
ec er sco
pom 10r e
Blue Jays (20-6), who advanced to Saturday's
h
. hi by h ldi D' . · IV
c,_amplofnsth P
J 0h nKi~ lVJSJOnl
co-til
p1ayer o · eed
year
on
ngscoreess
un
·
2:57 rernam . ·m the fi ~t half an d fcorang
h Pa th (24 2) .
21
t ~ n ~h d- 1~ 0 . turn~vers. C .
ng
e WI nme pomG. ratg
Giesy led Bristol with 19.
.
Nate ~us had 15 pomts and 11 assJS~ for
St. Johns, Casey Klaus scored 12 pomG,
Ryan Holdgreve added 11 and Mike
Anthony I 0.

Ken Caminiti pleads guilty, placed on probation
HOUSTON (AP) - Former Houston Astros third baseman Ken Caminiti pleaded
guilty Thursday to cocaine possession and was sentenced to
three years probation.
"You've committed your last
offense," State District Judge
Bill Harmon told the former
National League MVP."You've
had your last drink.You've·had
your last controlled substance."

Advance
fromPap81
Sooners will play the winner of the game
between UCLA and Missouri.
Arizona (24-1 0), which lost to Duke in last
year's NCAA championship game, could not
overcome the Sooners' tough defense or Price,
whose accurate outside shooting kept Oklahoma in it early before a sustained second-half
rally.
·
Jason Gardner, probably playing his last college game, led the Wildcats with 14 points.
Luke Walton, the son of former UCLA and
NBA great Bill Walton, had nine points and
eight assists.
Aaron McGhee finished with 21 points and
eight rebounds for Oklahoma, with 19 points

Kent from PageB1
Rashes, who made six straight
free throws in the extra period
against the Panthe~ (29-6).
"Our experience really paid
off for us tonight. We never
panicked;' said Huflinan, one of
four senio~ on the Mid-American Conference team. "We're
still trying to reach that perfect
game. We don't want to stop
here. We have a long way to go."
Kent State' plays fifth-seeded
Indiana in Saturday's regional
final. The Hoosim upended
defending national champion
and top-seeded Duke 74-73.
Brandin Knight, the Big East's
co-player of the year, and Julius
Page each scored 18 for the
Panthe~. who were trying to
reach the final eight for the first
time since 1974.
"They played with poise
down the stretch and we had to
execute;• said Kent State firstyear coach Stan Heath, an assistant to Tom lzzo on Michigan
State's 2000 national champions. "We had to make big shots
and we did it."
Pitt came into the game with .
a reputation for stifling defense,
but the Golden Flashes showed
fium the opening moments that
they could put tl1e clamps on,
too.
Kent State forced 17
turnovers - 11 in the fi~t half
- and made it hard for·Knighi
and Page to get open looks on
the perimeter.
"They did an excellent job
defensively;• Pitt coach Ben
Howland sa.id." I don 't think we

ring to the plea arrangement
that allowed the former player
to avoid prisoq time if he
meets the court's stipulations.
Caminiti was arrested Oct.
14 after Harris County Sheriff's Department deputies said
they found him in a southwest
Houston-area · motel room
with unspecified drugs and
drug paraphernalia.
The deputies
reported

smelling what they believed to
be crack cocaine and arrested
two other people with
Caminiti.
The player, who lives in the
Houston area, pleaded .guilty to
possessing less than a gram of
cocaine.
Caminiti was the National
League's MVP in '1996 with
the Padres, hitting 40 homers
and driving in 130 runs.

in the final seven minutes as the Sooners
turned a close game into a blowout.
The Wildcats singled him out after he averaged 25.5 P!lints and 8.5 rebounds in the
Sooners' first two tournament games. But they
,
apparently forgot about Price.
Oklahoma jumped out to an 8-2 lead, as
Price made two 3-pointers. But the Sooners
went scoreless for more than five minutes, and
the Wildcats narrowed the gap before taking a
10-8 lead on Rick Anderson's jumper.
The Wildcats shut down McGhee, and
Oklahoma had to rely on its perimeter shooting. Price carried the Sooners, with 22 of their
33 points before halftime. .
The Wildcats took a 28-23 lead on freshman
Will Bynum's acrobatic layup with 5:31 to go,
and the Wildcats stretched their lead to as
many as seven points on the way to a 37-33
halftime edge.

Hoosiers

Caminiti, 38, quickly left the
courtroom after Harmon told
him he also must receive counseling three times a week, speak
to students about drugs, continue attending Alcoholics
Anonymous meetings and submit to periodic urinalysis. The
judge also ordered Caminiti to
pay a $2,000 fine.
"You're getting a break,"
Harmon told Caminiti, refer-

ever really .bounced back after
the turnovers we had in the fi~t
half. You've got to give Kent
State a lot of credit:'
· Knight tied the game at 66
with 52 seconds remaining in
regulation. Following a Kent
State turnover, Page's long 3
fiom the corner bounded off
the rim as the buzzer sounded,
sending the game to overtime.
Gates hit a: jumper inside, to
open the extra period, and
Ontario Lott matched it with a
basket at the 4-minute mark.
Pitt went up 71-70 on Jaron
Brown's free throw with 1: It to
play. From that point, Huflinan
made a high-banking layup off
the glass, and Gates and Andrew
Mitchell each added two free
throws to push the margin to
76-71 with 21 seconds to play.
' Mitchell, only 3-of-16 from
the field for 12 points, added
two more free throws in the
closing seconds to seal the
victory.
But don't call Kent State a
Cinderella team - one sign
in the stands said it all: "We
don't wear slippers ... we wear
Nikes."
Kent State led 29-23 at
halftime, but Pitt soon closed
the gap and eventually went
up
45-43 on Donatas
Zavackas' 3-pointer midway
through the second half.
From that point, each team
would surge ahead by two or
three points, only to see the
other recov~r and regain the
lead.
,
Gates' jumper put Kent
State up 59-53 with 5 112
minutes to play, but Knight's
3-pointer keyed a 7- 0 run to
put the Panthers up 60-59

with 3:35 remaining.
Down 66-62 at the 2minute mark, Pittsburgh
forced OT by shutting out

from PageBl
Fife, drawing Duke within
one point.
Given a chance to tie the
game with 4.2 seconds left,
Williams missed the free
throw. He also had problems
at the line in losses to Florida State and Virginia and
~ade just 67 percent of his
attempts this season.
"The hardest thing is, this
is it for me;' said Williai11S, a
junior who is heading to the
NBA. ''I've always dreamed
of being in that situation, and

February.
CINCINNATI (AP) Huggins
Cincinnati basketball coach
not
Bob Huggins has received an did
offer
to return
b~come, West phone calls
V1rgm1a s
Thu~day.
coach and is considering
Two years
whether to accept it or stay ago, Hugwhere he is, the University of gins turned
Cincinnati and Huggins' down
an
lawyer said Thursday.
offer of a
"It's really a pe~onal deci- guaranteed
sian for Bob to make;' said $8 million contract to
Bret Adams, his lawyer in become head coach of the
Columbus. He declined to NBA's Los Angeles Clippe~.
discuss details of the offer.
Adams said.
Huggins, 48, has taken the
"I think that's a barometer
Cincinnati Bearcats to post- of his loyalty to Cincinnati;'
season tournaments each of he said . •
his 13 seasons as Cincinnati's
Adams said he spoke on
head coach. His overall Thursday with Huggins.
coaching record is 500-172, Adams declined to say
including
332-100
at which way he thinks HugCincinnati.
gins is leaning and said there
University of Cincinnati is no timetable for when
spokesman Torn Hathaway Huggins will make a decisaid he had no details of the sian.
offer. Huggins told CincinHuggins was born in
nati athletics director Bob . Morgantown, W.Va., played
Coin of the offer Tuesday for West Virginia and began
night and was given time to his coaching career there as
consider it with no deadline a graduate assistant in 1977.
for getting back to Coin, His tenure at Cincinnati
Hathaway said.
includes two NIT ·appearGain had no response ances and 11 consecutive
Thursday. He has said that he . NC/I.A tournament appearwants Huggins to stay in ances, the latest ending on
Cincinnati.
·
' Sunday with a 105-101
West Virginia athletics double-overtime loss to
director Ed Pastilong would UCLA.
not confirm or deny whether
His Bearcats advanced to
he offered Huggins the the Final Four in 1992, the
coaching job, said Shelly Poe, field of eight in 1993 and
a spokeswoman for thi!' 1996, and the field of 16
Mountaineers'
athletics last year.
department.
He has emotional ties to
1
Pastilong will not dJScuss both Cincinnati and West
the job while negotiations Virginia now, Adams said.
with candidates continue,
"I think it's probably the
Poe said. Gale Cadett created toughest professional decithe West Virginia vacancy by sion of his career," Adams
announcing his retirement in said .

NCAA

the ball just didn't bounce

ffiy .way."
He was also off from the
fiel d ar;ainst Indiana, going
6-lor-!9.
. Duke had other problems:
It .was outrebounded 47-32,
shot 33 percent in the sec~
ond half and went 10-for-19
on free throws.
"A lot of times we had
bodies on them, but the ball
would bounce a litde bit to
the left or a little bit to the
right," Mike Dunleavy said.
"There would be a scramble
or it would be tipped up, and
they always seemed to end
up with it."
Jared Jeffries, who almost

went to Duke, but ch~se
Indiana because of Davis, had
24 points and 15. rebounds.
Jarrad Odie scored 15 points
in 18 minutes.
It was the most significant
victory of Davis' tenure,
which began when Bob
Knight was fired in 2000.
Davis had to deal with the
pressure of succeeding a
coach who won three .
national titles in a state that
treats basketball as rel_igion. ·
Duke, with four returning
starters, was trying to be the ·
first school with consecutive
NCAA titles since it won
championships in 1991-92.

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letic · scholarship money in a percentage
similar to the percentage of men and
women on campus. About 56 percent of
the students at Bowling Green are
women.
Athletes on the teams being cut will
keep their scholarships through the next
school year.
"It doesn't sit well," said men's tennis ·
coach Jay Harris. "Everyone in the athletic department knew some cuts had to be

made."

Krebs said the sports that were cut have
been dwindling in participation and
other schools also have dropped those
sports.
"Just because some of the other programs in our conference have cut tennis,
that's wby we get cut," Harris said. "It's
frustrating."
Complying with gender equity laws
has been a challenge for Mid-American
Conference schools. Miami University
dropped three teams in 1999, resulting in
a suit against the school by male athletes.
Bowling Green already had dropped its
wrestling and men's lacrosse teams.

PGA

17th tee. "I had ·about four
hours to think about it beforehand. I watched the carnage
on TV I got out there and said,
'This does' not look too hard.~"
Like Hoch, Phil ' Mickelson
and Chris DiMarco played
after a windy rainstorm swept
through the TPC at Sawgrass.
Play was delayed for 2 1/2
hours and softened the course
for the afternoon. They also
were at 5 under, playing their
second nine when darkness
halted the first round with half
the 148 players still on the
course.
Tiger Woods played in the
afternoon too, but didn't take
as much advantage of the forgiving conditi,ans. Seeking to

· n•be
li

Russell Branyan hit his fourth

.

BAD NEWS - Bowling Green men's tennis coach Jay Harris talks on the phone
Thursday as the headline on the front page
of the BG News reads "Eliminated. • (AP)

cessful
and
turmoil-free
round. The Scot threatened
not to play again in America
after being heckled at the
Match Play Championship last
month, but changed his mi.nd:
Mickelson, who has never
won a major, has never done
well at this tournament either.
He's missed the cut four times
and finished in the top 10 only
once in nine years.
"! feel like it's a golf course
suited to my game, but I just
have not performed well," he
said. "This is a tournament
that means a lot to me, especially given the past I've had

here."

with t(mdinitis .in his right knee. He's batting .349 this spring. .. . A preliminary
MRI exam on Jaret Wright's shoulder
didn't reveal any new damage, Shapiro
said. Wright, who has had two surgeries
in the past 18 months, left camp earlier
this week after experiencing tightness.

Indians acquire C
Eddie Perez
KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) - Catcher
Eddie Perez was traded Thursday fium
the Adanta Braves to the Cleveland lndians for a player to be named.
Perez, 33, was the Braves' backup
catcher to Javy Lopez fium 1996-99 but
shoulder injuries kept him sidelined for
most of the last two seasons.
The right-handed hitting Perez hit
.188 with three RB!s in 14 spring games.
In his six seasons with the Braves, Perez
hit .258 with 24 homers and 194 RBis
in 325 games.
The Braves acquired catcher Henry
Blanco from the Milwaukee Brewm on
Wednesday cateher Paul Bako and pitcher Jose Cabrera.
. The Indians were looking for a second
cateher because Eddie Taubensee will be
sidelined for at least two months because
of back problems.

hom~e~r...:was=~s:c:ra:tc:h:e:d..:fro:m::th=e~sta:rt:in:g:.::li:ne:u:p:..:::::;::::~:;::::::;::::====~

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become the first back-to-back
winner of the richest tournament on tour, Woods stood at
I under with four holes left.
. "It. was just a day where yo,u
want to keep hanging in
there," Woods said. "The conditions weren't exactly easy,
but they became easier toward
..
.
t he en d.
Using yet another version of
his funky "claw" putting style
- this time with a putter that
goes up to his belly button Mark Calcavecchia was one of
seven players who finished
their opening round at 3under-par 69, the best 18-hole
score of the day.
Colin Montgomerie was a
s~r?ke behind, e11joying a sue-

for Cleveland.
Colon gave up three runs and seven
hits in 6 1-3 innings - his longest outing this spring. He struck out four and
didn't allow a walk.
Bagwell said he has had to make some
adjustments with his swing following the
surgery, but it looked as sweet as ever on
his homers.
·His second shot, to left off Mathews,
was vintage Bagwell. He stayed down on
the ball, and sent it high over the wall.
And although the wind threatened to
blow it back in the ballpark, Bagwell
knew it was gone from the moment he
made contact.
"It's a litde different for me because
may hand comes off the bat," he said.
"But I'm definitely starting to feel more
comfortable with everything."
Indians shortstop John McDonald, who
was sidelines for nearly three ·weeks after
undergoing an emergency appendectomy
earlier this spring, had two hits and made
three sensational plays in the field.
McDonald twice backhanded hard
shots in the hole atid threw out runners.
He also made· a diving stop up the middie and shoveled the ball with his glove to
second for a force.
McDonald, who should make the club
as a utility infielder, wasn't expected to be
back for 6-to-8 weeks.
NOTES: Indians OF Milton Bradley

LENNOX

The Daily Sentinel

David White Services welcomes all customers
of the two Lennox dealers that have gone out
of business. We can handle all manulacturer
warranty claima. 25 Years of continuous award
winning service. We are the largest dealer
servirtg Gallla County. 1
CllilCaiim Lbinse26152- West~iaCoovm\'M:®lll

Brought to you by:

DOWNING
CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE ..
t

McOure's
Family
.Restaurant

aouthwe1t comer of· 1

CASE NO. 02..CV-oo8

Bagwell's homers sack Cleveland
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - · Jeff
Bagwell's shoulder is still hurting. His
swing looks more than healthy, though.
' Bagwell, who had surgery on his right
· shoulder this winter, homered twice
Thursday to lead the Houston Astros to a
5-3 win over the Cleveland Indians.
Bagwell hit a solo shot to right field in
the sixth inning off Bartolo Colon and
'chen pulled a two-run homer to left in
the eighth offJeff D'Amico (0-2).
"It's getting there," Bagwell said as reached into his
locker left-handed while
. .
haiancing the . mountain of ice wrapped
on his right shoulder. "There's not much
J can do but push through it."
: That's exacdy what he did last year,
!&gt;laying in 161 games for the Astros
!=lespite the pain in his shoulder. This
~pring, he had been playing mostly as the
·1=lub's designated hitter before returning
to first base last week.
: ''I'm back in ~he field, so that's good,"
said Bagwell, who had the labrum in his
shoulder reattached during offseason
surgery. "This is just something that I'm
going to have to deal with."
: Tripp Cromer also homered for the
Astros. Reliever T.J. Mathews his first win
of the spring and Pete Muriro worked
one inning for the save.
Houston starter Dave Mlicki allowed
two runs and five hits in six innings.

1ummon1 cannot be

CUYAHOGA
IIITHECOURTOF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

:Hoch shares lead with Mickelson, DiMarco
PONTE VEDRA BEACH,
:Fla. (AP) - For four hours,
:scott Hoch sat on the couch
·
·
and watched shot
after shot land in
,
the
murky
:lagoon surrounding the famed
·17th hole.
: Then, his turn came, and
:Hoch found the hole to be
.easier than it looked on TV.
. He hit his tee shot within 4
feet and mad~ birdie, helping
him finish at 5 under Thursday
and putting him among the
)eaders after 12 holes of the
rain-shortened first round at
lfhe Players Championship.
: "I didn't think about it too
~uch," Hoch said ofhis mindset when he walked to the

Samentha
S.
Jooeph, being flrat
duly eworn, dapooeo
and says thet aha Ia
the
plolntlff'o
Attorney In the above
entitled octlon lor
Foreclooure, Money'
Relief 1o Judgment,
that oervlce ol

1 p11rt of Lot No. 100
In luger Run In
Lincoln
Hill
Annuollon
to
P-..y,
1nd
deoc..- 11 followo:
Beginning II 1 lllke
In the 1111 olde of
PIICOck Stroot,
which otoke 1111
oouth 5 degr111 U'
w..l 111 ..4 lilt from
the narthwoot carnor
of Lot No. 501, which
woe formerly owned
by
V olenUne
Ebereboch Eliott;
lhence
along
PIICOCk Street oouth
5 degreeo end 44'
wool 17.1 flit; thence
oouth 74 degreeo end
10' 1111 2113.3 fill to
lhe norlhweat corner
of Lot No. 513;
lhance north 8
degreeo 10' eaat 110
lee! olong the waet
llna o~ Lot No, 512 to
1 large locuat poet;
I hence eouth 70
dogroaa, waet 288.8
faet to tho place of
beginning,
contelnlng 62/100
acre.
EXCEPT
the
following from the
above daecrlbed
premlaaa eold to
Reymond Eloelotaln
by dead dated
February 24, 1836
beginning at the

COUNTY 0,

·

o"·~

1·80~247·6180

THE STATE OF OHIO

..

Kent State the rest of regulation, while Page hit a layup
and Knight scored inside to
tie the game at 66.

Warm winter-Hot summer??! Don't give your hard earned
dollars to the utilitie.s. A new Lennox HP26 Heat Pump can cut
your LP, Oil, Electric furnace or older Heat Pump heating
monthly bills .literally in halfl 50% off your cooling bills
tooi!Reallyl (Stop in the olfice if you want to see the fljjures and
talk to real lila references.)

BOWLING GREEN (AP)- Bowling
.G reen State University will eliminate
four men's sports so it can comply with a
:federal law designed to equalize the
:money colleges spend on men's and
women's teams, the school said Thunday.
The university will drop mens tennis,
swimming, and indoor and outdoor track
and field beginning in the fall. The move
~ill cut 16 scholarships and will save
· $360,000 annually, said athletic director
:Paul Krebs.
: "This has been an extremely difficult
'a nd head-wrenching decision," said
Krebs, who added thanhe university had
been talking about eliminating sports (or
at least three years.
Krebs said the school could not remain
competitive and . maintain 22 varsity
sports.
: University President Sidney Ribeau
;said the athletic departtnent has a deficit
of about $3 .6 million.
The decision leaves the school with
eight men's sports and 11 women's sports.
A federal regulation cornmonly known
·as Title IX requires schools to offer ath-

Rocky
Hupp ·

Insurance

CROW'S

FAMILY
,. .

Cm8ANK N.A.
AS TRUSTEE
P.. lntlff
-veAGNES GAIL
OHLINGER
au AGNES
OHLINGER'S
UNKNOWN
HEIRS, CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS.
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS et ol.
Oelendonto

mode upon the
Defendants Agnes
Gall Ohlinger aka
Agnes Ohlinger's
Unknown
Helra,
Creditors, Devisees,
l.ept-.
Admlnlalratoro,
Executors
ond
Alalgna; that plolntlff
hal
exercised
re81onable diligence
to 11cartaln the
reoldence of the oald
delencllnta, Including
1
aeorch of the
Probete recorda, and
that tho rooldance of
aold defandonta are,
other then herein oat
forth, unknown, and
c en not
with
reooonabla diligence
btl aacertalned; and
that this •••• Ia one
olthoao mentioned In
Section 270'3.14
and/or 3105.06 of the
Revlucl Code of Ohio
and pureuont to Ohlo
Rule
of
Civil
Procedure 4.4(A).
SHAPIRO lo FELTY,
L.L.. P.
Samantha S. Jooeph
(0070824)
Attorney for Plolnllff
BOO Wast 51. Clair
Avenue, Second
Floor
Clavolond, OH U113
(218) 821-1530
(218) 121-7848-flx
SHAPFELTOLOGS.C
OM
SWORN
TO
BEFORE ME, end
oubocrlbed In my
preunco thlo12th
cloy ol
February, 2002.
Marl Landino
Nollry Public, State
of Ohio
My Commloolon
axplreo 1G-28-04
CITIBANK N.A. AS
TRUSTEE
-vaAGNES GAIL
OHLINGER 1111
AGNES OHLINGER'S
UNKNOWN HEIRS,
CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS eul.
LEGAL NOTICE
Agnu
Goll
Ohlinger ako Agnee
Ohlinger'• Unknown
Holre, Credltoro,
DIVIIIII, Lageteel, .
Admlnlalretoro,
Eucutore
end
Alllgne, whoae leal
plecil of reeldence ••
Will II WhOII
pre11nt piece ol
reefd ,e nce
ere
unknown, will toke
notice that on
January 18, 2002,
CITIBANK N.A. AI
TRUSTEE filed Ill
Complelnt In Caee
No. 02-cv-ooe In tho
Court of Common
Ple11 ol Melga
County, Lorry !.
8p11ncer,
Molge
County Clerk of
Courta, P.O. Sox 111,
100 Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 457et,
lllklng foreclooure
end elleglng thet lhe
Dell ndo nto, Agnoa
Gall Ohlinger eke
Agne• Ohlinger'•
Unknown Helro,
Credltora, Devloeeo,
LegiiMI,
Admlnlelrlloro,
Executor•
end
Aeelgna heva or
claim to heve an
lntoreet In the reel
. . tate d11crlbed
below:
Sltueted In the
Vlll~ge of Pomoroy,
Ohio, County of
Melgl and IIIII of
OhiO:
Parcel One: Being

Public Notlee
Still of OhiO
0epar1m1n1 of
lneurence

County Compllonce
The uncllrelgned,
SUPERINTENDENT
. OF INSURANCE OF
THE STATE OF OHIO,
hereby certlllea thlt
CENTRAL BENEFITS
MUTUAL INSURANCE
COMPANY
of WASHINGTON
Stele of Dlatrlct of
Columbia
hea complied wHh
lhe lewo of lhlo 51111
oppllcabloto llond 11
authorized during the
current yur to
lrlnllcl In thll IIIII
Ito approprloll
buslneuof
Insurance.
Thll CtrtlfiCIII
mual be publlohod In
11

new1p1p1r

of

general clrculetlon In
the county of Mllgo.
Ita
Financial
condition Ia ahown
by
lla
onnual
llatement to have
been 11 followa on
December 31, 2000.
Aauta
$71,252,79e.OO
Llabllltleo
$22,340,824.00
NeiAsoeta
Capitol
Surpluo
$48,911,872.00
Income
$51,938,479.00
Expendllureo
$48,917,384.00 .
Statutory OeposH
EICISIAIIIII
· UNDER
THE
AUTHORITY of the
p11roon named below,
this document Is
valid
without
signature or eaal.

lot formerly owned
by Rena Elaelateln
the 11mo belng the
. northwest corner of
Lot No. 513; thenco
north 78 degrees and
30' west 50 feet;
th.ence north 20
degreeo end 30' weal
140.5 feet to the
north line of what
wao formerly Reno
Eloalataln'a
lot;
thence north 70
degr111 and 30' 1111
123 feet to lhe
northaoat corner of
what ·wee formerly
Reno Elaelateln'o lot; J. Lee Covington, II,
tho nee aouth 6 Director
degr111 and 30' west Superintendent of
180 feat to the placo Insurance of Ohio
of
begInnIng,
containing 20/100 (3) 22
acre more or INs.
Alao 1 former
Public Notice
granleo Ia to have
free ond undisputed · IN THE COMMON
uoe along tho north
PLEAS COURT,
olde of whol waa
PROBATE DIVISION
formerly
Reno
MEIGS COUNTY,
Eloelataln'o lot of a
OHIO
right-of-way as now
located to Peacock
IN THE MATTER OF
Street.
SETTLEMENT
Roferance DeadOF ACCOUNTS,
Volume 284, page
PROBATE COURT
561, Meigs County
MEIGS COUNTY,
Dnd Records.
OHIO
Auditors Parcel
No. 16-01286
Accounts
and
Parcel Two: Being vouchers of the
a p11rt of Lot No. 500 following named
In Sugar Run In the fiduciary has been
LIn coIn
H !II
flied In the Probate
Annexation
to
Court, Meigs County,
Pomeroy,
and
Ohio for approval and
beginning II the settlement.
Southeast corner of
ESTATE NO. 16806
a lot now owned .. Tho Forty-first
Reno Elaolotaln the Account of the
same being the Huntington Notional
Northwest corner of Bank, Truatoo of tho
Lot No. 513; thence Trust Created Under
South 78 - 30' wool tha Will of Thomas A.
50 foal thence North May, Deceaaed.
20..30' Weal 140.5.
Unless exceptions
fnt, to the North llno are filed thereto, said
of Reno Eloeloteln'o account will be set
lot; thence North 70- for healing before
30' Eaol 123 feot to sold Court on the
the Northeaot corner 22nd doy of April,
of Rena Elaalotaln'a 2002, at which tune
lot; thonce, South B- oold account will be
30' Waof180 flat to conaldered
and
the
place
of continued from day
beginning containing to day until finally
20/1 oo acre, more or dlopooed of.
1111.
Any
peroon
Audllor'o . Parcel
lntoruted may file
No. 18..01858
wriHen exception to
The Defondonta oold account or to
named above ere mottero pertaining to
required to anawer the exocullon ,of the
on or before the 241h truot, not 1111 than
day of May, 2002.
five deya prior to the
CITIBANK N.A. AS dill 111 lor hlarlng.
TRUSTEE
IIY:
Robert E. Buck
SHAPIRO lo FELTY, Judge
L.L.P.
Common
Pleu
Samantha 8. Jooeph, Court,
Probote
Attorney et-Law
Dlvlelon,
Melga
AUorney far Plolntlff• .County, Ohio
PetHioner
800 Wool St. Clelr (3) 22,2002
Avenue, 2nd Floor
44113

MIZWAY TAVERN
Fri. Karaoke 9:00-1 :00
Sat. Band -Blue Jeans
9:00-1:00
Cover $3.00 Single $5.00 Couple

�Friday, March 22, 2002

"-t'....Es:em.F..UIIf
. . . .1t•

."-r_AN'nQI.u_
. ___.,

tEribu.ne - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

.

~tlque • d.. _ wllh beYtted mli'ror, great
ahapel BooghUor$300, sell
for $250, (740)742·1011

l!uY or

1995 5-10 ~. 5 opeod.
112,000 mllee. Moetty lnlerstate. SarvlctKI regularly.
EK1ra clean. Runa like new.
93 343
Maaoay
_ _F_•_ill"_aon_38_2. 5-5 $4,800(304) 7-2
hp, 7t7 hr., like now. 95 GMC&amp;&gt;noma, Ext. Cab,
$15,800.(740)985-3843
2.2, 5 opeod, Bod eov&amp;r,
Rafsed
hood,
Racing
Maoaay F"''IUUI" 382 , 55 Stripoa, co Player, New
~5 ~( ~r)9as-~new, tirea and clutch, 82,000
• •
miles on engine. Real Sltaop
Time for Frost Seeding Pas· Truck, $5500. (740)669·
0302
lure and Hay Flakls.
• .,;;;-...,.,.......,.-....
ATV Broadcast Seeders, t2
&amp;
Fila most
4-WDs

Snapper lawn till"'.
rear tine, 1 attachment, pakf
over $1500, will tell lor
.$595.00 firm 30«75-4237
8llp

loll. Rlvenne Anti-

quat, 1124 Eaat Main on
SA 124 1!. Pomotroy, 740-

982·2528.

Ruu Moore,
~&lt;!w:::n::...::.·:-:---,..,---Sue•1 ~on the T

.

7

~~= :'~~ ~

r'

i

more. (740)992-o298

~~
~ "~

•

'

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Beautiful prom dresses, exdOIIIent condition, In style
ht at Britta--'a
''7 In Gat·
s, ctyed to match san1, selling 112 price, $50
$200 (740)59t •=•
•
-~
8eclalde commode, $25, 8KdOIIent condition; Breathing
·oltiiChne with attachments,
$tO; Ironing board comJ!"le, $5.00. 1740)446-4847

.. ;'

~

-z_~

'

•

l\egister
~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
675-5;:2;:..34;...___ _ _ _ _ _....,
446-3008
992·2157

O{f!ee llorv-~
Display Ads
Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publ ication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Tflursd!IV 'Dr Sundays Pa

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

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!$

~II

Up To
Over

15

15

Words,

Words

20¢

3

~

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

•

• No Commercial Ads
·
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Days

Per Word

Ads Must Be Prepaid

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Ati

WRITE
AQ.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .••

HOW

IQ_

\\ \ (ll '\( I \II \ I "

i.

I'ER.&lt;IlN.w;

rI
r
•

-

4

Moon Light Escorts. Full
Seovlce Mala and Female
Escorts. Prompt Professlo·nat Discreet &amp; ConfidentiaL
6pm to 6am (740)388·
·
t 799
·
Why walt? Start meeting
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
free 1-800·786-2823 ext
t621
·
I

~

·
Posted No Trespassing on
Richard Fehrmann Properties 4249 Sl. At. 7N, 4309
St. At. 7 N, 1004 Honeysuckle Drive or Shadyside
Campground 4250 St. At.
7N

r

GIVE4.WAY

6 month old black lab (mix)
1740)446
house trained
•
1619 After 4:00 or leave
message

r

J..oor

AND
FOUND

I

.

YARD SALE-

,.,.__ ~
PoMEROYnTU~JU~..~:.

11
•

I

116

u~ -~

oo;.,,

1110

w.ooW

n
- -W.••~
UJ!LI"'
J'U~•r.u

0 _,

I

~·

$$S$$$S$$
J)o you
want to
earn a
$500 signon bonus?

Black and white puppy
lound In the Pomeroy, Ohio
Courthouse area.
448·324B

1110 WORKERS NEEOED
Aasamble crafts, wood
ItemS. Material provided.
To $480+ wk.
Information
pkg. 24 Hr. •
Free
.LOST 2·15-02 at Hunting·
1·601 -428·4750
ton Museum. long Navy
Wool
Women&amp;
coat. Access to a computer?
.
w/Leather
gloves.
call Eam monthly $45().1 500 pt.
(304)743-5520
$2000-4500 ful~flme
www.OurAnswer:com
LOST· 3 year old mate
1-800·585.0780
Golden Retriever, friendly.
Galllol Lawrenoa line. R•
ATTN: Pomeroy
ward. Call (740)686·8488 Postal poliUons. Clerk&amp;lcar·
leave message.
rleralsot1en1. No exp. re·
quired. Benefits. For exam,
salary and testing InformsUon call (630)393-3032 tlC1.
715t, 6am·8pm 7 doye
AVONI All Areasl To B~r
Rick Pearaon Auction Com· Sell. Shirley Spears,
•
pany, full time auctionMr 875·1429.
'
complete auction eervlce
Responsible
Llcanoed 188,0hio &amp; Wnt BabyaitterVirginia, 304·773-5765 Or Teenager Or Adult to 'Witch
304·773·5447.
2 school· age boys In my
home 2 hours after school
and
summer
month a.
11rlyor Anguo Fermo
me•
(740)387·7152,
laava
Sl..,e 1923
Angus l'foductlon 8alo uge II no answer.
Morch 23 2002 1•00pm
Union 'stoc~
Block·brick la)'OIO only $100
Hllllboro Ohio '
sign on bonuol $50. rofe"al
'
bonua. Apply at lob lite Oak
OFFERINGS
Hill High School sog3 St.Rt
8- Coming 2 Bulls: 20- Long 93 N Oak Hill, OH.
Yearling Bulla; 1O· Open Computoroltnternet users
Puraboed Hailers· to. Open w ·-"
s15o0 o/PT
Croiilbrild Hen.;.; to.. Bred $ ~mo/FT.
m
'
HeHera; 10· Bled Cowl
Frao Booklet, 688·22&amp;-6288
24hr. Rocordlng or visit
Ami!.J~~Inolg b~\'! •:::,.~ www.woalthlsyours.com
.,.. ..,
cattle quallly lor Toflacco Domino's Pizza of Point
MonloL
PloasanUEioanor/Winlleld
now hlrlng Full•Time &amp; Part·
lleltlngll Hoed
Time sale drivers. Compafl·
Sire Groupo Aopreaontlld live Pay &amp; Flexible Schad·
Summltcrnt EXT 086G ule. Apply In person 420 VI'ttenry" • SAF Adam 5522· and Street. Pt. Pl.
8146 • Twin Valley Precl·
lion MlllcouiH 6807-423 •
TC Stockman 385 EXT DRIVERS WANTED-Now
Woodhlll Suprema • Cham- taking applications for Touck
pion HIIITraveter B-52 • Fa· Driving position. 2 years ••·
moua 7001 • Papa Equator parlance, Haz·Mat .and
BT UHravox
Tank andorlement requooed.
Call (304)653-4213 for an
All bulls wiU sail , with a application and questions.
Ralph M Bums &amp; Son Inc
Breading Scundn... EKam
.
'
.
Office
Manager/MalnteAuotl_, R~n Krelo """"" Woo1&lt;er
For catllogs and other
II Interested .write J·2·V-35
Water Association, Inc.
lntor·po Box 485 Pt. Pleasant
matlon contact:
WV 25550 at once. Include
William C. Strayer
your mailing address and
10270 Zion Churoh Road tolephone number. An appll·
Elida, Ohio 45801
calion form will be mallod to
Phone: (419)339-4845
you by retum mall .
E-maH: strayerOwooll.eono Board Of Dlrecto,.

5

:::.:..:::.::::::=:.:..__

Pan·time Secretary needed,
approximately 20/hrs per
week, with availabilitY to
cover whOle days aa neod·
E·mell: bengllahOwcoll.com Old. DuUea Include anewer·
lng phones. copying, and
light typing. High School Dl·
ploma required. send ...
sumo to CLA 554 c1o 625
Ttolrd Avenue, Gallipolis OH
45831

p~~·1r,'91 =17

\

We are paying
at

$500 sign-on
bonus to

individuals who
are Interested
in working for
a professional
telemarketing
company.

.
,

Call
1-877463-6247
ext. 1841

Inside Selel Power Equipmen!. Must be High School
graduate. Some ulaa e•porlence preferred, · illlt not
nacooaary. Apfo': In peraon
at Jlvkla&lt;t ' e Uower EquR11P.
ment, 30 5
pper
var
Road, GalllpoMs.
Put your PC 10 woo1&lt;, Stay
home
Make ·
Money.
1. 8 oo• 5 1• 16 43
jobthetpa
m
y.oo
R-pllonlol
Full·tlma Receptionist poollion available in Rio Goande
omce. High School Graduate required. One year ex·
parlance preferred. Must
.hove ability to handle munl·
line telephone system, and
be able 10 communicate el·

o

foctlvely with elderly popula·
lion and general public.
Ability to operate a computer and other office equipment helpful. $7 ·89/hr. plus
vacation, sick, and personal
leave; health, denial and vialon l!;'aurance available.
Deadline for application Ia
Aprll1, 2002.
Submit resume and
relerences to:
Human Resource•
Area Agency on Aging
Olatrict 7, 1..,.
F32 URG. P.O. Bo• 500
Rio Grande, Ohio 45874
Equal Opportunity Employer
·
Respiratory Thereplal Full
Time Po11tlon. Ohio U·
censed ART/ CRT. Mon·
day·
Friday.
9:00am·
5:00pm. Competitive Wage,
Retirement Plan, Health Insura..,e. Contact: Bow·
man's Homecare, 70 Pine
St. Gallipolis, OH 45631.
(740)4-46·7283

.,

6

11"

Cook
oualltlcatlona: high school
"dlplom~ GED required. Famlllar with Head Start phitosopfly. Currant or past
Head Start parent preferred.
Must have TB taot and an
'initial physical before start~ 10 work. Must pasa the
linvestlgatlon.
Nature of wo~.· wo~ up to
40 hours a "week,.durlng
~

3 black pups approximately
6-8 weeks old found in the
WhiteJOuly Rd. area.
IWANTEDI
Serious People To Work
740-446·2359
From Home, Call H~88·
Black and orange puppy 616.0094
found On Ann Dr. red collar, www.SimpleCashBiz.com
docked toll. 740·446-2657
$E-m what you are worth
Black and White Husky
rrom home.
bluelbrown eyes
Internet/mall order.
mate, found in town near $1 500·$5000 per 011001th.
O'Dell Lumber.
Free Booklet
448-9525
1-800·241·7754

Brent L EnQIIIh
9059 Zion Church Road
E
1o

. IIELPWANTED

•
M h 21 22 23 9-4 movo
'ngarcout ~ siate',
jet
kl
.
s es, camper, microwave,
ale, bedding, weed!aters,
craft supplies Chnstmas
·
trees, and decorations,
sweepers, tools, Beryl Wllson, Aeggscrest above
E t
(740)985 3565
as ern.
•
school yaar at the Wood·
rau'l/shine.
lartd Head Start Site. Responslble for operation of
B
the Head Start Kitchen. PreTO UY
pares nutritious meal and
snacks according to the
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. menu. Keeps accurate meal
Sliver. Gold Coins, Proof· counts and other neceSsa'Y
sets,
Diamonds, Gold records for USDA and proRings,
u .s . Currency,- gram. Meets time frame for
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- meals and snacks. Demonond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- strates the use of proper
446-2842.
sanllation techniques for
proper food handling and
Wanted: Old Pinball Ma· storage.
chines, Juke Boxes and
Other Coin Operated Equip- Applications/ resumes must
ment H ntingt0 n (304)429 be sent to Carol Young
·
·
· u
;
'
3333
c,06DI4HGaeadii.Stellrt, OPH.04. 56Bo3•1
1
8
I \11'1 1)\\11 \I
b 4 bop ~ ' h 28 2002
' I tn H I "'
Y :
m, arc
'
·

r · .r
~

YARD SA!£

• Start Your Ads Wltn A Keyword • Include Complete
cescrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrewlatlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
·
• Ads Should Run ? Days

Tribune
It 0111ov....,
.... , Flaet...,wtllt.;
t; _
elt:l.,.right
fotno
POUCtea,
- -_

lloM•be
·~
.,.lfwart ooolftcle(tUII. •CI.If'Nfttrtlll un:l1ppllet. •All
MfvetiiMI14iiti•IIUIIfect to the FedlrW '*ttoul'nl Aotof 1111. •Thll r~~~
ecoep~~ onry
EOE .tancMrde. w. wtll not. ~nctiY 11001pt -r NN tieing In wiO&amp;Itlon ol lhe "-·

,...lltlte

11"

liELPWANim

SEcu~~lng

MISCFl!4MXJI5

r~

I

GUARDS
Disney Beach Vacation. 6
Immediate
11 oval~ nlgloto great hotel NCrlfice
abl a 1or 1u1•tl me Sec u..•ty lor St=.oo
c.-• 814·52"·879•
&gt;r
~
Guaod. Candklatao must be
willing 1o work weekans and Doing apring cleaning? Doall shifts. Responslbllftktl In- nate reueabte Items to
elude general plant security, ReUse lndultriesl N. Cotruck, and visitors gate lumbue Rd., Athena. High·
etearance, and roving guard way 50, Albany. 740·698·
8200
dulles. Individuals should
·
pomss ...........t Interpersonal Lose up to 40 lbs. In 2
&amp;
.-ic
•
alclll
p
8
1
ccm
month&amp;, all natural, Dr. rec·
1 mun 1uonskill · er·
sona compuer
s are 8 ommondod,
1·888·939·
plus. Previous B&amp;Curlty ex· 3746
·patience Is desired.
•
We offer competitive wagea,IIIO
eiCcellent health care bene- ·
To DO
fits, paid vacation and holldays, profit •harlng, pension
and 401 (K) plan.
A&amp;E Construction
Candidates may submit remodeling, roofing, bath
their resumes to:
rooms, drywall, Interior
General Mlllll Plllabury painting. trim doors, win2403 S. Ptinnarlnnl• Aw. dows. Free Estimates.
Well.ton, OH 4581:2
(304}675·n38
Attention: HRJSecurfty
EEO/AA Employer
All Makes laWn Mowers
and CloJtdoor Power EquipThe Meigs County Sheriff's menl Repaired. Free Pk:kup
Office is accepting resumes and delivery avalablt. Can
for a full· time Administrative Mike (740)448-7604.
Assistant. Cendklate must
possess an A11900ate [)e. AM of your homerepol... Oilgree and/or equivalent work ditions &amp; remodeling . 24hr
eKperlenoe with a back- emergency service, aenk»r
ground In office procedur&amp;s. citizens discount. 22yrs.
E-rience In Microsoft Of· o&lt;p. (304)578·2085
~accounting and budget Clasa A COL. Driver, not
lice,
administration Ia required.
Candidale must submit to a much experience. looking
BCIIFBI background chock for local job. 444H657
and be able to work under .David's Home Repa Ir.
strict confklentlaHty. Must Plumbing, Eloctrlcal, Paint·
also be able to work In a lng, etc. (740)258·9373 or
last paced environment,
work well under presaure (740)4-41·5707.
care for elderty
and work well with the pub- Excellent
person• In my Christian
llo. Plaase submH by·March
29, 2002 a letter of Interest, Country Home. Non·Smok·
$850 ("")882
a resume and three lettera or, "-""
~•·
· ~
•
of recommendation to: PO 3880
Bo• 729-53, C/O The Dply Oeorge·a Portable Sawmill,
Senllnel, Pomeroy, OH don't haul your logl to tht
45789. No Phone Calls mill just call 304.075--1 Q57.
Pfeaaet
"",

URGENTLY
NEEDED·
plasma donon1, earn $50 to
$80 per week for 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call Bio Ule
Plasma Seovico, 740·592·
6651.
WANTED SERIOUS PEO·
PLE TO WORK. 8a oelf.
employed. No door·to-tfoor
sales. Mall-ooder~ntemat.
Full training &amp; suppOrt.
· RRHomaFrao.com t·
"

Help wanted caring for the
eldorty, oa..t Group Homo,
now
minimum wage,
new
: 7am·3pm, 7am6pm, 3pm-1fpm, ttpm·
7am, call740-992·5023.

Moving and Hauling: Clean
Ba
Out Buildings,
samento,
Garages, Estatoa, Toecsh1
•
.:.......:.__ _ _ _ _ _
Top to Bottom Cleaning
S.ovlca, profooolonal. real·
dontlal, office Claanlng at
an
affordable
pri.-.
(740)992·2979 or (740)992·
1391
Will be"'~'t In my home,
·•~·7~~· any Umo 740-

f~~)~7~,Jobs.

roR:;:I oMJ!s:;:.:;&amp;;UB: ;:-. ,~I

6
It'
L,.__

Get Calh Futll $100.$500.
Easy Ouallllcatlona. Navar
Laave Homel Funds D~·
.. _...
ltild·Checklng Account Naxt
Day. Loans By County Bank
of Rehoboth Beach, DE
Member FDICIEOL
1-800-397-1908.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-

Gt
=

~~

-~6-41587

~ ~ ·~·~-~~-~~~~~E~~~~~~~~
:c,;;op.....l

....-oooupWbythl.rorend
..

· anyloeeore.,.,...thll~fromU...pubtfodonoromiMionof.n ... atl•m••L Cw;

6

All rMint.lw ltdvertlalng
In"* newtprlper It
tubfecttotMFecsw.l
Fllr Houalng Act of 1MI
which IMkalt tltepl to
Jldvwt!M "•ny
.,.,.,.nce,ltmtt811on or
dltcrimlnatlon baed on

Completely rebuilt new, 3
bedroom, 2 bathe, Kltcllan,
Oak Cat;nala, La~
· - Uvlng
Room, Sunroom, Lots ot
decks, full basement w/WJ,raga $~27,000. (740)2455064
For Sate at this price until
May 3.1. 2500 sq H., 112
acre
BR
baths In·
, 4 ' 3
'
ground pool. 44 Beach 81.,
Green SChoota. Serious
b•~e,.only (740)448·3t39
.,
·
For sate by owner: Nloe bl·
level home on 1 acre near
Chester. Three bedroom,
two baths, one-car garage,
family room with Hreplace,
sun room. New central heal·
lng &amp; aJc system. One ml·
nute off Route 7, but etlll pri·
vate. (740)986·3981

Will pressure wuh houses,
trail.... and docko.. Call
4-41-4238 ask lor Ron or
IMvl massage.
I $400/h d0
·
r,
Orivara wanted to driVe call Will woo1&lt; or
to &amp; from auctions. Call be-'
tween 10 am • 5 pm. 7409314, 1-740-580.0t4t :
992·9716

~kl=iorl:. f::;')99~~

r MID~ ~,r__~
... .__.l·:
RI!Nr
..

I

Office building In Minersville, 800 sq. ft., ale, coverild. parking, ceiling fan,
$300/mo., 6t4-878-1881 .

r

rt
1 and 2 badroom apt;
mentl, fumlshad and un • ~
nlill*l,
,._
1eel seeunty
- . depolllt
740-992
qu r • no ,.....,
•
2218.
\
bl. Fumlahed Apt. LMng
1
room
kitchen beth All utlllt·
'
•
·
.. ,
lee pd. E~ecept Electric. ~~
(304)875-1386
"
:._..:..._ _ _ _ __
Appllcatl no being taken ror
o
..__. "
very nice 2 bedroom loca..u ~
In country aenlng yet clooe
to town. Very laoge kllehen .~
with stove, refr~erator.
dlshwalher. WBshtrl Dryer ••
Included. Tenant pays elac- ~
trio. Total electric heal/ .&amp;AJC. Garbage pickup and ,.
water Included. No pets Ill- lowed. $400 depos!t, $450 ,,
month. (740)448-22o5 · or
(740)41*9585. Ask to~ ~
glnll.
.,

Ims &amp;:

I

A&lt;liEAGE

.

2 .._
33475 Bailey Run
Rd. , off Ohio 124, 112 mUe
Woat I R-·•- 7
t &amp;
co
uu.. ' wa er
septic already In, $14,900,
e•cellent building site,
(937)39~Hl258
.
Country homes, nice lOIS,
located on Rt ·33. between
Pomeroy/Atllens. Call740992-2187 for details.

Lot for Sale- Approx. 2 1f2
acras, cleared &amp; ready for
building, gravel driveway,
water &amp; electric available,
race, c:otor, rwflgfon, • •
.Tanned Cape Cod house In Porter
area.
Asking :!!::::=:.._______
flmlla.latatulor~ Mason near. river and wal· $13,995, Call (740)446· BEAUTIFUL
APART~
origin, or •ny Intention to mart. Fenced Yard. 3 to 4br. 4514 trom 8·5 or {740}446-- MENTS AT BUDGET PRJ. ,
mau ony ouch
(304)773-54$2
3246 after 8pm.
CE8 AT JACKSON ES. 1
ptlfMinm, nmftatlon ar
TATES. 52 Wtttwood Drive ..
dllcrlmiMIIon. •
Two day promoUon. Every· Lots for sate- (1) 0.377 from $297 10 $383. Walk to •.
thing must gol Seve Thou· acoes· $14.000 &amp; (1) 0.459 shop &amp; movies. Call 740- sandal Reglater for free ICrtl· $15,000. All1t!W Rd. 448-2688. Equal Housing -£!
kooowtoogly gifts. Ttols weokond only II Pofter a,.., flot &amp; ready to Opporhonlty.
"
oldv.rtiMnnt• tor ru1
Oakwood Homes of GaiUJ» set up on. AEP electric,
...
Illite wflleh 11 In
lis. (740)446-3093
central sewage system, &amp; Christy's Family Living, '
vlolltlon ol the law. Our
'
. water
available.
Call 33140 New Uma Ad., Aut·
0
. . ..__._
Two story homo on Main St. (740)448·4514 M·FI 8·6 or land, . Ohio, 740.742-7403. 0
·-···•
In Vinton, OH.
Naweo
home and
Informed thllt
111
&amp; roof
Aaklold· call (740)448·3248 aHer Apartment,
Com
lal toailer ,
veriiMdln
lng, septic
.
no 6pm
iwntals.
marc
store~ c..
dwellln,. lei
$35.000 and poealble land
fronts available lor ,.a... .,
thl• MWipll*' Ire
contract. Can caN 740-742REAL F.srAn
Vacancln now.
8601, leave name and nurn.
WAN'Im
.
•v1lllble on 1n equal
opportunity bun,
ber and will call you back.
Furnished Apartment. 2 ~
L....::::::::::;~;;;;;:::;.....l :::..=.::...:::::...:::::.:=="--:
Roomt and 88th. Clelln. No·.
wanted: 10 people wanted Coedtt worthy buyer looking PeUo. References and De- .
with no coedH to blly a new for toouoa to buy, Gallla, Ma· posit Required. (740)~· ' '
home. Must meet minimal son or Meigs, please call 1519
HOMFS
requirements.
Call Jim, (740)992-3187
.:.:...:..._ _ _ _ _ _ .•
1 (740)448-3570.
FOR SAu
.
Furnished Efficlancy, All :
H
Wanting to Buy, Rent or UtiiHiea Paid, downstairs, ~
Molllu! OMEt; I leaH at laut 4 ac..l clear, $21 5/month. 919 Second,,
1994 Sunshine Homo on
I'OR SAu
barn, with mobllo homo AV&amp;. (740)448-311&lt;15
corner lot . 50 K 100 ft., - • hootc;up or live In already
washer, .dryer, stove, refrlg·
there Call 304·875-8200 Gracious living. 1 and 2 erator, central air, water .1985 Wlnd101 14K70 wilh 740 -44 1 ~ 1 015 leave mas· bedroom apartments at VII·:.
softener. storage building 8 t20&lt;24 add on, 3BR, 2BA, ,.~
logo Manor and Rlverllda ,
~·
Apartments In Middleport.
• tO', $35,000.00. Daytime Central AC, lrldge, stove,
From $278•$348 . Cal 740• ~·
992·2898, Even 1ng 992- microwave &amp; dishwasher,
0092
outbuilding, now roof, front
992·5064. Equal Housing .
and rear porches wlhandl.
Opportunl1lel.
2 homes on onelo11n Mid- cap rami&gt;l. 740·441·1870
Hruitli
I""Nawly==R-emodo..;..;;._led_,_2_8ad_·,
dloport, $59.500. Seen by laave message
RI!Nr
room Apt., Stovtl Refolgera· ;,
appointment only. 17401992·
FOR
tor, UtiHIIII Paid, $4001 ·
8t 54
t992 Palm Harbour ••• 70
month. 48 Olivo St.,
bed
home
MiddleEKcellent
Condition New 1 •3 8adrooma FortCioled (740)-448-394S
1
3
room
n
w- Washer &amp; Dryer. locllhod Homet From $1 118/Mo., .,. :::...:::..:.;;;_:::...:.:.....~-­
~~~~~ a":'a'1.':f&amp; ' :1n- on Jay Or.(740)245-9492 Down, 30 Yaaro at 8.5% Now Taking Applications- ::dows:::!!'-!!(7:_:40~)992=:·.:::32:_::78:::_._ _ zooo DUICh -~~~ " - APR. For Uallngs.IJ00.319- 35 Woll 2 8adroom T.,.... .
3 bedroom, 2 full bath, 3323 EK1. 1709.
. houao Ape~, 1 - .
3 8adroom on Route 2. porc1111 Dockt very nlca
Water
.,.wage, Tralh,
(304)075·5332"
homo. i8x80. i34,000 or ~~:c-~Oid
$350/Mo., 740 116 0008.

Thltnewap~perwHinat

r

I

i;;;::::::;;;

riO

j

i --------

:0

r'o

=

For 111e or 1 - with option
to buy: • bedroom, laoge
kitchen, 1 112 baths,
F.A.N.Q. heat-central air,
rlver vlaw lrom largo front
porch, IOUI rer...nc11 &amp;
dlpOllt no pate 740·992·

aomaont lntar881od In Ilk· $350.00 8 mon. 30.4-578lng over loan. On n~ ran
. t· 22 ~7
Old lot, at Old Town Mobile
Home Pork. Moving NH&lt;I to Charrnln~Hiotorlcll Homo
Sail lor Pay Off. (304)875· lor nom
~~taL $800/mo.
~135
Low Utili . Kltchon Fur·
nlshld. In town, clooo to

Plelaant VoHoy Apaotmentl ~

80!2 '
.
New Doublowlda on pnvate
proporty, 1·5 acres. Call
(740)448·3093 to quallly.

Inventory Roductlon Sale
All new and pro-owned
homioo reduced lor · qulok
selo. No rauonable oftor
raluolld. 18 new and tO
pra·ownild
homll
to
chooll from . Coio'o Mobile
HomM, US 50 E111, Ath·
ana, OH 740-592·1972

NEuHmber It (304)875-5808 ' :
0
=::·::.·::·..:_
_ _..;..._ __

o'7hoo
17~1~~~12158-e433

Art liking opplciUons for ,
2BR, 38R &amp; ~BR. Appllc•&lt;
lions are taken Monday~
thfough Friday, office ~oe~~- :
od 11 f15t Eveill,_ Dr. ~
Point Plaalln1, WV, PhoNo..;

DON'T RENTI Lall than Twin Rlw.. Towor """"'l"· pa~oct credH oven bank·
lng oppllcallons lor
"
nop1cy Is no problem In buy·
McClure's Ralltaurant now iiiij;;;;;;~::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ !.:::::!.=.:::=..:::..:::=~
hi"
II 31ocat~- full
New house· flnall(llng avail·
lng thla ltorroOI . . . Pomor· 1br. Hud Suboldlzlld opt.aii 'Y
,.;.'!}g11 '
pick ~... llcaor
............,
able to quallflod buye ... 0%
ov. Only $350 par month. utll. paid for elderly and .•,
,...,. me,
up app · ~oio.iOProimJNrryiiOiiiliiiiiliiiioioo_.i down. 1800 oq H, 2 t/2
lfooy lew down ~rmonl,
:".:.:~~~~~ blc: ~
bath. 3 8adrooma, custom
P - 0 doWnl Mull sell.
INOTICII
oak trlm
cabinets, gas
Jim (740)992-3187
10:ooam, Monday thru Set·
urday.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· flroplaco, tlrgt kitchen/din- Umltild OBa~ ~radlt7 ~· Pilot Program . Rantano
:::::!:.______ lNG co. recommends that lng, 2 t/2 car gorago Of' t ""''!!!~ -~ 1 naBanoerbou Y Neoded 3GI-?3A-729S
Lw-lllliliiiil
Mo1ho.. Droaml
youdoblllineoowlthpeope 112 acres. $t19,1100. Pofter At~~ n
no·
' .
,;;;;.oOioj ~
Stay Home
you know, and NOT to Nnd area. (740)448-45t4 tlll5pm villa, WV 304-738·3409.
•
'
t8•80 oliN, •100/mo. 740- '
Ba Your Own Sooal
. monoy thouugh the mal until or (740)4-48·3248 after 8pm Moble Home &amp; Lot. Beals
082·2187.
.
.
Eam up 10
you hava Investigated the Partially Remodeled homo, Meadow Road Gallipolis
~SBDOO/Mo
offerlng.
2 Bedroom, t Bath, Full Feroy. Lots of EK1raa.
.
Stonoge Space lor ront4033'·
Bauman!, Laoge Unattach· (304)075·3262
2 bedroom mobile h0me1or aquora 1oet. wltll m1111•
1-800-810.0705
Stort Your Business To· Old 2 car garage. t 27 Kin•
.
rent, no pots, (740)992· lholvlng. loclltld In City ot '
www.Cuh-AndFCIIOYOr.com day... Pnme Shopping Can·
58158 •
Point Plelllnt. lnquloe ot' ·
0 $80 000 (740)4-4t
NH&lt;I 5 llldles 10 1811 Avon. ler Space Available At AI· ~ '·•
'
·
• New 14•70, 3 br/2bth. Only
(304)87&lt;Hl102
·:
(740)446-S3 58
foodable Rato. Spring VaHey
$975 down &amp; $169. par/mo. Beautiful Rlwr Vlaw Ideal
Plaza, Call740-448.0t01 .
Possible
down payment. Call Nikki 740-395-7671
For 1 Or 2 Ptol&gt;le, Reflren..
Office Blllar Wanted. PollBad credit even bankruptcy
· cao, Dopolit, No Pelt, FOI·
tlve, Punctual Person Need- Sweeper buslnesa for sale- no problem on this home OvM 10 used homes priced ter Trailer Parte, 7~1· ii!iP:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·
Old lor Psrt·tlme position In naw·Rainbow &amp; Kirby partl, noar Pomeroy, Only $325 under $3000. Will help wltlt 0161 .
Doctora oHtct. Nc Experio bags &amp; belts and to many per month. Must sell, Jim dellvtf'Y. Call Karena, 740lloaimtou&gt; ~',
once Necessary. Apply In partl .to mention; Four (740)992· 3167
385·9948.
Mobile home, 10 min. lrom
Gooos
Person at Complete Care beauty Ilion euotlons and
Galtlpolla, available April 1. L.,""-11iiiiiii--~
24 bulb Wolfe Tanning bed. Sandttlll Rd, Meadowbrook . Want a 018\V home? Owrt 740-843-2463 or 740-258· '
Chiropractic, lOA Airport (740)367-ll6t2
Addltlon.7 yr. old' 2100 sq. your own land? Wo dol Call 8176 afttr8 p.m.
'
Appilancoe: R - H Rd, Behind Burger King.
ft 3 br 2 ba llvlngooom (740)446-33841or your new
Wilharo, Dlyotl, Ro~
OTA/PTA Full-time, Part·
MONEY
dinlngrOOm &amp; ~llyroom
hOme todayl Trade Ina we~ Tupporo Plains, 2 bedroom, Rofrlaratort, IJP To 80·
•
time posltlona available.
roWAN
car garage 304-674-4trn
come
lholudll 1t0ve &amp; relfigera· OuarantMcll We Stl
1111
tor, $.250 per month plus de- . . _.. •--"•not~, F.....,,.
3 Bedroom, 1· bath In Ra· Wo ha.,. approximately 10 '""'Uutllltln, (740)887·3487
Loin of All
olne. Convenient locaHon used homta for under
·
'
•~
haalth.
.
........ A lli"Aiel
$2 000 call 1 800 837-3238
AlluriT.mml I
-~
Ohio Licenoe required. Call
''""" • 137,500.00. 740-949-3226
• •
•
•
.
·
For 8alo: R-11forot&lt;J
No Fees, al Credll
lor Info.
.
I'OR RI!Nr . . wllhlrt,
Cilylr1 lind ~·
1•800•577-4 310 or lax
resUme to 937 -8 95 ~ 1375 .
accepted
357 Roush Lane. 2BR, Sun-~
tratora. ThOmplc:»oo
.J
Call Toll Fre,
room, , .5 Bath, Screened in
3407 Jockoon
'
11o Cl ~.,
t ... 2fM.1379
BaCit Porch, Feroced Back 311K27 11194 Fairmont Door 15 Court Stroot. Very nice lnol. .
_
~~~= . n~~. =~;,~; ---~------,.-, Yard, New Siding, New blewldt, 2BR, 2 Bath, Mull apartment, 2 BR, 1 112 nut, (304)07&amp;-'f311.
l;.
qulrlld. Sonellll. For &amp;KBm, Problema Paying Billa Call Building, (740)4-41 • 1033, movo.
(74Q)258-81 28, ~h, ~Ga~~ Good tJaocl Applloo - · flo.,~
aalary, and taatlng lnlorma· . Toll Frao 1·888-e89-3064. (740)38Hl5f 4.
(740)2158-t507
StrMt Porkln"o. OvariOotc. oonctlflonacl ond , Guar~no
lion call. (630)393-3032 eKI. Wa can Halp. All types ot
8ayvlaw ( Don)
p
WI..O =~
1
762 6am-8prn 7 days.
loans. Good, Bed., No Crlld- 6yr old houao on t .67 . 7VHK70 117. a w
, Pao1&lt; and Rlvor. No .,., RlnQ. and Aol,tgw•
M. Bankruptcy Welbome,
acrea, 2 mllell outside Vln· Now ~ 7, CIA, ~tor, $595/mo. plus
do- Som0
II ....
.....- - , . . . . - - - - ,
tOn. 3BA. 2 Mtt'l, Large uv. Heater, Fumaoe, Front pOtU
and . reftrtncea. Appllanou
VI .
•
,..,
lng Room with Flrtplact, Porch, Shed and WoodMI (740)448-4821
(7~73ii11 r ne
·•4
B~
I'Ron:!liloNAL 1101C20 Covered Porch, l'tnce, Loti of flltmOCIIIng.
·
--rr-nr
•
1
1
10&gt;110
out
buHding,
Altdoog
S..,
$8000,
(304)8752
8adroom
Apt.
In
Conllltl·
c_.,
1
.,
~
$66,000. (740)3B6 8630
3008
ry, oppllancN fumilhild.
Rolli. - 102'dttio.
·
~ ' --- _ ..
d
utiRtlao pelcloxoapt-.
,......
.,_.. ..
Galllpollo Coi'Mt Collett
Ranclt Style 3 """""""· 1 No CrOidlll Ba Coec1111 111 clean- 11288 montll· call 17
fl1l2 - 7 Ealtl1
~
·1 I,
(Careeno Clqse To Home)
TURNED DOWN ON
Balh, Largo LA. OR, Kitch• Time Homo buyerel FAS . (740)2511-11315- ~:ODpm linlrtOirv,
,
80
1
Call Todayl740·448·4367, SOCIAL 8ECURITY 1111? on, C/11. 3 car Ga..ge. 3 Loanel Government FHA
ouh. 'llai ...,.
1-800·2144152,
No Fee Unless We Win I Acrn, $75,000. (740)379· Lo1n1
Avollabll.
Call 3 rm upetalraaapl. utll. paid
Maltor
Reg •80.05· 1274B.
1·688-582·3345
2827
(740)-448-3216.
catl304-876-3030
·
•·
-

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I

a.

..

L.-•

5

!:..::::!.::::::::::::.:::::...___

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ci):~;;;g'740-448-m'i ~

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Smi\'KEi

r

(740)446·2484

~ Nascar tickets lor Coca
&lt;;ola BOO Lowes Motor
Speedway,
May
26. ~
if401258·1304
~

In one week With us
To ·Piace

v.X~s~~?'alily,
Jim's Farm Equipment Inc. Lo~------~

I

=

=. -

-a •

,it'd·

ro BUY

Wanted to buy: Used MatHia
Home. Call (740)448·0t75
Bo"r..
(304-)6•7•5-·5_98_5_ _....,

r

~

2 year old
Reglsteoed Angus Bull ,
out of New Trend E.P.D.'s
good . 256-1352

rL,.------_.1

qngland
Corsair
HAGRAIN:v
&amp;
OOuchlloveseat 6 month
&lt;!d. Floral with pillows. Paid
St400
asking · $700. ~
(604)875-7022 after 8pm.
Pasture &amp; pur~ Alfslta, 1400
lbe round bales Dry hay
Pree Gas Furnaces and Air
·
·
"--••tloner Estimates. Call stored inside. Wet (ellage)
.,.....
bales about 2.000 lbs. $tO
(f40)448·830B or 1-800· $30 dollars per bill. ca:l
~Hl098. II you don1 caH (304)6B2•3251
~wa~th lose!
-------drubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
~epalrs . Problema? Need Straw, Year 'Round Delivery'
~ned? Cell The Plano or. &amp; Volume Discount Avalla·
ble.
Heritage
Farm.
'J40-448-4525
(304)675·5724.
t1awlatt Packard Printer
Qrand New. $50., Uma&lt;
~.~
$canner, brand new, $50.
r uu JLI..U!..K
~uncly Saxophonil 2yrs. old.
$1300. (304)G7S·llSS
Tobacco Plants for s'a&amp;e.
11'\dapendent Herballfe Dis- Call Now and order Plants!
tributor, Call FOJ Product Or To reserve your .early spring
Opportunity. (740)441-1962 planting call Dewhurst
JET
Greenhouses
(304)8953740/(304)895-S7SS
AERATION MOTORS
II{\ '\'oi 'OIU \ IIC )'\
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stook. Call Ron Evans, t · ;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
600·537-9528.
Aums

r

r•o

L--•FOR:;:o::jl·S~AU--_.J

McDonald beanies, Glory,
Britlanla, Erin ·&amp; Maple, 4 rull 1986 ·Buick Century, runa
sets plus eKtras, Longa- good , many new parts,
$500.00. 740·992·1933
berger, (740)742·101t
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
tntertherm &amp; Coleman gas,
oil &amp; electric furnaces ineluding hi efficiency heat
pump sysl ems. We earlY a
complete line of Mobile
home parts &amp; accessories.
BENNETT'S HEATING I
COOUNO (740)446-1416
or 1-800-872-5987
www.orvb.comlbennett
New and used 242 cell, float
bed tobacco trays. new
$1 .60, used .50 each; or
buy 100 get 10 free. 256·
6504, 258-9247
Pool table. $200. (740)448·
t-55_7...;1_740....;.)«_s._48_7_6..:·-NEW AND· USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For COncrete, Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Drains. Driveways &amp;
Walkways. I.&amp;L Scrap Mot·
Open Monday,
Tueeday,
als
Wednesday
&amp; Friday,
Sam-

M

1986 Mercury Grand arI $800 C8 II afte r 7pm
·
qu 9 ·
·
(304)675 3069

•·.:=.:..:..·=.:....___

-1990 Plymouth Acclaim 4dr, NC, nit, Cruise, great
work car $900 (740)256·
1058

~=-------

1'992 Pontiac Sunblrd, 4.cyl.
auto. runs and drives great
$1250. 740-441·1083
1994 Dodge Spirit V.S, high
mileage, no major mechanlcal pro~ems, runs good.
$1,1 ()()_(304)895-3422 after
6

pm·

1994 Toyota T100 truck,
V6, auto, AJC, 1 owner,
$4,700; 1992 Tovota Pasao,
sunroof, ·AfC, CO, $2,600;
1992 Nlssan Stanza, $1.250
1994 Bonnevlle SSE, 1
owner, $4600; 1987 Toyota
Corolla, 4dr, auto, NC
:S1:_:6::95::·...;7.;4::0·_:2::58:..·60::.:_t:_2_ _

M&lt;mmcrcux

1993 4x4 Four Trax,
very good eondilion.
$2500

74Q.367-D41 5 (cheshire)
1998

Yamaha

,5

cot·

iL,--iiiSuFruEsiiiiioiiii-o-'

r

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·~ ~

I

.l'lA,.,

LIME-

tM~~~

1

iftr;;;;;;~~~--.,

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~

iD

FARM

· .;

!.9tnrMEN

1988 GMC 1500 pickup.
2WD.
V8,
automatic.
120,000 miles, ouns good,
$2,800.00. Colt 304·773e30! ...nlngs.

.
1081 ch41vY ~t. 4x•. e•·
TIOY Bil Horoe Ra!otllitr· ' ,_... 00f1111tio!l. now 350
Good Oandltlon. $800. cl. anglnf, (740)082·8027
~)070-311&lt;4
after 4pm.

V.

740-667-0363

Ill

Hill's Self
Storage

I

riO

67

•

Equipment
Repairs 6 Parts
on all makes of
farm Equip.

and Dozers

742-2455
33561 Bailey RUil Rd.
Pomeroy,

"

19934x4FouoTrax,
very good condition,
$2500
740-367-()415
(Cheshire)

o-.s nn no-.

__

~~

Residential or commercial
wiring , n@w. sa~lce or re,
pairs. Master Licensed alec1995 Yamaha WA250 dirt trlclan. Ridenour Electrlr.al,
bike, 740-367-0222.
WV000306, 304·675·1766.

•--==-====--=========

"Specializing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs ..
Garages. Pole Buildings, Concrete
Roofs &amp; Siding
Commercial &amp; Re:;idential
(7401 992·3987

"

·

Owner: Terry Lamm

(740) 992-0739

•

Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean

10°o Discount
on all orders
over SS.OO
217 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

992·5908

tll!•i

mu: [j;u

WERRY'S
WITTLE ONES

Now accepting
children
Day, evening,
and weekend
care available .

992~6975

or email@
992-3174
W!liiY1 @chgcrillla.ocm
pd 1 mo 3113

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
. Spout
Free Estimates
94~1405

P/8
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine , Oh io 45771

740·985-3948
CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Repl acements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil

Crete
Free Estimares
Serving Ohi.o and W.V.

TFN

WV #031712

F

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

~

[JlW
.a.....
_.,,
\ILl~

TFN

./lli:&gt;..M..Jir...lif:t.._lf!:..~

!It!~ ttl·~ [jill]

"mardi madness''

Gene Arms

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and
Additions

Hnlues 6CollecUbles

Owner

J.D.

Spedalizinc In:

on•

Can Count

LAMM"S ·~-~,..-~
lfl!IJ fiJ..I.Ij
M!!l !il,!!) ll!!J

•r

Ohio 45769

• Service You

l!;;;;i;;;;;::;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:;;;;;;;;;;:;:;r:;'":!J

raJu

JONES'

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

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

(740) 949-1521
1·877·466·1234

BISSELL

Pomeroy Eagles
BlnG02171

BUILDERS InC.

Business Services

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

Euery Thursday
6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
farty birds start

BANKRUPTCY

Windows • Roofing

6:30

COMMERCIAl and REIIDENDAl
FREE ESTIMATES

Progresslue top line
Thursdays
Progresslue
Couerell on Sundays

can relieve a debtor of financial obli&amp;ations and
amnge a fair distribution of assets among
creditors. A penon going through bankruptcy
may relain cerlain property, known as
"e~empt" property, for his or her personal use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
ltouiiChold aoodl. You should direct any

New Homes • Vinyl

740·992·7599

FN

High&amp; Dry

William Sal'rutk, Altanley
(7.0) Stl..$025
Atbeu

L...:.....;::..:,::,:;,::..:.;;.:.:________- J

-··-·-

"Quality Home
Improvements"

Self-Storage

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

33795 Hiillnd Rd.
Porntrll'j, Ohio

New ~.:;"R.'.:iellnl

WICK'S.

·

(10'K10' 610'K20r)

HAULING and

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

EXCAVATING

Sldlrt1 • Pofe Bomo
Deo:b • Gsno1a
,,. FAtlmaltl• WVO.lltlt

A'VA'TION
EXC"'
"
(Syracuse, Ohio)
Bulldozing,
land cleating, Septic

• •Residential

tank, ditching,'water
lines. site work,
basements/footers,

Free Estimates

98
L-74_o-_9_9_2.l.-311111.11j,jj511U

~.s

Garagea1 Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES! .

740-742-3411

Beauty
Bedllners •Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvtsor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line

. . . . .,. . '

; I ; I" \, Ill,

(740) 992-3470

'.tlllilllil

l\d \lid&lt;lh'j"&lt;&gt;ll.l

882-2343

) /]II'

(740) 992-581'12

Adv~rtise
your
business on this page
I
'
I

~

for one month for as low as $25
·'

4/1810 1

MARY KAY'

~·:.w.

405 5th Street

New Haven, WV

driveways, ponds
(1nsured)

•Hauling •Limeatona
-Gravel • Sand •Topsail
•Fill Dlrt•Mulch

FIELDS
PLUMBING

Trackhoe/BIICkhoe,

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,

740-992-5232

97 Beecil St.
ffilddleport, OH

Roollrt~•RoornAddltlonl

Sunset Home
Construction

~~~

queationa reprdlna bankruptcy to an onomey
before proceeding. For lnformlllon resanling
Bankruptcy wntact:
.

I

\11\I~I!Hh

PUTS

•••

r:;s

N

macks Packet

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
Sanitation
SERVICE

I

(740) 591-2173

morris

YOUNG'S

DEPOYSII

STONE

r~

I \In I "-I I 1'1 II...,

992-5479

West SUM II!Mr Slott
l71iGHexas RIM, Just
7

740..992·1671

t988 Bala Force 220. New
122/TFN
7
motor and out drive $t0.000 .__ _ _ _..,:=.~

740..992·7036

(740) 992·2753
(740) 992-1101
~ ovar Roller Cam,8750 EL , ........,~..,.....~_,
• W~n,B~~J;.~~;35~ ~~~J:
WiLLIAMS

se.oo·

Authorized Agent

HERBALIFE

r

Trans, with shift kit, Turbo
EKhaust traction ba.., Ton·
noau cover, new tires and
wheeta, Great Interior, New
Paint Job. Ex. Cond. "Very
Fall Truck" $3,500. Ph.
(304)875·3t 01

FREE ESTIMATES

___

1

·
CflESS GREENS. You cut
~r bulhel, Already
cut $12.00 per bushel.
Available Now through
March. Charles McKo•n
Form. phonl (740)448·94&gt;42

Certificates Available
SJQ-4.5 minutes
$4$ • 15 minulcs
740·985·3345 .

natural/Guaranteed

!=~-----

FRtJI'IS &amp;

Jeff Warner Ins.

and Yoga Therapy Gift

::..::::::=..::=:____

2684

VEGETABLES

Remodeling

1 Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

~
~tL.--~-iiiiiiio.P·

Minloturo Poodln In time
for Elllor. 2 AKC. 1 not. 1997 F· f50 E•tendild Cab .
(t,40)371!·2839
Excellent Condition. 58995.
;;::;;:;;.;:,;~;..--..., OBO. 304·675-4994
rv
MU!ICAL
2001 Ford F·260 ald. cab,
IN!rrRUMENTS
• targe bed. blueltllvor trim, 6
disc. c/d, dlelll, otenderd.
For Sale, Kimball Pf'lludt ltickired
$36.000
1111
Console
Plano.
Dark $28,000 OBO, (740)742·
(cherry) F;lnlah. $1,500. Call 101t
.
after~:OO 304·875-&amp;474
86·S10·Pu. 350 V·6 Bored

Cellular

10 Yean Experience
Specializina in: Deep
Tissue, Swedish, Sf1ia1su,
Crnniosncral,
~nexology, Myofascial

2: 00 pm. !:..:~::.::..:..::.:....
(740)448·10 12
·------87 8ayllner 14ft 67 Eocort
1993 Pontiac Transport Mini trailer. 50 Ioreet OlJtboard
k
ld
Van, power locks/windows . motor, 2 gas. an s.. s •
Independent
New Stereo. Real Nice. humming bird depth lrnder,
has am/tm cassette player
Distributor
Asking $3,000. (304)674- $2,900. Will ~aqe "lor vehi·
023t (304~75-3 765
cle
ol
equal
value.
taa 4 Red , F·250, 4&lt;4, (304)675·7845 leave most30,000 mUes. $7,000 finn . :sa:!g!:•·. .:__ _ _ _ __
(740)388·9055
Boat For sale or trade, 20
foot Rinker Cudd" Cabin, V·
• Oil change $18.95
100%
t995 Dodge SLT 4K4 $8500
•
(740)446-1012
6 engine, 165 Horse Power.
We stock all major
::.::::::;:.::...==---:---;-:- good condition, new uphols·
t996 Chevy Blazer LS, 4X4, tery Inside Phone (740)256·
brands
4 door, VB vortsc, automat- 6926
ic, 78,000 miles, PW, POL,r
;;;;~A·uro-·n·..-~-&amp;.....,
Mike Hill
cruise.
AMIFM/CD.
$7,995.00. Call 304·m·
A~RIES
L..---..l.lliWilloiliil.l
5305 evenings.
:::::.::.:::::.::::!~--­
1996 Ford F·150 Pickup, Bodllner tor Toyota Pick·up
4x4. Auto, A/C, 11,554 ac· Hte 1997 and up 740·245·
9019
tual miles. 17401446'4-4t 0
1997 Pontiac Transport van, Budget Priced Tr•nsmla99,000 miles, very good slons All Types, Access To
All Makes Tractor &amp;
condition, V6, .automatic, Over 10,000 Transmissions,
• Room Additions &amp;
Delivered
&amp;
Equipment Parts
PW, POL, power sliding Rebuild Kits, 740·245·5677,
Remodeling
door,
cruise
control, Cell: 339·3765.
Spread $15.00
Factory Authorized
• New GariSJII
AMIFM/CO, $7,995.00. Call
perton, 8 to 10
• Electrical a. Plumbing
Case·IH Parts
304-n3-5305 evenings.
tons, llmHed
• Rooting &amp; GuHers
Dealers
2001 Chevy Tracker 4x4, V·
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
area, call for
6, 7,500 miles. White with
•
Patio and Porch Deck•
000
St.
Rt.
7
South
details. Cell:
Silver border. Transfer of 1973 Stat Craft Camper,
Free Estimates
Coolville, OH 45723
Equity at $412. per month Good Condition,
or soli $22.000. Cay For more Information
C. YOUNG
Or leave name
(304)675·8639
Evening Caii740·25B·1902
992· 6215
and number
(304)675-6737
~rot, 1 ~1o
TFN
2 Year
I
B
85 International school bus, 1999 rockwood UIt ra Ute
345 gas engine, ready to 21' trailer, tows easy, selr 1!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==
~
go, $2500, (740)949-2700. contained, 741J.949·322B
Shade River AG Service
..,1 I&lt;\ II I "'
·as GMC
Subuoban,
;;;;:::::::::::::;
454 73K
t 1 4x4,
11
"Ahead In Service"
auto,
'
BC ua m es,
HOME
4"
lift, 314 ton, $6800 OBO,
.
35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
(740)992-3 141 leave masIMPROVIMF.NI'S •
sage.
29670 Bashan Road
• 4-H feed for lamhs, hogs, steers, chickens and
Racine , Ohio
:;:~D:;.od-ge_C_a_ra-va-n-,_$_500_;
BASEMENT
rabbits.
45771
WATERPROOFING
• Seed Potatoes
200 watt amp; 2300 4 cyl.
740·949·2217
Unconditional
lifetime
guarmotor. (740)992' 5860
:::::::::..:.:...::::.:.:.=.:...antee. Local references fur- • Onion Sets
95 Fo•M.., Aanger XLJ, Bl ue, n1shed. Es tabll shed t975 . • Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds
4.0, V6, 6" lift. 33~ Super Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446· • Fertilizer Specifically Designed for Garden Crops
Swamper, EKt. Cab, $9595 0870, Rogers Basement • New Fertili~r Buggies
OBO. (740)245-0t35
Waterproofing.
All buggies have been pattern tested to meet
Hours
96 Dodge 1500 4K4. 318, - - - - - - - Agronomy Association Standards
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
auto, air, tilt, cruise, 8' bed, C&amp;C General Home Malnte·
SLT package, 51 ,000 miles, nence- Palr1tlng, vinyl sid· '
good to excellent condition, lng, carpentry, doors, win·
..
$11 ,500, (740)742·2660
dows, baths, mobile home
I repair and more. For free
MOTORCYCLES
estimate call Chat, 740-992(j\!!J
~II
&lt;
·~
·.6
·,.;32;::3;..~---~.., &lt;
CONSTRUCTION

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

I

LICENSED MASSAG E
THERAPIST

Stop &amp; Comp~

1986 17' Bass Boat 115
Marc. Sale or trade $3000.
740·256-8365

S:OOam.
t0
1740144 t.07!l3

1997 Pontiac Grand Am,
4DR, A/T, PL, Dual air
bags, AIC, AMIFM Cas·
sene, PS, . TIIVCoulse, 76K
miles, asking $6800. 740·
441·)870 or 740-448·t7B9.
1999 Cavalier 46,000 mllas.
4dr., Auto, Air. $6,500.
OBO. 30«75·4363

1999 Lincoln Continental,
1u11 2t ,000 miles, loaded,
Block, brick, ....., plpeo, ~\'rs~condition. call 740windoWs, llntelo, etc. Claude
Wlnlera, Rio Grande, OH 2001 PT Cruiser Blaok,
Call740-245·5121.
5,500 miles, $16,500. 740::44:.:1..:.·1.::58=3_____
........
Iss Cavaior LS, 4 cyl, arnlfm
C/0, air, good Urea, good
oondMion, $4,000, (740)1192·
7 Adorobll Puppleo. Mother .20;.;7;.7_ _ _ _ _.,
Dolmatlan, Fothtr Blaok •
Lab. Bofh on premloao. l"''
· TRUCKS
Qreat witt&gt; ohlldran. Mokl 1
FOR SAu
good Olddllion to any Easter •
llukst. Had nnot shoto and 1987 Chovrolot 314ton 4x4
wormed. Ready to go Extended Cab, ahort btd,
00126/02
550
oaeh well equipped, 350V8, 71K
(740)288·10158
mllaa, $17,500. 740· 448·

Kris
Kaniecki

or.t ,420mllel,lotoolfactory chrome, padded back
rest. now blnery. 2 match· 0 New Homes
ing helmata,
$3,500.
(740)38!Hl506
• Garages
• - - - - - - . . . . , • Complete

·

waterline Special: 314 200
PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1' 200
PSI $35.00 Per tOO; All
Brass Com~reaslon Flttlnga
· In Stock
·
.
RON EVANS ENTERPAIS.
ES Jackson, Ohio. 1·600·
637·9528
BUDDING
I

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

Virago,

1100cc, teal &amp; craam In

4:30pm. Closed Thursday, 1995 Dodge Intrepid $3000
Public Notice
Public: Notice
Saturday
&amp; . Sunday. oep 1995 Plymount Neon _ _..:__;_ _ _ _ _ _..:__ _ _ __
$3000 OBO (740)25tJ.6t69
(740)448-7300
The
VIllage or must ba maintained 2
Oak doors wlglaasln upper· 1995 Dodge Spirit, good Pomeroy will be to 3 times per month
hall,t·61x34, 3·80x32 , t- condition, $2650.00, t08K accepllng ground In wet periods and 1
82x35 t/2, $200 ea.. 1740)949·3228.
maintenance
to 2 times per month
(740)992·5557
t995 Monte Cario, BSK, proposals lor BMch In
dry
parlods.
$4,495.
t996
5·10
automat·
Grove
Cemetery.
All
Conlractor
will be
One Kid Rock Ticket $33.00
lc, $3695. 1989 Dodge Van proposals must be paid on completion of
(304)576-4195
Like New, $2,395. 20 addi· received by 12:00 PM uch
complete
Rnldentllll Home OWnert llonal vehicles In stock, on March 25, 2002.
, mowing and wlt~ . !h•
Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus Cavaliers, Berettas, Corsi·
The maintenance
aatlslactlon
ol
gao furnaces Including oil cas. COOK MOTERS 740- aeuon beglne In the
Pomeroy
Village
and
electric · gas furna- 446.0103
·
, cas. HI Efficiency Heat
·
laat part ol April Council.
Pumps. featuring Tappan&amp; t 996 Chevy Calialler, red, 2 t h r a u g h
m 1d
Pomeroy Village
Frae incredible warranty door, auto, pw, locks, steer- SePtember 2002. Thll Council reserves the
package.
.
lng, air, cld cruise, good will Include mowing, right to accept or
BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; condition, $5000, (740)591· weed oatlng, tl)c. wllh
40::5::::
3 _ _ _ _ _ _ the
COOLING (740)448·9418 ::
contractor ·••loot any or all
proposals.
987
or 1.aoo.e72·5
·
t996 Honda Civic LX, Auto, providing their own
www.orvb.com/bennett Air. Cruise, PW. POL, 4 equipment
and
Kathy Hyull
Small pickup load of toys, Door,
Black,
$6995. a u p p II e a •
Aloa,
Clork/Treaaurer
crafts. m!ac Items. $100. 17401388- 987B
contractor
muat
Village or Pomeroy
(740)992·5979 (740)446· t996 Multang GT, convert!· provldo their own
0196
ble, black leather Interior, lnauranca. Cemetery (3) 11, 18, 22,2002
wanted: Dish Networtc Sys- loaded, American racing
tern call anytime (740)949· rims, excellent condition,
st4,ooo, 17401591 ·4053
33

olart

~
77...,...

1979 Chevrolet t/2 ton, four
wheel drive. 91 ,000 actual
I mites, new body parts and
paint job. Arolllng 15.500 .
• Call Mike Wells between

W.oom

r:

I

Phone
992-2155
'.

'

and
brains
From go~u• mok•up
to breaklhrougl'llkln
. FHI·good

to tclenttftcally

Kay has all you
to look gr.at ond

""""·
Paige Cleek
Independent Beauty
Consultant
I 14 High Street
Pomeroy. OH 45769

! 40-992-2802

'

�P-ve B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 22, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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'f'll\ t-IOT::IJR,( t'r-\ 11\(I.J(If'.lG ~
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I found it interesting how many deals
in Milton C. Work's
"Auction
llridgc
Complete" (Jolm . C.
Winston Co., 1'12&amp;)
feature themes I have
used in chisses. Here is
one. How should the
defen se
proceed
against four hearts?
North has an uncomfortable initial re sponse (unless using

I

SORRY T O BREAI&lt;. .
THIS. TO YOU, FELLA,
S.I.JT YOU ARE NOT
GETTIN' BY ME !

LET'S

DISCUSS HiE
. DIFFERENCE
! !!&gt;ETWEEN •1 N
YOV!I. FAC.E."

I

DE FE.NSE AND

''ON YOUR FKE"

25 Rubber·

43 Piled I

stampa

gondola

45 Dorm unHI
46 Becorna

OUtpUll

Klng'a

8 lllvlalon

31 Tonlh

channal
38 "I Uke-"
38 Unwanted

word
7 Wldo
8 Smoldoro
9 Uncle-

aound

path

27 Spark coil

29 Lowly
llboref

b~jy

VIrgo

42 Moon'•

49 Boh

Inning
CIUH

32

UriiOI'III
46 Long lor

-out a
living

holderl
50SchUIHI

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raapondlr

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p.

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f ~

STILL SEE ME! I
WAS JUST GIVING

by Luis Campos

Ctlebril)' Cipher cryptograms are crealed from quotatlona by famout
people, past and ptetent. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

AN E)r'.AMPLE !!

'TYL

JDGKS

RDZ

CL

CLVGZWPGK

UWZYDGZ

GATLZZWRB

ZYL

DP

HDXL

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION -

'Who aees the human face corroct·

ly: the photographer. the mirror or the painter?'

T~:~:~~y

S©l\crUN\-.2t-trS"

WORD
GAMI
- - - - - - Edlrod by CU.Y I . POLU.N - - - - - -

O four
Raarrang• letters . c f
scrambled words

1he

be·

low to fgrm four simple words.

II I

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17

I

IFRIDAY

MARCH22I

VINTON - Four Gallia
County volunteer fire departments responded to ·an early
Friday fire that destroyed "
Vinton-area residence.
Vinton volunteer firefighters were called to 971 Summitt Road at I :29 a.m. to batde a fire that struck a twostory residence owned by
Barbara Ferrari and tenanted
by Nick Litchfield.
· Probable cause of the blaze
w.q~lven as 'elecd'ical oy Vinton VFD, . which received
mutual aid from Gallipolis,
Rio Grande and Centerville
firefightel'll. Vinton had two
. trucks and 12 firefighters on
the scene, while Gallipolis
sent one truck, Rio Grande
two ·and Centerville one
along with manpower to help
fight the fire.
Firefighters were initially
011 the scene until about 6
a.m., but returned 20 minutes
later when the fire rekindled.
'vinton firefighters did not .
return to station until about
10:15 a.m., a spokesman said.

I I e

611. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS t
club six. Even the
~. IN THE SE SQUARES
most soporiftc of partnet'll will win with the . A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
. 1:1 GET ANSWER
club jack and lead a
diamond to deliver
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
the lethal ruff
Effigy • rriad • Onion • Oriole • INFLATION
If you can see how
Our local gas station is now charging us to put air in
to defeat the contract, . our tires. When I complained he shrugged and replied,
toke control.
."Blame it on INFLATION ."
.

•

~)~~----In the

Yl',lr

ah ead, you'll

b~·

bcttr.:r ~1 bl c to rc )nlro l importan t Jll;lttL'f S th.m you ha VL' in
the p.ut . 011t·•· ~\)\t g~t a handlt.• Oil t hill~&lt;;, Sli {' Ct'SS should
IOIImv in yom \Vakc.

ARIES (Marr h 2 1- 1\pril 19)
- You ll.Ja)' IJ L· able to lin ali zc
a dotm·~tk Juatt t•r that yo t1'vc
bcl'll l'&lt;lgi.: r tll dispose o f.
Ym1'll brL·ntl lt' a sigh of rd icf

that it

i~

finall y

o~,o·cr.

Trying

to patch up a br nk e11 . ro ~

T he Astro-(ir~ph
Ma td 1111 At..•r cu 1 hdp yuu tmderstaud wh.1t to Jo ro m ake
the rd.l!iom.hi p \Vork . M;1 i\
$2.75 to M.1t r llmakcr, .:./o this.
JH.' W5papcr, P.O . Box 1758,
Murra y l lill St;Hion. New
lll:tiH'c?

York. NY IIIISro.

T 1\UR US (1\pnl 20-May
20) .. This m ight be a good
ti111 L' to incorporatl.' cmoti()nal
rhiukinf.{ int n yotlr menu!
co n~idL·rations . It will coa t the
h.trshw:ss of rl'a lity and 111akc
it lllllrl' p:li.U,Jb)c .
c:EM INI (M~y 21 -Jut~ e 211)
-- En-11 if ym1 ~ Jll'lld ;1 bit
lllOI'L'

th,m yo u

~ l~tn dd.

yo u 'll

still fec-I good ablnl t it. hcG HI SC It 's Jike h• ~0 bt' SO I!l t'thillg a loved o ne wotdd
greatly apprcc ialc.
CANCE R
21-Jul y

U""''

22) -- Ccnkr ynm cflOrts un
a d v;mdn~ ynur personal dc ~ irc~. hcc:Jmt.• it l ook~ like vou

llli(.!;ht bl' al&gt;lc to do jt1st about
y(lu \ V,IIlt with out

a n~· th i n g

outsitlc iutcrfl'fl' II L't..':
LEO

Q~ l y 23-A ug. 22)

-- A

quiet pla ce free from outside
disturbances could help yon
figure out a co mplic:lte&lt;-1 issue
tlmt you need m 1111r:wd.
VlllGO (1\ug. 2.1-Sc pt. 22)
- An illtriguing departure
from your llSua l in terests
could ta ke a bent'fi cial rurn,
w hi ch will quit:ken you r
hopt's.
. LlllRA (Sept . 23·0&gt;t. 23) ·
- Nice pl'Oplc fi nish on top, ;' ~
yo u'll fi nd out. Your pleasant
demean or, co u piL·d w ith
kindncs~ and consideration for
nil ti1osc you 1llec.·t, w ill wi n
ym1 many gold ~tilr~ .
SCOili'IO (Orr. 24· Nov . •
22) -- You'll me your ~e n si ­
tivi ty to H.'a5oll )'0\lr lo~it..· a l

Archie Talley? Isn't that ... ? Yes, the great Harlem
Glcobetrottel and N ew York Kni cks' basketball leg-

evaluations, and Yoll'll be en-

dow ed with wi~dom. Others

will take yom thoughts seriously.
·
SAG ITT ARIUS (No v. 23IJec. 21) --You 'll co nstructivel y me t~ll the resou rcc!i at
yo ur disposal. and a project in
whk .h you'll partir::ip ate will
rC !ll:lrk:J b)y Wt'\1.
C APRICORN (IJrc. 22 J;m. 19) -- There sltouldu't be
.1ny _trouble getting the coopcr;tt i OI~ you ne ed from yoll -r
W UI' k Ulll

.or from those with
whom you share ;~. p;mn ership
situation . They'll go ri ght :
a lon~ with you.
·..
AQUARIUS Uan. 20 - F~b. ·
19) -- 'Se ttle down to business,
and you can make this both a
productive and n profiuhle
dav. Don 't le t fri vo lom int&lt;-•r11\ :l t C'

wowed thousands of young children with his
basketlball maneuvet'll involving th e crowd in stl)nts, .
games, and antics.
But sandwiched between the fun were some pow~
erful"lngredients of life" messages.
" I care about you and believe in you,"Talley began
telling Green Elementary students. "''m not going to tell
you what you're doing wrong, but I'm here to remind you

HE HAS
SKILLSArchie Talley
shows the
kids some
of the reasons why he
' was ..part of

Pin"' sH Messap. A4

the New ·-·· ' ·Kincks professional
. basketball
and why he
was one of
the chosen
few to take
part on the
Harlem Globetrootter's
beasketball
team. (Kris
Dotson)

A GOOD MESSAGE- These kids definitely had fun while
Archie Talley told his message of "believing in yourself.·
Ar.c hie wowed the kids with basketball skills while driving
home some very Important messages . (Kris Dotson)

Chauncey man
dies in Ohio ·
143 accident,

GALLIP OLIS Gov.
Bob Taft will be th e guest
speaker for the Lin coln Day
Dinner sponsored by the
Gallia and Jackson counti es'
Republican organizations set
for Wednesday, April 3 at th e
University of Rio Grande
Student Center Annex.
~ The 'ev~nt starts with a
rec.eption at 6 p.m.
Gallia Co unty GO P Executive Comm ittee C hairm an
Roger Watson said lo ca l
R.ep ublicans are .honored to
host th e governor, but also
welco me th e opportunity to
hear hi s views and responses
to their concerns firsthand.
"The event gives him personal contact with people in
Gallia County and to hear
about problems he ca n
addre ss," said Watson .."! have
been in contact with the
governor and his staff about
concerns in Gallia Coun ty,
so the governor is aware and

imaging u~~t
&lt;.

Details on A5

New fire trnck
delivery expected
in April

Index
Calendars
Celebrations
~lassifieds

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region

C4
C2
D2·7
insert
C1

Sports .

A4
A6
A2
81·8

Weather

A2

C 2002 Ohio

Valley Publishing Co.

to provide
GVFD
with
a
thermal
. ..
1magmg
camera.
' Th e
BY KEVIN KEUY
. camera,
KKELLY&lt;li&gt; MYDAILYTR!BUNE.COM
whi ch
GALLIPOLIS Galillumilipolis
firefighters
arc
Diln!lally . nates heat
increasing their techni cal
s?urces in a
to help
capability with the purchase extin guish hQ~ spots and
of equipment allowing th em · locate · people: trapped or
to pinpoint fire so urces
unconscious in ,a building,
within burning structures.
had been sou:ght by the
The C ity Comm issio n
depa~tment, whlCh launched
approved an emergen cy a fund- raising C(ll11paign last
ordinance at last Tuesday's year to meet the 'cost.
m eeting accepting a $27,000
"That's really '£he latest in
bid from All- American Fire
Equipment Inc., Ona, WVa .,

~te

~--,

will
be
prepared
to answer
questions."

earned his la\v degree from
th e University of Cincinnati
Law Sc hool.
Si nce his election , Taft has
" We
focused
on
reb uildin g
need
to Ohio 's schools, helpin g
jom
every child learn to read,
togeth er,
attractin g new JObs, posiwork for tioning O hi o as a leader in
Gallia
te chnol ogy. improving serTaft
County
vices for seniors, and restorand
get ing citi l-s and r ural commuthin gs done ," he adde d.
nities.
Taft, elected Ohio's 67th
Th e governor and First
governor in ,1998, began his · Lady Hope Taft have a
career in public service as a daughter, Anna .
volunteer for th e Peace
Beca use a large crowd is
Cor ps. H e ha s served expected to attend the dinO hioans as a membe r of the ner, Watso n. encouraged peostate House of Representa- ple to buy their tickets early.
tives, as a H amilton County Tickets are ava ilable from
commiss ioner an d as O hi o's any R epubli can central
secretary of state.
com mitteeman or from WatTaft is· a graduate of Yale so n by call ing 256-65 15. ··
University with a bachelor
" l'tn sure we're loo king
of arts degree in govern- for a crowd and peopl e
ment, received his nuste r's should purchase their tickets
degree in govern ment from · before and not wait unti l the
Princ e ton University and last minute," Wa tson said.

Colorecla' .Ccincer s-,.posium
Thursday! March, 28, 2002 • 7:00 PM
Charles E. HolzeF, Jr.; M.D. Surgery Center

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)

ASU 2nd ·Fioor Waiting Area - Gallipolis'

'•
Spomorecl by ihe Amwicon Can;er Sociery, the HMC Communily Hea/ih one!
Wei/ness Depor1men1; one! ihe ifMC Pre·Aclmission EducoHon Deportment

to reorganize. and you
OJl

I

FROM STAFF REPORTS

-- TackJJ that projl'ct that yol1
\\o';Ult

Please see Health, A4

CVFD roceeds Taft to address area GOP April 3
with ermal

Cllt~ distr:n:r you.

w il l be :1ble to get it off

POMEROY - Opening a new .commuili·
ty health center in a section of th e Veterans
Memorial Hospitil building on Mulberry
H eights has tentatively been set for October.
The steering committee which has been
planning for enhanced services for medically
underserved Meig; countians for more than a
year met last week to finalize plans for an application for federal funding to start up the health
care facility.
April 1 is the deadline for filing the application for a grant of up to $640,000 to be used in
establishing a health center.
The committee, chaired by Meig; County
Conunissioner Mick Davenport, views the
health center as a "fir.;t step in expanding local
medical care to incl\lde a crit:cal access hospital
with .in emergency room." The county has
been without hospital and emergency room
facilities !Or nearly twO years.
Once the grant application is filed it will be
about 60 days - late June or early July before a decision is made,.said Susan Isaacs, the
grants writer who is Working with George
Hoffinan, coordinator for the project.
After it is ·approved, th e committee wiD have
only 90 days to get the health center up and
runnmg.
"We know that we can't wait to see if we get
approved before we start doing something.
We're optimistic, so we 're moving ahead," said
Davenport.
"We"re going to bring back health services
to Meigs County one way or another, and if
soinethin g should happen and we get turned
down on this grant, th en we're not going to
stop, we're just go1hg to change direction."

.

4 Sedlonl - Jl ......
Saturd.1 y. March 23. ::!002

BY CH.vuNE HIIEfUCH
HOEAJCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Todays clue: A equals P

I I

ANI(TI-\ING TO A BIRD!

•
open1ng

ENTENARY - Amidst the
clapping, cheering, giggles and
basketball playing, motivational speaker Archie Talley had a
very serious message for srudents at each of Gallipolis City ·elementary
schools this week.

Fire destroys
home

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

'(OlJ CAN1T E)r'.PLAIN

CENTER

Hlp: 101, Low: 401
Details, Al

~====~===~"'

COURSE, I(OU CAN

orne court· ·
.·
· · Meigs

Edna McDaniel Howard
Flemon Seagraves Jr., 71
Louise Gardner Sando, 83
Gerald 'Gary' Rood, 59
Wilmer B. Halfhill, 79
Steven Cremeans, 31
Charles Brandeberry
~ .
. DebiUs, A'4

BY KRis DoTSON

I

l , , \

HEALTH

KOOTSON@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

one-no-trump fore- I
B A I V E
1·
ing) . H e would prefer ~-;.:,...:..:,....:.._r-:;7-;~·
2
one spade- to two dia.
.
.I 1
.
.I
monds, as long as
partner isn't going to
MU D 0 I
raise spades.
·
j-...,..-,.,:-T- T:--I
13
1. 14. .
1
South appears to
.
.
have only three losers:
0
011 '~ d1.a1nond and two rl K W·A S N 1. ...
·~·
..
"I always thought," the patient
clubs. However, East
~~
told
his pounselor,"that well ad5
can produce a fourth .
.
.
.
.
justed meant. you could keep
defensive trick. He ~~~::;~~~;::., making the same mistakes again
should overtake the I
R I G G E N
1· and aga in and keep .... - ... " ·
club king with his
Complete the chuckl~ quoted
ace, cash the diamond
.
.
.
. . .
by filling in the missing word1
ace, and return the
you develop from 5tap No. 3 below.

PEANUTS

Deaths

Archie Talley brings motivational
ideals to area students

L

...--~

DEFENSE. .

AND SOMETIMES WilEN A RABBIT
15 FRIGilTENED, IT WILL SIT
YER'( STILL LIKE THIS 50
NO ONE WILL SEE IT...
•

Howard

5 Coarnotlco

34 c-naxt
38 Larry

SlllCC.

BIG NATE

producer

24 Director

DOWN.
21 ~':.":.IIIU
1
Dovout'lld
28 Stlr·ffy pon
29 Llnkl goal z·vuaol .
3 Lloten to
30 Wltb-!Oid
4 Humlllata
rnamiNII

Auction !Jridgc suffered from one major
drawback : You didn't
need to bid hi gh to
score high. AS' I've already mentioned this
week, if you played in
o n e no·trump and
won ni11c tricks, you
receive d the game
bonus. So, it was po---·
tcntial sui cide to go
It ighcr than necessary.
In 1'.125, Harold S.
Va nderbilt co difi ed
the rules of Contract
Bridge. He introduced two particularly important ideas:
having to bid a contract worth at least
100 points to collect a
game bonus, and vu lnerability. After some
early stutter-steps.
C ontraCt Bridge took
over in 192Y. From
its May 1'12'1 issue,
Auction
llridge
Mag.1Zine (which be~an in En~;land in ·
May I '!26) dropped
the ftrst word, conce ntrating ou contract, ;uuJ has been
llridgc Magazi ne ever

RiGHT, SNUFF'{, FER P..
SI"IAI'!'T

abbr.
5I McMohon
and

23 Mylhlcll

Improvements

tmts

(rice brond) 33 Llgll
12 Floppleo
INitter
13 Be parched 35 Lopoldld
18 Loop tralno 37 Whinnied

22 "Once- o 40 OCtln I
Flomlng
time .. ."
rlv•
20 Putura
sum..,
41 Sign biiQra
21 Some lraqll 80 Mach 2 flier 23 Wool

P•u

Bush to
visit Peru, A7

•

51 Corporate

end

Opening lead: • K

BARNEY

e:.ooanam
lnUnga

Vulnerable: Nellher
Mot1lh

=:tjolm

11 Otc'*b•

13 Loyal

A

. ..

Dt-al~r

44Vuatlon
480\le.or
Onl.
4751 CompiWnl
52 Sonic
bounce

7eon-

.. J 7

•
t

mlclue
4FNncll

INSIDE

Industrial park
interest
increasing, 81

Missions of
mercy, Cl

ii'.:'""'
trey

42

prollcllon

Wnl
• 10 ••
10!43
K Q Jl

41 .......

-

1

J 10.
J I H
S I I

•
•
•

ACROIS
1 "-111

MONEY

TEMPO

HEA Croaaword Pu.z:de

a

fresh footin~. You 'II bc~in to
ht..• o1hlr: to control it. ins1 c.1 d of
it concmllin~ yo11.

Keynote Speaker: Vishwanath Shenoy, M.D.
Free colorectal screening kits will be given to attendees
call

For more
I

•

------

---·--

---·

-

_

....__

MEDICAL CENT~R
Discover th~· Holzer bifference

www.holzer.org

446·5679.
~ --

---- ··-- · - - - - --

�</text>
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