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•

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiUpolle, Ohio • Point Pl.. eant, WV ·

Sundlly, March 24, 2002 · .
•

Bad lnvesbnents in fund manager's
.may cost state pension more ttian S4
BALTIMORE (AP) Maryland's
retirement fi.tnd could lose more than $4
million became a former investment firm
sunk millions of dollars into its own parent company's stock, records show.
Two money managers for Chapman
Capital Management spent $5.1 111illion
from the retirement fi.tnd to buy 395,000
shares of eChapman.com when it was
first sold to outside investors, according
to state records obtained by The Baltimore Sun.
The stock sold for $13 a share at the
tinie; it is now worth 17 cents a share.
The June 2000 purchase represented
nearly a third of eChapman.com's ¥.26
million shares on the market. The initial
public offering raised $16.4 million for

the company, records shllw.
The state pension board fired the firm
in January after learning that the Securities and Exchange Commission was
investigating the stock purchase. The
company managed about $175 million of
the state's $27 billion in assets.
Nathan Chapman Jr., Chapman Capital's chief executive, said m~agers he
hired had been using state pension
money to buy his companies' stock since
1998 and that pension system officials
knew about the investments.
"I discussed the position with clients at ··
various times - including the state of
Maryland retirement system - and no
client ever had an issue with it," Chapman said.

Chapman, who is also chairman of the
University System of Maryland board of
regents, owned up to 65 percent of
eChapman.com before the !PO.
The state pension board took control
of the shares in February and began selling some of them. However, Maryland
Comptroller William Donald Schaefer
said he is reluctant to sell while the price
k so low.
·
One investment expert said he doubts
the state will recoup much of its investment.
"I hate to say something about a company's fi.tture, but it's going to have to do
marvels to get back to the offering"
price, said Michael Falbo of Los Angelesbased' IPOPros.com.

Tobacco company ordered to pay $150
million in damages to family of low-tar smoker
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A jury
ordered Philip Morris to pay $150
million in punitive damages Friday in
a lawsuit that contended low-tar cigarettes are as dangerous as regular ones.
' The lawsuit was filed by the estate of
Michele Schwarz of Salem, who died
of lung cancer at age 53 in 1999 after
smoking low-tar Merit cigarettes.
The jury found that Philip Morris
had falsely represented that low-tar
cigarettes are healthier than regular
ones.

Stocks
from PageDI
total of 9,964, had moved
up just like the market 30 percent or more during
those siK months.
1
As for the biggest gainers,
the top four funds making
the largest leaps were: The
Profunds Semiconductor:
I NV, up 99.6 percent; the
Profunds: SemiConductor:
SVC, up 98.73 percent;
ARK Funds: Sl Small Cap
Equity: INST, up 98.08 percent; and the iShares: MSCI
S. Korea fund, up 92.90 percent.
Narrow the field a 'little
and there were 113 funds
that gained 50 percent or
more. The bulk of them
were Science &amp; Technology
funds, (41); Emerging Markets funds, (26); and Pacific
X Japan fun~s, (20).

Free online resources
If you love the kinds of
investment tools that Morningstar has created for
mutual fund investors, you'll
really love what T. Rowe
..JPrice has to offer.
A handful of planning and
guidance tools that Morningstar created and
required a membership fee
to access - are now available at T. Rowe Price's Web
site at no cost. Yup, that's
right, free for the using.
1\vo of them, the Morningstar Clear Fut~re guid-

Whets Inside

The Flying SCotsman steam train leaves Victoria Station In
London on the day Flying SCotsman PLC was floated on the
Londog.. stock e)(change, ihe Aying Scotsman announced
almost a year ago It aimed to go public with an offering on
the stock market, In a move which would allow rail enthusiasts to own their very own share In the engine. (AP)

•

Bowman
:fnMn
Dl
Page

Kneen
ftom

Correction
In a recent column, it was
erroneously stated that the
worse performing mutual
fund through Feb 21, 2002,
was the Van Wagoner
Emerging Growth fund,
·down more than 23 percent.
Yes, that performance figure
is accurate, but it wasn't the
worst performing fund yearto-date through that time
period. The worst one was

Deaths
Cha~es \IlL

Brandebeny, 74

Wilmer B. Halfhill, 79
Details. A3

-.. :

'
County Extension office anlf.
Soil and Water Conservation
District will be held at the
Ronald Hartman Sr. Farm
located on Whispering Pines
Drive, The Plains.
Topics to be covered
include "Dam Law and Pond
Siting," "Pond Vegetation
. Management," "Pond Wildlife
Control," and "Growing Fresp
Water Shrimp." R.eservatiol$
are requested by calling th¢
Athens County Extension
office 593-8555.
'

The news was good.for
Meigs County, one of several
.counties with joblessness
at 9 percent or more. In February, Meigs' rate was at 10.9
percent. down .7 percent
from Janual)"s 11 .6.

(Hal Kneen is Meigs County3
Extension agent for agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio State
University.)

et prepared

Hlp: 10, Low: .0

or storms

Details, Al

Taft declares

BY MIWSSIA RUSSELL
MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

emergency in
Lawrence Co.
COLUMBUS (AP) -A
state of emergency was
declared for Lawrence
County in southern Ohio
after flooding last week

d'~sc_roye£t. , ~t .,~q~ed

honies, oustnesses, roads and
bridgeS, Gov. Bob.Taft said
Friday. .
Taft's declaration means
that homeowners and businesses can apply for lowto
interest loans up
$200,000 and grants up to
$14,800 for emergency
needs. Taft has asked that
the U.S. Small Business
Administration to assess the
damage to determine iffederal aid is warranted.
Areas of Lawrence County flooded Wednesday after
as much as 6 inches of rain

fell.

LocalTechJ..t?.rep
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·
·
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·
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·

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·

•

aS WInners

·

Langdon, and Krystal Pennington, l!lfe.
sent their program on "Starting a New
Business," which took second place In
regional ·competition. Above, placing
fifth · in the competition with their
".Rebuilding the Trade Center• display
are, from left, Jason Hershberger, Evan
Eastman and John Stanley. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

Meigs High School
teams excel in
regional showcase
at Zanesville
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

W.VA.
Daily 3: 7-5·6
DallY 4:· 5·5·1·5
Pw;..W: 1-2-1()..39-48 (13)

lnd"\
2 Seetin• - 12 ......

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

The number of unemployed has
increased by 90,000 over the year from
227,000.
Rates increased in more than half of
Ohio's 88 counti es and ranged from a
low of 3.6 percent in Delaware and
Holmes counties to a high of 15.8 percent in Morgan · Co unty in southeast
Ohio.
·
Morgan, Meigs and Vinton counties
were. among 10 that had unemployment rates higher than 9 percent. The
other counties included Adams, 13.7;
Pike 11.3; Monroe I 0.4; Huron an d
Ottawa, 9.4; Seneca, 9 .2; and Perry 9.I.
DJFS data can be accessed at
http: //www.state.oh.us/ odjfs.

OEMAurges
residents to

Weather

Pick 3 day: 8-8·7
Pick 4 day: 2-8·2·1

Clinton Stone
Jeymar/Quallty Stone
Gene Johnson Cbev.Cirmldleal's
Thomas De It Center
Letart Corporation
Farmers Bank

POMEROY - February's unemployment rate for the region was a
mixed bag. of good, bad and no news
after figures for the month were
released last week by the Ohio Depart'm ent of Jobs and Family Services.
The news was good for Meigs
County, one of several counties with ,
joblessness at 9 percent or more. In · lized in surrounding countie s, DJFS
February, Meigs' rate was at 10.9 per- found. Athens' rate was unchanged at
cent, down ·7 percent from January's 5.3 percent; Jackson was down .2 per11.6.
cent to 8.9; Lawrence's remain stable at
Gallia County saw unemployment 5.6; and Vinton increased .2 percent to
increase .3 percent, from 6.4 in january 15 ~5.
·
to 6.7 last month.
Ohio's unemplpyment rate rose 0.2
Joblessness either increased or stabi- percentage point to 5.3 percent in

February, the state reported.
The national rate was 5.5 percent,
down from 5.6 percent in january.
" Th e rise in unemployment in February refle cts the slow demand for
workers due to the econo mic downturn,"Tom Hayes, director of the Ohio
Department of Job and Family Services, said in a news release. "In fact,
hiring is likely to continue to be low
until there is a significant increase in
demands for goods and services, particularly for manufactured products."
The number of unemployed workers increased in February to 317,000
from 299,000 in january. The February
unemployment rate in Ohio was up
from 3.9 percent in February 2001 .

Spotlight: Tech Prep Competition ·

OHIO
Pick 3: 2·6·2
Pick 4: 7-Q-1·5
SuperLalto: 1·5·11·17-2D-37
Bonus Ball: 21 .
·
Kicker: 3-9·8·8-7

iallla County Trustu's · and Clerks Association would like to thank County
Englnur/&amp;len Smith and Southeastern Equipment I James Allen for the buffet
style dinner catered by Speeclo's. We also want to thank the following for their
generous donatlont and support:

Rodney Supply
Clldllletl Trucking
FISter Sales
waterloo Coel
Turnpike Ford
Carter Tractor
ftutoZone
Jim's farm Equip.
Bob Euans Restaurant [Gallipolis
· Ron Euans Enterprises [Jac:kson)
Central Supply
Golden Corral
motor Parts
Ohio Ualleg Bank
first Star Bank
Oak HIU Ba~k [GaUipolls)
SmHb Buick
BP Bulk Plant
Burllle 011
O'Dell True Ualue Lumber
SfS Truck
DIITis/northup Dodge
car Quest
Harold montgomery
Fred Oeel
Dan Fulks (Sheward Ins) Don Welten

(Luanne Rase &amp;wman is viet
president for financial and admin'
istrative offairs, Rio Grandt
Community College, P.O. &amp;J&lt;
326, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674;
245-7236.)
•

Terps top Final 4 field, BJ

Lotteries

.Thanks
Holly Brothen

to school. Contact your local "
community college today an4
let's put college · in you{
fi.tture.

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs jobless rate dips sli
FROM AP, STAFF REPORTS'

milder, or feeling less harsh.
attend class at 2 a,m. in your
Wobbrock said smokers were getting
pajamas if you wish.
the same amount of tar by taking more
As you can see, there are
puffs on their cigarettes and smoking many important reasons for
them closer to the butt.
adults to consider returning
But Dumas said it was not the company's fault that smokers fi'gured o.ut
how to get around the low•tar design.
Dumas also said that Schwarz, who
worked for many years in the medical ;
office of her physician husband, was 1
PageD1
well aware of the dangers of cigarette
the Athens County Fairsmoke.
grounds.
Pre-registration is required
Microsoft direc~ly, and own J1roFunds Wireless lnv., by April 8 by calling 593three different funds that 1/fhich was down 58.49 per- 8555 from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m.
There will be a fee collected
also own Microsoft, it will cent,
tell you what percentage of
Dian Vujovich ~ most· recent at the. door to pay for the
your portfolio is invested in books include "101 Mutual manual.
•••
that stock," says Norwitz,
Fund FAQs" . (Chandler
Pond owners, plan on
To . use these tools, visit House)
and "10-Minute
http://www.troweprice.co . Guide to the Stock Market" attending the "2002 Pond
m, then, on the right side of (Macmillan). To learn more Clinic" being held on Saturthe home page look for about mutual funds, visit her day, May 4, from 10 a.m. to
"Investment Tools" and W.,b site at: www.dianifund· noon. This joindy sponsored
program by the Athens
select a tool from the drop freebies. com.
down bar.
One reminder, as great as
these in~estrrient tools are,
the best they can do is provide a overview of what's
been going on with your
holdings and not an up-tothe-day report. · Mutual
funds don't report their
fund holdings to Morningstar on a daily basis. So
think past tense when
reviewing the ro~sults. So
think past tense when
reviewing the results as the
freshest data regarding a
fund's portfolio holdings
that y~u'll find in Morningstar's data base are likely
to be at least .two to three
months old."

Schwarz had switched from a regular
filtered cigarette because she believed
the low-tar version would be better
for her health, said the attorney for her
estate, Lawrence Wobbrock.
Wobbrock contended in court that
Philip Morris marketed the cigarettes
as having fewer health risks.
But James L. Dumas, one of the
company's attorneys, said Philip Morris did not market Merits as healthier
than regular filtered cigarettes. He said
the company advertises them as

ance module, and the
Morningstar Portfolio .XRay, are particularly helpful
for those wanting to get a
better picture of how their
401 k retirement dollars are
invested, and, what the
make-up is of all of the
investments held . in their
personal portfolios.
"The Clear Future helps
you diversifY your retirement plan," says Steve Norwitz, a vice president at T.
Rowe Price," And, to get an
idea of h·o w much risk your
taking ori in your asset allocation strategy with respect
to your 401k investment.
For instance, if you have
more than 10 percent
invested in company stock,
it raises a red flag and suggests that you shoqld probably limit that holding to 10
percent."
·
N orwitz says the Portfolio
X-Ray tool can help analyze your entire personal
portfolio. You enter all of
your holdings - like individual stocks, bonds, money
market funds and mutual
funds - and then letting
the program slice and dice
that info into any number of
different pieces.
The end result is you'll
have an idea of just how
much you've invested in
things like the various stock
sectors, the different style
boxes, regions of the world,
etc. The X-Ray also shows
the top 10 holdings in your
portfolio." So, if you own

Melp County's

83·5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81,3
A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY All three
teams of Meigs High School
students competing in th.e
Regional Tech Prep Showcase
at Muskingum Technical College in Zanesville last week
came home winners.
The teams qualified to compete in .the regional contest by
taking first places in their
respective ·Categories at the ·
annual Washington-MorganMeigs Consortium Tech Prep
Showcase held in February at
Washington State Community
College.
With a vicjeo presentation
and tri-fold displays in the
information support services
category for "Starting a Small
Business," the Meigs team of
Shauna
Manley, Amanda
Langdon, Krystal Pennington
and Jessica Roush, won second,
Evan Shaw and Chris Neece
took fourth place in interactive media with a promotional
video·· for Wellspring Retreat

GALLIPOLIS - Although the 2001 severe
weather season was a relatively quiet one across
Ohio, 2002 season started off with a bang.
Last year, strong thunderstorms, winds and hail
accounted for most of the severe weather as only
eight tornadoes touched down in the state, and
relatively little flash flooding occurred.
The only notable flooding in 2001 occurred
durinj! the middle part .of May when Meigs,Jackson'ahd Lawrence counties were hit with damages
totaling more than S1 million.
This year, the Ohio Emergency Management
Agency is kicking off Severe Weather Awareness
Week by offering the following safety tips to keep
citizens "Storm Ready."
Severe thunderstorms ca n produce damaging
winds as . strong as the winds in a weak tornado
and can be life threatening. ·
Telephone lines and metal pipes can conduct
elec!ricity. Unplug appliances not necessary for
obtaining weather information, avoid using electri cal appliances, and use phones only in an emergency. Do not take a bath or shower, water is an
electrical conductor.
If lightning is occurring and shelter is not available, get inside a hard top automobile and keep
the windows up. If no automobile is available, find
a low spot away from trees, fences and poles. If you
are boating or swimming, get to land and find
shelter immediately.
•

CLOGGIN'
PROMOTIONAL VIDEO - Evan Shaw, left, and Chris Neece prepared
a promotional video on the Wellspring Retreat Center of Albany. In
the Interactive · media category at the regiomil contest, they took
fourth place, (Charlene Hoeflich)
Center o£Albany.
In engineering technology
for
their
project
titled
"Rebuilding the World Trade
Center,'1 John Stanley, Jason
Hershberger, and Evan Eastman took fifth place:
Emphasis of Tech Prep programs is on providing students
with the
education
for today's jobs.
The th
ty consortium
is
through Washington
Community Col-

lege.
.
Meigs High School recently
received a. grant of $25,000
through
the
consortium,
which has been used for new
equipment and software. That,
according to a Washington
State Community College
representative, · will assist in
expanding the skills of the
students and better prepare
them to enter an associate
degree program of multimedia
technology.

The young
It team of the Big Bend Cloggers
took third place in their age category, 16 to 21, at
· a recent competition in Gatlinburg, Tenn. Instructors for the group are Donnie and Vivian May. Last
year, the team won first place overall at the South
40 Express contest held in Hillsboro. Pictured
around Donnie May are the dancers, from left,
Sierra Jackson, Erica Haning, Sheena Morris,
Elyse Hatfield, and Bethany Gibbs. Amber Fisher
also dances with the group. (Charlene !'loeflich) ..

Krogers

Smlth&amp;mc
Jividen's Pewer Equip
Glenn Smith
Clyde Evans
Ttm Evans
Parts Bam

Thank Youl

Cancer Syntposlu•
Thursday, March, 28, 2002 • 7:00 PM
Charles E. Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery Center
.ASU 2nd Floor Waiting Area · Gallipolis

offers, please call

Sponsored by the American Cancer Society, the HMC Communily Heo/111 ancl
Wei/ness Deparlmellt, and the HMC Pre-Admi.,;on Education Deportment

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

SPECIAL THANKS to Ruthann Millhone and Karl Justus
for all their help throughout the year.
6ollia County Trustee~ and Clerks Association, President Jamu Allen,
Vice President Wanda Hively, Sec. /Tres. Paul Justus.

For mare

:.

'.

coli

446·5679.

R

MEDICAL, CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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

I

'I
'·

�'

Ohio ·

The Daily Sentinel
1\lesday, March 26

'

.tifm..
" "'

·~~
"'~"'"':.'

•IColumbuo j35' 144' !

~

··,~

C2002

Inc.

0 ~--~~·~-·
Rail

the oil embargo and long gas
lines of the 1970s.
"September 11th just really underscored the value of
having domestic rertewable
fuel and not being dependent on foreign supplies,"
WASHINGTON (AP) said Mike Wagner of the
Ohio farmers are hoping Ohio Corn Marketing Pronational security issues com- gram and Ohio Corn Growbined with rising gas prices ers Association. "To me,
and clean air concerns will that 's what's . creating the
spur Congress to encourage interest in the. farm bill and
the use of fuel made from the energy bill for domestic
crops.
renewable fuels ."
" We'd really like to proOhio is the sixth largest
duce corn to make ethanol," corn producer in the nation,
Jane Marshall, a corn and , yielding 485 million bushels
soybean farmer from Preble in 2000. That makes Ohio
County, told House Agricul- the largest corn- producmg
ture Committee members state in the country without
during a recent trip 'to Wash- an ethan9l plant.
ington.
A strong ethanol market
Ohio farm groups are could m se the price of corn
pushing for agriculture and from 25 cents to 50 cents a
energy legislation pending in bushel because it eliminates
Congress to create new sub- surplus grain and boosts
sidies and markets for the demand. It would also g1ve
production of ethanol and farmers in Ohio the incenother biofuels .
tlve to mvest m an · ethanol
Ethanol comes from . the plant, said' Fred Yoder, the
fermentation of sugars from upcoming president of the
corn and other crops and is National Corn Growers
used primarily as a gasoline Association.
additive. It is currently subsi"There's a huge potential
dized by the federal govern- for profit," Yoder said. "We
ment through a tax break, as have always been a comis biodiesel, a product of soy- modity seller' and we think
beans.
it's high time t~at we partieFarmers would like to see ipate in the next step of
additional subsidies and tax profitability."
credits offered to spur the
Marshall and her husband
production of ethanol. They grow 300 acres of corn and
would also like to see incen- 150 acres of soybean
on
the1r
.
I
tives offered to encourage southwest Ohio farm. She
the use of ethanol in gasolin.e and other farmers sell much
products.
. of their crop on the internaSince the Sept. 11 terrorist uonal commodmes mark~t.
attacks, lawmakers have
Part of their income also
approached energy indepen- comes from government
dence with an added payments designed to conurgency, giving biofuels serve land and co~pensate
renewed support. The Unit- farmers for low pnces due
ed States imports about 60 to oversupply, dlSa~ters or
percent of . its petroleum . international treaties:
The U.S. ethanol mdustry
consumption. Farmers want
to capitalize qn what they produced abou,t 2 b1lhon
say is. the most attentionl ~ga~ons of fuer m 2001. An
. ethanol has received since expanded ethanol mdustry

Ohio farm
groups take case
to Washington ·

1- - 124'1&lt;10' I •
~

PageAl

Monday....rch :as.' ::aoo::a

~n"ieS

.

Snow

Ice

.,,_,_,_

Chance for rain
returns to area
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers or drizzle.
Lows 40 to 45. Chance of precipitation 30 percent.
.
Tuesday... Cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs near 60. Chance of rain 50 percent.
.
Tuesday night. ..Cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows m
the mid 30s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Weather forecast:
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the ?lid 50s.
.
.
Thursday... Mostly clear. L'ows in the m1d 30s and h1ghs m
the mid 50s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s and highs in the
·
lower 60's. ·
Saturday... Mosdy cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 40s and highs in the mid 50s.

Police without leads
in four unsolved
homicide cases
CHANDLERSVILLE (AP) have no doubt that this cow- Authorities have ru~ out of ard will be brought to justice,"
leads in the investigations of Dodd's letter said.
four unsolved homicides in
There are no apparent susMuskingum County.
pects in the Smith and CanBut the families of the vic- non cases, but detectives said
tims and police say they hope they believe a former girla break will surface soon.
friend might have killed Ford,
Since January 2000, sheriff's who was shot three times in
detectives have not been able the chest and head. A lack of
to close investigations of three evidence has stalled that invesmurder sc.enes involving four tigation, and detectives say
deaths, The Columbus Dis- they need one . more crucial
patch reported Saturday.
piece of evidence.
Until the last few years,
There is some DNA eviMuskingum County had only dence in Cannon's case, and
one or two homicides a year, his relatives suspect he died in
and any other cold cases are a robbery attempt. But direcmore than a decade old, tion in the case has faded.
Detective Robert Stutes said
Detectives said they now
on Saturday.
must rely on witnesses ot othInvestigators interviewed ers who can come forward
several people after the kiUings, with information in the Smith
but they have no definite suspects and have found no connections among the deaths.
Sheriff's detective Mike
Ryan hopes the responsible
parties will give themselves
away over time.
"It is frustrating, but guilt
can weigh on people over the
years,"h e sa~'d .
These are the unsolved
'
murders:
.
• Garry and Karen Smith
were found March 18, 2001,
shot to death in their newly
Full ea. pc
QuMn :&lt;~ot
built home in this community
King set
. .71
11
miles southeast of
Zapesville. Mr. Smith, 60, was
Serta Super Firm,..,.....
shot in the back and head;
Mrs. Smith, 42, was shot in the
head and neck ..
• Leiland Cannon, 74, was
beaten to death Jan. 13, 2000,
in his East Fultonham home
in southwestern Muskingum
County.
• Darius M. Ford, 43, was
found shot to death July l2,
2000, inside his car on public
hunting land in· Muskingum
Township, about 4 miles north
of Zanesville.
In a recent letter to a newspaper, Lisa Dodd, the Smiths'
niece, said investigators want
to solve the mysteries as much
as the families do.
" You are our lifeline from
this hell we live in, and we

could r.place hefty government subsidies, farmers say.
"For me, if we can help
provide energy for this
country, that's a good thing.
And by encouraging biofuels, we would also end up
with better prices for our
crops," Marshall said,
Ethanol supporters recentJy won a victory in the Senate energy bill. Bridging
longtime
differences
between farm and oil interests, lawmakers agreed ~o
triple the amount of ethanol
used in gasoline.
Under the agreement,
refiners would have two
years to increase the amount
of corn~based ethanol or
other biofuels used nationwide from I. 7 billion gallons
to 2.3 billion gallons. The
volume would increase to 5
billion gallons by 2012, a
move that would help farmers such as the Marshalls find
more buyers for their corn.
The energy bill is pending
in the Senate and has not yet
been considered by the
House.
Also pending in Congress
is the new 10-year farm bill,
which farmers are hoping
will expand the Bioenergy
Program that encourages the
use of crops in making
ethanol and other biodiesel
fuels.
Ohio Reps. Marcy Kaptur,
Sherrod Brown, Dennis
Kucinich and Tony Hall are
pushing for the farm bill to
also include a provision that
· establishes grant and loan
programs for farmers, ranchets, farmer cooperatives and

NO PERSON
SHALL UNCOVER,
MAKE CONNECTIONS
OR AN
OPENING INTO, USE, ALTER, REPAIR,
OR DISTURB OUR PUBLIC SEWER
SYSTEM WITHOUT HAVING FIRST
OBTAINED
A
PERMIT
FROM
SYRACUSE-RACINE
REGIONAL
SEWER DISTRICT, ISSUED UNDER
AUTHORITY OF RESOLUTION A·
SECTION 4-PAGE 8, USER CHARGE
AND SEWER USE REGULATIONS.

rural small businesses to
develop renewable energy. .
Also pending in the biU is
a requirement that federal
agencies purchase biofuels
whenevu they are found to
be comparable in price, performance and availability to
fossil fuels.
These provisions would
"bolster farm income, provide farmers new markets
for their goods, cr.ate jobs,
revitalize rural communities,
enhance public health and
the
environment
and
increase energy security and
independence," the Ohio
lawmakers wrote in :i recent
letter sent to the House
Agriculture Committee.
Critics. say the government .
should leave it to private
industry to develop new
fuels without federal assistance. They also point out
tbat ethanol is still more
expensive than crude oil.
It costs as little as $5 a barrei to pump oil out of the
ground in Saudi Arabia and
ship it to the United States,
about $15 less than it costs to
produce it in Alaska, according to energy economists.
Producing ethanol from
corn costs ~s much as $40 a
barrel.
Using more biofuels also
affects federal spending on
highways since the tax collected for ethanol is lower
than the tax collected for
gasoline. The Ohio Department of Transportation esti. mates that ·this costs Ohio,
one of the biggest users of
ethanol, $160 million a year
in highway funds.

Easter party

BELPRE -Angela Adams of Parkersburg, W.Va., is using
the $3,000 she won in the "Let the Doughboy Help You Cel'ebrate" conte&gt;t to host an Easter egg hunt and party for Westbrook Health Services' group homes, set for Saturday from
noon to 2 p.m. at Belpre Church of Christ, 2932 Washington
Blvd., Belpre.
Westbrook Health Services operates 15 residential facilities in
the Mid-Ohio Valley for individuals with developmental and
·
mental health disabilities.
Adams' brother is a resident at one of Westbrook's group
homes. The celebration will include more ·than 100 residents,
family members and friends.
The Pillsbury Doughboy will make a guest appearance at the
celebration . Entertainment will include a magician and a pair
of clowns. Easter baskets, a bunny ring toss and an egg toss will
complete the Easter theme.
Adams is one of 10 winners in the "Let the Doughboy Help
You Celebrate" contest who received $3,000 to create a special
celebration.
The contest, which was sponsored by the Pillsbury brand of
dessert and baking mix products, asked people to describe in 50
words or less an upcoming celebration that the Doughboy
could help them "sweeten." More than 13,000 people entered
the contest, which rari from Sept. 1 to Oct. 31, 2001.

Gallia Countian
helps form Ohio
4-H history
BY KRIS DoTSON
KDOTSON@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

'

·

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\

, ,.

'~,
;~,),; ·~·
.

'

"~ Motg~ttJ

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didtJ't t8id
hl!ta! ·

SYRACUSE-RACINE
REGIONAL SEWER DISTRICT

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- Egg Is not at a place of business
- Egg Is not at a private residence
-Egg Is not Inside a man-made object

49.

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COOLVILLE - Charles Wi!Wd Brandeberry. 74, Clark
Road, Coolville, died on Saturday, March 23, 2002, at CamdenClark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born March 12, 1928, son of the late Orville and
·Mabel Walker Br.mdeberry. He was retired from Kaiser Aluminum of Belpre, with 30 years of service, and was· a lifelong
fanner.
Surviving are his wife, Esther "Chick" fuller Brandeberry;
thn.e daughters and two sons-in-law, Teresa and Roger Randolph of Coolville, Debbie and Mick Carpenter of Salesville,
and Linda Noland of Gretna, La.; six grandchilgren and two
great grandchildren; and an aunt, nieces, nephews and several
COUSins.

He was also preceded in death by a son, Brian; a granddaughter, Tiffany Brandeberry; and his sister, Ruth Richmond.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Howard Mayne officiating. Burial will
be in Ireland Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 5-9 p.nt. Tuesday.

· Wil111er B. Halfhill
CHESHIRE -Wilmer B. HaJfhill, 79, Cheshire, died on
Saturday, March 23, 2002, at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington,
W.Va.
Born May 30, 1922, in Cheshire Township, he was the son of
the late Ora and Ethel Ba.ird HaJfhill. He was a retired coal
miner and former laundry departtnent employee with Holzer
Medical Center. He attended White Oak Church.
Surviving are his wife of 59 years, Alzada Cart Halfhill; a
daughter and son-in-law, Judy and Wayne Thompson of Gallipolis; four sons and daughters-in-law, Wilmer E. and Barbara
· HaJfhill of Gallipolis, Lowell E. and Myra Halfhill of New
Haven, W.Va., Douglas and Brenda Halfhill of Gallipolis, and
Thomas R. and Renee Halfhill of Cheshire; 21 grandchildren,
14 step grandchildren, 19 great grandchildren, nine step great
grandchildren and a great-great grandchild; a .sister-in-law,
Dorothy Halfhill of Bidwell; and sevetal nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by a son, Joseph Frank
HaJfhill; three sisters, Georgia HaJfhill, Audrey HaJfhill and
Lucille Clark; and three brothers, Kenneth Halfhill, Dana
Hal£hill and Charles Halfhill.
·
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in Cremeens Funetal Chapel,
·. Gallipolis, with the Rev. Carl Ward officiating. Burial will be in
Campa.ign Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9 tonight.

11:18 p.m., Ohio 681 ;
Wendy Clark, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital.
RACINE-Adamj.John- .
POMEROY
son, 16, 54342 N. Portland
sun day. 4:10 a.m., R oc kRoad, Portland, was cited for springs Rehabilitation Cenimpa.ired alertness by the Gal- ter, Paul McCarty, OMH;
lia-Meigs Post of the State
6 :42 p.m., Cre w Road ,
Highway Patrol following a David Putnam, treated.
one-vehicle accident early
REEDSVILLE
Saturday on County Road
Saturday, 12:04 a.m., Curtis
122 (Roy Jones).
Hollow, Charles Jones, treatTroopers sa.id Johnson was ed;
southbound, 1.2 miles south
sunday, 6:36 a.m., Happy
of CR 30 (Morningstar) in Hollow Road, Noah ChasSutton Township at 12:10 teen, treated.
a.m. when he fell asleep at the
RUTLAND
wheel of the pickup truck he
Saturday, 3:43 a.m., Ohio
drove. The vehicle went off 143, Rich Tanley, dead on
the right side of the road and arrival;
struck a fence.
Sunday, 2:50 p.m ., Salem
The pickup was slightly Street, Gail Boundon, HMC.
damaged.
SYRACUSE
Saturday, 9:32 a.m., Elm
Street, Vicki Bose, HMC.

EMS runs

Post to meet

POMEROY- 'Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered • 15 calls for assisTUPPERS PLAINS tance over the weekend. Units VFW Post 9053 will meet at
responded as follows:
the post home in Tuppers
CENTRAL DISPATCH Plains on Thursday at 7 p.m. A
Saturday, 1:11 a.m., Broad- special drawing wil be held.
.way, Lisa Smith, Holzer Medical Center;
5:14 p:m., HMC Clinic,
Florence Tablock, HMC;
9:54 p.m., Happy Hollow,
Sam Williams, Pleasant Valley
POMEROY -· Melvin
Hospital;
Mock of Advanced Hearing
Sunday, 6:01 a.m., Lincoln Center in Gallipolis will con- .
Smith, duct free Pure Tone Hearing·
Heights, Denise
HMC;
Screenings at , the Meigs
10:13 a.m., Mulberry County Health Department
Avenue, Robert Cushnen, on April 12 from 9 a.m: until
HMC;
noon and 1 to 4 p.m.
5:40 p.m., East Shade, RayOnly 24 appointments for
mond Maxson, St. Joseph's those age 22 and older will be
Hospital;
available. Appointments may
7:57p.m., Ohio 124,Wesley be arranged by contacting
Clark, PVH;
Courtney Sim at 992-6626.

Screenings
available

Added witnesses' names will be released about 10 days before
the execution, Dean said.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons also used closed-circuit television in the execution ofTimothy McVeigh for the bombing
of a federal building in Oklahoma City.
.
Baich said state law allows the family named in the conviction to name three witnesses, and department rules ban photographic equipment from the death chamber.
"If the di~ctor wants to change the rules near the end of the
process, he wjll have to comply with the notice and hearing
requirements outlined in Ohio law," Baich said.
·
That would require a hearing and a rule change to take effect
31 days after the hearing, he told the newspaper.

MEIGS
CALENDAR
117 E. Memorial 'or.
TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO, Tues·
day, 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. Meal will be furnished.
POMEROY.- Child immu·
nization clinic, Tuesday at the
Meigs County Heakh Depart·
ment, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3
p.m. Take children's shot
records. Children · must be
.accompanied by parent or
legal, guardian. Because of
vaccine shortages, call health
department to be sure vac·
cine is available.
POMEROY - Meigs High
School Junior parent meet·
ing, Tuesday, 7 p.m. high
school library.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Middle·
port Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Racine Library,
Eileen Buck hostess. Phyllis
Hackett to review •John
Adams" by David McCul·
Iough.

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Ewings
Chapter, Sons of the Amari·
can Revolution, 7 :30 p.m.
POMEROY - Veterans Thursday, Meigs Museum.
Service Commission will Program on 19th century
meet on Monday at 9 a.m. at superstitions.
Sally Field (The Court) went to
Binningham High School in
Los Angeles ·with .Michael
Ovitz, who later became her
agent.

Subtcrlptlon ratea

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LOCAL BRIEFS·~

Ohio will use closedcircuit TV for extra
execution witnesses

..

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

GALLIPOLIS- Ohio c~lebrated 100 yeats in 4-H by producing a ·book honoring the memories and tremendous
growth each of its 88 counties has experienced.
'
"Ohio 4-H Celebrating 100Years ofYouth Development"
recounts the history of 4.-H with statistics and its founder,
Ohioan A.B. Graham, recognizes past state 4-H leaders, dedicates two pages of text and pictures to each county's program, and talks about 4-H camp.
The book was written and edited by local resident . Erin
Dee!.
.
Community Calendar Ia
' "I became a .member of the Ohio 4-H Centennial Compubllahed aa a free aarvlca
.mittee that had around 40 members representing various sect9 non-profit groupa wlah·
tions of the state," said Dee!.
COLUMBUS (A~) - For the first time, Ohio will use lng to announce meetlnga
"Then I joined their Promotions Subconunittee, where we closed•circuit television to allow more witnesses at an execu- and apeclalavent1. The caldiscussed putting together a commemorative book," she tion.
endar 11 not de1Igned to
. added. "We asked each county to submit six pictures and two
As many as 24 extra witnesses will be able to watch the death promote aal11 or fund·ral•·
pages of single spaced text describing their histories and asked of Alton Coleman, vrhose execution is scheduled for April 26, era of any type. Item• are
for it to be turned in by February 2001."
.
· from a room inside the Lucasville Correctional Institution. printed only a1 1pace par·
Dee!, at the time, was working on coming up with a the- There is room for only 12 witnesses ~n the Death House.
mlts and cannot be guaran·
Coleman, 46, was convicted of two Cincinnati-area murders teed to be printed a 1paclflc
sis/project for her masters in Human arid Community
Resource Development at Ohio State Umvemty, which II an during a· 1984 crime spree. Authorities say at least seven people number of day1.
Extension Education program, takin~ in the footsteps of her in six states were killed over eight weeks.
father, Gallia County 4-H Agent Fred Dee!.
"The only reason we're doing it is there were multiple
MONDAY
After meeting With the master's conunittee and her advisor, crimes in multiple states;' Andrea Dean, spokeswoman for the
POMEROY
Trinity
she received the okay to double dip and have the,book be her Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, said on Satur- · Church, Pomeroy, VBS meet·
project.
.
day.
lng, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
The lileXt tedious and long year was filled w1th many comBut Coleman's attorney, assistant federal public defender Dale church. Members of other
munications with each county trying to get the histori~s and Baich, told The (Toledo) Blade that he might challenge the area churches involved in last
pictures turned in, after which she edited the text to make extra witnesses and use of a camera.
year's VBS or others wanting
room for the pictures.
"I think it is creating a circus-like atmosphere;· Ba.ich sa.id.
to help Invited to attend. Any
"The original photos were stressful to manage," recalled
Authorities said Coleman and accomplice Deb111 Brown questions, call 949·1316.
Dee!. "Even though we asked for six pictures, we got six to assaulted and abducted 20 people, killing at least seven, in Wis12. Each were categorized, prioritized for quality and cap- consin, Illinois, Indiana, ·Michigan, Ohio and Kentucky.
HARRISONVILLE - Har·
tions were written. ·
Brown's death sentence was commuted to life in prison by · risonville Senior Citizens will
"The biggest issue was organization."
then-Governor Richard Celeste in 1990.
meet at 11 a.m. Monday at
She submitted the first manuscript in September 2001 :The , Coleman, ofWaukegan, IU., was sentenced to die in Ohio for · the firehouse. Potluck dinner.
publisher c:illed back and told her she had tw1ce the amount the strangulation ofTonnie Storey, 15, of ~incinnati, and the Blood pressures will be taken.
of information allowed.
.
. ·
.
beating death of Marlene Walters, 44, of suburban Cincinnati.
.
"At. that ti~e, we h~d to cut mforn:'tlon from 64 countl.es
The state allows six reporters and three witnesses each for the
RUTLAND - Rutland Gar·
.
victims and the inmate in the Death House. Witnesses forWal- den Club, Monday, home of
. and sull d1dn t have p1ctures from 10, S31d Dee!.
" Aft~'&lt; searching the .history books for pictures, I e-mailed ters' family will be among those three.
Pauline Atkins, 1 p.m.
Coleman also faces death sentences in Indiana and !Uinois.
the ed1ted vers10n, asking each county to choose what was
important to keep and what they felt they could elinunate
The number of requests from victims and relatives from
POMEROY - Pomeroy
12
other states prompted the decision for the secure television Alumni Association planning
and to get 1t back to me by Nove~b~r 2001. ~ but. .
returned everything on time and Within th~, specification. feed, Dean said. No recording devices will be allowed, she session, Monday, 7 p.m. at
Then we re-submitted the second manuscnpt.
added.
the home of Yvonne Young.

•2
Clue For MondaY
March ·.2~+·. ::~~~.4~

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P•rkersburg
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PUBLIC NOTICE

•

. Mondlv. March 25, 2002

Farmers s~ek support for bi~fuels

Ohio weather

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Mond.y. Mlltch 25, 2002 _

_The_o_an_ySe_ntm_·e_I_ _

___;l~f

fhe Bend

Page AS
Mot~Qy. ~rch 25. 2002

J. . . .reclncypoet.com

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
• Fu: 7~·2157
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7~992-2158

. DEAR ABBY: I am being mar-

ned next month. Last night, my

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

r

Den Dickerson

Publisher
Charlene Hoelllch
General Manager.
urt~N tfltlt~ rdit1W ort wtll!Diftt. Tilly

I

Controller

.

slr.ould b~ !rn riiM JOIJ wunh. All ldttn

urt sub}«l tu tdiling and mulllu sigrttd Qll.tllllt:lulk lllldrrsr 11nd kltphont ,Utlllbfr.
No 111151Jnrd lrrttrs w,~ill IH publislr.rd. l...lrttn 11t01dd bt ;,. good taste, addrrnine

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rwt prnomdilits.
Tht upi•ions r.xp,urd ill thr l'lllum11 bt/llw tu't lht ronsensus of the Ohio V.Ue,
Publishi11r Cu. 'r edilurial boord. unlur olhuw&amp;t nntrd..

{ss&amp;AtS,

•
.,

NATIONAL VIEW
•

Conserve

•

Personal responsibility can
help offset effects of drought
• The Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre.• Pa.), on controlling
futr&lt;rc rr'lllcr .florr•: It is easy enough to say a drought is bad and
full rc·scrvoirs and ground wells are good.
What is nqt so easy? Remembering that the difference
between being parched and overflowing can be as capricious as
the rain.
While we can't control how much precipitation we receive,
people can con trol how much water we use. And that is how
we shou ld focus our attention during this present drought ....
What may not be understood is how much we need. At the
beginning of the 20th century, the six million people in Pennsylvania used about five gallons of water per person per day. ,
The population of the state is now almost 12 million people
and water consumption has increased to an average of 62 gallons per person, per day.
What some people also may not comprehend is the extent of
the current drought, which reaches across the eastern United
States.
Of the 67 counties of Pennsylvania, 62 are under some type
of drought declaration. A drought emergency has been declared
.in 24 counties, allowing mandatory water rationing to be
enforced ... .
And because the drought is in part within the ground
water- which serves almost 3 million people with wells in
Pennsylvania - the deficit may not be as apparent to people ....
Economizing needn't be a hardship. While some measures
include a purchase-low-flow plumbing fixtures, water-saving
appliances, repairing leaks - the investment would be repaid,
often quickly.
And so me methods of conserving water require just a litde
thought: turn off the f.1t1cet while shaving, brushing teeth or ·
cleaning vegetables; using a broom rather than a hose to clean
driveways, steps and sidewalks; washing the car with water from
a bucket.

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY 1HE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

Today is Monday, March 25, the 84th day of 2002. There are
281 days left in th e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 25, 1911, in a tragedy that galvanized America's
labor movement, 146 irninigrant workers were killed when fire
broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in New York.
On this date:
·
In A.D. 752, Pope Stephen II died, only two days after his
election.
In 1634, Maryland was founded by English colonists sent by
the second Lord Baltimore:
In 1894, Jacob S. Coxey began leading an "army" of unemployed from Massi.llon , Ohio, to Washington D.C., to demand
help from the federal government.
In I 913, the ~ome of vaudeville~ the Palace Theatre, opened
in New York City.
In 1947, a coal mine explosion in Centralia, Ill., claimed 111
lives.

.

In I 957, the Treaty of Rome esta61ished the European Economic Community.
In 1965, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led 25,000 marchers
to· the state capitol in Montgomery, Ala., to protest the denial
of voting rights to blacks..
.
·,
.
In 1975, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia was shot to death by a
nephew with a history of meotal illness. (The nephew was
beheaded the followingJune.)
In 1990,87 people, most of them Honduran and Dominican
immigrants,. were killed when fire raced through an illegal
social club in New York City.
In 1996, the redesigned $100 bill went into circulation.
Ten years ago: Libyan leader Colonel Moammar Gadhafi
backed away from an offer to turn over two suspects in the
bombing of Pan Am Flight I 03 to the Arab League. Soviet
cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev, who'd spent 10 months aboard the
orbiting Mir space station , thereby missing the upheaval in his
hom eland, finally returned to Earth.
Five years ago: The Federal Reserve · nudged interest rates
higher for the first time in two years, hoping to stifle any threat
of rising inflation. Georgia Gov. Zell ,Miller signed into law a
ban on a controversial form of late- term abortion. Former
President George Bush, 73, parachuted from a plane over the
Arizona desert.
One year ago: At the 73rd Academy Awards, "Gladiator" won
for best '{&gt;ict11re; its star, Russell Crowe, won best actor; Julia
Roberts won best actress for"Erin Brockovich:';Steven Soderbergh won best director for "Traffic."
Today's Birthdays: Modeling agency founder Eileen Ford is
80. Former astronaut James Lovell !s 74. Movie reviewer Gene ,
Shalit is 70. Feminist author Gloria Steinem is 68. Singer Anita
Bryant is 62. Singer Aretha Franklin is 60. Actor Paul Michael
·Glaser is 59. Singer Elton john is 55.

Meigs County Notebook

HENTOFF'S VIEW

pickering difeat wa.5 more cheapening political theater
'

'
When the Senate Judiciary Committee
killed the presidential nomination of
judge Charles Pickering to the fifth Circuit Court of Appeals by a strict party-line
10-9 vote, Chairman Patrick Leahy, aVermont Democrat, said triumphantly: "We
have made the Constitution, work and we
have made this committee work."
I challenge Sen. Leahy to find in the
Constitution, in James Madison's notes on
the debates as the Constitution was being
COLUMNIST
'written, and in the Federalist Papers, any
justification for allowing a single committee, no matter which party is in the major- for months that he wiU hold judicial nomity, to veto 'a federal judicial nomination. inees· to his own ideological tests. After
Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution Judge Pickering went down, Sen.
says clearly that the president shall nomi- Schumer said grandly: '.'There is clearly no
nate judges "with the advice and consent mandate from the American people to
of the Senate."There is no footnote giving stack the courts with conservative ideo·the final authority to the judiciary Com- logues. So, if'the White House persists in
mittee. Its veto power is the result of Sen- sending us nominees to throw the courts
ate rule. A constitutional amendment is out o£ whack with the country, we have
not required to change that rule. All it no choice but to vote 'no."' ·
requires is enough senators who believe in
The gloating Schumer did not tell us
a process that is democratic.
how he knows what "the American peaBefore Charles Pickering was dismissed, pie" want in their federal judges. Has it
Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, a not occurred.to him that the clearest way
Republican who understands constitu- to find out is by allowing all the members
tional democracy, urged his colleagues to of the Senate to vote on the judicial nomsend Pickering's nomination to the floor inee, no matter what the Judiciary Comso that the full Senate could advise and mittee decides? That's the countrywide
consent. Both Republican resolutions to advice to the president the Framers put
that effect were voted down 10~9. Even if into the Constitution.
they had passed, Democratic Majority
Leahy, who prides hiqlself on his
leader Tom DascWe had vowed to block a kn owege"
I d and realty to the Consn'tun'on,
full Senate vote.
said righteously after the Pickering vote
Before die final votes were taken, Sen. that the Senate's constitutional role "is
Specter predicted that this partisan war- advise and consent. It isn't advise and rubfare, including the refusal to give Judge ber stamp." That is, indeed, according to
Pickering at least a fair vote on the floor, · the Constitution, the whole Senate's role
would "leave a scar" on the Senate. And - not jl!St one committe~ in the Senate.
not for the first time. ·
I wonder at what point such good govCommittee member Charles Schumer, ernment outfit&lt; as the civil rights organia New York Democrat, had made it clear
'

Sdlolarship
committee
named

'

'

Nat
Hentoff

zations, People for the American Way, and
Alliance for Justice will' join Specter in
urging the Senate to change its rule and
abide by Article II, Section 2 of the Con- .
stitution. I'm not very hopeful, however, '
that the impetus will come from them. '
They ignore the fuct that, if this game ,
continues· to be played by the current :.
rules, many of their candidates will lose on , ·
·strict party-line votes when the Republi- ,
cans next have the majority on the Senate :
judiciary Committee.
If demociatic change is to come, the''
arena from now on will be the congressional and presidential elections. Candi-"
dates of both parties should be challenged'
by their opponents, by titizens, and by the 1
media on .whether and when the entire J
Senate will make the final decision on who sits in the federal courts·, and on the !
Supreme Court.
:
I was mordantly amused when, after the' '
vote on Pickering, Sen. Diane feinstein of
California told The Washington Post, in r
· justifying her vote against Pickering, that' 1
he is a "very polarizing figure."
-"·,
This is the very polarizing senator who "
said on NBC's "Meet The Press" recendy c
that she would not vote for any judicial ;
nominee whom she believes would overturn Roe vs. Wade. Period. Using •
Schumer's terminology, her absolutist pro-'
abortion-rights criterion is "out of '
whack" with a considerable percentage of'
Americans. Schumer and other members"
of the Judiciary Committee, in both par- •·
ties, owe it to the country 'to tell us their • .
definition of what makes a judicial nominee "in whack" with the country - and
also how they defin e "judicial independ
,,
'
ence.
(Nar He11tr!lf is a uational1y renowned

autlrority on rite Firsr Amendmem and tile Bi/1

if Rig1rrs.)

POMEROY- New members have been named to the
Diles Scholarship Committee.
They are Cathy Crow, Lee
Powell and Steve Story. They
replace Larry Powell, Rick
Crow and Tom Wolfe, who
have 'been on the committee
since the program's inception
in the mid-1970s.
Scholarships · have been
awarded every year to students
;who want to go to Ohio University to study something in
the field of communications
- broadcast,journalism, writIng, anything in the field.
Those already enrolled in the
field are also eligible to apply.
The scholarships range from
$500 to S1,500 a year. Priority
is given to students from
Meigs, Gallia, Athens and
Mason (w.Va.) counties. They
are awarded on the basis of the
student's grades and need.
Guidance counselors in area
school systems are encouraged
to advise seniors interested in
the field that the money is
available. Students must apply,
get letters of recommendation
and send along a grade transcript.

·Scholarship
resumes be1ng
accepted
MASON,

W.Va.

Resumes for 15 scholarships of $500 each to be
awarded by Stewart Johnson VFW post 9926 10
Mason are being accepted
from post members and
their families . Deadline is
April 27.
A post spokesman said
that if all of the scholarships are not awarded to
members and their families, then other veterans
and their families will be
considered. Those who
apply must have been
accepted at a college or
university.
Resumes should state the
applicant's relationship to a
veteran, the name of the
college, and the major
course of study, They can
be sent to the VFW Post
9926 at P.O. Box 586,
Mason, W.Va. 25260.

4-Hdubnews
Whiz Kidz
The Whiz Kidz 4-H
Club met on March 17 at
the home of Marvin and
Shelia Taylor, with 27
members and seven advisors present,
Items
discussed
and
approved were community
service
project
ideas,
adopt-a-highway, recycle
cans, visit the elderly, par·
ticipate in a parade, and
donate pop tabs to the
Ronald McDonald House
foundation.
Selling candy bars was an
idea for a fund-raiser and

bowling, swimming and Guides were handed· out,
skating for group fun project cards distributed
activities.
and deadlines discussed.
The group discussed proAdvisor Shelia Taylor
jects, cards and activities to gave a demonstration on
be performed by the how to sew a button on a
group. Camp dates and jacket. Refreshments were
costs were given to those served by Shelia Taylor,
interested in · attending Anna and Josh Nelson . respective camps.
Becky Taylor,
news
Recreation was "Secret reporter
Orders," played in two
teams with a basket full of
Silver Spurs
''orders." These were used
The Silver Spurs 4-H
to help members become Club met on Feb. 7 at the
better acquainted with Lone Oak Farm, with four
each other.
members and one advisor
Tia and Hannah Pratt, attending.
,
and · Derek Taylor served
Fund-raisers,
horse
refreshments.
shows and shots for horses
The next meeting will be were discussed, and officers
on April 2 at the Taylor were elected. At the next
home, with refreshments meeting on March 7 Tto be served by Josh Nel- shirts were to be ordered.
son, Andrea and Daniel · - Breana l&gt;. Hemsley,
Buckley
and
Samuel news reporter
McCall. A safety report
will be given by Michael
Nickers and Neighs
Taylor and Becky Taylor
The Nickers and Neighs
will have recreation.
4-H Club met on jan. 20 at
At the Pebruary meeting, the Pomeroy Library, with
also held at the Taylor 10 members and four advi.home, officers were elected sors pre~ent .
and installed. They are
Members agreed to put.
Brittany Hauber,
presi- on an open horse show, to
. dent; Chrissie Gregory, pay $5 dues, and discussed
vice president; Autumn going to the Equine
Hauber, secretary; Tia Affaire. Books were passed
Pratt, treasurer, and Becky out.
Taylor, news reporter.
The next meeting was
Dues for the year were held on Feb. 10 at the
set at $5 per members, and home of Don and Carol
books are $2 each, with Folmer. Books were gone
some at a higher price.
over and final plans made
Regular meetings will for fund-raising projects.
be held on the third Sun· - Melanie Sheets, news
day of each month. Family reporter

------------------------------------------------------------~--0

BUSINESS MIRROR

Evenowith store closings, America is still overstocked .
'
ing industry is undergoing a profound
have proven to be big traffic drivers.J·
NEW YORK - Even with the liqui- transformation with market share shifting Cheap chic retailer Target is now turningJ
dation of such big names as Montgomery from one segment to another."
to . a roster. of designers, ·like Massimo•'.
Ward and a rash of store closings from the
Wal-Mart, Target and moderate-priced ...wiftmulli, whose dresses s~U for •$22.
'
likes of Kmart, America is still overstocked chains like KoW's, with their low prices ~s department stores . industry are
. with retailers, particularly department and and exciting merchandise, all continue to increasingly under pressure from discoun-'
apparel stores that are turning consumers outperform the retail industry, senerating ters, rumors about consolidation in · the •:
off with uninspiring merchandise. '
strong sales ga... Wal- Mart plans to sector have only increased. There ha.&lt; been,·
In fact, even as consumer spending expand it&lt; square footage by 9 percent this eyen talk about the possibility of a merg- .: ·
begins to recover from the recession, pea- year, following an 8 percent increase last er between federated Department Stores&lt;
pie are still choosy about where they shop, year.
and May Department Stores, although •;
sticking to savvy discounters like WalThe big exception, of course, is Kmart, some analysts like Barnard view the see- 'Mart, and are not likely to return to the the nation's third-largest discounter, nario as unlikely.
"
carefree buying that defined the mid-to- which has long struggled with cluttered · The .death of the founder of Dillard's' '
late 1990s and fueled a frenzied store stores; inefficient operations and a fuzzy Department Store Inc., William T. Pillard
·expansion ..That will mean· a continued identity. It's now struggling to restructure Sr., has prompted some talk on Wall Street ~
retail shakeout that's expected to acceler- in bankruptcy and will be shuttering 284 that management might be ready to seU'.'
ate this year and in 2003 before tapering store in what SO!lJ,C.analysts believe will be ·the chain.
off.
just the first round of store closings.
Already this yeat,Jacobson ~tares Inc., a •
"We are still significantly overstored;' . The increasing clout of the discount 20-store department store chain in jack- ;
said Burt Flickinger, III, managing direc- sector has pulled business away from son, Miss., filed for Chapter 11 in January.•
tor of Reach Marketing in Westport, department stores and apparel retailers, - and its fate is uncertain.
.1
Conn., .who believes there is at .least 15 which are trying to figure out a magic
Meanwhile, BadiUo and other industry;,
percent to 20 percent more retail square- merchandising formula to entice con- analysts are closely watching specialty
footage in this country than consumer sumers, ,
apparel stores, particularly Gap Inc., which ·•
demand requires.
The big problem, Barnard said, is shop- just reported its second consecutive quar"There is no question that the con- pers are now "less enamored with famous terly ll)ss and has been strugglit:lg for two
sumer is different from today than she was designer names and big brands"- a busi- years. The chain operates 4,176 stores, and • ,
a decade ago, " said Kurt Barnard, presi- ness that fueled sales at department stores has reduced its expansjon pace, but Badil-1; l ~;
dent of Barnard.'s Retail Trend Report, in the mid-to-late 1990s. Now, these lo expects that may not be enough. He · &lt;•
based in Montclair, N.J. "The consumer is stores are aiming to differentiate them- believes there will be store closings by:
smarter and more sophisticated, and selves by fortifying their own store brands, yearend, particul:trly at Old Navy and~
understands value better than ever:"
but their efforts may be not enough.
· Gap.
·
Given changing consumer spending
Lower-priced competitors are moving
(Anne D' Innocenzio is a business writer jotJ
habits, Barnard noted, "The entire retail- along with excll!Sive merchandise \hat The Assodated Press.)
/ .
BY ANNE D'INNOCENZIO

I

•

Dear

Abby

Diana Kay Hill

.

.•
father announced to me that he had
just nurried his much younger girlfriend, "Cassandra." Abby, she is even
younger than I am. I am OK with
the marriage as long as Dad is happy,
even though I do not approve. But
that is beside the point.
ADVICE
Cassandra is now adamant about
walking down the aisle with my
father during the parent procession- should accompany your father dural at my wedding. I am extremely ing the parent processional.
uncomfortable with this idea. She
Although . I am sure Cassandra
has never been a parent to me, nor would like to be recognized for who
do I believe she ever will be.
and what she officiaUy is on this
How can I deal with this tactfully family occasion, she should rememand keep my wedding as I would ber this is your wedding, not her
like it? Help! - BEWll.DERED coming-out party. The impression
GROOM
she creates will last as long as her
DEAR
BEWILDERED marriage to your father. Please clip
GROOM: You haven't mentioned this and give it to her. Maybe seeing
your mother. If she is living, she it in black-and-white will convince

her to lighten up.
the answer is no, keep your presence neighbor told my brother about
DEAR ABBY: Are there any low-key:
dumping the dog - and how the
rules or guidelines when an exDEAR ABBY: Your column dog beat him home. He said, "If the
spouse is hospitalized or dies? My concerning the problem o'f dumping
ex-husband is in intensive care. If he unwanted pets prompts me to share litde mutt loves me that much, I'm
BILL
dies, what is my expected role? We an incident that happened several going to keep him!" GRIFFIN,
RICHARDSON,
have successfully navigated through years ago.
graduations, weddings and baptisms
My brother lives five miles outside TEXAS
in a civil manner. I am extremely a small town in Texas, and one day
DEAR BILL:. Pet dumping is no
close to my former mother-in-law, "!fter a big snowstorm, he needed to laughing matter. It often results in
grandmother to my children.
drive into town to get groceries and the death of an innoceqt animal. I
· · Abby, I want to do what is right gas.
am pleased your story had a positive
for my children and his mother, but
Just as he was about to leave, he outcome -- but a dog shouldn't have
I'm not sure what that is. Any advice noticed his neighbor's car pulling up
to turn into a hmning pigeon with
would
be
appreciated.
to the curb on the opposite side of
the aid of a Good Samaritan in order
DIVORCED IN INDIANA
the street. When the neighbor drove
DEAR DIVORCED IN INDI- off, a small dog stood in the snow. to prove how much it loves its
ANA: Trust your conmion sens.e. If The neighbo~:, had dumped his dog! owner.
(Pauline Phillips and her daughter,
·your ex has remarried, ask his wife
My brother' imrriedly picked up
and your former motheroin- law if the dog and drove to his neighbor's Jeanne Phillips, share the pseudonym
your presence would be disruptive house. He then let the dog out and Abigail V..n Buren . Write Dear Abby at
were you to, pay your respects. If the watched him scamper up the steps.
wr.iw.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
answer is yes, keep your distance. If
Lo and behold, the next week, the 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)
....

How to safeguard your Soda! Security number
Your Social Seanity card i&lt; not an
identity document !tis only =incalion of the Social Security nwnber
· assigned )00 by Social Security. but it
does not contain dal:l that woold
identifY }00. such ~ )tilr dare ci
birth or a pltylioU description.
So, don\ routinely use your
Social Security cud as proof of
your identity. Someone who legitimately and legally need; your
Social Security nwnber, such ~ an
employer; a bank or landlord, may
--'u or number.
ask you for yo...
~ .....
But not everyone who a.ks fur
your cud or nwitber really needs
it.
Giving someone your number
is voluntary, but they may deny
you the service or goods if you
refuse 10 give your Social Security
nwnber. Th better help you make
the decision whether you want to
or need 10 give your Social Security nwnber, you should ask the
following questions:
·•Why do they need your nwn-

her?
• How will !hey use it?
• Wlut will they do with your
nwnber when they are finished
\..

.

• How do· they 6.le, store or
destroy the 1 paper where your
' number is recotded?
· • How do they protect it frOm
theft?
• Wha all: the (X)tl&lt;;C(jue!lCI!S if

..
'

)00 refuse 10 ~ your nurnber1

Identity theft as a crime is a fast
growing trend. To a tliief, your
Social Security nwnber is the
beginning of a new identity. If
they can get your nwnber, they
can ruin your life until they get
caught or mCJ\Ie on 10 another
unsuspecting victim. Call the
Social Security Fraud Hodine at
1-800269-0271, if you believe
that someone is misusing your
Social Security number.
""--·
ull&lt; ti'ps
Americans should be aware of
the Social Security infonnation and
requiremeniS that aJfea their federal income l:lx re!llrm. Leaving out
certain infunnation or getting it
wrong could delay your toe refund
The following are tips for l:lxp~1) Make s.ure all the dependents
you list have Social Security nwnbers.
All dependents listed on your
federall:lx returns will need Social
Security nwnbers. If any of your
dependents needs a Social Securi· ty nwnber, you can get an applicalion by contacting Social Security at 1-8()()..772-1213.
2) Check the Social Security
nwnbers you use 10 make swe
they are the comx:t numbers.
The Ina:rnal fu.wnue Service
(IRS)c;hecksallthenan:.,;andSoc:ial
Security munberson )WI' toe retum

ag;linlt Social Security's recon:t. Ifthe
names and numbets do not rnati:h
Social Serurity's reco!tk, )00 will
~ a letter lium IRS asking )00
10 explain the discJ:epanqYoo emnot~ a toe relimd Wltil the diserepancy il resdYerl,
3) If )00 311: self-enplojro and
net $400 or more a )ell; )00 rnusi

pay Social Security tllcfs.
You must report net earnings of
$400 or man: a year on schedule
SE of your federal income 1:1x
· \IIith your
return and 6.1e tt
.income 1:1x return. E'A!n if you
don't CJWe any income 1:1x, you
may owe Social Security l:lx.
4) If you paid a household .
"~Wrker at least $1,300 in wages
last year, you are required 10 report
those wages and pay Social Security 1:1x on them with your 1:1x
return.

Workers covered by this law
include maids, cleaning persons,
child care providers, ganleners and
others who provide household
services. However, if the "~Wrlrer is
under age 18, you do not have 10
report the wages unl~ household
work is the worker's ,principal
occupation. Under this' rule, for
example, most teenagers who
baby-sit or cot your gxass are
excluded.

(Elizabeth Crump is manager
of the Social Security office in
Athens.)

'

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

"

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I

I

�NatiOn • World

The Daily Sentinel

Page A&amp;
Monel.,, Mllrch 25, 2002

Economic surge New Mexico fires force evacuation.
could lead to ·
inflation troubles
to
WASHINGTON (AP) Department store shoppers are
getting a bit of sticker shock
along with their new spring
and suminer fashions . Clothing prices in February jumped
by the biggest amount in a
nearly a year.
Airline travelers have seen
ticket prices rise for the past
two months.those still wary of
flying are not faring any better
at the . gasoline pump, where
prices so far in March are rising
at the fastest pace in a year.
The speed 'and strength of the
economy's rebound from recession has been a major surprise
on the positive side in 2002.
New worries, however. arc
arising that the unexpectedly
strong surge in activity could
lead to inflation troubles
down the road.
Clothes, airline tickets and
gasoline are not the only items
that cost more. Americans' bills
for doctors, hospitals and drugs
have dit!Jbed by 4.5 percent
over the past 12 inonths,driving
up payments both for individuals and their employers.
· The struggling economy last
year helped keep inflation in
check and bargain-hunters

happy because it was difficult
for businesses to raise prices.
But as the econmny revives,
·things could turn around.
"Just :i1 the Fed was caught .
by· surprise by the recession
last year, they could be surprised this year by the strength
of the economy and a jump in
inflation," said Sung Won
Sohn, chief economist at Wells
Fargo in Minneapolis.
··
"We could get a triple
whammy
coming
from
stronger economic demand,
higher energy pnces and higher medical costs," Sohn said.
So far, Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan, the
nation's chief inflation worrywart, seems unconCerned. He
recently told Congress that he
expected consumer prices, his
favorite measure of inflation,
to rise by a very moderate 1.5
percent this year.
The most closely watched
inflation gauge, the Consumer
Price Index, has been well~
behaved overall despite l5ig
jumps in some of its components. For the past 12 months,
the index is up by just 1.1 percent, its best performance in
38 years.

ALTO, N.M. (AP) -Windwhipped grass fires pushed
into affluent residential areas in
the pine-studded southern
New Mexico mountains Saturday, burning at least 30
homes and forcing more than
1,300 residents to evacuate.
. Three separate fires consumed nearly 11,000 acres,
including 600 ac~s in . the
Kokopelli Fire, n~med after a
subdivision where the homes
burned, police and fire officials said.
A blaze called the 5-2 Fire,
which
started on
the

pocket of flames - all of a sudden, they burst up on the side
of the mountain," said Cecile
Batchelor, who lives in a nearby subdivision, Deer Park.
Flames 'just ·COre up the
slope;· said her brother, Walt
Becker. "They were 100 feet
to 150 feet high."
, Terri Wildermuth, spokes.
woman for the state Forestry
Division, said the Kokopelli
fire was "human . caused" but
declined to elaborate. She said
the cause of the 5-2 fire had
not been determined.
Three air tankers dropped

retardant on the fires, but the It was too soon to give a dolwinds were so intense that Jar estimate, but village offiplanes and helicopters were cials said the losses would be
grounded in the evening, sajd in the millions of dollars.
Gwen Shaffer, Forest Service
Although wind died dcmn Satspokeswoman. Gusts up
60 un:by night, the sheriff expressed
mph were reported.
fear about Sundays wind
The tankers later resumed air
Police Lt. Wolf Born said 32
drops as the winds died down. homes burned in several
W"mds died back by nearly . northern and northeastern'
50 percent after sundown and. suburbs of Ruidoso, a moun;
firefighters said mostly unpop- cain resort known for skiing
ulated, open country remained in the winter .and horse racinl!:
in the path of the blaze.
in the summer. But tiretighte11 ·
"We've lost a lot of very James Mason said an actual
expensive homes . . It's just a count of burned homes later
devastating fire," Sullivan said. tallied 30.

Mescalero Apache reserva- 'i-:-:--:-'7"'---::---:--:--::---:-.-----;-::--::-~-:--:--::--:-:-::~-.--.:-:::::::r
tion, burned more .thai) Federal Consumer Protection has confinned the accuracy of the fuel saving described in this advertisement.
·

:~;~:~re~om~~':n~~it!::~
threatened, according to the
state Public Safety Department!
A third blaze, the Rock
Crusher Fire, was less than
an acre.
No injuries have · been
reported.
The Kokopelli fire started
around noon in a residential
driveway, Lincoln County
sheriffTom Sullivan said. He
said the possibility of arson
was under investigation.
"It's very suspicious the
way it started;' Sulliva.n said.
"It's just in an area where
there
wasn't
anybody
around. We're just not sure
why it got storted there."
"What started out as a small

Device may increase gas mileage by 22%
BOSTON .· National Fuelsaver
Corp. of Boston has developed
a low cost aulomotive accessory
called the Platinum Gas Saver
which allows 22% more of
each gallon to bum before it
leaves the engine.
With a simple connection to
a vacuum line, the Gas Saver
adds microscopic quantities of
platinum to the air-fuel mi~ture
entering the engine.
Since platinum has the unique
ability to make non-burning fuel
bum, the Gas Saver's platinum
increases the percentage of fuel
burning in the engine from
68% of each gallon to 90% of
each gallon, a 22% increase.
Since unbumt fuelleavihg an

engine is pollution, this 22%
of each gallon normally bums
when it reaches the platinum of
the catalytic converter.
UnfortunatelY, the convener's
platinum burns this fuel in the
tail-pipe, where the heat and
energy produced from this
fuel cannot be harnessed to
drive your vehicle.
But when the Gas Saver adds
platinum to the air-fuel mixture,
22% more of each gallon '
bums inside the engine so that
22% few~ gallons are required
to drive the same dislllnce.
After a five year study,
the government concluded:
"Independent testing shows
greater fuel savings with the

•

Gas Saver than the 22%
claimed by the developer,"
In addition to this government
study, the Gas Saver has received
patents for cleaning out carbon · •
and raising octane, making
premium fuel unnecessary for
most vehicles.
Joel Robinson, the developer, •
commented: "We have sold a
half million Gas Savers. To our
surprise, as many people buy
the Gas Saver because it extends ,
engine life (by cleaning out
the abrasive carbon deposits) ~
as buy it to increase gas
mileage or raise octane."
For further information call:

1-800-LESS-GAS
1-800·537-7427

•

Prices Good

March 26 and Wed. March 21

Fresh

Stokely

Pork Sirloin

'Squeeze

Chops-..,....-------...

Catsup

The Daily Sentinel

.Inside:

Sulli~~t~n a busy guy. Page B3

Redmen still winning, Page BJ

•

'Page 81
MonUy. Mllrch :as. 2002

MoNfi.\v's

HIGHLIGHTS
I

Redwomen
drop first two
AIKEN, S.C. - The Rio
Grande Redwomen softball
team opened the 2002 season
on Friday afternoon facing a
tough South Carolina-Aiken
squad. USC-Aiken swept a
double dip, 6-4 and 8-0.
Rio Grande (0-2) managed
seven hits and held a 2-1 lead
heading into the bOttom of
the fifrh inning when . USCAiken erupted for five runs
and the Redwomen could
never recover.
Sec:rior tri-captain Nikki
Milum tried to bring the
Redwomen back as she
wrapped a two-run single in
the sixth inning to cut the
deficit to 6-4. Milu111 was 2for-2 on the game with two
RBL Sophomore Krista
Tucker was l-for~3 with a
run scored and freshman Carrie Laufer was 1-for-4 with a
run scored, Marie Denney
and Jessica Temple also had
base hits for Rio Grande.
Freshman Amy Conn drove
in a run with a sacrifice fly.
Temple (0-1) took the loss.
She pitched silo innings giving
up nine hits and one walk.
Game two was all Aiken as
they scored four runs in the
first inning off freshman
hurler Tara Caudill (0-1) and
never looked back.
CaudiU went the distance
giving up all eight runs and
10 hits,
Rio Grande managed only
two hits in the second game
defeat.
"The first game we played
real well," said Rio head
coach David Pyles. "The second game we came out flat
and getting behind four runs
quickly made it tough."
Rio Grande wiD face Lander College (SC) on Saturday.

·Busch breaks·into winner's circle
"' BRISTOL,Tenn. (AP)- Kurt Busch
won't apologize for hitting Jimmy
Spencer.
Busch survived the usual bumping
and banging at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday and bumped Spencer
out of his way to win the Food Cicy
500, llls first career victory.
"Last year at Phoenix, he dumped us
flat out, He was a lapped car, and we
were racing for eighth place," Busch
said. "That was in my mind. He was
the one that never forgets. I guess we
can say I don't forget what happened
in Phoenix."
Spencer, who finished second,
tucked this incident away in the back

of his mind.
"When racing for
victories or top fives,
you have to respect
the leaders," Spencer
said. "When you
don't, it will come
back to haunt .you. I
didn't do that to him
and he , shouldn't
Buteh
have done it to me."
Their confrontation was just one of the many that
Bristol usually produces. With its high
banks, the .533--mile bullring is
known for the bumping and banging
that starts as soon as the race begins.

It led to 14 cautions and the usual
postrace confrontations, including a
pit road collision between Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Robby Gordon.
The two banged each other several
times on the track, and it boiled over
after the race. Earnhardt made contact
with Gordon after the cars came off
the track, and Gordon responded by
spinning him out. ·
"He was a moving chicane, 11 Earnhardt said. "He wouldn't get out of the
way. A lap down, racing the leader
with 10 laps to go. That's why it takes
three or four times to get into the
Winston Cup Series because he doesn't pay attention and doesn't know

Maryland,
Kansas set the
Final Four

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•

Rangers trying
·. RiVera
PORT
CHARLOTTE,
Fla. (AP) - Ruben Rivera
will get a tryout with the
Texas Rangers after being
released by the New York .
Yankees for stealing a bat and
glove from teammate Derek
Jeter's locker.
Texas general manager John
Hart said that the Rangers
planned to evaluate Rivera for
10 days before determining
whether to offer the troubled
outfielder a mirwr league
contract .

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) Maryland is getting this Final
Four thing
figured out.
After
a
struggle that
·
featured
·eight ties and seven lead
changes in the final 13 minutes, the top-seeded Terrapins
rallied in the final four minutes to beat No. 2 seed Connecticut 90-82 in the East
Regional fmal Sunday night.
The Terps are headed back
to the Final Four for the second straight year, but for only
the second time in school history.
"Last year, we came close,"
said Juan Dixon, who scored
27 point&lt;. "This year we lost a
tough game in the ACC tournament to North Carolina
State and had to 'be focused.
One loss · here and you're
done."
After Caron Butler hit two
free throws to give UConn a
77-74 lead with 4:07 left,
Maryla11d (30-4) did not miss
a shot the rest of the game.
Dixon hit a 3-pointer and
two free throws, Lonny Baxter
converted a layup and four
free throws to finish with a
season-high 29 points, and
Steve Bl~ke hit a 3-pointer
with 25 seconds left to put
UConn (27-7) dotvn 86-80.

·NCAA

alive at Nasdaq ·

Maxwell House
Master Blend

Pie•se see Busch, BS .

I

I

Capriati stays

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)
- Jennifer Capriati's new red
Ferrari was parked near the
players' entrance at the Nasdaq-100 Open, ready co hustle
her home across Alligator Alley
to Saddlebrook, Fla.
The car - and Capriati - will
stay in town for now. One
game from defeat, she overcame an erratic serve and rallied to beat Anastasia Myskina
of Russia 3-6, 7-5, 6-2.
No. 2-seeded Venus Williams
was leading Mariana DiazOliva 6-2, 1-0 when the
Argentine retired with a
strained lower back. No. 3
Martina Hingis lost only five
points in the opening set and
routed Tatiana Poutchek 6-0,
6- 1 in 41 minutes. No. 8 Serena Williams needed just 46
minutes to beat Katarina Sre. botnik.
In men:s play, No. 9 Andre
Agassi beat Augustin Calleri 63, 6-2, but there were three
upsets. No. 2 Juan Carlos Ferrero lost to Adrian Voinea; No.
3 Yevgeny Kafelnikov lost to
1998 champion Marcelo Rios;
and No: 7 Sebastien Grosjean
was beaten by Gaston Gaudio.

what he's doing."
. Gordon said the bad feelings started
early in the race when Earnhardt
bumped him, costing him 20 positions, and continued the rest of the
way.
"I didn't quite understand why he
did that so early in the race," Gordon
said. "And I rlidn't understand why
after the race, he ran into me, too,"
Gordon said. "I don't know what I did
to make him mad, but hey, nobody
runs into me."
•
The postrace banging was similar to
this race a year ago, when Tony Stew-

NNECT
Maryland's Lonny Baxter (35) puts up a shot as Connecticut's Mike Hayes, left,
and Caron Butler (3) defend during the NCAA East Regional Championship Sunday. (AP)

BMOC -

Tribe busts up
Reds' resetVes
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP)- They brought a bus full
of backlop players - a violation of baseball's rules - then
wound up hailing a backup bus to get home.
In between, the Cincinnati Reds aggravated their
intrastate rival and got shut out for only the second time
in spring training.
They'll be telling liorror stories about this road trip for
a long time.
The R eds left all of their starters behind for a 5-0 loss
to the Cleveland Indians on Sunday, violating a directive
from the commissioner's office and confusing a stadium
fitll .of fans.
Teams are required to bring at least four st.arters to each \
spring training game, so fans don't come away feeling
cheated. Instead of seeing Junior, Larkin and Casey, the
6,803 fans were treated to Clark, Castro and Jennings.
"A little light today, wasn't it?" Indians manager 'Charlie Manuel said of the Reds' ragtag lineup. "It would have
been nice to see Griffey or Dunn. But there's not much I
can do about it."
Sandy Alderson, executive vice president of baseball
operations in the com111issioncr's office, said Sunday that
. it's very rare for a team to violate th e long-standing order.
"The purpose is to protect the fans who pay . good
money to come to spring training games," Alderson said
,
in a phone interview,
He wasn't ·aware of the Reds' decision I&lt;' leave their
starters behind, If the Indians complain, the commissioner's office will look into the matter.
The Reds managed only five singles' and a triple by
shortstop Juan Castro as they were sllut out for the first ·
time since their spring opener. The problems didn't end

,..... -

.,
'- '

B•ckups, BS

••

And out.
"It's real hard, but ·it's history now," said Butler, who
scored 26 of his 32 points in
the second half to keep the
Huskies in th e game. "The
players have .to realize we did a
great job and played our
hearts out. We lost the game,
but that shouldn't . take any· thing away from what we
accomplished this season."
The experience of last year,
when Maryland lost to eventua l champion Duke in the
national semifinals, and the
Terps' senior leaders ~ Dixon
and Baxter - loomed large on
this night.
" We have tough guys. We
didn't think · we would lose
this game," Maryland coach
Gary Williams said. " When
you get to this point, onaybe it
does help to have been there
before. We're going back. We
want to do something this
year."
And the Terps can thank
Blake, a junior who struggled
all game, for that chance.
Leading 83-80 with 34 seconds left, Williams called a
timeout with only 14 ticks
. remaining on the shot clock
and barked instructions to get
the ball to Dixon, an AllAmerican.
Blake had other ideas an&lt;;!

Ple•se see Fln•l. 83

•

WVU wa1t1ng on Hugg1ns
•

•

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
night,
and
published
(AP) -West VirSinia's courting
of Bob Hugreports said
gins is enterthey met with
ing its second
Huggins in
week, with
Cincinnati.
West Virthe Mountaineers awaiting
ginia received
word. on whether the Cincinnati coach would accept a 'conpetnllssion to
. tract offer.
talk
with
Huggins
Contract negotiations were
Huggins last
week.
held during the weekend. West
Virginia athletic director Ed
Huggins 1 choices were clear
Pa•tilong and President David cut but difficult _ to remain
Hardesty arrived back at, the with a perennial Top 25 proMorgantown airport on Sunday gram or to return to his alma

NCAA

mater to' rebuild a team that set
records for losses in two of the
past four seasons and had discipline problems among its players.
Bret Adams, Huggms' lawyer
in Columbus, Ohio, and th e
coach's
Charleston-based
lawyer, .Steve Farmer, did not
rerurn telephone messages:
Cincinnati athletic director
Bob Gain said he spoke to
Huggins on Sunday.
"1 don't think he's accepted
anything," Coin told the
Cincinnati Enquirer late Sunday.

Perks .grinds out tab fini~h
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Craig
Perks became a golf star th,e hard way.
He stared down one of the
harshest courses on the PGA Tour.
He overcame ihe tougl1est field
in the sport.
He made three unforgettable shots under
unbelievable pressure and became the most
unlikely winner ever of The Players Championship, one of the· fJJost grueling tests in golf.
"I don't know Craig Perks," Rocco Mediate
said. "But it was a wonderti.tlmpment."
Ranked No. 203 before this week, Pdrks shot
an anything-but-ordinary closing round of evenpar 72 on Sunday to defeat Stephen Ames by two

PGA

strokes.
. Mediate finished third, followed by no fewer
than a dozen players, including Tiger Woods, who
had a chance to win on a day when shaky nerves
played as much havoc. with scores as the superslick greens or the occasional tricky wind gust.
Perks tackled the finish unlike any player in the
20 years this tournament has been pl•yeJ on a
I
diabolical TPC at Sawgr:J.&lt;S course.
Lying two, and with his ball positioned on a
slim piece of thick rough aside the 16th green.
Perks chipped in for eagle to take the lead.
Next, he teed off to th e center of the deviliSh
No. 17 island hole, then snaked home a 28-foot
putt for birdie.

�-

·'

..

. .

Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Mlll'ch 25, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball chalr~plonshlp
Flr1t round
March 14 or 15

Second round
March 16 or 17

llllke (29·3)
Mar. 14
.lwinlhrop (19-11)

Duke 84-37
Greenvil"&gt;, S.C.

Regional•

Semifinal•

Semifinal•

Regional•

Second round
March 16 or 17

First round
March 14 or 15

I

Mar. 16

8 Notre Dame (21·10)

Duke 84·77

Maryland 87-57

Mar, 14

85-70
Washlnglon
Mar. 17
Wisconsin 80-70

g Charlotte (18-11)

Indiana 74-13

Maryland 1'H8

I Indiana (2011)

Indiana 75-58

Mar. 14

Tulsa 71-59
St. Louis
Mar. 16

1l Utah (2HI)

4 So. Cain. (22-9)
Mar. 14

South
8 Caiilomia (22-8)
Mar. 15

11 Penn. (25-6)

Mar. 17

3. Pittsburgh (27-5)

Mar. 15
14 Cert. Conn. Sl (27--4)
7 Oklal1oma

~

So. Illinois '76-58
Chicago
Mar. 17

Pittsburgh 71-54
Ken1 St 78-73 OT

St. (2H)

Connectlc\Jt 71·59

Kon1 St 69'61
Greenvii"&gt;, S.C.,---'---'--~
Mar. 16

Alabama (26·7)

Indiana 81'69

N.C. St. 89-58
Washington
Mar. 17

Maryland 90-62

Alabama 88-78

Mar. 14

I~

Syracuse, N.Y.
March 22 &amp; 24

National
Champlon•hlp
Atlanta
April!

Fla. All antic (19-11)
Atlanta
March 30

l I Cincinnati (30-3)

I

Atlanta
March 30

Cincinnati.90-52
Pittsburgh

Mar. 15

1 Boston U. (22·9)

Mar. 17

e, UCLA (19-t1)
Mar. t5
J Mississippi (20-10)

Oklahoma 81-75

UCLA80-58

Kansas104-88

Stanford 54-58

Missouri 82-73

Kansas73-9

5 Miami (24-7)
Missouri 93--80
Albuquerque, ,---'---'----.
N.M.
Mar. 16
Ohio St. 69-84

Mar. 14

fa; Missouri (21-11)
4 Ohio St (23-7)
Mar. 14

13 Davidson (21-9)
8 Gonzaga (29-3)
Mar. 14

West

San Jose, Calif.
March 21 &amp; 23 ·

'-----l Madison, Wis.

March 22 &amp; 24

r-:::Wyom
-,-in-g-=7a=--se=-•

111Wyoming (21-8)
3j Arizona (22-9)
Mar. 14
1~

2 Oklahoma (27-!)
Mar. 15

15

AriZona 86·81

UC5a1alillb.(&lt;ll-1(!

7 Xavier (25-5)
Mar. 15
10, Hawaii (27-5)

Oklahoma 88-67
Wake For88183·74
Sacra"""'to, CaiW

Mar. 17

Mar. 16

Oklahoma 71-53

All times EST

81-52

Ill. -chicago (20-13)

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•

Red men ·win third straight
game in Sunshine State
McMillen was 2-for-4 with a
RIO GRANDE - The double and Matt Vandine was
University of Rio Grande
baseball team 2-for-3 with an RBI.
continued its
Senior hurler Jimmy Hall
success
on . pitched his first game of the
the Florida spring trip with a season and went 5 213
7-4 win over Luther College innings. Chad Wolfe (1-0)
(lA) on Saturday afternoon.
Rio Grande (12-9) moved was the winning pitcher in
ahead 4-3 in the eighth relief and Glen Hannah colinning on a sacrifice fly by lected his second save.
Jason Wheeler and then
The win marked the third
senior catcher Jake Sperry
in a row for the Redmen.
sealed the game with a threeRio Grande will get Sunrun home run.
Sperry also ripped a dou- day off and then play two
ble earlier in the game. Josh games on Monday.
FliOM STAFF REPORTS

NAIA

Spring sports are coming to
.
'llle Sentinel!!!

His arm doesn't tire from pitching a lot
ofinnings in a short span. He threw more ·
than one inning in 36 of his 79 appearances last season, and went two or more
innin~ 23 times.
.
He gets to pitch a lot because his arm
allows it and his statistics encourage it.
Public: Nolkn In' Ntwspapc:rs.
Sullivan went 7-1 with a 3.31 ERA last
Your Right to Know, lklivertd RIRhl 10 Your Door.
season, holding up well under the work
load.
SHERIFF'S SALE WASHINGTON
PLANS
AND
The sidearm delivery saves the shoulCOUNnES, OHIO, IN SPECIFICATIONS BY
der, but takes a lot of maintenance. The
Equlcredlt
ACCORDANCE WITH PAVEMENT
AND MARKING.
first time Sullivan dropped his arm, it felt Corporollon of PLANS
America,
Succeaoor
SPECIFICATIONS
BY
"The date HI for
awkward.
In lntarell to INSTALLING RAISED completion of thlo
It still does.
Equlcredll
PAVEMENT
work eholl be as set
forth In the bidding
Sullivan has to get he knack of his Corporation of Ohio MARKERS.
Va. Shaun Lambert, "The dele 111 for propoul." Plana an~
delivery every spring. It's not yet second- etet
completion of thla Spoclftcatlona ore on
Meigs County work sholl be as set file In the Osfl"rlmenl
nature.
Common Ploao Case forth In the bidding of Trenoporlllllon.
No. IJO.CV-1125
propoul." Plans end
In purauence of on Speclllcatlono ere on GORDON PROCTOR
order luuod from ftllln the Osfl"rtment DIRECTOR
OF
Spencer finished second, Ricky
Common
Piau of Trenoporlllllon.
TRANSPORTATION
Rudd was third and was followed by
Court, within and lor
ihl County of Meigs, GORDON PROCTOR (3) 18, 25, 2002
Earnhardt Jr. and Bobby Labonte.
State
of Ohio, on DIRECTO R
0 F 2tc
Matt Kenseth, who gave .Roush its
fromPageBl
November 5, 2001, TRANSPORTAnON
first victory this year, was sixth.
and to me directed, I
Pu.bllc Notice
when they got on the bus .for the two-hour will offer lor ..Ia at (3) 18, 25, 2002
art put Jeff Gordon into a retaliatory Rookie Jimmie Johnson finished
Notice Ia hereby
Public Auction on .:2t.;:c_ _ _ _ __
spin on pit road following the event. seventh,Jerry Nadeau - his Hendrick
trip back to Sarasota.
given that on
May 18,2002 at the
Saturday, April 8, at
Public Notice
Stewart drew a $10,000 fine and a Motorsports teammate - was eighth,
County
The team bus made it only a few miles Melga
10:00 a.m., 1 public
Courthoute
·
atepe,
and Rusty Wallace and ,Kevin Har- ·
long stinl on probation for the act.
outside Winter Haven before transmission 100 E811 Second NOnCE TO BIDDERS sale
will be hold at
STATE OF OHIO
Both Earnhardt and Robby Gor- vick rounded out the top 10.
problei]1S brought it to a halt. Players milled Street, Pomeroy,
the olllce of the Olive
DEPARTMENT OF
TrullBusch, using a similar pit strategy
don, as well as their car owners, were
in the grassy divider, some of them swinging Ohio, at 10:00 em of TRANSPORTAnON Township
on
Joppa
Road
oil
aeld
day,
the
called to the NASCAR hauler to to the one Elliott Sadler followed to
bats to pass the time. Writers who cover the following Real Estate,
Slate Route 661,
Columbuo, Ohio
win here a year ago, went 157 laps on
talk it over.
RHdlvllle, OH 45m.
team stopped and offered rides back to Sara- to wit;
Olllce
ol Contracts We ere oelllng for
Situated
In
the
Busch took over the lead when he his final set of tires.That gave him the
sota.
ceoh the following
VIllage of Middleport,
opted not to follt!W Earnhardt Jr. into lead on the restart and he only gave
After more than an hour, another bus County of Melge end Legal Copy Number: collateral: 1 • 1973
020182
the pits following the 13th caution, it up briefly to Spencer the one time.
Van Sl2056, and 1 ~
Stell of Ohio, and
arrived to complete the trip.
1181
Jeep CJ20
bounded
and
Busch was holding on to his lead
inheriting the lead with 85 laps to
UNIT PRICE
Five non-roster players who made the trip described as lollowo:
Bruoh
Truck
610900.
go. He briefly gave it up to Spencer, ·when the final yellow ·carne out lap
CONTRACT
The
above
Being Lot No. 83 In
assigned
·to
the
Reds'
minor
league
were
Moiling Date:
described collotoral
who moved in on Busch's bumper 478. That allowed Spencer to get up
Behan's
Third
camp afterward. Two of them started the Addition to the
0310812002
will be sold as Is •
and muscled his way into the lead on Busch's rear bumper, but he never
whara
Is, with no
game
_
designated
hitter
Raul
Gonzalez
and
VIllage
of
Middleport,
could catch him.
coming ofi'Turn 4 on lap 444.
Sealed proposeto expressed or Implied
Melga
County,
Ohio.
left fielder Anthony Sanders.
will be acCipted from wal'f8nty given.
Stewart, injured in a wreck last
But in Turn 2 of the next lap, ·
PPN: 15-00274
all
pra·qualllled
Asked
if
he
thought
Cleveland
would
be
For
further
Located at 55 bidder•
Busch bumped his way back into the week at Darlington, was. unable to
at the Olllce Information or to
Cuater
Street,
insulted that the Reds didn't bring any regContracts of the make en appointment
lead. Spencer nearly lost control of complete the race and had to turn
Middleport, Ohio of
Ohio
Dapartmont ol to Inspect the
said,
"I'm
certainulars,
manager
Bob
Boone
his
car
over
to
relief
driver
Todd
45780
his car on the contact, but saved it,
Transporllltlon,
ly not trying to be insulting. There's defiSaid profl"rtY has Columbus, Ohio, until collateral prior to
although he lost a lot of ground in Bodine. Stewart led 74 laps of the
date of ule, call Bill
been
apprelsod at 10:00
a.m.
nitely reasons for it.".
race and was running in third when
his bid to challenge for the lead.
II (740) 378-6135,
$11,500.00 and
Shortstop Barry,Larkin and center fielder cannot 1111 lor leu Wednelday, April 10, Randy II (740) 378·
But Busch, who gave Roush Rac- he spun out and said he couldn't go
2002,
FOR 8437, Jack at (740)
Ke~ Griffey Jr. played ·part of Saturday's then two·thlrda of IMPROVING
ing its second win of the year, on.
378·8247, or the
appraisement, or
Bodine started in 21st place after
game after missing time with minor injuries, $7,667,00. Thll SECTIONS ATH·7· Townehip Clerk,
claimed he was just gening back at
0.00 AND VARIOUS, Martha Dural at (740)
and Boone had planned to give them the Appraisal Ia baaed STATE
Spencer for a similar incident last the switch and maJJaged a 15th-place
' ROUTES 7 378-8149, 55498 4th
upon
a
vlaual
finish in the Pontiac.
AND
VARIOUS, Avenu'!, Raedsvllle,
day off to see how they recovered.
year.
Inspection ot that VARIOUS VILLAGES,
part of the premlteo ATHENS, GALLIA, OH45m.
to which Acce11 waa
HOCKING, MEIGS,
victory in December.
and 15 rebounds, putting the Jayhawks in readily available. The MONROE, MORGAN, (3) 18, 25, 2002
assume NOBLE, VINTON AND 2tc
KANSAS 104, OREGON 86
their first national semifinal since 1993. appralaer•
no responsibility lor, WASHINGTON
Public Notice
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Even Dick
Kansas faces Maryland iii Atlanta next and give no weight COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
·Bennett, the master of the slowdown Saturday. The Terrapins beat Connecticut to, unknown legal ACCORDANCE WITH
fromPageBl
IN THE-COMMON
matters, Including, PLANS
AND
offense, enjoyed watching the Kansas jay- 90-82 in the East Regional ·final.
PLEAS COURT,
but not limited to, SPECIFICATIONS BY
PROBATE
DIVISION
hawks.
Two
other
Jayhawks
nearly
joined
forconcefled or latent FAST
announced he would take care of thin~.
DRY
MEIGS
COUNTY,
defects,
and/or
the
The former Wisconsin coach had a wards Gooden and Collison with donWhen play resumed, he cautiously made
OHIO
presence ol harmful PAVEMENT
his way into UConn territory, patiently front- row view of Kansas' 104-86 rout of hie-doubles. Freshman reserve Keith or toxic chemlcala, MARKING.
"Thl data 111 lor
MATTER OF
looked around, then broke th~ Huskies' the Oregon Ducks in the Midwest Langford had 20 points and eight pollutants, or goset. completion of this IN THE
SETTLEMENT
Terma ol S.le: Ten
rebounds, and Kirk Hinrich nad 14
spirit with only 4 seconds left on the Regional final Sunday.
ahall be as 111
OF ACCOUNTS,
Percent (10 %) lilly of work
forth
In the bidding
He
was
one
of
the
few
local
fans
who
points
and
nine
rebounds.
PROBATE COURT
shot clock, hitting his only b.Sket of the
llle
propoul." Plant and
MEIGS COUNTY,
Kansas coach Roy Williams
"They crash the boards all the time,
cheered
game.
Specifications ere on
OHIO
Jamea
M
.
Soulaby,
"That shot was the biggest one I could cut down the nets, which were probably every single play," said Frederick Jones, Sherlll of Meigs ftllln the Osfl"rtmenl
ol Tranaporlllllon.
Accounte . on·d
hit for this team:· said Blake, who had sil( still sizzling after the Jayhawks' record who led the Ducks with 32 points. County, Ohio
of the
vouchero
assists and no turnovers. "/l.t the last point production at the 5-year-old Kohl "Their guards came in and got some, Frank J. Venalano, GORDON PROCTOR
following named
·
too. It was an all-around effort."
DIRECTO R
'0 F flduclory hll been
timeout, I told the guys to look for me: I Center.
Attorney
· TRANSPORTAnON
Iliad In the Probell
Williams raised the ire of Wisconsin
The Jayhawks, the nation's highest- 828 VIne Street, Sullo
was just kind of free-lancing. I knew if I
Court, Mtlga County,
1020
.
fans
last
season
when
he
said
after
a
highscoring
team
with
a
91-point.
average,
hit the shot, it would be tough for them.
Ohio lor approv11 and
Cincinnati, Ohio ~~ 18, 28,2002·
aettllment.
I just got a good look as the shot clock scoring game, "Don't you like this better outmuscled and outhusded the beefier 411402
~STAT~ NO. 21275
than 19-1 7?" - a reference to the hal(- Ducks on the glass, fueling their upwas winding down."
Public Notice
•
8th
Annual Account
(3)21,
2002
UConn's Tony Robertson was the vic- , time score at the Badgers' Final Four tempo game.
of
Joan
May, Trullle
(4)
1,
••
2002
NOnCI! TO BIDDERS of the Trull
Kansas led 48-42 at halftime and was
Crelled
tim on defense, getting fooled just to the game in 2000.
STAT! OF OHIO
by
Item
Eighth
of lhl
Many
Wisconsin
fans
felt
that
was
an
up
73-59
when
'Oregon
made
ill
final
right of the top of the key.
.
DEPARTMENT OF
Public Notlc•
Lui
Will
ond
·TRANSPORTATION Teatament of Llnnlt
"I was guarding him and he gave me a attack on the Badgers' physical style of run. Anthony Lever hit back-to-back 3TO IIDDI!RS
B. Tor,lor, DaoeiNd. ''
pump fake and I bit on it," said Robert- play under Bennett, who retired 16 pointers to spark a 10-2 Oregon burst NOTICE
Co1umbua, Ohio
STATE
OF OHIO
Un 111 exoepllono
ago.
that
made
it
75-69
with
8:30
remaining.
months
son, who finished with 15 points. "He
DI!PARTMI!NT OF
are filed thereto, Mid
Oftle1
of
Contraote
"We buried the hatchet a long time Lever's third 3-pointer made it 77-72 TIIANIPORTATION
was kind of off balance and I tried to put
account will bo 111·
ago,"
Bennen
said
Sunday.
"I
love
the
way
seconds
later.
lor
haarlng balore•
LIQII
Copy
Number:
my hand up. He just made a great shot."
Columbue,
Ohio
11id
Court on tha
020113
But Kansas scored the next 10 points, Ollloe o1 Contraotl
In tjle second half, neither te~ le~ by Roy's team plays. This is high-level stuff."
28th day ol April,
Drew Gooden and Nick Collison each four by Collison, to end the Ducks'
more than three points from 14:22 until
2002, 11 which lima
UNIT PRICE
Legal Copy Number:
double-doubles
early
in
the
second
dreams
of
reaching
the
Final
Four
for
the
11ld
aocounl will be
had
CONTRACT
Maryland we!It up 83-79 with 74 sec0201t1
coneldered and
Mailing
Date:
half
as
the
Jayha'J!:ks
(33-3)
reached
their
first
time
since
they
won
the
first
NCAA
onds left on two free throws by Baxter.
continued from day
0310112002
UNIT PRICE
to day until finally
Maryland, which has won 17 of 18 third Final Four u.nderWilliams, but their championship in 1939.
lealed propo1111 dlepoaed ol
It appeared as though the Jayhawks CONTIIACT Milling
games, reached the 30-victory mark for first as a top seed in five tries during his
Dill: 01/0812002
Any
poraon .
will be ocoepted !rom
were going to run away with it early, but
the first ~ime a'nd will play another No. 1 coaching tenure.
all pra·quallllad lntereated moy llle
Kamas controlled the fall, end-to-end the Ducks (26-9), playing in a regional
ltoled propollll blddlrl 11 the Olllca written excoption to
seed, Kansas, on Saturday in Atlanta. The
will
be ocoeplad from of Contraoll of the alid oooount or to
outrefinal
for
the
first
time
in
42
years,
scored
action
and
dominated
the
boards,
Jayhawks beat Oregon 104-86 in the
ell
pre·quollfled Ohio Depertment ot mattero· porllllnlng'to
bounding second-seeded Oregon 63-34. 12 straight poinu, seven by Jones, to tie it blddero
Midwest Regional final.
ot the Olllce Traneportatlon,
the •••cutlon ol the
of Contract• of the Columbua, Ohio, trust·, not l1.11 than
Maryland scored the final eight poinu Indeed, Gooden and Collison outre- at 40 with 2:57 left in the lint half.
Ohio Dep1rtmant ol un 111 10:00 a.m . llva daya prior to the
But Oregon couldn't take the lead and ..._
of the first half to take a 44-37 lead • bounded the Ducks all by themselves ...napa 111111 on,
w-~
d A 11 10
Collison scored three quick basketl as the Columblll, Ohio, until 2002,
oounes ay, prFOR' dahl 111 lor heorlng.
UConn's biggest deficit of the tourney. 35 to 34.
1 · m ' IMPFIOVING
"It was tough because you block one Jayhawks bu* a_six-point halftime lead. 1 0 : 0 0
Robert E. luck
Butler, who had four assists and seven
WICineadey,
April
10,
SI!CTION
ATH·7-G.OO
Judgo
Collison helped Gooden provide · a
rebounds, brought the Huskies back after out and the other one would come out
VARIOUI, Common. Piau
of
nowhere,"
Ducks
forward
Robert
mismatch
down low with the bigger but ~p~~VING P O R AN.O
sitting .out seven minutes in the finl half
Probato
II!CTION
ATH·
-G.OO
STATE
ROUTE
7 AND Court,
7
said.
"They're
a
great
1-2
slower
Johnson
and
Chris
Christoffersen,
Johnson
Dlvlalon
with two fouls.
AND
VARIOUS VARIOUS
IN
Oregon's ·7-feot-2, 300-pound senior ITATE· ROUT! 7 AND VARIOUS VILLAGES, Melgo County, Ohio
Baxter, the regional's Most Outstand- punch." ·
•
VARIQI,IS
IN ATHENS, GALLIA,
The Jayhawks gra~bed 26 offensive center.
ing Player, was 7cfor-12 from the field,
(3)
25,
2002
MEIGS ;
And it gives Williams, who is 388-92 VARIOUS VILLAGES'• HOCKING,
MONROE, MORGAN,.
15-for-18 from 'the li:ee throw line and rebounds, leading to 31 second-chance
GALLIA, NOBLE VINTON AND
· overall and 29-12 in the NCAA tourna- ATHI!NS,
grabbed nine' rebounds. He · had 24 points.
HOCKING, MEIGS, WASHINGTON
Gooden had 18 points and 20 ment, another shot at that elusive 'nation- MONROE, MORGAN, COUNni!S, OHIO, IN
points and; 10 rebounds in the teams' first
NOlLE, VINTON AND ACCORDANCE WITH
meeting lhis season, a 77-65 Maryland rebounds, and Collison added 25 points al tide.

as

Xavier 10-58
Dallas

2002 ENVOY

~[

All because his college
coach had an idea. "He said, 'Le~s try this,' and my career
took off from there," Sullivan said.
He got his_business degree in 1993, and
also struck out 81 in 60 1-3 innin~ as a
·senior. The Reds made him a secondround draft pick, and his adopted pitching style made him a success.
By dropping his arm, he saves his
shoulder.
"When you're throwing sidearm, you
bring your whole body back. You don't
bring your arm back as far," said Timothy
Kremchek, the team doctor. "It puts less
wear and tear on your arm, so he can
pitch more and hopefully will have less
trouble with his rotator cuff than overhand throwers."

Final

Midwest

f-.,.:--..J

Red$

SIDEWHmERCinctnnatl Reds reliever
Scott Sullivan delivers a
pitch during the eighth
Inning of Grapefruit
League action. (API

Busch

83-58

East

Lexington, Ky.
.--~~~=-~ March21&amp;23
Calilomia 82·75
Pittsburgh

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Scon Sulliv'dn's career was at a dead end.
The wiry outfielder was
out of ideas and quickly
running out of chances to
play college baseball. He had no scholarship at Auburn and was trying to make
the team as a walk-on.
It wasn'~ going well at all.
"A friend of mine told me the best way
to make the team is to tell .them you're a
pitcher and get -out there and throw it has
hard as you can," Sullivan said.
Sullivan couldn't get anyone out and
couldn't figure out what to do next. [t
appeared that his business degree was
going·to come in handy.
His career was saved by one suggestion.
Auburn coach Hal Baird told Sullivan
to try throwing sidearm and see what
happened. It felt awkward, but his pitches suddenly got some sting, his breaking
ball started moving and his career began
unfolding.
From that orie suggestion. Sullivan has
developed into· the major leagues' busiest
reliever. The right-hander has Jed the
majors in relief innin~ the last four seasons - something no other major leaguer
has done.
He pitches in roughly half of the
Cincinnati Reds' games each season,
often · throwing more than one inning,
sometimes throwing on consecutive days.
Sullivan has pitched more than 100
innings each of the last four years and
appeared in 79 games each of the last
. three.
In the last five years, Sullivan ·has
pitched 522 2-3 innin~ - more than any
other reliever in the majors.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

www.mYflallyMntlnel.corn

Monday, March 25. 2002

...

I

I

�•

.

#

Page B2 • The Dally Sent!l)el

Monday, March 25, 2002

www.mydellysentlnel.com

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OwWebllle

2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship
Firat round

Second round

March 14or15

March 16 or 17

Regional a

Semifinals

Semifinals

RegloMIB

Second round

First round

' March 16 or 17

March 14 or 15

11 Duke (29-3)
Duke 84·37

Mar. 14

1f Winthrop (19-11)

Greenville, S.C.
Mar. 16

Maryland 85-70
Duke84-n

Maryland 87·57

'8 Notre Dame (21-10)
Mar. 14

Notre Dame 82.-63

Washington
Mar. 17
Wi11cons,ln 80-70

8 Charlotte (18-11) .
Indiana 74-73

Maryland"IU8

I Indiana (20-1t)
Mar. 14

lndlana'75·56

~-

South

18~~

March 21 &amp; 23

II Penn. (25-6)

Pittsburgh
·

31Pittsb\lrgh (27-5)
Mar. 15
\A Coot Coot St. (27-4)

Syracuse, N.Y.
March 22 &amp;24

National
Championship

California 82·75

Mar. 15

So. Illinois 7!Hl8

Allanta

Mar. 17

Chicago
Mar. 17

April 1

Pittsburgh 71-54

Connecticut 71 -59

Kent St. 78-73 OT

7! Oklahoma St. (23-8)
Mar. 14
10. Kent 51. (27·5)

Kenl St. 69-61

N.C. St. 69-58

Indiana 8Hi9

Washington
Mar. 17

·z. Alabama (26-7)
Mar. 14

Alabama 86·78

Fla. Atlantic (19-1t)

Allanta
March 30

I

I

1 Cincinnati (30-3)

Atlanla
March 30

Cincirinati 90-52

Mar. 15

18 Boston U. (22·9)

70.59

Pittsburgh

51. Louis
Mar. 18

Mar. 17

• UCLA (19-11)

Oklahoma 81-75

UCLAII0-56

Mar. 15

Kansas 104-86

•

9 Mississippi (20-tO)

Missouri 82-73

Kansaa73-9

6 Miami (24-7)
Mar. 14
'12· Missouri (21·11)

Missouri 93-80

'

I

Albuquerque,
N.M.

Chicago
Mar.l7

Mar. 16

4 1Ohio St. (23·71

Ohio St. 69-64

Mar. 14

Illinois 93-&amp;4

San Jose. Calif.
March21 &amp; 23
.--:.,.,..--,---~

Wyoming 73.00

Mar. 14
11 1Wyoming (21-8)

Texas 70·57
Dallas
Mar. 17

3 IArizona (22·9)
Mar. t4

Arizona 86·81

Mississippi St. 70,58
Oklahoma 88-87__]

r

Xavier (25·5)
Mal. 15
10' Hawaii (27-5)

Oregon 72·70

Xavier 70-58

Wake Foresl83-74

Dallas

Sactamento, Calli

Mar. 17

Mar. 18

2 Oklahoma (27-4)
Oklahoma 71-63

Mar. 15

All times EST

81-62

· 15 III.·Chicago\20-13)
I

·2002 ENVOY

,

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135 Plaell 111110

I

NAIA

H"IS arm doesn't tire "-uvm pitc hin
· g a Iot
ofinnings in a short span. He threw more
than one inning in 36 of his 79 appearances last season, and went two or more
. .
23 times.
mrungs
H e gets to pitch a 1ot because his arm
allows it and his statistics enco'urage it.
Sullivan went 7-1 with a 3.31 ERA last
ing sryle made
him
a
success.
·
hi
h
h" season, holding up well under the work
BY droppmg
s arm, e saves · IS load.
shoulder.
The sidearm delivery saves the shoul"When you're throwing sidearm, you
·
h 1 b d b k v
d • der, but takes a lot of maintenance. The
b nng
your w o e o Y ac .•ou on t
·
b k r. " "dT'
h: first time Sullivan dropped his arm, it felt
bnng
your arm ac as t~r. sat tmot y
Kremchek, the team doctor. "It puts less · awkward . .
wear and tear on your arnt, so he can
It still does.
pitch more and hopefully wiD have less
Sullivan has to get he knack of his
trouble with his rotator cuff than over- delivery every spring. It's not yet secondhand throwers."
nature.

Backups

(740)446-3672

J-ao~~g~Ff'!'oos4

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I,

SHERIFF'S SALE
EqulcndR
Corporation
of
America, Succeaaor
In
lntereet
to
Equlcraclll
Corporation of Ohio
Va. Shaun Lambert,
atal.
Malge
County
Common Pleae Caoe
No. OO.CV-1125
In pursuance of an
order laaued from
Common
Piau
Court, within and for
the County of Melge,
State of Ohio, on
November 5, 2001,
end to me directed, I
will offer for eale at
Public Auction on
May 18,2002 at the
Malge
County

WASHINGTON
COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
PLANS
AND
SPECIFICATIONS BY
INSTALLING RAISED
PAVEMENT
MARKERS.
"The date eat for
completion of thla
work shall be aa aet
lorth In the bldcllng
propoael." Plano and
Speclfi..Uona are on
lila In the Dep11rtment
of Trwnoportatlon.

PLANS
AND
SPECIFICATIONS BY
PAVEMENT
MARKING.
"The date oat for
completion of thil
work ehall be 11 111
forth In the bidding
proposal." Plane end
Spec:lllcatlone ere on
fila In the Dep~~rtment
of Treneportlllon.

GORDON PROCTOR
DIRECTOR
OF
TRANSPORTATION

(3) 18, 25, 2002

and 15 rebounds, putting the Jayhawks i.n
their first national semifinal since 1993.
Kansas faces Maryland in Atlanta next
Saturday. The Terrapins beat Connecticut
90-82 in the East Regional final.
Two other Jayhawks nearly joined forwards Gooden and Collison with double-doubles. Freshman reserve Keith
Langford had 20 points and eight
rebounds, and Kirk Hinrich had 14
points and nine rebounds.
"They crash the boards all the time,
every single play;• said Frederick Jones,
who led the Ducks with 32 points.
"Their guards came in and got some,
too. It was an all-around effort."
The Jayhawks, the nation's highestscoring team with a 91-point average,
outmuscled and outhusded the beefier
Ducks on the glan, fueling their uptempo game.
Kansas led 48-42 at halftime and was
up 73-59 when 'Oregon made its final
run. Anthony Lever hit back-to-back 3pointers to spark a 10-2 Oregon burst
that made it 75-69 with 8:30 remaining.
Lever's third 3-pointer made it 77-72
seconds later.
But Kansas ·scored the next 10 points,
four by Collison, to end the Ducks'
dreams of reaching the Final Four for the
fint time since they won the tint NCAA
championship in 1939.
It appeared as though the Jayhawks
were going to run away with it early, but
the Ducks (26"9), playing in a regional
final for the first time in 42 years, scored
12 straight points, seven by Jones, to tie it
at 40 with 2:57 left in the first half.
' But Oregon couldn't take the lead and
Collison scored three quick baskets as the
Jayhawks built a six-point halftime lead.
Collison helped Gooden provide a
mismatch down low with the bigger but
slower Johnson and Chris Christoffersen,
Oregon's 7-foot-2, 300-pound senior
center.
·
And it. gives Williams, who is 388-92
overall and 29-12 in the NCAA tournament, another shot at that elusive·national tide.
'
r
'

VARIOUS VILLAGES,
ATHENS, GALLIA,
HOCKING, MEIGS,
MONROE, MORGAN,
NOBLE, VINTON AND
WASHINGTON
COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
PLANS
AND
SPECIFICATIONS BY
FAST
DRY
PAVEMENT
MARKING.
"The date ut for
completion of thle
work ehell be 11 eat
forth In the bidding
propoeal." Plane and
Spec:lflcetlonl are on
1111 In the Department
of Traneportatlon.

part of the pramleae
to which ACCIII Wll
readily available. The
appreleere aeeume
no reaponalblllty tor,
end give no weight
to, unknown legal

mattera, Including,
but not II mlied to,
concealed or latent
cllfecll, and/or the
preeence of harmful
or loxlc che:mlcala,
pollutente, or gaeee.
Terme of Sale: Ten
Percent (10 %) dey ol

....

Jemee M. Souloby,
Shariff ol Melgl
County, Ohio

GORDON PROCTOR
Frank J. Venulono, DIRECTO R
•0F
Attorney
TRANSPORTATION
&amp;21 VIne Straat, Suite

1020

Cincinnati,

GORDON PROCTOR
DIRECTOR
OF
TRANSPORTATION
2tc

Public Notice
(3) 18, 25, 2002

when they got on the bus for the two-hour
_21_c_ _ _ _ __
trip back to Sarasota.
Public Notice
The team bus made it only a few miles
Courthouae
atepa,
outside Winter Haven before transmission 100 Eaat Second NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
probleljiS brought it to a halt. Players milled Street, Pomeroy,
DEPARTMENT.
OF
in the grassy divider, some of them swinging Ohio, at 10:00 am of TRANSPORTATION
18ld
day,
the
bats to pass the time. Writers who cover the following Real Eotate,
Columbus, Ohio
team stopped and offered rides back .to Sara- to wlli
om
.. of Contract•
Situated In the
sota.
VIllage of Mldcllaport,
Mter more than an hour, another bus County of Melga and Legal Copy Number:
020182
Stela of Ohio, and
arrived to complete the trip.
bounded
and
UNIT PRICE ·
Five non-roster players who made the trip · dftcrlbad 11 follows:
CONTRACT
Lot
No.
83
In
Baing
were assigned to the Reds' minor league
Melling
Dele:
· Third
0310812002
camp afterward. Two of them started the Bahen'o
Addition lo the
game _designated hitter Raul Gonzalez and Village of Middleport,
Sealed proposals
Melge County, Ohio.
left fielder Anthony Sanders.
will be eccepted from
PPN: 15-00274
pro-qualified
Asked if he thought Cleveland would be
Located at 55 all
bldclare
et the Office
Sheet,
insulted that the Reds didn't bring any reg- Cueter
of
Conlractl
of the
Middleport, Ohio
Ohio Daparlmenl of
ulars, manager Bob Boone said, "I'm certain- 45760
Said property hal Tr•naportatlon,
ly not trying to be insulting. There's defibeen appreltad 11 Columbue, Ohio, until
a.m.
nitely reasons for it."
$11,500.00
and 10:00
Wadnudly, April 10,
Shortstop Barry.Larkin and center fielder cannot 1111 for 1111 2002,
FOR
Ken Griffey Jr. played part of Saturday's thon two·thlrde of IMPROVING
appralaement, or
game after missing time with minor injuries, $7,887,00. Thll SECTIONS ATH-7·
0.00 AND VARIOUS,
and Boone had planned to give them the Appreleel 11 b11ad STATE ROUTES 7
upon
a
visual A N 0
VARIOUS,
day off to see how they recovered.
lnepactlon of that

victory in December.
KANSAS 104, OREGON 86
~!SON, Wis. (AP) - Even Dick
Bennett,
the master of the slowdown
from Pap II
offense, enjoyed watching the Kansas Jayannounced he would take care of things. hawks.
The former Wisconsin c.oach had a
When pl~y resumed, he cautiously made
his way jrtto UConn territory, patiently front-row view of Kansas' 104-86 rout of
looked around, then broke the Huskies' the Oregon Ducks in the Midwest
spirit with only 4 seconds left on the Regional final Sunday.
shot clock, hitting his only basket of the
He was one of the few local fans who
cheered as Kansas coach Roy Willilms
game.
"That shot was the biggest one I could cut down the nets, which were probably
hit for this team," said Blake, who h~d six still sizZling after ·the Jay hawks' record
assists and no turnovers. "At the last p·o int production at the 5-year-old Kohl
timeout, I told the guys to look for me. I Center.
Williams raised the ire of Wisconsin
was just kind of free~lancing. I knew if I
hit the shot, it would be tough for them. fans last season when he said after a high1 just got a good look as the shot clock scoring game, "Don't you like this better
was winding down."
than 19-17?"- a reference to the rualfUConn's Tony Robertson was the vic- time score at the Badgers' Final Four
tim on defense, getting fooled just to the game in 2000.
right of the top of the key.
Many Wisconsin fans felt that was an
"I was guarding him and he gave me a . attack on the Badgers' physical sryle of
pump fake and I bit on it:.• said Robert- play under Bennett, who retired 16
son, who finished with 15 points. "He months ago.
was kil)d .of off balance and I tried to put
"We buried the hatchet a long time
my hand up. He just made a great shot." ago," Bennett said Sunday. "I love the way
In the ~econd half, neither te~ led by Roy's team plays. This is high-level stuff."
more t)!an three points from 14:22 until
Drew Gooden and Nick Collison each
Maryland went up 83-79 with 74 sec- had double-doubles early in the second
onds left on two free throws by Baxter.· half as the Jayhawks (33-3) reached their
Maryland, which has won 17 of 18 third Final Fouru,nderWilliams,buttheir
games, reached the 30-victory mark for firll as a top seed in five tries during his
the first time and will play another No. 1 coaching tenure.
Kansas controlled the fast, end-to-end·
seed, Kansas, ori Saturday in Atlanta. The
Jayhawks beat Oregon 104-86 in the action and dorrrinated the boards, outreMidwest Regional final.
bounding second-seeded Oregon 63-34.
Maryland scored the final eight points Indeed, Gooden · and Collison outreof the first half to take a 44-37 lead - bounded the Ducks all by themselves UConn's biggest deficit . of the tourney. 35 to 34.
Butler, who had four assists and seven
"It was tough because you block one
rebounds, brought the Huskies back after out and the other one would come out
sitting out seven minutes in the first half of nowhere," Ducks forward Robert
with two fouls.
· Johnson said. "They're a great 1-2
Baxter, the regional's Most Outstand- punch."
·
ing Player, was 7-for-12 from the field,
The Jayhawks grabbed 26 offensive
15-for-18 from the. free throw line and rebounds, leading to 31 second-chance
grabbed nine rebounds. He had 24 points.
Gooden had 18 points and .20
points and 10 rebounds in the teams' first
· meeting tbis season, a 77-65 Maryland rebounds, and Collison added 25 points

'

McMillen was 2-for-4 with a
double and Matt Vandine was
2-for-3 with an RBI.
Senior hurler Jimmy Hall
pitched his first game of the
season and went 5 2/3
innings. Chad Wolfe {1-0)
was the winning pitcher in
relief and Glen Hannah collected his second save.
The win marked the thifl'
in a row for the Redmen.
Rio Grande will get Sunday off and then play two
games on Monday.

Spring sports are coming to
The Sentinel!!!

AU because his college
coac h had an idea.
d• 'Let's try this,' and my career
"H
saifro
k e If
too o
m there," Sullivan said.
He got his business degree in 1993, and
k
· also· struc
60 1-3
Th out 81
ds in
made
himinnings as a
· a secondsemor.
e Re
round draft pick, and his adopted pitch-

Final

West

13 Davidson (21·9)

e Gonzaga (29·3)

RIO GRANDE - The
Universiry of Rio Grande
·baseball team
continued its
success on
the florida spring trip with a
7-4 win over Luther College
(lA) on Saturday afternoon.
Rio Grande (12-9) moved
ahead 4-3 in the eighth
inning on a sacrifice fly by
Jason Wheeler and then
senior catcher Jake Sperry
sealed the game with a threerun home run.
Sperry also ripped a double earlier in the game. Josh

pitch during the eighth
Inning of Grapefruit
League action. (AP)

Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Redmen win third straight
game in Sunshine State
RIOM STAFF REPORTS

Busch

East

..----1

Lexington, Ky.
8 Callfomla (22-8)

Cincinnati Reds reliever
Sullivan delivers a

Scott

Spencer finished second, Ricky
Rudd was third and was followed by
Earnhardt Jr. and Bobby Labonte.
Matt Kenseth, who gave Roush its
from Page II
first victory this year, was sixth.
art put Jeff Gordon into a retaliatory Rookie Jimmie Johnson finished
spin on pit road following the event. seventh,Jerry Nadeau - his Hendrick
Stewart drew a $10,000' fine and a Motorsports teammate - was eighth,
long stint on probation for the act. · and Rusry Wallace and Kevin HarBoth Earnhardt and Robby Gor- vick rounded out the top 10.
Busch, using a similar pit strategy
don, as well as their car owners, were
to
the one Elliott Sadler followed to
called to the NASCAR hauler to
win here a year ago, went 157 laps on
talk it over.
Busch took over the lead when he his final set of tires. That gave him the
opted not to follow Earnhardt Jr. into lead on the restart and he only gave
the pits following the 13th caution, it up briefly to Spencer the one time.
Busch was holding on lo his lead
inheriting the lead with 85 laps to
go. He briefly gave it up to Spencer, when the final yellow canie out lap
who moved in on Busch's bumper 478. That allowed Spencer to get up
and musckd his way into the lead on Busch's rear bumper, but he never
could catch him.
coming offTurn 4 on lap 444.
Stewart, injured in a wreck last
But in Turn 2 of the next lap,
Busch bumped his way back into the week at Darlington, was. unable to •
lead. Spencer nearly lost control of complete the race and had to turn
his car on the contact, but saved it, his car over to relief driver Todd
although he lost a lot of ground in Bodine. Stewart led 7 4 laps of the
race and was running in third when
his bid to challenge for the lead.
But Busch, who gave Roush Rac- he spun out and said he couldn't go
ing its second win of the year, on.
Bodine started in 21st place after
claimed he was just getting back at
Spencer for a similar incident last the switch and managed a 15th-place
finish in the Pontiac.
year.

St. Louis
Mar. 16

·Mar. 16

Mar. 14

He pitches in roughly half of the
Cincinnati Reds' games each season,
often throwing more than one inning,
sometimes throwing on consecutive days.
Sullivan has pitched m, ore than 100
innings each of the last four years and
appeared in 79 games each of the last
three.
In the last five years, Sullivan has
pitched 522 2-3 innings _ more than any
other reliever in the majors.

IIDEWHEB.ER -

Tulsa 7HI9

Sacrameni:J, Galif. r-..L.--'--~

1 Utah (21-8)

SARASOTA, Aa. (AP) - Scott Sulliv.m's career was at a dead end.
The wiry outfielder was
out of ideas and quic\ly
running out of chances to
play college baseball. He had no scholarship at Auburn and was trying to make
the team as a walk-on.
It wasn'~ going well at all.
"A friend of rrrine told me the best way
to make the team is to tell ihem you're a
pitcher and get out there and throw it has
hard as you can," Sullivan said.
Sullivan couldn't get· anyone out and
couldn't figure out what to do next. It
appeared that his business degree was
going to come in handy.
His career was saved by one suggestion.
Auburn coach .Hal Baird told Sullivan
to try throwing sidearm and see what
happened. It. felt awkward, but his pitches suddenly got some sting, his breaking
ball started moving and his career began
unfolding.
From that orie su""'"'tion, Sullivan has
develo""d
r- into the ma,ior
" leagu-•
•• bus1"est
reliever. The right-hander has led the
inaiors
" In relief innin&lt;&gt;&lt;
.,.. the last four seasons - something no other major leaguer
has done.

The

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

Sullivan is baseball's busiest reliever
Red$

YIIIDW

Mercury

LUXUIY

Monday, March 25, 2002

.

Ohio

~~ 18, 2&amp;, 2002

4&amp;402

(3121, 2002

(4 1, •• 2002
Public Notice
NOTICI TO IIDDI!RS
ITATE Of OHIO
DEPAIITMINT OF
TRANIPOIITATION
Columllul, Ohio
Otlloe ol Contreate
Legal Copy Number:
020111
UNIT PIIICI
CONTIIACT Mailing

Dill: 0&amp;'0112002

laaled propoaale
a--'ed from
will ...
"" ~~·
all pre·quallfled
blddlra it the OHioe
ol Contraote ol the
Olllo Department ol
Tr1naporllll on,
Columbue, Ohio, until

1 •m •
1D : 0 D
Wlllnwclly, April 10,
OD 2
flO R
2

IMPIIOVING
IECTION ATI!-7-D.OO
AND
VARIOUS
STATE ROUT! 7 AND
VA RIO U I
IN
VARIOUS VILLAGES,
ATHENS, GALLI A,
HOCKING, MEIGS,
MONROE, MORGAN,
NOlLE, VINTON AND

Public Notice
NOTICE TO IIDDEIIS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT Of
TRANSPORTATION
Columbue, Ohio
Office of Contreota
Llgel Copy Number:
020183
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Melling Dale:
03/0812002
Seeled propoeale
will be eooaptad lrom
ell pre-qualified
blddere 11 the Ollloe
of Contreote of the
Ohio Department of
TraneporUitlon, ·
Columbue, Ohio,
un 11 1 1 :
e.m.
w• d needey, Apr11 10
· '
2002,
FOR
IMPROVING
BI!CTION ATH·7-D.OO
AND
VARIOUS,
STATE ROUTE 7 AND
VARIOUS
IN
VARIOUS VILLAGES,
ATHENS, GALLI A,
HOCKING, MEIGS,
MONROE MORGAN
~OBLE VINTON AND
WASHINGTON
•
COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH

o oo

Notice 11 hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, April 6, at
10:00 a.m., a public
aeie · will be held at
the office of the Olive
Townehlp Truetaae
on Joppa Road ofl
State Route 681,
Raedevllla, OH 45n2.
We are selling for
caeh the following
collateral: 1 - 1973
Van Sfl2058, and 1 •
1881 Jaep CJ20
Brueh Truck SI0900.
The
above
deecrlbad collateral . ·
will be eold •• 11 where 11, with no
axpraeeed or Implied
warrwnty given.
For
further
Information or to
make an appointment
to
lnepect the
collateral prior to
data of oale, call Bill
et (740) 371HI35,
Randy at (740) 378·
8437, Jeck at (740)
378·8247, or the
Townehlp Clark,
Martha Duret at (140)
378-8149, 55498 4th
Avenue, Raedevilla,
OH 45772.
(3) 18, 25, 2002

2tc
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY,
DHIO
Account•
YOUChlrl

Of

end
thl

following named
flduclery h11 bean
flied In the Problle
Court, .Melge County,
Ohio for epprovel and
uUiement.
ESTATE NO. 2127&amp;
• 8th Annuel Account
of Joan May. Truetaa
of the Truet Created
by Item Eighth of the
Lui
Will
and
Taetement of Llnnle
B. Ter,lor, 0-eud.
Un Ill exoopllone
are !lied thereto, llld
ecoount will be 111
lor hearing beforellld Court on the
25th doy of April,
2002, 11 which time
eald eooounl will be
ooneldored
1nd
contlnueil from day
lo doy until llnelly
diiPOIId of
Any
per.eon
lntar1111d mey tile
written exception to
eald account or to
moliere• parUIInlng to
lhl IXIOUIIOn Of lhl
lruat-, not leu than
live deye prior to the
date Nllor heerlng.
Robert· E. Buck
Judge
Common
Piau
Court,
Probele
Dlvlelon
Melge County, Ohio

(3) 21, 2002

�•
Page B4 ·The oany Sentinel

Moncflly, March 25, 2002

-.mydallyMntlnel.com

March

r

tltrtbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

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

TtfE FO.LLOWING
APPLICATIONS
Equlpnent ..,,
VANS &amp;
ANDIOR VERIFII!D
(740)446-2414
~
4-WDs
COMPLAINTS WERE
Troy Bill Horeo - ..
a-.~ot 112 ton four RECEIVED, AND TtfE
Good Condition. $800. drive 91 000 ..... FOLLOWING DRA",
OR
(1104)0715-3124
mlln. por11 and PROPOSED,
ACTIONS
W.
paint job. All&lt;lng $5,500 FINAL
~
Cell Mike Welle botwH~ WEFt! ISSUID, BY
_
TO D&lt;ll
• ~ : ooam
to
2:00pm. T H E
0 HI0
•
(740)441.0793
ENVIRONMENTAL
Wonted to buy: Ulad Mdllie
tjoino. Col (740)446.()\75 1993 Pontiac Transport Mini PROTECTION
(OEPA)
S04)6?H965
Van, power locloslwlndowo. AGENCY
W EE K •
New Stereo. Real Nice. LA S T
Asking $3,000. (3()4)874· "ACTIONS" INCLUDE
1 _ ---IAYL&gt;hA.A
• 0231 (304)8715-3785
THE
ADOPTION.
MODIFICATION, OFt
1994 Rad, F·250, 4x4,
2 ~old
13(),000 miles. $7.000 firm. REPEAL OF ORDERS
(OTHER
THAN
llog111- Angut Bull,
(740)386-9055
EMEFIGENCY
out ol Now Trtnd E.P.O."o ~~
""""· 256-1352
..o Dodge SLT 4x4 $8500 ORDERS):
THE
.;..-_--_ _ _ _ _ (740)446-1012
ISSUANCE, DENIAL.
hloltloy 2 yr. cld 1\ppa· 1996 Chivy Blazer LS 4X4 MODFICATION OR
filly, blue man. loll ol 4 dOOr V8 vortec .,.;,..,:
OF
ti»&gt;tt, ready for training, 1c. 78,00o mi•, 'PW, POL, REVOCATION
LICENSES, PEFIMITS,
S850. (740)898 3054
cruiH,
AMIFM/CD
LEASES,
.
Ci11cQns. broWn 7~. white 17,995.00. CaR 304-ni
VARIANCES,
OR
iiOf.
Gary
Michael. 5305 evenings.
CERTIFICATES; AND
(740)8815-3956
1996 Ford F-1 50 Pickup; TtfE APPROVAL OR
'8oulhtm bUll ' rlpll ~ I 4x4. Auto, AJC, 11 ,554 ac- DISAPPROVAL
0F
• mont
oalo.
lual miles. (740)446-4410
PLANS
AND
~turday, Maooh 30111. 2002 1997 Pontiac Transport van. SPECIFICATIONS.
ot Jack Crank lenn. 3 112
99.000 miles. very good "DRAFT ACTIONS"
lllleo aouth ot Point Plaas· condition,
automattc,
WRITTEN
Ont on At. 35. 72 rogiS1erad PW, POL, power sliding ARE
STATEMENTS
OF
loelfeQ eligl&gt;lo lor Ohio to- door,
cruise
control, TtfE' DIRECTOR OF
bacco money "'II lOll at
AM/FWCO, $7,1185.00. Ctl
ENVIRONMENTAL
Itom &amp; 85 built eligible lor 304-773-5305 avenlnga.
PROTECTION'S
Ohio tobaoco money "'"
""lltpm.
1999 F-450 Ford 4x4. (DtRECTOFI'S)
4 dOOr crew cab, Oleoel, INTENT
WITH
flAy &amp;
~6-speed. manual, 7,000 RESPI!CT TO THE
L·--~G:::RAIN:0-_.1 with
miles. sticker price, $38.000 ISSUANCE, DENIAL,
-,
9ft. fltl bed, also haa
'
1011. hydraulic dump bad. ETC. OF A PEFIMIT.
~uturt &amp; pure Affalfa, 1400 aluminum tool boxtl. Wll LICENSE, OFIDEFI,
roo. round baleo. Dry hay sell lor $28,000 for on. eon ETC. INTEFIESTEO
ltorad ln-. Wet (silage) Hollie "Marcum (740)368· PERSONS
MAY
boles about 2.000 lbe. $10 8834
SUBMIT WRITTEN
S30 dollar&amp; per ball. Call :::~::--::-:-:-­ COMMENTS
OR
(S04)882.:3251
2001 Chivy Tracker 4&gt;&lt;4. V·
6, 7,500 mifes. White with FIEQUEST A PUBLIC
Hay &amp; Bright Wi;e Tie SAver border. Transfer or MEETING
SiroW, Veer 'Round Delivery Equity 11 $412. par month REGARDING DRA"
&amp; Volume Olocount Avallor or eell $22.000. Day ACTIONS.
ble.
Heritega
Farm. (304)675·8639
Evening COMMENTS
OR
(304)8715-5724.
(304)675-6737
PUBLIC MEETING
IIIII"-'"!"-----, 2001 S·tO 4x4. Full 4 door FIEQUESTS MUST BE
SW&gt; &amp;
crew cab. 7.500 mllos. SUBMITTED WITHIN
Fillmuzl;:a
Sticker price. $25.900. great 30 DAYS OF NOTICE
L.-~~=:...,1 deallor$18,000.Ct11Holllt OF THE DRAFT
Tobic:co Plants lor Sale. Marcum (740)366-B834
ACTION.
Cell Now and Older Plantol 85 International school bus. "'PROPOSED
ToA1881Veyourearlyaprlng 345 gao engine, ready to ACTIONS"
ARE
planting call Dewhurst go. $2500. (740)949-2700.
WRmEN
Clreenhouses
(304)895·
STATEMENTS
OF
87 OOdga Ctravan, $500; THE
37401(3()4)895.:3789
DIRECTOR'S
200 waH amp; 2300 4 cyl.
motor, (740)992·15880
· l N TEN T
WlTH
II~ \ \ \ I'Oitl \I ill \
RESPECT TO THE
1116 Dodge 1500 4x4. 316, ISSUANCE. DENIAL,
R&gt;R SAu:
auto, a~:•:rulse. 8" bed, MODIFICATION,

J:.:-

tm

~

HOW IQ WRITE AN. AQ.

-loot

ve.

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

to .

\\\(If\{ I \II \ I ..,

lfru&gt;WANm&gt;

__

~r

Iro

•I'ERso--N•A•I•.S-rl Babysitler·
Responsible
·
Teenager or Adult to watch
Moon light Escorts. Full 2 · school- age .OOys in my
Service Male and Female home 2 hours after school
Escorts. Prompt Professio- and
summer
months.
nal Discreet &amp; Confidential. (740)367-7152, leave mes6pm to 6am. (740 )386 - sage if no answer.
1799
·
Budget Inn, 260 Jackson
Why wait? Start meeting ~ike, G~lliP?~is. is now tak·
Ohio singles tonight, call toll 1ng ~pphcahons for Housetree 1-800-766-2623 ext keeping &amp; desk clerks. ~
1621 .
ply within. No phone cals
please.
c
s/l
u
nl"i"""-"JI,(.'EMENTS
Omputer nternet
sers
__
• Wanted. $1500 moJPT,
$5000 moiFT
Posted No Trespassing on Free 6ooktet. .888-229-6288
Richard Fehrmann Proper· 24hr. Recording or visit
ties 4249 St. AI . 7N, 4309 www.wealthisyours.com
St. A!. 7 . N, 1004 Hon~y- Domino's Pizza of Point
suckle Onve or ShadySide PleasanllEieanor/Winfleld
Campground 4250 St At now hiring Full-Time &amp; Part7N
Time safe drivers. Competit~ve Pay &amp; FleKible SChad·
GIVEAWAY
ule. Apply in person 420 Vi·
.ndslr..t. PI. pl.

lfru&gt;WANm&gt;

II'll

20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads ~
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

~~

or any •r dme.~Eo~•~oo~•Em~u~ot~bo~,~~•~IW"~...,~on~tho~~~~~S.~@~~

~

.

.UrM1"•1atl~tng

r

"'or':!::'

I

j ' MOBilERENT
H&lt;Mli

r

1140

WANI"ED

I

j

I

i

r

~51.

1--

r

-

I
.

r

I

IVIU

rent starting at 5289/month
740 441 0194
(
) 2 bedroom apt., dep. &amp; ref.
required , 43 oo.oo month,
304·n3·5601

~

""'

""&lt;iiVIiN

utll. paid

•·
11
'

-~

.

?

li J

w.oom

I

11875111

.,....,

\lOOd

,

~

"'
Oak doors w/glaS&amp; in upper·
~.
1
3 8 32 1
half, · Bb:W, · °K , - t
82x35 112, $200 ea., ..
(740)$92-5557
·'"'

,.

Antique 4 drawer dresser wailled: Dish Netwonc· Sys-~
with beveled mirror, great tem, call anytime, {740 , 949 . ,
shape! Bought for $300, sell 3315
;.._
for $250, (740)742-1011
.,
Wat rl"
1 1 314 200 ,
Buy or sell. Riverine Anti· PSI ~~~~00 ~~~; 1. 200"'
ques. 1124 Easl Main on PSI $35.00 Per 100; All ·
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 74D- Brass Compression Flttings .h
992·2528. Rues Moore,. In Stock.
.;owner.
RON EVANS ENT£RPRIS..
ES J k
Ohl
1 800 ,
Sue's Setactables on the "T" 537 • 9~ 8son,
O, •
• ,,
In Middleport. Dolls, glass- ·
ware, Aladdin mantels, and
mora. (740)992.0296
L-,.;•

s

I

r

I""

t•;

IAppiPo~nr

adr:

Ia~

r

MOBILE

j

I

w

WJoNTm

~~~~=: i::-.:~:128"

I

2001 Ford F·250 ext. cab,
Iorge bod, blu,.Collvor trlm. 8
dloc. cld. dlllll, -~.
ltlcktl"ld $38,000 1111
$28.000 OBO. (740)742·
· 1011
.

r•o.

,,t

4243

r'o

-·

I

\,

••

I

.I

"

special
service to all
our
customers.

Completl
Remodeling

.1. · ~:r

·. : ...

Cellular
refleKoloay. Myorascial
and Yoaalllerapy Gift
Cenificates Available
$30-45 mklu1es

J efT Warner Ins.
Authorized Agent

992-5479

746-992·1671

7122/TFN

HERBALIFE

BANKRUPTCY

Independent
Diatributor

can relieve a debtor Qf financial obli&amp;ations and
ananse a fair disUibbtion of asseiS among

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

may rellin certain property. known as
"exemptft property, for his or her personal use.
This may include a car. a house. clothes. and

100%
naturaUGuaranteed

740·992·7036
.,

credilors. A person going through bankruptcy

household goods. You should direct any
questions reguding·banlauptcy lo an attorney
before proceeding. For infonnalion reganling

LIME- DIPOYSIG
PUTS
STONE All Makes
Tractor &amp;
Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
ton•, limited

area, call for
detail•. Cell:

(740) 591-2173
Orleav• name

and number

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 S1. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667-0363

Compdllhe P'rkft

New Homes • Remodelina
Roonna• Room AddHions
SidinJ • Pole Bam~
Decks • Gaill&amp;es

(740) 992-2753
(740) 992-1101

YOUNG'S

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
SERVICE Sanitation
• Room Addlllono •
RemOdeling
• New Garage•
• Electrical 6. Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding 6. Painting
• Patio end Porch Decks
Free Estimates

3356] Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Service You

Can Count On"
Owner

V. C. YOUNG Ill

GeneAnns

992-6215

992·3174
mo

Pomeroy, OhiO

y

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

~
"Qlllllily Home ·
Improvements"

Free E,dmatlli • WVOJ291!

Bankrllptcy contact:
WIWam SalraDek, Attorney
(740} 5!'l-50Z5
Athens

sl

.

I

TFN

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

pd 1

Advertise

in this
space
for
per
month

sso

11!~

Ill!!! ll!!J !iilll !Ill!]

.

~1

iii~~J ljll

J.D. CONSTRUCTION
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Specializing In Ulg Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
~
Garages. Pole Buildings. Concre1c
1""·r~
· Roofs &amp; Siding
r· .1 -

·· .,.
r:r
1

..tA
..,.,,

Commercial &amp; Residential

~11 11

(740) 991-3987

Owner &amp; Operator. John Dean TFN ·--l!lii:\M':..Ino.Aff:..lfif:..~Jir...

Bulldozing.

TrackhoefBackhoe,

31t3

•••••••
•
•

Years have went and
gone, our love for
you, lingers on. A
•
. Freda
•
Precious rose, you
• Vanlnwagen •
were. We m!Js your •
July 11, 1926 • •
laughter, we Iniss
•
March 25, 20110 •
your smiUng face,
• Thank you for •
we miss yoil being
•
Jhe wonderful • •
with us the most.
•
days we ohai.d •
God needed a
•
toselher. My •
precious rose; so he
pnyers will be •
came and took you •
•
wllh
you unUl we •
home. Love you,
meet apln. •
miss you, and will be •
with yo~ and God
someday.
...... floo., . . . . .
~;-..
• ~-.t-. ...t •

•s.-s-•
...... .,_ •
••••••••
• 9••d'1&lt;... •

~

1.."------..llool

405 5th Street
New Haven, WV

•Resldentlol

tank, ditching, water

•Commercial

lines,'site work,
basements/footers,
driveways, ponds

WERRY'S
WITTLE ONES
Now accepting
-...
children
Day, evening,
and weekend
care available

992-6975
weny1 Ochgartia.com

P/8

Free Estimates
949-1405

Serving Ohio and W.V.
wv #03 1712

CONTRACTORS, INC.
Ohio 45771

Racine.

740-985-3948
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stenci I
Crete
Free Estima1es

Advertise
in this ~
space for $1 00
per month.
I

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
35537 SL RL 7 North • Poonemy, OH 45720
• 4-H feed for lambs. hogs. steers, chickens and
rabbits.
• Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets

• Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds

~(304)~

882·2343

• Fertilizer Specifically Designed for Gan.len Crops
• New Fcnilizer Buggies
• All buggies have been pattern tested to meet
Agronomy Association Standards

TFN

~-~~~~

WV Lie 1025243

BISSEll

Pomeroy Eagles

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
&lt;DMMERCIAland REIIDINIIAl

6 Sunday

BIDGO 2171
fuery Thursday
Doors Open 4:30

Early birds start

LARRY SCHEY

6:30

lcHfvRo£~T/

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

750

East S1a1e
·

L-----....»:111

Streel

Progressive top line
Thursdays

Phone (740)593-6671

Athens, Ohio

Progressive
Coverall on SUndays
TFN

~*R~
High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage
33795 HilAnd Rd.
Pommy, Ohi~

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
· Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;Mora

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-992·

Replacement Windows
Uvi1u.rl

740-742-3411

Df.

WICK'S
BAULDfCand
EXCAVATING

&amp; Modell

Freo Eatlmolto

•Fill Dirt •Mulch
•Ba;s

HEATING
COOLING

REFRIGERATION

(740) 992•3470

"4/1 8101

All Makeo

•Hauling ot.lmeatline

oQravol• Sand •Topaoll

AD
2 Avg. Size Rooms Cleaned
$29.99 ea. rm.

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

CONCRffi/BLOCK/BRICK

BUILDERS IDC.
In Memory

(lO'xlO' 610'x20')

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

fiELDS
PLUMBING

land clearing, Seplic

740-992·3985

Victor C.

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

[jill! Ill!~ [i!t] [jjllj [flu: [fu ij i u

(Syracuse, Ohio)

Sklng
htl j

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

M:&gt;.lfii:\M':..&amp;~M:o..IA

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION
Wlucklwa&amp;

TFN

·or email@

TfN

(Insured)
Free Estimates

Marclt 25,
1986-2002

~ :w.c.,~.
tSw+hl+-. ~·

.,...
L• · ·

Kris
Kanlecki

FREE ESTIMATES

Cetmaw.·11eed,"""' 811 i

In lAving Mtmory

Young,.Jr.

TJr •: '!v: PriN
:u· :·PriNTING

Stop &amp; Compare

trust.

BASEMENT
WAT£RPROOFINCI
Unconditional lllollmo guar·
antae. local references fur·
nlohed . Eotabllahed 1976.
Call 24 Hro. (740) «B·

L~-----~-.,J.
'
.

0

l3t!nl f1lm!S ~can .

In Memory

r~I

:::-

7

I._,;~~~

8S·Sto-Pu. 350 V.S Barad :~~· Roper• Baooment
3() over Roller Cam, 750 EL .
rproot ng.
ED Brock Carb., MSD lgnl· . , - , - , - - - - - .liOn, H-re 350 Turbo, C&amp;C Clenarol Homo MalnteTrana, with thlft klt,)"urbo nence· Pakltlng, vinyl akJ.
EKI:\AUit traction bal'l, Ton· lng, carpentry, doors, wlnno,u cover, new til'll and dowa, baths, mobile home
whiMI, Great lm.rtor, New repair and more. For rree
Point Job. Ex. Cond. "Very eotlmele call Chat 749·1192·
Feet Truck" $3,500. Ph. 6323.
'
(3()4)875·3101
911 ClMC Sonoma, Ext. Cob.
2.2,
6 opood.
cover.
Raloed
hood,Bod Racing
Strlptl, 00 Player, New
tlrtl 1nd cfutch,. 82 ,000
mllll on engine, Real Sharp
Truck, $5500. (740)889·
030.2 ·

"EXTRA"

;:;=====:::;;=;

11

rio

provides

N
AGENCY, P.O. BOX
1048, COLUMBUS, ·
OHIO 43218•1041
(TELEPHONE: 814·
144·2128). "FINAL

1 "r-~AA~uro-C&lt;EliOIIIES-=PAKfS~-=&amp;...,

:,:::lle::2.:r:Fo:::r&lt;I:..,3S0,-.-7.3-d-le-.-.,.l.
.
cr.w cab. dually. full 1ize
" I U\ H I "
bod. black &amp; oliver, centu~·
on packlgo. 82.000 mile•. m;;;r;;;;;~~--;;;
mint condition, 304-773·
HoM£
. 6188. (740)992-3102
IMPRovEMENTS

HE L D
0 N
A
PROPOSED ACTION
IF
A
HEAFIING
REQUEST
0 R
0 B J EC Tl 0 N
lS
RECEIVED BY THE
OEPA WITHIN 30
D•YS OF ISSUANCE
~
OF THE PROPOSED
ACTION. WRITTEN
COMMENTS,
REQUESTS
FOR
PUBLIC MEETINGS,
AND ADJUDICATION
HEARING FIEQUESTS
MUST BE SENT TO:
HEAFI
lNG CLERK,
PROTECTIO

1988 ClMC 11500 pickup,
2WD,
V8,
automalic,
120.000 mlleo, runo good.
$2,500.00. Call 3()4·773· 1973 Stir Craft Ctmper,
:530=:5~o:;v::•n.::ln::!g!:o.:____ Clood Condition,
111$1 Chavy Z71. 4x4, Ill· For more Information
collent oondfflon, naw 350 Call 740-258·1902
d. onglno. (740)992·6027 - - - - - - offer 4pm.
1911$ Brookwood Ultra Lito

0.46~

The Daily
Sentinel

:~~RONMENTAL

1962 GMC pick-up, fuii·Bize
bed, 89,000 mites, new
paint job, white spoke
whetll, ak.lm. toolbolC, ask·
lng 51850. (740)949·2621

e.:c

rr

~

I

I

rUdy

2oee ·

~::-------

ROI£1T BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

~g~~~gRg~D

AND
FIEQUESTS FOR A APPLICATION NO(S)
.PUBLIC MEETING OIHII-53-21
REGAFIDING
A
PROPOSEO ACTION (
MAY BE SUBMITTED 3 ) 25 " 2002
"-::7-:-~--::---1tc
lii8S 4x4 Four Trax
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF ~--------,
very good condition:
NOTICE OF THE · r
$2600
.
PROPOSED ACTION.
740·367.()415 (chesh~e)
~~AFIAINDJGUMDICAYATIBOEN

rD-··

oo

4:30pm: Closed ThUrsday, '
Saturday
&amp; · Sunday. 1

Pool table, $200. (740)4481557(740)448-4678

~~~:NTS

t9934x4 FourTrax
very good condlllon:
$2500
740-367.()415
(Chaahlro)

l996 Yamaha Virago.
1100cc, INI &amp; cream In ool·
or.t.420mllel.lotoollaolory chrome • .paddad back
:.;;;;.:..:....:..::..;..::.:..::.:..;__ rest. naw baHery. 2 malch·
1994 Dodge Splnt v.a. high lng helmets,
$3.500.
mllooge, no major medlanl· (740)381H!506
cal problems, runs good.
$1,100. (3()4)695-3422 after 2001
Ha~ey Oavldoon
•XL1200 Cuatom UC Blue,
:"""::;;;:···- - - - - - t ,043
miles. $11.500.
\994 Toyott Tt
truck. (3()4)6715-2897
V8. auto, AIC. 1 owner.
&amp;M
$4,700; 11192Toyota Paseo.
"""'TS
010RS
aunrool, AIC, CO, $2,800;
FOR 8AU
1992 Nlaaan Stana, $1.2150
1994 Bonnevlla SSE. 1 12 foot Aluminum fishing
owner, $4800; 11167 Toyotl boat. 600 lb boal trailer, 9
Corolla, 4dr, auto. A/C 1/2 HP Sportwln Evenrude
$1895. 740-258-8012
motor, awing away trailer
1w 6 Oodgo Intrepid $3000 jack, Hummingbird Depth
OBO 1995 Plymounl Neon finder. $1000. (3()4)528·
$3000 OBO (740)256-6169 5515 9-5pm Ask for Debbie.
(740)256-1502 after Bpm
1995 Dodge Spirit, IIOod
condition. $2650.00, IOBK 1986 Baja Fon:o 220. New
(740)9411-3226.
motor and oul drive $10,000
1996 Honda Civic UC, Aulo. (740)446-tOt 2
Air. Cruloe, PW. POL, 4 Boat For sale or loade. 20
Door.
· Black.
$6995. foot Rinker Cuddy Cabin. V·
(740)388·9678
6 engine. 1&amp;5 Horoo Power.
good condition, new uphols1999 Ctvaller 48.000 mllea. tory Inside Pholle (740)2564dr.. Auto. Air. $6.500. 6926
OBO. :J04.875·4363
:=;;~~_,.,.,.-,,.,.-,,..-~
=:=:.:::.:~:...:=-- 87 Bayllner 1411 87 Eeoort
1999 Lincoln Continental, trailer. 50 torce outbOard
jusl 21,000 miles, loaded, motor, 2 gas tanka, ski,
excelent condtlon. call740- humming bird depth finder,
has amlfm cassane player
446-1759
$2,900. Will trade for vehl·
96 Ctvaller LS. 4 cyl, arn/lm cle
of
equal
value.
C/0, air, good tires, good (304)675-7845 leave mes·
~~ltlon, $4.000, (740)992· sago.

d~ys same =~ ~~O~a~~~~e:SrX: ~

r

riO

r•

1986 Mercury Grand Mar·
quia. SBOO. Coli alter 7pm.
(3()4)8715-3089
·
1989 Olda Delta 118 Royal.
clean ca.r. everything
Worl&lt;o. $2.600, · 93 Honda
Goldwlng. excellenl ohape.
~ 1740)446-8394
1990 Ptymoulh Acclaim 4dr. AJC. Tilt. Cruise. great
worto car $900 (740)256·
!058
1992 Pontiac Sunbl~. 4 cyi.
'aulo. rune onc1 drives great
$1250. 740-441-1083

ACTIONS:
ARE
ACTIONS OF THE
DIRECTOR WHICH
ARE
EffECTIVE
UPON ISSUANCE OR
A
8 T ATI!D
EFFECTIVE DATE.
PURSUANT TO OHIO
REVISED
CODE
II!CTION 3741.04, A
FINAL ACTION MAY
BE APPEALED TO
THE
ENVIRONMENTAL
REVIEW APPEALS
COMMISSION (ERAC)
(FORMERLY KNOWN
A S
T H E
ENVIRONMENTAL
BOAFID OF FIEVIEW)
BY A PERSON WHO
WAS A PARTY TO A
PROCEEDING
BEFORE
THE
DIFIECTO F1
BY
FILING AN APPEAL
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
NOTICE OF THE
FINAL
ACTION.
PURSUANT TO OHIO
FIEVISED
CODE
SECTION 3745.07, A
FINAL
ACTION
ISSUING, DENYING.
MODIFYING,
REVOKING,
OR
FIENEWING
A
PERMIT, LICENSE,
0R
V AFIIANCE
WHICH
IS
NOT
PFIECEDED BY
A
PROPOSED ACTION,
MAY BE APPEALED
TO THE ERAC BY
FILING AN APPEAL
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
ISSUANCE OF THE
FINAL
ACTION.
It FIA C
APPEALS
MUST BE FILED
WITH:
ENVIRONMENTAL
REVIEW APPEALS
COMMISSION, 231
EAST TOWN STREET,
R0 0 M
3 0 0,
COLUMBUS, OHIO
43215. A COPY OF
THE APPEAL MUST
BE SERVED ON THE
DIREC'TOR WITHIN 3
DAYS AFTEFI FILING
THE APPEAL WITH
THE ERAC.
APPROVED
PERMISSION FOR
OPEN BURNING OAC
I;HAPTEFI 3

REVOCATION,
OFt 745-18
RENEWAL
OF
A . RACINE VOL. FIFIE
PERMIT, LICENSE, DEPT.
0R
VAFIIANCE
· 31 8 8 4
0 LD

1986 Buick Century, runs $11,600, (740)742·2e80
ma
rt
•
ny new pa s,
.00. 740-992·1933
MlmlRcY&lt;LES

NEW AND USED STEEL "
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar ;
For Concrete, Angle, Chan· &lt;.I
nel, Flat Bar. Sleel Grating
For Drains, Driveways &amp; •.r.
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met· •.

(740)446-7300

Auros

F
Lr.--~~::::i-.,J ~Pfo excoll;~~=~~:

Lift for wheel chair, will tit Chevrolet or Ford, 740-992- ::
7879; tractor with plow, has __
grader; gas welder, porta· •
bla; 3 trailers , different ,,
sizes: (740)992-701 2.
.· ,
McDonald beanies. Glory, -.
en·l'oan·ra En'n • Maple 4 full '
' axlras,
1)0
'
'""
sols plus
lonna·
...
berger (740)742-1011 • "•
_.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS I&gt;i'
lntertherm &amp; Coleman gas, fr
oil &amp; electric furnaces in· ·':
eluding hi efficiency heat ...,
pump systems. We carry a 1r
complete line of Mobile
·home parts &amp; accessories. ' ·
BENNETT'S HEATING 1: .~
COOLING (740)••• ••15 •
-""
or 1-800-ln-5167
-·
www.orvb.comlbennett
'·

by 4:00pm, March 28, 2002. nate reasable IJema to ·1·800-397·1908.
pralsal. A bargain at
ReUse lndustrtosl N. Co·
$182.0001 (740)448·3139
2 ocreo, 33475 Ball~ Run Applications being !Ikon for
H
·~ rt
th lumbua Ad., Atheno. High·
TURNED DOWN .ON
Rd.• off Ohio 124. 1 mila very nice 2 bedroom locatad
.
e1P wan_, ca ng 1or e way 50, Albany. 740-de· SOCIAL SECURITY 11117 Ranch Style 3 Bedroo(n, 1 West of Route 7, water, &amp; In country setting yet cklsa
Absolute Top Dollar: u.s. elderty, Carat Group Home, 8200.
No Fn UnleM We Win!
Bath, ·Large LR, DR, Kitch· septic already in, $14,900, to town. Very large kitchen
Silver Gold Coins Proof- now pa.~lng rnnlmum wage,
en, CIA, 3 Car Gara~, 3 excellent building site, with atove, refrigerator,
1.888-682·334!
sols. ' Diamonds. • Gold newpm,ah ftapm
: amp·m3pm
. • 7pamm: Looe up to 40 lba. In 2
Aoreoi. $78.000. (740)3711- (937)3116.0258
dllhwtoher. Waoher/ Dryor
11
11
3
Rlnga
u S Currency 5
months, all natural, Or. reo·
2627
. included. Tenant paye e)ec.
.
. .
.- 7em. cell740-992·5023.
ommendad,
1-868·939·
90 ..... ol good huntl
trlc. Total tltctrlo htaV
MlscFJ:LANEbuo;
M.T.S. Coin Shop. 161 Sec·
Sandhill Rd, Meadowbrook
ng
3748
ond Avenue, Galllpl)lio, 740· Help Wanted: COOK
.
JloMEs
Addltion.7r. old • 2100 lq. leindl.:..!~000740./ac9re49. 22Claa24well A/Ct. Cllart&gt;ald~ pNickupt enid
MERCHANDISE
Block. brick, oewer plpea,.~
446·2842.
Galli&amp; coun•" Council on
FOR"··•- lllng
nc..,.,_,.
•
•
waer ncu ...... o !)ell·-wlndowa, llntels, etc. Ciauda :1 • 3 br
Aglng 11 llklri'g appllcellono
dinlngreom &amp;'iamrlyroo"':':i
lowad. $400 dopooll. 1450 2 N
tl kot 1 c
·
Wlnttre Rio Grandt oH"f,
lor a cook/ nutrlllon ald. Thle
an .. 674 ••77
Country homH, nice. loti, month. (7&lt;40)448-2205 or
aacar c I or •• oca Call 740·245-5121
•
'
I \ ll'fl)\ \ 11 \ I
oldon
full time. ExporlTo Do
tllU Sunohlno Homo on car garage~·
·locetad on Rt 33 betw10n· (740)448·11681i. All&lt; for Vir· Colt BOO Loweo MOtor
·
,
po
11
'. IU \111"
comer lot 50 x 100 ft., Tanned Co~ Cod houoe In Pomeroy/Athens. Coli 740- glnla
Speedway,
May
28.
~~;r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., onoo In largoquantllycOOk.
waohor, dryer. S1ovo, rof"'-- Ma••• noa~r river.~ wal· 91l2·21871ordetallo.
.
(740)256-13()4 .
__.......,110
ling prelorrod. Appllcellono
A&amp;E Conotructlon
•...~·
•N
BEAUTIFUL
APAFIT
fUR~
lfru&gt; WANTID
are ovallllblo at tho Senior remodeling. roofing, beth
orator, c.ntrol olr, water mart. Fonood Yo~. 3 to 4br. Lol far Sale· Approx 2 112 MINTI AT IUDGET PFI~ 24 toot Tri-ll!le lrallor, aok· ·
''
8
1
·
Contor locatedsoe
ot rooms,
drywtll,
Interior
eolltntr.
etorago building
ao..,
for Cll AT JACKION 1 '"lng $900. Call (740)446· 7Adorablo~upploo. Mother "
- - - - - - - • Reeouroe eRoutot~.·
.
xtO' $3500000.
Dayllmo (3()4)773·~2
b 11111• cleor.O &amp;
dri
• doo
111ng • 1.,m
~
pan
re, w1n·
Evening llll2
u ng, grave 1 voway, TATII, 52 Wootwood Drlve 402! after 6pm weolcdeyo Dalmallen Fathor Blook ··
892
IWANTEDI
• Clonele Plantz lor en appll· - · · FrH Eotlmotto.
"
•
• For oalo bf owntr: Nlat b~ water &amp; eloctrie evollable, from $297 to $383. Walk to
y11 e
eekondo
' L b B0th• 0
1
·"
00112
Serlouo People To Work calion and copy of lho job (3()4)8715-7738
lovol home on I acre ntar Porter
area.
Aoklng o•op &amp; movloo. Cell 740- an m on w
·
a"rea·t 1th oh lldn pr~~ ktoor_
0
From Homo Call1 ·888·616· deocrlptloo.
Chootor ThrH bedroom 5139115
11 (740)448
"
4 oemelory loto lor 1111 In
w
rtn. ••• a ·
0894
GCCOA It on equal appor· All Mokoo Lawn Mowera 2 homoe on ono lot In Mid· two betho, ono-oar garage: 4Bt4·rrom
or (740)440: , 448·2~~~· EQual Houolng the Muonlo Gorden In Ohio &amp;ood addldon to any Eaotei 1
www.SimpleCaohBiz.com
tunlly employer.
and. Outdoor Pawor Equip- dilllOrt, $58,600. Saon by lamlly room wnh llrtplaoo •. 3248 oiler 8pm. .
Oppo
ly.
Valley Mamory Clordono.
aokot. ·HIICIIIrot ahoto and ;
mont Ropolred. Froo ~lckup oppolntmonl Onl)r. (740)992· oun room. Now oontrtl 11111·
Chrloly'o Family Living, Mull be a Maoon. (740)386· wormed. Roady 10 ga •
.
lng &amp; ole oyotom. Ono ml· Loto lor oalo· (1) 0.377 33140 New Lima Rd .• Rut· 8484,1oavomtlllll'l·
03/26/ll2
SBO
oach ··
SEam what you are worth lnllde Salea ~owor Equip· and dellvtry available. Call 8164
ment. MUll be High School Mike (740)446-7804.
bedroom homo in Middle· nute on Route 7, bulotlll Pfl· acrtl" $14.000 &amp; (1)
land. Ohio. 740·742·7403.
(740)258-1058
"
from home,
3
graduate. Some oaloa expo·
~ lih 2 car garage ntw· valo. (740)1185·3981
ocm· $16,000. Alrtlne Ad, Aportmont. homo and troller Baby ltoml. Indian Dlllgn Miniature ~OOdloo In Umo :
Internet/mall order.
·
$1500·$5000 por monlh. rlence pretarred, but not All of your home rer,:lra, ad·
c:Ural air &amp; htat &amp;win· For 1811 or,.... With option P~r am., f~~~ re
rtntlill. Commercial 1tore~ rug1, Cotto tableland tl• for Eatter.. 2 AKC, 1
1
Free Booklet
"sectJelovoalderyn.•
poEqrueolpn· dltlono &amp; remodel ng. 24hr dowo. (740)11$2·3278.
to buy: 4 bedroom
"''·t upl on.
• oo r • Ironto avolloblo lor loooo. bioi. (3()4)875·2801
(740)379·2639
not. "
.....
tmergancy HNiot. Hnlor
' ·•· cen ra nwage eyllam, I. vacanclet now
.,.
1-800·241-7754
ment, 305 Upper River citizens dlacount. 22yrs. 3 Bedroom on Route 2, kitchen, 1 112 batha, water
available.
Call
.
Bedtlde commode, $25~ exFR'.._. &amp;
~100 WORKERS NEEDED Road, Galllpollo.
axp. (3()4)578·2085
(3()4)875·5332
F..t..N.G. hoat·central air. (740)446-4514 M·FI 8-5 or Furnlohed Apa~mont. 2 callent condition; Breathing
~••
'
Aaaemble crafts, wood
river vi1w from large front call (740)446-3248 after ~ooma and Bath. Clean. No mr.cnlne with atta&lt;lhmanta,
VEGETAIL&amp;9
•
lteml. Material provk:led. Malnlananca· Mutt have Class A COL Orlvar, not 3 Bedroom, 1 bath In Aa· poroh, tea• rlltrancu &amp; 6pm
Ptta. Aeterenoea and 0. $10; II'O{IIng board com,u
To ·$480+ wl&lt;.
oklllo In electrical. plumbing, much expertonco, looking clno. Convonlent loootion depooll. no poll. 74Q-1182·
paoli Requlrod. (740)448· plate, $6.00. (740)4&lt;16-4847 CRESS ClREENS. You cut~
Freolnformlllon pkg. 24 Hr. heating and general molnlo· lor local job. 448·1657
$37,500.00. 740·949-3228 9012
Property lor oslo on Slate 1519
$8.00 ~r buahol, Already .
nanoa akl!la. lmmecllate
At. 143 Pomeroy Ohio, Seri·
Englartd
Coraalr
!""·
...
1·801·428·4750
opening In Clalllpolla ..... Oavld'o Homo Flopolr. 3 bedroom, In Middleport.
~~aMEs OUI Calli only. (3()4)862· Fumlohed Efficiency, All· Couch/Loveetal · 6 month cut ' 12·00 per buohtl. "
ll7 Lincoln Conllnentll . Sand roaume to: CLA 555, Plumbing, Electricll, Point· call Tom Anderaon after
FOR SAlE
. 29118
Utllltlll Paid, downottlro, old. Floral with piiiOwo. Paid Avallalilo Now through :
block, 59K mlleo. good con- clo Clalllpollo Dally Tribuna, lng. etc. (740)258·9373 or 5pm. (740)11$2-3348.
S215/montf1. ll19 second $1400
aoklng
$700. March. Chorteo McKean .,
7
944
dillon, $14K, dayllme num- 825 Third Avenue, Galllpo· (740)441-6707.
.
"
RlrALE.vrATE
Avo. (740)448·3945
(304)675-7022 ahorepm.
Form. pho~( 40)448·
2n
I \In I"' 1'1'1 II ._,
bar. (740)440·8899
ua, OH 45831
3.8 Aoroo w/331 h. 0 hlo 1980 HHioroot. Nlco Condl·
·'
Excellent Cere lor olde~y Aivlf Footage. nt&gt;l 1o CI'Y tlon, 2 BR, Clp Fumoco. 0
jlrl,clouo living. 1 and 2 Froo Gao Fumaceo and Air
•
,\11\l " itllh
McClure's Aeataurant now ptrtOnl In my Chrlattan Flark In Maaon, WV. Brlok central AC, 1 Owner,
~
.
bedroom apartment• at VII- Conditioner Eatlmattl. Cell
Accs111o a compuler?
hlrlng oil 3 looatlono, lull or Counlry Homo. N...Srnok· homo with 3br. 1112 beth. 2 $7600. (740)2&amp;8·1914
Cl-.tlt worthy buyer looking loge Manor · and Riverside (740)446-6306 or 1·800· jj;ji;r;;;;;~~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Eom monlhly $450· 1600 pt. pa~·llmt, pick up appllat· or, Mobile. $850. (304)682· car gorago, City water,
fO(houoe to bl"'. Clallla. Ma. Aportmonto In Middleport. 291.0098. II you don•t call
FARM
~~. ·
$2000·4500 lull·llm·s
· lion at location &amp; bnng back 3880
Sewor. lnground pool, ton· 111118 Fleetwood t8K80 3BR 110(1 or Melgo, blotto 0111 From $276-$348. Call 740· uo we bolh loaal
••
www.OurAnswer.com
between
9:30am
&amp; Cloorgn Portable Sawmill, nlo court, hot tub, cement 2 bath. Excollenl Condhlon Jim. (740)11$2·3187
892·5064. Equal Houalng
"
10:00am, Monday lhru Sal·. dOn't haul your 1,...,1 to the boat dock, river bank Ia 118,000 (740)448·6652
Opportunltlea.
,..aldtntl.. Ham~ Ownere Shp Snapper lawn IIIIer.-.
1·800-685·0760
urdey
.....
rocked. Looated acroaa
Wantad: Individual wanta
Tappan HI efficiency 90 pluo
ARE YOU LOOKING TO
.
mill jul1 call304-676-1957. Pomeroy, Oh. Amphl Thea- Just geHing atarttd?
land 1-6 acrea. Call New 2 Bedroom with wash· gaa furnaces Including on rear tina, 1 attachment, paid :~
WORK AT HOME? OWN A Need! ladlea to 1811 Avon.
ter. Vtri private lot. Ume homebuyert? No creel· (740)448-3570 mor1 acre- er and dryiH hookup. CICNMJ and
electric gas furna· over $1500. will sell for "
COMPUTER PUTIT WORK (740)«6·3358
Will babyllit in my homo $179,000 Firm. coil 304· II? Cell (740)448-3670 for ago k pricllt ~·
to hoapltol (740)«1-0117
ceo. HI Efficiency H..t $595.00 firm 3()4.875-4237 ~
~~~.:;~~~ '7:ro~; • OHica 'Managtr/Malntt· anv agaa, any time 740: 773-5081 P' 3CM·n3-5769 mortlnlormatlon
~twly Remodeled 2 Bed- Pumps, feBturlng Tappana 99 Maslly Ferguaon
~
387"7828
w e b a I ,I t nanca Worker
4 .uaed t"tomll left. Muat Over 10 uHCI hornet priced
room Apt. , S1ovel Aetrtgera- :~:ag~credlble warranty (86 Horae) 70 hours. 4WO,~;
succeed2richea.com
It Interested ,write J·2·Y·35 Will prauure wash houses, ...1(740)448-3670.
under $3000. Will help with
tor, l!tllltles Paid, $400/ ·IENNJTr•s HIATINQ &amp; Cab, heat &amp; a!r, AM/FM:·
Water A810Ciallon, Inc:,
trailera, and deckl. Call eyr old hOUII on 1.67 dellllery. Call Karena, 740,
HOlES
month. 46 Olive St., COOLING (740)441·8411 cassette stereo. Frorit tires ..
PO Box 485 Pl. Plea~ 441-4238 uk lor Ron or ocroo.
mlloa outolde Vln· 385-11948.
(740)446·3945
or t-eoo-&amp;72-SH7•
12.4-24. rear tlr.. 18.4·30.'•
ATIN: Pon)Oroy
2
FOR RENT
Now ~akin~ Appllcallon•- www.orvb.com'bennett
$30,000. Call Hollie Marcum ~
l'ostal positions. Clerkalcar· IY/11 25550 at once. Include leave me884ge.
rlert/sortera. No exp. re·
your mailing address ar)d
·
ton. 3BR, 2 Bath, Large Llv- Want a new home? Own
I•
(740)388-8834
~
qui red. Benef!tt. For exam, telephone number. AA appJI· Will worn. tor $4.00/hr, dO lng Room with Fireplace, your own lanel? We do! Call 3 br. house located at 3408 35 Weal 2 edroom Town· Small pickup load of toys, ;;...:::.:.:.::..:=..:.__ _ _ .,
salary and testing lnforma- cation form will be mailed to odd Jobs. Will clean out 10)(20 Covered Porch, (740)446·3384 for your new Moatman Ave. Pt. l'leaiant hOUII Apartments, Includes orafta, mise Items, $100. Massey Ferguson 362, sa.::
lion call (830)393.:3032 ext. you by rewrn mall.
buildings for lree . (740)992· 10x10 out building, Aaklng homo iodayl Trade Ins wol· $350.00 a mon. 304-676· Waler
Sewage. Trash. (740)992·5979 (740)448· hp, 717 hr., like new,.
7151. 8am.flpm 7 dsys
Board Of Dlreclora
9314, 1·740-590·0141.
$85,000. (740)388·8830
come
2247
$350/Mo., 740·446·0008.
0196
$15.800,(740)985-3843
"

TO BUY

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I3ca""II"~4P•!•715rs.'::2.t.

--

llousEHow
GooDs

Appliances: Reconditioned
as.he rs, o ryers, Aanges,
Ae1ngrators, Up ~•O 90 o ays
Cl uaranteed'·. W8 s e11 New
Ma~·
•~i
Frene h
7 ...g .,....lances,
Cily Maylag. 740-448-7795.

I

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For Sale: Reconditioned
washers •. dryers and refrigIDR
• erators. Thompsons Appliance. 3407 Jackson Ave2 bedroom mobile home for nue, (304)675·7388.
rent, no pets, (740)9925858
Good Used Appliances, Re·
condllr·on~ and Guaran:
vu
Beautiful River View ldNI teed. Washers, Dryers.
For 1 Of 2 People. Aeleren-- Ranges, and Refrigerators,
cas, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· Some start at $95. Skaggs
tar Trailer Pane, 740-441- Appliances, 76 Vine St. ,
0181 ·
(740)446-7398
Molloha C
Cl
Tuppers Plains, 2 bedroom,
n arpet, 202 a.rt&lt;
includes stove &amp; refrigera· Chape1 R08d• · p 0 rt er, Oh io.
lor. $250
.. per month plus dor (740)446-7444. H!77-830111 II111188 (740)66l3487 9182 Frae Est mates Ea
pos u
'
••
finanCing, 90
cash. Vi~ Master Card.
APARIMENTS
Drive- a-11ttle save alol.
FOR RENT
Whirlpool bath with laucet
(never used), 2 ~talnless
1 and 2 bedroom apart- steel &amp;inks with taucets.
ments, fumlshed and unfur- (740)446-8871
nished, security deposit requlred, no pets, 740-992212a18nd' 2 Bedroom Ap•- lor
ANnQUES
~
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16x60 sites, $100/mo. 740- tributor, Call For Product Or,:.\
992·2167.
Opportunity. (7401441-1982 ;,.,
JET
Storage Space tor rant 4033
r 0 OTORS. ...I~
square faet. with matal
AERA ,I NM
shel11lng. Located in City of Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In .. I
Point Pleasant. Inquire at Stock. Call Ron Ellans, 1• :
(304)674.0102
800·537·9528.
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1br. Hud Subsidized apt.all 740-446-4525

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Twin Rkters Tower accept- Grubb•s Piano· Tuning &amp;
lng applications lor
Repairs. Problems? Need·''
Tuned? Call The Piano Or. . ,

2 Bedroom .House In Gallipoils Area. $350/month plusl
depool1(740)441.0194
Charming, t"llstorical Homo
for rent April 1st. $600/mo.
Low Utllhles. Kitchen Furnlshed. In town, close to
schools. Gall (740)256-6433
or (740)339-0562.
DON'T RENT! Less then
pertect credit evan banknJptcy Is no problem In buylng this home near Pomeroy. Only $350 per month.
Very low down payment .
p-·'bl
...,._. e down1 Mu01 ae 11.
J.lm (740)992 -3187
Pilot . Program •. Renters
Needad. 304- 736 •7295 .

°

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util. paid fo~ elderty and H 1 11 P "•rd Print
d1sewe
ac-.
er
2 Bedroom House, South abled E.H.O 304 75-6679 Brand New. $50., Umax
on State Route 7. ReferScanner, brand new, $50.
ence Required. Approxi·
SPACE
Bundy Saxophone 2yrs. old.
mately 15 miles South.
mR .RENr
$600. (304)875-3765
(740)4.41-1917
lndependeht Herbalife Dis·

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Ir

APR. For Ustlngs, 800-3193323 Ext 1709.

I

376

:a~

2000 Dutch Mobile - . 1 .:3 Bedrooms Forecloood
3 bedroom, 2 full bath, Homes From $1991Mo., 4%
porches, Decks. Very nice Down, 30 Veers at 8.5%

Long-term care and home Etc.

1

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t ~~:uOMES IriO

~

OTA/PTA Full·time. Part· Moving and Hauling: Clean
lime positions available. Out BuildlnQI, Basements,
Good wages and benefits. Garages, Estates, Trash,

I

r

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Odd
Jobs. Call
In thla , . . I I Ia
home 16x80. $34,000 Of
health.
(740)446-7604
IUbfeCI to.the Fedenll
aomeone Interested. in takOhio License required. can
.
F*~Aclof1• ing over loan. On nice" rent1-80()..5n-4310 or fax
Top . to Bo1tom. Cteanl~
which"'*"' tt illiOII to 1 ed lot, at Old Town Mobile
resume to 937-695-1375:
SeMCe, prof88S10081, res1. . . . . . . ..,..,
Horne Part&lt;. Moving Need to
dential, office cleaning at
po...,.tce,llmlbsd • •
Sell for Pay Off. {304)6 75.
Part-time Secretary needed, an
affordable
price.
diKrlmtnMIOn bMed on
4135
approximately 20/hrs per (740 )992 ·2979 or (740)992•
,_,.,color, reUgton, MX
week with availability to 1391
tamlllal118tua or nattonll
39x27 1994 Fairmont OouCOVBf, whole days as needorigin, ar •n' lnt.ntlon to
blewide, 28R, 2 Bath, Must
ed. Dutias include answer·
rukelnytueh
move.
(740)256-6128,
lng phones, copying. and
pioloionco,llmllollonor
(740)256·1597
light lyplng. High School Di-.
B~
dl-=rimlnatlon."
lo
"eel Send
n - -..... ~
7914x7bBayvlew(w/OfJn),
P ma requlr: ·
revrrvn• vrua •
New Since 97, CIA, Water,
su~e 1 CLA 554. c/o 825
Tnilnewtp~perwiMnot Heater, Fumace, .. Front
!~~ Avenue, Galltpolls OH $$AT&amp;T Payphono Routes
knoMngly accept
Porch, Shed and Wooden
$$. Ptime local sites. Huge
.tvertiaementl for rMI
Fence, Lots of RernodeCing,
Retpll'ltory Ther•plat. Full $$. Free Into. 800-800-3470
:r:h.:W~Our Must See, $8000, (304)675Time Position. Ohio Li·
........ hlftby
3008
censed ART/ CRT. Mon·
rNOncEI
lnformedthltllf
Inventor)' Reduction Sale
day·
Friday, . 9:00am- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHAll new and pre-owned
5:~pm. Competitive Wage. lNG CO. recommends that ctwtnlnp ICIVMIMd In
homes reduced ror quick
Retirement Plan, Health In· you do business with people
thll newep~p~r.,.
sale. No reasonable offer
surance. Contact : Bow
. - youknow, andNOTtosend
Plllll»&gt;onln.,quif
_ .... sod . 16 new and 10
.I .I
-unity - ·
,.,,u
-..- •
homas
to
man's Homecare. 70 Fllf'IB money through the ma1 unti
pre-own ed
LabiMilll
puppies
St.,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631.
you
.have
Investigated
the
...........
,__
Col
•
Mobil
Choe·'ale
88
8
~
D0 1VEAS WANTED No
c•......._ •n.. m.
to ~ home.· Call 304- taking
"' applications for Truck
. w (740)~7283
of1enng.
Homes, us 50 Ea.,.,
•• Alh llc:&gt;P,e
882 ·
2
Dnving position. 2 years ex· URGENTLY
NEEOEO· For sale Thriving Small
FOR SAlE
ens, OH 740·592·1972
I.orr·I\ND
perience, Haz-Mat and plasma donors, eam $50 to Family Owned Business.
ol
.-4_
FOLIND
Tank ern:lorsement required. $60 per week for 2 or 3 All Equipment Great Loca·
'" ~
~~olmited&lt;UJliNo Credit? Gtlv•
Call (304)6$1-4213 for an hours weekly. Call Blo Ufe tion. Reasonably priced. Se- Land home packages . .emment Bink Finance Only
'
application and questions. Plasma Service, 740-592· rious Calls Only (304)675- Landi Home/ Land Improve· At Qakwood fn Barbours·
LOST 2-15-02 at Hunting- Ralph H. Bums &amp; Son, Inc. 6651 .
44.52
mants in ana low payment. ville, WV 304·736~3409.
ton Museum. Long Na11y
Loan officers on hand 7 Mobile Home &amp; Lot. Beale
Wool
womens
coat.
Head Start Cook
wanted- Roofers, 2·5 Years S.lart Your Business To· days a week. {740)448· Meadow Road Gallipolis
w/Leather gloves. call Qualifications: high school experience. No laborers. day... Prime Shopping Can· 3093
F
L016 01 E 1
·
t Space Available AI Af
erry.
)( ras.
{304)743-5520
diplomat GED required. Fa· Pay based on axpenence, er
(304)675 '3110,
- - - - - - -miliar with Head Start phi· (740)446-3541 or (740)339- fordable Rata. Spring Valley New house- financing avail·
·-.~
Plaza , Call 740-446-0101 .
able to quaUiied buyers. 0% New 14K70, 3 brl2blh, Onty
LOSJ· 3 year old inale losophy. Current or past 3818.
Golden Retriever, friendly. Head Start parent preferred.
down. 1600 sq ft, 2 112 5975 down &amp; $189. per/mo.
Gallial Lawrence line. Ra- Must haw TB test and an Put your PC to work, stay
MONEY
bath, 3 Bedrooms, custom Call Nikki 740-385-7671
ward. Call (740)886-6488 initial physical before start- home
Make
Money.
10 loAN
1 oak trim &amp; cabinets, gas
leave message.
ing to woril.. Must pass the 1 - 8 o o . 5 o· 1 - 1 8 4 3
fireplace large klt~ln- New Doublewide on 1·5
_,,..;....;.;.;;;::;;,.._ _....,
·ob h
•
·--.·-..3384
acres ('"'0"'
~
BCI in11estlgation.
1 t atpay.com
Loon of All
lng, 2 1/2 car garage on 1 ~
· 1"" ~
•
YARD SALE
l'{poo Avolloblol
1/2 acres. $119.900. Porter No CradiV Bad CrediV tSI
Nature ol work: Work up to AVON! Alt Areasl To Buy or
No Fees. all Credit
area. (740~14 tlll5pm Time Home buyers/ FAS
40 hours a . week during
Shirley Spears, 30&lt;4accepted
or (740)448·3248 arter 6pm Loans! Government FHA
429
"
school year at the Wood- 7 · 1 .
Call Toll Free
Partially Remodeled home, loans ., Available.
Call
YARD SALEland Head Start Site. Ae-··-Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full (740)446-3218.
1_866•294• 1379
2
sponsib1e for operation of
BusiNEss
GALLlroLIS
the Head Start Kitchen. Pre·
TRAINING
Basement, large Unattach· We ha11e approKimately 10
'
pares nutriUous meal and
Problems Paying Bills Call ed 2 car garage. 127 Kine· usee! homes for under
March 24·25, 28-29, 12-6, snacks according to the
Toll Free 1·686·699-3° 64 · on Dr., 1$60,000. (740)441- $2,000, call 1-800-837-3238
5 buildings to clean out menu. Ke...v: accurate meal Gal''--11• C.rMI' College We can Help, All types of 0465
for Info.
-.........,..
loans GOOd Bad No Cred
10988 State Route 325, counts and other necessary (Careers Close To Home) It 8a . k I ' W
Possible 0 down payment
Vinton.
\
records lor USDA and pro- Ca11Todayf740. 448-4387,
. n rupcy ecome.
Bad credit even bankrupmV
JhmiEfi
gram. Meets time frame for
1-800-214.()452,
~
no problem on this home
AucnONAND
meals and snacks. DemonR~t90.05-1274B.
SF.Rvt~
near Pomeroy, Only $325
ANOIIunJ.JJNGs
FLEA MARKET • stra~es the use of proper 1176
per month. Must sell, Jim
sanitation techniques lor
MrscnJANEOUS
(740)992-3187
Office building In MinersRick Pearson Auction Com· proper food ha!'dllng and ,
• Get Cash Fastll $100·$500.
ville, eoo sq. ft., ale, cov·
pany, lull time auctioneer, storage.
Easy QuallllcaUons. Never Private. Great neighborhood ered parking, ceiling tan,
complete auction service.
.
'?isney Beach Vacation. 6 ~ave Hamel Funds Depoe- Green Schoola. 4 bed- $300/mo., 6~4-876-1681.
Licensed 1166 Ohlo &amp; West Applications/ resumes must nights great hotel sacrifice 1tad.Chacklng Aocount: Next rooms, 3 tull baths. InVir inia 304:773·5785 Or be sent to; Carol Young, rfor$199.00 614-523·8792
Day. Loans By County Bank ground pool. Oecka. Oodles
Lars &amp;
309·773.5447.
?~.~1upos\r,~·cfH045~; Doing spnng claanlng? Do- ~!.mRbeehroFboo:hCIEBotach. DE ~ext~ppras.:,r~~:.·-;:.:wsa:pl~
ACREAGE .

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ftl"'"_,.,.....,._....,

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing. 825 Third

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"Mbunl
Scnthlel
Rig PubiiiNnl
wit bee : aeHM
tor. no moratlulnthe
of the"*"
QCJllypild bytht.ror Mel onty thefnllnMIIIOn.
I
POUCIES.:
OtWo v.ney
thllltght
ta Milt. Nfect. coe1
unoe1
lid-«
-rr lou or_,..,.. thll I'IIIUb fi'Oftldtt pub": don or antlalon of .n IICh•llw•••L Cul;eedon wll be made In thl ftnlrtaltable ec:lnton.
. . alwlya conftdentlall. • Cwrent rat11 CMI•ppltn. • All rM1 ....a.
to the r:.denl F•lr Houalng Act Df 1H8.
~only..,.......,_.
Nnct.nfa. W. wfH not
of IM ..W.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

bodY

"-------_.1

Private Party Ads Under $100

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

I

i

(304) 675-1333
Display Ads

=· r

--·~· "··--··-·-

NOTICES

~~~~~;!!;!~======~~~:5

·

VOlt, ~ Quallly. Fllo moo1 "r-":':"~:-...,

~egister

All Olspl•v : 12 Noon 2
Business Oevs Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

~~~-~--~~·~·
~
PUBLIC
-~~·~·-"

1

~~n ond Hey"-·
Ex ollonl Condition. A T V - - .. 12 080. 304-675-481M

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

Word Ads

bt~~~

R!S.uv.

nnororFrooc--.gPaa- 1997 F· t50 E - Cob.

\

In one week With us

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Nelllt Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

2002

HENDRIX
Heating &amp; Cooling
24·HR.
· SERVICE
''One Price.

L.abllrr War•ranty I

Anytime .

An the Time."

COMMERCIAU

SA\11::

Captain Steamer Carpet Cleaner

1·888·338-7847

Aaaldanllal or commercial
wiring, new service or repal111. Master Llcenud elec·
trlolan. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000308, 3()4·675·1788.

AB Video
&amp;

Tanning

Cl"llftl, C1ndle11, T.nnln1 Heth
Old ll.l1!10n l..aultdrom11

CAlif f "l r A.n Appoinrmrnt

(304) 773-5601
'• ·

�P~~ge

.·

Be • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, March 25, 2002
BRIDGE

..._or
.....

ACROIS

ALDER

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YOU'~t PAYING

Mt Tti~t~ n~C.tNT
ON MY INVtSTMENTS
ANI&gt; ~·M PAYING

YOU NIN~ Pt~C.ENT

MY l-OANS.
WtiAJ:' wt tiAVt
ON

15 A C.ONFLI'-T
OF INTtlltST.

~

THE BORN LOSER
I'"L Ki'IOW

\H(Y'I?( ({).610U::EC&gt;""'
IN )TYL£ SINC£ Th(

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RONNIE
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LOVESICK

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51 Dawn

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19 Goller Ernie 39
20 Femlly MDI 41
22 Oo....,
Montez
42
23 Tonker
43
cargo
24 Componlon 44
25 Mil. bronch
2&amp; Populor
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.. AND t·~
NOT LOOKING

FoR A. NEW
PUPPY .

ing. His hand is too
strong for a weak
jump overcall , and
too weak for an intermediate jump overcall .
Hamman seen1s to
have four unavoidable
losers: one spade, two
hearts and one dia mond. nut somehow
he guessed the full
layout and .found a
way to make one of
the four evaporate.
After winning the
first trick with his
club JCC , Ham nun

- dele en;
Flrebug'o .

peop~.

llolnboo or

TllrnM•IOI"""m••

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LPo'

BY BRIAN J. REED

"""""_.
Church
110t

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Nagy out of time? Bl

Deaths
Frances Parsons, 80
Carole Crujeiras, 62
Robert Harris Jr., 96

Details, A3

BGL

UL

MEIGS COUPLE HONORED
.

Weather
Hlp: 50, L-: :SO
Details, Al

XLGNG

Van thief

DYEKD

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caught ·

. HVGXD'L

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'She could not be more beautiful
without upsetting the balance ol nature.' - Walter Kerr. of
Claire Bloom
·~:,

WORD
GAMI ·-

O four
Raarrong~t lettars of
scrambled words

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tha

be·

played a trump to low lo form four simple words.
dummy's ace and returned a heart. getting 1--rTi-iHriTC~W_..:.T,...--1
the bad news. Going .
up with his king, de ;::~=~---1
darer crossed to dum- rl
NI L NE I
my's .diamond king,
-..-~-...,;--,.-l
3
ruffiheddthe
cdlub
sevden
1
man ,an paye
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II I I I f

==· ==·==·

POINT PLEASANT An unidentified woman
from a homeless shelter in
Point Pleasant stole an
ambulance from Pleasant
Valley Hospital on Tuesday
moming at 6:30. ·
She '' Wllll · ,caught, sev'efal
minutes later, .according to
Amy Leach, community relations director at the hospital.
The woman was arrested
at Tudor's Biscuit World on
Jackson Avenue.
No other details were
available at prestime.

Special

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MARCH25I

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service set

While admiring the i
beauty pageant, I heard one
viously jealous woman mutter, ''I
·wonder if she's that pretty after
'she - ----- her face?''
.

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MI L S A D

by filling
I I I 16. I eyou develop
from Slep No.

Complete the 'huckle q... oted
in the mis.sing words
3 below. •

L..-....1..-L..-....1..-L..-...J.._.J

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UNSCRAMBLE AB OVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

..

• i
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Viable - Odium - Swank - Ginger- SMILING
~
"I always thought," the patient told his counselor "tha ,.
well adjusted meant, you could keep making the ~arne~
m1stakes aga1n and again and keep SMILING."
.

Addi tion ,tl

~00.:!

re~ ~H)mibi l irirs

aud duties wnn ' r both e r vou ·
in till' year ;lh cad, bcc;;ltst'

yo u."ll re :d iZL' all the pemmal
hcm·fit~

yo u"lllkri\·e for .vour
ti1n~· :111d l'll(m~ .
·
AR IES (M:srd1 21-April I~)
-- i\11 t·ycs W i ll turn on you if
yn u b ~ ~iu IIJ •"l'Spcct more
!i·um nJ-work t·r~ tkm vou'n.·
pn:p:n·l!d tu d u vou r~dr." W ha t
your cohorts f..d,·e m1 t i~ based
t' ll w h .1l thc y' \1 H "l" li·01n you .
Tryi1 1~ to p.trrh 11p il brukt·n
rn llliiiH." t.•? 1 he Ao:,tro-Gr~ph
M.ltt:hmakt•r r.m hdp yo u l lll der~t:m d whar IQ
till· rci.Himi~ hip

do to make
\Vork. M ;lil

$2 .75 to Mat1•hnu kt-r, (/o thh
ncwsp.•1wr. P.O. Box 1 7~fi.
. MLirr;~ y Hi ll St~tion , Nl'w

Ymk, NY 1t1 ISh ,

TAl 'It US (Ap ri l 20-May
21!) -- h 's ·wu nder t'u l ro ~ b e
sharjn)..l .111d !4i'' in~. but a mani pu l:l.tur mi ~ht u~t· your ~1..'1 1t' IO~ity to ).tl't thi ng~ fro m yo \J
to which tl1i~ pl· r~o n im"t c ntit lt·d.
c;UviiNI (M.1y 21-Jullo 211)
-- T lwn·

..

l. lll

hl"

:1

fine linl' b t&gt;-

puuing fu 1 th 11 1.1Xinm m
t&gt;ITort .mJ doill !-( rh i n g~ th e
h.m.l \Yay . It \ admirilbl l' w
lWl"l'll

'·

W;lllt t•l do rom hc:~ t. bu t usc.•
, th L· fi.mncr way, not till! J..1tt('r.
C AN CE it Uuno 2 1-July

handl e

1

SAC ITTAIUUS (Nov. 23- .
Dec . 2 1) -- Ym1 may start [he
d,t}' being your oiJ opti mi stic,
cheerful self. bm all time we:1n
o n ," yo u co uld , let cvcms
d an1pc n your spirits and ~. ee

dd(:at iH th .1 11 au ad\"t·ntmcr.
Unfontmatcly. thi~ ClJU (d be
one of tho~c c.by~ if you h.·t
thinv;~ gc.•t to you.

.

,

:
•
n nly n egative~ . Don't let this- · •
happen.
:

lEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -- A
fin;tnci al ~ituation c.·;mnot be
resolved if you pretend it docs
not c:'fi~t . lmrcad of burying
your hcilJ in the ~and, f.1ec the

CA PRI CORN (Dec. 22-· • •

Jm.

I~) -- Ue gratdul for ,I( :
the good thilt co m r.:s yo ur '
way, instead of feeling you're
l.'IH itlcd to more, even if you ......
are. l ot1k in g on the (b rk side:-:=
will take away the joy you =:
should feel.
....,
AQUAIUUS Uan. 20-Feb.'::.
l Y) --: Thi s is nut n. ~ood day ~
to ga mble. especi ally on un- known f.1cg. You can avoi d ...t~;'
bein g bl indsitk• d by _g uarding "':
nga im t any in clin:ltion to ..,.
duo\V caut ion to th e wind .
~
PISCES (Fob 21!- March 20) •·
~- You 'll have compassion tOr 111
01 hcrs, bur if you don't rcvt·nl. ;
it fUr li.·ar o('-""'p rc~sing it, yuu ;

f.1cu and fi nd a solution.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sop t: 22)
lndividl1,1!s \\-·ho are not
equipped to help you attain
your prc.•M.'nt objcclives sho uld
not be invo lved in your affoJir~ . They'll only be in the
way ;1 ml hinder your efforts.
LIURA- (Sept . 23-0,·t. 23),. If you want your compan~
~~

accc~,t
philo~opbkal

iom to

co ulJ cvnkc
r

;1

W.VA.

Dally :s: o-7-1

Dally 4: 9-2-B-Q

C.sli 25: H 1-14-15-22

:

l":Jre :lb0\1[.

...

.A2

Cl 200.2 Ohio Valley Publlshin&amp; Co.

~

were arrested in the village,
Bv BRIAN J. REED
and that's a trend Swift
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
expects to continue.
MIDDLEPORT - "The . "Things are going crazy in
police department is under- so utheastern · Ohio," Swift
staffed, underpaid, under- said. "It's time to get rid of
equipped, and undertrained, the ' Mayberry' mentality.
and that has to change."
Mayberry doesn't exist anyMiddleport Police Chief more. The police departBruce Swift met with Village ment must be a priority."
Council
on
Monday
Swift and other departevening to discuss what he · ment heads are to meet with
characterized as an ongoing the budget committee Monhistory of inadequate fund- day evening to discuss their
ing for public safety.
departments' needs in light
The 2002 tax · budget of the appropriations in dudincludes a $271,900 appro- ed in the 2002 tax budget.
priation for the police operCouncil
President
ations, down almost $7,000 Stephen Houchins, who
from the 2001 appropri:i- chairs the .finance commitcion.
tee, said Swift may not
" A lot of our radio equip- receive additional funding.
ment, computers and cruis"I understand where
ers need to be replaced," (Swift) is corning from, but
Swift said. "We . need more that's what is there to work
manpower on the street, and •with this year, unless we get
a wage increase to ·attract some additional appropriaPIHM- Pollee, A3
. -"~A d · keep e ffieers on the

Playground
equipment gets
council's nod

.LEAGUE RUNNER.IJP- The Meigs High School quiz team was runnerup In the Tri-Valley Conference with a record of six wins and one loss, and placed. third In the TVC tournament. The
students coached by Jim Oliphant, participated In tournaments at Parkersburg High School,
1
Ripley High School, Parkersburg South and Parkersburg Catholic. Leading scorers for the season were Evan Shaw, 117; John Lentes. 110; and Tyler Barnes , 86, seated from left. Others
on the team are. from left, Amber Snowden, Brad Baylor, Kelly Johnston, Tyler French and Jessica Roush. (Charlene Hoeflich)

POMEROY - The purchase of new playground
equipment for Waterworks
Park was authorized during
Monday's regular ~eting of
Pomeroy Village CounciL
Council agreed to begin
seeking bids for new playground equipment, to be
installed at the park on East
Main Street, after Councilman Victor Young Ill reported businesses and private
individuals in both Middleport and Pomeroy have
donated sufficient funds to
cover the cost of the new
equipment.
Estimated cost of the
equipment would tota(
aro und $25 ,000, with 75
percent of that cost being
funded by a $19,000
Nature Works grant the village received last year.
The exact type of playground equipment has yet to
be determined.
"We have already received
donations in the sum. of

$5,000 from interested parties in both Pomeroy an.d
Middleport and I'm happy
t\) say another $2,000 is on
the way," said Young.
"These generous donations are a clear indication
that community spirit is
alive and well in Middleport
and Pomeroy," added Mayor
John Blaettnar. "This playground equipment will be
an excellent addition t.o
Waterworks Park."
Once a bid has been
accepted by council, Blaettnar said the equipment's
installation would " begi,ri
immediately."
·
In other matters, Pomeroy
Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar
informed council the fire
department is ineligible for .a
$200,000 FEMA grant that
would have helped pay for a
new pumper truck .
During council's last
meeting, Blaetmar, who at
the time was ·attempting t.o
obtain the grant, was auth orized to seek bids for a new

Please see Pomeroy, A3

Guess what's new at Veterans Memorial in Pomeroy?

Holzer Medical Center,
Outpatient Therapy Services
Physical Therapy • Occupational Therapy
Speech Therapy • · Massage Theropr,

MEDICAL CENTER

Monday - Friday • 8 AM - 4:30 PM

·Discover the Holzer Difference

.'

Extended hours by appoinlmenl
Medicare, Medicaid gnd Privgte Insurance (includina AETNA! gccepood

nc~ntiVl! fl'- , ,

spome fro m MHIJ c onc you

AS
83-5
86
A6
A4
A3
A3
81,3

Cites training, fo~;~~rding to Swift, arrests
• as needs increased
m
Middleport
have
repatrs
exponentially
1995, when 431 arrests
fior new Year since
were made. Last year, I,002

BY TONY M. lEAcH

'
OHIO
Pick 3: 0-1-4
Pick 4: .5-8·8-4
Buckeye 5:3-12-16-20-28
Pick 3 dey: 0-4:-6
Pick 4 dey: 3-6-3-4

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
· Obituaries
Sports
Weather

underfunded

TLEACH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 s.ctiHI - 12 .....

upti~ht.

Call

I

I,

I

MIDDLEPORT
Evangelist John Elswick
will speak at the Hobson
Christian
Fellowship
Church, one mile below
Middleport, Wednesday, 7
p.m. '

Index

effectively.

sho\Jid :he fun could gt•t you '

, 22) -- Ev~·r}" l?lll'l' i1 1 awhile,
you go inro on e of yo ur
nH md.~ ;md bt•cuJHC more of a

your political or
concepts, presen t them in .1 light and
c hccr(\li manner. Ut:ing
ht&gt;;lvy-handcd will invite n ·l&gt;uttals.
SCOitPIO (Oct. 24- Nnv .
22) -- It i~ n"t likdy th:~ t you"IJ
ht.• intimidated l&gt;v dilli ru lt dl'vd•)plll cnt s. Iu· f.1rt·. yo u ' ll

th em

Howcv_c rf something that

department

POMEROY

PR INT NUMBERED LETT ERS IN
THESE SQUARES

------. l)~----T ucsday. M.m.:h 2(•,

•

Joan and Bruce May of Rutland, who have been married for 50 years, were one of 24 couples
In Ohio honored by First Lady Hope Taft and the Ohio Department Pf Aging for their volunteer
efforts and service to others. The Mays attended a "Joined Hearts in Giving" reception held at
the governor's residence. They are pictured here with Joan W. Lawrence, director of the Ohio
Department of Aging, left, and Hope Taft.

L..

diamond to th-e eight,
end playing East.
When East returned
a low spade, Hamman
won with hi s queen
and played a diamond
to dummy's ace. On
the penultimate diamond, South threw a
spade. West ruffed
and led a spade, but
Hamman won with
dummy's ace and disca rded his la st spade
on the final diamond.
Declarer lost only two
hearts and one dicrmond.

indictment
documents
against Qualls, including
missing signatures and
notary affirmations. Those
issues will be addressed in
motions filed through the
court, Crow ruled.
Qualls' trial is scheduled
for early May, but Eachus
said he anticipates filing a .
Qualt&amp;
motion to continue the case
once discovery documents
are provided by the state.
Prosecutor Pat Story and Assistant Prosecutor Christopher Tenogl ia represented the state.
Qualls is in the Southeastern Ohio Regional Jail in Nelsonville in lieu of a $1 million cash
hoi)d.

VKEE

LZKD

ZKMHGM

M I K 0.

LZG

POMEROY - Funds for a defense team
investigator and a mitigation expert were
approved for Eric A. Qualls during an initial
pre-trial hearing before Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow Ill on Monday.
Qualls, 26, is charged with twO counts of
murder, one of which specifies premeditation
and one of which does not, in the shooting
death of Rebecca Ackerman on March 7 in
Middleport.
Defense counsel William N. Eachus of Gallipolis and K. Robert Toy of Athens plan to
seek funding for a psychologist and a firearms
expert, as weD, Eachus said.
Eachus again raised issue with what he characterized as improper execution of the original

Phyolclen'a

grp.

Today'sclue: Lequa/s H

LZMYO

'U

"'!IDDLEPO~

&lt;OHM

past and present Each latter In the clphef stands lor anather.

.~

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.·approved

Whirs inside

crime
Ollloa nota:
POll
.
Khoyyom .
ChHI
organ

Ce~_ebrtty Ctpherayptograms are craate9 from quotations by famous

three c]u bs is surpris-

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•-•

Shaw wrote. "You
4 Lewlo ond
dognome
must not suppose, be27 a.r.tr.
47
31 Holr ttyle
5 ...,...
21 Cook 1
441
cause I am a man of .
37 .vr.n...
lldbH
qlyL
50
letters, that I never
1111111
1 port a Flink
31 R-..,.p 7 BIHboerdo 31 Clutch
51
tried to earn an hon8 Chonge
33 Lillie child
est living."
40111er-c.on
I Wh....,.ted 35 Thurmon o1 52
chMII
·
111m•
Few players make a
living from bridge.
Even the world's topran-ked performer,
llob Hamman ofDalbs, earns only part of
his annual income
from the game.
Hamman declared
this co ntract more
than 20 years ago.
How did he bring
home four hearts
w ithout peeking at
th e opposing hands?
I think North
.
I
should have opened
one no-trump , even if
using a 16-11l range.
That five-card suit
and all the points in
aces and Ring(!) make ~ ·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
the hand, eas.zly wo~C . . ___ '\
by Luis Campo•

~

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.Wp County's

571n-

22 Cutoff
24 Wllpl of

10
tricks
George llernard

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Meigs County TB board report. AS

NEA Crossword Pu:nla

PHILLIP

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-----

·www.holzer.org 1

today for an appointment· (740) 992·2104
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