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,

www.mydallylentlnel.com

.P11ge B I • 'Tlle Dlllly Sentinel

- .

e

PHILLIP
ALDER .

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11 Wiele 20 canton

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21 Cryol .

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2 Purdue, Lg. 25 CIIMICI
30 IMetal
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31 Uglbolaht
home
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Opening lead: • 1

IS WIT l».T

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23

Vulncrllble: Eui-Weat

Melp County's

buyer
Ill Quip
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Dtaler: South

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AC..a.8 41 Cala~m
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wants to be a Buckeye, 81

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NEA Cro•iword Puule

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Around" i
311 Flue
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What's inside

31 Jlpenen ;
31

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Mark Twain wrote,
"Truth is stranger
than fiction, but it is
because Fiction is
lcilloiDn
obliged to stick to
41 ~··~
34 Frealug
~
21 T-hlr'l
koe
,.
possibilities; Truth
35 "*II
7 In F I Old
IOIW
47 "llflen'l
3a Field
I c - - 31 ~
long" ac:t4ir
isn't."
,__
hen!
IIIII O.W.In 41 Long
,
I saw this deal in a
37 HttO
• "Ribbllln 1:1 "Scl'lllli"
llofy
-~~
•
director
11 Ex:Ua-.ennlMII'rr
magazine, and I think
3t , _ dluy 10 r c
..
wn
IIMII
the author, let's call
40 hMI
notice of
35 · - ~!""'"11'..,.
him Joe, resorted to
some · fiction under
the guise of fa&lt;·t. See
what you think.
North-South raced
into three no-trump.
West led his fourth high es t heart, the
trick being won with
dummy's qu een. Deci&lt;Orcr cashed the diamond king, then
played a diamond to
his ace. Wh en the
queen . didn ·~ drop,
South cooitinued With
a third round of the
suit. In with his
queen, .East shifted to
the spade queen, netting the defenders
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Cempoa'
four tricks in that suit
~Cipher
crypiogramo
are creaied lrom quoiailona by famou8 :
for one down .
people, pasO and preeeni. Eac11 ietier In ihe cipher &amp;Iandt kK onoti1tr. •
It seems simple
Today's clu8: R equals 0
•
enough when you
'RWU
OYUIUAR,
ZPBU
S
,
look at all 52 cards,
ADRU
PA
KEIPT,
PI
but how did East
.•
know to lead · the
ADRWPAX
CER
Sl
PR
spade queen, rather
•
than return the heart
p I '
SOOUYRSPAI
RD
LWSR
•
10? If South had be•,
gun with the spade
LWSR
PI
RD
0 SIR
SAY
.....
ace and kin~- third of
•
hearts, East s defense .
••
TDKU.'
•
wouldn' t have won
•
ZSAVDY
LSZRUY
any plaudits.
What did West disPREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I throw the ball harder than Nol~
Ryan. It lUll doean't get there aa faa!.' - Steve Buaby
"
card on the diamonds? joe didn't say.
WOlD
If South has the club
GAM('
- - - - - - l~h\'!' by CLAY I. POLLAN
ace, West knows he
needs a spade shift,
Rearrange .letters of the
•
0 four
acrambled words
but if East has the
low to form four simple words.
club ace and South
the king-queen-jack
RI F 0 L
of spades, West wants
1
2
a heart return.
I I 1 I I
•'
'
Joe wanted to make
'•
the point that declarer
AYTES
misplayed. If South
.,
had finessed his diamond jack on the second round of the suit,
the contract would
have been assured.
Even if West had the
diamond queen, he
would have no killing
return . 'With South's
spade king is safe from
om. PRINT NUMBERED
attack, he cari take at
'=" LETTERS IN SQUARES
least I 0 iricks via two
. . UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
hearts, four diamonds
'U FOR ANSWER
•
and four clubs. Still,
'.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
.'
in the real world, I
'
think South would
Twitch • Linen • Issue • Dismal- WASHES
:
survive his misplay·
While admiring the winner of a beauty pageant, I heard .
We are trained on our .
one obviously jealous woman mutter, 'I wonder if she's
grandmother's knee
that pretty after she WASHES her face?"
to return partner's
suit, especially in no- ~ AL...
..
trump.
-.utll"

/

A NO~MAL
/GUY TO

l&gt;ATe

FO~

ONC.t.

APTLY
NAMED,

SILAS
II

Wf\~'(

Dunn fits in with Reds, Bl

Deaths
James I. Fife
Details, A3

Hlp: 50s, Law: 20s

Details. A2

Confident
consumers
boost stocks
NEW YORK (AP) Gains in consumer confi- ·
dence and durable goods
orders brought buyers back
to Wall Street Tuesday, sending stocks solidly higher
and endi~g a . fo!l r-sesston
losing streak for blue clitps.
Analysts said the advance
had as much to do with
lower prices as positive economic · news. Barg-•in hunting was expected after th e
extended sell-off, which
came on concerns about th e
pace of the business turnaround and fears that possible interest rate hikes might
further hamper profits .
The Dow Jones industrial
· average ended the lightly
traded session up 71.69, or
0.7 percent, at 10,353.36.
The blue chip index lost
353.58 in the previous four
sessions, giving back all of
its March advance.

~

SO , JEtiNY. ..
HOW COME

T~~:t:~y s©~ot\1J.-~£c!fs·

YOU BR.OKE
UP WITH
RONNIE?

WHAT BUSINESS IS IT
VOIJ~S ~ AND WHY
WOULD I BE STUPID
C:.i'IOU6H TO CONFIDE.
IN YOU? ..---1

I

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I

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I·

PEANUTS
''AFTERNOON D06 BREAK" !

D06

"TilE OWNERRUSHES

ltOME,61VE5 HIS D06 ASNACK,
1-lOLDS HIM IN HIS LAP AND
PETS J.IIM FOR TEN MINUTES...

'f'OV'RE RI614T. MAAM ..
IT15 VE~ SIMILAR TO
D06 BREAK''

Lotteries

I

MARCH 26l

'Birtbda.Y

March

27,

Pick 3: 0-7·7
Pick 4: 8+8·2
Buckeye 5: 5· 11-24-32-36
Pick 3 dey: 0·3·3
.
Pick 4 day: 2·0·5·6 .
W.VA.

Dally 3: 6·0·4

Dally 4: 8·0·6-4
Cesli 25: 12-1-3·14-15·21·25

0

2002
An :l!'~t,da tc who has more
knowlt•dgc or is more cxpcri-

em.:cd than ym1 m uld become
a close ally in the y~:ar ahead.
, They may help you mo ve forward in your dw~cu fidd of
l'1l l'kwo r.
ARIES (March 2 1- April 19)
-- Gootl intentimu cou ld
blnw up in yo ur face if you
· o(fcr .1Jv i ~· e lo anothL·r about
somethi n~ in wlm.: h you're ill
inforiue~o.l.

Thi:; penon could

nac

la ke yom coumd and t:lll
uu his or her f.1l'l'. Aric:;, treat
yuursclf ro " birthday gifc.
Send for your Astro- Graph
prcc.lkt~~n s fo r the ye~r ·~ln~ad
by ma1hn~ S2 imd 'SI\SE to

AstrO-Gr.1p h, c,/o this newspaper, P.O. Uox 1758, Murrny llill St:ni.o n, New York,
NY 1015(1. li e sure lO stare

your Znt.li &lt;~c sign.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - - If YVU &lt;lllow too mud1
of your tim f.' to be devoted to
trivi.d or fr~vololiS cnJeavon,
you 'n· ap t to have a very small

total &lt;lt tilL" cmt of the day
when you add things np.
GEM INI (May 2i-j11ne 20)
-- U ra~:t~i n g about yo ur
a !.:hi ~o.'Y CI.n cnts may. cause oth-

ers to call your bluff nnd demand you prove w hat yo u

say. You'd better be prcpnred
to provide evid(.•nce of your
claims.
C AN CE R 011ne 2 1-j11ly
22) -- Ue careful what you
sign. If you put your signature

to a leg&gt;ll docum em without
undcrsunding it thoroughly,
you cOuld get rtuck with a
detrimental binding agrcL"ment.

LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -·
When pil ed up together, little
things could add up to a big
heap . So. be careful in your

:1 1lairs :~b o ut yielding small
concessiom.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Ar.:cepting illld believi1.1g in formation fro m indi viduals
you don't know too well
could cause your affairs to
misfire. Don't take anything at
faf:e value.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
- Using your fantastic imagination for the wrong reasons,
mch ns concoctin g alibis for
thing!! you failed to do, w ill
on ly get you inca more hm
w:nt:r. Face up to the ttcU.

SCORPIO (O ct. 24-Nov.
22) ~- Any unfl:~tte ring thin~
you say about a mutu:d friend

•
who isn' t present will be car""'

.. ·c ................ .

"

2 Section•- 12

even th e score.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23~

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Dec. 21) -- Watch your con{
duct, because someone whd'
hop~:~ you'D behave in a man~,
ncr that co uld become th •
~ubj cct· of gos~ip is gunninP!
fo r you. W alk the straight an&amp;
·narrow.
:
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-;
Jan. 19) -- Word' of wisdom.
can !iprjlig ffOin most anY:
plncc, even from the mouth{
of bnbes. T hus, it behoove•
yoll to be a good listeneJ:,.
even when you don't rcspekf

-

'

the

50 l1rCC,

1

-I

Q

Paps
AS
B3·S
B6

AS
A4
A3
A3
B1-3
A2

2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY Recent
warm weather trends are
prompting many Meigs
County landowners to get
outside for some spring cleanup projects.
However, the Ohio .Department of Natural R eso urces
(ODNR) and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) are reminding citizens
that if they have debris to
burn, they need to follow
Ohio's outdoor-burning laws.
ODNR and OEPA each
enforce a different set of outdoor-burning laws for suburban and ·rural landowners.
These laws restri ct wheri ,
where and if a landowner can
burn leaves or other debris.
Concerned with the potential for brush and forest fires,

PIHH -

Cleenup, A3

tion.

The anti-rej ection medication suppresses her immune
system somewhat, so she will
always be more Sl,lsceptible to
infections. The most her family can· do to protect her from
illness is to practice ~oo.d
handwashing and keep her
'!_y&gt;ay Jroni"those who '!!'.e sick .
" Without organ donation
. and the expertise of her su tgeons, there is no doubt in our
minds that Olivia's story
would not have a happy end. "
mg.
As of March 1, the United
Network for Organ Sharing
had more than 79,000 people
on a waiting list for organ

transplants.
"Organ donation saves li ves
and brings hope, happiness
and wellness to those who
would othetv~ise not survi.ve."
Olivia is the granddaughter
of Richard and Kaye Fick, and
Wilbur and Marilyn R obinson .
In order to help Olivia's
family with continuing medical expenses, her Meigs
Co unty family has planned a
benefit dinner for April 6 · at
the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School building, beginning at
2 p.m .
·Entertainment in.cluding
local · Elvis tribute . artist
Dwight Icenhower, Federal
Hocking Cloggers, Swinging
Seniors, High Country Band
and a Chinese auction and
drawings, are planned, and
home made food will be
served.

CLEANUP BEGINS- When the warm weather comes, so does
the urge to get out and clean up the yard. Here, Annie Chapman .gathers up leeves which she'll bag for disposal rather
than burn. (Charlene Hoeflich)

,

Thursday, March, 28, 2002 • 7:00PM
Charles E. Holzer, Jr., M:D. Surgery Center
ASU 2nd Floor Waiting Area · Gallipolis
Sponroreci by the American Cancer Sociely, the HMC Community Health anci
Well'""' Deporlmenl, one! the HMC Pre-Admission Education Deporlmenl

Keynofe Speaker: Vishwanath ShenoY, M.D.
. Free colorectal screening kits will be given to atlendees

..•

446·5679 •

For more informolion, call

..

RACINE- It's official. A
new boat launch ing facility
will be constructed m
Racine, accdrding to the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources .
Jim . Marshall, ODNR
Division of Wildlife district
manager for southeast Ohio,
said Tuesday that prepa;ations are curren tly underway
for the construction of a
new boat ramp on a 21-acre
tract of land near Star Mill
Pa rk in the Yellowbush
Creek area.
"Funds have been allocated for the construction of a
new public boat launch in
th e Racine area, and at the
present time, we are ac tively
engaged in receiving bids
from a number of engineering consultants," said Marshall .
"The new ramp will provide easy access to the Ohio
River for both fishermen
and boaters and will include
so me 1,475 feet of accessible
shoreline for anglers who
don't own boats," he added .
The new launching facility will replace the existing
boat ramp at the Old Ferry
Landing Park, which still
remains popular with local
sportsmen who enjoy fishing
th e productive tail waters of
the R aci ne Locks and Dam.
However, limited parking
space, a restricted approach
to the Ohio River and gen-

Pieese see Recine, A3

AGING BOAT LAUNCH -

Even though Racine's existing boat ramp, located at the
old Ferry Landing Park,
remains popular with local
sportsmen, limited parking
spaces,
a
restricted
approach to the river, and
general deterioration of the
ramp itself has many antici·
paling the construction of a
new launching facility. (Tony
M. Leach)

NEW RAMP SITE - According to ODNR officials, a new
boat launching facility is to
be constructed on 21 acres
of property near Racine's
Star Mill Park in the Yellowbush Creek area. Once finished , the new ramp will
resemble launching facilities
near Forked Run State Park
and Robert C. Byrd Locks
and Dam in Gallla County.
(Tony M. Leach)

Eastern Local board
·approves. subs
.

2002-03 academic year was
approved, with a teachers'
TUPPERS PLAINS Substitute teachers and other workday on Aug. 23 and th e
personnel were hired during last .day for students on May
'the regular meeting of the 29,2003.
Eastern l ocal Board of EduA list of ca ndidates for
cation.
May 2002 graduatio~ was
Michelle Miller, Ma~y approved.
Ann Moore, Janine Petrel
The board also:
and Michael Soroosh were
• Approved financlal
employed as substitutes; Sam reports for the month of
Thompson as a volunteer February 2002, an amended
assistant track coach; and appropriation resolution as
Mendy Guess as substitute ap proved by the treasurer
cook.
and approved a resol ution
The board approved the accepting the amounts of
posting of a math teacher ra tes determined by the
position for th e 2002-03 Meigs Cou nty Budget
academic year.
Commission and certified by·
The board also approved the co un ty auditor.
an agreement with the Uni• Set a special board meetversity of Rio Grande on the ing for today, Wednesday,
placement of student teach- . March 27 at 7 a. m. to award
ers in the district's sc hools, the bid for th e elemenrary
and approved an agreement gymnasium heating and
wi th Ohio University for an cooling system, and set the
athletic traine r for the 2002- next regul ar meetin g for
03 academic year.
Wednesday, 'April 17 at 6:30
A school calendar for the p.m.
FROM STAFF REPORTS •

Cancer Symposium

&gt;

..

is keeping us busy."
Olivia's long-term care will
include daily medications for
the rest of her life, frequent
blood work and, her mother
said, occasional hos pitaliza-

'

-- It may take only one sou~ ·
note to to uch off a barrage o~
ire to disrupt l1 anuony in thej
household. Make an effort not ..
to say anything unless it i ~
complimentary.
•

' ~

sh~

M. lEACH

AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb,
I 9) -- Save all receipt!' fran\
purchases, especially those qF
expensive itenn. There is a."'·
nrong probJbility you might"
want to return :m articl e for1
any of numeroUs rea~ons .
'"·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20);

•
I

Index

'ried back to that pnl. Chances:'
arc she or he will want to!

.Olivia Rck

State, local officials
stress buming rules
BY ToNY

0

W t·llrH·~tiny .

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
year-old girl with local ties has
not allowed a liver transplanl
to get in the way of growing
up, and her parents praise
organ donation programs for
saving her life.
For Olivia Fick, daughter of
Kirk and Lee Ann R obinson
Fick of Loveland, both Eastern
High School alumni, it's just
b~en a bump in the road .
At 2 months of age, Olivia
was diagnosed with biliary
artesia, and underwent her
transplant at Children 's Hospital of Cincinnati in December.
"She's doing remarkably
well despite five surgeri es,"
Olivia's mother said.
Blood tests show "excellent"
liver function, Lee Ann Fick
said.
"She has been through
more than most adults go
through in th eir lives, but it
certainly hasn't slowed her
down. Hopefully, th e worst is
behind us now," Fick said.
"Olivia has discovered th e
freedom of crawling and
walking all at the same time, so

TLEAC~MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

OHIO

.

!TUESDAY

Parents credit
organ donation
with saving life

Weather

...

BIG NATE

BY TONY M. WCH
TLEACH®MYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM

REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

...

W IL&amp;I:.f"ClR'LE.'~

recovers
from
surgery
Bv BRIAN J.

.-·..•

.....
WP6 \AA\,

ramp on tap
for Racine

Fick·

w,.,

A ,~AIN.

New boat

Miracle Child

u.... . . ~

4f l.ai'MIItl :T
42 t - . '
_..
'
43 Nobel181
WIHII
44 Rlocl ol

Hometown Newspaper

.

"'---·--

·----·----~·. ·-~

.

----·-··--'

.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Djffe1·ence

www .holzer.org
•

--------------------~.------···-··-·-·--

"

...

~

�Ohio,

The Daily Sentinel .

PageAl
WIJJtlfd.,.. Mas de 17. 1001

Historical Society.introduces Web site

. Ohio weather
Thuradily, March 28

COLUMBUS (AP) - History buffi
can get a snapshot - make that thousands of snapshots - of 19th century
Ohio through a Web site the Ohio Historical Society introduced Thesday.
The Ohio Memory Online Scrapbook has more than 9,000 pages and
images of Ohio's first hundred years
(1 803- 1903) along with information
about prehistoric Ohio. The Web site www:ohiomemory.org - features letjters, photographs, paintings and other
material donated by more than 250
Ohio libraries, historical societies, museums, universities and other sources.
The scrapbook was funded with
$500,000 from the Ohio Public Library
Information Network', a state agency
_that develops Internet programs for

I Mon- la'IW I •

-~

W.VA.
I(Y,

•

libraries. The Historical Society is trying
to secure the money to bring the project through the 20th century. The state
celebrates its bicentennial next year.
The scrapbook gives Ohioans an easy
way to discover the st;ate 's history, said
Hope Taft, Ohio's first lady, who has
been involved in the p~t&gt;ject for abou! a
year.
"We have treasures that more people
in Ohio should be able to see,"Taft told
historians, librarians and others gathered
for a Statehouse ceremony Tuesday. "No
longer do you have to worry whether
tha.t library or historical sociery is
open."
The site features a catalog of Ohio's
transportation, cultural, economic and
environmental history. It also features

•

photographs, drawings and other memorabilia from cities, towns and counties.
Among the items in the online museum are a Cincinnati Reds baseball
scorebook from 1894, an 1874 atlas of
Cuyahoga County, photographic views
of Cedar Point from 1878 to 1910, and
a "bird's eye view" drawing of Delphos
from 1881.
.
The Historical Society began planning the project five years ago, with the
goal of being online by the bicentennial year; said Laurie Gemmill, the projec_t's manager. Budget constr;lints forced
the society to focus on the state's iirst
hundred years, she said. However, public
interest encouraged the society to open
the Web site early.
.

C 2002 AccuWealhor, Inc.

0 ~-·~-·-·

&amp;my Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

s.-. r--..

Rain

"""'"

Snow

""

plane's wing can control itsl roll with less need for -big control surfaces on the wings and horitontal tail- and possibly without the
need for a horizontal tail. Project officials said the twistable wing
should result in better performance, less drag, more fuel efficiency
and 25 percent less weight for the aiJ:oaft.

ShQwers possible on Thursday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly
clear.
Lows 21 to 25. Light and vari,able winds.
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the ' upper 50s. Light
and variable winds becoming
south early in the afternoon
and increasing to 5 to 10
mph.
Thursday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Lows 42 to 46.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers. Highs in

the mid 60s. Chance of rain
40 percent.
Friday night ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers during the
night. Highs near 60.
Sunday.. .Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 40s and highs in the
-upper 50s.
,
cloudy.
Monday... Partly
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the lower 60s.
Tuesday., .Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs near 60.

Judge orders new ftlles
AKRON (AP) -A federal judge ordered state prison officials
to draft new rules for sending inmates to its super-maximum security prison.
U.S. District Judge James Gwin said prison authorities must give
adequate notice, hearings and appeal opportunities to inmates who
. the penal system wants to send to the Ohio State Penitentiary in
Youngstown.
· The judge on Tuesday gave state officials 30 days to revise their
rules.
Ohio opened the supermax in May 1998' in response to the
deadly inmate riot at the Lucasville prison in 1993. The new
prison, which keeps convicts in isolation for 23 hours a day, cost
$85 million.
·

P1vjed to develop new wing
DAYTON (AP) -A flight control technique invented by the
Wright brothers is the basis for a new wing design aimed at
imp!t&gt;ving aircraft performance.
Engineen from the Air Force Research Lab at Wright-Pattenon
Air Force Base and from NASA focused on the concept of"wing
warping" to modifY an F/ A-18 fighter jet with a twistable wing by
Boeing Phantom Works, the Dayton · Daily News reported
Wednesday. ·
The modified jet, developed under the $41 million Active Aeroelastic Wing p!t&gt;ject, was scheduled to be publicly displayed
Wednesday at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's
Dryden Flight Research Center itt California, the newspaper said.
The goal of the project was to show how a slight twist to an air-

CLEVELAND (AP) -Bishop Anthony Pilla urged the Roman
Catholic church to be active in responding to victims of abuse
within the church and more effective in dealing with those responsible for abusing minors.
.
The bishop of the Cleveland Diocese said 'he is "saddened and
embarrassed by the sickness of some among us, and the sinful recklessness of some others."
His comments were applauded by hundreds of Cleveland area
priests who braved a snowstorm Tuesday night to renew their vows
ADELPHI, Md. (AP) -William Kirwan, the former president
at the annual Chrism Mass at the Cathedral of St. John the Evan- of Ohio State University, was introduced Tuesday as the chancellor
gehst downtown.
' of the higher education system in Maryland.
Pilla warned priests and hundreds of others in attendance that
Kirwan, who left his post as president of the University of Marythe church faces an enormous challenge that will not get e.Sier.
land in 1998 to take the Ohio Staie job, returns to a system that
has stronger, more autonomous university presidents than when he
SllOW'
departed.
.
At a news conference, Kirwan said he thinks he ,an improve
CELINA (AP) -A chance to talk to astronauts in space kept cooperation between the Board of Regents and the universities
school open on a snow day. .
without infringing on the independence of the campuses. .
More than 100 students showed up at Immaculate Conception
As president of Maryland's College Park campus from 1989-98,
School on Tuesday despite a snow day so they wouldn't' miss a Kirwan was a major proponent of giving more power to individchance to talk to astronauts abOard the International Space Station. ual universities. He said he had no difficulty now assuming a posi"What kind of a chance do you get to talk to an astronaut in tion he helped weaken.
space?" Matt Clausen, 11, said when asked about passing on a
chance for typical snow day activities such,.as sledding and snowball fights.
Col. Carl Walz called the school in September and offered to
CINCINNATI (AP) - City nego~tors in a racial profiling
speak with students from the space station. He had visited the lawsuit are proposing a new watchdog committee as.a replacement
school in 1998 after talking with students from the space shuttle for the Citizens Police Review Panel and the Office of Municipal
Atlantis in 1996.
Investigation.
The new agency, to be known as the Civilian Complaint
Authority, would investigate police shootings, complaints of excessive force and other allegations of police misconduct. ·
BOWLING GREEN (AP) - Michelle was the homecoming
Unlike the agencies it would replace, tile central responsibility of
queen who loved sports.Jessica was the honors student who want- it would look beyond individual cases for patterns of police mis..;
-ed to be a nurse. And Ryan Leigh was the cheerleader who col- conduct.
.
lected coats for needy kids.
The current system is hampered by confusion over the jurisdic-'
The three Bowling· Green State Univenity_students and their tion of the twO agencies, a backlog of cases and a lack of followthree classmates who were killed corning home from a spring up, said William R. Martin, the city's special counsel, in a report to:
break trip touched many lives, friends said at a campus memorial the city solicitor.
_
:
service Thesday night.
'
"It took only one second to be a~t&gt;und them to fall in love with
them:' said Susan Baughman, who shared a room with five of the
victims. "When I think about the memories we shared, I could go
SPRINGFIELD (AP) - Acey Eads couldn't hold back tean as
on forever:•
he watched the second Vl!nion of the U.S. National Flag Truck roll
She would have been with them on the trip to Florida but pfl' the assembly line.
.
instead stayed home for her sister's wedding shower.
The four-door, crew cab high-performance truck carries a col-:
lection of historic flags a~t&gt;und the world.
.
"That's one thing that the enemies to our flag can never take it
the pride and love we have for it:' said Eads, a worker at InternaNEWARK (AP) -A prosecutor said there was not enough evi- tional 'Ihlck and Engine Corp. "All the guys are crazy about it.
dence to file charges against a school district accused of hiding a That's our truck."
·

Kirwan inbodiiCled in Maryland

Students give up

,I

•

'

sonably in trying to protect
certain population groups,
including small children, the
elderly and people with respiratory problems.
In the latest court decision, a
three-judge panel of the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected
claims that the EPA had acted
arbitrarily in determining the
level of the new standards.
While technically, the decision
could be appealed, lawyers
expected no such action, since
the Supreme Court already
had decided on the broader
issues of the case.
"We are gratified that after
more than four years of litigation, the court has affirmed
these standards, implementation of which will improve the
lives of millions of Americans
who suffer aSthma, bronchitis
and other respiratory .illnesses:' said Tom Sansonetti, the
Justice Department's assistant
attorney general for environment and natural resource.
The American Lung Association has estimated that the
tougher requirements · on
smog-causing ozone and
microscopic soot will prevent
15,000 premature deaths,
350,000 cases of aggravated
asthma and perhaps as many as
one million cases of children

day

City proposes new agency

Unive&amp;slty moums victims

Prosecutor won't file charge

Court gives go-ahead to issu~ air
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federal appeals court gave the
Environmental
Protection
Agency final approval Tuesday
to issue more stripgent air
quality health standards after a
five-year legal fight that
reached the Supreme Court.
The court rejected several
remaining challenges to the
standards, which first were
issued by the EPA in 1997 and
quickly were protested by
industry groups and the states
of Michigan, Ohio and West
Virginia.
The standards will require
states and local authorities to
impose tougher controls on
smog- causing chemicals and
microscopic soot.
The changes have been in
limbo because of court challenges waged by industry
groups and several states.
Opponents of the changes said
the EPA exceeded its authori. ty in issuing standards that had
no definitive scientific basis
and would be exceedingly
expensive for businesses to
adopt.
The Supreme Court,1 ruled
last year that the EPA under
the Clean Air Act had no
requirement to take into
account costs when issuing
health standards. The ruling
. said the agency"!Jad acted rea-

mifrophone in the false ceilirig above the work area of a union
leader.
The Ohio AsSociation of Public School Employees had accused
Newark school officials of interfering with union activities protected by law.
Licking County Prosecutor Robert Becker said Tuesday that he
could find no evidence to substantiate the union's claims.
According to the union, maintenance workers found the microphone Dec. 19 and traced the wiring into the office of the supervisor ofTeleia Settles, president of Local 190.The foUowing night,
Settles and others saw a security company on district property and
the next day the microphone and rooftop equipment were gone,
the union said.

Wa~

winter-Hot summer??! Don't give your hard earned
dollars to the utilities. A new Lennox HP26 Heat Pump can cut
your LP, Oil, Eleclric furnace or older Heat Pump heating
monthly bills literally In hall! 50% off your cooling bills
tooltReallyl (Stop in the office if you want to see the figures and
talk to real life references.)

After the Supreme Court
upheld the rules in February,
200f, Whitman said they were
the key to the EPA's efforts to
protect the health of millions
· ofAmericans from the dangers
of poUution.

---

PUBLIC NOTICE

SYRACUSE-RACINE
I
REGIONAL SEWER DISTRICT

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

-----·------

11--1

.a.
··

Silver Planned
Maintenaoe Coni1K:I
~ (Retail $1291)

11--1 Famous Silper90

.a.

.._,

Rifle association

the community. It will be
added to $17,816 previously'
POMEROY - Units of awarded.
The selection was made by
the Meigs Emergency Service
CHESHIRE -james I. Fife, Cheshire, died Tuesday, March answered three calls for assis- the National Board made up
26, 2002, at his residence, following an extended illness.
tance on Tuesday. Units of affiliates of national volunArrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.
tary organizations and chaired
responded as -follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH by the Federal Emergency
12:57 p.m ., Elige Hill, · Management Agency, accord FROM STAFF REPORTS
. pun:hase original Ohio long
Marie Young, Holzer Medical ing to Sandra Edwards of Galtia-Meigs Community Acti on
MARIETTA -The Asso- rifles."
c.;'nter;
ciation of Ohio Long Rifle
1:10 p.m., Page Street, Sam Agency.
Herman noted that the
United Way of America will
Collectors will hold its 27th members and experts at the
Tucker, HMC.
provide
administrative staff
annual Exhibit on April 6 and show can often identifY long
RUTLAND
and function as the fiscal
7 at the Hotel Lafayette in rifles that visitors bring to the
12:59 p.m. , Carpenter Hill,
agel}!
for the program . T he
Marietta.
show, thus establishing the age,
assisted by Scipio Township,
board was charged with disThe exhibit will enable the value, and historical signifipossible structure fire, Randy
tributing funds appropriated
general public to view the cance of what otherwise
Heary residence, no injuries.
by Congress to help expand
finest Ohio muzzleloading would just be a "wallhan'ger."
the capacity offood and shelrifles' in existence, according
Herman said he expects
ter programs in high need
to Mark Herman, AOLRC
renewed interest in all original
across the country.
president.
RACINE
Tuppers
Ohio antiques due to the
A local board of Gallia and
"The approximately 400
Plains-Chester Water District
approaching Ohio BicentenMeigs counties' citizens will
antique rifles exhibited by prihas lifted a boil advisory determine .how th e funds
nial.
vate coUectors represent some
issued Friday in Sutton TownThe Association of Ohio
awarded to the counties will
of the finest rifles produced
ship. Results of a sample taken
Long
Rifle
Collectors
was
be distributed. The counties
within Ohio. The rifles
Monday are considered safe.
formed
in
1975
for
the
study
have distributed Emergen cy
include plain working rifles as
· Food and Shelter funds previ,
well as extremely fancy brass, and preservation of Ohioously, with Gallia-Meigs C AA
silver, and ivory inlayed rifles made muzzleloading· rifles. The 16th annual Good friday All-Night Gospel Sing Is set for
and Gallia County Council
that are exceUent examples of The association has recently Friday at 7 p.m. at Rutland Freewill Baptist Church, on Ohio
p~sent
on Aging participating.
American folk art," said Her~ completed the publication of a 124. Slated to appear are acts Pure In Heart, from Columbus;
Riffles,
from
Jane
Lew,
W.Va.;
Gloryland
Beleivers
from
Gal·
of
books
listfive-volume
set
Information about the proman.
KANAUGA -- Dwight
The exhibit for 2002 will ing the gunsmiths of Ohio, by lipolis ferry, W.Va.; three generations of the Roush family, from Icenhower, the third place gram may be obtained by
New Haven, W.Va.; the Prophets and Jim Edens from
contacting Edwards at 992feature an authentic 19th cen- county, with biographical
Charleston, W.Va.; and the Kings from Lancaster. (Submitted) winner in the "World's Best
tury working rifling bench on information and photographs
Elvis" contest held in Las 6629.
of
their
work.
The
books
will
site, as weU a "Trading Table"
Vegas, will perform at 7:30
where mel)lbers can offer be available at the exhibit as
lane! purchase came about p.m. on Friday ~t the
muzzleloading arms and will be the author, Donald
through _division revenue AM VETS.
Hutslar.
· accessories for sale or trade.
POMEROY- Easter serobtained through the sale of
Hours on Saturday, April 6,
vices
at the Zion Church of
"The purpose of the annual
fishing and hunting licemes.
from
PapAl
exhibit," said Herman, uis to are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
Christ will include sunrise at
"The first step is to have
Sunday,
April
7,
from
9
a.m.
to
7
a.m. followed by a breakfast;
attract visitors who may not
era! deterioration of the ramp engineering consultants preCHESTER - . A -;~ pecial
otherwise be able to view and 3 p.m.
itself has many _ fishermen pare designs and layouts of meeting of Shade River Sunday School at 9:30 ·a.m.
anticipating the new ramp's the new boat launching Lodge will be held on Thurs- and worship service at 10:30
a.m. There will be no Sunday
facility,"
said
Marshall. day at 7:30 p.m.
construction.
evening service.
"The Racine area is a uonce we have agreed on a
popular site for both fishing design, we will then begin
and watercraft enthusiasts to seek bids from various
Premier - 8.57
AEP-45.27
Federal Mogul - .84
and the new ramp's con- construction firms. The date
POMEROY - The Meigs
Rockwell - 19.18
USB-22.90
Arch Coal - 20.82
struction
will greatly benefit for the actual groundbreak- High School drama students
f'locky Boals - 7
Gannett - 75.17
Akzo-46.59
General Bectric- 37.31 AD Shell - 53.45
AmTech/SBC- 38.34
the community, county and ing has yet to be deter- will present their annual plays
ATHENS- "Three Days;'
Ashland Inc. - 44.46. · GKNLY-4.25
Sears- 50.25
. d"
rrune
.
state," said Marshall.
on April 12 at 7:30 p.m . i.n . an Easter musical/ drama will
Harley Da\lldson - 54.&amp;1 Shoney's - .35
AT&amp;T-15.15
Marshall said the new the high school gym. "Ogga- be presented by the choirs
In 1999, ODNR procured
Kmart-1 .69
Wai-Mart - 62.17
Bank One -'- 41.75
Kroger
22.20
Wendy's34.13
BLI-14.11
10 acres ofland for the ramp ramp, once finished, will hne and the Time Machine'' ·and drama ministry of th e
Worthington - 15
Bob Evans- 27.24
Lands End - 44.77
project from Racine busi- most likely resemble public and "Just Desserts:· will be Athens Church of Christ, 785
Lld.-17.78
Daly stock reports are
BorgWarner - 60.78
nessman ji'm Diddle, who, launching facilities near given. Celia M cCoy is the W Union St., Athens, Satur1he 4 p.m. closing
NSC-23.59
Champion - 3.25
Channing Shops - 8.01 Oak Hill Financial- 21 quotes of the previous
following the purchase, Forked Run State Park and director.
day and Sunday evenings , 7
OVB-23.90
day's transactiOns, pro·
City Holding - 16
Robert
C.
Byrd
Locks
and
donated
1
1
adjoining
acres
p.m. The musical tells the
by
Smllh
Partners
vlded
BBT-38.07
Col-24
to the agency. Funds for the Dam in Gallia County.
Peoples - 23.87
at Advest Inc. of Gal·
DG -16.24
story of the three days that
Peps ico ·- 51.95
lipolis.
DuPont- 47.51
changed the world. Both of
the performances are free.
"We really haven't had
- Additional parking is available
much · of a problem with
MASON, WVa. -- Mason at Morrison and Beacon
brush fires within village VFW Post 9926 will have
schools.
limits,
however, several brush nominations for post officers
from Page AI _
fires we've responded to out- for 2003. at the April 9 meetODNR's Division of Forestry side the village have been ing, 7 p.m. Election of officers
is prohibiting outdoor burn~ caused by open burning," will be held on April 23 at 7
ing in rural areas between the said Pomeroy Fire Chief p.m.
hours of 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rick Blaettnar.
PORTLAND - Lebanon
"This is a serious threat
during the typically dry
Township trustees will meet
months of March, April, May, and we encourage anyone
Saturday, 7 p.m.. at the townwho plans on burning debris
October and November.
MIDDLEPORT - Hope ship building.
"This year, as much as outside to strictly follow Baptist Church in Middleport
5,000 acres of .Ohio's forest Ohio's outdoor burning will have an Easter celebra,_
and fields are likely to burn laws," he added.
tion and egg hunt on Saturday
,. '
OEPA regulations also
due to carelessness," said John
POMEROY- Caring and
from 2 to 4 p.m. for children
Dorka, acting chief of the· prohibit burning without ages 2 to 12. Refreshments Sharing Support Group will
ODNR Division of Forestry. agency permission of rubber, will be served.
meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
· "In the spring and fall sea- grease, asphalt and petroleum
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
~,:;....,...;,...,_ _ _.__...,. . . . . ....,...........,...,........,.,.
son, Ohio woodlands are materials· at any time during
Center. Speaker will be
especially susceptible to fire. A the year.
Kristina Cobb of the MidODNR offers the followmajority of these wild fires
Ohio
Valley Alzheit;ner's AssoPOMEROY
Meigs
could be avoided by follow- ing safety tips and guidelines County has received an addi- ciation .
ing basic rules of safety," said for those planning on burn- tional $2,364 to supplement
ing outdoors:
Dorka.
emergency food programs in
• Clear the burning site of
OEPA, enforcing state and
(USPS 2i3-960)
\
Ohio Volloy PubHohlng Co.
federal
pollution-control all flammable materials;
Published every anemoon, Monday'
• Use a proper burning
through Friday, 111 CouN 51.,
laws, regulated outdoor
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·class
container
or barrel with a
burning
in
both
restricted
our main concern in all stories Is postage paid at Pomeroy.
and un-restricted ' areas. lid;
to be accurate. If you know ol an Member: The Associated Press and
rhe Ohto Newspaper Association.
• Clear a I 0-foot area
error In a story, call the newsroom Poetm11ttr:
Restricted areas include land
Send address conec·
at (740) 992·2156.
tiona to The Oally sentinel. 111 COurt.
within I ,000 feet of a around the burning site;
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
• Have water and hand
municipality and areas withNews Departments
Subscription rates
in a mile of communities tools ready in case fire
The main number Is 992-2156.
By c.m.r or motor routll
Oepanment extentlons are:
escapes;
larger than 10,000 people.
ono-k
$2 _
One month
$8.70
• Avoid burning on windy
General manager
Ext. 12
In
restricted
areas,
One yeor
. $104
landowners may burn out- days;
Dolly
50 cents
News
Ext.13
S1,1bscribers not deSiring 1o pay the
• Do not burn within 200
doors only for cooking purcarrier may remit In advance direct to
or
Ext. 14
poses and some occupational feet of any woodland, brushThe Daily Sentinel. Credit will be given
carrier each week. No subscription by
land or field containing dry
needs.
Other services
mall pennltted In areas where home
Landowners in areas out- grass;
carrier serVIce Ia ·avallab~.
Advertloing
Ext. 3
• Stay with the fire until it
side of restricted areas . may
Mall
suhuftatlan
7:20,9:35
KEAGE
::Q
burn outdoors for waste is out;
Circulation
Ext. 4
lnoldo MOivo-cOI:iniY__ _
• Take all responsible prepurposes as long as specific
13Weeks
·
527.30
7:35, 10:05
RESIDENT EVIL-.,;Clooaltled Ads
Ext. 5
26 Weeks
$53.82
cautions.
requirements
are
met,
52 Weeks
5105.511
For more .specific informaTo send e-mail
including the need to be at
R•le• outelde Melga County
newsOmydallysentlnel.corn
on burning laws, contion
leost 1,000 feet from all
13 Weeks
$29.25
On the Web
26 Weeks
$58.88
inhabited
buildings
on tact the ODNR Division of
52 Weeks
$109.72
www.mydallysentinel.com
Forestry at 614-265-6694.
neighboring properties.

EMS
runs
,

to hold .meeting

.in Marietta

GOSPEL SING

Advisory lifted

AMVm

Elvis ·

Services set

Racine

Lodge meets

LOCAL STOCKS

Meigs plays

Drama to be
presented·

Officers to be
named

·cleanup

Trustees
to meet

Plan celebration

'
~Read :'more.aboQt,the Reds' ,. ·~

·-': ·. s1Ja9er'on~Rage·a1 r ri:'~

Support group

Funds awarded

&amp;lper flllllr included

fBll. (Retail $295!)

-

•

~Thermoatat

.a.
,_..,~
.........(Rellil$3411)

446-4940
.1~00.247~180

Thai

LENNOX
.. ...,..

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

David White Servlc:.es welc:om.. all customers
-- of the two Lennox dealers that haY&amp; g_one out
of business. We can handle all manu"fac:tursr
warran~ c:lalma. 25 Years of continuous award
winning service. We are the largest dealer
serving Gallla County.
c:n,CQiii:b !.tense ail!it- We\t~Agna Ca1IUI wmi008

~--------

(

LOCAL BRIEFS

Reader Services

said the agency is. working
with states and local governments to develop pollution
control programs to meet the
new air quality requirements.

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

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

The·Daily Sentinel

standards

'having decreased lung tUnctions.
EPA Administrator Christie
Whitman has embraced the
new rules, which had been a
top priority of her predeces sor, Carol Browner, who headed the EPA during the Clinton administration.
"EPA now has a clear path
to move forward to ensure
that all Americans can breathe
cleaner air,"Whitman said. She

Wednesday, March 27,2002

-

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

A free initiAl eMIIUJtiml ctm be pro; 'lid to help
dttmnitu the tutds ufthe clmtt MUl potentiAl
payur Sl/lintSfor the rtgJUJtell CIJrt. PlellsR:nt lfiiJey
Private Duly Home Cart is JCAHO tucreditell.

.,-'

,.

OIFa

Faces
I

Ple:wnt Valley Hospital knows the importance of familiar faces and surrmmdings when f~~ed
with an illness or chronic medical condition. Plaasa• IIIII Plll•llll II• aara pn&gt;V!dcs
personal care:, homemaker services, support services, companionship, respite care, sitter service,
private duty nurses and facility s_taffmg.
.
.
All of the staff members arc: skills-tested and bonded to assure qw.lity of care: and protecnon.
Our professionals arc: available H .llfl.., 1111 •IMI --Will and a registered nurse
can also be contacted to answer any of your qucspons.
_

~~ liiCII.III.. llltl111t -ll.lrt . . . I lMm112-lltl. -112-e111
'

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�'

Ion

The Daily Sentinel .

The Daily Sentinel

,..A4

www.mydllllyHntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing c.o.

DEAR ABBY: A senior girl at
my school was tragically killed in a
~ar accident over Super Bowl weekend. She wasn't wearing her seatbelt
and was thrown from the car. The
car rolled on top of her and crushed
her. Her boyfriend was with her. I
heard that before she died, he took
her hand and she told him she loved
ADVICE
him. It just blew me away. My cousin
was killed a year ago in much the
same way.
and it's the most requested piece in
My family has read your articles the history of the column. Young
for years, but one touched us deeply. people have written IP me to conIt was an essay about a teen who was firm that it made thtlfn think twice
killed in a car accident, and he was about their driving habits and
only 17. I am only 17 and so was the encouraged them to be careful. You
girl who died. Please print it again ·to are right; it should run at least once
remind us of the fact that we're only ·. a year, so here it is:
PLEASE GOD, I'M ONLY 17
mortal and should . cherish every
waking day. BARRY W. IN
The day I died was an ordinary
KENNEWICK, WASH.
school day. How I wish I had t:iken ·
DEAR BARRY: That piece is the bus. But I was too cool for the
titled, "Please God, I'm Only 17," bus. I remember . how I wheedled

Dear
Abby

'

Den Dickerson
Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

"

un~n to ,,, ~tliJM dN WtkiHfl•. Tltey ,.01114 k ku ,,.,. 300 wtmh. AU l«t.n
4,, rubj«t to tdirttrg tJnd 1ruut h signtd a1td inci/Mk t~d4nn llltd ~Upllollt """'~'·
Nu utrsignHI ltltln will 1M p11blilhtd. Utun sltl)flld k lrt good IMU, llllilnm"f
in•ts, 11tH tnnoocrlitits.
fht op;,;0111 rxprnud lrt tilt C"olum11 btlo": fiTt 1M tOIIJtMIIS ofrll.t Ollis lbllty
Pllblishittg Co.. 'J tditorl41 board. 1111lt11 0111,-wllt noiftl.

,,
A

NATIONAL VIEW

9AHt£&amp;. : ;

GmlEGIIICI~ ~~ ·A

Prudent

jstahlerOclncyposl.com .

Steel manufacturers, public may
see wisdom in Bush decision
• The Marion (Ohio) Star: His decision didn't please anyone completely. So it's likely President £lush's decision on steel .
.
.
import tariffs will someday prove prudent.
llush last week announced new Import dunes as h1gh as 30
percent on major steel imports from Europe, South Korea,
Russia, Japan and other countnes. His move came after lawmakers and labor unions sought sanctions to protect the Y,S.
steel industry, claiming 46,000 American jobs have been lost
since 1997 due to the dumping of low- priced steel in this
country.
.
.
Locally, the steel industry remains vital to our economic success, both in terms of steel manufacturing and in usage of steel
·
by other companies in their own manufacturing.
Many union leaders think Bush didn't go far enough and that
a 40 percent tariff was needed.
Steel manufacturer; largely applauded the move, though
some called it a stop-gap measure which will only work temporarily.
.
.
.
.
.
Nations against whom sanctions will be 1mposed hkely will
strike back in some economic way.
While we generally oppose any government intervention in
the fre e market system, something drastic needed to be done.
The illegal dumping of cheap steel into the United States, sanctioned by many of the governments who now oppose these
tariffi, •was effectively kiUing the steel industry in this counrry.
Bush couldn't allow it to continue.
The steel ind~stry is far too important to our future success,
and even security, as a nation to allow it to be degraded any
further.
·

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, March 27, the 86th day of 2002.There
are 279 days left in the year. The Jewish holiday Passover begins
at sunset.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
·
Twenty-five years ago, on- March 27, 1977,582 people were
killed when a KLM Boeing 7 47, attempting to take off, crashed
into a Pan Am 747 on the Canary Island ofTenerife.
On this date:
.
In 1512, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon sighted Florida.
In 1625,. Charles, I ascended the English throne upon the
death of James I.
In 1794, President Washington and Congress authorized creation of the U.S. Navy.
·
In 1836, the first Mormon temple was dedicated, in Kirtland,
Ohio.
.
In 1917, the Seattle Metropolitans became the first U.S. team
to win the Stanley Cup as they
defeated the Montreal Canadi.
,

ens.

In 1945, during World War II, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
told reporters in Paris that German defenses on the Western
Front had been broken.
In 1958, Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet premier in addition to First Secretary df the Communist Party.
In !964, Alaska was rocked by a powerful earthquake that
killed 114 people.
.
In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man to
orbit the earth, died in a plane crash.
In 1980, 137 workers died when a North Sea floating oil
field · platform, the Alexander I. Keilland, capsized during a
storm.
Ten years ago: Democratic presidential front-runner Bill
Clinto·n, campaigning in New York, apologized for recently
golfing at an all- white club. German Chancellor Helmut Kohl
met with Austrian President Kurt Waldhetm m Mumch, a
meeting denounced by Jewish groups because of Waldheim's
alleged involvement with Nazi persecution during World War
11.
' Five years ago: Dexter King, son of civil rights leader Martin
Luther King Jr., met with]ames Earl Ray, the man in prison for
the older King's assassination . Ray denied having anything to
do with the shooting, to which King replied, "I believe you."
R1.1ssian workers staged a nationwide strike to dema;td overdue
wages.
'
.
.
.
One year ago: In ill first specific accusatton agam$t a detamed
U.S.-based scholar, China said Gao Zhao had conf~ssed to spying for foreign inteUigence agencies. (Gao_. wh~ had been
detained on. Feb. I I, was released the followmg J~y.) Cahfornia regulators approved electricity rate hikes of up to 46 percent. An empty train riding on the w~on~ side of the tracks
crashed into a crowded commuter tram m central BelgiUm,
killing eight people.
..
.
Today's Birthdays: Lord Callaghan, former Bnt1sh pnme
minister, is 90. Blues musician Robert "Junior" Lockwood 1s
87. Newspaper columnist Anthony Lewis is 75, Dance company dir;ector Arthur- Mitchell is 68. Actor Julian Glover IS 67.
Actor Jerry Lacy is 66. Actor Austm Pendleton 1s 62. .

__.___

....:·;_
·

_______

...:_

_________

,

......-

PERKINS'VIEW

Joseph
PerKins
COLUMNIST

the car out of Mom. "Special favor;'
I pleaded." All the kim drive."
When the 2:50 bell rang, I threw
all my books in the locker. I was free
until 8:40 tomorrow morning! I ran
to the parking lot, excited at the
thought of drivin~ a car and being
my own boss. Free!
It doesn't matter how the accident
happened. I was goofing off going too fast caking crazy
chances. But I was enjoying my freedom and having fun. The last thing I
remember was passing an old lady .
who seemed to be going awfully
slow. I heard the deafening crash and
felt a terrible jolt. GlasS' and steel
flew everywhere. My whole body
seemed to be turning inside out. I
heard myself scream.
Suddenly I awakened; it was very
quiet. A police officer was standing
over me. Then I saw a doctor. My
body was mangled. I was saturated

Life Line Screenings assess risk

Deep pockets still main motivation for big lawsuits
A KallSas City pharmacist pleaded
guilty recently to tampering, adulterating
and misbranding two well-known cancer
drugs, Gemzar and Taxol.
More than 300 lawsuits have been filed,
including more than I 00 wrongful-death
claims. Which would raise . no eyebrows
except that two-thirds of the suits target
Eli Lilly &amp; Co., maker of the chemotherapy drug Gemzar, and Bristol-Myers
Squibb, maker ofTaxoL
Kansas City trial lawyer Michael
Ketchum, who represe·nts more than 170
of the plaintiffS, claims that the pharmaceutical · companies somehow failed to
alert authorities that the pharmacist was
diluting their drugs. ·
·
.
Yet, it was Lilly that dropped the dime
on the felonious pharmacist. And. had it
not acted when it did, the company
argued in a statement, "there's no telling
how long this would have gone on."
So why is Ketchum going after Lilly
and Bristol- Myers? Is it because the two
drug makers were conspiring with ' the
Kansas City pharmacist to dilute fheir
own medications (which actually meant
less profits for them)?
·
No. It's because the two pharmaceutical
giants have deep pockets. And because
Ketchum has dreams of millions of dollars
in contingency fees from the patients and
families he represents.
It is because class-action litigation has
gotten so out of hand that the U.S. House
of Representatives passed a bill last week
that targets the more questionable practices of trial lawyers such as Ketchum.
Among other key provisions, the measure aims to curb settlement&lt;, say sponsors,
"where attorneys ·frequently reap millions
in ' fees while class members are shortchanged."

_..:l=.f. the Bend

Page AS
Wednesd.y, Merch 27, 2002

TeenS aaident exerts powe ul pull

I HAVE .
MilCH MORE
FREE TIAlE . ..
NOW THAT .tftl··. -,
NOT DEFEWDIN6- '
.
CllNTON
",,

111 Court St., Pornii'Oy, Ohio
740-982·21111• Fax: 740-982-21117

Charlene"Hoefll.ch • ·
General Manager

_The_D_aily_Se_ntin_·e_I_ _

\

.Organization to
offer screenings

which any plaintiff and defendant live in
different states and the total claim is more
than $2 million.
This provision is .especially important to
companies like Eli Lilly and Bristol-Myers
Squibb, staring at class-action lawsuits that .
could cost them tens of millions of dollars!
For federal courts are not nearly as likely ·'
to impose huge damage awards against ' '
corporate defendants as state courts.
-: ·
Of course, the nation's trial lawyers are,
not too· happy about the House class-: '
action bill.
Not because the measure would make it
more difficult for them to rake in millions ,,
of doUars in legal fees, they say. But •
because the legislation would make it
more difficult for injured or aggrieveq"
individuals to get the justice they deserve;
Indeed, that's precisely the argument .
being made against the legal reform bill by 1
Democrats, who count the nation's ttial .
lawyers among their biggest political .
donors (with more than $16.5 miUion in,,
campaign ·contributions so far this year,
according to the Center for Responsive
Politics).
The bill would "drastically tilt the justice system in favor of big corporations
and their executives and against the individuals they sometimes harm;' said Rep.
Martin Frost, the Texas Democrat.
Yes, of course. Well, tell that to the individuals who were plaintiffS in the cell
phone class-action lawsuit, the Bank of
Boston suit and the Cheerios suit.
They can attest that the civil justice system is tilted to neither big corporations
nor individuals .c1aiming harm. But to the
buck-raking trial lawyers.
·. (Joseph Perkins is a columnist for The San

April 18
MIDDLEPORT On
April 18, Middleport Church
of Christ will offer area residents the opportunity to
spend a few minutes doing
something that could safe
their lives.
Life Line Screef)ing will
offer health screenings to
assess the risk of stroke and
vascular disease.
-These screepings -include a
carotid artery screening,
abdominal aortic aneurysm
screening and an ankle
brachial index (ABI) . Aso
offered for men and women
will be a bone density screening to assess risk for osteo-

The House Judiciary Committee cited
several recent examples.
In a case involving purported overcharges on cell phones, wireless customers
received $15 coupons with which they
could purchase furure products. The classaction lawyers, on the other hand, pocketed more than SI ·million in fees,
A class-action suit against the Bank of
Boston resulted in an award of $8.76 to
each individual listed as a plaintiff in the
suit. However each of those individuals
also had $90 deducted from their bank
·
account to pay their attorney fees.
Then there was . the class-action suit
against the makerof Cheerios concerni':'g
food additives. The class members got
coupons to purchase more Che.erios. The
lawyers got S2 million in fees.
It is because of the lure of such multimillion.dollar windfalls that trial lawyers
are always on the _lookout for potenpal
class actions, no matter how dubious. And
to improve their prospects of winning,
they file suits in state courts that have a
history of granting large awards to plain. tiffS.
The House bill ·would rein in such
"forum shopping:• It would give federal Diego Union· TribunL and can be reached at
\
courts jurisdiction in class-action suits in josep/1. Perkins@UnicmTrib.com.)

porosis.
According to a spokesman
for Life Line Screening, the
fast, painless and low-cost tests
use ultrasound technology and
are conducted by registered or
registry-eligible ultrasound
technologists.
A board certified physician
reviews the results of each test
to ensure the accuracy of the
results before they we mailed
to the individual.
An individual whose screening suggests further evaluation
is encouraged to seek appropriate followup care with his
or her own physician.
. Those interested in registering for any of the screenings,
are asked to call 1-800-4074557 to schedule an appointment. Each screening requires
10 minutes or less to complete
and costs $40. A package of all

three vascular screenings is
$99, a savings of$2l.Ask your
Life Line Screening representative for · details when registering.
Life Line Screening is the
nation's leading provider of
health screenings. By offering
those noninvasive, painless
ultrasound screenings, Life
Line Screening helps people
identify their risk for stroke
and the presence of vascular
disease or osteoporosis early
enough for their physician to
begin preventative procedures.
The Church of Christ is located 437 Main St. in !yl.iddleport.
Also available at the screening will be free information
on the identification and control of risk factors for stroke,
vascular disease, abdominal
aortic aneurysms, and osteoporosis.

with blood. Pieces of jagged glass
were sticking out all over. Strange
that I couldn't feel anything.
Hey, don't pull that sheet over my
head! I can't be dead. I'm only 17.
I've got a date tonight. I'm supposed
to grow up and have a wonderful
life. I haven't lived yei. I can't be
dead!
Later I was placed in a drawer. My
folks had to identify me. Why did
they have to see me like this? Why
did I have to look at Mom's eyes
when she faced · the most terrible
ordeal of her life? Dad suddenly
looked like an old man. He told the
man in charge, Yes, he is my son."
The funeral was a weird experience. I .· saw all my relatives and
friends walk toward the casket. They
passed by, one by one, and looked at
me with the saddest eyes I've ever .
seen. Some of my buddies were crying. A 'few of the girls touched my
11

'

hand and sobbed as they walked
away.
Please - somebody - wake me
up! Get me out of here! I can't bear
to see my mom and dad .so broken
up. My grandparents are so racked
with grief they can hardly walk. My
brothers and sisters are like zombies.
They move like robots. In a daze,
everybody. No one can believe tills.
And I can't believe it, either.
Please don't bury me! I'm not
dead! I have a lot of Jiving to do! I
want to laugh and run again. I want
to sing and dance. Please don't put
me in the ground. I promise if you
give me one more chance, God, I'll
be the most careful driver in the
whole world. All I want is one more
·
chance!
Please, God, I'm only 17!

(Pauline Phillips and her daughter,
Jeanne Phillips, share the pseudonym
Abigail V..n Buren.)

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calendar
Is published as a free
service to non-profit.
to
groups wishing
announce meetings and
special events. The calendar Is not designed to
promote sales or fundraisers of any type.
Items are printed only
as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a specHic
number of days.
WEDNESDAY .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education to meet in spe·
cial session; Wednesday,
7 p.m. at administrative
office to discuss possible

personnel action and con- thing on Easter.
structlon contracls.
FRIDAY
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - An allPOMEROY - Ewings night hymn sing will be
Chapter, Sons of the held al the Rutland
American
Revolution, Freewill Baptist Church
7:30 p.m. Thursday, on Friday beginning at 7
Meigs Museum. program p.m. A freewill offering will
on 191h cenlury supersti· be taken Ia help the Big
lions.
Bend Jubilee in May.
POMEROY - Meigs
Counly Churches of
Christ Women's Fellowship Thursday, 1:30 p.m.,
allhe Bradford Church of
Christ Zion lo have devolions; Kathryn Johnson,
an Easter egg craft, and
Paula Pickens, Some-

.SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Hope
Baptisl Church in Middle·
port will have an Easter
celebration and egg hunt
on Saturday from 2 Ia 4
p.m. for children ages two
to 12. Relreshments will
be served.

' .

·.

RED GREEN'S VIEW.

Like .old cars, your body is in constant state of repair
There comes a time in the lives of
most men when Y"'U realize you've
treated your cars better than you've
treated your own body. You've even
treated rental cars better than your own
body. But it's not a rental car.
You can't ditch it in the woods and
then report it stolen. Are you one of .
these guys? Is it possible that you haven't
kept yourself in showroom condition?
There's an easy way to find out. Stand in
front of the bathroom mirro~. Don't
actually. look directly into the mirror;
you're not ready for that shock yet.
What you do is open up your medicine
cabinet and look inside. Remember
how when you were young, there'd be
some toothpaste and maybe some
mouthwash in it? What's in. there now?
Antihistamines, anti-inflammatories,
antidiarrheals, antidepressants (in c.ase
the antidiarrheals don't work). Your
medicine cabinet used to be practically
empty, now you've had to build on.
Anti-fungals, unguents, ointments,
poultices, patches, plasters, salves - all
these bottles and tubes spill out onto
your sink counter, the top of the toilet
tank, every horizontal surface in your
bathroom : Decongestants, muscle rubs,
eye drops, wart remover, hair restorer,
nasal sprays, denture cleaner, antacids. If
this sounds like your bathroom, it's time
to tak~ stock of your health. And time to
buy stock in a drug compa~
· .
.
Urban iron
I used to live our in the ountry with
acreage and well water an peace and
quiet and all that, but for the lase 10
years I've Jived , right downtown m a

-.- --

·~·-

~·

...

Red
Green
COLUMNIST
medium-sized city: In that time, I've had
raccoons in my chimney, mice in · my
basement and bats in my belfry. I never
had any ·ofthose problems in the country. That's because in a rural "environment there's room for everybody. Mice
and raccoons can have their area; I can
have mine. But in the city, we're all sharing the sa.;1e space. The tree that was the
raccoon's home was cut down . and
turned into a deck. Mice like dark and
dank and my basement is an ideal source
of each. If you want to get away from
animals, move to the country where
they have options. If you live in a congested city, having anirtlals infest your
home is as understandable as your adult
children moving back in. They have
nowhere else to go.
freedom 85
Signs that you may not be as ready' to
retire as you think you are:
• You have 4 7 years left on your mmtgage payments.
• Packard has recalled your car.
• Your daughter has decid~d to

........ ,.

bec9me an artist.
• . The doctors can't guarantee tha~
you '11 die soon.
,
• After a two-week vacation, your
wife looks forward to you going back tO
work.
;
• Your retirement fund relies on a
winning lottery ticket.
It's · automatic
I was at an antique car show this wee]i
and the biggest evolution of cars jn th¢
last 50 years is in the area of sleekness.~\
1951 Chevy was tall and narrow. TM
cars of today are low and wide. To
explain this, you have to go back a little
further to when there were no cars at
all. In the days of the horse and buggyl
the driver and passengers sat up straigh_t
so that the bumps wouldn't thtow anyone's back out. The early cars are base~
on the same principle. You can't make '
sleek car if the people inside it need til
sit up straight. So some automotiv&lt;
engineers made the decision that peopl(
didn't need to sit up straight. That
changed everythiflg. That's how they gel
the cars· of today to look so sleel~
They've got u.s ·all lying down. Lyinf
down in cars. No wonder teen pregnan,
cies are up.
:
QUOTE OF THE DAY: "You should
never lie to your wife, but she may not
want to hear all the truth all the time.1
-Red Green
••'

On a loan to buy, build or re-finance a home.
Up to 30 year financing available! Call now. This is a limited time offer!
•

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•

(Red Green is the star oj"The Red Gree.
Show,"1a television series seen in the U.S. o~
PBS and in Canada on the CBC Network;
and the author of "The Red Green Book~
and "Re4 Green Talks Cars: A l.o"[
Story.") .
J

t

~-.J-·---

,,,

II

.,

�•

/

•

Page Ai..

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

- .•

w.dn•dJIY, Mllrdl17, lOG:

..

~

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
Rocker gets drilled, Page B2
Spurrier's first day in D. C., Page BJ

watching Medicare, Social Security Still ·stable

eastem.

Afghanistan closely
WASHING-lyON (AP) The U.S. military expects Taliban and al-Qaida fighters to
· try to start regrouping in eastern Afghanistan, but it is too
soon to tell how many there
are and what they are doing,
Pentagon officials said.
American forces have long
focused on the region near the
Pakistani border and believe
pockets ofTaliban or ai-Qaida
are holed up there. But perceptions of what's happening
shifts as the enemy moves and
new intelligence is received,
defense officials said Tuesday.
The area around the town
of Khost is a major land route
into Pakistan to the east and
borders where U.S.-led troops
just conducted the largest land
assault of the five-month campaign against Taliban and aiQaida forces.
U.S. officials played down a
report by Afghans that there
have been recent s1ghtings of
al-Qaida leader Osama bin
Laden and top aide Ayman alZawahri in the area. ·
"The Khost area is a tense
situation .... It remains a dangerous place," Pentagon briefer
Brig. Gen. John W. Rosa Jr. said
at a news conference.

The city itself also is saturated with we~pons and has been
the site of hostilities between
competing Afghan warlords.
Rosa ·did not reveal how
many enemy may be in the
area, how they are communicating and how they are operating.
"But it's always worth
repeating, we expect and
anticipate additional pockets
of resistance,"
Pentagon
spokeswoman Victoria Clarke
said. "lc is the MO (modus
operandi) of these people to
try to regroup in some shape
or fashion, so we fully expect
it and that's one of the reasons
we're still there."
Rosa said that while there
had been no engagements with
enemy fightets in more than a
week, coalition pilots flew 150
numons over Afghanistan
Monday and continued to
search the area of Operation
Anaconda - the large ground
assault completed earlier this
month against' other regroupings of al-Qaida and Taliban.
The flights included surveillance and reconnaissance
planes and bombers on standby in case enemy forces are
sighted.

r

WASHINGTON (AP) Social
Security and Medicare are still running
out of cash, but despite the recession the
two retirement programs have grown a
little bit stronger.
Trustees for the programs reported
Tuesday the projected insolvency date
for the Medicare trust fund was extended to 2030, a year later than earlier estimates. Social Security is expected to run
out of money by 2041, three years later
than previous projections. '-~
The Bush administration quickly
pointed to the numbers as proof that
changes are needed to bolster the pro.
grams before baby boomers reach retirement age. Republicans have been eager
to legislate changes in Medicare, including a limited prescriptioh drug benefit
for older people, before Congress
adjourns this year.
But Democratic Sen. Edward
Kennedy of Massachusetts, chairman of
me Senate's health committee, said the
numbers prove that Medicare is solvent
for another three decades - despite
Republican demands for widespread
changes now.
"These estimates discredit (the administration's) claims that Medicare needs
radical surgery to privatize the program
and force senior citizens into HMOs,"
said Kennedy, chairman of the Senate's
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
Committee. He said the numbers show
Congress's "lop priority should be
enactment of a Medicare prescription
drug benefit."
Republicans insisted on adjustments
sooner rather than later.
"This reprieve provides little comfort

Trustees for·the programs
reporfe!i_ TueSday the
projected insolvency date
for the Medicare trust fund
IMlS extended to 203q
a year later than earlier
estimates. Social Serurity
is expected to run out
of money by 2041, three
years later than previous

projeclons.

as the programs .c ontinue to face substantial financial challenges in the nottoo-distant future . that need to be
addressed. at the earliest opportunity;•
said Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill, a
truste~ for both programs.
· Health and Human Services Secretary
'(ommyThompson, another trustee, said:
"We cannot be so irresponsible we leave
this problem for the next generation."
Trustees also predicted that Social
Security will begin to dip into its trust
funds a year later, in 2017, when it is
expected _to begin paying out more in
benefits than it collects in payroll taxes.
The year that Medicare is projected to
begin dipping into its trust fund
remained at 2016.
The improvements were attributed to
healthy gains in productivity, a key
ingredient to the economy's long-run
vitality.
· "The economy has weathered a relatively brief and mild recession," said

Lynn Reaser, chief economist for Bane
of America Capital Management. "As a
result, the overall revenue sources for
Medicare and Social Security out 15 or
30 years have not been impacted significantly."
Still Reaser cautioned, "The point
remains that at some time both of the5e
trust funds will be out of money."
Over the past several years, the strong
economy has helped to extend the time
before either trust fund is expected to
run out of cash.
.
~ But the gains, as Reaser noted, doh'i
hide that both Medicare and Social
Security are ill-prepared to deal with the
baby boomer population; now close to
retirement age.
The number of older people is expect-·
ed to double by 2030.
'
Congress has promised to look at costly Medicare changes this year, includinj!:
the pres.cription drug benefit for seniors.
But those plans could be derailed by the
cost of the war against terrorism. Further .
complicating the political •landscape are
this fall's congressional elections.
The prospect for Social Security
changes may be dimmer. Preside.nt
Bush's Social Security com.lnission has
recommended letting younger workers
invest some of their payroll taxes in the
stock market. But the commission's ~ro~
posals would require $2 trillion to $~
trillion in new government S);lending
over the next75 years, and workers retiring in 30 to 50 years could face cuts in
benefits.
Already politicians in both parties have
distanced themselves from the commission's recommendations.

or

.

~·

Ash Street Church

Sunrise Service·
M11rch 31, 2002
Sunrise Service: 6:00a.m.
Speaker: Elder Kenny
Yeauger
Sunrise Brtakfll!o1: 6:30 a.m.

Man:h 27th· 7
"Metflcal Aspects of the ·
:ruciifixlcm of Jesus
presented by
M.E. Plaugher of
New Martinsville
Anesthesia Associates

Come and enjoy a Cree home
cooked meal.
Sunday Morning Sunday
SchooliO:OO a.m. ·'
Classes: Adult, Teen, Junior,
Primary &amp; Nursery

EUJiltr Egg Hunt following
Sunday School
Sunday Evening Worship &amp;

Easter Sunday
Mareh3tst
.Sunrise Service 6 am
.· Breakfast to follow

Communion
6:00p.m.
Pastor Glenn Rowe, .
Preaching 398 Ash Street,
Middleport, OH 992-6443
il'ouiM ~ &amp; ~ A.l

s-

38260 Brastbury Rd.
Pomeroy
.
Easter Sunrise Service
Sunday 6:30 am
Breakfast 7:45 am
Morning Program
9:30am
Morning Worship
10:30 am
Pastor: Doug Shamblin
Countywide Hymn Sing
Sunday 7 pm at
Middleport Church of
Christ

Hillside

Suuday Sunrlst

Senb
'tOO am
wontdp
lOtOOam
Wonhlp

11t0pm
f

Pastor:
Paul Taylor

Wecln•dJIY, Mllrdl17, 1002
WEDNFS~Y's

HIGHLIGHTS

.......

Sunrise
Sunday7 am
, with breakfast to follow
am • Sunday SchtOO
10:45 am - Morning
Worship
7:00 pm· Evening
Worship

Maundy Thursday

Service 7:30p.m.

Morning Worship
10am
Easter Egg Hunt to
follow

Evening Service
· 6pm
Pastor: Kevin KO~lkle.

LUTHERAN

39724SR 143
Pomeroy

CHURCH

$t. Paul
231 E. Second, PomeroJ

Maundy Thursday ·
7:30pm.
· Holy Communion
Good Friday- 7:30pm
Easter Sunday • 11 am
992-2010

St. John
Pine Grove Rd. Easter
Sunrise Service 7:00am
Worship 9:00
992-5641

ofaundyTbursday • 7 pm .
Friday Communion
Setvlce· 7 pm
SpoiliSOIIed by Middleport
nls~~rlal Association

Easter Sunday
Sunrise Service
7:30a.m.
with breakfast to follow.

Bradbury Chun:h ot Christ
Sln1~· Combined Choir
Sunrise Se"ice·

Sunday morning worship

Sunday 6:30
breakfast to foUow

10:25 a.m.

992·3824

Church
Good Friday Service
1:00pm
Special Singing
Easter Service
Sunday 10:30 am
Special Singing
girl's bicycle &amp; one
bicycle to be given 11way
during /0:30am
service
Pastor James
'
992-6768

Comer or Lynn and
Second, Pomeroy

Craig CI'OSSIIII8D

Thursday 7 pm

Enterprise
U. M. Church

Easter Cantata

Enterprise Rd. off SR 33

Saturday 2 pm

Silent Communion

Guest speaker:
Pastor Jim Heaton

MnrNilltt Wonhlp -10:/S 11m

Pastor Mtuk Morrow
. 992-2755

Saturday 6:00pm
Fellowship
Rutland l.eQion Hall
. SUNRISE SERVICE

NBA

Browns re-sign
Tre Johnson
BEREA (AP) -The Cleveland Browns re-signed offensive lineman Tre Johnson to a
one-year contract on Tuesday
even though he missed most of
the past two yeats to injury.
Johnson played seven se'!50ns
with the Washington Redskins
and was named to the NFC
Pro-Bowl team in 1999. But in
2000, he missed 12 games with
an injured left knee and was
signed by the Browns before
training camp in 2001.
Before joining the Browns,
the 6-foot-2, 326-pound Johnson had started 65 of 80 games
during his pro career. .

Ohio river bank
fishing
restricted
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Huntington District
announces that bank fishing
access at Greenup and Robert
. C. Byrd Locks and Dam is currently under · a temporary
,restriction.
The Ohio side bank fishing
access at Greenup is closed due
to security reasons at the
hydropower plant Efforts are
being made to open the access
area once security issues are
resolved.
.
At Robert C. Byrd, the
Ohio side fishing access ramp is
· ' closed due to flooding damage.
The Huntington District is
working to repair the damages
and make the access ramp safe
for f4herman use.
It Win be reopened when
repairs are complete.
Bank fishing access at
Racine, Willow Island, Meldahl
. and Belleville Locks and Dam is
currently open with no additional restrictions.
Areas designated as restricted
to boating at all locks and dams
remain in effect to ensure boating safety.
For more information,
contact Wayne Budrus at 502
Eighth St., Huntington, W.Va.
25701, or call 304-529-5507.

CAREER CHANGER- Reds outfielder Adam Dunn waits in the on-deck circle for his fourth inning at-bat Tuesday against
the Minnesota Twins in Sarasota, Fla. (AP) ·

Baseball a good choice
12 homers in August, the most ever by
an NL rookie in a month .
It also affirmed the decision he made
(ollowing Texas' 1999 spring football
.game - baseball was the way to go.
.J.'L'It,l!l'as Q&gt;e hardest decision. I've ever
had to make in my life. I hope I never
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -Tight end. have to make a tougher one," he said." I
·
., like to think I made the right decision.
Linebacker. Defensive end.
(;don't regret it at all. I still miss foot- Adam Dunn wanted none of it.
ball.
If baseball wasn't going so well, it
Rather than change positions in the
sport that was his passion, the Texas might be different."
The Texas prep star, who passed for
quarterback decided to
4,792
yards and 44 touchdowns at New
change careers and head
to baseball. He hasn't Caney High School, was genuinely
done anything to make him second- torn after the Reds drafted him in the
second round in June 1998.
guess the choice.
,
He wanted to be the starting quarterThree years later, the Cincinnati
Reds' brawny outfielder is one of base- back at Texas and beyond. He loved the
ball's most acclaimed young players. His bruising hits, the thrill of hitting a
promotion to the majors last season receiver in stride with a tight spiraL He
gave a glimpse of his power - a record didn't w~nt to give it up.
He didn't see mtJch of a choice.

Dunn misses football
but doesn't regret
giving it up;. __

RedS

Sullinger wants to come Astros top Indians
home, join Buckeyes
•b
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) - Arkansas
guard JJ. Sullinger has asked to be released
from his scholarship so he can transfer to
another sch&lt;lol, possibly Ohio State, accord·
ing to media reports.
Sullinger, who has backed
Arkansas assistant
Mike
Anderson to replace fired coach Nolan
Richardson, told the Arkansas DemocratGazette that he was waiting for the university's response.
·
"There was a release request, but as far as
my schol~rsh1p not bemg ren~wed ~ext year,
that has~.t .been dec1ded yet, Sulhnger sa1d
Tuesday. I J,~st asked for a release to we1gh all
my o~l!ons,.
.
.
.
Sullmgers father, Sacch Sulhnger, sa~d hiS
son would transfer to OhiO State. J.J. Sulhnger
graduated last year from Thoinas Worthmgton High School in suburban Columbus.
"He's always . been a Buckeye," Satch
Sullinger told The Columbus Dispatch for a

NCAA

story Wednesday. "Even when he was playing
for Arkansas, he was loyal to Arkansas, he was
committed to Nolan and Arkansas, but he
cheered for the Duckeyes. When things
changed, he wanted the opportunity to come
home.
"Our request was to release him to Ohio
State and Ohio State only."
Arkansas associate athletic director Derrick '
Gragg said he had not received Sullinger's
request as ofTuesday afternoon.
Ohio ·State coach . Jim O'Brien did not
-return a message seeking comment. Sports
i~ormation director Steve Snapp said Ohio
State had not been contacted by Sullinger.
' The Buckeyes have three scholarships available for next season, which Sullinger would
be forced to sit out under NCAA transfer
rules.
·
Sullinger was not offered a scholarship by
Please see Buckeyes, BJ

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) -Dave Mlicki looked sharp for 5
2-3 innings and Lance Berkman hit a grand slam off Bartolo
Colon as the Houston Astros won their eighth straight, 5-4 on
Tuesday over the Cleveland Indians.
Mlicki (3- 1) alloi(Ved two hil&lt;- one a long
homer to Jim Thome - in his final start in
Florida this spring. He walked three, struck out four and got
nine of his outs on grounders.
"I felt great," Mlicki said. "My control is bugging me a little bit. I'm just missing, but they aren't fishing for it. I feel like
I'm right where I need to be."
Colon (1 - 1) gave up Berkman's slam in the third inning and
was touched for five runs and seven hits in six innings. Despite
the so-so outing, Indians manager Charlie Manuel thinks his
ace right-hander is set co open the season Sunday night at·
Anaheim.
,
·
"He looked OK." Manuel said. "He was throwing good. He
just got the bases full and then he got a ball up."
Manuel also said he's not concerned about Colon's weight;
The 28-year-old Colon not only gained two years over th '
winter when officials found an error in his birth certificate, he
also arrived at camp 20 pounds heavier than he was a year ago.
"No, I'm not worried," Manuel said. "He's ready to go."
Eddie Perez, trying to win a spot as th e Indians' backup
catcher, hit a three-run homer in the ninth off closer Billy
Wagner.

Tn e

nitv Resource Fair

.1Prll2, 2002 • 10 a.m.ta2 p.m.• wanness Center Aerobics· Room

by Choir -6 am
Breakfast to follow
service! 9 am
by Sunday

•
•
•
•

School

EM,_
I

Please see Plkhlng. Bl

MLB
Spring Training
Tueaday'a Games
Boston 11, Texas 8
Tar!1lll Bay 3, Toronto 3, tie
Florida 12, Sl. Louis 4
Houslon 5, Cleveland 4
Baltimore 10, Montreal 5
Minnesota 12, Cincinnati 9
Philadelphia 11, Delrolt 3
Seattle 1o. Anaheim 6
Oakland 13, Chicago Cubs 11
Arizona 6, Milwaukee 2
San Fran cisco 7. San Diego 2
Colorado 10, White Sox 9
Atlanta 5, Kansas City I
Los Angeles 7, N.Y. Mets 1
N.Y. Yankees 11; Pittsburgh 5

U .iHft"

.

Please see Choice, Bl

Red5

co

Medication Assistance Program
Pulse Oximetry Screenings
Domestic Violence Risk Assessments
Skin,D;unage Screenings

•
•
•
•

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

111 scre•llll are anivldelltne of Chlrue as a public service
I •

I

After the Longhorns' spring game in
1999, the coaches informed him that he
wouldn't be the starting quarterback in
the falL They talked about moving him
to a different position to make better
us~ of his 6-foot-6, 240-pound frame.
A day later, his decision was made.
'" They told me all that stuff and I was
like, 'OK, that's it. That's somebody
telling me I need to go play baseball,"'
Dunn said.
Once he made up his mind, his career
climbed.
He started last season at Double A
and hit 12 homers in 39 games, earning
a promotion. At Triple- A, he hit 20
homers in 55 games. That brought a
July promotion to Cincinnati, where he
set the NL record for rookie homers in
a month and hit 19 overall in 66 games.
"Last year was really my first full sea-

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) The Cincinnati Reds reached
the 25-man roster limitTuesday
by making their
biggest decision of spring
training.
Manager Bob Boone wants
as many relievers as possible,
so the Reds will go with 12
pitchers to start the season,
giving Boone plenty of
choices out of the bullpen but
fewer options off the bench.
The Reds" rotation was so
bad last season that the
bullpen wound up with the
most relief innings in the
National League.
"It also says your regulars
have got to play," he said.
"You're not going to be able
to pinch hit as much, and
you 're going to need health."
Boone was waiting to see
whether shortstop Barry
Larkin was healthy enough to
play every day before return ~
ing backup Cookie Dawkins
to the minors.
Larkin has played .the last
two games and given no indication of a problem with his
abdomen. He didn't play for
nine days because of irritation
in an area where he had a hernia repaired last year.
"A big part of.it is being
comfortable with Larkin ,"
Boone said.
The Reds put right-hander
John Riedling on the 15-day
disabled list and optioned
Dawkins, left-bander Hector
Mercado, outfielder Ruben
Maceo and catcher Corky
· Miller to Class Triple- A
Louisville. Riedling is recovering from surgery last season.
The roster currently con- .
sists of:
• Starters Joey Hamilton,
Jimmy
· Haynes,
Elmer
Dessens, Jose Acevedo and
Chris Reitsma.

Pro Baseball

"lutu e~e .

COMMUNION
Sunday 6:30am
Sunday School
9:30am

go1ng
with
pitching

Tuesday'• Garnes
Washington 103, Denver 87
Detroit 96, Indiana n
Atlanta 103. New Jersey 77
Ortando 96, Chicago 82
• Dallas 112, Milwaukee 106, OT
Golden State 115, Miool00001106
Utah 109, Houston 105
Sacramento 107, Clippers 90
Lakers 121, Cleveland 116

Thursday 7·8 pm
Sunrise Service

EAsTER EGG HUNT

•

Pro Basketball

School9:45

Church
.of Christ

Gobd Friday 7pm
All night hymn
sing

Page 81

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.

I ,•

.

'

'

�•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 27, 2002
Wednesday, March 27, 2002

John Rocker struggles for Rangers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

john Rocker struggled in his first game
:rlter being given another chance as a darer.
Rocker allowed four runs in one inning
during an 11-8 loss to the Boston Red Sox
on Tuesday after darer Jeff Zinunerrnan was
placed on the 15-&lt;lay disabled list with tendinitis in his right elbow.
"I need to make a few
more quality pitches. I did
some good thin~. and I'm
trying to focus on them:' Rocker said.
Zimmerman, who hasn't pitched since
March 6, is expected to miss at least one
month. The news was better on Rangers
starter Ismael Valdes, who returned to Aorida on Tuesday night :rlter tests showed no
ligament damage in his right elbow.
Elsewhere, Moises Alou played for the first
time in more than a week, going 2-for-3
with an RBI in the Chicago Cubs' 13-11
loss to Oakland in Mesa, Ariz. Alou had
been sidelined for much of the spring with
a strained muscle on his left side.
"I'm feeling OK;' he said. "I think I'm
going to be all right. Just get in these final
three or four games, and tune up for the
opening of the season."
Miguel Tejada's two-run homer capped a
seven-run Oakland rally in the eighth
inning. Sammy Sosa, Chris Stynes and Joe
Girardi homered for the Cubs.
Marlins catcher Charles Johnson returned
to limited action, catching and hitting for
the first time in three weeks. But the twotime All-Star probably won't be ready for
the season opener.
Johnson sprained his left thumb March 5
when he ran into Montreal first baseman
Joe Vitiello. He wore a cast for two weeks,
allowing swelling and soreness to subside,
then regained strength and flexibility during
the past week.
Johnson eased back into baseball activities
Tuesday, catching soft toss and hitting off a
tee.
"It's an injury that I have to be concerned
about;' Johnson said. "I can't rush it because
it's my thumb. With me being a catcher, I'm
dealing wid1 this thumb every pitch, every
time a guy throws a baseball and every time

MLB

PULL THE BUM - Pitcher John Rocker, center, talks to coach Oscar Acosta (24)
while Rafael Palmeiro listens during a mound conference Tuesday. (AP)

Orumm 10, ExPos S
At Fort Lauderdale, Aa., Marty Cordova
hit a grand slam, and David Segui had two

I swing a bat. I have to be very careful:'
In other games:

YANKEES 11, PIRATES 5

hits in his return to the Baltimore lineup.
Pliw:JEs 11, TIGERS 3
.At Lakeland, Aa., Todd Pratt had two
doubles and three RBis, and Mike
Lieberthal homered· and drove in two runs
for
Philadelphia.
DoDGERS 7, Mlrrs 1
MARINERS 10,ANGELS 6
At Port St. Lucie, Aa., Ornar Daal pitched
At Tempe, Ariz., Charles Gipson, Carlos
like a starter one day :rlter being sent to the
Guillen
and Bret Boone homered olr Lou
bullpen, allowing one hit in six scoreless
Pote in the sixth inning to lead Seattle.
innin~ for Los Angeles.
At Tampa, Aa., Todd Greene homered
twice and drove in six runs before getting
released by New York. Greene, who also
made · three errors, lost the reserve spot he
held last season to Alberto Castillo.

DIAMONDBACKS 6, BRI!WI!RS 2
At Tucson, Ariz., Rick Helling allowed

BRAVES 5, RoYALS 1
At Kissimmee, Aa., Andruw Jones and

Mark DeRosa homered, and Albie Lopez two runs and seven hits in seven innin~, and
Chris Donnels hit a three-run double for
allowed one run in six innin~ for Atlanta.
Arizona.
DEVIL RAYS 3,'
GIANTS 7, PADRES 2
BuJE jAYS 3, 10 INNINGS, Tm
At Peoria, Ariz., San Francisco rookie
At Dunedin, Fla., Chris Carpenter
ri~ht-hander Kurt Ainsworth left in the
allowed three runs in 6 2-3 innin~ in his
third inning with a strained groin and the
final tuneup for opening day as Toronto tied
Giants beat San Diego. Ainsworth allowed
Tampa Bay.
two runs, five hits and two walks in 2 2-3
MARuNs 12, CARDINALS 4
innin~ before leaving because of tightness
At Jupiter, Aa., Kevin Millar went 4-for-5 in his right groin muscle.
·
with a grand slam oft Bud Smith to lead
Aorida.

Indians release pitcher Buckeyes
from PageB1
Sc~tt Radinsky Tuesday

Ohio State while in high
school, but was told one
would be available for him
in 2002 if he attended a prep
school for a year.
In his senior season in
high school, Sullinger shared
Ohio Division I player of
the year honors with
Cincinnati Moeller's Matt
Sylvester, a freshman with

WINTER HAVEN, Aa. (AP) - Scott Radinsky, hoping to
make Cleveland's opening day roster as its second left-handed
reliever, was waived Tuesday by the Indians.
Radinsky, 34, struggled all spring and had a 14.29 ERA in eight
appearances before the Indians decided they had seen enough. The
club had thought about keeping Radinsky as a lefty along with
Ricardo Rincon in a set-up role.
Radinsky, who made a successful comeback from Hodgkin's dis- ·
ease while pitching for the Chicago White Sox in 1994, appeared
in just two games for Cleveland last season after spending most of
the year in the rninoili.
The Indians also reassigned catcher Chris Coste to the minor
league camp.
In addition, the club has decided to keep right-hander Jose Mercedes around ft(i while. Mrn:edes signed a minor league ,deal
before camp under the condition that he could leave by March 26
if the club couldn't promise him a spot on the 25-rnan opening day
roster.
Mercedes went back to the Dominican Republic to be with his
mother who is ill, but he has agreed to report to Triple-A Buffalo
when he returns in five days. ·
Omar Olivares, who signed a deal similar to the one Mercedes
has, is·still in camp.
Also, OF Jolbert Cabrera played three innin~ in his first appearance with the major league club this spring. Cabrera is recovering
from a gunshot wou,;d in his buttocks suffered during a calj:icking
this winter in Colombia. Cabrera popped up in his only at-bat.

Choice
from Page B1
son of playing baseball ;' Dunn
said."[ think it came from just
playing every day. When
you're on a roll like that, you
feel no one can get you out."
It didn't take him long to
feel comfortable in the Reds'
clubhouse, where his easygoing personality and self-effacing humor helped him fit in
with Barry L~rkin, Ken Griffey Jr. and the rest of team's
veterans.
What he did was impres. sive. How he handled all of
the attention was nearly as
remarkable.
"You want to avoid being
the flash in the pan, the one- .
hit wonder," .Larkin said.
"Consistency h~ppens in the
way you think about what
you're going to do, your
focus, your preparation. He
does all that well. That's why
he'll be successful and he'll be
a leader.
"It's not rare to see that in a
young guy. For him to be able
to project it and influence
others to be like him - that's
the rarity, and he has that at
22 years old. H e's setting a

standard not only for guys
who are younger than him,
but guys who are on the
team."
It's the quarterback in him.
Dunn is used to being a leader
and dealing with the spotlight.
"I think that has a lot to do
with it," Dunn said. ''When
you play quarterback, you get
a lot of credit that you don't
deserve when yo\1 win, and
you get a lot of abuse when
you Jose.You Jearn to take the
good with the bad."
The only abuse he gets now
comes from his teammates,

the Buckeyes this past season.
· Sullinger's father said that
once
Richardson
left
Arkansas; his son no longer
wan ted to be away from
home.
'Lhe 6-foot-5, 202-pound
.Sullinger averaged 9.4 points
a game and shot 42 percent
from the field last season.
He has asked to be
removed from the search
committee that has been
interviewing candidates to
replace Richardson.

Pikhing

•
Outfielders A'dam
D.unn, Ken Griffey Jr., Juan
Encarnacion, Brady Clark
and Robin Jennings.
Pineda, 23, came from the
• Relievers Jim Brower, .
Luis Pineda, Jose Rijo, Scott Tigers along with EncarnaSullivan, Gabe White, Scott cion in the trade for Dmitri
.Williamson and Danny Young last December. He
Graves. White is the only appeared in 16 games for
Detroit last season, going 0left-bander in the bullpen.
• Catchers Jason LaRue 1 with a 4.91 earned run
and Kelly Stinnett.
average.
"Sometimes getting there
• Infielders Sean Casey,
Todd Walker, Larkin, Aaron is the easy parr:' Boone said.
Boone, Juan Castro and "Now we're going to see
Wilton Guerrero. ·
who wants to stay:·

Twins out-gun Reds

Spurrier opens minicamp with 'Skins

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Ken Griffey Jr. hit his first spring
homer, but the Minnesota 1\vins beat the Cincinnati Reds 129 Tuesday behind Dustan Mohr't grand slam
and two homers by Michael Cuddyer.
Griffey hit a two-run shot offTwins starter
Kyle Lohse, and Aaron Boone homered
twice. But the Reds' concern about their
pitching intensified as the Twins' homers
piled up.
Fifth starter Chris Reitsma gave up Mohr's
grand slam in the first inning and had to leave
.as a precaution after the second inning
because of tighmess in his right elbow. He
was solid in his first three start~. giving up a
total of two runs.
Reitsma said he's been bothered by a tight
elbow all spring and had an MRI exam and
a CT scan last week that found no serious
problem.
"It's been (tight) the whole spring;' he said,
sitting in the Clubhouse with ice on his
shoulder and elbow. "Nobody knows
because it's not that big of a deal. The doctors
tell me it's just fine, there's no reason to
William~ worry."
Instead of accompanying the team to
Cincinnati, he'll stay in Sarasota and pitch in a minor league
game Sunday.
"He couldn't get the ball down;' manager Bob Boone said .
"He really had no breaking ball."
· Reliever Scott Williamson, making a comeback from reconstructive elbow surgery last April, pitched consecutive innin~
for the first time this ·spring. He gave up Cuddyer's solo homer
in the fifth and his three-run homer in the sixth that made it
11-3.
'!Wins reliever Eddie Guardado was ejected in the ninth by
home plate umpire Bill Welke. Guardado thought he'd struck
out Kelly Stinnett on a pitch called a ball. Stinnett hit a tworun homer on the next pitch, and Guardado was ejected for
complaining.
1
Notes:The 1\vins sent LHP Travis Miller outright to TripleA Edmonton. He can accept the assignment or choose free
agency... .All three runs offLohse were unearned. He has given
up only two earned runs this spring in 16 innings .... The Reds
put RHP John Riedling on the 15-day DL and optioned LHP
Hector Mercado, INF Gookie Dawkins, OF Ruben Mateo
and C Corky Miller to Triple-A Louisville.... GM Jim Bowden
said minor league OF Austin Kearns won't be fined for skipping workouts Monday. Kearns was unhappy' to learn he'll
open the season at Double-A Chattanooga instead ofTriple-A.

ASHBURN, Va. (AP) Steve
"Ut put in _ gosla _mort Rosenfels, a second-year player and the
Spurrier took the field in chilling fog
I
.
.
h I"
only holdover quarterback from last
·
1
11
da
fi
p
avs
1n
one
mutano
t
an
ve
d
d
a.n
nzz e ues y or his first practice
I
""
year's team. Even so, he actually looked
as an NFL coach. The Fun ' N Gun is ewr seen in any o.ffeme. I was much sha rper than the Spurrier-savvy ·
definitely not in Florida thinking, 'How would these guys Wuerffel, who wore gloves.
any more.
adjust to tllis?"
Dameyune Craig was the third quar"Sort of like playing golf
terback in camp. The Redskins have
in Ireland," said Spurrier, who
QB Denny W-'181
been unable to work out a trade with
~xchanged his trademark visor for a
Chicago for ex-Florida quarterback
lllack baseball cap because of the weath- what he did wrong from both Green Shane Matthews, and free agent Jeff
er.
and Spurrier when he got back to the Blake didn't accept Washington 's initial
· The Washington Redskins' three-day, huddle.
offer and is considering other options.
non -contact minicamp is a chance for
"There's a lot of stuff;' said Spurrier,
"If opening day was tomorrow, we'd
the new coach to get to know !tis play- who left Florida in January to sign a be able to go play," Spurrier said. "I
ers and learn the feel of coaching in the five-year, S25 million contract with the don't know how well we'd do, but we
big leagues, but the first practices Redskins. "Yeah, I sort of believe you got enough ball players (that) after one
skipped the preamble and went straight give the players a whole bunch of stuff day we could go play. That's how simple
to Chapter One.
so they don't get bored."
this offense is .... We don't need five
"We put in - ' gosh - more plays in . As ex_pected, Spurrier. sp~mt his entire exhibition games to be ready, but unforone meeting than J've ever seen in any tim~ With the offense, Jeavtng defensrl"e . tunateJy we've got to p)ay all of them."
offense," quarterback Danny Wuerffel coordinator Marvin Lewis in charge of
Notes : CB Darrell Green was
said. "I was thinking, 'How would these the defense. There were no tantrums or excused from practice for personal reaguys adjust to this?' You go to another heavy lectures, JUSt a renunder to the sons ... ~ DT Delbert Cowsette will miss
team, and you'll spend a week on three players to have fun. .
,
the camp after having wrist surgery....
plays and you'll run them over and over. . Wuerffel s;ud Spurner hasn t changed First-year RB Stanley Stephens was
We've got just about the entire play- s1~~e the Flonda days.,
.
diagnosed with a heart murmur and
book in one meeting."
Not really a hck, Wuerffel satd. might have to retire. ... Linebacker
. At least Wuerffel was familiar with it " He's just a ball coach. 'that's what he LaVar Arrington decided not to be the
all, having won the Heisman Trophy wa~ts to be, ~nd that's. what he's doing. next Lawr~nce Taylor for a day. During
playing for Spurrier at Flotida. Spurrier He s tn there JUSt dra~ng plays up ther~ the morning practice, Arrington wore
has signed other former Gators on the board, and were learmng them. No. 11 - his old college number Jacquez Green, Reidel Anthony and
About 50 players were on the field, instead of his usual No. 56.
Chris Doering- and it wasn't hard to but depth was lacking at many positell who understood what was happen- · tions. The first-string guards were Alex
ing and who didn't.
Sulfsted and Ross Tucker, who have just REMEMBER THIS ONE_ New Washing. R eceiver Rod Gardner completely three games of NFL experience ton Redskins head coach Steve Spurrier
inisunderstood an audible caD and ran berween them. The team is negotiating talks to quarterback Danny Wuerffel dur·
the wrong route on the first play in the . with free-agent guard Tony Semple,· ing the team' s practice at its mini-camp,
~orning's final drill. Gardner heard who visited Redskin Park last week.
Tuesday at Redskins Park in Ashburn,
· The first-team quarterback was ·sage
Va. (AP)

. fl
N

Arkansas
:wants
Kent
.
:state's Heath
LITTLE ROC K, Ark. (AP)
·- Arkansas athletic director
·Frank Broyles, looking for a
replacement for fired coach
Nolan
Richardson,
has
received permission to talk
· with
Kent
State's Stan Heath, whose
Golden Rashes were among
the final eight teams in this
year's NCAA basketball tour.• .•
·..
'
nament.
Meanwhile, Wyoming athletic director Lee Moon confirmed ·that Cowboys coach
Steve McClain is in the running for the Arkansas job.
"I gave Frank Broyles permission to talk with coach
H eath," Kent State athletic
director Laing Kennedy said
Thesday.
He said Broyles contacted
him on Monday. Kennedy said
he did not know when H eath
would be interviewed.
H eath, 36, just finished his
first year at Kent State. The
1Oth-seeded Golden Flashes
advanced to the finals of the
NCAA South Regional before
losing to Indiana 81-69.
During their run, the Golden Flashes beat Oklahoma
State 69-61, Alabama 71-58
and Pittsburgh 78-73 in a
game that went into overtime.
Kennedy said other schools.
also have inquired about
Heath, adding that he was not
surprised because of Kent
State's NCAA showing. He
described Heath as very articulate and said he does a "great
job on and olf the court."
He also said that Heath has
four years left on a contract
that is bemg amended and that
Kent State plans to put additional other resources into its
program.
.
. "taking us to the Elite Eight
has just been awesome for
Kent Stare;' he said. "We want
to continue to be at this level
with or without coach Heath:'
White and Broyles said
Richardson's remarks damaged
· the program. S11gg, after a
three-day review, agreed.
Members of a committee
formed to help fiQd a new
coach conducted two interviews Monday. At least ~o
more were scheduled Tuesday.
· The committee interviewed
Richardson assistant Mike
Anderson and Arkansas-Little
Rock coach Porter Moser on .
Monday. Broyles had promised
Anderson the first interview,
and the Moser interview might
have been nothing more than a
courtesy call. Arkansas-Little ·
Rock is a sister school to the
Fayetteville campw.

NCAA

And Win

·~

'2

Clue For WednesdaY
March.21 •••

mnnPagea1

who love to give him grief
when he breaks out the football in the clubhouse something that happens quite
often.
Before a game Monda}
night, Dunn zipped passes
across the .clubhouse and
bragged that he could fling
one into a 1-foot-by- 1-foot
storage compartment at the
top ofTodd Walker's locker.
He did, with ease. Then he
asked Walker if he'd like to go
outside and throw the football
around.
"Keeping my
options
open," Dunn said.

"Not at 263 pounds," Griffey said. "You'd be on the
line."
No he wouldn't. That's why
he gave up football in the first
place.

Its TIOle For

SPRING

ClEAN-UP!
•Shovels
• Balles
•Hoes

PLEASE REMEMBER:
- Egg Is not at a place of business
- Egg Is not at a private residence
- Egg Is not Inside a man-made object
· - You will not need digging toots
-: You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder

HETIRWENT MONEY

AnlRAw~a

The Daily Sentinel

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end Attttlltod
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McClure's

PICKENS
.HARDWARE
MASON, WI
304-173-5583

~ocky

Family

Hupp

Restaurant

Insurance

CROW'S
FAMILY

DOWNING
CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE
RESTAURANT

I

'
J

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

www.mvdallvaentlnel.com

.,.

.
AJ. Moye go1ng
'

after

II, NCAA hoops title

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - I f there 's a loose
ball on the floor, you can be sure Indiana's
A.]. Moye is somewhere close
by.
The burly 6-foot-3 scrapper.
seems to have a knack for coming up with
the ball, even when he's under the basket
among the big men.
" Moye plays with a lot of energy on the
offensive end, and then he 's really stepped his
defeiDe up," coach Mike Davis said of the
212-pound sophomore.
.
.
Be was one of the Hoosiers' key reserves in
their drive to the Final Four, averaging 5,9
points and 3.2 rebounds .. He has the lowest
ratio of turnovers to minutes played among
a)! the Indiana regulars - starters included.
The Hoosiers (24-11), in the Final Four for
the first time since 1992, will play 0 klahoma
(31-4) in the semifinals Saturday night in
Adanta, the hometown of Moye and 6-9
junior Jeff Newton.
"As a basketball player, any time you have a
Final Four, it's big, but to have it in your
hometown, and to be able to participate in it,
it's unbelievable," Davis said on Tuesday. "So
they're all excited about going back home."
Newton is averaging 7.8 points and 5.1
rebounds a game and has blocked a teamhigh 65 shots, more than a third of the
Hoosiers' total.
"Both guys, when they come in, make us a
better basketball team," Davis said of Moye
and Newton . "Both guys could easily start for
.. us , but I decided to go the other route. When
they come in, there's no drop- off."
Newton, who played at Mays High School

NCAA

in Atlanta, is Indiana's top reserve big man,
usually in place of 6-8 Jarrad Odie. Moye,
who played at Wesdake High School, will
come in at guard and could see extra playing
time ifTom Coverdale's injured ankle doesn't
come around.
"It's day by day, questionable," Davis said. "If
he plays, he won't do a whole lot, and he'll be
at full speed by 'no means."
·
Davis said he would likely know by Friday
whether Coverdale or. freshman Donald
Perry would start, although Moye, Perry,
Dane Fife and Kyfe Hornsby all could be
used at the guard positions.
Indiana upset top-seeded Duke 74-73 in
the South Regional semifinals and then took
out Kent State 81-69 on Saturday to earn its
first Final Four appearance sirice 1992. In two
seasons as Indiana coach, Davis already has
won as many tournament games as Bob
Knight did in his last seven years with the
Hoosiers.
It took Knight five years .to win the first of
his three NCAA titles.
· Davis said he put in a new offensive system
after last year, when he was named interim
coach after Knight was ·fired.
"Last year, I had about 15 plays and this
year about75 plays," he said. "I have one main
setup we run a lot. I just thought if you play
hard-nose defense, it's really going to wear
you out, and you rieed to have an offense that
no matter whatever happens, everyboily
knows where to go.
"There's no doubt they know exactly what
to do every single time."

NOTICES
THE STATE OF OHIO
COUNTY OF
CUYAHOGA
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
CASE 1110. 02.CV.005

OHLINGER aka
AGNES OHLINGER'S
UNKNOWN HEIRS,
CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES.
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS et al.

AFFIDAVIT FOR
LEGAL NOTICE
SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
Agnes
Gall
PURSUANT TO OHIO Ohlinger aka Agnes
RULE OF CIVIL
Ohlinger's Unknown
PROCEDURE 4.4(A) He Ira, · Creditors·,
Devisees, Legatees,
CITIBANK N.A.
Administrators,
AS TRUSTEE
Executors
and
Plaintiff
"Aulgno, whose lalt
·VI·

AGNES GAIL
OHLINGER
aka AGNES
OHLINGER'S .
UNKNOWN
HEIRS, CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS at al.
Defendants

wall

as

residence
· are
unknown, will take

notice that on
January 15, 2002,
CITIBANK N.A. AS
TRUSTEE tiled Ita
Complaint I~ Case
N~i!·~y~s In tho
C urt
ammon
Pleas of Meigs
Larry

NEW YORK (AP) crosstown rival Villanova in
Dajuan Wagner played like a the quarterfinals without him,
pro.
.
but the Owls missed the open
He lool&gt;ed right at home at space his long-distance shootMadison Square Garden, ing usually gave them.
tying a career high
Without Greer, who has an
with 32 points, ankle iqjury, Owls coach John
·
including a late 3- Chaney \'/anted his shooters
pointer from behind the - David Hawkins and Brian
NBA arc.
Polk- to take more shots.
I:Iis best play, though, \'las
"I got (angry) at Polk,"
the one that won it. He drove Chaney said. "Once you get
to the basket and passed .to in the paint, they have a
Kelly Wtse, who dunked wtth · license to shoot."
18.6 seconds left, giving
'Jemple plays Syracuse (23Memphis a 78-77 victory .12) Thursday night for third
over Temple on Thesday place before the tide game. ·
night
Th 0
. d
"I :
•·-d th d ~
e
rangemen mme a
JUSt attac...
e ••ense, chance to become the first
and everybody collapsed on t
. th
,
earn to wtn
e preseason
me," Wagner said. !saw Kelly and postseason NITs in the
down there by himself."
The Tigers (26-9) will pl~y sa:~a~arolina (22_141 was
South c;:arolina, a 66-59 selll;'- led by Aaron Lucas, who had
final wt~er. over Syracuse, m a season-high 20 points, and
Thursdays ade game.
. Jamel Bradley, who scored 12
Wagner, 19, has
not of his 13 point! on 3 s. Thny
anriounced. whether he'll Kitchin also had 13 for the
gsks .
return for his sophomore sea· G amecoc
h
h
hi
M
son.
emp s coac J o n
W 1'th
littl
th
Calipari thinki,Wagner would
.
a
e more an a
be taken in the NBA draft's rru?ute to play, Syracuse
first 13 picks if he left.
tra~l~d 63-59. 1 DeSh_aun
The Owls (18-15) were Williams forced a pan mto
without iqjured top scorer the lane for Kueth Duany, but
Lynn Greer, . who averaged it was picked olf by Rolando
23.2 points. They beat Hpwell wtth 1:09 left. Lu¢as
made only three of seven free

NIJ

throws down the stretch, but
it was enough to hold off the
Orangemen, who didn't score
in the game's final 2:09.
Conspicuously absent from
the game's closing minutes
was
Syracuse's
Preston
Shumpert. The senior, who
scored 11 first-half points on
3-for-10 shooting, took over
in the second half, but didn't .
score in the final4 :41.
Shumpert, who finished
'th
·
·
W1
28 pomts, outsc~red his
~;anunares at one pomt, 28·
Duany \'las the only other
Syracuse player in double fig. . · .
·
ures, firushing wtth 15 potnts.
N
th S
h d
o o er yracuse p1ayer a
more than Williams' five
points.
Both teams brought their
home white uniforms, and it
wasn't discovered until the
teams. took the floor for
pregame warmups.
Syracuse was supnn
. sed to
r :be wearing its road orange,
d
d
an a stu ent manager wa
dispatched with polic
escort - to get them. Syracuse switched to roid&lt;i.ers~s
at the first media timeoUt-an
came out 'for the second half
wearing its full road uniform~.

E.

duly sworn, depo1es Courts, P.O. Box 151 ,
100 Second Street,

Pomeroy, OH 45789,
seeking foreclosure

and alleging thai tho

Foreclosure, Money Defendants, Agne1
Relief I Judgment, Gall Ohlinger eka

service

of Agnes

Ohllnger'i

ilummona cannot be Unknown

Heirs ,

made upon the
Dafendanta Agnes
Gall Ohlinger aka
Agnes Ohlinger 's

Administrators,
Executors
and

Unknown

Assigns have

Heirs,

Creditors, Devleeoa,
LegaiHI,
or

Creditors, Devlaeea, claim to have an

Legatees,

Interest In the real

Administrators,
ExecUtors
and

Memphis, South Carolina advance in NIT

whose

praaent place of

County,

that

Lol No. 513; thence
north 76 degrees and
30' waist 50 feat;
thenee north 20
degrees and 30' west

140.5 feel lo the
norlh line of what
was formerly Rena
Elselsteln's
Iot i

thence nor1h 70
degrees and 30' aaet
123 feet to the
northeast corner of

what was formerly
Rena Elaelaleln'a lol;
thence

south

6

degreeo and 30' west
180 feet to the place
of
beginning,
place of residence as ·conla lntng 201100

Samantha
S . Spencer,
M el g a
Joeeph, being ilrot County Clerk of

and says that ohe Ia
the
plalnllff'a
Attorney tn the abOVJI
entitled action lor

northwest corner of

acre more or leas.

Also

a .f ormer

grantee Is .to hav•
free and undisputed

use along the north

side of what was
formerly
Rena

Elseleleln't 101 of a
rlghl~ of·way

as now
located to Peacock

Strael.
Reference Deed·
Volume 294, page
561, Melge Counly
Deed Recorde.
Auditors Parcel
No. 18-01288
Parcel Two: Being
a part of Lot No. 500
In Sugar Run In the
Lincoln
Httl
Annexation
Pomeroy,

to
and

beginning at the
Southeast corner of

a lot now owned ·
Rena Elaelateln the
same being the
Northwaat corner of

Lot No. 513; thence
South 78 · 30' weal
50 feet thence North
20-30' West 140.5
feet, to the North line
of Rena El11lateln's
tot; thence North 7030' Eaot 123 feet to

estate deacrlbed
below:
Aoelgns; that plaintiff Situated In tile
hao
exerc.laed VIllage of Pomeroy,
reasonable ·diligence Ohio, County of
to ucarlaln lha Melge ~nd Stale of
rotldonca of tho otld Ohio:
the NortheaiJI corner
delondanta, Including . Parcel One: Being of Rena Eloeleteln'o
a 110rch of the a part of Lot No. 500 lot; thence, South 8·
Probate recorda, and In Sugar Run In 30' Wool 180 foot to
that tho rooldence of Lincoln
place
of
Hill tho
11ld defendant• are, Annoullon
to beginning containing
other than heretn tot Pomeroy,
20/100 acre, more or
• nd
forth, unknown, end ducrlbld •• lollowe: looo.
cannot
with lloglnnlng at o olako
Audltar't Parcel
reuonable diligence In the 1111 tide of No. 18..01858
be ucerlalned; and Pucock Slr11t,
Tho Dolondanta
thai thlt 0111 lo ana which atako 1111 nemad above are
of theta llllntlaned In lOUth 5 dlgrHI 44' required to enewer
hcllon 2703 .14 wilt 111.4 feet from on or before tho 14th
and/or 3105.01 of the lho northwool earner dly of Moy, 2002.
Revlud Code ol Ohio of Lot No. 501, which CITIIIANK N.A. AS
and pureuant to Ohio wu formerly owned TRUSTEE
Rule
of
Civil by
Va Ientine
Proaadu111 4.4(A).
!borebach Eatale; IIY:
thence
along SHAPIRO l FELTY,
IHAPIRO It FELTY,
Peacock Slrool ooulh L.L.P.
L.L.P.
5 degree• ond 44' Samantha B. Joooph,
Samantha S. Joeeph wolt17.1 fell; lhence Allomev al·l.ttw
(0070824)
aoulh 74 degree• end Attorney lor PlalnllftAttorney for Plaintiff
1O' aeat 283.3 feet to Pelltlonor
100 Wall St. Clolr
the northwoet corner 800 Will St. Clair
Avonue,Baoond
. ol LOI No. 113; Avenue, 2nd Floor .
Floor
thence north a Cleveland, OH 44113
CIIVIIInd, OH 44113 . dear••• 10' •••• 110 (211) 821-1130
11) 121 ·11130
feet along thl Will
21 8) 821-714e-fax
line of Let No, 512 10 (3) 12, 11, 28, 2002
HAPFI!LTOLOOS.C 1 largo locuat poet; (4) 2, '· 18,2002
OM
lhence aoulh 70
SWORN
TO dear•••· wall 211.1
Public Notice
II!FORI! ME, and feat 1c tha place of
auboarlbed In my bliJinnlng,
Rutland
Vlll1g1
preunce lhle 121h containing 821100 Council
will
have
a
lOre,
I
day of
"Specltl
Billion"
EXCEPT
lhl
February, 2002.
meeting to. dleouotlho
fallowing from ~he Rutland
Elementary
tbOVI
dttorlbtd
M•riJ.andlno
School
lulldlng
on
Notary Publlo, Stall preml111 eold 10 Thurtday, Merah 21th,
Raymond Elealateln
Of Ohio
at7:00 p.m.
My Commlulon . by deed doled (3) 21; 27, 28 3TC
February 24, 1 US
explree 10.21-04
beginning 11 the
eoulhweet corner of
ClniANK N.A. AI
1 lot fcr1111r1v owned·
TRUITII!
by Rena Elaelateln
·VI·
tho
being. the
AON OAIL

~

••m•

----------------·----·-------------------------------·~------------~r----------------~-~~-------------

�•

Pqe B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

March 27, 2002

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

.

r

r=
t

r__..~~-&amp;:..... rb::~

l ...

LlhliiiXX

1

oBeby llaml, Indian lltaign 8o&lt;oii!Wll buill"""

mont--.._

2001 5-10 4a4, F.. 4 door
• Colleo tabtoiond II•
cab 7 500 mlloo
(304)17!&gt;-2801
Setunlay, Mon:h 30th, 2002 crow
• •
.
· -~
-price, $25,900, graaf
~
et ~Crtlllklorm. 3 1/2
-lor$11,000. Ca1Holle
cut &amp; opllt, you . . - lOUth o f - Pleu- Monxom (74D)388 8834
. ~. $25 ""' 1eve1 plclwp •"' on Rt 35.
'&lt;1l' t ed
)tucfc 1ood. 740-DeS-3585 hoilllfll eligible lor Ohio It&gt;- 118 Dodgo 1500 4&lt;4, 318,
' ·1c
becoo rnon.y . - ....,
. . ,, • ·
cn.a..
£ t.t.
: ; , : : :vo. 1000 want, 11arn &amp; 85 buill otfglblllor SLT
51,000 rnlloo,
• UMd 8 wka, ax- Ohio tobacco monev w11
goad to •
tt rt 001ldltion,
175. 74(). loll at 1pm.
l1t ,!500, (740)742·2ee0

- CLASSIFIED

n

*·
'*"""·

rrr?s';'MIIllor'·
~

r

~=

r41

I

t~

011 &amp; tllctrlc 1urn10111 In- .
cludlng hi lfflcloncy heat Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tle
mp l!'ltoma. We carry a Straw y.., 'Round Dellve
mplele line ol Mobile
Voiurne Discount Ava i.Z
t:Nr'#s&amp; acceaaorlea. bla.
Horl18ge
Ferm.
304 7 5724
1:00LING
5'
pr 1-..72.sll87
Sl!m &amp;

CaUII Cedlf, 0H

(7:~~~~~

FFRnuzmt

'EW

AND USED STEEL
Beamo, Pipe Rebar
for Concreto, Angle, Chan""· Flal lllr, Steel Gradng
for Drains, Drivewaye &amp;
f"allcwoys. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
•Ia Open Monday, Tueaday,
ro'edneaday &amp; Fnctay, Bam·
J :30prn. Closed Thuraday,
6aturday
&amp;
Sunday.
f140J448-7300

l\egt,ter
(304) 675-1333

riO

JI

FOR SALE

1

~ Hidontlll Homo DwMno

~:c":.~'=d::~~

1985 Nissan Sentra Wagon.

Jnd

HOW I.Q WRITE AN AQ_

0

1"
,.

r
L-------'
I'ERsoNAIB

0

HaPWANm&gt;

11"
..

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts, wood
items. Material provided.
To $480+ wk.
FreS Information pkg. 24 Hr.
1-801-.428-4750

I

w•

i

:;;~;--,

~,___

ARE YOU LOOKING TO

WCOOMR~UATJE~OPMUET?ITOWWONRAK

~--,.1

$251$1 5 per hour. PTIFT 1•
80().686-8614 Or see o.ur
w e ~ s I I e
succeed2nctles.com
ATTN: Pomeroy
Postal positions. Clerits/carrierslsortero. No exp. re·
qulrod Benefits For exam
salary .and tastl~g Informs-'
tion call (630)393-3032 ext.
7151, 6am-8pm 7 days

...,
•
LOST 2-15-02 at Huntington Museum Long ' Navy
Wo~ens
coat.
Wool
wiLeather gloves.
call
(304)743-5520
:_...:.________
LOST- 3 year old male
Golden ·Retriever, friendly.
Galii a1 Lawrence r1ne. Ae·
ward. Call · (740)886-6486
leave message.
Lost: Black Angus heifer in
East Letart area . 740·247·
3838

r.
__

r

D0

yOU

I

earn•a
GALL~ .
$500
·
Sign•
Items from A to Z. Baby
Clothes, Beanie Babies,
On bonus?
6110 mile on Bulaville Pike,
YARD SALE·

Tum right on Unwood Drive

We are paying
at $soo's•' gn•on
bonus to

3 family yard sale. Lots ol
•
clothes and other Items . · •
Apnl2, 3, 4111 on 42159 En· . IDdiVldUaJS
I.rp.."se Road ' Pomeroy ·
8am·4pm
-

r

:~'!!_"!!!!_

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

I in working for

R'•k ~--·n Aucllon COm·
pany, full lime aucttonHr,
compltlt o•cllon servlco.
Llctnltd tBB,Ohlo &amp; Will
Vlrvlnla, 304·773-1781 Or
304·773·5447.

"' ,.._,..,.

r

WhO

are i nt erested

WANnD

a professional
te1emarketlno
...,
COmpany,

Call
1• 877' •
· 3•6247
46

l7

:i:olld Wood Clroular Dining
f8ble and 4 chairs, $65.
401992 . 7574·

r

11

McClure's Restaurant now
htring ·an 3 locations, full or
part-time, pick up application allocation &amp; bring back
between
9:30am
&amp;
10:008m, Monday thru Satuf&lt;lay,
,
No Gl~mlcks,
hnes, do~ens 0 compan es are 00 •
lng for ~pie like you, who
are senous abOut working
fro":! home. For more Infermation send $5.00 a Sell
addrese envelope to: Opport unities Gutc;te AA 1 PO
Box 823 Ga.lhpolis Fe,rry,
WV 25515
.
Office
Manager/Malnte·
W ~
nance 0 •1\Br
H Interested ,write J-2-Y-35
W
. ater Association, Inc.
PO Box 485 Pt. Pleasant
WV 25550 a1 once Include
.
your maillnn address
and
•
te~ number. An appli·
PVfo''"""'"'
cation tonn will be maned to
you by retum mail.
Board Of Directors

r;o

1

}lFuWANnD

Operating FamMy Type Reataurant. Tum Key, Ready to
Go. Includes Real Estate,
all equlpment and Inventory.
A great opportunity to Own
Your Own Business. Homestead Bend, Broker. 304682-2405 or 304-882~2447
Sta y
B I
1i
rt
our us ness oday... Prime Shopping Center Space Available At AfURGENTLY
NEEDED- fordable Rata. Spring Valley
plasma donors, earn $50 to Plaza, Call740·446-0101 .
$80 per week for 2 or 3
hours weekly, Can Bio Life
MONEY
Plasma Service, 740-592TO l..oAN
.1
6651.
Wanted· Full Time MainteLOIIn of All
.Skill I Electric8 I
"'peo Avallablll
nance.
s n
•
.,
Plumbing, Air Condhloning
No fees, all Credit
Helpful. Apply In Person,
accepted
Holiday Inn-Gallipolis.
Call Toll Free
1-866-294·1379
11411
BusiNEss

2 homn on one lot In Mk:l·
dleport, $59,500. Seen by
appointment only, (740}992·
6154

Pa•Hime Secretarj needed,.
approll:lmately 20/hrs per
week, with availability to
wver whole days as needed. Duties Include answering phones, copying, and
light typing. High SchOOl Dl·
ploma required. Send resume to CLA 554 c/o 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis OH
45631

For . . . by owner: Nice bilevel l1omo on 1 acre near
Chatter. Three bedroom,
two ba~s. one-car garage,
family room with fireplace,
sun room. New central heat·
ing &amp; 8lc system. One mi·
nute orr Route 7, but still prlvate. (740)985-3981

j

I'

For sale or !ease with option
to buy: 4 bedroom, large
kitchen, 1 1/2 baths,
F.A.N.O. heat-central air,
river Ylew from large front
h I se
farences &amp;
pore • ea
re
deposit, no petS. 740-992•
9012
·

Ha~~
.HWVouse3bFor Saloln
••••••
1
a

""'· - - -

Problems Paying BHts Call
Toll Free 1-866-699-3084.
we can Help. AJ typeS o1
Galllpolll C1reer ColltQI loans. Good, Bad, No Creel·
(Careers Close To Horne) ~ Bankruplcy WelcOme
Help Wanted: COOK
CaM Todayl7-7, ~
.
Gallla County Council on
· HI00·214.Q452,
~
Aging Ia taking applications
Rog f90.05·1274B.
SEavJcEs
for a cook! nutrition aid. This176
~-.
position Is full time. Ell:peri-1
M:rsiEu.ANF.:.o
ence in large quantity cookGet Cash Fastll $100-$500.
i.ng preferred. Applications
Easy Qualifications. Never
are available at the Senior Disney Beach vacation. 6 Lea~e Ho":Jel Funds DepoeResource Center located at nights great hotel sacrifice ited.Check1ng Accounl NelCt
1167 Slale Route 160. Se• lor S199•00 81 4-523•8792
Day. Loana By COunty Bank
Geneie Plantz for an appll- .
of Rehoboth Beach, DE
catio~ and copy of the job ' Doing spring cleaning? Do- Member FD1CJEOL
d
r
bl
It
t 1· 800•397· 1908
escnp IOn.
nate reusa •
ems o
·
GCCOA Is an equal oppor- ReUse Industries! N. CoTURNED DOWN ON
tunlty employer.
lumbus Rd .. Athena. High· SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Inside Sales Power Equip- ~:Jo 50, Alba':V. 740,.:698No Fee Unless We Winl
ment .Must. be High School
1..aea·582-3345
graduate. Some sales e~epe- Lose up to 40 lbs. in 2
rience preferred, but not months, all natural, Or. recnecessary. Apply in person ommended,
1-888-939- lll'l'lr""_":'!'_ _ __,
at Jividen's Power Equip· 3748.
. '
r10
HOMIS
ment, 305 Upper River
FOR SALE
a~ll"ii\.lr

I

j

WANI'ED
To Do

Road. Gallipolis.
1110
IWANTEDI
•
Serious People To Work

~r:HomeCall1·888·6 1 6·
www.SimpleCashBiz.com ·
Budget Inn, 260 Jackson
Pika, Gallipolis, ia now tak·
lng applica11ons lor Housekeeping &amp; desk clerks. Apply within. No phone calls
please.

I
.

A&amp;EConstructlon
remodeling, roofing, bath
rooms, drywall, Interior
painting, trim doora, wlh·
dowa. Free Estimates.
(304)875 7738
•
All Makea Lewn Mowera
and Outdoor Power Equi~
"
men! Repaired. Free P~kup
and dellvary available. Call
Mike (740)448-7804.

==::=:=.:;.:c:':'::::::::":-:·--

~:~:t

1

:

°Ch~::~~

"'/'tr.

00

~ld: ~~:~~ ~i:~~~:o~~~~ ~n~f ~~a~:~:· &amp;, 1':':~

r'• ,.,__

°

2 BA, 2 Bath with elCpando.
144 Mitchell Ad, Gallipolis.
Total Eleclrlc, $300 deposit,
$3501mo, Water and trash
:...pa_ld_. .:..(7_40..:)_446_-o_11_B__
Beautiful River View ideal
For 1 Or 2 People, Referencea, Deposit, No Pets, Foo·
ter Trailer Park, 740-441·
0181 .

~

I

OtrotmoorY .

~ark lt~=·l r/i't,.~~

i'

i
I

watar a avollobll
Portor
araa.
•13,881, Call (740)4olll·
4114 from 1-1 "'(74DJ44&amp;3248al1or lf&gt;m.
Loto tor 1111• (11 0.177
aora• 114,000 &amp; (l/, 0.488
ac;,.. )1!,000. Aln no Rd,
Port,ar am, flat a ready to
111 up on. AEP olootrlo,
oontral oawogo oyllam, I
wa1tr
avallabla.
Call
(7401,........1• M·~l I·B "'
coli (740)4olll·3248 aHor
epm
.;;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _
Property lor 1111 on S1ott
~
~- Oh
nt. 143
"~••roy
lo. lllr1o
oua
Callo
only. (:104)882·
2888

::rt= ..!
•

Russ

11

Introducing HAPPY JACK
. FLEXENHANCE: restore;
mobility and strength in
dogs &amp; cats suffering with
arthritis, bone &amp; Joint ail·
ments. Contains blb.lr
Natura'• 1111 rtMIIent.
~hewable; Liver flavored.
I!&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
740-992-21~4. (www.happyjackinc.com)

In Middleport Dolla, ~ ware, Aladdin mantels, and., 1
more. (740)992.0298
"

Ml!01JANDJUl

~

MFRaiAI'IJR

1·

L,~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOii...,.

.'

R&amp;u.EsrAm
WAN111D

utll. paid lor oldarty lnd

eoo.a37-HII.

------------~.::5p~m~·------~--~

aeoo.

'

.j .

lng
4011 lfttr 1prn oilllodl)'i, ,
•'""'-on Wlllllndo
~

•

~O!M:Iii£~.1! In~~~·

11!1. 1708.

4011, LDw ~"":'*!II
1 0:::..., __
aq"":::r,. 111IMt.

~- ~•· ,._.
1 lledfOOII! conaot, No
.
• ~ In Cllr ol
Pe11,
In ' GlllHpaHo. Polrtl
• lnqulrli II
(740)441-24811
(304117+0101

WOLI'PTAIIMII-

~

1111111

Cll'ftllllr 1

'
•r

CattiiDfl ,\,
11-711-4'1~ ·"

-·--

.
1991' Chevy 4x4, Silverado
ahOn wheel bass, 1500 aer·
las. 350 5sp. lift kit. Oependable. $7,300 (304)875:.13::1~0_ _ _ _ ___

1993 .ford E•ploror XLT.
4114. (3041675: 1170
1999 F-450 F0rtl 4 4 ·
4 door crew cab Dlo:.l·
'
'
6·opted, manual. 7.000
~===·-.....,---- mAll. oUCker.prlce, $31,000
MillOy Ferguoon 382, 55 wllh 911. Hal bed, aloo hao
hp, 717 hr.. llko new, 1011. hydraulic dump bed,
S15,800,(740)986-3943
aluminum lool boxoa. Will
.;._.;._,.c.._,;__ _ _ _ eoll lor $28,000 lor all. Call
Tlme lor Frool Sttdlng Pu· Hollie Marcum (740)388·
8834
lure and Hay Fltldl.
ATV Broodcaot Slldoro. 12 :::-:-:-::::--::-:-:-:-;-:;:llol1, High Ouoll1y, Fila moll 2001 Chevy Tracker 4x4; V·
AT)Io, S~.
6, 7,500 m1111. Whitt with ·
Jim's Farm Equipment Inc. Sltver bord.r. Transfer of
(740)446·2484
Equity a1 $412 . per month
or atll $22.000. Day
11111"-'"!'!1~...,.--., !304)875·8638
Evening
ANI'EDBuv
1 304)675-6737
10
11194 F·150 XLT, EX!. Cab,
4x4, Sharp Truck. 1,01 ol Ex·
to buy:' Uoed Moblla lraa, One Owner, High
Horne. CIH (740)448-0t75 Milos, $4500. (740)387·
304)87HOID
7060

0111 (740~

• .. MI., 1lo - - · """"
ll'lllev Mtmoll' Clll!ltrltoo
-'be I Millin. (7~
1 -3 lledrooma l'oioolmd tlot80-. t1octlmcl 7..0. - . laotvt n
~·
.,
Hornoi From t1H/Mo., i'll tt2.J 117
•
.,
Down, 30 Yaort II 8.1'11
•
Afllltllallla•Dom-tl,.

100%

naturaVGuaranteed.

740• 992• 7036

......... .....__....._ __

IHift.ll•....-..~~~o~.~~n

t....---l.lllllolilll.i/iiil.l
-

·

,

. BANKRUP'[CY
Clll relieve a debtor of fiiiiJICial oblicllio It'd
~m~~ae a fair distribution of aueu unonc
creditors. A penon going dwouJh bankruptcy

may retain certain property, known u
"exempt" property, for his or her personal use.
This may iacluile a car, a house, clolhcs, and '
hquseholtl goods. You should direct any
questions regarding banlaup!Cy 10 an adorrtey
before proceeding. For infonnllion regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
WDIIam Slfnntk, AUomey
(740) 592.5025
Atlae111

,.,..

Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
ton1, limited
area, call for
details. Cell:

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

740-667·0363

441 Beech St • Mulillcuort

140·992·9158

for
per month

Equal Housing Opp&lt;inunily

u~lliii&amp;UU\.

I

111194 Rod, F•250, 4K4,
130,000 mi!M. $7,000 flnn.
(740)368·ib65

4-H Club llmba. IH~illtnt 1117 Chevy TI'IICktt'. COnv,

~ t118. - · lhOW· 8 IPifd, •WD., 74k m"".
11!D, -*"i. -.g In- Exoollanl. IUOO. (304)876-

coUitil; 740-NI-1104
.

11161

(1 0'110' fio10'11201

WERRY'S
WITILE ONES
Now accepting

• Room AddHiona &amp;
Rernodallng
• New G.ragea
··Electrical I Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding II Pelnllng
• PMio end Porch Decks
Free Estimates

Ftw F..tl...ift • WVI3191J

33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Owner
Gene Arms

992.;e975
or email@

992-3174

992·6215

pd I tnoW13

TFN

740-Mtl-2217

children
Day, evening,
and weekend
care available

• Service You
Can Count On"

. V. C. YOUNG Ill

Racine, Ohio
45771

v.wny10chgonbba.com

P/8

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

111!~ .fii.!!J fll!!l tll.!!l rl!!l 1i!!J I.'•.
/[A J.D. CONSTRUCTION

i.il!•l

CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Onio 45771

740-985-3948

CONCRETf./BLOCK/BRICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil

Crete
Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W.V

wv 11031?12

....

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.
•

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

" Specializing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"

.a,.

!f!i.•J Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete 1fi1'1;
Roofs &amp; Siding

COmmercial &amp; Residential

(740) 992·3987
Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean

11fA
1.11.'!

TFN

~~~·~.M':..i!P&lt;

·!ii.!!J fl!.l.!i W!•J.W.•.•J li]_n! fi!"' til" '

lines, site work,
driveways, ponds

{Insured)
Free Estimates

7 40-992·3985

fiELDS

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

PLUMBING
405 5th Street
Haven, WV
•Residential
•Commercial
,&gt;

New

e;t (304)0
882·2343
WY Lie 1025243

,_,.

35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 437iO
• 4-H feed for lambs, hogs, slee~s. dickens and
rabbits.
• Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets
• Full Line.of Bulk Garden Seeds
• Fertilizer Spc1:ilically Designed for Garden Crops
• New Fertilizer Buggies
• All buggies have been pattern tested to meel
Agronomy As sociation Slandards
TFN

BISSELL

Pomeroy Eagles
BIDG02171
Euery Thursday
6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garages

Early birds start
6:30
Progresslue top One

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

COMMERCIAlond RESIDENJW
FREE ESTIMATES

Livestock

740-992-7599

Thursdays
750 Eas1 S1a1e Strce1 Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
"We sell Che
for Jess"

s

High&amp; Dey
Self-Storage

Household Goods

33795 Hilnd RJ.

Bryan Reavaa
New Homes, Room Additions,
.Garagea, Pole Bulldlng1, Roofs,
Sldlli.g, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall

&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-992-5232

740·742-3411

D

·ucAVATINC
•Hiullng •Umeetone
oGravet • S1nd •Topaoll
•Fill Dirt •Mulch

(740) 992·3470

(7il0) 1187-3318

AltMakit
&amp; Modalo

(800) 1153-3110

H£NDR/X

Bryont Equip.

Hei11ng &amp; Cooling

10 Yr. Porta &amp;

F'"E1Uml111

24·HR.

Labor Worramy

HEATING

SERVICE
"One Price,

COOLING

Anytime.

All the Time."

PLUMBING
ELECTRICAL
APPLIANCES
RESTAU~ANT

COMMERCIAL!
RESIDENTIAL

EQUIPMENT

Classifieds

It's all here.
992-2155

4!1&amp;'01

WtSarvlct

AEFAIGEAATlON

The Daily

TFN

PD711l1Y!J, Ohio

WICK'S
KAVLJNCand

Instructional

Progressive
Couerall on Sundays

Sunset Home
Construction

~~~

w.

• --

Dmu; • GarqtS

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
SERVICE ·Sanitation

basements/footers,

Employment

Rooft1111• R"'"" Addllloas
Skll1111• Pole lams

YOUNG'S

29670 Bashan Road

(Syracuse. Ohio)
Bulldozing,
Trackhoe/Backhoe,
land clearing, Septic
tank, dilching, water

(740) 992-6419 • TOO #1-800-750-0750

97 Beech St.
c-.
......
New Homes • RtiiiOdtlin&amp;
middleport, OH
(740) 992-3194
992·6635 '

Hill's Self
Storage

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION

Office Hours:
Tues &amp; Thurs. Noon - 5 pm

"QIUility Home
Improvements"

~~-.111':\An.Ai':o.k:..

Advertise .A
rli i.:
in this space
525

----

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

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

Pomeroy, 01'1~
1

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

JERRY'S USED
ComPUTERS
Free Estimates

TfN

.----------------,

LIME· DEPOYIIIi
STONE All Makes Tracior &amp;

2070 St. Rt. 124

il

•

I Lost 27lb.
in 32 dayS.

(740)388-8834
Gravely wllh elaclrlc slart,
bulh hog, plow, tiller, aock·
fly new .b4Hery, $900. OBO.
ltave message
304·576-3238. •

·,'",

114 fool Tll-ludt tralltr,

1

99 Maaaey Ferguson 4243
(85 Horse) 70 houra. 4WO.
Cab hoot &amp; air AMIFM
cuiene aterto. F'ront tires
12.4-24, rear urea 18.4-30.
$30,000. Call Hollla Mtm;um

::'."&amp;..rtn' ==~ ~

"
i 'T""!'

~For Uo11ngo,IOI).3t .. -::_-:--_::-p--u-:~-rant-.=

1983 Chevy Truck LWB. 314
Ton, 4x4, New tires, Exhaust, brakes, Carburetor.
$3200. (304)875·6693 after

FARM

=:.

~ t'J'~~:~.th,

8)1p Snapper lawn tiller,
rear lint. 1 anachment, paid
over $1500. will Hll for
$595.00 firm 304-675-4237

•r:,,or--~---.,

teD.

Jim, (74D)tt2.3187
..
Wlnlld: Individual wanla Twin ••-- - - · _..._
n·-· '""'" __,.,...
land 1-1 aoree. Call
lng applleliiOnl 1or
(740~4411-3170 mora lOreago polot II o1gh1.
1br. Hud Su-lCI apLtll

"--;,
· -EQmMFNriliilliiiiiiiiiiio_.l
~

1979 Chevro18t 1/2 lon, four
wheat drive, 91,000 actual
miles, new body parts and
paint Job. Asking ss.soo.
Call Mike Wells between
9:00am
lo
2:00pm.
(740)441.0793

I \I(\ I ' I 1'1 '1 II ..,
8. I I\ I ..,II H h

b01h

Jnd nd
epe ent
D'ill tri'but or

$29.99 ea. rm.
Captain Steamer Carpet Cleanei
1-888·338-7847

4-V\1ls

Famn. phone(740~9442

sr~ntl~na!:'~•
lion. (304)17&amp;-7791

r-------,
HERBALIFE

2 Avg. Size Rooms Cleaned

i

:ry

992-5479

7

Tree Service

Seniors, disabled; handicapped
Range, refrigerator, NC, on-site
laundry, community room,
24 hour maintenance provided.
Call or Come By Our Office
Located At

Authorized Agent

'-----=~

JONES'

Taking Applications For
1 Bedroom Apartment

Jeff Warner Ins.

740-992·1671
122/TFN

.' I

Water's Edge of Syracuse

Cellular

in;

Cranioea:nl,
reflcxoloJY. Myofucial
ond Yos• Therapy 0111
Certificates Avai lable
$30-45 minutes
S4.S • 1S minutes

FREE ESTIMATES

Or leave name
and number

CRESS GREENS. You cut 1997 F·150 Extended Cab.
$6.00 per buahel, Already Excellent Condition. $8995.
CUI $12.00 per buahal. OBO. 304-675-4994
Available Now through
March. Chanee McKean
VAN'! &amp;

For Salt Pride Brand Sooot•

11IUAPUT
·

1991 . Chevy Z71, 4x4, axcettent condition, new 350
cl. engine, (740)992·6027
after 4pm.
-,9-9-1-'-='G,-M"C-.,.So_n_o_m_a-E~xl
Cab, Topper, 4K4, 134K
miles, Auto, AC, TIC, Lola
New, Very Clean, Excellent
Truck, $4500 . (740)441·

I

peo

Carrier, $100. Relrigerator, .
$50. (740)387·0850 or•·
(740)367-7272.
..
.•
2 Naacar llckela for Coca,
Cola 800 Lowoo ·Motor
SI&gt;Hdway,
May
21:
(14D)II5e-1304.

U CP.NSF.D MASSAGE

10 Yoean Experieoce

(740) 591-2173

00 1 3

nd •D
1
II&amp;
•
•
poall Floqulred. (740)4olll· FIN Goo F u - and Air :
11 18
Condl1lorlor ElllmaiN. Cll
Fumlahad E111olenoy AH (7~.0308 or 1·800·..
u11111111 Paid, downilalra, ~~ ~ don~ 01~
1211/monlh. 818 Sooond
.,
Avo. (74Dj44W941
CliE Hllvy Duly WUha,j:
Clraclouo living. 1 lnd 2 Gu Dryar. Now CondHion:';
bedroom ljlll'tmtnll 11 VII· 1880. Crollaman 14.1 li.P•.
11go Minor lnd Fllvtroldt 4ft' out, ~lzmower, t700: •
Apanmtn1e In Mlddlo~n (:104)871.
.. '
F
•• 71 .•••• ~. 11 • ...:
rom ........ "" Galllpollo, Oni!l a Plo1orlll.
882 •50114• !qull Houalng Hillary 1780·1890, t31~

I:=.
7;.\
•

740-742·3020

Miniature Poodles In time .:.::-:--:::---:-:=-::-:-::~
for Easier. 2 AKC, 1 not. 1992 For&lt;! 350, 7.3 dleoel,
(740)379-2639
crow cab, dually, lull size
bed, black &amp; sllvtr. conturi·
F'Rurrs &amp;
on package, 82,000 mllos.
"'1,--ViiEGiiiiETiiii~Biillliiiiii_.l mint condition, 304·773.,
5186, (740)992-3102

2 Accor&lt;llona. Great Condl·· ·
tlon, $150 each: Uaad A•''
lrigerator, $50; sofa aleeper,.
$20. {740)388-9J6S
,.~
·•,
2 Flahlng Beata, 14' and.•
12', $300. Car Luggage

Opponunllllt.
TtltVtelon : Cablntt, O.k;.
Now 2 lladroorn with Wllho
Ga"* Puth Plow,
1-45 (740)aY.111at
••
tr and d~r -up. Cloat
·
to.......,..
(7•''"1~'117
Q
bb'
·
,_.,._ -,.... ~
IU t Plan.. Tuning l"
Ropalro. Probloma? ~HCf ;
Ntw, 1 BR Townhouea, TUI!ICI? Clll Tho P'tlno D«r
. Ntar HoHr, CIA, Eoonoml• 710 441 4aa•
• •
~~
lndlptttdtrt1 Htrlldlt Dlto.
.
1rlbutor, Coli '"' PtcciYo1 Or
1740J441-HI7 .
Opponunlly. (740J441-1112 .
Credit worlhv buyer looking Now Takln\:pplloatlonofor houu1o buy Clollla Ml• 38 Wut 2 Afroom Town•
J!T
oon 01 'Molge 'pluM 0111 hO~N Apor1mtnto, lnoludu
AI!I'IATION MOTOFI8 "

j

I

1979 Dodge 112 Ton PU . 8
cyt., standard. New clutch,
tires, exhaust and carboralor. $2,000. (740)379·2535
-------1962 GMC plck-up, full-size
bed, 89,000 milts, new
paint job, wl'llte spoke
Eleautilul tittle Japanese wheels, alum. toolbox , ask·
Chin pupplas.' tor sale. Very lng $1850, (740)949-2821
. lntelttgenl. Great Company.
$150. Each. (304)675·2906 1985 Dodge Ram, near
show conditlon, contact Oal·
8tter 6pm.
, las Weber: 740.992-3394,

$ue'sSetactableaonthe"T"'~

r

TaiJCKS

AKC Aoglllered Siberian
Husky Pups. 1st Shots and
Wormed. Sire and Dam on
premlses. 41emale $225. 2
male. $200.· AII have beautlfut blue eyes. Great Easter
Glfta. (304)n3-5730

Moore, .
:

-

Kris
Kanlecld

~

r

~~esi2!1~4 ~:.::.~:'..

'.

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Coinpare

448-f

r---------------,

t··

992·2528.
ownar.

I

I

Glrlgel
Complete

~3785.

'
Residential or cCM'f1mercial
wiring, new service or repairs. Master Licehsed ekK:Irtc!an. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000306, 304-67!&gt;-1786.

I'

i

Por·,.,

.I

~
740-2"5-5677.
111118 Harley FXDS Low Rid- .Coli:
ar oonvortlble, red. loll of
chrome, 13,000 rnlloo, lillY- ll!r--'O::..;;;,;.;;;;;;;~
Iced, $11,000.00. 740-742· 10
II&lt;NE
1385
·
2001
Hartay Davidson '
Xlf200 Custom LX Blue,
IASEMENT
1,043 mlleo. $11 ,500.
WATERPROOI'INCI
(3041175·2897
Unconditional llleUmo guar·
anleo. I.Qcal owlorences lur·
llo\15 &amp; MmoRs nltflod. Eetabllahed 1975.
FOR So\u:
COli 24 Hra. (740)
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
12 fool Aluminum flohlng
boat. BOO lb boa11ltllltr, 9 - - - -- -1/2 HP Spor1win Evenrude C&amp;C General Horne Malnl•
mo1or, IWin~ away trailer nonce- Painting, vinyl Bid·
jack, Humm ngblrd Depth lng; carpontry, dooro, ..;nHndqr, $1000. (304)528· dows, balha, mobile homo
5515 9-Spm Ask lor Dabble, repair and more. For free
2 1
:-(7:-40-:)-56--::-_502
_..a-ft.,..er_Bprn
_ _ estlmale call C~t. 740 •992•
6323
87 Bayllner
87 Eacor1 - - ·- - - - - trailer. 50 force outboard Superi"' Home Malnte·
motor, 2 'gas tanks, aid, nance. We do all Repairs on
hurnmi~ bird depth finder, homes. Carpentry, Plumbhas
m cassette player 1ng, E•~-•
-..viWII, Dec"•
...o, 1nside
$2,900. WID trade lor vahl· and .... (740)441.0113
cle . ol
equal
value.
""'-·~
(304)67!&gt;-7845 leave mea~""""'
0
sa......
AU'.KR..f:RA110N

T,if: ·h•: P ~ IN
:~· :t P-:tHING
L· ' ·-

New Homea

~&lt;US Rtl&gt;ulld
et~~=~~
Kill.

.c:::-:;,;_______ ""-tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.r

llllr--:::""".....-.,

uSed Furniture StQre below;
Holiday Inn In Kanauga: ·
MOnday lllno Friday. 10-4. ·
(740}~782. Stop by.
..~
·
•
Used Sola and Chair, $200,,
New Recliner Cha.lra, $160. ~
'Mollohan Fumlture and car- ;:
pet, Clar1&lt; Chapel Rd.,
ler, Ohio. (740)388-0173. &lt;

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~

""-=.;,;;:.::::..:=--

..,.,._,__
Tuppers Plains, 2 beclroom,
.BI.'II~
~
Includes stove &amp; rehigera·
,,
tor, $250 per moolh plua d..
.,
posit/utilities, (740)867-3487 Buy or sell. Riverine Anti- .

Ir

Aoklna

L

llo!H!Jtow
G&lt;x:oi

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$
.
8 0 0 0,

: ;~=m~lted.'n: : :l~: :n a: :N: :o: ~:. red-.: lt?:-(lov.: :- ~,:.r~t!~
T.:O~ ~~ =~
building, gravol driveway, P
Rei

--1!"'-r

=

FOR RENT

I r10

2 Bedroom House, ~th
._
on State Route 7. Refer,
ence Required . Approxi· AppHances: Reconditioned ~·
mately 15 miles South. Washers, Dryers, Ranges, ,
(740)441-1917
Rehigrators, Up To 90 Days
Guaranleedl We Sell New
2 Bedroom tious&lt;lln Galllp- Maytag Appliances, French :'
otis Area. $350/month plus City Maytag, 740-446-7795 . •,
deposit (740}« 1-0 194
,
. ned:~
3 BR House, Slow &amp; Re- For Sale. Racond1tio
frigerator Fumished, s 1so washers, dryers and refrtg-..:
deposit, $325/mo. (740)446- eralors.340Thom7J~~ AppUA• -'
ance
...,NIUn ve9061 .
.
nue, (304)67s-7388.
-•
Charming Historical Home
for rent Apr11 1st. $600Jmo. Good Used Appliances, Re- ,'
Low Utilities. Kitchen Fur- conditioned and Guarannlshed. In town, close to teed. Washers, . Dryers, '1
schools. call (740)256-6433 Ranges, and Refngerators.:.,
"'(740)339-0562.
. Some start at $95. Skaggaj:-:~
A 11
76 VI
St •
·
PP ances,
ne
•• ,
1
Cottag_a lor rent
pe~n (740}446-739B
,.,.
only, br. kitchen, bath. ' - - - ' - - - - - - S1751month +UtilitieS. Ref. Late Model White GE ~
wa.~r
~- &amp; D
Sal $150
Required. (3041675·2495 lmond
'
. -.
Wh1ryer
r1poo1 w-~alter 6pm.
A
·
$75 2 While D
•~ •
·
ryers, ~ ""'
Pit t P
A t s
h
Cali
ft
6p ·
rogram,
en er eac ·
a er
m.,l,)
736 7295
"
Needed, 304·
(740)446-9066
~
MDIIIIE HOMEi Mollohan Carpet, 202 Cllot('
FOR RENT
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. ~·
(740)446·7444 f.87HI30·:
·
9162. Free Eallmalea, Easy
2 bM!room mobile home lor fin&amp;nclhg 90 clays same ai"'
rent, nO pets, (740)992· cash. Vi'eaJ Master Card. ·:
5858
Drive- a·llttla saw alol.

79 14•70
n-n).
• Bayvl"" (wl u•
New Since 97, CIA, Wafer,
Heater, Furnace, Front
Porch Shed and Wooden
Fane&amp;, lots of Remodeting,
Must See,
(304)675·
3008
8 used 'homea priced under
$ 500 11 Nlkld ••• ••n
2
· a
• uuu.__.
New house- finqncing avail- 3958.
able to qualified buyers. 0% New Doublewlde on 1-5
down. 1600 sq ft, 2 1/2
bath, 3 Bedrooms, custom acres. (740}446·3384·
oak trim &amp; cabinets, gas No Credhl Bad eraditl 1st
II replace, large kitchen/din· Tlme Home buyers/ FAS
ing. 2 1/2 car garage on 1 Loans/ Government FHA
112 acres. $119,900. Porter Loans
Available.
Call
area . (740)448-4514 till5pm ( 401446 3218
or (740}448-3248 after 6pm :,7,.....:__
• -~
· --::-::Want a new hOme? Own
Partially Remodeled home, your own land? We dol Call
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full (740)446-3384 for your new
Basement, Large Unattach- home today! Trade ina weted 2 car garage. 127 Kine- coma
on Or., $60,000. (740)4410465
We have approximately 10
used homes lor under
~~::~· ~:!or:~h~~ $2 000 call1~800-837~3238

r

Hotali

rooms, 3 full baths. In· lor' Info:
116 South Park Drive 2 groun&lt;j pool. Decks. Oodles
BtrsiNm
FOR RENT
.
Story, with basement, front of extras. You have to ~ It
AND BUILDINGS
h
bll
1 d k to appreciate. Below ap~~Y~ rea~rou·n~ve p~: pralaal. A bargain a.t
1 and 2 bedroom aparta
$162,0001 (740)448-3139
Qftloe building In Miners· menta, furnished and unfur·
13041675 1145
ville, 600 sq. H. , ale, cov- nished, security deposit reRanch Style 3 Bedroom. 1 ered par1&lt;1ng, ceiling lan, qulred,. no pats, 740·992·
Bath, Large LR, OR, Kitch- $300/mo 614-876 _1661
2218.
en, CIA. 3 Car Garage, 3
.,
.
Acres. $75,000. (740)379•'
L&lt;Yrs &amp;
11 and 2 Bedroom Apia for
~827
ACREAGE
rent to1artlng al $289/month
(740)441.0194
MOBUE HOMEi
FOR SALE
a - • •· 33475 Bailey Run BEAUTIFUL
APART·
L~------~,.1. Rd.. off Ohio 124 , 112 mile MENTS AT BUDGET PR~
..,
·
West of Route 7, water &amp; CES AT JACKSON El14K70 82 COmmodore mo- septic already In, $14,900, TATES, 52 Weatwood Drive
bll
hO
3 bedroom
f
$~7 $383· Walk to
e
me,
• excellent building site, rom •• to
$8,500. 74tl-985-42B2
(937'""""'258
ehop &amp; movlea. Clll 740·
~r;nry
446 2568 E
I H
11"1
1973 12x53 all electric, 2 - - - - - - - •
. qua
OUI 0
bedroom n\oblle hOme for 90 acres ol good huntlrig Opportunity.
aile, ready lo move. land, 51000Jacra. au wei Chrlety'a Family Living,
1800.00. ~·n3·9151
Included . 740·949-2224
33140 N~ Uma Rd A I
~
'
u•
II d Ohio
740-742"7403
COunlry homoo, nlco loll, n •
• ·
•
·
JUII getting otartad? fat located on .Rt 33 - H n ~~men~rne.;:f;:'~r
1 ,.
limo hOmabuyara? No cred· Pomeroy/Aihono. Call741). ran 1·
ma
II? Coli (74D)-70 lor m·21171or datallo.
Ironia available lor luoo.
;;,;,;,;;,.,;,_,;,....;.;,;;;=._ _ Vaoancloo now.

ext • 1841

fl~ly

r'

1997 Brigadier 14x80 3br 2
full bath, CA!Heat. appllan·
cBS. · Immaculate. Appointments only. (304)675..&amp;802
-------1998 Aeetwood 16x80 3BR
2 balll. Exe8118m COndition
$18,000 (740)446·5552
2000 Dutch Moblte Home
bedroom , 2 full bath,
3
IYVl'hes, Decks. Very nice
h-o·m-e 161C80 $34 000 or
.
,
someone Interested In tak~
ing over loan. On nlce rented lot, at Old Tow~ MobHe
Home Park. Moving Need to
Sell lor Pay Off. (304}6754135
39•27 1994 Falnnonl Dou·
"'
btewida, 2BA, 2 Bath, Mull
move.
(740)256·8128,
(740)258·1597

·
car8224
gar go.
$25· 000 r.(304)882
'
•
Land
home packages.
Landi H(Jt'l'tQi Land improvernenl8 In one low payment.
Loan oftlcers on hand 7
days a week. (740)446·
3093

i

Computers/Internet Users
Wanted. $1500 mo/PT.
$5000 maiFT
F- Boo
.
klel ..688·""" "288 All of your home repairs, ad·~
~~
dll
&amp; emod 11
24h
24hr. Recording orvlsll
tons
r
eng.
r
www.waalthlsyours.com
emergency Hrv~e. senior
cltlzena dlacount. 22yra.
DRIVERS WANTED·Now eKp. (304)576·2065
laking appllcallona lor Truck
D"vlng ~nlon. 2 years ex· Certified Teacher. Will TutOr
perlence·, Haz-Mat and K• 12· Nta"
..y all aubjecla
Tank ondmoment roqulrad. and beginning 11udy, organ·
Call (304) 653.4213 lor an lzallonal, and IHI taking
application and ~01110111 . oklllo ao wen. Call Kelly 11
Ralph H. Buma &amp; n, Inc. (740)448-81181

''

r

.=

6

..__.

r

tvanted: Dish Network Sya- V8, auto, A/C, 1 owner, .
ttm, call enytlme, (7401949- $4,300; 1992 Toyoll Paseo,
33t5
sunroof, /lJC, CD, $2 ,300:
1992 Nlssan Stanze. $1.250
Wa!Orilne Special: 314 200 1969 Dynasty. $1000, 1993
PSI $2~ .00 Per 100; 1• 200 Sundance, 2 door. auto,
PSI $35 .00 Per 100: All $1495. 740-256·6012
Brass C&lt;lmpretSion Fillings
In Stock.
1995 Oo&lt;!go Splrll, good
RON EVANS ENTERPRIII- condition, $2250.00, 108K
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-800- (740)949-3228.
537-9528
1996 Honda Civic LX, Auto,
Wood DlneHe Set, $200. Air, Cruise, PW, POL, 4
Color TV, $50 . Full· Size Door, Black, $8500 OBO.
MaHress, $50 . (740)446· (740)388-9876
9742
1999 cavalier 48,000 miles.
BUIUliNG
4dr., Auto, Air. $6,500 .
~
SUi'PuEs
. OBO. 304-675·4383
·-..,jiiiioiiiiit-· · 2002 Pontiac Grand Am.
Block, brick, sewer plpas, 4dr., $18,000. (304)875·
windows, lintels, etc. Oaude .:..61.:..2_1--,----Winters, Rio Grande, OH 85 Olds Tioronado. 86 K.
Call 74().245·5121 .
Good Work Car, $450.
(740)379-2111
__
95 Cavalier LS, 4 Cyl, amlfm
CID, air, good tires, good
7 Adorable Puppi8s. Mother condition, $4,000, (740)992·
Dalmatian, . Father Black 2077
,Lab. Both on premises.
97 Lincoln
Great with children. Make a black,
Contlnenlal,
59K miles,
good congood addition to any Easter dition, $1 4K, daytime numBasket. Had first shots and ba&lt;, (740)446-6899
wormed, Ready to go
03128102
$50
each ::-_..--.....,----:-:
(740)256-1058
Buy here pay here. 94
AKC ~aglatered Mln'pln Dodge Splrll, 97K, $500
PUppies. 1 Black and Tan down, many more. 740742 2 3 70
Mell, 1 Chocolate Malo, !111"'••~~---.....,
Shota &amp; Wonned. 7 weeks
old, $300. (304)273-9558,
FOR SALE
·
(304)532·0312.
~
•

.,

IF
~ I eo
I M~s~ I ~
~
·~_.iiiliiiii...... ~
10

Pul your PC to wol1&lt;. Stay
l;·r:y
TO BuY
homo
Make
Monoy. Counlry Homo. Non·Smok·
ommonl lllnk Finance Ohly
~
Moblla. $875. (304)882·
AI O.kwood In Balboure1 • 8 0 0 • 6 0 1 • 1 8 4 3 or,
3880
ville, WI/ 304-731- 3409 .
Aboolulo Top ' Della"
Joblhllpay.aom
Sl~ar, Clold Colno, Prool·
R~lonlal
Goorgoa Portable Sawmill
Moblta Horne &amp; Lat. Boalo
aoll, Dllmondo.
Clold
Full•llmo Rooopllonlll PQII· don~ haul your logo lo lha
Meadow Road Galllpollo
Ringo,
U.S. Curroncy,·'
lion avallallloln Rio Clrondo mill Julloaii304·8TB·111!7.
Ferry. LOit of Extrll .
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 181 Soc· ·
Oflloa. High ·School Clrodu· M 1 1 nd H 11
Cl
(304)87f5.311a
ond Avonuo, Golllpolla, 740·
alo roqulrad. Qna - r IX•
ov ng
au ng: tan
4olll 2842
•Du1 Bulldlngo, IIINmonll
Moving out ol 11111. Nttd to
•
·
Experltnoad oarpenltr and porianoo pralorrod. Mua1 Glragtt, Elta111, Truh,
aall lovaly mobllt home.
l \ 11 '11. \\ 11 '\ l
'·lok • • .a~·-·~
·
14x70, AlrtadY 10 ott up on
rooltr noodod. 740·378· have ablllly to hondta mul11· Elo. .Odd Joba. Call •
2 810ry ~ • ~ ~~·· • nk&gt;t lOIII 1121 Grean Ttr·
-.. t ll ' l• I '
1~8
llno tolopnont lyllom, and (740)441·71().1
::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
·
ba able to oornmunloato tl·
LR, DR, Kllohan, 2·1 a raot Mobllt Homo Park.
Moln1enanoe lmployH:. factlvtly with oldonr popul• Top 1o aonom Cleaning lllth, CIA, Gao hoot, Haa now unique aiding, naw
llr.IJ'WANnD
Overall Malnlllllnot ol152 lion and genera publlo. sarvloa, prolaNional, real· Family Rm/FP. BaHmon1 1 underpinning, 3 'If· heal
"'-!""..
unlll and 11111. Mull hava Ability 10 operoto a oomput· danHal, cftlct oltanlng 11 4-oar Clarago, Mt. Vtmo• pump and A/C. Naw llack
:
llrct1Q oomputtr lkllla; mutt tr and Olhor cHico oqulpo an , affortlabla
prlco. Avenue. Call (004)171-2840 Door and llonn door. Hll
AVONI All Artatl
u or bt ablt 10 wor1&lt; lndtpend· mont holplul. 17.18/hr. pluo 17;.6)88a 2878 or (740)88a
11111. Shin- •-·~
onuy In artao o1 reoldonllal, vacation, olck, and --·nal
•
• 3 Bedroom on Roulo 2, houat guHore, awn 1ngo,
•-· ~ v~ 381
("'•)•7•
••••
·
-raocUieal, plumbing, carpon· lllvt; hoallh, danlaland
, . o ••,
..
·~
~ building • Front871·1428. ., -·~
t
alnllng, hHIIn(l' rolrig· olon lnouranco avallabla. Will prtllure waoh hOuMa
with matal oovor and Quail"'
.,11
appllanco 1 "
tralloro, and daokl. Cali 3 llldroom, 1 bath In Ra· daok. 2 llldroome v.11h 21ull
••
r par D11dllno lor oppllcollon lo •• 1•• 231 aok lor Ron or oint. Convanltn1 '-lion llllhrooma. -Lata ol ·olorago,
Ill." I
ona...,.n1
and 111
rlt; muol ba IX· Aprll1, 2002.
•
$38 500 00 740-948-3221
11
11
1 ludrn1
PoroonnoiiN
porlanoed
ohlclo/ lawn/
111vo m1110go.
•
· •
, ~~~h~~.;.~&amp;m: ch~~
Our average 11111 prol* onow oqulpmt Nl kllp:
Submit reeumtand
Will work. lor 8-4.00/hr, 110 3 bedroom, In Middle~, 11 oull (74D)44II-8528
tlonal wllh 1+ yaar'aiXpen· mua1 ba willing 10 takt
•
rolaranc1110:
odd Joba. Will olean out oall Tom Andaroon aftor
;~~~~~~••~o~h.: ~~r~d '':1'~."~1~P~~Y~~ Are~~~R~~~a~
bulldlngolor ''"· (740)88a· epm, (740)882·3348. .
New 2002 14 wldo, o~
potonllll lor an oxfr"""y muol havoa valid Ohio driv·
8314, 1·740·180·0141 .
38 Aorta Wi331 11 Ohio ' 788 down &amp; only ' 19·
hlo h 1
Hh 1
Dlo riot • Inc.
Alvar Focllgt, ntlt1 ·10 CitY ~~~ mo.nlh, oall Korona,
.
•
In
40-318 8G48.
lng company m vale you ca on WH per monl · Equal ()pponunlly EmplOyer
orna w
'
'
'
Wa lro tho llfVttl rndo· Porocno without all ol lho
car goraga, Cl1y wator, 1878 8onul1z 2br. W/18xl
pondan11y ownad organlza· above quallfloatlono n11d l'lllplro1ory ThtreploL Full
..........,
- · lnground pool, tan- Covored ~ • dllh-·
lion of OYr lype In tht ro· not apply. Good bonollll. Tlmo PooiHon. Ohio Ll·
nlo ooun, hot tub, . . .ant 11 WID NO. o.,;;ral 11111
glon. Duo to OYr lromon· Applloallono may ba picked con11d RRT/ CAT. Mon·
boal dock, nvor bank lo Niwly '
' Rtmodtlad:
douo IUOOIH, waaro lttk• up 11381 Buck Rldgt Road, day·
Friday,
8:00am·
INP!ICII
roolctd. l.ooa1ed 10roo1 (304)871-eate or (304)171lng Iiiii 5 managomonl Bidwell, OH 41114 and 1:00pm. Competltlva Wage, OHIO VA'LIY PUBLISH Pomeroy Ph Amphl Thtl· :137. ·
-raonntllor our WHI VIr· mutt bt re1umed to thai ad- Rttlremtm Plan, Htalfh In•
• tor
VtN · prlvalt ' 101
•
~
INCI CO. rooommoncle lhol
•
''
' ...,
glnlo 1 Klllluoky locallono. d - prier lo 4:00pm, April ouranco. Contool: Bow· Y"" do bullnall with people 178,
Firm. caM 004- 1 - Hll-. NICI CondlII you arelltl Btot 5 wanllo 8, 2002. Clll (740)4411.0251 man'o Homocaro, 70 Plna you know and NOT to ttnCI
or 304-n3,1758 lion, 2 IR, Gu P - .
ba wMh lho - · ttne1 ra- lor moro lnlormatlon.
81., Clalllpolla, OH 41831. ·
•
Ctnllltl AC, 1 OWner.
oume to: Tho Horne Show·
(740)448-7a83 I
monwy lt!rough lilt mall unUI 4
Mull 17800 (74D)281-1814
Conlral Olfloo. 2720 Penn· Malnlananco· Muol havo
you hava lnvtlllgotled lhl ==.:.=::~:..=::..::;...:__ ::-::~·~=~':'-::':-~
1818 W - 1ol&gt;t70 with
aylvanla Avonu• Chorill· okllloln aloolricol, plumbing, Rotallllloo cltr1&lt; In Pomtr&gt; offering.
ton wv 21302
noollngondgonoralmalnl• ·oy, 21houroperwukpluo ::---:--:::--:---:--:: lyr old hou11 on 1.17 12x2i add on, 311'1, alA,
•
·
nanoo oklllo. lmmedlalo 1111
In
lor
vacallone. For 1111 TMvlng Small acrea. 2 mllu OUialdo Vln- Cenltll ~. lrldgt, etove,
Full Tlmo Offloo LPN, opening In GIINipollo orea. 8.25/hour oomo ovonlngo, Family Ownld Butlneu. ion. 3BR, 2 80111, LArgo Llvo mlcfowave &amp; dill I~..,.,,
Strllghl Oayo, No Wttk· Sand rooume to: CLA 115, No Sundayo, und r11umo All Equlpmtnl. Clroal LOCI· lng Room with FlrepiiOt, outbuldlng, ,., 111111, loont
anda or Holldar•· Apply In c/o Galllpollo Dally Tribune, ro The Dally Sentinel, PO lion. ~taoonablv priced. 81· t Ox20 Covered Poroh, and rear ~ ~·
perooo. Medica Plaza. 838 821 Third Avenue, Galllpo- Box 729·21 , Pomaroy, Oh rlouo Calla Only (304)875· 10x10 oU1 building, Aoklng oap rampt. 7iJ).+41·1170
Slate Routt160, Gelllpollo. 111, OH 45831
45769.
4452
$85.000. (74D).·IIBOO
loovt mtlllgt

u.s.

mall Table and Chairs,
50. Refrigerator· amall,
., 50. Love·aett, $100.
401446-9742

CONSTRUCTION

1~ft

$500.

1986 Mercury Grand Marquls. $800. catl after 7pm.
(304J67l&gt;-3069
1990 Plymoulll Acclaim ...
·dr, ,..,...,, Tilt, Cruise, great
wort&lt; car S900 (740)256·
..:.1058:..:..:-::---...,:.--1994 Dodge Spirit V-6, high
mileage, no maJor mechanl·
cal problems. runs good.
$1 ,100. (304)895-3422 after
6pm.
-19'-9-4_l_o-yola--T-1-00-tr-uc-k,

i

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

=.:..·...:_-_.._..-:-:-

want to

YARD S.w;;

HaPWANnD

116

Good
Condition
(304)675·5652

..er1~·51187.
www.orvb.com/blnnett

• Ads ShOuld Run 7 Days

...,
Moon light Escorts. Full
Service Male and Female
Escorts. Prompt Professional Discreet &amp; COnfidential.
6pm to Sam. (740)388·
1799.
Accepting Applications for
GIFT SPECIALIST. Must be
Why wait? Start meeting able to work 10am.-7pm.
Ol'llo singles tonight, call toll Monday Thru Friday and
free 1-800-766-2623 ext Occasional
Weekends
·around Gift Giving Holidays.
1621 .
Gift merchandising Display
Inventory Control' Settlnci
ANNouNCEMFNIS
Depa~ments, And 'Reorder1,~-------'· ing Are some 01 the Tecl'lnlques required. Knowlec:lge
~If DettenH for all ag~~ of Collectibles Helpful. Floeam a your own pace
ral Arranglnn And Seasonal
private lessons verj afford·
•
able Jay Clark/a Kennn Ka- ~ecorating Important Actlvl·"'ties. Courteous And Personrate ' 740 742·2"".c
....-.u
1 Must c orne Nau1
,
a15 erv~e
ra lly. Will Report To C01p0G 1n~·w."Y
1 I Manager. InIre "LI1l n.
rate · G'f
'
t
T
...
quen. rave 1 0 ut o1 Area
POSSI ble. Sand Aesume ..-:.o:
Chocolate Lab/Mill puppies JA26 200 Main Street, Point
home. Call 304- Pleasant. WV 25550

i

All Olsplay : 12 Noon 2
Business D.!lys Prior To
Publication
In Ned Day's Pal)er
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Tnursday ror Sundays
·For Sundays Paper

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday•Frlday for Insertion

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Pri Ce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When N~~ded

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
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Herta Fechner, 94
Mary Moles, 83
James L Fife, 63
~ack A. Gorrell, 60
Details. A3

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AND TONIG!lT WE'LL BE READIN6 TIIAT FAMOUS
POEM "TilE OWL AND TilE PUSS~CAT," AS REI¥JESTED
5'&lt; ALL. OF '&lt;Oli EXCEPT RA'I'MOND, WIIO
~ATE5 OWLS AND PUSSVCATS .. ,

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Thursday, March 28, 20U2
Yom chances to fulfill your
ambitiouJ goah in the year
ahead look good. You'll be
willing to work hard and long
for thejn. but tr)t to moaintain a
good IJalancc between work
and fun .

ARIES (March 21 -April 19)

-- YoUr judgment is good,

but o•lly when you have '
chann~

to take into account all
consid ..·ratiuT1!i. Rushing to
j1ldg.mrnt could have you
tripping ovl'r hidden flaws .
Know where to look for romance and you'll find i• . The
/\stro-Gr~1ph

Matd1makcr instantly rcvt:ah which signs i\rc
romantically p ..·rfcct fiu you.

Mail S2.75 t&lt;&gt; Ma\chmaker,
c/o this ncwspapt•r, P.O. B"x
17SB, Murray Hill Station,

New York, NY 10156.
Tt\UitUS (April 20-May
20) -- If you don't first believe in younelf and your
abilitit'\ w get · things done,
you ' II find cx&lt;:mes ro not even
try to accompl ish anything .
Trt1 ~t yollr abilities.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Rise above anyone among
vour friend~ or :usociates who
;lttcmpts to make wavcs. lly
kce pinF; your head, you'll

Bv TONY M. WCH
TLEACHfMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
RACINE - Contra"!ts were approved and business matters addressed during the recent meeting of the Southern
Local Board of Education.
Allen Midcap, Michael Soroosh and Matt Weand were all
approved by theboard as substitute teachers for the remainder of the 2001 -02 school year to be used on an as-needed
bas is, pending approval by the Ohio Department of Educa-

Stan's the man at Kent, Bl

are not

keep your dignity inuct as·

well.
CANCER Uune 21-July
22) -- Dig tlecp within your~clf for truth in all chint,JS and
succcs.' wou't elude you, especi&lt;~lly if ~o meoue attempts to
lay blame at your f(ct. Facts
will protect you.

LEO Uuly

2~-Aug.

22) --

Keep your priorities in order
or else you coJJid allow an oppming opinion of someone
else'~ get to you and jeopard. ize a relationship. Agree to
disagree and get on with
·thing.;.

VIRGO

(Au~ .

23-Scpt. 22)

-- Someone with whom you
have to deal whh could attempt to use intimidating tactics in order to get what ~he
or he wan~ out of you. The
facts will tell you otherwise.

so abide by them.
l\13RA (Sept 23-C?ct 23) .. Demands won't cut it -you'll have to be logical a.nd
reasonable if you want support
from your mate, especially on
issues where you've disagreed
previously.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov.
22} -- Persons who take you
for gr~nted aren't apt to get

any assistance from you. Only
cho~e who are truly in nc.ed .
·will be offered what you have

to give. You'll know the dif·
ference.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23Dec. 21) -- Plan your activities with groups that include
only those with whom you
feel at ease . Getting involved
with persons with whom
yOu've once had trouble
should be avoided.

CAPRICORN · (Dec. 22- ,
jln. \9) •• Should there ben
big variance between your :
priorities and those of some- '
011c with whom you're in- ,._
·volved, it could create condi- . :
tions not beneficial to either. ~·• :
Go your own way.
"' ~

•

.employees

w.-oe1n

ln.

31 Plato'• H

SOUTHERN LOCAL
Board ap~roves

Inch higher
NEW YORK (AP) Blue chips enjoyed ,.a solid
advance Wednesday -. the
second in a row - · as
investors continued their
search for bargains and big
in~itutions bought stocks
to dress up their portfolios.
The Dow Jones industrial
average dosed up 73.55, or
0.7 percent, at 10,426.91.
The market's broader indicators had a more modest
advance. The Nasdaq composite index inched up
2.58, or 0.1 percent, to
1,826.75, and the Standard
&amp; Poor's 500 index gained
6.09, or 0.5 percent, to
1,144.58:

OHIO
. Pick 3: 5·3·5
. Pick 4: 3·3·0-8
: ~ 35-37·38-40-41-48
.Bonus Ball: 22
Kicker: 1·7·5·8-6·5
Pick 3 day: 2·0·7
·Pkk 4 day: 3·8·6·9
W.VA.
Dally 3: 4·5-7
Dally 4: 0·2·6·1

Pw;uW 15-35-4043-416 (33)

Index,
2 SldJOI!I - II Pips

Calendar
A4
Classifieds
85·7
Comics
88
Dear Abby
A4
Editorials .
A6
Movies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports
81·4
Weather
· A2
C&gt; 200l Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

tion.

LOOKING FOR HELP - About 60 senior citizens gathered at the Senior Center to hear about
a new program which might help pay for the expensive prescription drugs they must take to stay
well. As Rose Ann Rosier explained how the MedConnex Pharmacy Program works to provide
free medications, Amanda Carter, patient advocate, passed out application forms. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

rug
•
program com1ng
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSEHTINELCOM
POMEROY- Senior citizens on fixed incomes and
other low-income resident' in
Meigs County may qualify to
receive their prescription
drugs free or '\t low cost
through a new prescription
drug program called MedConnex.
Re~:&gt;resematives of the River
·Cities Community Health
Coalition, which handles the
MedConnex ·Pharmacy Program, were at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center Tuesday to explain how the program works, who qualifies and

the application process.
The o0alitiolf is funded
through a federal grant alld
operated in Meigs, Gallia,
Scioto and Lawrence counties
in Ohio, and in several counties in Kentu cky and West Virginia, including Mason.
Rose Ann Rosier, a pharmacy technician, described
the program as a "little or no
fee for servi ce" source for
name-brand
prescnptoon
drugs a~.:ailable to people who
are now "falling through ihe

Tht drugs ·are provided free
or at low cost by pharmaceutical comp:mies to patients
w hose i'ncome guide lin es
meet the criteria for assistance,

according to Rosier.
She explained that the program is gL'arcd to assis t patients
who are on Medicare, are
unin sured or underinsured,

and do not qua li fY for a Medicaid card, have· other assistance, or qualify for treatment
through Veterans Affairs.
"MedConnex was created
cracks," and are some tim es
faced with making a choice to benefit those · commun ity
between "paying their bills or members in need. lt is specifigetting their medication."
Pleese see Dru1, A3'

11 _ ,

The board approved a special contract with Lelia Browning as a hearing impaired translator for a high school st~­
dent that resides within the district. That contract specifies
that if Browning's services are no longer needed, due to the
student leavi ng the district, the contract is terminated.
The board approved the adjustment of the following supplemental contracts for the 2001-02 school year as a result
of Jay Rees recently being approved for disability by the
State Teachers Retirement System: Jonathan Rees, head
boys baske tball coach instead of reserve coach; Scott Cleland, reserve boys basketball coach instead of freshman boys
basketball coach; and Gordon Fisher, athletic director.
In business matters, the board approved a data analysis
agreement with "Battelle for Kids," a program that entails
providing students with performance test data and, in
return, the school receives valuable performance analysis
information.

This statewide research project involves 39 school districts
and is petformed at no cost to those districts.
The board also:
• approved a two-year contract with Michaela Kucsma,
principal of Southern Elementary;
• accepted the resignation of Joyce Thoren, school nurse,
effective June 1. Thoren, who has been in the district for 27
years, is retiring;

• approved the District Intervention Policy as developed
by Meigs County's fourth grade teachers;
• approved senion \\lho have met both th e State Board of
Education and the Southern Local lloard of Education
requirements for graduation;

• approved an application for the OhioReads Summer
School grant in the amount of$15,000. lf approved for the
grant, Southern will receive half of the money in 2002 and
the other half in 2003.

HALFWAY THERE

•

Absentee voting to begin
April 8 deadline
for voter
registration
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
POMEROY - April 8 is
the deadline for voter registralion, and voting by absentee
ballot will begin on April 2,
according to Rita Smith,
director of the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
This year's Republican and
Democratic primary elections
. on May 7 will include candidates for Meigs County commissioner, and probate and
juvenile judge, as well as candidates for the .Ohio House of
Representatives and U.S.

House of Representatives,
The Republican ballot will
·include John Fisher and Don
R. Hill, both candidates for
county commissioner, Robert
E. Buck, cand(date for probate
and juvenile Judge, Nancy
Parker Campbell, candidate
for county auditor, Jimmy
Stewart, candidate for state
representative, and Mike Halleek and Lyle Williams, candi· dates for Congress.
· The Democratic ballot ~vill
include Mick Davenport as a
candidate for county commissioner, John L~ntes, candidate
for probate and juvenile
Judge, Eric Hasemeier and
Dale Tampke, candidates for
state representative, and Ted
Strickland, candidate for Cangress.
A county-wide sales tax

increase, a 1-milllevy replacement for · the Meigs County
Board of Health and several
township and vi llage levies
will · also appear on both
Republican and Democratic
Meigs County ballots.
According to Smith, those
who wish tO vote by absentee
ballot can call the board office
at 992-2697 to request an
application, or may visit the
board office in the Meigs
County Annex, next to Veter_ans Memorial Hospital, to cast
their ballots .•
May 4 is the last day absentee ballots can be mailed from
the board office, Smith said .
Those over ,,62, those who
work out of town on election
day and those who are dis·
abled are among those eligible
tO vote by absentee ballot.
)

Middleport Community Association is halfway to its goal of
$7,000 for July 4 fireworks. Myron Duffield, chairman of
the July 4 Committee, crossed the busy "T" Wednesday
afternoon to add another section of "mercury" on the association's giant firecracker, which measures the fundraislng
progress. The organization has placed collection containers
in local businesses, and expects some larger donations to
come from the Village of Middleport, local business owners
and organizations, The Community Association 's July 4
Committee plans entertainment and a parade in addition to
the annual fireworks display, which attracts residents from
.throughout Meigs County. (Brian J. Reed)
·

lor·.V ery Special Deliveries

AQUARIUS Uln. 20-Feb. ••

19) -- De conscious of the fad :
that things you normally . ·:
mi8ht overlook in others
"
could be very irri~ating to ,

•

you. You should be able to
control this so that things
run smoothly.
·

c~n

HOLZER

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

-~ Just

bc(;ause some. obstacles
and frustrations may be pre~cnt at the omet of the bmi~
nes~ day doesn't mean you
can't get past thl'm. Regrol~p
and get a fresh •tart .
r

CLINIC
•

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•

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contracts for .·

(2 wcle.) 24 Humlllull

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THI'.T ..lEI'.K!

LOW-COST ALTERNATIVE

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47 Conllnullt

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Fencod

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1 Explcnr

S@

· BIG NATE

Hometown Newspaper

·~

tlupw ..

learning that We~t began with three spades,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'The present, \Ike a nole in music, 18
ee
hearts,
nothing but at It appertains to what Ia paet and whal is to .
at least thr
come.'- Wattar S. Landor
and' five diamonds.
8
So, West has at most
T::i:~~~Y
~~
two clubs . Declarer
.
f~ll•d by CU.Y l. 'OlU.N..,.
.
should play a 'Club to
Rearrange \otters of tho
dummy's king,- then
four scrombled word•
return a club, claim- low •o form lour aimplo
ing when the queen
T EANUT
pops up.
~.....;....;:r-..;.;.,.:::-;.....;,_,
However,
now
I 1 I 1.
imagine thai East L=~~:;;:~~=~..J
takes only three spade "I N 0 B R A I
tricks, keeping the 1--.--r--r::--r--l
3
eight in his pocket,
before shifting to the , L=i;~:;;:~~~
· heart J·ack. What · .,.~
Y N N 0 L 1::;:
~Rst sur1mer we visited our
would South make of
' son at camp. We asked him about
' his activities.'There's plenty to do
that?
Surely South would
·around here," he informed us, "but
· assume West had ledlr---::6-- :-L~T=-:I:-::B---:-:H-i
~h-~. counselors won't let - • : do
from 10-fourth of .
·
0 Complalo tho chuckle quoted
spades. And if so, the
I IS
V by tilling in lho mining words ·
contract would be
· · · ·
you davolop from 11ap No. 3 below.
safe if declarer cashes A PR INT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
his club ace and leads ~ THESE SQUARES
a second club, finess~
A UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
ing dummy's jack V
TO GET ANSWER
·
when West plays low.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
However, disaster
strikes. That nefarious
Frolic. Yeast· Motor -Hunter· YOURSELF
A man and woman stood at her doorstep after their _
East . produces both
the club queen and first date. "I'll forgive you for being so rude,' she con- "
:
spade eight to defeat . ceded. "After all you were just being YOURSELf'!"
'
the contract.

~ ......--,

TEDDY! DID YOU
H\OA!P JENNY BROKE
UP WITH RONNIE.!
,

16 SUr\'tlyed

DOWN

25 Btuau
25.

-trained to be underhanded and deceptive.
How did East defeat
this thr.e e-no-trump
contract -after West
led the spade three?
That was some lead
by West. However, as
North didn't investigate a major-suit fit,
and because West had
such a lousy hand, it
was reasonable to at. tack in one of the maj~&gt;rs, hoping to find
partner's long suit.
If East takes his fuur
spade tricks before
casting adrift with the
heart · jack, what
would South do next?
l-Ie should cash his
red-suit

C;
and
AnjOU .

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56 Lingerie

2311-.

Francois, Due de La
llochefoucauld,
wrote, "The height of
cleverness is being
able to conceal it."
That is so true!
When you first meet
two of my best
friends, you do not
notice anything extraordinary, but after
talking with them for
a short while, you realize they are very intelligent. Oh that we
were all like-that.
In bridge, there are
clever plays to conceal
our holdings, but they
are hard to find be-

&amp;OUR!!

Melp County's

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�</text>
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