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Reds finally win one, 81

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BIG NATE
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GOING.
OUT
·· WITH

' I . O'&lt;.AY, SO JEN'-IY 6ROI'-E
UP \JITH RONNIE .
PLE,I&gt;.SE T\=LL ME
YOU'RE NOT G.OINC. TO
START CHASING. AFTER
..lENNY A&lt;;/4.1 N!

I&lt;.ELLY.
REM EM ·
SER~

I KNOW.
BUT I'VE':
LIKED
JENNY
SINCE

THIRD
G.RADE!

!!oUT FOR NOW, TEDDY...
SOt'\ETII'\E S
ALl- THAT
Tlt'\E SHE'S
PEOPLE
TREATED 1'\ATUI'.S:!
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LET ME
SLIP AWAY
AGAIN!

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BY TOMY M.·I.EAcH

-

MARCH 281

57 CIWige

..... cOlor

Thome deal on hold, 11

Deaths
Audrey B. Ours, 87
Harold A. Young. 71
Nola E. Trimble, 83
Details, A:S

outlook on something chat

·dis-turbed you. With the ~cil
lifted; you ' ~] be able to tccl

good otbol~t- t hin ~~ agaiu. G~t a
jump on hie.: by und er.standm ~
the intlucnns ttha r' ll govern
yt.H I in the year ahead. Se nd
your Astro-Graph prcdic~

rnr

cions by nmilinH $2 .to A.stm·
Graph , c/u thi~ n l'\v~p :!pcr, ·
P.O. llux 1758, Mumy ll ill
Statio n , New York, NY
111156. Uc sure to state your

Zodi;tc siJI;Il.
. TAURUS (April 211-May
20) -- Spend tim.c with frit·nd!~.
who think in prtlg;rcssivc
terms. :tml it could inspire you
w ~.:01ile up \~it h .~&lt;l ti\ C ingc niou ~ conccptillll!i. of your own.

It ,ould b1.·

.1

fldfilling experi-

ence.
GEM I N I (May 2 1-Jtm&lt; 21l)
-- Frit•nc.l~ (tiUltl pl01y a moTL'

New 10110 for
Melga County
. Chamber of
Commerce
"We chose the color red in honor of Meigs
County's famous agricultut'al products, namely
.
'
.
tomatoes and flowers;' said But~r. "Red also
catches one's attention better an any o ther
color.''
. "The logo is outlined in blue, wh ich represents the co unty 's 57 miles of river shoreline,

Pluse see Chamber, Al

by Lula Campo•

.

Celot&gt;&lt;\ly Cipher c~1&lt;9amo are creo\ICI from ~by lamoua
people peal and praunl. Each lollor In lho cipher olands for anoltlor.
'
Today's clue: P equals K

'VHCMWH

OY

OPW

UCDOY

POAPWYO

OPW

VNGRO

Eghuntset
tor Sunday

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fOur scrambled words be·
low tc form four simple words.

C~Y

in Middleport

WTWHYNR :
.
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'All poets who, when reading
lhalr own works, experience a choked leellng. are major.
- E.B. Whhe

·

important roli: 111 y uur personal
r:o rtunatcly. in :111
bllt om.• l':qtcriclll't', thci_r in ·
put will be t:onstru ctive.
CANCER UuJJ&lt; 2 1-July
22) -- Your sclf- t·stecm coultl
be greatly lifted as :1 result of
the kind way you ham.ll c a
situation, where you dwose

an:,io.

to satisfy the: n eed~ of another
above your own .
LEO Uuly 23-Au g. 22) ·Spend tim e with person~
whmc ideas yo u respect. and
it could turn out ttl he a wry
p ositi v e experic.•l,JCC. They
could he\p you ac hic.• vc :\
good change of lu.• art and attit ulil' about thin~s .

:

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

SCORPIO (O&lt;t. 24-Nov.

Pick :s: 0·4-2
Pick 4: 5·1·6-8
Buckeye 5: 5-11-18·28-36
Pick :s day: 7·8-8
Pick 4 diY: 5-5-8-8

Index

!

l

2 Sedl••• - II Plpa
calendar
AS
C:lassifieds
85-7
Comics
·
88
Dear A~by
AS
Editorials
A6
Movies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports
Bl-5
Weather
A2

•

st;l rting tn . l~\1k !'or pmiliVc ,
reasons to hdp you c:hanhrc a '
bad (lpin io n ·ynu'vl• h ad of
~omcone you know sucially . t
Y ou kn ow .thert•'s ~nod in 1

t
:

C APRI CO itN (ll ~c . 22J.m . 1~) ·-- Two areas where
you are likely to sho.w the
gr~ ;u cSt gains are carcc~ and •

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Easter bunny comes to Carleton School
SYRACUSE - The Easter Bunny arrived at Carleton School in Syrac.use a few days
early. The Visit was arranged by participants in the Youth Employment Serv~ce/Crossroads
Program at the University of Rio Grande's Meigs Center..
.
.. . .
.
In addition to playing host to the rabbit, the YES participants, mcludmg JessiCa Snuth,
Corrie Hoover, Rebecca Smith, Chris 'B,eitmire, Heidi Reitmire, Shelly Tol11ver, C hns
Tolliver and Daniel Hannan, organized an Easter egg hunt, refreshments and favors for
ihe children at the school. ·
·
. .
Brenda Phalin, YES ·Case Manager, Collin Roush, activities counselor, .and Tern F1fe,
office intern, also played a role in the Easter p~ rty. " It was a day filled wtth fun for the
students and the YES participants," said Phalin.
.

c :1002 Ohio Valley Publlthins Co.

·I

dtSC5.

!i.Oilll'thing.

'·

W.VA.
Dally :s: 1-9·6 .
·Dai!Y 4: 3-1-4·4 ·
Clsli :zs: 2·6-7-8-9-13

ity

- There arc two rcasnm why
ynu'rc gl'c:ll to Ill' :H'mu;r.~ .
One. you 'lllct people do tht•lr
own thing :nul l\~1~, if th~y
have nothing to ofll'r, you 11
inspirt• ~hem tn comc up with

Meigs commissioners ·
approve transfers

OHIO

finances . In 1' few i. nstan ces
m:mcn may be int crrcl;a.t cdi •
bm that won 't be so i11 all :

UllltA (Scp1. 2J-Oc1. 2.1) ·

NEW MEMBERS- Inducted into the National Honor Society at Thursday morning's assembly at Meigs High School
were, from left, seated, Brook Bolin. Meghan Haynes,
~ayte Davis, Candice Fetty, Kelly Johnston, Michele Runyon, Jessica Hooten, Hollie Ferrell and Josh Glaze; standing,
Allison Williamson, Jennifer Walker, Beth Wilfong, Katie Jeffers, Robyn Freeman, Mathew O'Brien, Jennifer Zielinski,
Emily Story, Ashley Colwell, and Mindy Chancey. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

Lotteries

you deal more profitably w ith ' I
othen in acqu iring what you
woant if you think in bottom 1
line tcnns.
.
"~

evcrybo&lt;iy.

AQUARIUS

U·'"· 20-Feb.

19) -- It could bt· difficult for
· yo u to hl' a folloWl'f, so don't

.I

-:
1

Doctors' Day ·'

fi~ht

it . Do what yo ur indirec t. Speak up and
t01kc charge of thinl(S .
PISCES (Feb ..20-M arch 20)

Holzer MaGICal Center salutes our
physicians on this special day; recopnizing their role in caring for the
liCk, advancing medical knowledge, and promoting good health.

lo

rely on your fe d inW' to direct
you r thinkm g. b~1t your scnsi · tivitics could be more accurate
tha n your logical evaluations.

'

1

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)

'

11 ·-.

POMEROY Me1gs County comm iss ioners
approved transfers of funds and the payment of co unty
bill s du rin g their regular meeting Thursday.
Transfe rs were approved as follows: $1,198 and
St 1,791 .08 for th e Meigs Recycling and Litter Prevention program; $ 10,000, $40,000 and $40,000 for the
engineer.
Bills in th e amo un t of $222,970.94 were approved.
The commissioners reviewed a petitio n from residents
of Tan ner's Run R oad in Lebanon, Letart and Sutton
townships. who have reques ted the county to reduce the
speed limit on th e road fro m 55 miles per hour.'to 35.
The requ est was refe rred to County Engineer Eugene
Triplett for consideration.
The commissioners ap proved a bid for bituminous
materials for April from Asphalt Materials Inc., Marietta.
The board also approved a $900 appropriation for the
. Alban y Agricultural Fair.
Present were Commissioners Mick Davenport and Jim
Sheets, and C lerk Glo ri a Kloes .

March 30th is

~t incts

-- It im' t always too w ise

POMEROY -· Traditionally, 20 Meigs High School
juniors and seniors are tapped eac h year for membership in
the National Honor Society.
However, at Thursday's induction ceremony, there were
·
only 19 students th ere to receive the honor.
· Lindsay Bolin, who died in an automobile accident on
Feb. 20 in Vinton Coun ty enro ute home from a basketball
g:Hne at McArthur, would have completed the group recognized for academic achi eve ment.
In tribute to her, a chair was left vacant. and her stole, a
yellow rose, and a certifica te of membership were presented
by N HS president Mindy O'Dell to her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Brent Bolin.
Featured on the ceremonial table where candles were
lighted for charac ter by Amber Snowden, scholarship · by
Nicole Runyon, leadership by Mick McLa ughlin, and service by Mary Schultz, was a painting of Lindsay by Meigs
art student, Jason Stanley.
Students inducted into the society were Brook Bolin,
Meghan Haynes, Kayte Davis, Candice Fetty, Kelly johnston, Michele Runyon, Jessica H ooten, Hollie Ferrell, Josh
Glaze, Allison Williamson, Jennifer Walker, Beth Wilfong,
Kati e Jeffers, Robyn Freeman, Mathew O'Brien, Jennifer
Zielinski, Emily Story, Ashley Colwell and Mindy Chancey.

•

1iful thinJ!'. bul it will help :

SAGITTAitiUS (Nuv. 2.'Dtc 21) -- Guntl fnr you fur

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

H~ ):l epNt1JlRJ1~ ;.•~

sponsor the commumtys
annual ' Easter egg hunt
on Easter Sunday beginning at 1 p.m. The event
wiU be held rain or shine
at General Hartinger
Park.
Children will be divided into eight categories
from newborns to 12
years old. Eggs will contain prizes. About 2,000
eggs have been filled
with cash, gift certificates, movie rentals,
bowling certificates, a
scooter, and food and
drink prizes.
About $1,000 in cash
will be awarded.

a. POLLAN

22) -- It 's fine to dc.·sirc beau-

MHS National Honor Sodety
remembers Lindsay Bolin

MIDDLEPORT
~iddlep&lt;1rt _ Volun t~er ·

VIII.GO (Aug . 23-Scpt. 22)
-· Yom best asset is your abil-

lo tramfofn) outmmh.•d
thh~'gs into something newer
anJ more (unctional. T hh
co uld include t:ebtiom h ip.s, as
well as itcm5.

lfappy Easter!

UHNT

KOUW

NU

Hllfl: lOs, Low: 501
Details, A2

OPW

NU

DNROWTVKCOONR

.

Friltly. M:trch 2 J,·:mo2
Adopt a more po5itive attitude, and uoticl'ahlt' improvem e nt~ in ;lll yom an:,irs will lie
in tht- year ahead. Your largest
gains cmtld con~~e ftn m situa tions Lady luc:k handles. .
ARIES (March 21,April 19)
-- A do~c friend could be instnnn cntal in ch an ~ing · ym1r

POMEROY -The Meigs County Chamber of Cornmen;e is seeing red, literally.
In an effort to be more Visible to the public,
Courtney Butcher, director of operations for
the Meigs County Chamber of Col1llllerce,
said We.Jnesday a new colorful logo has been
designed for the local membership organiza·tion.
"The chamber's old logo was in the shape of
an umbrella and the decision was made to
design a new &lt;r,e that was, let's say, more pleasing to the eye, ' said Butcher. "So, our imaging
committee came up with a new logo and local
graphic designer Chris Stewart put it all
together."
The design of the new logo accentuates the
unique~ boot-like shape of Meigs County and
is bright red in color, which, according to
Butcher, symbolizes the county's successful
agriculture industry.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~.
1

memory

TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

bad split. After winning the trump lead
(preferably' in the
dummy) and taking
the heart ace, continue with a low
heart.
. A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
Prob;~bly E:JSt will
\:I
TO GET ANSWER
return his remaining
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
trump, but win in ·
Attune • Baron - Nylon • Blight - YOU do IT
hand, n1!T a heart with
Last summer we visited our son at camp . We asked
dummy 's
spade
him
about his activities."There's plenty to do around
queen, cash the diahere,"
he informed us , "but the counselors won 't letYOL!
mond ace, ruff a diado ITI"
molld ill hand, draw
the remaini11g t r u m p , l ) &amp;...,~.:.
and claim.
-.ulll'
·

([i); I

New chamber logo Honoring
celebrates agriculture a friend's
'

·41 Olltllry

but act.:ommodate a

WHA'T KIND OF A SI!ORTS'TOP
ARE VOU?!TIIA'T 8ALLWENT
'iOtJ,
VOU 171 DN'T EVeN MOVe!

·'

=-

34

What's inside

:~lt.

mololuN

3~

.....,...

Opeft"&amp; lad' • I

Do you agree with
this comment by Virginia Woolf? "One
cannot think well;
love well, sleep well,
if one has not dined
well."
I would be inclined
to add ,"play bridge
.well." Although many
feel differently, I cannot play good brid!(e
on an empty stomach.
1\t the bridge table,
it normally pays not
to be greedy; make
your contract without
worrying about overtri cks. (In duplicate
pair events, overtricks
can be very nnportant . However, when
in a slam, usually you
sho\1ld play as safely as
possible.) If you were
South in this de al,
how would you plan
the play in either six
spa des or seven
spades?
South's sequence,
bidding hearts first,
then spades twice,
shows a strong hand
with 5-6 in the majors. (With equal
length in the majors,
open one spade.)
Seveu spades is a
good contract, needing the hearts to split
3-2. Win the first
tri ck and cash the two
top hearts. Here, disastt'r strik('s :md you
grumble ab&lt;&gt;ut bad
luck.
In
six spades,
though, maybe you
thought about establishing dummy's club
jack . You could do
that, but it would
yield only 11 tricks:
three spades, two
hearts, pne diamoud,
two duhs, and three
dub rulls iu hand. In stead, you should es~lblish your heart suit,

2 ObMin

30 NATO

•

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DOWN

· Hometown Newspaper

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Melp County's

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MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

-·

~

�.'
•

•

·ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, March 30

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's new
budget deficit could· top $1.2 billion
this year and next as the state feels the
full extent of last year's recession.
"The rece.sion in Ohio is longer and
deeper than originally anticipated
when we did the revenue estimates in
October:' Tom Zaino, Department of
Taxation commissioner, said Thursday.
Ohio could face a SSOO million
deficit for the remainder of this year
and as much as $750 million next year,
said Zaino and state budget director
Tom Johnson.
Revenue from personal income and
corporate franchise tax collections was
less than expected, Johnson said.
"While the economy continues to
improve at the national level, a lag effect
'

l w.-lmu· l · ''

INO.

.1Col...ouo 140'180' I

\_~~~-W.VA.
C2002

Friday, March 29, 2002

PageAl

•

Friday. Mw dt 21, 2002

•'

will continue
to
impact Ohio's economy as we go forward,"
he said.
The
projected
deficit for the rest of
this year was $100 .
million . more than
Gov. Bob Taft had
predicted last week.
Tllft.
It comes at an especially awkward time for the state: settlement talks in Ohio's decade-old school
funding fight ended in failure on March
21, meaning one option for the state
Supreme Court would be to order lawmakers to spend more on schools.
Johnson denied that the deficit ·
announcement was timed to send a

Harold A. Young

gap.

they don't back me."

Rain to end briefly on Saturday

COLUMBUS (AP) -A Buder County man has been indicted on charges accusing him of trying to collect on a fradulent
insurance claim related to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade
·
Center, the Ohio Department of Insurance said Thursday.
A Buder County grand jury indicted Ajay Chawla, 36, ofWest
Chester, on charges nf insurance fraud, attempted aggravated theft
by deception, telecommunications fraud and falsification, accord·
ing to the department.
· Agency officials said that on Sept. 26, Chawla filed a claim with .
CNA Insurance Co. saing that his father was mis&gt;ing and was last
known to have been at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11.
Police and insurance investigators determined that Chawla's
father was not in New York City on that date and is probably alive
and living ip India, the department said. The agency said Chawla
later tried to withdraw his death claim.

Coloner issues homicide ftlling

Nola Elizabelh "Liuie' 'lftmble

.

Traficant takes his shots

a

i-lolzer Clinic and Satler and Associates claim
top creative prize in.2001 Vision Awards ·

·

I.

'

Sunrise Service - 6:00 am
Family Life Center
A celebration of the Resurrection with the Easter Cantata

Marks ofthe Mission
Breakfast-7:00am
Wonhip I- 8:15am
Sunday School- 9:30 am
Wonbip II -10:30 am
Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth at Main ·
992-29i4

I

.

and television stations. Four
National Finalists are chosen
annually in 44 categories.
The winning commercial,
tided "Orthopedics Care," creatively depicted the variety of
Holzer Clinic's orthopedics
services and personality of their
physicians. The spot earned a
National Finalist award in the
Healthcare category.
"The creative work behind
the Orthopedics piece provided a great platform of which

our services and skilled staff,"
said Holzer Clinic Marketing
Director. Steve Elberfeld.
"Winning a Vision Award is a
great way to celebrate the success of the ad."
'!We really felt the commercial showed Holzer Clinic as
they are - the complete and
caring healthcare choice for
people in Southeast 0 hio and
Western West Virginia;· Salter
and Associates President Ron
Salter said. "When it came to

'
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I

.,

.'

VISIT OUR GRAND
NEW LOCATION!

~EP-46.09

68 GANDER LANE
In front of Wai-Mart
773-9560

Urgent Carel!·

No Appointment Necessary
7 Days A Week • 9:00am - 9:00pm
Network Providers For
• Medicare
• Aetna
•Anthem
• OU Employees
• Central Benefits
• Ohio Health
• Medical Mutual
At

Chamber

LOCAL STOCKS

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-_.

i

Tougher.stanclards soupt

· Moat people woalcl•y "etemllllfe."
The Easter bunny brlnp cboco~te ea-. but Jesu1 brlnp etenallllfe.
It' • for that rea10n w' want to. Invite you to wonhip with us thil Easter.
Maybe you ..ve a big dinner planned or an Ea.ter ega bunt.
Why not plan to make wonblp part of your day and 1tart oft' in ehuRh'f

·

• -_

Clinic and Parkersburg, W.Va.)bsed adVertising agency Salter
and Associates recently were
d'arned National Finalists in
the 2001 Vision Awards comj1etition for· their work on a
jt&gt;cally aired, 30-second televiliton commercial.
~ T~e Vision Awards competi~on is aimed at rewarding the
ltievision commercial, web site
ICJd video presentation indus!fies, and is open nationally to
;tore than 30,000 advertising

cHILLicoTHE (AP) - More than 40 yean after its last
senior. class, Twin High School has another graduate.
Dale Pollock, who left '1\vin High in Bourneville for the Navy
weeks before he MS to graduate in 1943, will get his diploma
1
May 26.
He's the only member of'l\vin's class of 2002. The high school
no longer exists.
Because of that, Pollock thought he would have to fight to
become a 1\vin graduate. 1\vin and Bainbridge high schools
merged in 1958 to form the Paint,Valley School District.
"They told me I couldn't get a diploma unless it said Paint Valley;• Pollock said. "I told them I didn't want it. I didn't go to Paint
WASHINGTON (AP) -The damaged steel cap at the Davis- Valley."
Besse nuclear plant in northwest Ohio should be replaced- not
repaired - before the power generator is brought back online,
Rep. Dennis Kucinich said Thursday.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, meanwhile, asked for a thorough congresPERRYSVILLE (AP) - A police chief faces c\ismissal after
sional investigation into the plant's safety and questioned whether shooting himself in the leg while staging a traffic stop to cover up
it should ever be restarted.
an earlier accidental shooting, the mayor said Thursday.
''I'm not sure this region should even have this kind of plant;'
After investigators found holes in his story, ChiefTirn Sommer
said Kaptur, a Democrat from Toledo. "After 9-1 1, every one of
admitted making up the tale.
these nuclear plants became a sitting time bomb for our country."
On Wednesday, Mayor Renee Matt sent a letter to Sommer's
Earlier this month, plant workers found that leaking boric acid home saying she would ask for his firing at a village council meethad caused two holes in a steel cap that covers a reactor vessel of ing Monday night.
the 25-year-old plant along Lake Erie in Oak Harbor. The holes
"Then the council will either back my recommendation or say
were stopped by a steel layer impervious to the acid.

Which would you rather have:
a chocolate egg or eternal life?

-,,

•

-~.J.,:

F, ~AttiPOt.lS ' ',_;; Holzer agencies, production studios we could let people know of producing the spot, we wanted

.

FORT MITCHELL, Ky. {AP) -A girl who was attending a

,

..

Old school name on diploma -

Girl pulled from pooL dies

.

.,•·

Cleveland State hikes tuition

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland State Uruversity raised its
tuition 9. 9 percent beginning in May, its third increase in less than
year to cope with Sta_!e funding cuts.
•
State aid has dropped by $5.5 million over two yean, said Roy
Ray, the university's vice president for finance and administration.
In June, trustees raised tuition from $4,094 to $4,464 as of fall
semester. State budget cuts prompted a midyear increase in
November that boosted the annual tuition, effective spring semester, to $4,728.
Students will now pay $5,196. New students also will pay a
$300 surcharge.

the latter part of her life; special friends, Iinda Sager and Juanita Workman; and seven grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildten.
Also surviving are two sioters, Helen (Burley) Maynard of
Ashland, Kentucky, and June (Clift) Bishop of Umatilla, Florida; two brothers, Roy Gordon Webb of Lexington, Kentucky.
and James N. Gune) Webb of Norman, Oklahoma; and two sisters-in-law, Sue Webb of Somerset, Kentucky, and Lillian (Tom)
Dick of Huntington, West Virginia.
In addi?on to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
husband, Palmer Trimble; brothers, Charles H. Webb Jr.• and
Oliver Lee Webb; a sister, Mary Perkins; and several nieces and

· RACINE- Audrey Belle Neville Ours, 87, of Racine, died
Thu~day, March 28, 2002 at the home of her daughter and
.~on-m-law, Nancy and Jay Pedigo. Yellowbush Road, Racine,
following an extended illness.
. She was born May 12, 1914,at Sybene in Lawrence County,
Q&gt;ughter of the la,te George Edgar and Lena Mae Neville.
, She was JVrried to Wiley D. Ours Sr., on January 26, 1934,
and he pre~ed her in death on December 28, 1995.
She was a homemake.r. · She belonged to the U!Jited
~ethodist faith, and for years, was instrumental in keeping the
Antiquity United Methodist Church open for Sunday school nephewl. ~
until the church was released from the United Methodist
Services will be 11 a.m. on Saturday, March 30, 2002. at Willis
,charge.
Funeral Home, with Roy McCarty officiating. Interment will
, , In addition io her parents and husband of 62 years, Mrs. Ours be in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the
was preceded in ,l!eath by three children, Wiley D . Ours Jr.,
funeral home on Friday, March 29, 2002. from 6-8 p.m.
::P..obert Larry and Cheryl Diane Ours; a brother, Eugene
'
!'leville; four sisters, Virginia, Bonnie and Nora Neville and
Besse Neville Rowe; and a half-sister and brother, Georgia and·
I•'
•
Edgar Neville.
CLIFTON, W.Va.- Harold A. Young, 71, of Clifton, died
Survivors, in addition to Mr. and Mrs. Pedigo, indude a Friday, March 29, 2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
daughter,Violet Preston of Pasadena, California; a daughter and Ple.asant, West Virginia.
_son-in-law, Karen and Michael Wilson of Miami, Florida; two
Born May 22, 1930, in West Columbia;West Virginia, he was
sons and daughters-in-iaw, Harry and Sharon Ours of Columthe son of the late Alburtice and Roberta Redman Young.
bus ,and William and Patricia Ours of Marksville, Louisiana; 15
He was a graduate ofWahama High School, a member of the
grandchildren, including Mayl:i Yoachall' (Don) Puckett, and Middleport First Baptist Church, and a lifetime member and
Camilla and Lena Yoacham, who grew up in Racine; 13 great
volunteer of the West Virginia State Farm Museum.
grandchildren; a stepsister, Lucy Alford of Fraziers Bottom, West
He was.also an Army veteran in the Korean Conflict and a
Virginia; a brother-in-law, Kenneth Hours of .Wellsville; a
retired lineman, formerly employed with IBEW Local 245,
brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Ralph and Ida Mae Ours of
Rossford.
New Brighton, Pennsylvania; a sister-in-law, Naomi Neville of
Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by a daughRacine; and many nieces, nephews and friends.
ter-in-law, Jennifer Young; and a granddaughter, Stacy Young.
Services will be Saturday, March 30, 2002, at 2 p.m. at CreHe is survived by his wife, Frances Chase Young of Clifton;
meens Funeral Home in Racine, under the direction of the
three ~hildren, Chester and Fonda Young of Mason, West VirRev. Dewayne Stutler.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. on Fri- ginia;:Vickie and Gary Clark of New J.l:aven,WestVirginia, and
Sue Schwarz of Point Pleasant; five stepchildren: Sheila and
gay, March 29, 2002.
Ralph
Roush of New Haven, Michael and Holly Lieving of
. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
New Haven, Judy Lieving of Ripley, West Virginia, Sue and
James Grimm of Pickerington, and Jane Zirkle of New Haven;
a brother and sister-in-law, George R . and Audrey Young of
·. GALLIPOLIS - Nola Elizabeth "Lizzie" Trimble, 83, died Point Pleasant; a special cousin and wife, Russell and Ruby
Young of West C&lt;fiumbia; a mother-in-law, Quida Chase of
Wednesday; March 27, 2002, in Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport;
and three grandchildren, nine step grandchildren,
She was born May 23, 1918,in Lovely, Kentucky, daughter of
and eight step-great-grandchildren.
\)le late Charles and Lucy Hale Webb.
.
Graveside services will be held at 11 a.m. on Monday, April
:: .She was a homemaker, and a member of the Union United
1, 2002, at Gravel Hill Cemetery. Officiating will be the Rev.
tJaptist Church in Pilgrim, Kentucky.
.
•: Surviving are a daughter, Lea Robinson of Clarksville, Ten- · Mark Morrov:-- and the Rev. James Keesee.
Friends may call on Sunday, March 31, 2002, at Fisher Funerqessee; a son, Ronald E. (Sue) Trimble of Gallipolis; a daughter,
al
Home in Middleport from 6-9 p.m. ·
~onna (Robert) Schmoll of Rio Grande, with whom she lived
•

messa~ to the court about the state's
ability to pay. "It has nothing to do with
it," he said. "This court case has bee':'
going on for 10 years."
.
Johnson and Zaino both defended
the revenue estimates done in October,
saying they changed for the worse ~s
more data became available.
They also said there is no guarantee
the current deficit won't get worse, bu't
they are confident in the estimate~
released Thursday.
"We believe these are ·as accurate :n
we can produce at this time;' Johnson
said.
,
Neither official offered a potentiaJ
solution. Taft is expected to announce
proposals next week for closing the
'

no:• Mott said. "There will probably be a further investigation lf

O !MM . . . . . . . . .

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

...

Aucher Bele Ours

Inc.

birthday party died after she was pulled !rom an indoor swimming
pool at the Drawbridge Inn; authorities said.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Showera T·IIO!ml
Allin
Fluntrn
Snow
k:e
Investigators said the girl was 8 years old and was from Covington, but did not release her name.
She was discovered at the bottom of the pool about 7:45 p.m.
Thursday, police said. Adults pulled her from the pool and administered CPR until emergency personnel arrived.
The girl was taken to Children's Hospital Medical Center in
the mid 60s. West winds
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cincinnati,
where she was pronounced dead about 8:30 p.m.,
Rain was expected to end around 10 mph. Chance of
police said.
over the region by Saturday rain 30 percent.
Saturday
night ... Partly
morning as a frontal system
moved off to the east, the cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
Extended forecast:
National Weather Service said.
HAMILTON (AP)- A man whose body was found in a creek
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
Drier air will rhove in on
Saturday, providing partly a chance of showers. Highs in behind an apartment comple~ this southwest Ohio cityld
· ·
cloudy skies and highs iri the the upper 50s. Chance of rain violently, authorities said.
But a spokesWoman for the Buder County coroner sai she
60s.
·
40 percent.
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy could not say when the man died or how log his body had been
Look for partly to mostly
cloudy skies on Sunday with with, a chance of showers. in the water.
Paul W. Brown's death was ruled a homicide. The 33-year-old
some rain moving in during Lows in the lo}li'r 40s. Chance
Hamilton
man's body was found Wednesday in Two-Mile Creek.
the afternoon. Highs will be in of rain 40 per~nt.
"The victim was discovered face-down in the creek bed," police
Monday... Mostly
clear.
the 60s.
Chief Neil Ferdelman said Thursday. "This was a violent death
Sunset tonight will be at Highs in the uppt!r 60s.
6:53, and wnrise on Saturday
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy. that the victim suffered:'
Lows in the lower 40s and
is at 6:19a.m.
highs in the upper 60s.
Weather forecast:
I
Wednesday...Mostly cloudy
Tonight. .. Rain
with
a
CLEVELAND
(AP)
.
U.S.
Rep.JamesA.TralicantJr.
insulted
chance of thunderstorms. with a chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 50s. South- Lows in the lower 40s and prosecutors and told the judge she was aiding ·their case as testimony in his corruption trial concluded for the week.
west winds 10 to 20 mph. highs in the upper 50s.
U.S. District Judge Lesley Wells gave jurors the day off Friday
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Saturday... A chance of with a chance of showers. and said testimony will resume Monday after she rules on several
showers in the morning, oth- Lows in the upper 30s and motions. Tralicant said he will conclude his defense next week.
With the jury out of the courtroom Thursday, the congressman,
erwise partly cloudy. Highs ln highs in the lower 50s.
referring to prosecutors said, "They have the testicles of an ant:'
He made his comment after learning. on his way into court, that
the judge had denied him the chance to use audiotapes as part of
his defense.

www.mvdallyMntlnel.com

LOCAL BRIEFS

Ohio budget deficit could top $1.2 billion

Ohio weather

0

..

'.

Federal Mogul- .81

from PapAl

Premier- 9.59

l'fCh Coal - 21.38
USB - 22.57
AAzo-46.93
Gannatt-78.10
~Tech/SBC- 37.44
General Electric- 37.45
Aahlandlnc.-45.51
GKNLY-4.85
AT&amp;T -15.70
HarleyOavldson-56.13
!lank One -41.78
Kmart-1.80
BLI-14.06
Kroger- 22.18
Bob Evans - 28.22
Lands End - 44.87
jlorgWamer - 82.92 1 Ltd. - 17.90
~mplon-3.11
NSC-23.94
Charming Shops - 7.92 Oek HI Fnardal- 19.43
21ty Holding -15.35
OVB- 23.70 .
t:ol- 25.22
BBT- 38.11
J;lG -16.28
Peoples - 24
~uPont-47.15
Pspslco-51.50

Rocl&lt;well - 20.06
Rooky Boots -7.40
AD Shell - 54.32
Sears- 51 .27
Shoney's :..... .35
Wai·Mart- 81.29
Wendy's - 34.98
Worthington - 15.38
DaHy aklck reporta ate
the 4
closing
quotes
the previous

t'

'

J.m.

day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Advast Inc. of Gal·
llpolls.

LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
,.f:MORE
,,,,I'
Subscribe today • 992-2156
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••
~

and contains the chamber's
new motto, 'We Mean Business,"' she added.
In celebration of Ohio's
upcoming bicentennial, a thin
blue line, which illustrates
C~nfede:Cate Gen. John Hunt
Morgan'; raid through Meigs
County, runs the entire length
of the logo and ends with the
official bicentennial symbol
near Pordand, site of the Battle of Buffington Island, the
only Civil War batde · fought
on Ohio's soil.
"Once Ohio's bicentennial
is over, the line highlighting

The' Daily Sentinel
. Reader services
Correction Polley
Our m111n concern In all stories Is
·; to be aocurate. II you know of an
• error In a story. call the newsroom
: at (740) 992·2156.

. Newe Department•

;

• The m11ln number Is 992·2156.
; Dapanment extenlloos ara:

.

Dr. Eric ·Hasemeier
Medical Director

, Newl

~.13

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Ext. 14

Other .arvlcee

..

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594-7979

____________ . . . . ___

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Ext. 4.

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Ext. 5

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General man1ger

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To .and e-mail
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On the Web

WNW.mydallysentlnel.com

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

through Friday, 111 Court St.,
Ftomercy,
Ohio.
Second·clau
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Mombo• The Aaooclatod Pr088 and
tho 0114o Nowlp- Aooocla11on,
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carrier lOCh · No oubacrlptipn by
mal ponnltted In 11111 whore home
carrier llti'Yfoe il available.
-o

Mill
suhu!IDIIon
I n - ,.;.p-c(,{i~13 Weeks
211Weeko
52 Weeki

Plan uaft fair
WILKESVILLE
A
spring arts and crafts fair will
be held at the Wilkesville
Community Center from 9
a.m. until 3 p.m.
Those interested in setting
up a booth ca n receive an
application by calling 6696454 or 669-3915.

Line flushing

EMS runs
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered three calls for assistance on Thursday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:3 7 p.m., Maples Apartments, Betty Maynard, treated;
10:40 p.m., Spring Avenue,
Bonnie Adkins, treated.
SYRACUSE
9:12 p.m., Bridgeman
Street, motor vehicle accident, Andy Patterson, refused
treatment.

·n.omton
. address
HUNTINGTON,W.Va. Meigs County Commissioner
JeffThornton remains hospitalized at St. Mary's Hospital
in Huntington, W.Va., where
he underwent major surgery
last week.
Cards may be sent to Thornton at Room 4163, St. Mary's
Hospital, 2900 · First Ave.,
Huntington, W.Va. 25701.

'

The commercial was written by Bill Wright of Salter &amp;
Associates and directed by
Gary Smith. Bob Hall and
Smith edited the sport and
Studio Center provided music
and production talent. Filminl;
was done on-location at Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis.

Plan sale

MARIETTA
Ohio
Department ofTransport~tion
will hold a municipal sale
April 29 through May 3 from
9 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. daily.
The sale will be held at the
District 10 Garage, 1401 Colgate Drive, Marietta.
The sale items consist priMorgan's Raid will be marily of vehicles cars,
removed from the logo," . trucks and dump trucks added Butcher.
which are · availaple only to
Butcher added that the new municipalities. All equipment
logo will be placed on official will be reasonably priced, and
letterheads, window decals, any equipment not sold will
membership plaques, and the be forwarded to public aucchamber's new
website, tion on June 22 in Jacktown ..
Information is available by
which is currently under construction and scheduled to be calling Stephanie Filson, ODaf ·
·completed in April.
public information officer, at
373..0212, extension 202.
"Besides the new logo, we
are updating our website so it
will be more informative and
accessible to individuals sutfPOMEROY - Work will
ing the Internet," said Butch- begin on the replacement of a
er.
new bridge on the county
Those interested in learning · portion of Union Avenue on
more about the chamber can Monday.
"
'
do so by logging on to
According to Highway
meigscountyohio.com
or Superintendent Randy Pyles,
meigscountychamber.com
County Road 24 will be

Road to dose

NO PERSON
SHALL UNCOVER,
MAKE CONNECTIONS
OR ~N
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
AUTHORIT,Y OF RESOWTION A·
SECTION 4-PAGE 8, USER CHARGE
AND SEWER US~ REGULATIONS.

. 8y-ormolo(rou11
OnoS2
Dolly

TUPPERS PLAINS Holley M : Burrelli, 30, 41960
Kaylor Road, Reeslsville, was
cited for improper backing by
the Gallia-Meig1 Post of the
State Highway Patrol following a two-vehicle accident
Thursday on Ohio 681.
Troopers said Burrelli was
backing out of a private drive"f"y at '7 a.m. when the cat
collided with a westbound
pickup truck driven by Andy
L. Midkiff, 33, 17185 Zion
Road, Shade.
Dainage to both vehicles
was slight.
Ci Ying, 30, 41059 Park
Road, Shade, was cited for
failure to control by the patrol
following a one"car accident
Tuesday on U.S. 33.
Troopers said Ying was
northbound in
Bedford
Township at 12:30 p.m. when
the car Ying operated failed to
navigate a left curVe, slid off
the right side of the road and
struck an embankment.
The car was moderately
damaged.

PUBLIC NOTICE

(USP82t HIO)
Olllo Volloy Pullllohlng Co.
Publ- rNrtfY afternoon, Monday

ono month
ono,..,

to focus as completely as we
could on the clinic's orthopedics services in our short 30second timeframe."

doled for three months while
construction is completed.
The official detour during
construction will be Hiland
Road to Mulberry Avenue.

$27.30
$53.82
$105.5e

SYRACUSE-RACINE
REGIONAL SEWER DISTRICT

RallO outoldt MilO• Counly
13Weelts
$29.26
211 Weeks
$118.68
52 WHkl
$109.72

'

r
~-

'

. ..
-~·

~·

..

TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District will flush the balance
of their ~ter lines next wee k,
on the following schedule:·
• Monday, from the intersection of Pomeroy Pike and
Flatwoods Road to the Flatwoods booster; Gold Ridge
area and Pageville; From
McKenzie tank to Stiversville
and the Dorcas area; from the
intersection of 0~ 681 and
County Road 50 to near
Hockingport.
• Tuesday, from the Flatwoods booster to Carper
tank, Hockingport.
• Wednesday, Carper tank to
Gold Ridge booster and
-Burlingham. Intersection of
U.S. 50 and Brimstone Ridge
in Athens County to South
Canaan Road.
• Thursday, Intersection of
U.S. 50 and South Canaan
Road to Stringtown and
Canaanville, US. 50 to Best
Photo tank, Stewart.
• Friday, from the Tackervitle MPRV to the Dorcas ·
booster.
According to Don Poole,
general manager of the TP-C
Water District, most flushing
will be performed at night and
some customers will experience low pressure. Water may
be discolored for several miles
around the locations where
flushing takes place.
Those who experience discolored water for more more
than a few hours are asked to
contact the water office.

Issued license
POMEROY -A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Edward Morris Siek, 38,
Reedsville, and Christine
Mary Lantz, 32, Pomeroy.

File foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure action has been filed in
1
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Mortgage
Electronic Registration Systems In c., Jacksonville, Fla., ·
against Barbara K. Burgess,
Pomeroy, and others, alleging
default on a pronu;sory note
in the amount of $71 ,656.63.

�Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Economy grew at 1.7.
percent rate in fourth
quarter, better than
·previously thought

I

i

WASHINGTON (AP) - .growth rate is still considered
The economy, knocked down below par, it nonetheless
by recession and terror attacks, marks a remarkable turnsnapped back at a stronger around for the economy,
pace than previously believed which shrank at a 1.3 percent
in the final three months of rate in the third quarter, fol200 I .
. lowing the jolt of the Sept. II
Gross domestic product terrorist attacks.
the· broadest measure of the
Many economisis estimate
economy's ·health - grew at the GDP, which measures the
an annual rate of 1. 7 percent total output of goods and serin the fourth quarter of last vices produced within · the
year, its best performance in a United States, continues to
year, the Commerce Depart- improve in the current quarter;
ment reported Thursday.
Some predict economic
The government had ini- growth in the January-March
. tially estimated that the econ- quarter could be at a sizzling
omy grew at a tiny 0.2 percent rate of 5 percent to 6 percent.
rate in the fourth quarter. A Others forecast a rate in the 4
month ago, that was revised to percent range. Growth should
a 1.4 percent rate.
be helped along as the Federal
Thursday's upward revision Reserve's 11 interest rate cuts
to the GDP, based on more last year make their way
complete data, largely reflect- through the economy.
ed an improved trade picture,
Earlier this month, Fed
which was less of a ·drag on Chairman Alan Greenspan
growth in the fourth quarter. offered his most optimistic
The latest GDP report rein- assessment of the U.S. econoforces the view that the reces- my in more than a year, telling
sion, which began last March, Congress recovery from the
has ended and probably will tum rec ..sion was under way.
out to be the country's mildest
Manufacturers, which had
downturn ever, economists said throttled back production dur"lt's starting to look like a ing the slump and laid off hunpretty picture of recovery," dreds of thousands of workers,
said Stuart Hoffman, chief worked offbig stocks of unsold
economist at PNC Financial goods and were beginning to
Services Group.
add to production.
The Dow Jones industrial
Against that . backdrop,
average finished the day down i!lventory reduction was a lit22.97 at 10,403.94, cutting de less of a drag on fourth
short a two-session winning quarter GDP than previously
streak, as investors braced for thought. Economists believe
earnings reports due out start- that first-quarter GDP will get
ing next week.
a sizable boost as companies
While the 1. 7 percent GDP replenish stocks.

a,___fll_t~R__tfljl,;;,..______;,;,~·
Bas ed mai box ends

)he Daily Sentinel

Rumsfeld: Avoid peacekeeper role
Difense secretary ·
suggests US. should
avoid getting bogged
down in Ajghanistan
WASHINGTON (AP) -Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said
the effort to restore stability to
Afghanistan must succeed, but he
suggested the United States should
not get permanently cast in the role
of peacekeeper.
He drew parallels to the U.S. mission in Bosnia.
"I think it's helpful to remember
that those who developed the concept for peacekeepers in Bosnia
assured everyone that those forces
would complete their mission by
the end of th~t year and be home by
Christmas," Rumsfeld said Thursday
at a Pentagon briefing. "We're now
heading into our seventh year of ...
involvement in Bosnia."
The need to secure Afghanistan's
interim g9vernment has become
increasingly clear as some al-Qaida
and Taliban forces have fled across
the countryside .and, in some cases,
blended into the Afghan· populace.
In Pakistan, there are reports of
Taliban and al-Qaida who have
pledged to return and fight again
when U.S. forces pull out.
Many analysts are urging an even
more aggressive U.S. and inteq~a­
tional role, worried that the day
American and other Western soldiers leave is the day Afghanistan
again will start to disintegrate.
"The law may be there on paper
but unless you have someone to
turn to ... then it's only paper," said
the U.N. human rights representative for Afghanistan, Kamal Hossain.
Earlier this week, Rumsfeld said
the United States already has begun
training a military force for
Afghanistan .
But Rumsfeld lamented that no

.

ADAMANT - Defense Secretary Don·
aid Rumsfeld said he believes the U.S.
needs to avoid becoming a permanent
peacekeeper in Afghanistan. (AP)
one has offered to help pay for it,
including those countries that met
at a donors' conference in Tokyo.
While money for humanitarian aid
and medical supplies was raised, the
issue of security never came· up.
"There's not a nickel in the
donors' conference funds that is
available to provide for the development, training, sustainment of an
Afghan national army, nor is there
money there for the International
Security Assis!ance Force," Rumsfeld said.
The defense secretary said the
United States was raising money on
its own to support the Afghan army.
"There is no question but that
very little is possible in a country if
there is not reasonable security," he
said.
"There's not going to be a stable
government. There's not going to
be humanitarian assistance. . .. The
police work won't be done . because
there won't be policemen."
Rumsfeld also said it would be

"mindless" to release captives from
the Afghan war before it's over and
he doesn't know when that might
be.
"The United States has every
right to hold enemy combatants
until the end of the conflict," he
said.
Even if the detainees were acquit-ted ' before a military tribunal,
America would continue to hold
them, he said.
"To release enemy captives so ·
that they could return to the battlefield would put the lives of more
young American servicemen at risk
and, in my view, would be mindless," Rumsfeld said.
There are 300 detainees from 33
countries being held at the U.S.
naval base at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba , and 236 more in Afghanistan .
Rumsfeld argued that the U.S.
stance is "universally recognized" as
consistent with the international
law o( war and the Geneva Conventions, which cover the treatment of detainees .
He said the captives include terrorists who have committed brutal
acts and are sworn to continue
them.
"To protect the American people,
the United States has every right to
hold enemy combatants for · the
duration . Today the conflict is still
going on. Our troops are still fighting in Afghanistan. And we do not, ,
as yet, see an end," he said.
Rumsfeld and Joint Chiefs Chairman Richard Myers said that in
addition to the war on terrorism
the Pentagon would be able to take
on any mission President Bush
ordered.
''You can be absolutely certain
that to the extent that the United
States of America decides to
undertake an activity, that we will
be capable of doing it," said Rumsfeld.
"We'll be ready to do whatever
the president asks us to do," said
Myers, an Air Force general.

DEAR ABBY: 1\vo weeks ago,
·
"shannon .. came over
my tinen
with her children for a play date.
·As she backed out of my driveway,
· she accidentally hit my mailbox.
She was very shaken up at the
time. I was more concerned that
' no one was injured because my
mailbox is set into a large concrete
ADVICE
post and Shannon's car was datp.' aged . She promised she'd "take
- care of it." I told he( to drive called. Because of my husband 's
home safely; we'd discuss it anoth- dislike for her, the situation esca" er time.
lated into a daily argument at my
; My husband, who is not fond of house.
this couple and vice versa, said I
When I finally called her, Shan· should have ftled a police report, non informed me she wasn 't intergiven the cost of the damage was ested in spending money on my
~ $350. I told him I didn't think it mailbox and didn't understand
· was necessary because Shannon what.! needed a $350 mailbox fot.
·had promised to take care of it.
My husband called her husband
1\vo weeks went by; she never the following day to ask why he

a

Dear
Abby

and his wife thought they were through it.
"Name Caller in Texas," who didnot responsible. The husband said,
Your thoughts, please.
n't know how to address her step"Your friendship isn't worth $350. HURT IN CORAL SPRINGS, parent during introductions .
A friend would never ask a friend FLA.
When my husband's son began
for the money. I'll send you $150
DEAR HURT: Regardless of to introduce me to his new college
. ."
anddont' ever .caII us agam
what you thought, the couple . housemates, he became em barA short while later, Shannon were not only not friends, they are rassed and blurted out, "What do I
calle.:l me screarping, "How dare also seriously, lacking in character. call you anyway?"
your husband call mine at work? Mature and responsible people live
I quickly replied, "Why, Wicked .
I'll send you the $150, and I'm up to their obligations. Since you Stepmother, of course!" Said with
never speaking to you again!" heard nothing' from Shannon for a smile, it works every time! Then she hung up on me.
two weeks, your husband was SHELAGH
M'GONIGLE,
I'm so hurt. I thought these peo- within his rights to follow up by OTTAWA, ONTARIO
ple were friends. Was I wrong to calling hers.
DEAR SHELAGH: You are
exped them to pay for the damSmall claims court is there for blessed with a wicked sense of
age? Was my husband out of line just the kind of dispute that you humor. I'm sure it was appreciated
to try and discuss this with them? have described. I see no reason to by all.
Aren't they responsible? '
let these people get away with it.
(Paulirlt Phillips and her daughter,
My husband wants to sue them The friendship is over anyway. J eanne Phillips, share the pseudonym
in small claims court. Her husband Why should you be out the Abigail Vtm Buren. Write Dear Abby
even told mine to go ahead and money, too?
at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
try. I don't want to drag myself
DEAR ABBY: This is for . 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069)

Meigs County Notebook
Miller birth

Jarvis of Milton, W.Va.

great-grandmother,
Jane
Simpson; grandmother, Janet
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
Simpson; gra'ndfather, Paul
Tim and Carrie Miller of .
Simpson; and Joanie BuckNew Haven
land, Valerie and Jeff Nottingannounce
ham, Ethan and Isaac NottingPOMEROY
Devin
the birth of
ham, and Jessica Chapham,
Paige
a son, Paul
Steven
Hawk,
Eric
Humphreys
Michael,
Humphreys, Kim, Mark and
was honFeb.
20,
Mariah Halley.
ored on her
2002,
at
second
Cabell
birthday
Huntington
with a party
;.._---~ Hospital.
given
by
Paul MAlar
He weighed
her mother,
ADA - Michael Leifheit of
eight
Teresa
Pomeroy, Chad Hubbard of
· pounds; 15 ounces.
Simpson.
Syracuse, and Keithen Branch
Grandparents are Mike and
Theme
of Mason, W.Va., were named
·.Jennifer Miller of Hartford,
was "Clifford, the Big Red to the Ohio Northern Uni- W.Va., and the late Paul
Dog." Attending were her versity dean's list for the win. Zerkle, and Sharon and David

Humphreys·

birtltday

Named to

dean's list

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

ITH BUYS!

&lt;!Clark's 1 etuelrp ~tore
'1/0WI. PrU.t, .

C.w~·

dJ.uJw..

The start of • ptlrt.ei: w.ddlngl

A_,.lllble .t:

Easter Decorations
Bulk Candy
Silk Flowers
NASCAR Items

C:·

Sinctl948. .. "Ctltbfdllnr Ov" 50 y,.,. OfQwllty S"'k'''

The Quality Print Shop, Inc.
255 Mill Street • Middleport, Ohio
992-3345
Mon·F'rl 8::30·5, Sat 9-12 Noon

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - An all-night
hymn sing will be held at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church on Friday beginning
at 7 p.m. A freewill offering will
· be taken to help the Big Bend
Jubilee in May.

ter quarter.
Leifheit is the son of Roger
and Lenora Leifheit arid a
fourth-year pharmacy major;
Hubbard, the son of Sharon
Hall, is a· criminal justice
major; and Branch, the son of
Ronald and Teresa Branch, is a
REEDSVILLE - Good Frithird-year pharmacy major.
day Services,
7 p.m.
Reedsville United Methodist
Church. Speaker f~ldcin
Johnson. Special si~ging.
Everyone welcome ..

PROUD TO BE APART

.·~ oR YOUR LIFE..·.

j' .
•
.
~_,J
t&lt; TM Dally ~ntinel
-.
Su,bscribe t&lt;NfaY • 992-2156 '
'

,·!(

www.mytlailysentineL~om·.

113 COURT ST.
IN HISTORIC
DOWNTOWN
POMEROY

210 E.

2?l:jfes, Sfwtguns
!Handguns
Scopes

Main~

. Flags
~lanters

Spring Craft Items

p,,.,.,A..,..,..,

. 892~1182

MACK'S
Pocket Knives &amp; Collectibles
'it Cut Above The Rest"

water benefit your teeth by direct COI!tact
with them as it is swallowed or by Indirect action through the blood? Also, I use
a Brita filter for my drinking water. Does
. this freezing fluoridated water effect?
· Answer: The issue of fluoride and
·drinking water is an ongoing topic of
heated debate in many communities,
including mine - Athens. As I'm sure
you know, its use is advocated to reduce
.the rate of dental decay, the qtost preva•Jent infectious disease. In some low}income areas, 30 to 50 percent of all children have cavities.
The Centers for Disease Control andPrevention have recommended the introduction of fluorine compounds (fluoride)
into drinking water that doesn't naturally
· contain it to the concentration of 0. 7 to
1.2 parts per million. This is a process
called "fluoridation."The CDCP believes
that the relatively "(idespread adoption of
·. this public health · measure is largely
. responsible for the drop in frequency of
"cavities in the past 20 years. But as I'm
· · sure that you have surmised from the
controversy, fluoride can also be harmful.
· LeVels over 4.0 parts per million increas.• es ailments.
Dental decay occurs when three com. mon mouth conditions co-exist. They

.•

.9Lm11W

are: 1) susceptible dental enamel, 2) a significant population of streptococcus
mutant bacteria, and 3) suitable carbohydrates (sugar) for the bacteria to convert
into acids that eat away the enamel. Fluoride improves the quality of enamel and
makes it much harder. Therefore, the
enamel becomes more impervious to the
acid, and decay is less likely.
The opponents of fluoride in water
argue that brushing and other methods of
fluorine application , can be used to
reduce the number of cavities in children.
The rest of .us should not be exposed to
the risk of having excessive amounts of it
by its inclusion in drinking water. The
case for fluoridation is obvious and doesn't need repeating here. And fluoride in
drinking water works both by direct c~
tact with teeth as well as systemic .
Some=is
swallowed eventually is
secret i ·
here it direcd
ntacts a · tre
~ns
tooth arne!.
Now to your question about your Brita

filter. The Brita filter, like many similar
products, uses charcoal to remove chemically active contaminants from water.
These units are about 81 percent effective
in removing fluoride. Other water purification .products such as reverse osmosis
filters and distillation also remove fluoride and other water contaminants.
These methods are even a 'bit more
effective thai). charcoal filtration. Chilling
or freezing your drinking water doesr't
appreciably change the amount of fluoride it contains or its effect.
So you should be aware that you and
your famiiy are not getting substantial
amounts of flouride from your drinking
water because of the charcoal filter. That
is of some concern for children, who
normally get the most cavities. However,
if you choose to continue to use the filter, your family can reduce the risk of
cavities by the conscientious use of fluo-·
ride-containing toothpaste and regular
professional applications of fluoride. In
some t:ases, your dentist might also recommend prescription flouride tablets,
"Family Medicine" is a weekly column.
To Sllbmit questions, write to John C Wolf,
D. 0., Ohio University College '![Osteopathic Medicine, P.O. Box 110, Athens, Ol1io
45701. Past col1mms are available online at
wwwjhradio.orgl}ir1.

.
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Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671

••

SPRINGS SUMMER
FASHIONS ARRIVING DAILY!

••••
••
•••
••••
•

•
-·
••••
••
••
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••

Spring
Fashions
Arriving Dally

illlEl•

Good Selection of
Spring &amp; Easter
Decorations!

Sign up for Dragon Internet

137-CN.Second•

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PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
Saturday at the township
building .

SUNDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Easter egg hunt, Sunday, 2 p.m.
Scipio Fire Department for
children 12 a·nd under.
MONDAY
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30 p.m. at the firehouse.

SATURDAY
RACINE- Racine Chapter
MIDDLEPORT Hope 134, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
Baptist Church in Middleport the hall.
will have an .Easter celebration and egg hunt on SaturSYRACUSE
Sutton
day from 2 to 4 p.m. for chil- Township Trustees, Monday,
_. _ _ _

. .

Queltlon: Does fluoride in drinking

fkl&gt;'itatio~

MEIGS CALENDAR

Water filters remove jlouride, other chemicals
'•

AS~

Pa;,;.;;;,;.g.;;;.;;;.:.;e
FriUy, .,.rch
ll, lOOl

~

- - - - .L. . . . . . _

.. ,.,

, . . . _ , _ _ _ ._

.. . '"''"'-

- ·

.....

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

''t••---

James and Crystal Sellers of
Longbottom, Ohio, would like to
announce the buying of a restaurant.

A Little Bit of Heaven,
fonnerl:y known as Dreamers in
Ravenswood, WV, will open under
Sellers' management on

Monday, April 1, 2002.
· Hours are: 6AM • 7PM Mondgy
throu&amp;h Saturday.
Some changes have been made on the
menu. We've added a few things and
have changed some of the prices. ,..
Please come in and check us out!!

-· -·-. ······-········-······· ... •·· ....... ····-····· ... ··-·-···· ..··-- .. -- ·-·--··-· .
,

$200 •Rebate

---]

or 6 Months Same Aa Cash
' give your hard eamed
Warm winter-Hot summer??' Don't
dollars to lhe utilities. Anew Lennox HP26 Heat Pump can ·cut
your LP, Oil, Electric furnace or older Heal Pump heating
monthly bills literally in halfl 50% off your cooling bills
too!!Really! (Slop in lhe offtee if you wanl to see the figures and
talk 10 real life references.)
Take the rebate or take no Interest and no payments for six
monthl. Enjoy savings now...don't pay 'till faiL
' Sic I'IIOIIfiiU!ll II t.lfii-Sul:itlet D ~ WQ¥11. No WN:t ~~~~~- be 1CCaMC1 not Hl"'''ffl$ ...,nd
Ning 111 Ill mon11 ptdocl. AAir WI PI'JOd, h &amp;lllndlld rill ol1t_as.,. APR 'Ill Jlllllf. ~ .._. c11a11

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Silver Planned
Main len ace Con~act
FREE (Retail $129!)

11...-1
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Famous Super 90 ·
Super Filter included
(Relail $295!)

fBSf.

1'1..-1 Cotnpull!rTherrnostat
.IIVIf EBf.E (Retail$3411)
\ FNI Clllta only~ will~ IIUitiiiM

446-4940
1~00·247·6180 , LENNOX
lfii • .,INillrtt . . . L. .

'I

David White Services welcomes all customers
of the two Lenn.ox dealers that have a_one out
of business. We can handle all manulacturer
warran~· clalmti. 25 Years of continuous award
winning aarvlce. We are the largest dealer
aervlng Gallla County.
CJlbCcrtfa:trLtne26152- Well•o.•m 't'I\.1X!Di8

.'

..

'

I

�The Daily ~entinel

The Daily Sentinel

Opinion
. ..
FOX~ II~LbBRITY
CtJ

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74o-992·2158 • Fax: 74o-992·2157
www.mydaffyMnlfnel.com

BOXIN&amp;! P-AULA JON'~
WAlll ~ kY'LAC.lNG
flM F\5t-t{;R,\u.tlt
1JUS JUSt IN~ '"

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

Tht upitrioru exprrutd in lht c()IMmlf bllow art lht CDffltMsMs

Sentinel • Page A 7

Frldlly. Mllrch 21. 2002

~TitlS\S

GrnlNG GaJJ!

W\LL ~ \\YtAt\NG

Uttrn to thr 'editor orr Wt~dcom~. Tltry sho111d ~ 1111 tiMII 300 words. Alllttttn
are subjut to tditiflfl atld must H s;Rntd and iRt:ludt addntt 41ttd ttlrphont n14mHr.
IY9 umirnrd lrurn will bt publislttd. Utttrs should 1H ;,. gO(Jd ltutt, Dddrntillf
iuun, ruN pttnonafitiu

The

lti~CLlNTON

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

PageA6.

TOOA~NG'• ·

Q/ the Qllio Vail.,

PubUshing C11. •, ~ditorUJI boanl, unltsr othtrwiu nottd.

NATIONAL VIEW

Gift

•

Johnathon "Cole" Betzing

Kassidy Elise Betzing

Riley Garrett Martinel

Happy Easter!

Happy Easter!

Happy Easter!

Grandson of

Granddaughter of
Paul &amp; Kath Chadwell

Grandson of
Paul &amp; Kath Chadwell

DNA testing holds the power
to restore faith in criminal justice
• Seattle Post-Intelligencer, on DNA testing also
reducing crime: Assessing its short but stunning track
record over the past decade, Attorney General John
Ashcroft describes DNA analysis as the truth
machine oflaw enforcement.
Seen through a wider prism, no tool has more
potential to revive America's faith in its criminal justice system. That's a tall order for a very short
acronym .... But witness the monumental power of
DNA analysis.
·
it exonerates the falsely convicted, freeing people
who have been locked away for years. It convicts the
rightly accused earlier in the process, sparing taxpayers the cost and victims the angst of lengthy trials. It
brings resolution, if not closure, to the friends and
family of those who have been murdered. ·
Moreover, the specter of DNA analysis - if it
becomes the gold standard throughout the country - should deter crime in a way that capital punishment
has failed to.
What would give a would-be killer pause: the
prospect that he might, many years down the road, be
executed or the knowledge that just tiny amounts of
DNA (sloughed skin cells or a blot of saliva) could
seal his guilt? And the testing's ability tO nab criminals earlier and with dead-on accuracy should prevent a certain number from re-offending ....
These advances will certainly be worthwhile but
the best that DNA analysis has to offer is the gift, as
Ashcroft says, of sparing Americans from ever being
victimized.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Good Friday, March 29, the 88th day of2002.There
are 277 days left in the year.
TodaY:s Highlight in History:
,
On March 29, 1?62,Jack Paar hosted NBC's "Tonight" show
for the final time.
On this date:
In 1638, Swedish colonists settled in present-day Delaware.
In 1790, the 10th president of the United States, John Tyler,
was born in Charles City Co·unty, Va.
.
In 1847, victorious forces Jed by Gen. Winfield Scott occu. pied the city ofVera Cruz after Mexican defenders capitulated.
In 1867, the British Parliament passed the North America
Act to create the Dominion of Canada.
In 1882, 'the Knights
of Columbus was chartered in Con.
necticut.
' In 1932, a vaudeville comedian made his radio debut by saying, "Ladies and gentlemen, this is Jack Benny talking. There
will be a slight pause while you say, 'Who cares?"'
In 1943, World War ll meat, butter and cheese rationing .
began.
In 1951,Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of conspirac)C to commit espionage. (They were executed in June
1953.)
.
.
In 1971,Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was conviCted ofmur·. dering at least 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai massacre.
(Calley ended .up spending three years under house arrest.)
In 1971, a jury in Los Angeles recommended the death
penalty for Charles Manson and three female followers for the
1969 Tate-La Bianca murders. (The sentences were later com- ,
muted:)
· Ten years ago: Democratic presidential front-runner Bill .
Clinton acknoi"ledged experimenting with marijuana "a time
or two" while attending Oxford Universiw. adding, "I didn't
inhale and I didn't try it again."
. Five years ago: Vice President Gore concluded his tour of
Asia, saying that talks in Beijing had created "new momentum"
in relations between the Lf.S. and China ..
One year ago: James Kopp, the fugitive wanted in the 1998
slaying of Dr. Barnett Slepian, a B- ,ffalo, N.Y., abortion
provider, was captured in France, (Kopp is fighting extradition
to the Lfnited States.) A chartered jet crashed near Aspen,
Colo., killing all 18 people aboard. Pianist John Lewis, who
masterminded the Modern Jazz Quartet, died in New York at
age 80.
.
,
Today's llirthdays: Former US. Sen.-Eugene McCarthy is 86.
Former British Prime Minister John Major is 59. Comedian
Eric Idle is 59. ComposerVangelis is 59. Singer Bobby Kimball
(Toto) is 55. Actor Chris I!.awford ("Thirteen Days") is 47.
Olympic gymnast Kurt Thomas is 46.
.

.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Vegetarianism may gain ground in society after all
After President Bush choked on a
pretzel recently, he · recalled that his
mother had told him as a boy to "always
chew your food thoroughly before you
swallow it."

Many of us had parents who told us
the same thing, "Chew it good," my
father repeated at the dinner table when
we were growing up. He waffollowing
, the advice of a food faddist named
· Fletche~ who recommended chewing
each mouthful 40 times before swallow. ing · it. His method was known as
''Fletcherizing."
· The Rev. Sylvester Graham, a 19thcentury Presbyterian minister best
remembered for Graham c·rackers,
taught that food should be cool and
chewed slowly and thoroughly.
If the president's mother was like most
mothers, she also advised young George
W. and his brother,Jeb, to "eat your vegetables" - an injunction that fell on
deaf ears with her husband, the former
president, who made famous the line, "I
hate broccoli."
But more' people (adults as well as
children) are eating their vegetables
today. The fear that mad cow disease
could spread from England to this coun- .
try, contaminating the 111eat supply,
. turned many toward vegetarianism.
There is another reason for the switch
away from meat. The threat of a world
food shortage in the 1960s raised the
specter of compulsory vegetarianism.
"Toward the end of the 20th century,"

Publishing, 1976).
The book tells the story of the food
faddists -mostly clergymen and members of the evangelical sects - · who
brought ready-to-cat breakfast foods
into the American home. Gluttony and
the frying pan were ruining the American stomach. Midday dinner consisted of
two · meats, gravies, pickles, vegetables,
cheese, bread and butter, topped off by
pudding or pie.
COLUMNIST ' The 19th-century man would have
scorned the modern breakfast of orange
said the director of the New York Board juice, cereal, toast and coffee. He wanted
of Nutrition, "the United States will two meats, bread and potatoes, pickles,
have to divert a large proportion of grain and sometimes eggs, toast, hot cakes, hisfrom animal feeds to direct human con- cuits and coffee.
,
The manner of eating was no more
sumption."
It was pointed ·o ut that "when grain is delicate than the 9uantity of food conpassed through the stomach of an animal sumed. The Amenca~. gentl~man _of the
and we eat the meat, it takes about eight . Urnes, wrote Cars~n, . ate Wl~h bl~ndmg
acres to produce as much food as we sp~ed, shoveling h1s VIctuals m ~!th h1s
could get from one acre if we ate the kmfe and afterwards" cleanmg h1s teeth
food directly from the farmlands."
w1th hiS pocketkmfe.
The food shortage never reached a
Vegetarians fall into several categories
critical stage here, but then environmen- - th~se who eat no meat, those who
talists, with their eye on the future, eat a httle meat and those who eat fish,
began encouraging people to eat less ?ut no meat. The!J numbers, have
meat. The last time the country went on mc_luded Socrates, Plato, da Vmc1, Ema vegetarian kick was in the 19th centu- stem, ~andh1, John Milton, Robert
ry; but it was . not the result of food CummmS'l, Glona Swanson, the Beatles
~nd George Bernard Shaw. Shaw, who
shortages. just the opposite.
"A cheap, aoundant food .supply and a hved to 94, became a vegetanan at the
robust habit oflife sent our ancestors off age of 25 and remamed healthy
on a gastronomic binge which knew no throughout his life.
·
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
limits," said Gerald Carson in his book,
"The Corntlake Crusade" (Ayer Co. , Newspaper Enterprise Association.)
.

· Darren Crase Roush
Happy 1st Easter!
Love, Mommy &amp; Daddy

Love,
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Love,

Love,

Happy 1st Easter!

Baylee Paige Grueser
Love,

Love, Granddad &amp; Gamma

Sean and Kim Grueser

George
Plagenz

·,

Becky &amp; Chad Taylor

NaNa~

Popaw

,

Happy Easter Buck!

NaNa&amp; Popaw

Son of Kenny Ramsey &amp;
.Michele Jarrell

WEST'S VIEW
Tristan Michael Theiss
Love,

Prqfiling supporters are speeding to wrong conclusion

Mommy &amp; Lewis

. Love,
Mommy &amp; Daddy

. Randolph
Love,

Love,

Love,

NaNa &amp; Popaw

NaNa&amp; Papaw

MaMaw &amp; PaPaw Randolph
&amp; Mommy &amp; Daddy

Brenna Elise McClintock
Happy 1st Easter!

•

Whatever was the Justice Department
race .
thinking? Having successfully ·comBad news for the sensitivity-training
pelled New jersey to set new ~idelines .
industry. New Jersey was all set 'to
intended to eliminate "racial profiling"
· release the results of this $500,000 study
by state troopers along the Garden
conducted by the Pacific Institute for
State's highways, why did it order up a
Research and Evaluation in January
study of the speeding habits of New Jerwhen Mark Posner, a lawyer with the
sey motorists? Such carelessness. After
Justice Department, told the state to hit
the brakes. Informed by his no doubt
all, science can be so unpredictable.
extensive legal expertise, Mr. Posner
Guess it never occurred to anyone at
determined that the scientific methodJustice that a comprehensive analysis of
COLUMNIST
ology of the study was all wrong. ·Glare
the facts might actually provide some
coming off win~hields, he suggested,
evidence that New Jersey troopers are
nqt quite the Simon Legrees in squad the speed limit at a much higher rate very likely- skewed the analysis of the
than white motorists. "In the southern 38,747 photos of drivers that researchers
cars their critics say they "are.
But that's what the new study shows. segment ··of the turnpike, where the compiled for anal)osis. Weather or camOr is said to, show, anyhow. It's hard to speed limit is 65 mph, 2. 7 percent of era placem·ent, he was sure, probably
know tor sure bec,ause the Justice black drivers were speeders, compared ruined the determinations of the threeDepartment, having discovered this big with 1.4 percent of white drivers," member j!liilel charged with identifying
political boo-bpo in the ream of scien- reported The New York Times, which drivers oy race from the photographs
tific data it asked for, has decided to broke the story last week." Among dri- (without any spe~ding information) .'
·bury the report by barring its release~ vers going faster than .90 mph, the dis- "Based on the questions we have identified," he wrote, "it may well be that tlie
This, of course, has only intensified parity was ever greater."
This was not what the government results reported .in the draft report are
media interest in the story.
was
expecting. "Those results .startled wrong or unreliable."
Why? It allgoes back to the fact that
The only way to find out for sure
before we had~a bin Laden, we officials in the state attorney general's
office,
who
had
assumed
that
the
radar
whether
environmental factors skewed
had New Jersey-st(l'te troopers, widely
reviled as unreconstructed racists for study would bolster their case that pro- the ~sear~h is tQ release their report,
stopping black motorists at a much filing was widespread," the newspaper not JUSt for the benefit of the taxpayers
higher rate than other motorists, partic- wrote. "Instead, the study concluded ; who pa1d for It, but for the vetting
ularly along the New Jersey Turnpike. that blacks make up 16 percent of the process _of scientific peer ·re~iew. What's
Troopers do stop black motorists at a drivers on the ,turnpike and 25 percent the Justice Department afra~~ oft A. few
of the · speeder1 in the 65 mph zones, tou~h facts see~ to have coll1ded w1tl\ a
much higher rate than white motorists.
where complaints of proli.ling have been frag1le, pet pohttcal theory, and 1ts supThis happens for varietY of explanamost common." Given thatl recent porters are domg everythmg wrong to
tions, which are either denounced as·
records show that black drivers make up save it. ·
'
racial profiling or upheld ·as common-.
23 percent of the traffic stops on the
sense police 1Wotk. What this new study
(Dipna J#st Is a columnist and' editorial
tells us is that one reason troopets are turnpike. it sounds as if the troopets just
might
be
stopping
black
drivers
because
· 1on 11'1mes. Sh e can be
stopping more black than white
wr1'terfior ..,.,,.
' r~e w.vash@
mg
of their driving, not because of their
·
. contacted via dll!fst . washingtontimes.com.)
motorists is that black motorists exceed

Diana
·West

Love You,
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Nana &amp; Papa, Uncle
Jenlmv. Aunt Kim &amp; Megan

Love,

Cody William Capehart
Love,

Mamaw &amp; Papaw Randolph

Mommy, Grandpa, Grandma

Love, Papa &amp; Grandma

Love,

Logan Mikayla Eades
Love,

Carson Tanner Eades
Love,

Happy !:aster!

Happy Easter!

,.

''

Adra ""''"'""' '"'""'· nto&lt;:_k
Happy Easter Sweetie!
_Love, Papa &amp; Grandma

· · Maw, Pap Bissell

Poppy and Grammy Eades

1

Poppy and Grammy Eades
'

Grandson of 1
Paul &amp; Kath Ch dwell

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

r

�•
Page AB • The Dally Sentinel
Sunday School 10 lim·
Momina: worship II am Eveninz - 7 pm

Apple and"'-"' s~.

Churdl Gl J..., Cluiol Apoololk
V.nZandl and Wud Rd.

S.:rtd Hurt Catbolit Churc:b
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-!!898
Ptitur. Re v. Wallet E. Heinl.
Sal. Con. 4 : 4~ - !! : J Sp . m.; Mas...:- 5:30 p m.
SWl. Cuu. -8:45-9:15 ...111..
Sun. Ma!&gt;S - 9:.30 a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30 a.m.

Rhtr VaJity
Aposwlic Worship Center
873 S. Jrd Ave. , Middleport
Kevin Konkk , Pastor

Sunday. I0 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Wtdne sda)', 7:30p.m.; Yoolh Fri. 1:30 p.m.

Churrh ol

Chun:h o( Jesus Christ
Apostolic Fanh
Sunda)'. 10 a.m. and '7 : ~() p.m.
Wt dnesday, 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy Westside Churth or Christ
33226 Children' s Home RU.
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - IOa. m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday St:hool - ~ : :10 a.m.
Wol'll.hip - I I a.m. and b p.m.
Wednesday Smicc - 7 p.m.

Pomern)· f'ir!!t Baptist
East Main St.
Sund:Jy Sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Wor,.hir - IO:JO a.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Churrh ofChri.~t
r ~st l•r : Tcrrv Stewart
Su nday Sc hool -9JOa.m.
Worship · IO:JO il.m.. 6:JU p.m.
Wednc ~ da y Service:-;- 6:30 p.m.

Soulhern Baptist

41872 Pomeroy Pikl'
l"'o~stor : 1:. Lamar 0 ' Bryant

Sunday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 1:1 :15 a.m , 9:45am &amp; 7: 00 p.m.
Wcdnc'lday Services.- 7:00p.m.
First Baptist Church

l'aswr: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St , Middkport
Sunday School - 9:1 5 a. nf.
Worship- 10: IS a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wcdnc!l{lay Scn:iec· 7:1Xl p. m.

Tupp~:r!!

Plain Church or Christ

Instrumental

~

Worship ~c rv ice- 9 a.m.
Cnmmuninn - 10 a.m.
Sunday S ~· h uul • I0: I5 a.I H.
Youth· 5:30 pm Sun&lt;lay
Bible Sludy Wedn esday 7 pm

• Racine Hrst Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School - 9 :3 0 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chun:h
75 Pl!arl St., Middleport.
Pas1or: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m.• 7:]0 p.m.
Wcdncllday Service - 7:30p.m.

Brudbury Churt'h of Christ
Pillltor: Jim Eaton
39~ !18 Bradbury Road, Middlcpon
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m . ·
Worship - 10 :30 a.m.

Worship - 10:40 a.m .. 7:00 p.m
Wednesday Services-7:00 p. m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson

Sunday School - I Oa.m.
Worship · l la.m .. 7:00 P.m.

p

Hysrll Run Holinns Chun:h
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 10:43 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible ~tudy and Youth · 7 p.m.

Rutland Churrh or Christ
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:3 0 a. m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 1:00 p.m.
MI. Union Baptist
· Pa!itor : David Wiseman
Sunda y Sc hool-9:45 a.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodl8t Church
Rev. L.es Strand! and Myra L Strandt

Bradrord Church of Christ
Come r of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedne!Oday Service- 7:00p.m .

M in i s t~: r : Doug Shamblin
You lh Mini ster: Bill Amberger
Sunday Sc hool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip -ltOO a. m., 10:30 a.m., 7: 00p.m.
Wedn~~da.y Services - 7:00p.m.

6:30p.m.

Wednesday-Servic es - 6:3op.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Grea! Rend, RnUJe 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Dilniel Mt:..:ea
Sund1ty School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bihlc Study- 6:00p.m.

'l

. Old Bethel Free Will Baplisl Church
28601 St. Rt . ?. Middl epon
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
E\·cning · 7:00 p.n1 .
ThurMiay St rviccs - 7:00

l .a llrr-Da\ Sainh

Hickory Hills Chul'l'h or Christ .
Evang el ist Mite Moore
•
Sunday School ." 9 a.m.
Worship - l 0 ~.m. , 6: 30 p.m.
W~:d ncsda y Services- 7 p.m.

,The: Chun:h or Jrsus
Christ of Latter-Dlly Saints
St. R.t. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday S~hool 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood l I :05· 12:00

Langsville Christian Church
Pastor: Roben Musser
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wollihip - 10:30 a.m., 7: 30p.m.
We dn esd::~y Service 7:30p.m.

Hillsidr Baplisl Chun:h
S! . Rt. 143 just olf Rt. 7
Pas tor: Rev. James R. Ac ree, Sr.
Sunday Unified SL:I'\'i~e
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

0000

Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
1-lom emaking meeting, 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m.

Ke es e ~

Wurship , IOa.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday Sdtoul - I 0 a .}ll· ·
Worship - ll a. m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p. m.

lnt cr.; c:~tion

Forest Run Baptist
Pa ~tur : Ari us Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a. m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Churth
COI'Iler Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy

Hartford Church or Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Vn.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School • l I lt.tn .
Worship - 9 :~ 0 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrviccs- 7:30p.m.

1\tt. Moriah Baptist

Fo~r1h &amp; MainS!.. Middlepon
Pastor: Rev_Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday S\: hool ·9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Antlqull)' Baplist
Sunday Schnol - 9:30 a.m.
Wun.hip - 10:45 a.m.
Su nday E\'ening - 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Mt. Moriah Chun:h or GOO.
Mile I-I ill Rd., Racine
Pastor: James Snuerfield
Sunday Sc hool - 9:45a.m.

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
S und::~ y School - 10 a.m.
Eveni ng· 7 p.m.
Wedne sday Services - 7 p.m.

Evening· 6 p.m.
Wedn esda y Scro.dr.:es - 7 p .m.

Second Baptisl Church
Ra\·c nswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McC lain

Saltm Ceuter

.•

Pastor: William K. Marshall
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.

Syracu!le tlrst Chun:h or God

Thursday services - 7

p.m.

Nnv Life VIctory Centt'r
;
3773 George! Crtck Road, Gallipoli!i, OH
Pastor: BiD Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 1 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Abundant G..-e R.F. I.
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pas! or Teresa Davis
Sunday service, I 0 a.m.
Wednesday !&gt;trvice, 7 p.m.

Savior
RtJ38. Antiquity
Pastor. Jesse Morris

The Belleven' Fellowship Minbtry
New Lime Rd., RuUand
Pilstor: Rev. Mars:aret l Robinson
Ser'o'ice1: Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
Sundny, 2:30p.m.

Carmel.Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rda.
Racine:. Ohio
·• .. PMcor: .DewayncS6ilier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a7m. .
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Saltm Community Church
Lieving Road, West Columbia, W .Va.
P.l!ltor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School 9:30am
Sunday ~ening setvice 6 pm
Wednesday service 1 pm ·

HarrlsonviUe ConlmunUy Churda
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 11.m. itnd 1 p.m.
•Wetlnesday • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School • II a.m.

Middleport Community Chul'l!h
57.5 Pearl St., Middleport
Pllstur. Sam Andcnou
• Sundl!y&gt;S"tl901 )0 !J,m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wedne~y Service • 7:30 p.m.

Wortilrip • 10 a.m.

Faith Valley Tabet11Kie Church

';.,'""~:i, Md~· ~

·'

Pat~l

Pa~tor: ~'illial'l)

'!' .'

l'rt·~ln

Pastor: Elder Robcn Crow

Sunday S!i:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Hnrlsonvillr Prtsbyterlan Church
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School ~ 9:45a.m.

Hazel Commuuity Church
Off R1. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won~hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

\ "\(Ill

l nilt·d Brethren
Mt. He:rmon Unlted Brethren
hl Christ Chun:h ·

Mt. Olive: Com•unlty Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednc:day Service: - 7 p.m.

Middleport CburdJ oftbe Na:arme
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunda)' School - 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Se.vlces ~ 7 p.m.
Pa.!ilor: Allen Midcap

Ree:dsvllle Fellowship
Church of the NaZIU'Cnc:
Putor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday Sch~9:30 a.m.

"I

1

Long Bottom
Suoday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

\:llan'lll'

\ t hrill

I y
,
'•
Mulbcny Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Follh Goopel Chur&lt;h

.

h-11.11

Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sander!!
Sunday School- 9;30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvi(;es - 7:30p.m.

United Fairb Churt'h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pa.'ls
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worsltip • I0:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Eden United Bn:thn:• In Chrllt
2 lf2 mile~ north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pulor: Rev. Robert Markley
' Sunday School- lla.m.
Sunday Wo111hip - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.

Full G"'p&lt;l Llghlho""'
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pas10r: Roy Hunter .
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evt:ning 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:;JO p.m.

WedneSday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m.

South Bethel New Testament

I

216 E. Second Pomeroy

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992-6376

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Pomeroy

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••"....w

NBA
Thuraday'a Games
Toronto 85, Atlanta 83
Milwaukee 95, Denver 88
Minnesota 113. Dallas 111
Philadelphia 99, Chicago 79
Sacramento 101, Houston 74 ·
Utah 112. Cleveland 9t

Pro

Baseball
MLB

Spring Training

Thursday's games
Mets 5, Los Angeles (ss) 1
TQ~!I.J7, !3o$1lln 2 .
Baltimore 9, F10rlda8
Montreal 1, St. Louis 0 .
Cleveland 8, Atlanta 4
Houston 6, Kansas City 1
Toronto 3, Phil~;~delphia 3, lie
Pittsburgh 5, Minnesota 4, 10 Inn.
San Diego 7, Seattle 4
Anaheim 17, Milwaukee 5
Colorado 4, Arizona (ss) 3
While Sox 22, Cubs 7
Tampa Bay 7, Detroil 6
Cincinnati 16, NY Yankees 4
L. Angeles (ss) 7, Arizona (ss) 5
Oakland 8, San Francisco 1

2010, 2011 ·
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State and Miami have
srheduled a home-and-home
football series in 2010 and
20 I 1,
the
Buckeyes
announced Thursday.
The first game will be
played Sept. 4, 2010 in
Columbus. The Buckeyes and
F.Iurricanes also will play in
1\'liami on Sept: 17,2011.
: Ohio State and Miami have
!p-et only twice previously,
with each school winning
once. Ohio State won 10-0 in
the I 977 season opener . in
Columbus. The Hurricanes
lieat the Buckeyes 23-12 in
the 1999 Kickoff Classic.
: Ohio State has never played
t regular-season game in
·
Florida.

Rulon Gardner
loses toe

E
White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667·3110

Basketball

sign to play In

Worship · 10 a.m.

Dyesvllle Community Chul'l!h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

National Chllmplonahlp
./ Monday, Aprll1
Semifinal winners, 9:18p.m.

OSU, Miami

Middleport Pmbytcrlan
Sunday School- 9 a.m.

Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
W...h" 1030

tnia11

Sy....,.,. Flnt Uruled Preobyt&lt;riau

MoniC Chapel Churth

Tonh Church

Hotwik

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
I
Evening ~ 7 p.nl. , (r
Wednesda)' Services- 7 p.m.

SyracUR Mhsloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike ThompSon,Pastor
~ Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service -. 7 p.m.

Cool\'llle U•lkd Mtdlodlst Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville ~urcb
Main &amp; fifth St.
Swulay School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 am. .
Thesday Services • 7 p.m.

AuemltiJ

;SI. Rt. 124, Racine

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

EuiLelart
Pastor: Brian Harki'tcss

..

God's '&amp;mpiJorPrai!IC
31665 McQuirc.Rdj fomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm ·
Services: Thurs. Nitc:s 7:00pm
N~w church No Sunday service
estah\ished.

BethAny
Pasror: Dewayne StuUer
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wor5hip- 9 a.m.
Wtdneiday Services- 10 a.m.

.,

Services: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

(33-3)

·Pro

Full Gospel Churth of the Llvlna

Faith Full Gospel Cllurth
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m .

Worship· 9:1' a.m.
Bible Study: ·Monda)' 1:00pm
SntJW¥111e
Sund1y School • 10 a.m.
Worsltip • 9 a.m.

Hocldn..,..-t Church
Gmnd Stree't ·
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor8hip- II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

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

Sunday School · 10 a.m. ·.
Wor!ihip - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p:m.

Pas1ors Jbhn &amp; Pany Wru:k;
603 Second Ave. Mason
173-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

G.-.bam Unlkd Methodist
Worsltip- 9:30a.m. ( In &amp; 2nd Sun),
7 :30p.m: (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Worship· II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Rutland Church or God
Pastor: Ron Healh
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed ne~day Serv ic e~- 7 p.m.

Clifton, W.Va.

"Full-Gospel Church"

Rolla-'

NCAA
Men'• Tournament
THE FINAL FOUR
At The Georgia Dome
Atlanta
National SemHtnala
Saturday, March 30
Indiana (24·11) vs. Oklahoma
(31-4), 6:07 p.m.
Maryland (30.4) vs. Kansas

Cllf'lon Tabt: ...Hie Churrh

Agape Lire Crnter

l "nill'd \ll'lhodiq

Meip Coopel'liUve P•rillh
Northeast Cluster ·
Airred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

ReJolclnl Life Chum.
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor. Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Harvest Outreach Mlnlstrie:s
47439 Reibel Rd., O.escer
Paslors: Rey. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Sel'\'ice!l: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

R«k Sprinp
Pastor: Keirh Rader
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowahip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Wednesday ~iees • 10 a.m.

Mt. Olive United Medtodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville .
Pastor: Rtv. Ralph Spires .
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

( 'hu rd1 of ( ;ml

Rutland Free Will Baptl.~

Sunday Service: - 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1:00 p.m.

Wonhip- 10 a.m.

( 'hristian l nion

:HIGHLIGHTS

Pastor. Wayne: R. Jewell
~sb Stlftl Church
Sunday Services . 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Ash St., Mtddlepol1· Pastor: Glenn Rowe
Thun!day . 7:00p.m. ·
·
Sunday SchoQI - 10:00 a.nP.

Ieibel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

FRIDAY's

Sdve:rsvlllr Community Church

MlnenvUie
PMror: Bob Robinson
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip- fO a.m.

llocloe

Our Saviour Lutheran Churt~
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Paslor; David Russell
Sundny School - 10:00 a.m.
Wurship • 11 a.m.

Church of Christ
7; md 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study- 9:30a.m.
Worshi p: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p. m.
Wednesday Bihle Study- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wollihip - II :OOa.m.

P.l!ltor: Brian Hattne.~s
Sunday School· Jo a.m.
Worship • l lr.,a.m.
Wedoosday 1p.m.

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

Dexter Chun:h ofChrlsl
Pa5tor: Nalhan Robinson
Sunday sch1xll 9:30a.m.
Nonn~1p Will, ·superinlendcnt
Sunday worship - I 0:30a.m.

Heath (Middlrport)

,.

St. John Luthrran Chun:h
Pine Grove

Calvary Bible Chardl
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor. Re\'. Blackwood
Surxlily School - 9:30a.m.
Worship I 0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · J :30 p.m.

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m. .

Sunday Sc~l - ·10 a.m.
Wor!ihip - 9 a.m.
WcOOesday - 1 p.m.

l .uthtran

Rttdsvllle Church of Christ
Pastm : Philip Stul]l
Sunday School: 9:30\.m.
Worship Service : 10:30 a. m.
Hible St udy, Wednesday, 6:30 p. m.

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middle)XIrt ,

•

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pa.o;tor: Rev. O ' Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.
Wors hip - 10:30 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.
Wc:r.Jncsday Service- 1:30 p.m.

Follh Fcllowalllp Cruudc for Chrio1
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service:: Friday, 7 p.m.

Community o(Qrist

Pomeroy
Pastor: ROd Brower
Worship- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:35 a.m.

Sunday wn,;hiJ" -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer mt eting- 7 p.m.

Service - 6:30p.m.

( Hh l' r ( " hurrhl'~

Pu.tChap&lt;l
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

HtN! ol Sharon Holiness Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland
Pastor: Re v. Dewey King
Sunday M: hool- 9:30 a. m.

Zion Church of Chri-.t
Pumcroy. H arris~mv illc Rd. (Rt.l43)
P;t~to r : Roger W!l l~o n
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - IO:JU a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wcdnespuy Services - 7 run

Pordliad F1nu c•urth ottbe Naul"mt
PII.Sior. William Justis
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Morning Wurship - 10:45 a.m.

Pas10r: Bob RDhinson
Sunday School - 10 a .m.
Wors~ip • 9 a.m.

Cah·ary Pilgrim Chapel
1-larriso nvillc Rood
P-.tstur: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnesd:~y Servi(;t'- 7:00p.m.

Utan.. W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School ·.9:30 a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wedncsdly Bible Study - 1:00 p.m.

•

740·992-5444

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they.
shaU see God.
Matthew 5.
My Qrace Is sufficient for
thee; for my strenQth Is
made perfect In
weakness
11 Cor.12:9

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Orlando
Hernandez allowed five rims and six
hits over five innings
and closer Mariano
Rivera also was
pounded in the New
York Yankees' 16-4 loss to Cincinnati
on Thursday night.
Hernandez, who had discomfort in
his .right elbow last weekend, struggfed early before finishing with three .
scoreless innings.
"I believe so,, said Hernandez,
when asked if he was ready to star.t
the season. "I feel fine. I had fatigue. I
felt a little tired before:'
Hernandez underwent an MRI
.exam Monday. Results were negative.

Reds

Fairvltw Bible Omn::b

Wedftesday Service&amp; - 7 p.m.

Forest Run

Reds pound on somebody for a change

Wllllc"s C&gt;apel W..,_
CooJviUe Road
Pastor: Rcv1Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor.~h i p • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service -.7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · IO: JO a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Su~y

81

r-~­

Pastor. Rev. Samuel W. Basye:

llatwoods

: CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP)
-· Olympic wrestling champion Rulon Gardner's frost.bite-damaged toe was amputated, six weeks after he was
strandet:! overnight in the
Wyoming backcountry.
qoctors at Eastern Idaho
Regional Medical Center in
Idaho falls said they removed
the middle toe from Gardner's
right foot and are optimistic
he will not lose any ~ore toes.
Dr. Timothy Thurman said
Gardner's left foot was "looking good" and he -was not
expected to stay at the hospital overnight.
It remained uncertain how
the loss of the toe will affect
Gardner's career.

"I think he 's fine;"Yankees man ag~
er Joe Torre said. "That's all I care
about. I don't care about the num bers. He threw all his pitches: •
Hernandez is expected to make his
regular-season debut April 6 or 7
against Tampa Bay.
Aaron Boone hit a three-run
homer during a four-run first inning
for the Reds, who won for just the
third time in the past 15 games.
Rivera allowed six runs in a third of
an inning in the ninth.
"I threw all my pitches in one-third
of an inning," Rivera said. "''m feeling great. It's been a good spring."
Hernandez struck out three, walked
one and hit two batters. He threw 53

of 80 pitches for strikes.
"Yes, I felt a little fru strated," H ernandez said. "You have to accept it as
it comes and oVerco me it."
':,EI Duque" started the game by
striking out Todd Walker and Brady
Clark in the first.
Ken Griffey Jr. followed with a
bloop single. After Sean Casey singled, Boone hit a three-run homer.
After walk.ing Adam Dunn and hitting Juan Encarnacion, Hernandez
allowed an RBI double to .Jason
LaRue.
Griffey made it 5-0 with a runscoring single in the second.
Hernandez allowed only one base
runner- when he hit LaR~e in the

Contrad doesn't

third - over his final three innings.
Dunn had a two- run single in a
five-run, seventh that put the Reds
up 10-3.
Enrique Wilson and Derek Jeter hit
third-inning solo homers for the Yankees.
New.Y~ lost for the second time
in 16 games . .
Reds starter Elmer Dessens gave up
three runs and four hits in four
tnmngs.

REDs ACQUIRE TAYLOR
The Philadelphia Phillies traded
minor league outfielder Reggie Taylor to the Cincinnati R eds on Thurs-

Please see Reels, BI

Thome

WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) -Jim Thome ~tood on
his tiptoes, reaching into the
back corners of his locker in
search of things to bring on
the Indians"
season-opening road trip.
Another
spring training camp over,
Thome tossed in his first
baseman's glove, cleats, a few
T-shirts and some personal
items in his !7avel bag as he
got ready (or another season
with Cleveland.
Maybe his bst one.
"I've loved it in Cleveland,"
Thome said Thursday. "It
would be sad not to come
back. But sometimes things
happen and business things
happen."
Thome's high socks and
home runs are as much a part
of Cleveland's baseball lore as
a Bob FeUer fastball, Omar ·
Vizquel 'backhanding a
grounder in the hole or a hot
dog with stadium mustard.
But now, the three-time
AU-Star, who had 49 homers
and 124 RBis last year, is in
the final year of his. contract
and .wiD be eligible for free
agency after the World Series.
"Nothing has changed," the
31-year-old Thome said. "I do
want to stay in Cleveland, and
hopefully I'D come back to
spring training next year. I've '
cherished every minute I've
been here."
After some . preliminary
contract talks with the Indians, Thome, the Indians'
career home run leader, and
his agent have decided to suspend negotiations until after
the season.
And while that may worry
Cleveland fans. who watchep
helplessly. as the club traded
Roberto Alomar this winter MAN WITH BIG STICK - Indians' Jim Thome watches the flight of his second Inning
home run off a pitch by Astros' Dave Mlicki, In Kissimmee, Fla., Tuesday. Thome has put
.PIHM ... 'dlome.B2
contract talks on hold until affter this season. (AP)

Tribe

Riverside
ealtyl002
MASON, W.Va. - As
the 2002 golf season gets

(iQIf

underwa~

Riverside
Golf Club
is getting started with several events in April.
A favorite to many
golfers in the area, the
2002 Riverside Senior
Men's League will kick-off
the season on Tuesday with
an organizational meeting
at 8:30 , a.m. inside the
clubhouse Banquet Room.
An optional breakfast buffet wiD be offered to those
in attendance, followed by
18 holes of regular play.
The cost for the 2002
league play is $16 for walking and $23 for rton-mem"bers.
On April 21, the Bend
Area C.A.R.E. will host
the · annual
Special
Olympics Scramble. The
Bend Area C.A.R.E. sponsors this event each.year at
the golf course to help

Indians doubleup on Braves
WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) - Ellis Burks hit two ·
home runs and went 5-for-5,
leading the Cleveland Indians
to an 8-4 win Thursday over
the Atlanta Braves.
'Til take that any · day.
Maybe it was these," Burks
said as he tucked a new pair of
batting gloves into his duffel
bag. I'm keeping 'em.
Burks had five RBis for the
Indians, who . will play . two
exhibition games in Los
Angeles on Friday and Saturday before opening the season
Sunday night at Anaheim baseball's season opener.
Andruw Jones hit a threerun homer for the Braves.
who'll open the 2002 season
at home on Monday against
Philadelphia.
C. C. Sabathia (2- 1), who a
year ago stayed behind in
florida when the Indians
broke camp, allowed four runs
and eight hits in seven
innings. He walked none and
struck out nine.
After Sabathia went 17-5 as
a rookie last season, big things
are expected of the 6-foot-7
left-bander.
·
Burks' first homer put the
Indians up 4-0 in th e fifth , but
the Bravd tied it an inning
later with four runs - three
coming on Jones" fourth
homer, a shot to left off
Sabathia.
Omar Vizquel hit an RBI
triple and Burks had a runs~oring doubl e in sixth off
loser Tim Spooneybarge)- to
make it 6-4. and then Burks
hit a two -run homer off Jake
Robbins in the eighth .
11

1

'

Memphis Wins NIT, 72-62
with the cost of fundin'g
such a worthwhile organization in the community.
There are several opportunities for the public to
help with this event.
including the following
sponsorship&lt;:
GOLD
SPONSOR ($110), on e
player and a sponsor sign
on a hole or tee area; SILVER SPONSOR ($85),
one player and a sponsor
sigu on a hole or tee area;
BRONZE
SPONSOR
($60), one player in the
tournament.
The Annual Riverside
Two-Man Scramble will
be held on April 2S: The
tournament wi)l be separated into two flights
according to USGA handicaps.
for more infqrmation,
contact Riverside Golf
Club at (304)773-5354 or
(800)261-3031.

NEWYORK (AP) -John
Calipari knows it will happen
eventually. Dajuan Wagner, his
best player, will be an NBA
player whenever he wants.
He could enter the draft in
a heartbeat. Or he could wait
a year. All he has to do is
de cide. And Memphis' star
freshman hasn "t done that yet.
Wagner scored 16 points
and was harned the tournament MVP as the Tig!!rs won
th e NIT on Thursdiy night,
beating South Carolina 72-62
in th e championship game.
. Ternple beat Syracuse 6554 for third place on the
strergth of David Hawkins'
20 points, 18 ·'in the second
half. It was the first time in his
20 seasons as Owls coach that
John Chancy won a season
final e at Temple.
Thursday could have been
Wagner's only collegjate season finale.
"If he decides· to stay, I'm
going to be so happy. because
Please see NIT, Bl
;

\

.

.,

Frld11J. Mllrdl :Zt, :zoo:z

Bald knob. on Co. Rd. J I
Pastor: Rc:v. Roger Willford
Sunday Sc-hool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhi~ 7 p.m.

Rutland Church olthe: Na:zartnt

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a m,
Worship . II a.m.

, D1m·ille Holiness Chun:h
J 1057 State Rome 32 S, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary J a~:ksu n
Sunday SChool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - I0:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednesday pru yer service - 7 p.m.

Worship - J:JO ~ . m .
Sunday s~:hool - lO:JO a.m.
J l~s to r - J c tTrcy Wallace
~~ and J rd Sunday

S(;houl · 9:30a.m.
Worshi p · 10:45 a.m.

Pastor : James E.

Worship - 9 a.m.

1

S uml;~ y

E ~· ening -

Sunday School and
Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m.

Community Church
Pastor: Rev. AulOs Tillis
Main Strce l. Rutland
Sunday Won;hip---10:00 un.
Sunday Sen.·ice-( p. m.

Keno Churt'h or Chri!it

Rutland FiMII Rapti!it Churth

Fln~t

Eatrrpritt
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday 'School - 10 a.m.

II ol i m· ~~

1\liddlepurt Chun-h ur Christ
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hart ~uu
Youth Minister: Bill Fmzicr
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wohhi p-IU5, !0:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
WLxlnesda y S&lt;.':rviccs - 7 p.m.

Hupt- Baptist Chun-h (Southern)
570 Gra nt SL, Mid dlepurt

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - I I a.m.
Wednesday &amp;rvicet - 1:30 p.m.

326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy
Rev. James BcTTUtCli. Rc:v. Katharin fus_ler

,..,. C..rdlfl/ldlt N:ua..PIIk.'r. Jan Lavender
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • IO:JO a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Services - 7 p.m.

wectnewy servm - 1 p.m
.

Crntnl Cluattr
Asbul')' (Syracuse)

Gl'll~e Episcopal Chwd

KmpbwyRood

Putor. Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School -9: 30a.m.
WOI'ihip • II a.m., 6 p.m.

1\ac:sday Servicei . 7:30p.m.

Pas10r: Rev. Cmig Crossman
Worship I 0:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9:15a. m.

212 W. Main SL
Min i~ t cr : Ant hony Morris
Sunday ~-h ool - 9:30a.m.
Woohip- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Servk'es. 7 p.m.

Baptist

•

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

Pu&amp;or: Robnt Vance
Sundly Scbool " 9:30 l .tn.
Wi:nbipSetvi« 10:30 Lm.
EveniftJ St:Mce ~ p.m.

"
Clleatr a..rn rA t1tt Nuaruc

Putar:: Jane Beanie
Sunday Scbool: - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 un.

~

Pomtroy Church of Christ

Llbt11y Ai!it:mbly of God
P.O. 8011. 467, Duddi ng lallC
Ma.soll, W.Va.
Pastnr: Neil Tennant
Sunday Servil·t:)· IO:QO a.m. uuU7 p.m.

p

First Sundly of Mood! - 1ffl p.m. SCf'tioe

Trinity Cburdl

Hemkd. Grove Cluisti1n Churth
Pastor: L.arry Brown
Won:htp - 9 :.~0 am.
Sun!lay School 10:30 a.m.
Dil;l lc Study- 7 f".m.

New Ltma Road

-......,._51.,_.
Worship- 9: 30a.m.

-Inside:
Thur:sday's NBA action, Page B3
m,hama rips Point, Page B4 _
NCAA Final Four notes, Page B5

Wcdnelday Setvice • 1 p.m.
c.lduallltc•• r 1 e...rCHrda

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30t.m., 6p.m.
Wednnclay Servkel - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - I 0:30a.m.

( OII"IT"alioual
,..,

PuoocllobMI!trloo&lt;
Sunday Sc:bool • 9 a.m.
Sun. Won.IUp - I0: I 0 a.m.• 6 p.m.

S - Chouu Gltloe N Pistor Mike Adkins

WOI'Iftip - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship - II a. m.
Wednesday Sef'\lices - 7 p.m.

Chri~t

Wtnhi.p - 9:30a.m.

'-Sunday School - 9;JO a.m.

Churdt Gl God Gl....,....,
OJ. Whitt Rd. u«SL Rt. 160
Pastoc PJ. Cbapttwl

Sil"" Rid&amp;&lt;

Worship . 10:4S a.•.. 1 p.m.
Wednetday S..Vic:ft - 7 p.m.

Pa- Dol&gt; ltandoqlll
Sunday School - IO:JO a.m.

Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.
Service$ - 6:30 p.ID,

W~y

( a l ho li l·

Pasloc Jamet Miller

J-

Pasaor: Re-v. Da\id Ruuell
Sullday SchooJ aod W~ip-- 10 a.m.

Wednesday 7 p.m.

Sunday School - IO:lO a.m.
E\·ening - 7:30 p.m

Friday. March 29. 2002•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

•

•

DRIVE - South Carolina's Rolando Howell drives between
Memphis' Chris Massie, left, and Antonio Burks in the second
half Thursday. (AP)

••

.,

�t
Pllge

8 2 • The Dallv Sentinel

. Friday, March 21. 2oo2

Friday, March 29, 2002

www.myd,lllyMntlnel.com

Piazza shakes up Mota in Dodgers, ·Mets standoff.
There was a shakeup at Dodgertown: thanks to Mike Piazza.
Upset after being hit by a pitch
from Guillermo Mota, Piazza waited
an inning before tangling with the Los
Angeles reliever and
causing the benches to empty Thursday
There were no punches, but plenty of shoves as the New York Mets'
star grabbed Mota's collar and shook
him
·
"R ight now, I can't say anything,"
Piazza said after being hit by a pitch
for the fourth time this spring. "Give
me a day or two and I'll talk about

M LB

-i.t."

The problems at Vero Beach, Fla.,
started in the seventh inning when
Mota hit Piazza in the backside with
a 3-0 pitch.
Piazza gave Mota an angry look
and was replaced by a pinch-runner.
Piazza remained on the Mets' bench
rather than head to the clubhouse.
When Mota passed the Mets'
bench on his way to the clubhouse in
the middle of the eighth, Piazza confronted him, grabbed him by the
shirt and the shoving started.

The episode continued a turbulent
start to Mota's career with the
Dodgers. Recently traded from
Montreal, he faced the Expos on
Wednesday and gave up six runs
without retiring a batter.
"I don't want to talk about it,"
Mota said.' "These last couple of days
here have been unbelievable."
Dod$ers pitching coach Jim Colborn said Mota told him he was trying to apologize to Piazza when the
·altercation began.
"It's absolutely impossible to interpret that as something intentional,"
ColbOrn said.
Mets general manager Steve
Phillips supported Piazza, and he didn't expect anyone to get suspended.
"It was just a little .chat," Phillips
said. "It wasn't overly aggressive."
The other team of Dodgers got hit
a three-run homer from Brian Jordan
in a 7-5 victory over an Arizona Diamondbacks split-squad in Las Vegas.
Hideo Nomo (3-1) pitched six
scoreless innings, allowing four hits,
striking out five and walking four.
Miguel Batista (1-2) went three
innings for Arizona, allowing five
earned runs on six hits.
·
In other spring training games:

RANGERS 17, RED Sox 2
At Fort Myers, Fla., Carl Everett,
booed during his first appearance at
his old spring training park, homered
in the first inning to send Texas over
Boston.
Everett, seen by many as a disruptive player during his time in Boston,
also had an RBI double.
J'e~s starting pitcher Kenny
Rogers was scratched because of
tightness in his left hamstring.
BLUE jAYS 3, PHiwl!S 3
Af Clearwater, Fla., Philadelphia's
Pat Burrell and Toronto's Jose Cruz
Jr. each hit two home runs as the
teams played to a nine-inning tie.
ORIOLES 9, MARLINS 8
At Melbourne, Fla., Brook
Fordyce hit a two-out, two-run
homer in the ninth inning that rallied Baltimore past Florida. 1
EXPOS 1, CARDINALS 0
At Jupiter, Fla. ; Woody Williams
pitched six scorJless innings for St.
Louis.
Cardinals pitcher Rick Ankiel, still
trying to overcome control problems from two seasons ago, was
placed on the 15-day disabled list
because of tendinitis in his left
elbow.

Browns back into prime time
CLEVELAND (AP) -The
Cleveland Browns will be
back in prime
time this season.
For ·the first
time since their
1999 season opener, the
Browns will play on national
TV this year in a Sunday
night game against the Baltimo.re Ravens on Oct. 6. ·
The Browns will also open
their season at home on Sept.
8 against the Kansas City
Chiefs. The ·next week they'll
face the Cincinnati Bengals in
Cleveland before playing their
first road game on Sept. 22 at
Tennessee followed by a Sept.
29 game in Pittsburgh.

·NfL

In addition, the Browns will
play two of their fast three
games at' home, concluding
their regular season on Dec.
29 against the Adanta Falcons.
The Browns will have a bye
in Week lOth- the weekend
ofNov. 10.
"We are especially looking
forward to the Sunday night
nationally televised primetime game against the Baltimore Ravens, because it gives
our fans an opportunity to
display to . the country how
special they are and what the
greater Cleveland community
is really like:' said Browns
president Carmen Policy.

Reds

frotu Page 81
day for a player to be named.
Taylor, 25, joined the Reds for Thursday
night's game with the New York Yankees in
Tampa. After replacing Juan Encarnacion in
the fifth inning, Taylor had two singles and a
walk in four plate appe~rances, stole a base and
scored twice.
Taylor'has yet to live up to the promise he
showed when the Phillies made him a first- . .
round pick in the 1995 amateur dr.aft. He has
appeared in just 1~ major league games, and in

seven seasons in the minors has hit .260 with
56 home runs and 286 RBls.
. Taylor said hoc sensed he was being traded .
when manager Larry Bowa asked to see him
Thursday.
'Tve heard talk since the third week of
spring training," Taylor said. "I was out of
options. They had no room for me.
"I just want to show these guys (Reds) what
I can do. It's a chance to start over. It gives me
a chance to start in the big leagues. I want to
fit in wherever I can."
·
Reds manager Bob Boone said Taylor could
be used as an extra outfielder and left-handed
pinch hitter.

most popular and productive
players.
Chief Wahoo is the team's
· mascot, but make no mistake,
from PageBl
Thome is Mr. Indian.
Roberto Alomar this winter
And with Gonzalez no
and passed on re-signing sev- longer in the middle df the
eral free agents, including order, Thome will be counted
Juan Gonzalez and Kenny on even more.
Lofton, neither' Thome nor
'~Right now, he's more
th e Indians appbr to be con- important than he ever was,"
cerned about putting -things said manager Charlie Manuel,
off for a few moriths.
who has been with Thome
"Jimmy doesn't want to talk since the minors. "We look
contract during the season," for him to hit another 40
said Indians general manager homers or 50. He's the big
Mark Shapiro. "But we've stick in our lineup."
talked about· bringing him
Thome didn't hit his weight
back, and he has a desire of last April, finishing with just
r' turning as a Cleveland Indi- three homers and a .182 averan. So that's a good place to age. But for the next five
start."
•
months, there wasn't a
But Albert Belle talked tougher out in baseball as
about staying, too. So did Thome hit .307 with 25 dou~
Manny Ramirez, Lofton and bles, 46 homers and 114 RBis
even Gonzalez. They're all in 135 games.
going, going, gone.
He also moved passed Belle
If the Indians aren't the into first place on the team's
same team because of the home. run list (282), and will
departure of the others, imag- head into this season ranked
ine them without Thome.
It's almost unthinkable.
· Drafted in the 13th round
by the Indians in 1989,
Thome made his major
league cfebut with the club
two years later as a skinny
third baseman with a suspect
glove but a sWeet, left-handed
swing.
.
By the time the club moved
to Jocobs Field in 1994,
Thome was beginning to
emerge as one of the AL's premier power hitters.
Now, after hitting more
than 20 homers in each of the
past eight seasons, he has
become one of Cleveland's ·

lbome

I

I

first in club history in walks
(875), third in slugging perce'ntage (.555), fourth in
extra-base hits (540), seventh
in RBis (809), eighth in runs
(816), eighth in total bases
(2,308), and ninth in doubles
(240).
· Numbers, · though, don't
mean a thing to Thome. He's
a throwback and not just
because of the way he wears
his · socks. For Thome, just
putting on a major league
uniform every day is what
matters most.
"My job is to come to the
ballpark every day, hit early
and try to get better as a player," he said. "Do the things I
can to try to help our. team
win.
"A. contiact is a contract,
but you have to play the game
for pride. Contracts are a part
of the game, but I don't want
to get wrapped up into a contract. I want to go out and
play the game and be a baseball player."

AS1110S 6, Rd'vALS 1
At Kissimmee, Fla., Wade Miller
pitched five scoreless innings and hit
a three: run triple for Houston.
Jeff Bagwell hit his seventh home
run of spring training for the Astros.
PIRATES S, TwiNs 4
At Fort Myers, Fla., Brian Giles
and Abraham Nunez each drove in
two runs and Pittsburgh beat Minnesota in 10 innings. ·
DEVIL RAYS 7, TIGERS 6
At St. Petersburg, Fla., ·Chris
·Gomez's two-out, ninth-inning RBI
single off juan Acevedo lifted Tampa
Bay past Detroit.
Tampa Bay rallied from a four-run
deficit after right-hander Tanyon
Sturue was rocked for six runs and
10 h.its in a final tuneup for his opening day start Tuesday against the.
Tigers.
WHITE Sox 22, CUBs 7
At Tucson, Ariz., Ray Durham
went 4-for-4 with a grand slam and
six RBis as the White Sox routed
their Chicago rivals.
Magglio Ordonez's three-run
homer capped a seven-run second
inning for the White Sox. Durham's
slam was the highlight of an eightrun onslaught in the third.

NIT
fnnn ... Bl
I've got him for another year," Calipari said.
"Every day I walk in, he puts a smile on my
face.
·
"If he decides to leave, I'm going to be
happy for him, But if he does decide to come
back, I'm going to be happy for us at Memphis."
Earl Barron, who played last summer in
China for the United States in the World
University Games, scored 19 of his careerhigh 25 points in.the first half to lead Memphis.
Calipari said he can see pro potential in
Barron. But Wagner's potential is obvious.
"Oh yeah, he'll be a lottery pick," Calipari
said. "Everybody knows and he knows if he
comes back, he'll be (drafted) one or two."
So what's Wagner going to do?
"[ don't worry about that," Wag11er said.
"This is real special. We won a national
championship: We wor!fed hard all year an~
we just tried to come out here and get one
for coach."·
The blue-and-white-clad contingent of
Memphis fans stood and chanted "One more
year! One more year!" when Wagner came
out of the game. with 47.3 seconds left,
bumping chests and clasping hands with all
of his teammates.
For Calipari, the championship accomplished something he wanted to get out of

NBA

.'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Jazz top disinterested Cavs

BY THE~SOCIATEO PRESS

18 rebounds.
All those folks who wrote off the
Wally Szczerbiak scored 26 points
Toronto Raptors a week ago might and Chauncey Billups had 23 points
want to consid~r a and a career-high 17 assists for the
rewrit~.
Vmc~ Timberwolves, who held a playersCarters team 1sn t, only meeting the day befori to
' ~ead yet, even though Carte.r is fin- address their monthlong slump.
!Shed
for the season.
M'mnesota, w hi ch 1ost 10 o f 1ts
·
t.
•
T "e
resurgent Raptors won their fi
· M h d
d ·
f
fourth straight game _and pulled . . rst 13 . m arc ' roppe seven o
f 1 dia
to
· h h 1ts previous e1ght at home.
Wl'thi ntw
o o n na10re1gt
h
'd '
th
. place ·n th E t d r. t'
th
Steve Nas nearly t1e It at e
.
1
e as , e.ea mg
e b
b h ' a: bal
h
.th
. Atlanta Hawks 85- 83 Thursday uzzer, ut IS ou- ance s ot WI
night.
·
one foot on the 3-point line wen~
"We're showing we have what it off the back of the nm.
takes," said Antonio Davis, who
Garnett was hurt with five minutes
blocked a shot by Toni Kukoc with left in the third quarter when he
1.3 seconds left to preserve the win. lunged at the Mavericks' Wang
The Raptors play the Pacers twice Zhizhi, who gave him a ball fake and
in the season's final tO games.Toron- sent Garnett falling to the floor as he
to won both its games against Indi- tried avoid a collision.
ana earlier this season.
While Garnett was getting stitchElsewhere Friday. Minnesota out- es, Dallas crept back from a 19-point
lasted Dallas 113- 111, Sacramento deficit.
"I knew it wasn't major," Garnett
crushed Houston 101-74, Milwaukee beat Denver 95-8.8, Utah topped said. "I still had my wits about me. It
Cleveland 112-91 and Philadelphia wasn't like I couldn't remember my
defeated Chicago 99-79.
name or anything."
·
Jerome Williams' putback with 6.1
BucKS 95, NUGGETS 88
At Milwaukee, Sam Cassell scored
seconds left gave the Raptors the
lead for good.
29 points despite a pairiful toe injury,
Davis and Morris Peterson scored and Glenn Robinson had 19 points
15 points apiece, and Alvin Williams and 15 rebounds.
Cassell's biggest basket was ~ 3added 14 as the Raptors won their
fourth straight since learning that pointer with 1:09 left for an 89-83
Carter will undergo knee surgery lead as the Buc,ks. won for jusi the
·and miss the .rest of the season.
fifth time in 14 games.
The Raptors improved to 3- 0
Voshon Lenard scored 25 points
against the Hawks, whom they beat fot the Nuggets, who trailed 53-44
for the fifth straight time. The three at halftime.
wins this season have been by a comKINGS 101, RoCKETS 74 ·
bined six points.
Chris Webber scored 19 points and
"They're playing together now,
and that's a huge difference,"Toron- Doug Christie added 17 as Sacrato coach Lenny Wilkens said. "We're mento won at Houston and defeated
on the same page, and we know the Rockets for the eighth straight
. what we want to do defensively."
time.
.
Shareef Abdur-Rahim scored 23
The Rockets, mathernattcally
points and Jason Terry added 16 for eliminated from the. playoffS TueSday.
Adanta, which fell to 29-42 and is were led by 20 pomts from Kenny
assured of a third straight losing sea- Thomas, and Cuttino Mobley added
son. ·
.19. Houston shot just 29.9 percent,
T-WOLVES 113, MAVERICKS 111 the worst in franchise history.
At Minneapolis, Kevin Garnett Sacramento scored the first 11
took 12 stitches to the back of his points of the fourth quarter to
head and had 20 points - including stretch its lead to 89-61. The lead
' seven of his team's final nine - and crested at 32 with 3:25 to play.
'

ANGELS 17, BIU!'PIERS S
At Tempe, Ariz., Anaheim openea
the game with nine straight hits o!f
Ben ·Sheets and beat Milwaukee.
Sheets, who will start Tuesday~
opener at Houston, gave up 13 hi~
and 10 runs in his sixth start of the
spring. He was 4-0 with a 1.64 E~
in his previous exhibition outings. ;
ATHLETICS 8, G~ 1 ,
Barry Bonds homered in his fi~t
appearance at Pacific Bell Park sine~
setting the single-season record fo;r
home runs with 73.
·
,
Jeremy Giambi hit a three-rup
homer for Oakland in the opening
game of the annual Bay Bridg,c
Series.
,
PADIU!S 7, MAluNERs (ss) 4 :
At Peoria, Ariz., Aaron Holbe(t
went 5-for-5 for Seattle's split squacj.
RocKIEs 4, D-BACKS (ss) 3 .
At Tucson, Ariz., Jose Ortiz hit )l
solo homer in the eighth inning tb
lift Colorado over Arizona's split
squad.
·
DoDGERS (ss) 7, D-BACKS (ss) S
At Las Vegas, Brian Jordan hit :a
·three-run homer in the third inning
to lift Los Angeles past Arizona.
'

the way at this time last season. The Tigers
lost in the NIT semifinals last year, and Calipari was hoping they would make th:e
NCAA tournament this year. But the Tigets
lost five of their last seven, including a firslround loss to Houston in the Conferenc:e
USA tournament.
.
Calipari said earlier this week he fe1t
snubbed by the NCAA tournament. Before
Tuesday's semifinals, he said advancing would
be "validation."
"They had a coach that vented all week;'
Calipari said of his players. "And next weeli:,
I'm really going to vent."
·
First-year South Carolina coach DaV.e
Odom was bidding lor his second NIT .tide
in three years. He won with Wake Forest in
2000.
Rolando Howell had 20 points and 1;5
reboun,ds for the Gamecocks, who shot just
8-of-18 from the free-throw line.
./
The Gamecocks (22-15) stayed dose in die
first half, but didn't score in the second uniil
Aaron Lucas sank a free throw with 15:50 to
play.
Lucas scored South Carolina's first field
goal ·ofthe halfwith 13:25 left.Butby •theg,
Memphis (27 ·9) was ru1,1ning away with it~
." I think pure and simple, we lost to a better basketball team," Odom said. ''I'm pro~d
of them. at the way we played."
Calipari thinks playing in the NIT pn;pared his team for next season, when ~e
· Tigers hope to make the NCAA tourn~­
ment.
With Wagner or not.

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

Raptors ~re winning again

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -The
Utah Jazz played like a team trying
to make the playoffS.
The Cleveland Cavaliers played like a
team that wanted to get home.
John Stockton and Karl Malone
picked apart the Cavaliers early
enough to earn their aging bodies
some rest as the Jazz beat the Cavaliers 112-91 Thursday night.
"They cut us up in every way,
form and fashion. We allowed them .
to run their offense, do whatever
they wanted to do, and it just cut us
up," Cleveland coach John Lucas
said.
Andrei Kirilenko and Scott Padgett each scored 17 points for the
Jazz.
With Utah leading by more than
20 points for most of the second
half, Stockton played just 23 minutes and had 13 points and 12
assists. Malone, logging just 26 minutes; scored 16 points as Utah
improved to 16-1 when shooting
over 50 percent.
"I never worry about rest in this
league ... but fortunately we got
everyone in the ballgame and
everybody got a chance to play,"
Utah coach Jerry Sloan said.
"We'll iake it. Any victory is a.
positive victory." Stockton said. "I
just try to play every game like it's
the most important game."
GCFAWAY - Cavaliers guard Andre Miller (24) tries to get around Jazz
Kirilenko started in place of guard John Stockton during the first quarter Thursday.. (AP)
Donyell Marshall (strained left calf)
and had six rebounds, four steals and by one game for the seventh spot.
(Utah) on a consistent basis," Lucas
three blocked shots.
"They executed and picked us said.
Utah has won 12 straight at home apart all night. That's the way they
The Jazz scored the first seven
against the Cavaliers, who lost all play basketball; they cut, screen for points, never trailed and led 55- 43
three games on their Western Con- each other and find the open man," at halftime. Kirilenko had a jumper
ference road swing.
•
Michael Doleac said.
and an alley-oop dunk to spark a
"We had a defensive game plan,
Cleveland, coming off a 121-116 14-2 surge to open the second half.
but they have an answer for every- loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on
"They played a good ballgame.
thing. Everybody gets involved on Tuesday, has lost five straight and They kept pressing on us . in the
their team and they used all their nine of 12.
·third quarter and the game was
options," Andre Miller said.
Ricky Davis, a,game after scoring over," Lamond Murray said .
Utah's reserves scored 50 points, a career-high 35 points, led CleveUtah shot 51 percent and
helping the Jazz win for the fourth land with 23 points. Bryant Stith recorded 35 assists to the Cavs'
time in five games to solidify their had 15 and jumaine jones added 14. 14. The jazz also had 15 steals.
hold on the eighth playoff spot in
"We just had to do patchwork
"We were aggressive on
the Western Conference. Utah with no Tyrone Hill, no Wesley Per- defense and made many steals .
moved four games ahead of the Los son, no Zydrunas Ilgauskas, but we That really helped us get going,"
Angeles Clippers and trails Seattle don't have enough to compete with Kirilenko said

NBA

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Frldlly, Mllrch 29, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I·Four

The Daily Sentinel

Prep

a

' ATLANTA (AP)- Maybe this is tucky's Tubby Smith.
Davis downplayed the significance
: Indiana's Mike Davis W.. asked of the moment. He wants to create
~bout his role in the first Final Four more opportunities for assistants game matching two minority coach- no matter the color of their skin ~·· He paused for a second, then to move up to the head coaching
~plied, "Well, I really haven't even jobs.
thought about it."
"At one point, I would have taken
, Less than a week after Halle Berry the Alcorn State job if it was offered,
and Denzel Washington made histo- just because I w.~nted to prove
iy at the Academy Awards, college ·myself;' said Davis, who · spent 11
tlasketball will break through its own years as an assistant before succeeding
Bob !{night. "What I've done proves
~ass ceiling Saturday night.
j Davis, who is black, will be coach- you can do it."
mg against Oklahoma's Kelvin
Others have taken note of his
Sampson, a Lumbee Indian, in the accomplishment: After clinching a
opening semifinal game. Kansas and spot in the Final Four, Davis returned
Maryland, both 'coached 'by white home to find 55 messages of his
inen named WilliamS, are paired in . answering machine.
!he other semifinal.
.
One .of them was from the Rev.
~ Ontil this season, only four minor- Jesse Jackson, who called after the
jty coaches had reached the Final Hoosiers upset' defending national
four: Georgetown's John Thompson, champion Duke in the ·South
1\rkansas' Nolan Richardson, Min- Regional semifinal.
itesota 's Clem Haskins and KenSampson is more outspoken when

a sign of progress.

'

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) - Now thot Arkansas has a
new coach, freshman guard J.J. Sullinger has not ruled ~ut
staying at Arkansas, but he may be leanmg
• toward Ohio.
.
·~ Sullinger has asked that he be released
from his scholarship. His father, Satch Sullinger, has said
Sullinger wants to transfer to Ohio State.
"R.ight now it's what I'm. going to need. It doesn't have
too much to do with the university," Sullinger told Little
Rock television station KATV on Thursday. "I'm go.ing to
look elsewhere to.see if this is the best place for me and, if
not, I will go elsewhere."
The Razorback!' new coach, Stan Heath, said he hoped
Sullinger would stay.
in the inning. Rickard theri settled into a Cromley walked prior to Rickard lifting
"R.ight now, I think he's leading in a different direction.
rhythm to retire the side with a strike out a Durst offering over the fence in left
But
he said he is willing to talk," Heath said. "As long as
as the Big Blacks first inning threat centerfield for a ~o run homer. Hunter
there is a.. chance, I'm going to fight to keep him."
proved to be futile.
Roush came on in relief of Durst and
Sullinger's request had not been formally granted and was '
Wahama made the most of its first- issued successive free passes to Mitchell
working its way through channels Thursday, said Arkansas
frame opportunities as the White Falcons and Lambert before Scott Johnson laced a
assis~nt sports information director Robbie Edw.~rds.
scored four times on just one base hit. two base hit down the left field line to
Edwards said Arkansas associate athletic director Derrick
Point Pleasant starter Ken Durst walked make it an 8-0 affair. Alex Marcum came
Gragg had not gon• to athletic director Frank Broyles with
Ryan Roush to get the WHS first started on to run for Johnson and Marcum later ·
the request.
before Ryan Hodge reached on the first scored on consecutive groundouts by
Heath quit his job at Kent State on Thursday to replace
of three PPHS errors on the day. Bryan Long and Brad Roush to give Wahama a
Nolan Richardson as coach at Arkansas. Sullinger said preCromley received a free pass to load the commanding 9-0 edge.
viously that he would give the new coach a chance but
sacks before Rickard walked to chase
Dennis made another bid to. break up
wanted to keep his options open.
·
home the first run of the game. Ryan the no-hitter in the Big Black fourth
Sullingar graduated last year from Thomas Worthington
Mitchell then sent a two run single back · when the sen~or infielder led off the
High School in suburban Columbus, Ohio.
through the box to bring home Hodge fourth wtth a hne dnve. rocket to center
"Ohio State University would be a great opportunity to
d c rn1
'th M't
h
ll
lat
·
but
Brad
Roush
tracked
down
the
base
go back home;' he has said.
er shcormg hit proposition. Roush shut down the
an G rob Laey Wlb , 1. c ed
on a e m ert s groun er to s art to F.al
ffi
·
d · h fi
hb
Sullinger, one of 14 members of a search committee
· 4 OWHS 1 d
con o ense m or er m t e ourt ut
k
formed to help find a successor for Richardson, supported
rna ~ tt a . ea · . .
.
Wahama mounted what would become
interim coach Mike Anderson for the job. His father critiRickard struck out the stde m the Pomt its game-ending threat in the fifth after
cized
the way Richardson was dismissed.
Pleasant second but not before aUowmg two were out. Anthony Mitchell groundThe Buckeyes have three scholarships available for next
what would become the final PPHS ed a single back through the middle and
season,
which Sullinger would be forced to sit out under
baserunner when Durst drew a two out swiped second before later scoring on a
NCAA transfer rules.
walk. Durst retired the White Falcons in pair of PPHS errors to bring the outing
order in the Wah~ma second but the to a conclusion.
·
Bend Area team busted the game wide
Rickard notched the mound victory to
open in the third with a five run explo- go to 1-0 on the year with Durst taking
Slon.
the loss to faU to 0-2.
The five-run outburst began when

NCAA

discussing the social relevance of two
minorities matching strategy from
opposite ends of the court on college
basketball'~ biggest stage.
"The greatest word in a minority's
vocabulary should be hope," Sampson told The Daily Oklahoman.
"There's got to be hope. And I would
hope that minority coaches would
look at Mike and myself and say, 'I
can do that."'
Sampson started his coaching
career at lowly Montana Tech, but he
quickly moved through the ranks. At
31, he became the youngest coach in
the Pac-10 Conference, taking over
at Washington State.
AU along, he was inspired by ,black
coaches such as 'Jho.mpson, Richardson ani! George Raveling.
"They gave me hope. I thought, 'I
can do this one day,"' said Sampson,
who led Oklahoma: to its first Final
Four berth since 1988. "You can
work hard and do things the right

NCAA

nament,

resigned
Thursday to
coach at Arkansas.
Heath leaves a team in transition. Four of the Golden
Flashes' top players are depart.
.
mg semors.
Junior forward Antonio
Gates said he will adjust.
"But it's a blessing for coach
Heath. This is a business. If
anybody gets mad at that, they
don't understand," Gates said.
''I'm happy for him. This is

what happens when you surround yourself with good
people. He..gave me an opportunity, and now somebody is
giving him one."
Heath, 37, who had a .fiveyear contract at Kent State, led
the
1Oth-seeded Golden
Flashes (30-6) to the finals of
the NCAA South Regional
before losing to Indiana 81 69.
Athletic director Laing
Kennedy said Heath told him
Wednesday night, during an
emotional
meeting
at
Kennedy's home, that he
would leave Kent State.
Kennedy said he felt complimented that Heath would be
coaching at Arkansas.
"You do not want to have
coaches nobody else wants,"
he said. " In my opinion,
Arkansas is one of the top five
jobs in America:•
Several finalists from Kent
State's coaching search last season are stiU available.
Coach Jayson Gee from

Division II University of
Charleston, Cincinnati assistant Dan Peters, Division II
Wayne State coach David
Greer and Rutgers assistant
Garland Mance all interviewed before Heath ~as
selected.
Kennedy confirmed he had
already spoken to Mane~ and
Kent State assistant Jim Christian and that Gee was under
consideration.
Heath was named coach at
Kent State last April 19 after
helping Michigan State win a
national title and reach the
Final Four during his tmee
years as an assistant.
Heath replaced Gary Waters,
who became Rutgers' coach
April 6. Waters had a 92-60
record in five seasons at Kent
State.
Ken! State's success had special meaning for the MidAmerican Conference. The
last, and only time, the MAC
had a team in an NCAA
regional final was in 1964,

Steele.rs will make.three
f\M\l.F appearances in '02
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Call them the Monday Night
Steelers.
The Steelers, coming off a 13-3 season that ended in the ·
AFC championship game, will play three ·
Monday night games this year - the most •
allowed by the NFL.
The Steelers open the season Monday, Sept. 9, against Super
Bowl champion New England in a rematch of the AFC title
contest. It's the first regular-season game in CMGI Stadium,
the l'atriots' new home.
The Steelers' other Monday night games are Oct. 21 at
home against Indianapolis and Dec. 23 at Tampa Bay. Pittsburgh also has a Sunday night home game with Oakland on
Sept. 15.
It's the most prime time appearances for the Steelers since
they played two Monday night games and two Sund.ay night
games in 1997.
.
The Steelers .will play home and away games with AFC
North division opponents Cleveland, Baltimore and Cincinnati. They also play road games against former AFC Central
opponents Tennessee (Nov. 17) and Jacksonville (Dec. 1).

.NFL

I

t

FilMy. . .rdl 21. 2002

way, have some integrity and characMinorities occupy 26 percent of
ter about you and one day you'D be , the head coaching jobs in NCAA
rewarded. So I do think that it's sig- Division 1 basketball - no,t enough
nificant."
to satisfy many people, but better
Sampson was one of the few than most team sports.
.
coaches who contacted Davis two , Last weekend, that progress w~
years ago to congratulate him on apparent as five teams with minority
becoming Indiana's first black coach. · coaches reached the round of 16.
That gave Davis his own role model. Four of those - Sampson, Davis,
"I like him a lot. I do;• Davis said Kent State's Stan Heath and Oregon's
of Sampson. "I always followed him Ernie Kent- made it to the region~
because of the letter he wrote."
a! final .
That letter helped comfort Davis
Indiana knocked out Heath's team,
during some trying times . The while Kansas beat Oregon to prevent
Hoosier Nation was up in arms over minorities from taking three spots in
Knight's .ouster, and his successor the Final Four.
admits that he thought of quitting
Heath was rewarded for Kent's run
when the criticism got especially in the NCAA tournament Thursday
nasty.
.
when Arkansas picked him to replace
"At the same tiine, {just felt like 1 Richardson. He made a point to
was meant to be here and whatever acknowledge his predecessor.
happened, happened," said Davis,
" I'd like to thank coach Richardwho led Indiana to its ·first Final Four son," Heath ,said. "He's opened up
since 1992. "Everything ~as worked barriers. He's a leader."
out."

Make sure
to follow all
your-teams in

The Daily Sentinel

..

~JK\~· ~-11r~ . ~~r'~~ ·~ ~~

~~~\~~~\~~~

II~OTI
_f! uB CES
Ll c
'
'
"
"
"
•
'
"
'
'
'
"
'
"
'~' '"""'"'"·
'""' "'' " '",......... """""·~:.: .·:::~::~~.::.:.::·.
THE STATE OF OHIO
COUNTY OF
CUYAHOGA
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Kent State looks to build on Heath's success
KENT, Ohio (AP) - Kent
State is wishing coach Stan
Heath the best in his move to
Arkansas and
looking
to
build on the
success he left
behind,
Heath, who
in · his first
year as coach
led his team
to · the final
Heath
eight in the
NCAA tour-

Page BS

'

Two minorities coaching in Final Four for first·time

Bv·GARY CWnl
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT

MASON, W.Va. - Adam R.ickard
pitched four innings of no-hit lnseball in
addition to smacking his second home
run in as many games as
the Wahanu White Fa!cons turned away visiting Mason County rival Point Pleasant
Thursday evening with a five-inning, 100 shutout win over the Big Blacks.
Rickard drove in three runs with a first
inning bases loaded walk and a third
.inning two-run homer over the cen\er
. field fence while teaming with Bradford
Clark on the no-hit bid. Rickard fonned
six and issued two walks ovet the first
. four frames before giving way to Clark
who hurled perfect fifth inning to complete the no-hitter.
·
Despite collecting only four hits on the
day, W~hama was able to capitalize op
every scoring opportunity. Coach Gordon Spencer's crew cashed in on six free
passes by a pair of Point Pleasant pitchers
with aU six eventually finding their way
home. The White Falcons, after a season
opening setback to · Poca earlier this
week, claimed their first win of the young
2002 dia111ond season while coach Jamie
Higginbottom's Big Blacks feU to 0-3.
Wahama pitchers allowed just three
PPHS baserunners on the day with two
of those coming in the opening frame
when the Big Blacks mounted what
would be their only threat of the game.
Nic Dalton walked to open the Point
Pleasant first with Ashley Pyles reaching
on a WHS fielding error. Matt Warner
then gave the Falcons a scare with a driv&lt;
to left that appeared to be headed for
home run territory but Falcon left fielder Jared Long hauled in the towering shot
at the fence for the first out of the inning.
Andrew Dennis then came to bat and
once again Wahama e~perienced an anxious moment as Dennis lofted a long fly
" to right that just missed leaving the park
before Gabe Lambert picked off the long
drive at the wall for the second PPHS out

.

when Ohio University made
it. The Bobcats lost to Michigan 69-57.
Kent State's 30 wins marked

CASE NO. 02·CV.Q05

a single-season record for any
MAC team, as was the team's

J.J. Sullinger

21-game winning streak.

,

entor
r
News and information for

Sooners lurk as Kansas, Maryland
get much of the media's attention

Senior Citizens of the Tri-County...

Aprilll, 2()()2
• ~alltpolt~ Jlailp ~tthunt .
• ~oint ,Jiltasant l\egisttt
• The Daily Sentinel
..

Senior Citizens
makeup 65%
of the total
population of
the Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your'·
Advertising
Representative.

eJt

Advertising Deadline is April 2, 2002
I.

I ,

~allipo!i~

ATLANTA (AP) -Watch out Kansas
'and Maryland. Oklahoma is OK. too.
Better than OK, really.
Much of the attention at the Final Four
is on the two No. 1 seeds, the Jayhawks and
Terrapins, but the ~ond-teeded Sooners
should not be overlooked.
They won the Big 12 tournament.
They're playing some of the best defeme in
the country. Oh, yeah, the}o also beat Maryland AND Kansas this season.
The Thrrapins aiid Jayhawks play in the
marquee national semifinal Saturday night,
following the Sooners' game against fifthseeded Indiana.
"I think we're a tough basketball team,
but after watching them it definitely raises
· the' bar," Hoosiers coach Mike Davis said.
This is nothing like 1974, when the semifinal between North Carolina State and
UCLA ovenhadowed the other between
Marquette and Kansas, or like 1983, when
Houston and Louisville played above the
rim in one semifinal while North Carolina
State and Georgia ~emed a mere formali-

WE'RE HERE-

Oklahoma guard
Ebl Ere enters the
team's hotel as
the team arrived
for the NCAA Anal
Four basketball
tournament In
Atlanta Thursday.
Oklahoma faces
Indiana the semlfl·
nal game of the·
NCAA Final Four
Saturday. (AP)

J)a(l!' m:rtbunc Dally Sentinel
'
740-446-2342

~oint ~lca~ant i\.cgtstcr

304-675-1333

StiU, the attention heading into the weekend is clearly on Kansas-Maryland. The against Kent State, one game after knocking
Sooners don't care- as long as they get by top-seeded Duke out of the tournament.
Indiana for a shot at the national cha!npi"Oklahoma is a very physical team and
onship against a team they already beat this offiape you can see they play with a lot of
season.
toughness and hit hard," Davis said.
Oklahoma (31- 4) defeated then-No. 2
Sooners coach Kelvin Sampson could
Maryland72-56onDec.21,oneoftheTer- only laugh when talking ab?ut Indiana's
rapins' four losses in 34 ,games, and their shooting spree against Kent State. .
lowest point total of the ~ason.
"I don't know it we coul
5The Sooners split with Kansas (33-3),
losing 74-67 on Jan. 19, and then beat the in a drill;' he said.
then-No. 1 Jayhawks 64-55 in the Big 12
Davis and Sampson are
tournament championship game on M:lrch appearance in a Final Four, and their
10. The 55 points were the lowest of the schools haven't exactly been regulars, either.
season by far for the nation's highest scor- Oklahoma was last in it in' 1988, while
ing team, 35 off their average.
. Indiana hasn't reached one since 1992.
Now it's Indiana's tum to face the Soon"When 1 am by myself, it's exciting;•
ers' d~fense. The Hoosiers (24-11) p~nt a Sampson said. "I am like a kid in a candy .
different problem, having gone 15-for-19 store. It's something that I have ' always,
from 3-pQint ranf¢tin the regional fit
always dre~ed about."

CITIBANK N.A.
AS TRUSTEE
Plalntlll
•VI•
AGNES GAIL
OHLINGER
aka AGNES
OHLINGER'S
UNKNOWN
HEIRS, CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS etal.
Delendlnts ·
Samantha
S.
Joseph, baing llret
duly aworn, depoeaa
and says that she II
tho
plelntlll'e
AHorney In the above
entitled action lor
Forecloaure, Money
Rella! &amp; Judgment,
that ·1arvlce of
eummone cannot be
made upon the
Delendonta Agnu
Gall Ohlinger aka
Agnu Ohllnger'a
Unknown Halle,
Crldltora, Davia•••·
Lagatue,
Admlnlatretora,
Exacutora
and

·VI·

AGNES GAIL
OHLINGER aka
AGNES OHLINGER'S
UNKNOWN HEIRS,
CREDITORS,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND
ASSIGNS etol.
LEGAL NOTICE
Agnes
Gall
Ohlinger eke Agnes
Ohlinger's Unknown
Heirs,

Creditors,

Devisees, Legatees,
Admlnletratoro,

ExecutorS

and

Aeolgna, whoat leal
place ol residence ••
well
as whose
praaent place of
realdance
are
unknown, will take
notice that on
January 15, 2002,
CITIBANK N.A. AS
TRUSTEE Iliad ltio
Complaint In Case
No. 02·CV·005 In the
Court of Common
Piau ol Meigs
County, Larry E.
Spencer,
Melga
County Clark of
Courte, P.O. Box 151,
100 Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45789,
seeking foreclosure
and alleging that the
Dafondanta, Agnaa
Gall Ohlinger 1k1
Agnaa Ohlinger'•
Unknown Halra,
Credltore, Davleeae,
LegiiMe,
Admlnlllralore,
Eucutora
end
Aulgna hava or

~=-~gna;~~·r~~~n~·; r~:~:'!.,'~n h.~~· r:.~ .

raaeonable diligence
to aaca;111n the
re1ldonce of the eold
dalendanta, Including
1 uarch ol the
Probata recorda, end
thll the raoldance of
uld delendonte are,
other than herein 111
forth, unknown, end
cannot
with
reaeonabla diligence
· be aacartelnedl) and
that thle caaa li one
of thou mentJDnad In
Section 2703.14
and/or 3105.01 of the
Revlaed Coda of Ohio
and purauentto Ohio
Rule
ol
Civil
Procedure 4.4(A).

ty.

Co~ing

next week in the
Sentinel•••
all your spring sports!

AFFIDAVIT FOR
SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO OHIO
RULE OF CIVIl
PROCEDURE U(A) ·

CITIBANK N.A. AS
TRUSTEE

Davis has the added burden of being the .
first coach to take Indiana to the Final Four
since Bob Knight took the Hoosiers there
five times, winning it aU in 1976,1981 and .
1987. Knight wa5 fired in September 2000
and Davis was promoted to the head
coachingposition.
.
Maryland is the only team with players
who have Final Four expe· rience. The Terrapins lost to Duke in the ~mifinals last
year.
"I think you have to go through it. The
experience has helped me this year;' Maryland coach Gary Williams said.
Kansas coach Roy Williams has been to
tWo Final' Fours - 1991 and 1993 - but
he has had to listen to a lot of criti~ism in
the interim about not getting back.
.,

SHAPIRO &amp; FELTY,
L.L.P.
Samantha S. Jonph
(0070124)
AHornay tor Plaintiff
800 West St. Clelr

Avenue, Second

Floor
Cle.velsnd, OH 44113
(218) 621-1&amp;30
(211) 82t-7148·1ax
SHAPFELTOLOGS.C
OM
SWORN
BEFORE ME,
aubscrlbed In
praaenca thle
dey of
Februery, 2002.

TO
and
my
12th

Merl Landino
Notary Public, State
oiOhlo
My Commlulon
e•plrea 10·26.04

eetata ducr'lbad
below:
Situated In I he
Vllloge of Pomeroy,
Ohio, County of
Malga and State of
Ohio:
·
Parcel One: Being
a port ol Lot No. 500
In Sug1r Run In
Lincoln
Hill
Ann u ell on
Io
Pomaroy,
and
cllecrlbld •• lollowa:
Beginning at • etekl
In the 1111 aida ol
Pncock Street,
which etaka Ilea
aouth 5 dagraaa 44'
wtat 111.4 laet lrom
tha northweat cornar
of Lot No. 101, which
wu lc,merly owned
by
V elantlna
Eberabach Eatata;
thane•
along
PIICOCk SlrNI lOuth
5 dagraaa .and 44'
waet 17.I leet; thence
lOUth 74 dlgrMI and
10' aaet 213.3 1111 to ·
the northweet corner
ol Lot No. 513;
thence north I
degree• 1o· •••• 190
leet along the weal
line of Lot No, 51 2 to
1 lerge locu~t poat;
thence aouth 70
degraea, weal 281.1
feet to the place of
beginning,
containing 62/100

acre.

EXCEPT
the
following from the
above daacrlbed
premleeo eold to

Raymond Elaelateln
by deed dated
February 24, 1838
beginning el the
oouthweat corner ol
a lot formerly owned
by Rena Elaelataln
the aamo being tho
northwoat corner ot
Lot No. 51 3; thence
north 78 dagreea and
30' we at 50 teet;
thence north 20
degree• and 30' weal
140.5 feet to the
north line ol what
w81 formerly Rena
Elaelateln'~
I o I;
thence north 70
degree• and 30' eaot
123 leal to the
northaaat corner ol
what waa formerly
Rena Elaelateln'a lot;
thence aouth 6
degree• and 30' weal
180 feet to the place
ol
beginning,
containing 20/100

acre more or leaa.

Aleo a former
grantee Ia to have
tree enq undlaputed
use along the north
elde ol what wu
lormarly
Rena
Elael1leln'a lot ol 1 ·
rlght·ot·way 11 now
tocalld to Peacock
StrMI.
Reference Deed·
Volume 214, paga
581, Melge County .
Diad Recorda.
Audllore Po reel
No. 18..01281
Parcel '1\vo: Baing
a pert ot Lot No. 500
In Sugar Run In the
Lincoln
Hill
Annexation
to
Pomeroy,
and
beginning at the
Southeaat corner of
1 lot now owned
Rena Eleeletaln the
uma being the
Northwlll corner ol
Lot No. 113; thanca
South 71 • 30' wa1t
10 lael thence North
20-30' W111 140.5
1111, to the North line
of Rene Elealallln'a
lot; thence North 70.
30' Eell 123 fell to
the Northeul cornar
ol Rena Eleeletaln'e
lot; thence, South I·
·30' Waet 180 fMI to
the
place
of
beginning containing
20ft 00 acre, morw or
1111.

•

Audltor'a Parcel
No; 11.01181
The Dalandanll
named above era
required to enawar
on or before the 15th
day of May, 2002.
CITIBANK N.A. AS
TRUSTEE

IV:
SHAPIRO &amp; FELTY,
L.L.P.
Samantha S. Joaaph,
Attomay ai·Law
Attorney tor Plaintiff·
Petitioner
800 Weal St. Clalr1
Avenue, 2nd Floor

Cleveland, OH 44113
(218) 121·1530
(3) 13, 19, 2e, 2002
(4) 2, I, 16, 2002

'

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8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

$4.300; 1992 Toyota Pueo,
ounroot. AIC, ·c o. 112.300;
t992 Nlsaan Slanza, st.250
t989 Dynaoty, StOOO, 1993
Sundance. 2 door, auto,
495 7
St
· 40-256-6012
· Buw!JNG
t995 sarona. 83K. l2695.
~
StmJmi
t993 Cavalier, 96K, S2t~5.
.,
t998 Corsica. 83K. $2895.
"'
.1995 Monto Carlo, 89K.
Block, brick, sawer p!poo, $4495. Othar trucks. v&amp;r)s,
lintels. ole. Claud&amp; cars In atock. COOK MD" Winters, Rio Grande, OH TORS. (740)448-0t03
• Cal 740-245-5t 2t.
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t 985 Dodge Spirit good
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~
~
• (740)949·3228.
.
1

:: 537·9528 •
'
..
,. WOOd Dinette Sat. $200.
• Color TV, $50. Full Size
: Mattreoo. S50. (740)446~ m2

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1~.,1'."--~-~-Doiilli--"

IIELPWANIID

Lt•.--I'EHsoN·
'--ALS--.,J~ GIFT
Accepting Applications ·lor Put your PC to wo11&lt;, Stay
.,
SPECIALIST. Must be home
Make
Money.
Moonlight" Escorts. Full
service male and female es·
corta and dancers. Prompt
and Professional ar1d Confi·
dential. We also do Birth·
day, Private and Bachelor
Parties .
Spm6am.
(740)388-1799.
Why wait? Start meeting
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
free 1·800· 766·2623 ext
1621 .

fl30 nl"IIMIU~CE.\ft"Nl'S
•·-·-·-·
L

I

--

. SeH Defense tor all aguLeam at your own pace wl1h
private lessons, very afford·
at&gt;le, .Jay Clark's Kenpo Karate, 740 742·2546
GIVEAWAY
Stack Lab Mix Puppies. 1
male, 1 female to good
home. (740)446-2359
Chocolate l.at:VMix puppies
to good home. Call 304·
882·3762

.r_Ln&lt;rr~FiJuND~AND:::.-_.~1
LOST· 3 year old male
Golden Retriever, lrlandly.
Galllal Lawrence line. Ae·
ward. Call (740)866·6488
leave message.
Lost: Black Angus heifer In
East Lelart area. 740·247·
3838

r
r

llama from A 10 Z. Baby
Clothes, Beanie Bablea,
6/t 0 milo on Bulavllle Plko,
Tum right on Linwood D~ve
by Churoh. 3130102· 4103/02

0

L,r.iO_oiFOiiHRiii~iiiii..._.l t.,r__.,.,tcmiliCRI!Ai li ~i iE0. -"1 L,r_·_Ail.:;FOR; ;I\KIMI!MS~ - -.,1~ L,r.·O_UcJu;mow_Goooil l;:;:-_.1

11::t

90 acres of goO&lt;! hunting ·1 lledroon\ Upstairs Apart·
land, St 000./acra. Gas well mont, 720 Second Avenue.
Included. 740·949-2224
Oft Street Pal1&lt;1ng. Water,
Sawar,
Trash
Fl'ald.
Lot lor Sale- Approx. 2 t/2 $300/rno, $300 deposit. Day
acres, cleared &amp; ready for (740)«1·5216,
Evening
building, gravel driveway, ,(7:..:40::::.;)446-::::,,:01:..:0:.:t:.
.--water &amp; alecbic avaUable, Fl'ortar
area.
Asking tbr. large rooms. All alae·
$t3,995, Call (740)446· trio. Cloae to high aehocl.
45t4 !rom 8·5 or (740)446- $300. monlh/damage Do·
~.._,_ _,iiiiiiiitiii-li
· rl3248 altai 6pm.
pOalt required . Coil daYtime
~
.
·
(304)675-3100
14x70 82 Commodore mo- Lots lor sale- (I) 0 ·3n ::.:.::.::..:..:.:..:.:::.____
bile home, 3 bedroom, acres· $t4,000 &amp; (t) 0.459 2 Bedroom Apt., 78 Vine
$8 500 740-985-4282
acres- $15,000. Alnlne Rd, St..
GallipOlis,
OH.
•
·
Porter area, flat &amp; reedy to (740)387-7888
1978 Schultz 2br. w/16x8 set up on. AEP electric,
Covered porch diBhwash· central sewage system, &amp; 2 bedroom apt., dap. &amp; rei.
er, WID, AJC, Central heat. w~ter
available.
Call required, $300.00 month,
Newly
Remodeled. (740)446-45t4 M·F/ 8·5 or 304·773-580t
(304)875-6295 0! (304)675- call (740)446·3248 after BEAUTIFUL
APART·
3378
6pm
MENT8 AT BUDGET PRI·
·
·
CES 'T J'CKSON ES
t980 Hilk:resl
NiceFurnace·
Condl Propany
lor saleOhio.
on State
ft
ft
tion
BR
Gas
At
t43
Pomeroy
SenTATES,
52 Waotwood
Drive•
2
Ce~tral
l O'f/ner' oua Calla only. (304)882· from $297 to $383. Walk to
$7500 (740)258 ,t9t4 • ' 2988
shop &amp; movies. Cell 740·
•
.
446·2568. Equal Housing
t985 Windsor t4x70 with
·REAL FsrATE
I :::Oppo!l
·~rt:::un;::lly!::,._ _ __
t2x24 add on, 3BR, 2BA,
Christy'a Family Living
Canlral AC, frldga, stove, - A Rut'
microwave &amp; dlahwaeher,
.
33140 New Lima d.,
•
outbuilding, new root, trent Credit worthy buyer looking land, Ohio, 740.742,7403.
and rear porches whlandl· fat house to buy, Gallla, Ma· Apanment, home and.traller
740 441 1670 son or Meigs, please call rentals. Commercial ator&amp;0 ap ra
mps.
•
·
Jim, · (740~·3187
fronts available for leaae.
leave message
Vaeancieii"'IYi.
1997 Brigadier 1.exao 3br 2 Wanted: Individual wants
lull beth, CNHeat, a~llan· land
t ·5 acres. Call Fumlahad Apanment. 2
••
cas. Immaculate. Appoint·
(740}446·3570 mort acr• Roome and Bath• Clean · No
manta only. (304)675·8802 age II price is ~ght.
~~i =:::u~(~ ~:
1998 Fleetwood texso 3BR
16t9
2 balh. Ex.callent Con!tiitlon
.::.:.:...._ _ _ _ __
Furnlahapd Effslchlency. Ahll
518 ,000 ( 740 )446 •5552
I UtiUtlea aid,
are 88I '
2000 t6x80 Fortune Mobile
H~
St50/mo. 9t9 2nd Ave.
Home 3 bedroom, 2 lull
fllR RENf
(740)448-3945
·
h
ad 12 1 6
h Lw....ioiiiii.iiiii.i,;.,..l
bat j cover ad ~o.X ,rrc '
Gracious IMng. 1 and 2
on n ce rant
n ason. 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed bedroom apartments at VII·
&lt;304)77~~ 5345 • &lt;304 )593 · Homea From $1911/Mo., 4% tage Manor and Riverside
0219
Down. 30 Years at 8.5% Apartment&amp; In Mlclcllaport.
2000 Outch Mobile Homo APR. For Listings, 800·3t9- From $278-$348. Call'740o
3 bedroom, . 2 full beth, 3323 Ext. t709.
992-5084. Equal .Houelng
pOrohes, Dec:ka. Very nice
· OppOrtunities.
home t 6x8o. $ 34 ,000 or . t Bedroom Cottago, No ~:=:::::::::____
eomeone Interested In tak· Pett.
l_n
Gallipotls. New 2 Bedroom with waahlng over loon. On nice rent· (740)446·2468
or and dryer hookup, Close
ed lot, al Old Town Mobile
Bodroorn Hoult, South to hoopllal (740)441-01t7
2
$38,500.00. 740·949·3228 Homo Pal1&lt;. Moving Nead to on Stoll Route 7. Rofor· Now, t BR Townhauoo,
3 bedroom, In Mlddlaport, Stll lor Pay Of!. (304)878· enco Raqulred. Approxl· Naor Holzer, CIA, Eocnomloall Tom Anderaon after 413!
mat•ly 15 miltl South. cal au Heal, WID Hookup,
M ••••
5pm, (740) 9•••
~.
3Vl&lt;27 1VV4 Fllrmont Dou· (740)44t·t9t,7
No Poll, 1389 pluo ulllllloo,

A&amp;E Construction
remodeling, roofing; bath
AllrNI ...... adnrt..lng
ab!e to work 10am.·7pm. 1·800·501·1843 rooms, drywall, Interior
In lhlo nowopoporll
Monday Thru Friday and jobthalpay.com
painting, trim doors, win·
oubjoclllllhoO&lt;x:aslonal
Weekends - - - - - - - - dows. Free Estimates.
Falf.Houstng Act or 1181
around GiH Giving Holidays. Refund Processor $8.50- (304)675-7738
Girt merchandising, Display, $9.00 hour. Flexible Hours.
which Nlfogolto
ln11entory Control, Setting Entry Level. 304·344-4746
· advertlee "any
All Makes Lawn Mowers
Departments, And Reorder·
prer.t •noe, limitation or
and Outdoor Power Equip.
ing Are some Of the Technl· Reaplratory Then~plat. Full mont Repaired. Free Pickup dltcrfmln•lool bMed on
ques required. Knowledge Time Position. · Ohio LI- and dillvery available. Call
rtce., COlor. ,..lglon, MX
ol Collectlb!es Helpful. Flo- censed ART/ CRT. Mon· Mlka (740)44e·7604.
fa'nllll 1tatu1 or nltlonal
Fridav,
9:00am·
ral Arranging And Seasonal day·
arlgln 1 or ny Intention to
Decorating lmpor1ant Actlvl· 5:00pm . Competitive Wage, AJI or your home repairs, admaaanyauch
ties. Courteous And Person· Retirement Plan, Health In· ditions &amp; remodeling. 24hr preference, tlmiiMion or
al Service Must Come Natu- surance. Contact: Bow· emergency service, senior
dlacrlmlnatlon."
rally. Will Aepor1 To Corpo· man's Homecare, 70 Pine citizens discount. 22yrs.
rate Gift Manager. lnfre· St.. GallipOliS, OH 4563t , exp. (304)576-2065
Thll MWapiper will 1101
quent Travel Out of Area (740)446·7283
Certified Teacher. Will Tutor
knowlngty accept
Possible. Sand Resume To:
NEEDED· K·t2. Nearly all subjects
ldvorlloomtnlllorrHI
JR26 200 Main St~. Polnl URGENTLY
plasma donors. eam $50 12 and beginning study, orgen·-which loin
Pleasant, WV 25550
$00 per week lor 2 or 3 lzallonal, and teal taking
vlalotlonotlllolow.Our
hours weekly. Call Blo Ufe skHis as wall. call Kelly at
rudlraarehtreby
PI
740 592
S I
0) ... 996 - - , - - ~~ma
erv
ce.
·
•
,;&lt;7c.:
·
4:.:.:.-.:..::.·:.:::.:.t
lntOffliOd tho! oil
66
Excellent Cary for elderly
dweiMnp lldveriiHd In
ARE YOU LOOKING TO persons In my Chrlallan
lhle-roro
WORK AT HOME? OWN A Country Home . .Non-Smok·
avalloblo on on oquot
COMPUTER PUT IT WORK or, Mobile. $875. (304)882· L...;";:;""':;';;."';;;u;;;nl~ty.;;b;;;••;;;";;.·_,
$251$75 per hou•. PT/FT I· .:38::00:.:.__ _
800·686-8614 Or sea our
w e b s 1 t
a Georges Portable Sawmill,
suoe&amp;ed2.riches.com
don't haul your logs to the·
.:.;;;;=.:.:...;.....;__ _ _ mill just call 304-675--1957.
· JloM.E§
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
li.
.
FOR SALE
Sell. ShirleY Spem, 304- Housakoepmg Jobs wanted ~.w--ioiiiiiOiiiiiiiioo_.l
call Be~ II (304)675·1084 '
675·1429.
116 South Park Drive 2
::..::..:.;.::::_ _ _ _ _ after 5.
Story. with basement, Iron!
100
WORKERS
NEEDED
Men a-• Women's
allera- poreh, rear bll
Assemble
crafts,
WOOC1
d
·eveI d ec k •
Items. Material provided. :~~s ~=·
W::,~e ('Jb";,~ _t p.;~und pOol.
To $480+ wk.
once. Call Teresa (304)675- '--'----~--Free ·lnlormatlon pkg. 24 Hr. 7148
2 homes on one lot in Mid·
_ __.:1.::-80:::1:.-4.::2::8..:·4.:;750:::..._ :..:..::.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ dleport, 59 ,500. S&amp;en by
Mow Lawns In Point Pleas- appointment only, (740)992·
Budget Inn, .260 Jackson ant and Gallipolis areas. ptS4
Pike, GallipOliS, Is now lak· (304)675·6473
1ng appllcalicms for House- o:..:....:..;.-"-'--'---- 2
brick 3-4-BRISt dy,
keeping &amp; desk clerks. ~ Top to Bottom Ckaanlng LA.'~A. · Kitchen, 2~,12.
ply wllhin. No phone calls SeNice, proleaslonal. resl· Bath, CfA, Gas heat,
please.
dantlal, office cleaning at Family Rm!FP. Basement,
an
afforc:lable
price.
· CNA's &amp; Resident Assls· (740)992·2979 or (740)992· !~:~u!"'~!ff(S::&amp; ~~ ~
lllllll.
t39t
.:.:::...:....----,-"--- 3 Bedroom on · Route 2,
Appllcallona /Ve Now Being Will work lor $4.00/hr, do (:)04)175·5332
AccepCed For CNA's &amp; Aea· odd jobs. Will clean out
ldenl Asalslanta.
Local, buMdlngs lor free. (740)992· 3 Bodroom, t bath In Ra·
Compatlllve Wages &amp; Faml· 93t4, t-740·590-0t41.
cine. Convenient location

$$$$$$$$$
Do you
want to
, earn a
$500 signon bonus?

c____

1-877463-6247
ext.1841

i

FOR SALE

AC

j

==--,----p""
:Vro.

75

4

s

riO

!:.c::C...-----s

1

7 2

~oo~lm8:1:,h"c~nte~~vft"t'3

.

Waahi'W' St-. Ravans·
ood
w
'
'
r1U

$~~~~ J:~n &amp;~:J·~~~~I

... _ _
u~,....,.

2BR~,

OPPoimJNrry

HouH For Stlo In Hartford, blowlda,
2 )Bilh, Muot
740 258 -llt 28 •
movo.
Did ill
INOTICII
WV. 3br. 1 O!lr garigo, (740)2li8-t5 7
$25,000 (304)862-8224
Computorollntornet Uooro OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH.
8 uead homoo Drlood under
YardSalutlhoTradlnPoot
Wonlod. $t500 mo/PT, lNG CO. raoommondolhaf Land
homo . paakagoo. 112500. all Nikki,
In Pot~ot. Monday, April tot.
115000. mo/FT.
you do buolnou·wllh pooplo Landi Homo/ Land Improve· 39~8.
11-?.
L - - - " ' " ' - - - - 1 Froo Booklet. 868·228·11288 you know, and NOT !o Hnd menll In ono low poymont.
24hr. Rooordlng or vlolt
monoy through 11ta mall until L.Qon ol!looro on hand 7 Cou~ homoe. nloo 1011,
~ YARDSALEI
IANK1NCI
www.woo~hloyoura.com
you havo lnvootlgotod tho= 1 - k . (7.0)448· Plocaom~~AnthR 1na33CbalwH
,.n
l'oMERoYIMiooL&amp;
C•tomer lorviHI Tollw
"
offering.
·
.
• •• ,,,
•
~
Oak Hill Banko hoo lull-limo DATA ENTRY
992·2t 87 lor dotallo.
oppO~unlty In our ClalllpOIIo Clolmo !or Ooolors. For oolo Thriving Smell Now houoo- financing ovoll• J
I
to ld? t
3 family yord salo. Lola of offlco lor a friendly, enorget- Will Train. PC roqulrod.
. Fomlly Ownod Butlnoll. ablolo quollllecl buyoro. 0% uot gott ng I n
II
clolhn and othor llomo. lc poroon 10 provide oupori· Grntlnoomelll
AI EQuipment. Graot Loco· ~~wnh . t!~ oq It, 2 t/2 ~""c':l~:;.:,g~;
Ap~l2, 3, 41h on 42t5V En- or auolomor oorvlco proc· t,800·240-t848. Dopl. 928 lion, Anoonobly prlcod. Sa· ~· ' .,..roomo, cullom
Inform ~
torprllt Road, Pomoroy. " " customer trannctlono,
rlouo Cello Only (304)67~· oak trim &amp; coblnllo,
more
II n
and promote bank oorvlcoo. Vlliap,• 01 Middleport Ia ao- 4452
.
llroploco, Iorge kitchen/ In· Llmllld Or No Credit? Gov·
Should have cuotomtr Hrv- copt ng appl~aliono for flOOI
·
lng, 2 t/2 cor gerago on t ommontlllnk Finance Only
ohl
ri
maneger. Appllcallona can Oporatlng Family TW&gt;I All· t/2 ao,.., $tf9,800. Porter AI Oakwood In lllrbouro·
Ice or bclal erb exps ence. bo pk:kld up at village hall, taurant, :rum Kay, Rtody to area. (740)448-4St411115pm viHe VN 30.4-738-3408.
profera Y n a ank or cred- Appllcallons need to ba Go. lncludee Real Eotato, or (740)448·3248 after 8pm ;,c;::'::"-~7.=::~::'--:"':
It union. Wo offer QPI&gt;or1unl- turned In by 4,30 p.m. on oil equipment ond Inventory.
No· .CrOCIIV Bad CrediV 111
Rick Peerson Auction Com· ty lor ldvancomont. IKCII· April t5.
A ~t opportunity to
Partially Remodolod home, Tlmo, Home tiuyero/ FAS
pany, lull limo auctioneer, lent companaatlon ond bon·
You~·Own Buel-l. Homo· 2 Bod room, 1 Bath, Full Loono/ Govornment FHA
complete aucllon oarvlce, onta, and a groat wol1&lt; anvl· Wanted: Full llme Malnle· lltld Bend, Broker. 304· BaHment, Large Unoltaoh· Loono
Avallob!o.
Call
Licensed IHIII,Ohlo &amp; Waot ronment. Apply In paroon al nanco. Skills In Elec:lrlcal, 882 _2405 or 304-B82·2447 ed 2 car garage. 1 Kine· (740)446•32 t
Virginia, 304-773·6785 Or Oak Hill Banko, 500 3rd Plumbing, Air Conditioning
on or., $00,000. (740)44t · ::...::::.::,;..:.=.~--...,...304·773·5447.
Avenue, Gallipolis, EOE, Halplul. Apply In Person, Stan Your Bualntll TO· 0466
Wont. 1 new 'holflt? .
·~BIJY
IINF/DIV
.
Holiday Inn· GallipOlis.
day... Primo Shopping Can·
your own lond? Wo dol Cell
~.,tor Spaca Avollablo AI AI· Private. Groat nolghbomood (740)446·3384 lol your new
Full Time Office LPN , 11«1
Bl.ISINI!SS
I fordable Rate, Spring Valley Green Schools. 4 bed· hometodayl Trade ln.s wal·
L_ _ _ __,_ _
1'iwNING
Plaza can 740.448-0tOt.
rooma, 3 lull baths. In· como
Straight Deys No week'
ground pool. Deoks. Oodles
Absolute 'lop Dollar: us ends or Holldiyo· Apply In
·
parson Medical Plaza 936
MoNEY
I olextras. You have to aee ~ Moving out of otall. Nead to
Sliver, g~~~~~· P&amp;~~ Slale Roule tOO, Galll~la. Golllpallo Coreor Collogo
TO LoAN
to appreciate. Below BP· oell lovely mobile home.
~~11.
U8 C
(Careers Cloee To Home) ~
• pralsal. A bargain at t4x70. Already !o oet up on
M '}113• eon
~~~~~: Maintenance· Muel hove Call Todayl 740-448-4367,
$152.0001 (740)446·3t39
nloe lot al 325 Green· Tor·
. ·A·
G'flpol,
I1 740 skills In electrical, plumbing ,
t-BOQ.2t4-ll452
Loon Dl All
" ~ S le 3 "-"
t race Mobile Home Park.
ond
1
"
·
• •··dngand~ne lm I to
venue,
'
"" oA allablol
nan~· ty LR -room,
·•· ra an •
Reg tiiCHl5·t274B.
.,po •
Balh L
DR Kitch· ·~" vInYlll'dlng • no w
446·2842
·
nanoe akllls. lmmodlateiHO
No Faao. 111 Credit
C •G •
3 underpinning, 3 yr. heal
Racine Bank stock 5500 per opening In GalllpOIIa area.
MlscF.u.ANF.oiJ
· ....,pled
:·
76 ~ (;~~;:, 9 • pump and NC. New Back
1
share need up 10 100 Send reaume to: CLA 565, •
.
•
Call Toll F,..
• ·
Door and storrtl . door.. Has
2.;,•·
share~ (740)992•7599
c/o GallipOliS Dally Tribune,
t-868·294-t379
house gutters, awnings,
•
825 Third Avenue. GalllpO·
storage building. Fronl deck
lis, OH 456:it
Disney Beach Vacation. 6 Problems Paying Billa Call 3.6 P,cres w/33t ft. Ohio with metal oover and beck
I \11'1
\ II \ I
,
·
nights groat hotel sacrifice Toll Free t -e66-699·3094. River, Footaile. next to City deck. 2 Bodrooma with 2 lull
"' H\ I« I ..,
We can Help. All types of Pa11&lt;~n Maaon, WV. Brio~. Bathrooma. Lote of storage,
-;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; McClure a Reetauranl now lor $t99.00 6t4-523-8792
1
~- hiring 111 3 locations, ful! or
loane. Qood, Bad, No Cred· home with 3br. 1112 batn, 2 all appliances· Including
llELP WANTJil&gt;
part-lima. pick up apphca· Doing opring cleaning? Do- 11. Bankruptcy Welcome.
car .Qarage, City . water, washer/dryer. Come check
1
tlon at location &amp; bring back nate reusable Items 10
Sewer. lnground pool , ten· It out! (740)446·8529
·
!.,• • • • • • • " ' · between
~ 9:30am
&amp; ReUse . lndualrlesl N. Co~ERVICESF•S11K&gt;"u.
I nls -··. hot tub, cement
.
1
lumbus Ad Athens High
-vu.
..,......n
0 00
M nd
h S
IWANTEOI
1
am, o ay I ru al· wav 50 Aibany 7~698.
boat .dock, river bank Ia New 2002 · 14 wide, Only
Serious People To Work.. ur _8 Y·
·
•
rocked , Located acroas $799 down &amp; only $156.89
8200 '
From Home Call ~--888-616- No Gimmicks, no lines, dbz.
.
Get Cash Fast!l $~00-$500. Pomeroy, Oh. Amphl Thea· par. month, call Karena,
0694 ,
ens of companies are look- REPOSSESS. Must st:~ll 3 Easy 0 allflcatlona NeV8f' ter.
Very private lot. 740 385-9948.
w_
w_w._s_tmp.:_IOC_as_h_Bt_z._co_m
_
lng lor people like you, who aleel bulldl!'95, brand
Leave ~mel Funds Dep0a- ~~~So~ :~. ~~~ : •· Now Doublewlda on 1. 5
are serious about working never erected, 1·40)180, lted·Cheeldng Account Next
acres. (740)446·3384.
Experienced carnAnter and from home . For more infor· 30x40,.. . Lowest prices! Day. Loans By County Bank 3br. House In Mason $375.
of Rehoboth Beach, DE month+ De~slt. (304)882· We hove approximately tO
roofer n••d.d' ·•·740·378· matiqn eend $5.00 a Sen SacrHicel t-800·334·84tl
~
used homes lor under
0ddressd •nveiope to: Op
6349
·
PO.
1180
W.
·
I
Member FDICIEOL
3862
52 ,000,-Call t _800.837. 3238
.:.:..:.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ ponunl eo 0 ulde RR 1
t·B00-397· t908.
Bo• 823 Gallipolis Ferry,
•
·
4 uead homos left. Must lor Info.
= ·Wo~:,noger/Malnte- WV 25515
'
TURNED DOWN ON
aeel (740)448-3570.
Lars &amp;
I

Moving SOle. Thureday, Fri·
day, Slturdly. 7480 Slalo
Floute1&amp;0, Bidwell, OH.

You

-..eo·

r

1

3

1117

u---

$

0'

116

r

d

new:

7 5 9

ToANTiil&gt;Do .

If lnteresled ,wrile J·2·Y·35
Water Association, Inc.
PO Bok 485 Pt. Pleasant
wv 25550 at once. Include
your mailing address and
telephone number. An appll·
cation form will be mailed to
you by return mall.
Boord 01 Direclors

Peromodlc .
Local clinic Is seeking a
Paramedic to assist with dl·
reel patient care. Qualified
candidates wiU receive a
starting salary of $11 .00 an
hour with haaUh benefits .
Call 594-4440 to schedule
an Interview.
·

Will Do Hcuaa ~lng
sweeping, dusting. Cali
(304)895·3217leave name
&amp; Number
·
·
Will pressure wash houses,
trailers. an~ decks. Call
441·4238 ask for Ron or
leave message.

j

SOCIAL SECURITY /8817 For eele by owner: Nice bl·
No Fee Unless Wo Win! le11el home on 1 acre ~
1-888·582-3345
Cheater. . Three bedroom,
two baths, one-car .garage,
family room with f1replaca,
sun room. New central heat·
lng &amp; ale system .. One ml·
nute otf Route 7, but still Prl·
vale. (740)985·3981

Used Sola and Chair, $200.
New Recliner Chairs, $160.
Mollohan Fumitui'e and Carpet, Clark Chapel Ad.; Por·
tor, Ohio. (740)388-0t73.

•·~- .

,..,,....,..,..
~-------'
..,
Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·
qu... tt24 Eaat Main on
SA t24 E. Pomeroy, 740o
992·2526. Rua~ M~ll.

owner.

~·

'

Sue's Selectablea on t~ "T"
In Mlddlepoft. Dolls, glalll!':
' ware Aladdin mantels ·antt
(740)&amp;92-o298 '
;;;;;;;;;..·:;;;;;:;;;;;.;;;;;;;.....;..,
M!scEu.ANF.oui I

r

mora'

MER~

.
2 Acoordlono. Groat Condl·
don, St50 aach; UUd Refrigerator, S50; f20, (740)388-9768

81-.

2 Fishing Boots, f4' and
t2', $300. Car Luggage
Carrier, $tOO. Re!ngerato&lt;,
$50. (740)387·0850 or·
(740)387-7272.
24 toot Tri·axle trailer, ask·
lng $900. Coli (740)446·
4025 after 5pm weekdays,
anytime on -kenda.
27x4 above ground pool
with deok. Lock' gete. Call
(740)446·7331

~

only, br. kitchen, both.
lt71!1rnonth + U~l~loa. Rtf.
Roqulred. (304)87~·2•116
alter 8pm.

cemeto;t, 1011 lor ltle In

lha Maoon Gorden In Qjo
Valley Memory Oardln1.
Mul1 ~. "-oon (740)•••
~ ·
~

Baby ltomo, lndlon Daolgn
rugo, Coffll tablelond Ia·
biN. (304)e7~·280t
:;;;;;;..:;:;;;::;;.,::..::::.:,_ ___..
Both bonoh, now, novor
uood, paid 13(10.00, would
llko 1100.00 OBO. 7~0.

m-oaaa

Dolo Eamhardl trading Olld.
ni!VIr out 01 Pill!~ aovor,
1150.00 OBO, 140-992~

L..• ...ii

~;.....;.;;.:.;.....---:::--

Pilot Progrom, Rontors
Neadod, 304-738· 7211e. ·

s

Small t Bedroom HouH In
OOk Hill. R e i - , Rent.
ol Louo, Oopo~l. No Poll,
S231!1mo. (740)288·3405

j·

MOIIILI! "-· _
""""""'
fllR

RENf

1

t 4x70 lralllr lOIII eltct~c
$300 • month $t50 dopOO:
It
pot 2 bedroom coil
(i·.:;;)742 ~7t4
•
•

ijp;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

riO

2 bedroom mobile home lor
rant, no poto, (740)892·
5858
2 BR, 2 Bath with e•pando.
t44 Mitchell Ad, Galllpoila.
Total Electric, $300 depOtlil,
$350/mo, Water and truh
poid. (740)448.0tt8
4 BR Mobile Home on Cora
Mill Ad, cloH !o 325. No
Pets, Deposit ReQuired,
$425/mo. (740)245·5622
evenings.
Beau"!ul "lver VI~ '"--1
For 1
tPaopi&lt;J
C8fl Deposit No Pets Faa·
t 'r II
rk 740 441
ar ra er a '
•
•
8
Ot t .
For Rent: 2 Bedroom Mobile
Home at 246 Dillon Ad, Gal·
llpOIIs OH (740)441.QOOO
'
·
~ . _ , -- - . I

"br

Ret=·

p

nl'l\l&lt;lNW."lo

FOR RENr

-

ACREAGE

__

\

HOOli!HOUI

Ggg
wa

:,:a :W.; _,00·

s

r

iG

MllSICAL
•·-- __

"""'"u"'""""

Hammond Organ. Cherry·
Flnlah.. Lealie Spaakora,
• eultabla for small church or
. homo.
Mako
Ollar,
: (740)245-518t

•

Reoondllloned Baby Grend
, • Plano. Coli Grubb's Plane
- Tuning Service. (740)4464526
I \It\ I "I 1' 1'1 I I '-o

Residential or commerolal
wiring, ,_ servk:e or repalra. Mlaler Licensed oleo·
trlclan. Ridenour Elacl~cal,
WV000306, 304-875-t768.

$3()-4.5 minutes

Authorized Agent

992-5479

-

- -RN'S - -

-· ~
- - .J':

. ·:(\

·# ·

--

;,,

Arcadia Nunlng Center Is a
small facility nestled In the hlUs
of CoolviUe, Ohio.
pride
ourselves In placing the needs
and wants of our residents ftrst.

We

TRvexs
FOR
SALE

~------""

We oft'er;

t 12 li

PU 6
1978 Joage
on
.
cyl., alanderd. New clulch,
tires, exhaust and carbora·
tor. $2,000. (740)379·21535

ARCADIA

,j

WANTED
I
TO BIJY
1._-toiiiioiioiiio--"

bef01e proceeding. Por infonnatlon ~eganlii!J
Bankrupu:ycontact

WIIIWD l!a.._ ..... AUornev
.,...,.......,
'
(740) 592-5025
AllleDI,

LIME·

DIPOYSIG

NURSING

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

AU Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case·IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rr. 7 Sou1h
Coolville, OH 45723

PllltS

STONE

(740) 591·2173

740-667-0363

Or leave name
and number

~~~~j

Free Estimates
tlt1 18!'1'! n sr · Mutuleuort
...

740-992·9158

JIIJ..

Advertise

fll.•!.!

In this space

FI'M Eltlnttl• WVeJ%919

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

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(lD'xlD' 61D'x20')

[740) 992·3194
992-6635
· WERRY'S
WIITLE ONES

33561 Bailey Run Rd4
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
•service You
Can Count On"

Day, evening,

• Room AddiUono &amp;
Ramodollng
• NIW Garaget
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing • GuHers
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Pltlo and Porch Dtckl
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

lr

Siding

• ' l:d

· CONTRAOORS, INC.

29670 Bashan Road

Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

740-985-3948
CDNCRETf!BLDCK/BRI(l(

Spout

and Drives • Stencil

~

(740) 992-3987

tli!!;

driv~ways,

1Salisla;ti:

gJ1liiV1Iaed.
UfeliTie VVarrarioj

(Insured)

·on:

t983 Chevy Truck LWB. 3/4
Ton. 4•4. Now tires, Ex·
haust; brakos. Carburetor.
$3200. (304)675-61183 after

ponds

Free Estimates

Free Esllt IID!s

740-992-3985

Pocket Knives
&amp; Collectlblaa

. ~CutAbove
dlirilb the Rest"
Hours:
Mon-Sat 10"4
E. 2nd .St •
Pomeroy,OH

217

(740) 992-5908

FIELDS
PLUMBING
405 Slh Street

New Haven, WV
•Residential
•Commercial

·basements/footers,

C'.el1ai'1mJ, Sim1iniJO:S'lnt

•

· ·-"

lines, site work,

trust.

.1

ill!~

Commercial &amp; Resi.d cntial

tank, ditching, water

8rartl narms )W can

or email@

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Specia~zing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete
Roofs &amp; Siding

(Syracuse, Ohio)
Bulldozing,
Trackhoe/Backhoe,
land clearing, Septic

992~6975

Hill's Self
Storage

~

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION

VANS &amp;

GeneAnns

andw~kend
care available

Wlfty10~

TFN

~ft~t~~~f@

s25 per month

Good lor Storege. $t 200.
(740)446-2359
.

Owqer

Now accepting
children

992-3174
1 mo 3113

992·6215

Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean TFN

for

22' Box Truett No Engine.

P/B
Racine, Ohio 4577t

• Footers, Walls, Steps •
'Flat Work,

Replacements, • Walks
Crete
Free Estimates
Serving Otiio and W.V.
WV.#031712

Advertise

in this
space
for
sso per
month

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
'

35537 SL Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
• 4-H feed for lambs, hogs, steers, ch ickens and
rabbits.
• Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets

•.Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds

e;:1(304~
882-2343
WV Lie 102520 ·

• Fenilizer Specifically Designed for Gurden Crops

• New Fenilizer Buggies
• All buggies have been pattern tested to meet
·Agronomy Association Standards

TFN

1..-p1

..;5!&gt;;._•_•·....,...,.,.....,.--'--,--

t988 S·T Blazer 4x4 In
good condlllon. (304)615·
335&lt;1 altar 5pm. on Week·

Pomeroy Eagles

BISSEll

BlnGO.Z171

Euerg Thursday
6 Sondag

BUILDERS IDC,

=do:!.:YB:...·- - - -

L.••••••_.J 4x4.
t993 Ford E•plorer
(304)676·1176

New Homes • Vinyl

Doors Open 4:30

Siding • New Garages

Early birds start

• Replacement

6:30 .

Windows • Roofing

XLT.

Progressive top One

COMMER(lAland RI~DIH!IAI

t994 F-t150 XLTil Ext. Cab,
4x4, Sherp True , Lot o1 Ex·
tras, One Owner, High
Miles, $4500. (740)387·
~7.:.060::..,_ _ _ _ __
t 994 Red, F-250, 4x4,
t30,000 miles. $7,000 finn.
(740)388-9055

Thursdays

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

150 East

~~~
High&amp; Dry

t 999 F-450 Ford 4x4,
4 door crow cob, Dleeel,
8·tlpeed, manual, 7,000
miles. slicker price, $38,000
wllh 911. llal bed, oleo has
10ft. hydraul ~ dump bed,
aluminum tool boxH. Will
oall lor $28,000 for all. Call
·
Hollie . Marcum (740)388Shetiand Pony, $400. !loot, 8834
:$40:..
:200:::t_C_he_vy_T_ra-ck_e_r4-x-4,--V·
~ •v &amp;
I 8, 7,500 min. Whitt wllh
:"''
Sliver border. Transfer of
L
_ _ _ _G_IWN
__. • ,.1. Equity
11 $4t2. por monlh
"
or ooll $22,000. Day
Evening
Wlro Tie (3GI)875-8839

Self-Storage

s·ooP,

~(7~40~)3=8=8~8~6~44~-...

Advertise your
message

I~Diur~~~::"iniDallvary

1

Steve's Tru c k
A ccesson es

1888 Bulokaaoutl!ul
Skylark, 7t,OOO
1388
mllae.
Cor, _
_ _ _ _ _ _....;.

Sl t·u t·

Davldoon

go!lablo.
Mlt~ cu,,otom LXStt~oo"'·
1V88 Slbring LXI Black, 1,Gio
m oo.
,u ·
- · Grutlftepl. 1990 (304)875·28117
Dynaoty, runo but noado
CR 2150, Loll
2001
1700. (304)87&amp;·~5ol 8 01 Extru. (740)446·731 t,
'· 1!002 Ponlloa .Grand Am. ·
&lt;Cdr., St8,000. (304)875- . - - - - - - - . .
812t
. 'f:NEWSPAP.ERS
811 Oldo Toronado, 86K,
COVO! 1\11 Tne
GOOd Work Cor, 1450.· .
Motor SublooiJI
(740)3711-211t
L......;:;.
- _....

' .'work.

---.1

33'!95 Hiland RJ.
Po""""' Ohio

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homea, Room Additions,
Garagas, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
· Siding, Dacka,.Kltchena, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

I

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lllhtl t•. Oouuo•t
I..

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BedUnen•NerfB••

.,...

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ToDDeUe Cover

• VentvWir •

IShield &amp;

Bua ·

FuU J,.lne

Other Aee-.ia

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j,

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4/18!01

(740) 667-3318

Healing &amp; CooUng
l4·HR.
SERVICE
"One Price.
Anytime.
AU tbeTime."

Services Offered

taae Nillan Sontra Wagon.

Horloy

Mirror
l&amp;:ctu.Sive Dealer
IFa!ctoJry Direct

TFN

HENDRIX

Good Condition 11500. 1999 Herioy FXOS Low Rld(304)875-8852 .
or oonvenlblo, red, lola of
:;;;;;.:;;.;.;;,.::.;;:_____ chrome, 1~,000 mlln, nrvloed, Stt ,000.00. 740-742·
Nt- ·2001

174·0\5;93-66;111

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$1 0.00 column Inch ~undays

Avolio· (304)875-8737
F
2001 S·10 4x4, Full 4 door
lrm. arew cab. 7,500 mll11.
Sllagr prtoo, $25,000, groat
cfool for $t8,000. Call Holllo
iiiji;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;· Maroum (740)388-81134

~~FOAIJros-RS._W!__.1 r· ~oroRCYWs

Stale Street Phone
Athens, Ohio

Progressive
Coueral~. on SUndays

for

Banty Chickone, $3.00
each;
Turkeys.
S25.
(740)245-5622 evenings.
Good 4•H and . FFA Fair
Pigs, Hamp. Yoot&lt; and I'll·
. rarn CI'OIIbrld. (740)386·
9033 (740)386-0t76 altar

(740)255-8018. 1181500

Decks • Gal'llges

~oc~~ftft MACK'S
IJ».. J.D. CONSTRUCTION .

ocio

r

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New Borneo • ReRIIlllcllrrg
RooftiiJI• Room Addldons
SldiiiJI• Pole Barns

949-1405 TFN

ComPDTfRS

EOE

4-WDs

Compeddn Prim

Free Estimates
JERRYS USED

1991 GMC SOnoma Ext
Cab, Toppar, 4x4, 134K
miles, Auto, AC, TIG, lots
New, \/ely Cleen, Excellent
Truck, $4500. (740)441·

~

"Qualily Home
Improvements"

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
Sanitation
SERVICE

Pomlror, Ohio

CENTER

(740) 667-3156

0425

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......

YOUNG'S

45n1
740·841·2217

Wanted to buy: Used Mobil a t 99t Chevy 4x4, Silverado
Home. Col (740)445-0t75 short wheel boao, .1500 ser·
r 304)875·5985
los. 350 Sop. lift kit. Dependeble. $7,300 (304)875.
lnEsrocK
113t0

2 year old
Registered Angua Bull,
out of New Trend E.P.D.'s
good 258·1352
·
4-H Club Iambe, excellent
quality, $125. each, ahow·
lng, grooming, !eedlng In·
dudod; 740-742·t504

1 thes,Illd
IB may me
a car, a ouse, co
household goods. You should direct any
qucationa ~eprdins bankruptcy to an attorney
h

RaCine, Ohio

East Main Street
CoolvUie, Ohio 45723

t 989 Chevrolet Plokup
Truok, 4 Wheal Drive, 4.3
Engine, 4 apeed, $3000.
Cell after 3:00pm. (740)448·

1997 F·t50 Extended Cab.
Excollenl Condldon. $8995.
OBO. 304-875-4994

his or her personal use.

If you are Interested In applylll8 you
may apply In person between the
hours of 9:00.4:00PM or you can call
Stacey Duncan at (748) 667·3156•

;,.c:.;_~-~~-------

'Ford BN Tractor. New Paint,
12 volt, Meny NftW Parts,
$2996. Call (740)44t-8578,
laava meaaage, nama and
.Pho::.::.""::.:.".:um.::ber=·:__ _ _
Masa8y Ferguson 382, 66
.hp, 717 hr., like new,
.St5.800.(740)985-3843 ,

· Jude

Th'

We 'currentlY haye the followin&amp;
gosiUoga ayetleblc;
1 Full·tlme 3·11
1 Part-time 3·11/11·7

t982 GMC pick-up, !ull·alze
bed, 89,000· mllea, nftW
paint job, whlta opOke
wheels, alum. toolbOx, aak·
lng St850, (740)9411-282t
t 985 Dod go Ram, noar
show condltlon, contact Oal·
loa Weber: 740·892·3394,
740-742·3020

=OO::t:::3_ _ _ _ _~
1992 Fcrd 350, 7.3 dleeel,
crow oab, duelly, full size
bed black &amp; sliver: centur1·
on P.,cicage 82
miles
mint condlilon' 304-773:
5186, (740)992-3to2

"exempt" property, for

Wages up to $18.50 per hour
8 hour shlfls
30 nsldenls lo 1 nurse ratio
Laid back environment
A team of dedicated and caring co,
workers

197t C"-•• C30 1 ton 292
·~·r
'
'
6 cyllndar, 4 opee&lt;l, otael
tlol bad, headache rack,
gooseneck haok·up and
6al, very good condtlon,
mgo·oo OBO. 740-742·

.rL. ~iJI~.iUIM
...- - · ' ~r~~·

llme lor Frost Seeding Pasture end Hay Fields.
·
ATV Broadcast S-rs. 12
' Von, High Quality, Fill most
ATVo, S285.
Jim's Farm Equipment Inc.
(740)446·2484

- ....

.lf;.

~

·

Maasay

A penon going lhrough bankrupu:y
.
may retain c:eauin property, known as

I Lost 27 I.b.
,·n 32 da·ys.

TFN

.c

Buy hera pay here. 94·
Dodga Spl~t. 97K, $500
down, many more. 740"71114211'·;23;;7.;0"'=_,__.....,

·99
Farguoon 4243
(65 Hcree) 70 hours. 4WD.
·Cab, heal &amp; air, AMIFM
caaseHa stereo. Front tires
. 12.4-24, roar llree t8.4·30.
$30,000. Cell Hollis Maroum
'(740)388 8834

arrange aflir distribution of assets among
creditors.

Help Wanted

t991 Chevy Z71, 4x4, .,. - - -oJ(
J.f.:
.··~ -·"1:·· ~···
ii;;i;:::;;;;;;li':.l7;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ callont condltkln, new 350
• "ft•
-;r!'
-10
•••
(740)\192;6027 .

"'
; oleo- T King Kutter. Exoeldent
Condition.
$460.
•(740)245-0370
;_..:..,_ _ _ _ _ _

CIIIJelieveadebloroffilllllcialobli&amp;ationsand

Distributor

~

WE WANT YOU!

Dod

·

BANKRUPTCY

1n dependenl

740·992·7036

t998 Honda Civic LX, Auto,
Air, Crulao. PW, PDL. 4
Door. Black, S8500 OBO . .
(740)388·8878

•r

----------------.

I00%
natural/Guaranteed

oqulpPact, Ford Chaaals.
Twin Bade, aleeps 6, good
ahape. Yardman 42 Inch
cut, good ehapa. Call
(740)367·7070

,\ I I\ I ._, I ( )( f,

~~~~ ~~~:a•~:; Gallipolis Ohio a Plotori~l
each. Can' aher ''apm. Hlatory •1790• 1990, S3!.
(
•
Television Cabinet, Oak~
7401446 9066
50 , Gar&lt;feh Push Plow!
545 (7-40)266- 1529
Used Fumlture Slore beloW .:...:.;.·:..:.=:.:...=:.___
Holiday Inn' h1 Kanauga. Independent Herbellfe Dl..Monday thru Friday. 10-4. tributor, Call For ProclJcl 0(
(740)446-4782. Stop by.
Opportunity. (740)441-1 99Z

orl

Citro;'

Beeull!ul Hille Japanese
Chin puppies. for aale. Very
Intelligent. Grut Compony.
$1150. Eaoh. (304)675-2908
after !lpm. ·

t and 2 bedroo.m apa~•. ments, fumlshad and unfur·
nlshad, security d_eposU re2 acr11, 33475 Bailey Run qulrad, no pats, 740·992·
Ad., off Ohio 124, 112 mile 2218.
West of Route 7, water &amp;
sepllc already In, S14,900, 1 and 2 Bedroom Apta for
exc~ llent
bulldln.g site, rent starting at $289/month
(937)396-0258
(7.40)44t .0194

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Cottage lor ront. 1 porson

own

Sh

Refrlgeratot· Almond. 19
cubic ft. Lillo NftW, $250.
Hot Point Waaher, White,
Like New, $175. 30' Eleclrk:
Range· Almond. Like New.
St75. Skaggs Appllanc11.
(740)446•731111

~(7_;40;:;)~~..:.;..·2::9;.:;5:.7____ ~8.::48~4:..,loa.;:;ve.:.;:m:;;";;;'=•:!::·--

2 Bodroom HouM In Golllpo
olio /Vee. $360/monlh plul Now Toklng Appllcotlonodtpollt (740)441·0te4
311 WIOt 2llodroom Townhou A
1 1d
BR Houoa Stove &amp; R•
H po~menta, nc U II
3
trlgorato&lt; Furnlohtd, Stl50 Wolor
Sowa~o, ' Trooh,
d-oll $3211/mo (740)446• 13!501Mo., 740 4 MOOS,
••• •
·
V001. ·
Twin Rivera Tower oocopt·
30r, t bl.$3150. mcnlh, 120
lngopplloallonl !or
Howord Slrael, Now ~
(304)757-827. Ext, t 22

:
• 1 Af&lt;C Poodlo Puppy. Ador·
• able AKC·Goktan Retriever
: Puppies lor Easter. Vet
o Checi&lt;OCI. (740)379·2838
~
·
" AKi!' Rogloterod Mln'pln
, Pupplao. 1 Black and Tan
: Malo, t Chocolate Male,
, Sholl &amp; WorrnOCI. 1 weeks
_...,ld, S300. (304)273-9~58,
l:(304=15=32::.0.::3:..:.t2:;._ _ _
Af&lt;C Regloterld Siberian
Huoky Pupe. til ShOll and
·Wormld. Slro and Dam on
prernlaoo. 4 female 5225 . 2
male. $200. All have bulutHul btua eyes. Great Eater
OHio. (304)773-5730

j

~

~~~-

Mollohan Carpet; 202 Clal1&lt;
Chepel Rood, Porter, Ohio.
(740)448·7444 t-877·830·
9182. Frae Estimate&amp;, Eaey
financing, 90 deye same as
cash. Visa/ Master card.
Dnve· a- Uttle oave alot.

•

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~

1

Lawnboy mower, 21 ~, lleolrio 111111, Nko now. 740-e-1&amp;:
2874
Mlorowave 1000
11
1111CBO ollte, ltOO/mo. 740- tum,.blo, ~Old
w~a.::
8
8t2·2187. .
callont condition, •. • .,~
7u 7~
___.;_____
:llll::5:.;·3=e8:::.~- - - - Storage Spaco tor rent4033
equore toat. wllh molal NIW AND UUD ITE!L
oholvln~, Looalod In City of , Stul Booms, Plpo Rober
Poln!_. laaunl. lnqulra at For Concrete, Anglo, Chan·
(304,.7~-otoa
nol, Flat Bar, Steel Clrattng
Troller opaoelor rontln Mid· For Dralno, Drivewayo 6
dleport (740)8t2·8668
Wolkwayo. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
'
..
• ala Opon Mondoy, Tueodly,
:-'lodnesd'(l; &amp; Fridty, sam,
~:30pm. loltd Thurlday,
I Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)44a-.7300
'
Samoonlll PooVPatlo Set.
-Glasa Top Tabkl.
swlval
4 and
Appllancea: Reoondllloned chalra and umbrella
W••hers, D~ero, Rangas,
d
''
stan· Hl~at Quality,
Re!ngrators, Up To 90 Dey&amp; $300
Guaranteed!
Sell New .:.:.:.:.:.
· :.:&lt;7.;;40::::::..:8=4=45:.__
Meytag ApplianCes, Fronch Smell Table and Chalro,
City Maytag, 740-448·7795. $50. Refrigerator- small;
:.._:.._...:_...:__ _ _ _ $t 5o. Lovaaoat, $tOO.
For Sale: Reconditioned (740)448-9742
nd
ri
'
waahera, dryers 0
re~- Solid Wood Circular Dining
orators. Thompsons A~~- Table and 4 chelra, $e8:
ance. 3407 Jackaon ve· (740)882.·7574. .
· ,
nue, (304)675-7386 ·
Good Ul8d Appliances," Re·
I
dll
d
d G
' Firewood cut .a . IPII~,
con t one an
uaran· load •~s ...., hwil
teed!_ Wuhera, Dryera, truck~. '740·885 3515 '
Ranges, and Rafrlgeratona,
Some etart at $95. Skagge Free Gaa Fumaca and Air
Appliances, 76 VIne St., Condltklner Estlmat11, ca"
(~40)448·7396
. (740)448-8306 or t·800'
291.()()98. · 11 you don't cau
e ueen Sleeper SQta. us we both lOIII
GE R
rotor. Both Ex·
·'
cellant ondltlon. (740)388· G/E Hoovy Duty Wuhor•
8997
Gaa Dryar. New Cond
.
It ion;
$550. Co ft m
146 H~
Late Model White GE oW' .U,
Weoher &amp; Dryer Sat, $t50. · (304),875-e652
'
:

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own

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WANTiil&gt;

rjQ

We are paying
at $500 sign-on
bonus to
individuals who
are interested
in working for
a professional
telemarketing
company.

Call

For sale or lease wnh opllon
to buy: 4 bedroom, large
kitchen. t
t/2 beths,
F.A.N.G. heat·cenlral air,
river view lrom large lront
porch, lease references &amp;
deposit, no pats. 740·992·
9012
·
1111!11'"~--~---.
MOBILE HOMI'S I

Jeff Warner Ins.

$4! - 7!i minutes

HERBALIFE

I

=TI:-- 8---:1-:::-:--m-od.,..e.,..l"'tu...,.lty
994
09

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Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Iji'

"-·c·~·
~·~·

:!
..-windows.

· Mall ,To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

rtO IIELPWANTiil&gt;

ELF.cnuCAt1

RV: t998 Golden Falcon 3t
ft. mint condition. Slide- out
LA, plckole&lt;l ook cablneto
and kllchen floor. Stillng lor
book voJue. St4,500. Call
&lt;740 )••• t8B4

112.500.00. 740-992-117t9

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

r ........

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~ RON EVANS EHTERPRIS. t994 Toyota Ttoo truck,
" E8 J8ck1on Ohio t -BOO· V6, ,auto, A/C, t owner,

Pr.lvate Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Com.merclal Ads

Stop &amp; omparet

n:,!lcxoloJ:y.
,
·
and Yoga lberapy Gift
Cenificate! Available

FREE ESTIMATES

•

.:r

6

.....

CondtuOn.

~

~ 1B&lt;
nuoStocCamprnok.ion FIHinge

(304) 675-1333

Cellular

Garages

1.-

; Wtllerllne Spocial: 3/4 200 t993 Ford Taurua,
door,
' PSI 112t .00 Per t 00; t' 200 oxtra good condition, ev~ PSI 135.00 Por too; All optton, 3.8 V6, low pr~o;;:,"'

l\egt~ter

To Place

.Alliil

740-992·1671

•

REACH OVER 285,000· PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW

New Homes

c:.r-car,

ssoo.

•

In one week With us

Krls
Kantecki

ooo

•

1\ \ 01 \ ( I \ II \ I '

~I

85 Cavalier LS, ~ cyf, om'fm 12 fool Aluminum fiohlng
C/0, olr, good - · Q9od boot 500 lb bell kaller, 9
OOndlllon $4,000 (740)"""· 1/2 HP e~ Evonrude
IASEMENT
21m
' ' '
motor, ,;;:;;;g";;..y troller
WATERPIIOOFINCI
- - - - - - - - :::-::--:-::-~-- joclc, Hummingbird Depth U(IOC)IIdllloltal II!OIIme , guer·
Grubb'o Plano- Tuning .&amp; 87 Ford Explorer. 4x4, finder, S1000. (304)528· am.. Local referMCts h.lf·
Ropol,._ Problems? NoOCI Loalhor lnltnor 88
"t511-5prn Aok for Dollble, nlohed. Establtlhld 1975,
Tunod? Cell The Plano Dr. mlloo, $t3,000. '(740)448. (740)2511-1502 olter 8prn
Coli 2~ Hrs. (740) 446740 448 4~25
~715041=-----0870, R~re BoMmOnt
JET""\
Boot For oale or • - · 20 Woterprooling.
111111
AERATION MOTORS
Good Olda Colla 88 flovoJ. foot Alnkor Cuddy Cobin, V·
Ropalrod, Now &amp; Rebul~ In wcrb
~ 8 engine, t85 Horoe Power. - - - - - - s·~ Call Ron E
t
·
.
ng, good ooudldon, new Uflholl· C&amp;C General Horne Malnte~~.
vane, • excallent shape, loaded. !try
Phone (740)256- ,.,_. Painting, vinyl old·
Complete
1100-537-11528.
(740)446-8394
6926
lng, carpentry, doonl, winRemodeling
18119 Plymouth Honzon 4 "r.r-A~"""'r.-"""'&amp;
dows, belhl. mobile home
Vintage Black Wool Cepe cyf., Auto. Good
l1lU :UUS
._1r and mora. For !rea
1 eetimale call Chet, 740-992·
with period Rod Trim. Por·
(740)446-2tt5
A&lt;XEHIIIIEl
!eel lor Civil R•Enect·
~
I
6323.
mant, $55.00 (740)258· 1992 Olda CuUuo, 4 door Blldiltot 1
544!
Cierra -S, one owner, new
Superior Home Malnta·
Urea, lola o1 opttone,' ~9,000
nonce. We do all Repalra on
Wentad: Dloh NeiWOII&lt; Sye- llclual mllea, parlect condl·
horriea. Carpentry, Plumb- · 1- - - - torn, cal anytime, (740)949- lion, $4,500.00. 740-992·
lng, Electrical, Decks, Inside
3315 .•
:67:..t.:9--=---and out. (740)44t.01t3

'tor oale can bo
at t04 Hazelwood
"• Drive New Haven, WV
• (304)882-2804

• oeen

:

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

'I I&lt;\ !C I "

~ Gazlbo

C L A 5 5 I F I· E D

1

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

.jt ==: l.,.tiO_.....:a.u,.tu:.os-._.~ ..____

m:ribune ·- Sentinel -

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ.

2002

YOUR CORCRETE
CORRECTIOR, LLC
(740) 742·8015

Bryttnl Equip.
10 Yr. Plr11 &amp;
labor Wornlnty.j....-

Quality Com:rele Work

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors
28 ynr• Experience . ·

AB Video
&amp; Tanning

F111Eitlm11e1
(toll free)

Cnhl, C•ndlu, 1i11n!na Btd•
Old MIIOII Llundromtlt

c.u ,,, .. ,..ypoM,••,

877·353-7022

(304) 773-5601
j

.

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••

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~

•

PIIU* a a• The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 21, 2002

www.mydallyHntlnel.com

ALLtYOOP

."

PHILLIP
ALOE II

N HuNIIId

...........
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of mine.
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Oscar .W ilde, 111
"The Pict ure of
Dorian Gray," wrote,
"When a woman
marries again it is because she detested her '
first husband. When a
m cu1 marries again it is
beca use he adored his
first wife. Women try
the ir luck;. men risk
theirs." Is that true?
Today, you might
be experiencing deja
vu, because this deal
bears a noticeable resemblance to yesterday 's . How would
you play in seven
spades after West
leads a diamond?
This layout occurred during the fi'n al of the World
Youth Championship
in 200 I, . when the
United States defeated
Israel.
The United States
stopped in six spades
and made it exactly
for phw'J80.
Israel bid the good
grand slam. (In this

BARNEY

.. .
. THE BORN LOSER
r

P'"

F'"'

::ICJ YOU CN-1 .lll:'l\
FOR&lt;:£T 1--ll-\{&gt;..\ [
YOO 10 PICKuP
(v\E.r!&gt;-f\E:R. WU\&lt;.1'.~

f.\t.LLO, &amp;ll\\J:) I

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GET 10 TI-\E: :)\OR£,
f&gt;.HER. N.L ..

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Co111111lsslon
to llleet
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campo•
CelebrftV Clpner cryptogram~ are crnttd from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each lener In lhe cipher stands for another.

TSMUEPN

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NMPURE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Prayer Is the contemplation of the
laces of life from lhe highest point of view.'
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
.

WOlD
GAMI

O four
R:ecmange letters of
scrambled words

the

be·

low to fOrm four simple words.

1

I:
======·==-

declarer should have
~
taken both of his top r
clubs. When the jack
T H C 0 N ..
;' ·
Kids ask the craziest quesdrops from East, de- · 15
1 .. lions. We passed a trailer park •
darer pulls the re- ==·~-==·==·=:....,one day and my young son asked
maining trump. then r
me why they called them mobile
h:lmes when they - - - -' - - - - -I
I
N
D
M
0
A
takes a ruffing finesse
O Comp
lete tho chuckle quoted
against West's club 7 . ,
.
...
.
by filling in the missing words
queen, leading the 10
-L--' vou d o,elop from step No. 3 below ..
~nin~~~q
.
·
'
::,w~hen West plays . ~ m~;~~UMBEREO
13
L.

TllERE I5 NO Tf.liRD
QUESTION, 51R .. WE DID
TEST LAST WEEK

I

· TIME FLIES WJ.IEN
I{()U'RE HAVIN6

The witmit!g team·
was Urad Campbell,
Joe Gruc, John Hurd,
John Kranyak, Kent
Mignocchi and Joel
Wooldridgc; with
Robert Rosen the
nonplaying captain.

MARCH 291

Sat\lalJy, March .3U, 2002
nul 111~\ke
c han ge~ merely for their own
~ake in th e year nhead, &lt;md
yo u' ll ha vl' more time t o
~pe nd on subnantive matters.
S u cres~ l"OIIle.~ through · improvin g .and bettering the is~ ues :lt h:md .
AR I ES (M,ch 21-April I9)
-- It ma y be time to try out a
n ew uu tlt·t fur .~onn:th in g you
buy on a regular hasis.. Other
vt•m.ln~ may lmv~ sin ce come
up with a bcncr dt.•al than the
one you're l1Sl'd w . Trying to
patch up a bmken rom:mcc?
The Astro-Graph M;ttt::hmakcr ca n help you understand what t() do to make the
relatinnship \'Vork. Mail $2.75
to M;H ..: hm akcr, ..:io this
13 e

Sllre

to

newspaper, P.O. Bo:o: 175M,
M1~rr.1y Hill St&lt;ltion , New
Ynrk, NY III ISr,.
TAURUS (April 2!1-May
20) -- In order rn ·maincain
your credibility, do what yOu
say you will \.ln. n:~~· kpcdaling
or simpl y rt•nt·gi ng could ha\·e
;moriates think ing ill of you.

GEMIN I (May 2 1-June 20)
--Just bc c :~use you doO't like
doing ;1 'e rt :~ in Job is no e-xnl st: fo r not ~t:tt i ng it done . If
yo u don ' t. produce , ycm'll

..
'

r

'

I"'

1:. 1 :

..

GALLIPOLIS Three
organizations have requested
privilege of floor at Tuesday's
City Commission meeting to
discuss the transient guest tax
approved for first reading by
the commission at its March ·
19 meeting.
The commission meets at 7
p.m. in the Gallipolis Municipal courtroom for its regular
monthly meeting.
Expected to speak on the
tax are Bill Davis and Dene
Pellegrinon of the Our House
Museum Board, Mary Bea
McCalla of the French Art
Colony-.
~· Eana· Wniiefey .
for the Ariel Theatre.
The ordinance establishing
the tax is up for second reading at Thesday's meeting.
The commission is expected to act on emergency resolutions accepting an easement
from the state for water tap- in
purposes, accepting an easement from Kathryn Wiseman
for water line purposes, and
accepting an easement from
Legend Communications for
water lin e purposes . .

Children Hooded
'Gallipolis City Park,
right. and Raocoon
Creek County Park
In Gailla County
on Saturday
to participate
·In Easter ,egg hunts.
Below. kindergarten
students Michael
Stobart, lelt, and
Nicole Brlcldes search
for Easter eggs hidden
behind Southern
Elementary School
In Racine during the
school's Easter
activities on Thursday.
An egg hunt Is also
scheduled for today In
Middleport, beginning
at 1 p.m. at General
Hartinger Park.

DuPont suit·
.

Class action certification
opens suit to Ohio residents
•

Bv BRIAN J. REED.
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

PARKERSBURG, WVa. - Anyone whose water h.S
been contaminated with the chemical cont.1minant C8 i!.
now eligible to join in a class action lawsuit against EJ .
D uPont deNemours &amp; Co.
. Last week, a Wood County circuit e&lt;&gt;urt judge certified a
suit filed by 13 Parkersburg-area ·residents as a class action,
allowing Ohio residents and those whose private wells have
been contaminated with the chemical to join as litigants. .
The chemical Ammonium Perfluorooctanoate is used at
the DuPont's Washington Works plant outside of Parkersburg, and while the Environmental Protection ·Agency has.
not deem ed the chemical unsafe, testing for C8 in conunu.
nities along the Ohio River has revealed its presence as far
from away from the plant as Long Bottom.
There, two of Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District's
three we\ls have bee.n found [o be contaminated at relatively low levels.
·.
Of\icials have also tested water supplies in Pomeroy and ih
water supplies in Mason County, W.Va., and Floyd Browne
Associates, a Columbus consulting firm workin g for the VU•
!age of Middleport, has announ ced plans to test a new well
field near Hobson for the chemicaL
,
The 3M company has announced it plans tO sto p manufactur ing th e chemical, used in DuPon t's fluoropo lymer
manufacturing process, and DuPont plans to begin manu·
facturing the product itself.
In their lawsuit, litigants allege ·that C8 is a health risk
even at levels considered. safe by DuPont - one part per
billion -. and th:it' tile chemical giant has !&amp;town since 1984
that the levels in the Lubeck,WVa.,Public Service District's
. water supplies have exceeded the standard.
DuPont maintains that it notified the water company in
1989 that the levels were in excess o f their community
exposure gu'ideline for safe contaminant levels.
TP- C wells show a contam ination level well below that
co mmunity exposure guideline established by DuPont. Initial -t&lt;:!Sting shows the level in TP-C's wells at 0.07 tO 0.7
pa rts per billion.
DuPont has agreed to continue mon itoring community
watef supplies, and tO provide . alternative drinking water
sources in those communities where levels exceed 14 ppb.
. The original litigan ts in the Wood County suit, all Lubeck
water custome rs, seck compensato ry and punitive daniag~
·and payment of the costs for medical monitoring. Th~
Lubeck water system is also a defendant in th e case.
No trial date has been set.

Tlmea-Sentlnel photos
by Kevin Kelly and
Tony M. Leach .

and

CALLI POLIS

Cor1ection

.

L.

f

I FRIDAY

Hlp: lOS. Low: 50s
Details, A2
)

IE D D

judge expand~

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___

Israel was unlucky, ~=:;::~==~~:!--l
but South had a better '"
line available . Aft~r r_,.:..:N_U.;.....:.H-nO~D.-1
two ruumls of trumps,
14

PEANUTS

Easter Festivities

org.

47 Tllu,.,...p

Todsy's clue: X squa/s P
'TSDENEYP
EK
PYW

Wood County

. ......

25 "M'A•S•H" 41

211 Loving

s1.25

40 Army duft
42 Movie

Lena M. Stout, 75
Chadwick Barrett, 19
Noah Chasteen, 79.
Flora Gibson, 89
Robert D. Roush, 90
Sarah Truitt, 69
Detllils, AS

ZYB

b

veggll

Deall1s

no-

trump is the Grand
Slam Force, the reply
showing ei ther the.
spade ace or king.)
However, declare r
didn 't find a successful
lin e. After winning
with dummy's diamond king, South
cashed the spade ace,
played a trump to his
king, took the dub
ace, ruffed a club in
the dummy, played a
diamond to his ace,
. and ruffed another
club. However, East
· overruffed to defeat
the contract.

I

OF 1"HE
SUDDEN
JENNY 'S
GQOD,
KELLY'S

five

c::"'ot

21 c..cttve•o
11111e.
cry
22 Lrin lett.,.
DOWN
23 Climb
1 Golfw
211 Commollona
Dulrl
2 Landlord'o
211 Sic~
30 Cowboy '•
lee
3 Kind of lira
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l'au
PHI

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13w.b-.
14 ~PMI57
15 Piercing
18 Pop'• 58
Loboo
59
17 Templld
60
11 Gnwe
61

ID f 4

lkalt&gt;r North

usa I til
55 ......

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•

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Urvonl

TSC opens Monday
in Gallipolis, A2

•
ttttts

52 "lty myl"

. ,.J&lt;Itll
•

Better d~ ahead
for Reds? 81

DMIIIIIIt

1:1·· ·

4 1ftA I I I
¥ JtlS.
t KI J

·INSIDE

Adoption brings
, joy to family, Cl

.......... .

ACROSII

1~

Wnt

TEMPO

NEA Croaaword Pua:lle

I
r I' r I' I' I' Ia I' I

Ia I 1: I

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
Chosen - Whirl- Snarl- Bishop- PILLOW
Our teenage son rad come home and proudly announced he had landed the softest job in town. 1found
out he was going to be a tester in a PILLOW factory!

fi.~. -----

..h.ave a lot ~•f"explaining to rJo
to the powt.•n; that bt".

CANCUI{ (June 21 -July
22) -- Usually yo u're a
shrewd horse trader, btu yo u
migh t be gullihll' j u~t bc~·;utsc
the pl'nion with whom you're
t.lcaling is blindsiding you with

flattery.
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) -Sonleone you recently met
might be an OK pe~on , but
take things 5I ow and don't be come too lnvolvcd t on
quickly. Ti m e may reveal an " other 5ide to this individu ;,l.

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
-- Things yo u put off doing.
w h ich you promise you rsel f
that you 'll g~t around to doing ano th er 1day m ay n·t·ver gCt
acco mpHshed. It may become
a monkey 011 your back for
quite some time .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) "" Stop te!lin~ yourself you
c:~n't live without thi~ or that.
or it wi ll c:msc you to speml
f.1r more than you shuuhl.
You could Je.,ve your~df vuiJH'r.,hlc whl'll ftllun· hills

come in .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- You above 111l ot her
5i~:tn s should. know tlwrr arc
a lw ay~ two sides to an imfc ,

so don't start anticipating the

negative side of.thing~ while
totally forgetting about the
po~itive

side .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) -- Should you get
frmtrated, you might be inclitlCd to resort to mbterft•gc
in order to achieve your"aims.
It could. prove . tO be extn'mcly embarr:mi11g.
CA PI~I CORN

(IJcc. 22-

J;m . 1.9) -- Tlll'rc is ;t tcndt•n cy on your p:~rt from time
.to tiine to get carelen with
yo ur possessions, all because
your mimi is not on what
you' re doing . This may be '···
o ne of those days .

In the Sunday, March 17
edition of the Sunday TimesSentinel, it was incorrectly ·
noted in Gallia County court
news that Christine B.
Williams received · a year's
probation stemming from
charges of reckless operation,
driving left of center and not
using a turn signal.
According to court note ~.
Williams was fined, but not
placed on probation .

; Index
ol SectiDIII - 2S ......

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region ·
Sports
Weather

C5,7
C2-3
02-7
insert
Cl
A4
A6
A2
Bl -6
A2

c 2002 Ohio Valley P1..1blishins Co.

City officials question
·distribution formufa
'Wele goinfJ to try to do
some negotiating. My one
question is why is there
an unwillingess to negotiate, and my second question is, the unfairness of
wking away $111,000
from our budget"

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS - A proposal on the distribution formula for local governm ent
funding from the state has
been fl oated by a committee
· of Gallia County townships,
and has raised questions fron,1
one of the entities involved
in the process.
The townships have proposed a 43 percent aistribution of funds for the county,
22 percent 'for townships and
35 percent for· villages - a
formula yroponerlts said is
equi table based on population and the number of roads
townships and villages must

•

Gary Fendarbooch, Gallipolis

City CommiSsion

prt~ldenl

$100,000 away from the city.
whic h has th e largest infrastructure among the coun ty's

muni cipalities.
T he committees were to

meet again Monday at 7 p.m.
in th e county co mmission --:

ers' office at the cou rthouse.
"We're go ing to try to do
son1c negotiating,"\ Fenderbosch said. "My one question
is why is there an unwillingess to n'egotiate, and my

l:lut Gallipolis Commission
President Gary Fenderbosch second question .is,.. the
has ~sked for further discus- unfairn ess of taking away
sion on th e proposaL
$111 ,000 from our budget."
Fenderbosc h, a member of
Townships · and villages
the committee formed by
were asked last month by the
villages, cited Gallipolis' need
county budget co mmission
and what he termed "unfairPlease see Formula, A6
ness" in taking more than

maintain.

HIGH WATER

SOME THINGS NEVER CHANGE - Eighty-nine years ago
· this month. one of the biggest floods ever to hit the Bend
area. crested at 68 feet. This March 30, 1913, photograph
s ubm itted bY Jennie Canter is from her father 's collection ,
shows Main and Court streets underwater. Again this year,
March brought heavy rains causing creeks to overflow and
the Ohio River to rise, at times mak ing travel difficult for
local motorists. (Tony M. Leach)

Blood Drive

AQUARIU S U,n . 20-Feb. ,
19) -- lf you arc not prepared

•

sponsored by Hol~er Medical Center

to help yourself, succt:ss will .
be denied yo u through no
on e'~ fa ult but your own. It
won •t llo yo'i any good to say
you expect ~ others to do
ce rt:\in thing1i .

Monclay, April · I, 2002
.IOAM-4PM '
' HMC Eclucatlon &amp; Confe,ence Center

PISCES (Feb. 20-M,ch 20)
-- It 's futile to indulge your-

'

self in self-pity. T h ere will be
littl e 5ympathy for you, beGtusc comp;mions will be im mersed in their own probll·ms.

••

.

All blood types urgently needed.
For more information, call (740) 446·5171 .

•
'

...

~-....;._ ------------....--.--~----·---------'·

,,..

~'

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difjel'ence

www.holzer.org
...

' -----------------------;rr-~-------------

. '

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