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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, Ohio • Point Pl....nt, WV

Ptlge D1 • 6uabap Cltmtf ·6tntinel

Briefcase·

selling, gener:d and adrillnismtive expenses, company officials said.
fNIHPIIpD1
The board of directors
announced the declaration of
scheduled e2ch Tuesday .until the company's quarterly diviApril 17 liom 7-8:30 p.m. in dend of 5 cents per share. The
Room 204, Anniversary Hall, cash dividend will be paid on
University of Rio Grmde.
March 26 to shareholders of
The six-week workshop will record on March 9.
2ssist individuili in setting
Marshall T. Reyn~lds, chairfinanci:d md investment goals. man of the board and chief
The class will provide an in- executive officer of Champion
depth look at \he many differ- • said that "modest earnings
ent types of investments avill- improvement on a year to year
able to and suitable for basis for our first quarter is an
investors who are working or indication that even in a slowretired.
ing economy we ha.:e stabi"Whether.you are interested lized our earnings and have
in maximizing your long-term been to achieve an II percent
investment returns, reducing growth rate.
your income taxes, or maxi"Our balance sheet is in
mizing
your
investment excellent shape and from this
income, you should plan to. strong foundation we will conattend . this informative class,..

Moore said.
Enrollment is free, but a
textbook may be purchased for

ss.

For more information or

to

reserve a seat, contact Dale
Whitt of the Adult and Continuing Education Department
at Rio Grande, 740-245-7325,
extension 7325 or toll-free 1800-282-7201 or e-mail :
dwhitt@rio.edu.

Champion
declares
•
eam&amp;ags
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Champion Industries Inc.
announced net income of
$279,000 or 3 cents per share
for the thri:e months ended
Jan. 31, 2001, compared to
$252,000 or 3 cents per share
for the same period in 2000.
The increase in net income
was primarily the result of
higher gross margin dollars
due to' m overall s:des increase
in the company's printing divisions partially offiet by a gross
margin decline in the office
products and furniture divisio~ and a slight decrease in

fromAipDl .
said.
Niche publications appeal to a ·
particular interest for the community. Some of the division's
· niche publications will include
Passport Kentucky, a tqurism
guide, Christmas in Kentucky, a
special section for the holidays
and Tee Time, a golf publication
that will be distributed to golf
courses across the state.
Hanm10nd said these publications are an extension to
CNHI's goal of delivering information.

Mailbox
fromPapD1

Kneen
fnNn PlpD1
office has several fact sheets and
low cost bulletins (#591 Growing &amp; Using Fruit at Home)
that may be picked up at the
Meigs County Annex, Mulber-

~es
from Page Dl

fees.

•re report

•••

S •y the word "termite" and
the fear of your home crashing
down around you quickly
enters the mind However, most
termite damage is slow to occur
there will be mother. test da ted~
in the near future as well as
another training. Watch the
paper for details.
2001 PHASE II PAYMENTS: At the annu:d tobacco meeting we mentioned that ~
decisions had not been made ~
on how the 2001 Phase II
money will be allocated (base
years, base pounds, establish
history or not). As ofThursday,
there was still no form:d decision made; however, the advisory council met 'last week: and
passed along their recommendations to the Certification
Entity. Although this . informa~

•

Melp County's

Vuhm•" ~ 1 Numbl'r 1 Sll

S.vlno• up to 40%. 10% - eommon.
The conaultatlon Ia FREIL
Clll TODAY befo,. 1M mall comu

., .... 446-4940 or 1-800.247o.61
Ohio's

.former Gov~· James Rhodes dead at 91
.

.

.

==-:---,

COLUMBUS (AP) - As Ohio's longestOhio State Fair to
"serving governor, James A. Rhodes left an
Ohio State University
·indelible imprint across the state with the highto all the colleges and
universities he helped
'ways, colleges, airports and industry he champicreate throughout the
oned.
state,"
said U.S. Sen.
For many, his legacy of public works was
Mike DeWine, R"overshadowed by his decision to send Nation:d
Ohio. "He was a man
·Guard troops to Kent State UniVersity in 1970
with big vision, even if
'to quell anti-Vietnam War protests. Four stuit was ·putting an airdents were killed when the troops opened fire.
port in every county or
Rhodes, who served 16 years as governor,
a college or university
died Sunday afternoon at Ohio State Universiwithin driving distance
.ty Medical Center of complications liom an
of every citizen."
infection and heart failure. He was 91.
Born .in poverty, the son of a southeast Ohio
"Nobody loved Ohio more than Jim coal miner, Rhodes used his folksy ways to
.Rhode1. And that love can be ~een fiom the

achieve his political ambitions and became
Ohio's dominant political figure in the 1960s
and '70s.
·
A Republican, he was popular among bluecollar workers who related to his "jobs and
progress" campaign themes. He won elections
with a coalition of independents, conservative
Democrats md mainstream Republicans.
"Everyday Jim Rhodes shared his enthusiasm for life and boundless love for Ohio," Gov.
Bob Tafi said in a statement. "I will miss his
keen insight, great wit and personal friendship.
It is safe to say there will never be mother one
like him."
Rhodes' wife, Helen, his childhood sweetheart, died in 1987. A daughter, Saundra Jacob,

.season
SYRACUSE - Syracuse baseball signup will be
. ~arch· 17. and 24 from 10
a.m. until 2 p.m. at the '
p1aYQt's ollice, ·sandy 'Phil~ :
, .~
. 1\ . .tQJ?.,~wa~e., '(~
.

MSRP t2.1 ,~15

'

FROM STAFF REPORTS

will be Ma~ S With a
parade beginning . at 10
a.m. LineUp will be at 9:30
a.m. Fe~ for, ~~il11~p; will be .
the same as ~t year: $20,
not to exceed $30 per family. f. S10 refund will be
given if parents work the
concession stand.
All those working in the
stand must have a tuberculosis skin test, council
advised.
Philson 21so said several
welve students were tapped
:bats. are not in use; they
for membership and inducted
· will pe·dona~d to the new
SoUiilern
Elementary
Me+~ .Chap1J• ,~·,. ~rida~ i;nJ~
School.
··'_,, rer or ~ ~N~ao~1· Honor
· f,oJlOwing .a discussion,
.
·· Society "'at .'i~,c:its High
·' tabled a proposed
council
Scl\ool. Tliose inducted weg\ left to right,
. building code tubmitted by
seated, Joeline Allen, ;1'iffan.y Day, Aaron
Councilman
Thcker
Kfliutter, Nick McLaughlin, Monica Moon
Williams. The biggest
and Mindy O'Dell; a$1· standing, Kristy
drawback to the proposal,
Puckett, Misty Pucke~t, Leslie Runyon,
council members said, was
Mary Schultz, Amber :Snowden and Tara
t!)e proposed minimum
distance a property owner
Wyatt. Candles signlfyiu the qualities of
may erect a building from
scholanhip, character, W4dership and seranother owner's property.
. 'Vice .were lit by fllembtf::s including Beat, · Williams suggested a
rice Morgan, pictured hllre. Derrick Bolin,
limit of 10 feet from
president, I!$Sistcd by other officers, Cara
adjoining properties, while
Ash, vice p~dent,An~~sczyn, secother council memben
reta....,,
, art'd Carrie
oot, ' treasurer,
"'11).,.
·
said five feet would be sufpresided at the., ~teremo · which was folficient.
,.
: Mayor Larry Lavender: · lowed
a fCC~tion for
new inductees
said addition:d work n~eds
and ' their famjJJ."'es. (Phqtos by Charlene
Hoeflich) . '·' '

,thf,

'

0.9% FinancinO:is mo.
2001

2001 aonnEu•.,.. . . .,

free financing foi
2.9% for60

;!
"

Brown &amp; Williamson
Tobacco

r

bY

:lllr•••••••nn.AI

Export Leaf

·.

'

' Tadlfl

2000 LESABREiCUSTOM

.~ Sentinel

I

:ua' dl1111 -

' 1¥057

CIIIQifar

1998 LESABRE LIMITED

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

Only 32,000 low miles, platinum beige,

cloth Interior, near p~ condition
.

'·· C!esllf!g
Cpmjq .

• Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
wuthlf

1:1 rza

'

AS
82:4
B5
M

A3
BI .3.6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO

Plck3:~7;Pidt4:~ '

Sllplrl.aiD: iJ..Do»al-JWII .
Kidw..W+l·l

W.VA.

Dilly 3: 0+3 Dilly 4: .2-+1

-----~--'-----------"-----------

Agency

POMEROY -A $5,000 grant has been
awarded to the Meigs County Family and
Children Fint CouQ~.i\. fiom the Ohio Parents for Drug Free Youth tu implement a
public awareness campaign targeting parents
of teens.
Meigs CoW!ty Family md Children First
Council was one of 12 communities to
receive funds in Ohio, said coordinator
Amy Boster.
The "Parents Who Host, Lose the Most"
campaign educates parents about the leg:d
ramificitions and. he;Uth and safety risks of
serving :alcohol to teens, other than their
own children. First Lady Hope Taft is the
campaign's spokeswo=.
The campaign will begin in April and
continue through June during prom and
graduation season, when underage drinking
parties are most prevalent, Boster said.
The Meigs Council also will promote the
"Safe Homes, Safe Parties" parent pledge.
The pledge asks parents to make a commitment not to serve or allow :alcohol or other
drugs at parties hosted in their homes.
The Ohio Family md Children First
Council and 88 local COW!ty councils were
created to streamline and coordinate existing government services for families seeking assistance for their children.
The Meigs County Council promotes
coordination md collaboration among local
and state governments, non-profit organizations, businesses and parents for the benefit
of Meigs County children. The Council
.evaluates md prioritizes services, fills service
gaps where possible, invents new approaches to achieve better results and ensures
ongoing input liom a broad representation
of families, Boster said.
She said information about the program
may be obtained by contacting her at 9923088 or at meigsfcfc@yahoo.com.

~~~'
"'"'"'''.
. ~ckoft' for baD ' seuon .

CENTU~Y

died in 1999. He is survived by two other
daughters, Suzanne Moore of Upper Arlington
and Sharon Markham of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Other survivors include nine grandchildren and
13 great-grandchildren.
Rhodes ' public funeral is planned for I 0 a.m ,
Thursday at the Upper Arlington Lutheran
Church with burial in Greenlawn Cemetery in
Columbus, the Schoedinger Funeral Service
said Sunday night.
Rhodes' body will lie in state from 7 a.m. to
2 p.m.Wednesday in the Ohio Capitol's rotunda. A private service by invitation only is
planned for 2 p.m. Wednesday in the arrium of
the Ohio Capitol. Visitation is liom 4 p.m. to 7
p.m. Tuesday at the church.

gets
grant for
•
campa1gn

. 8Y IWII CIIOW

'

~o '('Ill\

Middleport • PomefO)', Ohio

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

2001 'BUICK

March 5, 2001

Hometown Newspaper

11

11

-- -----

j"'

Monday

entine

New NHS inductees

. ULTRA

Since everything is done
freehand, no two pieces are
exactly alike. Terri does the
see.
original design work and
then a couple of her employees assist with the painting.
Outdoor paint like
house paint - is used on the
mailboxes and for the design
work. Then the finished
product is coated with a car
clear coat for protection.
"Doing something unique
and original, adding new
things all the time, and not
copying from someone else's
Crain's Tobacco Warehouse in Maysville,
work, is what keeps us
Kentucky is pleased to announce they will be
going," s•id the artisan who
the contracting agent and. receiving station for
has been in the arts and crafts
Brown &amp; Willia·mson I Export Leaf
. business for 10 years. Haynes
(B&amp;WIELT).
started her artwork as a
B&amp;W, ELT will be introducing a direct ,
hobby, saw it evolve into a
purchasing program for the 2001 Burley
cottage industry, and then
grow into Always ·and ForevSeason.
.
er.
If you.choose to sell your tobacco at auction,
She still does much of her
the auction system is still available with the
selling at juried craft shows, ,
Brown Warehouses. You may contact any of
attending 20 to 24 two- or
our personnel I employees for information. ·
thr~e-day events a years.
For more information about B&amp;W/ELT
As for the quality of her
Direct call:
products and displays, the
Eugene Crain at ............ (606) 564-5858
awards she has won tell the
"". '....... ".. "". """ .. """ "" .( 606) 782-2485
story. She has taken "firsts" at
Gary Moran ................. (937) 392-1424
several shows and last summer at Rolling Acres Craft
."........ "" .... "..... '".""'" ... (513) 646-1424
Show at Delaware, receiving
Ray Campbell .............. (937)-392-1479
the top award in the "best of
""' '.""" ".. " ...... """"" "...(513) 218-3 742
. four" contest winning a $700
Don Pope ....................... (740) 256-1150
cash prize and a rosette.
". '' "" ..."..................""' ... (7 40) 379-2198
This is the second year for
Terri's mailboxes. Before that

•

••••

Are you interested in recon~'
srrocting a barn?
.
Plan to attend Ohio Bart)
Conference II on April 6-7 a~
the Fisher Auditorium, Ohie1
Agriculrure Research Develop; ·
ment Center in Wooster. Thii
twa-day seminar begins with
sever:d speakers discussing the.
differences between barn structures and how they went about
preserving their barns. On day
two, take a tour of Wayne
County barns that have been
restored. Registration is $35 per
person.
For information write or call
Jim Skeeles at the Lorain
County Extension Office,
42110 Russia Road, Elyria,
Ohio 44035, (440) 326-5851. ,
(Hal Kneen i.s the Meigs County agriculture and natu.ml r£JOUI'ct5
agent, Ohio State Univmit-}
Extension.)
·

2000PARK

her "biggie" was birdhouses
Ag new~
- looking much like those
PESTICIDE TESTING is
painted on the mailboxes.
· scheduled'for Monday from 3. Next year's ordinary thing 5 p.m .. However, since sched. uling difficulties with ExtenturQed into something extra- sion last week caused several
ordinary could be anything. interested producers to miss
We'll just have to wait and out on the training session,

Community news .and notes, AS
Gordon wins at Las Vegas, 11

cils running fiom the soil to
wood mming is another sign of
termites.
At signs of m infestation it is
wise to call in a professional
exterminator or ~. Get estimates of the cost of the externlination and what the cost of
later annual inspections. The
extension of!ice has two fact
sheets - #2092 "Tertnites" and
#2091 "Selecting a Reli2ble
Pest Control Firm for Termite
Control" - to assist the home. ·
owner in termite control.

ry Heights, Pomeroy. Commercial spray and pest identification
guides are also availal:k for small

deadline, which means that
some items will have to be
purchased· before a producer
knows if'he or she is approved.
The application is very simple to complete. Copies may
be obtained at the OSU
tinue to attack the cost side of Ektension office in the C.H .
our business,'' Reynolds added. McKenzie Agricultural Center
on Jackson Pike. This program
has been extremdy successful
in the past and has offered sigSl
nificant assistance w Gallia
tion is critical co have prior to
GALLIPOLIS -The 2001 County.
Spring
Sire
Evaluation
The following items and leasing, there will most likely
reimbursements will be made not be an official announceReport, issued in the spring
and fall, lists Angus B'reeders to qualifYing producers: (I) S ment until afier ·leasing starts .
who own bulls. Published by 1,000 per acre capacity of new on March 15.
Watch the ag news for
(not remodded) curing structhe American Angus Associa- ture with a maximum of updates.
tion, St. Joseph, Mo., it features
aennifer Byrnes ;, an agent for
the latest information available $3,000; (2) 50 cents per new
on 4,9!6 sires.
float tray purchased with a tl.e Gal/ia County Extension Sermaximum of $250; (3) $500 ••ice.)
Listed in the report are the · towards a tray washer; (4) 25
following local breeders:
percent of the cost up to
Champion Hill, Bidwell, 12 $2,000 for irrigation equipbulls; Sunset Valley Angus, Gal- ment; (5) 50 percent of the cost
lipolis, one bull; Champion up to $300 for blue mold conFarms, Gallipolis, one bull.
trol spray equipment; (6)
"The Americm Angus Asso- $2,000 for labor housing; (7)
dation has the most complete $7,500 towards a new Powell
and comprehensive beef cattle tobacco harvester or $ I ,500
database in the world;' says toward a 4-Star tobacco harJohn Crouch, American Angus vester; (8) $300-500 towards
association director of perfor- one of three stripping, aid
mance programs. "Of the sires options," including .a stripping '
in the main report, 65 percent wheel, a leaf processor, and a
have expected progeny differ- K&amp;S stripping line; (9) 50 perences (EPDs) for carcass traits, cent of the cost up to $500 for
which should assist cattlemen a humidifier/steamer for the
in choosing genetics that will purpose of casing tobacco.
produce a more consistent,
There are addition:d requirehigher quality beef product."
ments and· guidelines for each
of these items. The most popular item in previous years has
"My VlSton is to develop been the curing structures. This
· niche publications that are tar- year the foundation has dougered toward a specific audi- bled the reimbursement for
ence," he said.
curing srroctures, but now also
Laurence, a native of Win- requires that the structure have
chester, was previously the . a met:d or gable roof. Thus,
adVI!rtising director for the Win- interested producers $hould
chester Sun for eight years. take a monient to read through
Before that she was the classified the guidelines that accompany '
=ager for The Day in New the application. · Plans for
London, Conn., for three years roofed curing structures may
and was also the s:des supervisor be obtained at the Extension
for the . Lexington Herald- office.
Leader from 1978 to 1986.
For four years Gallia C,ounty
. She said she likes working in has led the state in the number
newspapers because it rarely gets of •grants approved and paid
dull. "No day iS ""'' the same. out, so if you did not pick up
Something new and different an application at the ann11:d
II hue tourtag car. Supttn:halrgetl~3
happens CVI!ry day. That's why I tobacco educational meeting,
sunnof, Jtttller
lnterltl,
like it.
I
•
.
.l
be sure to stop· by the Exten'suspension.
Detno.
&amp;500
low
sion office, or call 446-7007.

Local fanns on

Sunday, March 4, 2001

Big.ci~ies

adjusted census data will show undercount

'

'
.
COLUMBU,S (AP) that Leonard ·Stewart
a
part of ·- people not
2000 cetisus. '
"I di4n't lill out that f9rm. You gotta
undmtand, I got no· education- can't
hardly read; cm't hardly write. But I
wish I would have been counted anyway," the 85-year-old golf course worker laid Friday while at a community
center in the Linden neighborhood,
dne of the poorest areas of the city and
one place in which experts expect a
wt\e number of pebple who weren't
counted during the census. . po.
Censw worlcen who went doer to
door to count people who didn't mail
in their censw forms didn't catch him
- or an .eStimated 3.4 million Americans - in the tally for the 2000 census.
,Still, ofDcials in Ohio's major cities say
they want to kn&lt;JW hC1W many; people
who Wft'Cn' counted ~ve in their com-

'wt'd like to get a better snapshot of 011r people and get tire ·
best data to plai1jor .thej11ture. That's why we want to at least
see the adjusted data even if we can't 11se it."
Mike Brown

munities.
Columbus md Cleveland officials are
hoping that Commerce Secretary Don
Evms rebuffi the U.S. Census Bureau's
recommendation not to statistically
adjust census data to make up for the
undercount.
The Census Bureau's acting director,
William Barron, on Thursday recommended that Evans only allow for the
release of unadjusted data, or the strict
head coW!t. Evans will make the. fin:d
decis,ion by Thesday about whether to
release adjusted numbers :also.
Once Evans makes the decision,
population, race and age data then ollli1l
•'

be released periodically through this
month several states at a time. It's
unknown when the·data for Ohio will
be rolled out.
"We'd like to get a better snapshot of
our people. and get the best data to plan
for the future. That's why we wmt to at
.(east see the adjusted data even if we
can't use it," said Mike Brown,
spokesman for Columbus Mayor Mike
Colemm.
"We want to see what the statistics
come up with as to address the systemic
Wldercount problem that seems to be
inherent in• any count," said Hunter
Morrison, Cl~land's planning direc-

tor. "We did work very aggressively to
make sure our people understood the
need to be counted and we're waiting
to see how well it worked."
•.Demographers agree that Ohio's
biggest undercount likely is in the core
of Ohio's major cities where·minorities,
immigrants and the poor typically live.
While census data are used to determine congressional md legislative districts, they ilio are used to distribute
more than $185 billion in feder:d funds
across the nation for programs such as
housing, he:dth care md job training.
·Jlach person represents about $815 in
feder:d funds for states.
In 1990, Ohio had ·an undercount of
roughly 74,000, meaning rhe state
could have lost $60 million in feder:d
funds over the pasr I 0 yean. The Census Bureau has said 1990 undercounts
cost some major cities inillions of state
•
and fdleral dollars.
.. . .:.
~·

.

�h•
.
0 10

The Daily Sentinel
•

'

'

l
\

1j

'

AKRON (AP) - Law enforcement officials trying to figuno
&gt;Ut how to best use thermal imagers are awaiting a decision
rom the U.S. Supreme Court on whether the devices used
Nithout a search warrant invade privacy.
A thermal imager, which makes heat visible, is a tool police
•gencies sometimes use in drug investigations, to search for a
:Ugitive or tracking other criminal a~tivity.
Marc Rotenberg, executive dinoctor of the Electronic Priva. :y Information Center in Washington, D.C., said his organiza:ion believes the warrandess use of thermal imaging is uncon;titutional.
Last month the Supreme Court heard arguments in the case
of an Oregon man who was arrested in 1992 for growing marijuana in his home.
In that case, during the course of an investigation police
pointed a thermal imager at the man's house and detected high
amounts of heat coming from his side wall and roof. After
obtaining a search warrant police arrested the man, who has
appealed the legality of the search.

PageAl
MOnciiiJ. M•rch 5, 1001

County Court cases processed

Police await court decision

POMEROY
Meigs
County Court Judge Steven
L. Story processed a number
of cases last week. Fineli were:
Sandra G. Schreiber, Racine,
$850 and costs, 1o days jail suspended to three, six month license
suspension, one year probation, jail
and $500 suspended upon oornple. tion of RTP School• driving under the

Influence, costs only, assured cleilr
distance; James C. McKay, Long
Bottom, $100 and costs, three days
jaH suspendad, probation until 21
years of age, underage

consump-~

tion, $50 and costs. left of center;
Donald L. Spencer, Vinton, $37 and
costs, speed; Stacia K. Reed, Rut·

land, $0 and costs. speed; Paul M.
Smith, Racine, $30 and costs, seat
bell; Palncla A. Miller, Alliance, $20
and costs. speed: Melvin Norri.s,
Pine Grove, W.Va., $30 and costs,

Toledo names new president

speed, $30 and costs, seal bell;
Megan L. Andrews, Middleport, $30

TOLEDO (AP) - University of Toledo trustees. selected a
new president Saturday, voting 9-0 to hire Dr: Daniel M.Johnson, a provost at the University of Alaska-Anchorage:
Johnson's appointment, effective July I , came. one day after
Johnson an d the other finalist, Central Michigan University
Provost Richard Davenport~ visited the can~pus.
The university was seeking a successor to Vik Kapoor, who
resigned last June after 17 months in office.
Johnson, 60, is Toledo's 15th president. The native of Springfield will earn $215,000 annually, the university said in a statement.
"I can't think of a day when I've been more excited and
more enthused about the future that I am right now, Johnson
said. "The University of Toledo represents for me the type of
institution that I believe is going to be in the forefront in the
future as higher education changes to meet the growing needs
...
o f our co rhm\lmty.

and costs, seat belt; David Herd·

man. Rutland. $20 and costs, left of

center; Brenda J. Aedholz, Parkers~ .
burg, W.Va., $30 and costs, speed ;

James E. Albright, Sr., Gallipolis.
$30 and costs, speed; Terrance G.

Wyer, Grafton, W.Va. , $30 and
costs, speed; Granville S. Flesher ill,
Nelsonville, $30 and ·costs, speed;
George Reitmlre, Pomeroy, $20 and

pension; $22 and costs, speed, $50
and costs, flctitlous tags, costs only,·
40 hours community service, dlsor·
de~y conduct, coslo only, 40 hours
community service, open container.
$75 and eosto, possession; Lois G.
Pooler, Long Bottom, $20 and costs,
failure to control; Er1c A. Qualls,
costs only, five days )all suspended,
one year probation, disorderly con·
duct; Lester R. · McGrew, Mallon,
W.Va., $250 and costs, overload;
James E. Randolph, Racine, $1,000
and cools, 30 days )all suspended to
1.0. house arrest Option gjven. one
year llcanaa auspanslon, one year
probation, driving under the lnflu·
ence, $100 and costs, 30 days jail
SYspended to 10, driving under sus·
pension; Frank M. Colwell, Pomeroy,
$350 and costs, overload; Ronald S.
Haggy. Pomeroy. $350 and cools.
ove~oed; Jennifer L. Shain, Middle·
port, $30 and costs, speed, $30 and
costs, seat belt, Danny L. Walker,
Rutland, $350 and costs , overload;
Gar1 E. Moore, Langsville, $20 and
costs, seat belt; Ted L. Dexter,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, speed; Jay
H. Swisher, Middleport, $850 and
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
ltlree, 90 day license suspension, jail
and $550 suspended upon comple·
tion of RTP School, driving under the
Influence, $100 and coots, 90 day
license suspension concurrent, 10
days jail suspended to threa concur·
rent, driving under suspension, $100

COLUMBUS (AP) -The owner of the state's largest egg
producer has been ordered to pay more tha.n $600, 000 to one term limits.
of his former executives.
Judge Patri~k McGrath of Franklin County Common Pleas

~;;r:a:~:~::td~:h;~r~~~o~:c~~~~a~~ o;:~~;:tB~~~::

Goranites $447,174 for his 5 percent stake in the company and
$150,000 in salary for the final year of his three-year contract.
With interest, the figure could top $750,000, said Austin Wildman, one of Goranites' attorneys.
Goranites sued Pohlmann for fraud after being fired in
October 1997. Goranites claimed he was recruited from Maine
with false promises of autonomy to run the egg company,' then
k
A ·G
a1 C
nRpwn ~
e~erhl or~. 1
di t d
0
~;~
m, d
man~s, awyer, pre ~: the decision
wou
e reverse on appe .
•

.f:t'

'

·
Comair.pi· 1ots get
contrad ofler

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) -The union representing Comair
pilots is trying to decide whether to approve a contract offer
aimed at heading off a strike later this month. .
The regional carrier has offered a five-year deal that 1,350
pilots will vote on this month. If the union rejects the proposal, it could strike as early as March 26.
Comair's branch of the Air Line Pilots Association began dis'b .
h
al
b .
F 'da U ·
1 d
tn ~tmdg tde prhopohs to mdem e~ ;'n ~~ y. ruodn ea ers
won t eCI e w et er to en orse It 10r a 1ew more ays.
· "This is. a very intensive document that is going to take a
while to get through," union spokesman Paul La~ltie said.
Comair operates most of the
.

IJights out ,of the Cincinnati/Northern
Kentucky
International
Airport,
a Deita.
COLUMBUS (AP) - For~er Ohio House Speaker JoAnn
hub. Comair is Delta's regional
Davidson was picked as interim director of the Department of
Job and Family Services on Saturday- a day after the former earner.
director quit following weeks of controversy over the state's
child support system.
"Her knowledge of state government, her enormous credibility and her commitment to employers, employees and families will enable her to move the department forward,'' Gov. '~CINCINNATI (AP)
Bob Taft said during a news conferettce announcing Davidson's President Bush got a 60 perselec.tion.
cent approval rating, compara·
Davidson will run the agency until May 1 when a perma· ble to those for recent pnosinent selection is put in place. She takes over for Jacqueline dentl at the beginning of their
Romer-Sensky, who resigned Friday u hud of an asency that term1, according to a statewide
has come under fire for owing millions in back payments to poll released Saturday.
thousands of parents.
An Ohio Poll found that 24
Davidson, 73, was in the Ohio House of Representatives pen:ent didn't approve of his
from 1980 through 2000, tpending the last six yean as Ohio's performance and 16 percent
first woman speaker before being forced to leave because of.

Davidson takes over agency

1

costs only, 30 days jail suspended,
proballpn· until 21 years of age,
underage consumption; Jesse A.
Williams, Middleport, costs only, 30
days )all suspended, probation until
21 year&amp; of age, underage consump·
tion; Dwayne T. Lawson, Gallipolis,
$27 and coots; speed: William
Racer, Middleport, $25 and costs,
three daye )all suspended, one r,••r
probatioo, reslralnlng order, d sor·
de~y conduct; Ralph 0. McKenzie,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six
months jail suspended to tlmt
served. one year probation. c~mlnal
slmul.atlon; Dallas S. Moodlspaugll,
Pomeroy, St 00 and costs, six
months jail suspended to time

Por11and, $25 and costs, failure lo
control; Della I. Caslael, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, 10 days jail sus·
ponded, one year probation, driving
under FRA suopenslon, costs only,
failure to slop at a traffic control
device; Darlene Pillow, Crown City,
$100 and costs, 10 days jail sus·
pendad, one year probation, driving
under suspension; Kevin B. Jowell,
Langovilla, $100 and costs, 10 days
jail suspended lo three, one year
probation, thraa days )all suspended
upon proof of a valid operators
license. driving under auepenalon,
$30 and costs, belt, $25 and
costs, fictitious tags; Eugene V.
Long, Long Bottom. $30 and costs,

served, one year probation, criminal

speed, $30 and costs, seat belt

simulation; Richard L. Payne,
Pomeroy, $50 and cools on each
count, five. days )all suspended on
each count, one year probation con·
current, two counts disorderly con·
duct; Dana R. Williams. Pomeroy,
$50 and costs, no operators license;
Wendy Long, Middleport, $850 and
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
ltlree, jail and $550 suspended upon
completion of RTP School, six month
ltcanse suspension, one year proba·
tlon. driving under the Influence.
cools only, 10 days jail suspended to

Jason T. Reynolds, Pomaroy, $850
and costs, 10 days jail suspended lo
thrse, six month license suspension,
. jail and $550 suspended upon com·
plelion of ATP School within 90
days, one year probation , driving
under the Influence, $100 and cosiS.
10 days jail suspended to three con·
cuiTent, driving undar suspension.
Elby C. Nye, Rutland, costs only,
30 days jail suspended, one year
probation, restitutiOn, criminal dam·
aging; John F. Edwards, Long Bot·
tom, $30 and costs, speed; Jannlfar

three concurrent. one year proba·

L. Bowser, Athens. $30 and costs,

Ohioans approve
of Bush so far .

·:Clinton considering
:~ offer to talk to senators
WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Clinton is
looking at an offer that he be
questioned privately by senators about pardons he issued
·' · during his final hours in
office, a spokeswoman says.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa.,
·· · said Sunday he ~hinks Clin: ~. ton "may be inclined" to
. • accept the offer as a way of
' · "getting to the basic facts."
Spokeswoman Julia Payne
said Clinton was considering
the offer, bur she stressed "it
' 1 (' is
very pre ~nature to talk
' : about what the president
may or may not do." Clinton
r
has no time frame for making
.. a decision, she added.
Senate leaders are treading
, gingerly over the prospect of
•" . ..' .trying to compel Clinton's

Season

had no opinion.
The Institute for Policy Research at the University of
Cincinnati contacted 811 Ohioans by phone from Feb. 13-25.
The , poll's margin for error is plus or minus 3 percentage
points~

Bu'sh's approval rating is in line with results of Ohio Polls
during previous administrations. President Reagan got a 61
percent approval· rating early in his administtation, George
H.W: Bush's approval rating was 63 .percent and Pnosident
Clinton had a 56 percent approval rating in initial polls.
Ninety percent of Republicans approved of President Bush's
first few. weeks in office, while only 36 percent of Democrats
ap· pro~ed.
,,
.

,,- ·

.Laminated. Commemorative
Drawing of Dale Earnhardt
.

.

from PageAl

probation, iail suspended upon com-

pletlon of RTP School, 10 days
house arrest, driving under lhe lnflu·
ence, $100 and costs. one year pro·
batlon. no drivers license, cools only,
failure to control; David R. Nance,
Racine, $30 and costs, speed, $20
and costs, reckless operation; Tare·
sa Van Cooney, Pomeroy, $25 and
coals on each CQunt, two counts
paselng bed checks; Timothy Wick·
ersham, Mansfield, $25 and costs,
10 days )all suspended, restiiUIIon.
passing bad cheeks.

r

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to be done on the proposed
code before passage. Williams
• ' asked council members to
·· · see k ideas from residents.
Council extended appreciation to the Wildwood Garden
_.. .. Club for the planters they
have built at City Hall and in
the pool area. The club has
additional plans for beautification. Money donations for
the projects are being accepted. Checks may be written to
the Wildwood Garden Club
_ and mailed to Joy Bendey,
· · ·Box 188, Syracuse, .Ohio
45779.
A special fund has been
established for the project,
Lavender said.
Council granted permission
to Syracuse Postmaster Bonnie Brown, in case of a disaster where the Post Office
would become nonopcra·
tiona!, to use the village
·~ · m!lnicipal building a1 its
, • headquarters.
,
.
· ~ Meeting with council was
:: Harold Gibbs on behalf of
. · First Church ·of God, seeking
• . permission to place a 12-by: • 16 storage building on the
•
•

-

-

.:~~•. Snowy and
•-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·:·:·

•

I·

·•

I' :

· Fee proposals must state qualifications, including all related completed
training for the · HOUSING REHABILITATION project activity; pre'vious
experience in CDBG/Home Housing programs; scope of services to be provided
and amount of fixed price compensation required for the above services and
pricing data to support the fixed price (e.g., per hour, diem, unit). All related
qualifications and I or training certifications must be attached to the proposal.
Fee proposals may be mailed or delivered to the Meigs County
Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Questions
in regard to this request may be addressed to Jean Trussel, Grants Administrator,
at 740-992-7908.
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

••

conversation~'

With

Clinton's chief of mff, Karen
Tramontano, and was told the
forn1er president "is thinking
about it." Payne said Tramontano had wanted more information about the offer.
"I think as. the facts build
up, the president is evalua.cing
it and may be inClined to
come in /' Specter satd on
ABC's "This Week ."

church's property. He said that
originally, a 24-by-60 fellowship hall was planned, but
with FEMA regulations, it
was decided that it would be
too expensive.
Lavender advised Gibbs to
take elevation shots and
obtain a building per(nit, and
proceed with the project.
Councilman Bill Roush
advised Gibbs on procedur~s.
as well .
The low bid ofDon's Heating and Cooling of Middleport to install an electric furnace in the municipal building in the amount of $2,500
was approved by a 5-1 vote,
with Katie Crow abstaining.
Council is accepti'\g applications for pool manager.
Applications may be submitted to Sharon Cottrill,
clerk/treasurer, by April. I.
Two applications have already
been received for the position.
· ·
Lavender said it is illegal to
hang any signs ·on stop signs
.within the vil4ge, and that
Ralston has perrll'lssion to
remove any such signs.
Lavender appointed Roush
and Councilman Mgny Wood
to investigate the cost of a
new police cruiser. •'·

Tuesday will be in the 20s .
Forecast
Today: Snow showers. High
32, low 20.
Tuesday: Snow showers.
High 28, low 22.
Wednesday: Mostly cloudy.
High 37,low 24.
Thursday: Partly cjpudy.
,.;.
High 37, low 26.

LOCAL BRIEFS
free of charge for Meigs
Home
County residents or anyone
employed within the county.
destroyed
Skin tests givn during the
RUTLAND - A twostory home was destroyed
Sunday following a fire near
Rutland .
Rutland Assistant Fire
Chief Danny Davis said the
department received a call
SUJ1.day around 4:21 a.m.
reil••dir.g the fire on Side
Hill Road .
Firfefighters discovered
the home of Jeff Napper
totally e ngulfed in flames .
No one was home at the
time of the blaze.
Mo re than 30 firefighters
fro m Rutland, Scipio Township and Pomeroy battled
the fire for 2 1/2 hours. The
structure was completely
d~ s troyed . No injuries were
reported.
The cause of the fire has
yet to be determined, and
the in ciden't is still under
investigation , said Davis.

clinic will need to be read
on March 14 from 4:30 to
5:30 p.m. Additional information is available from the
office at 992-3722.

Class offered
POMEROY A free
Ohio Hunter Education
Class will be offered March
26 to 28 from 6 to 9 p.m.
and March 31 from 9 a.m.
until noon at Pomeroy Gun
Club on Pomeroy Pike. Students must attend all sessions
to receive certification. Class
size is limited. Prospective
students should preregister
by calling the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation ' District
at 992-4282.

Post to meet

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 will meet
on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
hall in Tuppers Plains. DinPOMEROY - Two indi-1 ner will be served at 6:30.
viduals were arre-sted Satltrday for domestic violence by'
the Pomeroy Police Department
j
POMEROY - Units of
Police Cpief Mark Proffitt the Meigs Emergency Sersaid Thomas R. De Weese vice answered II calls for
was arrested early Saturday assistance over the weekend.
morning and charged with Uniti responded as follows:
domestic violence.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
In an unrelated matter,
Saturday, 12:25 a.m., LinTeresa J. Howell of Pomeroy coln Heights, assisted by
was arrested on Saturday fol- Pomeroy as First Responder,
lowing a domestic violence Savannah Day, Holzer Medincident.
ical Center;
Both await court ·dates.
3:24 a.m., Middleport
Police Department, Thomas
Deweese, treated;
9;57 a.m. , State Route
POMEROY
Meigs 124, Wesley Clark, Pleasant
County Sheriff Ralph E. Valley Hospital;
Trussell · reported
three
Sunday, I :22 a.m., East
· arrests for driving under the Main Street, Lisa Zahran,
influence and other charges HMC;
recently.
10:54
a.m.,
Veterans
James A. Whittington was . Med'!orial Hospital, Robert
charged with DUI and left Davis, HMC .
of center and was released
POMEROY
pending his court appearSaturday, 10:06 a.m., State
ance.
Route 681, assisted by RutEric ]. Taylor was charged land and Scipio Township,
with DUI and marked lanes motor vehicle accident,
and is currently being hdd Frank Gives, treated, Sara
in the Middleport Jail ' on Sprunger, O'Bleness Memounrelated charges .
rial Hospital.
Ro11nie Hysell was arrestRUTLAND
Saturday,
12:07
a.m.,
ed in Columbus on a failure
to appt&gt;&lt;lr 1 warrant from a Hysell's Garage, assisted by
2000 criminal case in Meigs Pomeroy and Middleport,
County. He is .currently no injuries;
being hdd in the Meigs
4.:07 p.m., State Route
Count)' Jail pending his 143, William Gum, OBMH;
court appearance.,
Sunday, 4;21 a.m., Side
Hill Road, assisted by Scipio
Township and Pomeroy,
structure fire, Jeff Napper
. HARRISONVltLE
property, no injuries.
The Meigs County TubercuII ;55 a.m., Bradbury
losis Clinic will hold a free Road, Stephanie Pickens,
evening clinic on March 12 Raymond Dewitt, refused
from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. at the treatment;
6:48 p.m., Dexter Road,
Scipio
Volunteer · . Fire
Laura
Stephens, treated.
Department. Skin tests are

Two arrested

EMS logs calls

Arrests made

Clildc planned

LOCAL STOCKS,

••

· Preliminary inspection and preparation of rehabilitation work specifications
to meet Residential Rehabilitation Standards, of approximately 25-30 single
family homes and specifications/cost estimates for such work on each unit. The
Specialist will also assi.st in the contractor bidding process and review all bids;
attendance at pre-bid/construction meetings; interim construction inspections;
oversee compliance with Residential Rehabilitation Standards; undertake final .
inspections and payment approvals; and provide written reports.
.

.. informal

cold tonigbt

It will be cold and snowy
: : ·. across the tfi-cOunty region
,; tonight.
• A winter storm advisory is
: :. in effect for the region, with
• up to 4 inches of· snow
~.
. - : expected to accumulate by
:·;. Tuesday morning.
, . • Lows Monday night were
:• •. to be af\lund 20. Highs on

• ••

i~

•
•! AEP- 47~.
• :- Arch Coal- 25'/.

• • Akzo- 49l.

; AmTechiSBC- 46. ~
,.: . Ashland Inc. - 39
• AT&amp;T-22~
..:( Bank one - 36
• Bob Evans - 20lo
-~- BcrgWamer- 45
- Champion - 2~
• •." Charming Shops - 6~
- • City Holding - 9
~ • Federal M'1Qul - 3~
•• • USB- 23l.

The program will require the ·professional services of a rehabilitation
specialist to provide the following scopes of services:

testimony about his 176 lastminute pardons and commutations. Specter said they
have suggested that he and a
Democratic senator do the
questioning in private.
He detailed the proposal
in a letter to Clinton last
week.
Specter mlso uid he had an

·· VALLEY WEATHER
.. •

The Meigs County Commissioners will be applying for the FY's 2001
CDBG Community Housing and Improvement Program grant funding and will
accept fee proposals for REHABILITATION CONSULTING SERVICES to
implement the program, if funded, until March 8, 2001 at 10:00 a.m. at the
offices of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Fee proposals will then be opened and considered during
the regular Board of Commissioners meeting at I0:45 a.m. on the date above.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

tlon, no dr1vars license.
speed; Norman R. Sampson, Mid·
TerriL. Houser, Rutland, $20 and dletown, $1,000 and costs. six
costs, fictitious lags; Joshua D. Dick· monltl license suspanslon, 10 days
ens, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six jail suspended to three, one year

cosls, failure to control; Jonathan W.
Newsome, Middleport, $30 and and coats, fleeing, $30 and costs, months jail . suspended to time
costs, speed unsafe for conditions; seat bell, costs only, wrong way on served, one year probation, criminal
Trlna T. Lee, Middleport, $20 and four·lana highway.
simulation; Donald E. Roush, Syra·
costs, assured clear distance; Mary
Jimmie L. Maynard, Pomeroy, $20 cusa, $100 and cools, 10 days jail
A. Shoemakerr, Cheshire, $30 and and costs, failure to stop at stop suspended to thre~. three days jail
costs, speed; Mary E. Young, sign; James D•. Jones, Pomeroy, suspended upon completion of RTP
Racine. $30 and costs, speed; Gary $250 and costs, ovar1oad; Daniel E. School, reckless operafion, costs
R. Rellmlre, Pomeroy, $30 and Swisher, Cheshire, $250 and cools, only, failure to control: Ricky Miller,
costs, speed.
.
overload; Gary W. Gllmora, Casstown, $250 and costs, $250 for·
Alanna J. Grimm, Middleport, Langsville, $250 and costs, over· failure, three days jail suspended
$100 and costs, 30 days jail sus· load; Del L. Ogdln, Langsville, $250 upon completion of RTP School.
pended to five days,. five days sus· and costs, overload; Scott" A. lean· reckless operation, costs only, stop
ponded upon proof of a valid license hower, Langsville, $26 and costs, sign; Paul S. Jasovsky, Albany, $20
within 60 days, driving under sus· spaed; Lee M.. Fitchpalrlck, Rutland, and coats, speed; sarah B. Asher,

Former exec gets S&amp;Oo,ooo

Monday, March 5, 2001

Qannett-66
General Electric- 44~
Harley Davidson
44~t

.

Kmart·- 9Y• .
Kroger- 24~.
Lands End- 22~

Rockwell- 46'/._,
Rocky Boots ~D
AD Shell - 59~(;

~~~~y's 39\ ~~\46l• .

Wal·Mart -

Wai'ldy's- 24,.......

Ltd.-16~

Oak Hill Financial 14'1.
OVB-26
BBT-36~.

Peoples - 1.,.
Premler-6'1.

Worthington - t Q),
Dally stock repoils ara
lhe 4 r·m, CIQalng
quotes o the preyfous
day's transactions, pro·
vlded by Smith Part·
ners at Advesllnc•.

..
.·,...--~~--------------~
.
~.

A lastins tribute to the
heart &amp; soul of NASCAR
RACING Dale Earnhardt. Intimidator
Don•t miss this OPPOrtunitY to ilet Your laminated
exclusive tribute drawlnil to cherish ·for a lifetime•.

~'

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-.•
-·.•.

.·~

•

Correction Polley
Our main coneom In all slor1as Ia
to be accurate. If you know of an
. error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

-·.•-

News Departments

•

·~

The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

•

..·-.-

(l40J 992-2156

'· · •

The Pictures are $6.00 .each. rhe Proceeds from
each sale will Include a·contribution In your name to
the Dale Earnhardt Foundation of Carolinas.

Reader Servaces

!' .•

.,.,.

• '

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Offered to You by
1~be :lBailp &amp;entinel
11 t Court Street. PomeroY. Ohio
'

The Daily Sentine~ :~

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rates

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SubScrtbers not de&amp;lrlng to pay the
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·

Gwen A. Baker
BUCYRUS - Gwen A. Baker, 88, of Bucy ru s, died on
Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2001 at Heartland of Bucyrus.
She was born on May 13, 1912 in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Arthur Hess, Sr. and Glenna M.Jenkenson Hess. She was a
homemaker and she and her husband were owners of Colonial
Grill. She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School and a member of First Christian Church.
She is survived by two sons anddaughters-i n-bw, Bill and
Mar,Y Ann Baker of Bucyrus and Neil E . and Catherine Baker
of Little Rock, Ark.; a half-brother and sister-in-law,Arthur and
Jane Hess of Middleport; four grandchildren and three stepgrandchildren and great-grandchildren.
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded Ill de,lth by her
husband, and a sister, Virginia H arten bach .
Private family services will be today at 2 p.m. at Wise Funeral Home in Bucyrus, with Arthur Hess officiating. Burial will
·
follow at Oakwood Cemetery.

Earl Holman
RACINE - Earl Holman, Racim·. died o n Munday. M.orch
5, 2001.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fi ~ h ~.:r-Acr~t.'
Funeral Home in Pomeroy anJ will be .1nnonncNi wh en completed.

Lucille Sparks
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Lu cille Whittington Sparks,
75, of Point Pleasant died on Saturday, March 3, ~00 1 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasani.
She was a homemaker, born on April 25 , 1'1:~5 in .Wmtield.
She was the daughter of the late Frank and Lula Belle Walker
Whittington.
Surviving are three sons: William E. Shuler of Middleport, .
Ohio, Kenneth L. Shuler of LeS age, and Joh n W. Shuler of
Point Pleasant; three daughters: D oro thy H esso n of Apple
Grove, and Caroline Sue Doss and Edith Virginia Plants, both
of Point Pleasant; two mters, Ruth Ann Strutton of Oklahoma
and Roselee Roar\&lt; of Delaware, Ohio; 10 gran dchildren; two
great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren.
In addition to her parents , she was preceded in death by her
husband, Joseph E. Sparks;. a daughter, Martha Frances Shuler;
two brothers, James Rumbaid and William Edward Whittington; and a great-granddaughter.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Crow-Husscll Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant with the Rev. Carl Swisher officiating.
Burial will follow at Mt. Union Cemetery in Pliny.
Friends may call at the funeral home on ]\!onday from 6 to ,
8 p.m., and prior to the service on Tuesday.

Bush returns to Middle
America to plug budget plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
They're not America's glamour spots, and that's the
point: President Bush is
returning w the nation'S
heartland this week. to · promote his spe11ding alld taxcut proposals.
Bush was focusing on his
Medicare plan in Washington
on Mo11day and watching
the swearing-in of disastermanagement chief Joe Allbaugh. Then he was returning to his 2001 campaign
trail a zigzagging path
that took him to five st.1les
last weok, and will hit four
this week.
The
president
has
shunned ·places like New
York and Hollywood, gravitating instead to the Midwest
and South - regions that
generally supported him on
Election Day. This week follows the pattern, as he heads
to Illinois, North . Dakota,
South Da,kota and Louisiana .
He plans to spend next
weekend at his Texas ranch.
Rather than visit Wall
Street, Bush will go Tuesday
to the Chicago Mercantile

Exchange, where intcrn::~­
tional
currenCies,
sto ck
indexes and beef and pork
futures are traded .
It offers a window on tht'
nation's economy: In 2000,
some 231 milli on contract~
worth more than S 155 tril lion changed hands al rl11..·
ex change.
"The prcsidl!nt ( ontillLlL'S ·
to take hts 111L'SS agc to thl.'
Amencan pe(&gt;plc, ourl11 H11 g
his budget and tax cut pbns,
and _t he mercantil~ exc\nnge
is a good venue to talk abotlt
l!conomic growth," White
House spokes man Gordon
Johndro e said.
On Thursday, Bush flies to
the Dakotas, which he carried easily last year with
more than 60 perce nt of the
vote, and which both have
two Democratic se nators.
In Fargo, N.D., he'll talk

taxes, · and in Sioux Falls,
S.D., he'll visit a health care
institution. Bush's budget
calls for increases .in medical
research funding, something
he highlighted in Atlanta last
week.

Diabetes Supion Group
OraanlzaUonal Meeting
Members of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education
Program will be conducting a general public
organlzatlonal meeting to assess interest in a
diabetes support group.

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

••MCIIIII'IICII. .

13 weeki

$27.30

Pleasant Valley Outpatient
Diabetes Self·Management
Education Program

52 Weelul

$105.56

(304) 675·4340, Ext. 2004

~II

sublcriDIIon

lntldl Melga eot.;t"y

26 weeki
,~

$53.62

Alto outtlde Melga County
$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

WHkl
26 Wookl
52 WHkl

.·L------~----------~
.
.

ort -lor

Deaths

elllrcll11, 1111·1 ....

or motor route

$104

Ext. 4

·-•.'

Subacrlptlon

$8.70

Circulation

·-..•.'

Sl.. Pomemy, Ohlo 45769 .

OnlyMr

Ext. 3

·=-..•

·

MembW: The Associated Press and
tt1e OhiO Newapaper' A&amp;soclatlon.
i~
Poetmlltlf': Send address correc-' 1~
tlonelo The Dally Sentinel, 1l1 Court • \

On• month

Advertlalng

•

postage ~ld at Pomeroy.

Ext. 12

.......

•.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Frfday, 111 Court St t'
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Seoond·clus

Oenerll' manager

Other Hrvlcea

.......
•

(USPS 213-8410)
Ohio VoHor Publlohlng Co.

According to a r-nt Gallup Poll, 42 perc&lt;int of Americana oay thay would
prefer to have 1 male child Wtho choice wort up to thlm, whHt 27 percent
would want a ftmall. Fifty-three percant of raapondtnllliiO oay that boy1

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

.....trlllllllllll.hllh II•

�h•
.
0 10

The Daily Sentinel
•

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'

AKRON (AP) - Law enforcement officials trying to figuno
&gt;Ut how to best use thermal imagers are awaiting a decision
rom the U.S. Supreme Court on whether the devices used
Nithout a search warrant invade privacy.
A thermal imager, which makes heat visible, is a tool police
•gencies sometimes use in drug investigations, to search for a
:Ugitive or tracking other criminal a~tivity.
Marc Rotenberg, executive dinoctor of the Electronic Priva. :y Information Center in Washington, D.C., said his organiza:ion believes the warrandess use of thermal imaging is uncon;titutional.
Last month the Supreme Court heard arguments in the case
of an Oregon man who was arrested in 1992 for growing marijuana in his home.
In that case, during the course of an investigation police
pointed a thermal imager at the man's house and detected high
amounts of heat coming from his side wall and roof. After
obtaining a search warrant police arrested the man, who has
appealed the legality of the search.

PageAl
MOnciiiJ. M•rch 5, 1001

County Court cases processed

Police await court decision

POMEROY
Meigs
County Court Judge Steven
L. Story processed a number
of cases last week. Fineli were:
Sandra G. Schreiber, Racine,
$850 and costs, 1o days jail suspended to three, six month license
suspension, one year probation, jail
and $500 suspended upon oornple. tion of RTP School• driving under the

Influence, costs only, assured cleilr
distance; James C. McKay, Long
Bottom, $100 and costs, three days
jaH suspendad, probation until 21
years of age, underage

consump-~

tion, $50 and costs. left of center;
Donald L. Spencer, Vinton, $37 and
costs, speed; Stacia K. Reed, Rut·

land, $0 and costs. speed; Paul M.
Smith, Racine, $30 and costs, seat
bell; Palncla A. Miller, Alliance, $20
and costs. speed: Melvin Norri.s,
Pine Grove, W.Va., $30 and costs,

Toledo names new president

speed, $30 and costs, seal bell;
Megan L. Andrews, Middleport, $30

TOLEDO (AP) - University of Toledo trustees. selected a
new president Saturday, voting 9-0 to hire Dr: Daniel M.Johnson, a provost at the University of Alaska-Anchorage:
Johnson's appointment, effective July I , came. one day after
Johnson an d the other finalist, Central Michigan University
Provost Richard Davenport~ visited the can~pus.
The university was seeking a successor to Vik Kapoor, who
resigned last June after 17 months in office.
Johnson, 60, is Toledo's 15th president. The native of Springfield will earn $215,000 annually, the university said in a statement.
"I can't think of a day when I've been more excited and
more enthused about the future that I am right now, Johnson
said. "The University of Toledo represents for me the type of
institution that I believe is going to be in the forefront in the
future as higher education changes to meet the growing needs
...
o f our co rhm\lmty.

and costs, seat belt; David Herd·

man. Rutland. $20 and costs, left of

center; Brenda J. Aedholz, Parkers~ .
burg, W.Va., $30 and costs, speed ;

James E. Albright, Sr., Gallipolis.
$30 and costs, speed; Terrance G.

Wyer, Grafton, W.Va. , $30 and
costs, speed; Granville S. Flesher ill,
Nelsonville, $30 and ·costs, speed;
George Reitmlre, Pomeroy, $20 and

pension; $22 and costs, speed, $50
and costs, flctitlous tags, costs only,·
40 hours community service, dlsor·
de~y conduct, coslo only, 40 hours
community service, open container.
$75 and eosto, possession; Lois G.
Pooler, Long Bottom, $20 and costs,
failure to control; Er1c A. Qualls,
costs only, five days )all suspended,
one year probation, disorderly con·
duct; Lester R. · McGrew, Mallon,
W.Va., $250 and costs, overload;
James E. Randolph, Racine, $1,000
and cools, 30 days )all suspended to
1.0. house arrest Option gjven. one
year llcanaa auspanslon, one year
probation, driving under the lnflu·
ence, $100 and costs, 30 days jail
SYspended to 10, driving under sus·
pension; Frank M. Colwell, Pomeroy,
$350 and costs, overload; Ronald S.
Haggy. Pomeroy. $350 and cools.
ove~oed; Jennifer L. Shain, Middle·
port, $30 and costs, speed, $30 and
costs, seat belt, Danny L. Walker,
Rutland, $350 and costs , overload;
Gar1 E. Moore, Langsville, $20 and
costs, seat belt; Ted L. Dexter,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, speed; Jay
H. Swisher, Middleport, $850 and
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
ltlree, 90 day license suspension, jail
and $550 suspended upon comple·
tion of RTP School, driving under the
Influence, $100 and coots, 90 day
license suspension concurrent, 10
days jail suspended to threa concur·
rent, driving under suspension, $100

COLUMBUS (AP) -The owner of the state's largest egg
producer has been ordered to pay more tha.n $600, 000 to one term limits.
of his former executives.
Judge Patri~k McGrath of Franklin County Common Pleas

~;;r:a:~:~::td~:h;~r~~~o~:c~~~~a~~ o;:~~;:tB~~~::

Goranites $447,174 for his 5 percent stake in the company and
$150,000 in salary for the final year of his three-year contract.
With interest, the figure could top $750,000, said Austin Wildman, one of Goranites' attorneys.
Goranites sued Pohlmann for fraud after being fired in
October 1997. Goranites claimed he was recruited from Maine
with false promises of autonomy to run the egg company,' then
k
A ·G
a1 C
nRpwn ~
e~erhl or~. 1
di t d
0
~;~
m, d
man~s, awyer, pre ~: the decision
wou
e reverse on appe .
•

.f:t'

'

·
Comair.pi· 1ots get
contrad ofler

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) -The union representing Comair
pilots is trying to decide whether to approve a contract offer
aimed at heading off a strike later this month. .
The regional carrier has offered a five-year deal that 1,350
pilots will vote on this month. If the union rejects the proposal, it could strike as early as March 26.
Comair's branch of the Air Line Pilots Association began dis'b .
h
al
b .
F 'da U ·
1 d
tn ~tmdg tde prhopohs to mdem e~ ;'n ~~ y. ruodn ea ers
won t eCI e w et er to en orse It 10r a 1ew more ays.
· "This is. a very intensive document that is going to take a
while to get through," union spokesman Paul La~ltie said.
Comair operates most of the
.

IJights out ,of the Cincinnati/Northern
Kentucky
International
Airport,
a Deita.
COLUMBUS (AP) - For~er Ohio House Speaker JoAnn
hub. Comair is Delta's regional
Davidson was picked as interim director of the Department of
Job and Family Services on Saturday- a day after the former earner.
director quit following weeks of controversy over the state's
child support system.
"Her knowledge of state government, her enormous credibility and her commitment to employers, employees and families will enable her to move the department forward,'' Gov. '~CINCINNATI (AP)
Bob Taft said during a news conferettce announcing Davidson's President Bush got a 60 perselec.tion.
cent approval rating, compara·
Davidson will run the agency until May 1 when a perma· ble to those for recent pnosinent selection is put in place. She takes over for Jacqueline dentl at the beginning of their
Romer-Sensky, who resigned Friday u hud of an asency that term1, according to a statewide
has come under fire for owing millions in back payments to poll released Saturday.
thousands of parents.
An Ohio Poll found that 24
Davidson, 73, was in the Ohio House of Representatives pen:ent didn't approve of his
from 1980 through 2000, tpending the last six yean as Ohio's performance and 16 percent
first woman speaker before being forced to leave because of.

Davidson takes over agency

1

costs only, 30 days jail suspended,
proballpn· until 21 years of age,
underage consumption; Jesse A.
Williams, Middleport, costs only, 30
days )all suspended, probation until
21 year&amp; of age, underage consump·
tion; Dwayne T. Lawson, Gallipolis,
$27 and coots; speed: William
Racer, Middleport, $25 and costs,
three daye )all suspended, one r,••r
probatioo, reslralnlng order, d sor·
de~y conduct; Ralph 0. McKenzie,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six
months jail suspended to tlmt
served. one year probation. c~mlnal
slmul.atlon; Dallas S. Moodlspaugll,
Pomeroy, St 00 and costs, six
months jail suspended to time

Por11and, $25 and costs, failure lo
control; Della I. Caslael, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, 10 days jail sus·
ponded, one year probation, driving
under FRA suopenslon, costs only,
failure to slop at a traffic control
device; Darlene Pillow, Crown City,
$100 and costs, 10 days jail sus·
pendad, one year probation, driving
under suspension; Kevin B. Jowell,
Langovilla, $100 and costs, 10 days
jail suspended lo three, one year
probation, thraa days )all suspended
upon proof of a valid operators
license. driving under auepenalon,
$30 and costs, belt, $25 and
costs, fictitious tags; Eugene V.
Long, Long Bottom. $30 and costs,

served, one year probation, criminal

speed, $30 and costs, seat belt

simulation; Richard L. Payne,
Pomeroy, $50 and cools on each
count, five. days )all suspended on
each count, one year probation con·
current, two counts disorderly con·
duct; Dana R. Williams. Pomeroy,
$50 and costs, no operators license;
Wendy Long, Middleport, $850 and
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
ltlree, jail and $550 suspended upon
completion of RTP School, six month
ltcanse suspension, one year proba·
tlon. driving under the Influence.
cools only, 10 days jail suspended to

Jason T. Reynolds, Pomaroy, $850
and costs, 10 days jail suspended lo
thrse, six month license suspension,
. jail and $550 suspended upon com·
plelion of ATP School within 90
days, one year probation , driving
under the Influence, $100 and cosiS.
10 days jail suspended to three con·
cuiTent, driving undar suspension.
Elby C. Nye, Rutland, costs only,
30 days jail suspended, one year
probation, restitutiOn, criminal dam·
aging; John F. Edwards, Long Bot·
tom, $30 and costs, speed; Jannlfar

three concurrent. one year proba·

L. Bowser, Athens. $30 and costs,

Ohioans approve
of Bush so far .

·:Clinton considering
:~ offer to talk to senators
WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Clinton is
looking at an offer that he be
questioned privately by senators about pardons he issued
·' · during his final hours in
office, a spokeswoman says.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa.,
·· · said Sunday he ~hinks Clin: ~. ton "may be inclined" to
. • accept the offer as a way of
' · "getting to the basic facts."
Spokeswoman Julia Payne
said Clinton was considering
the offer, bur she stressed "it
' 1 (' is
very pre ~nature to talk
' : about what the president
may or may not do." Clinton
r
has no time frame for making
.. a decision, she added.
Senate leaders are treading
, gingerly over the prospect of
•" . ..' .trying to compel Clinton's

Season

had no opinion.
The Institute for Policy Research at the University of
Cincinnati contacted 811 Ohioans by phone from Feb. 13-25.
The , poll's margin for error is plus or minus 3 percentage
points~

Bu'sh's approval rating is in line with results of Ohio Polls
during previous administrations. President Reagan got a 61
percent approval· rating early in his administtation, George
H.W: Bush's approval rating was 63 .percent and Pnosident
Clinton had a 56 percent approval rating in initial polls.
Ninety percent of Republicans approved of President Bush's
first few. weeks in office, while only 36 percent of Democrats
ap· pro~ed.
,,
.

,,- ·

.Laminated. Commemorative
Drawing of Dale Earnhardt
.

.

from PageAl

probation, iail suspended upon com-

pletlon of RTP School, 10 days
house arrest, driving under lhe lnflu·
ence, $100 and costs. one year pro·
batlon. no drivers license, cools only,
failure to control; David R. Nance,
Racine, $30 and costs, speed, $20
and costs, reckless operation; Tare·
sa Van Cooney, Pomeroy, $25 and
coals on each CQunt, two counts
paselng bed checks; Timothy Wick·
ersham, Mansfield, $25 and costs,
10 days )all suspended, restiiUIIon.
passing bad cheeks.

r

'

.r '-'

to be done on the proposed
code before passage. Williams
• ' asked council members to
·· · see k ideas from residents.
Council extended appreciation to the Wildwood Garden
_.. .. Club for the planters they
have built at City Hall and in
the pool area. The club has
additional plans for beautification. Money donations for
the projects are being accepted. Checks may be written to
the Wildwood Garden Club
_ and mailed to Joy Bendey,
· · ·Box 188, Syracuse, .Ohio
45779.
A special fund has been
established for the project,
Lavender said.
Council granted permission
to Syracuse Postmaster Bonnie Brown, in case of a disaster where the Post Office
would become nonopcra·
tiona!, to use the village
·~ · m!lnicipal building a1 its
, • headquarters.
,
.
· ~ Meeting with council was
:: Harold Gibbs on behalf of
. · First Church ·of God, seeking
• . permission to place a 12-by: • 16 storage building on the
•
•

-

-

.:~~•. Snowy and
•-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·:·:·

•

I·

·•

I' :

· Fee proposals must state qualifications, including all related completed
training for the · HOUSING REHABILITATION project activity; pre'vious
experience in CDBG/Home Housing programs; scope of services to be provided
and amount of fixed price compensation required for the above services and
pricing data to support the fixed price (e.g., per hour, diem, unit). All related
qualifications and I or training certifications must be attached to the proposal.
Fee proposals may be mailed or delivered to the Meigs County
Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Questions
in regard to this request may be addressed to Jean Trussel, Grants Administrator,
at 740-992-7908.
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

••

conversation~'

With

Clinton's chief of mff, Karen
Tramontano, and was told the
forn1er president "is thinking
about it." Payne said Tramontano had wanted more information about the offer.
"I think as. the facts build
up, the president is evalua.cing
it and may be inClined to
come in /' Specter satd on
ABC's "This Week ."

church's property. He said that
originally, a 24-by-60 fellowship hall was planned, but
with FEMA regulations, it
was decided that it would be
too expensive.
Lavender advised Gibbs to
take elevation shots and
obtain a building per(nit, and
proceed with the project.
Councilman Bill Roush
advised Gibbs on procedur~s.
as well .
The low bid ofDon's Heating and Cooling of Middleport to install an electric furnace in the municipal building in the amount of $2,500
was approved by a 5-1 vote,
with Katie Crow abstaining.
Council is accepti'\g applications for pool manager.
Applications may be submitted to Sharon Cottrill,
clerk/treasurer, by April. I.
Two applications have already
been received for the position.
· ·
Lavender said it is illegal to
hang any signs ·on stop signs
.within the vil4ge, and that
Ralston has perrll'lssion to
remove any such signs.
Lavender appointed Roush
and Councilman Mgny Wood
to investigate the cost of a
new police cruiser. •'·

Tuesday will be in the 20s .
Forecast
Today: Snow showers. High
32, low 20.
Tuesday: Snow showers.
High 28, low 22.
Wednesday: Mostly cloudy.
High 37,low 24.
Thursday: Partly cjpudy.
,.;.
High 37, low 26.

LOCAL BRIEFS
free of charge for Meigs
Home
County residents or anyone
employed within the county.
destroyed
Skin tests givn during the
RUTLAND - A twostory home was destroyed
Sunday following a fire near
Rutland .
Rutland Assistant Fire
Chief Danny Davis said the
department received a call
SUJ1.day around 4:21 a.m.
reil••dir.g the fire on Side
Hill Road .
Firfefighters discovered
the home of Jeff Napper
totally e ngulfed in flames .
No one was home at the
time of the blaze.
Mo re than 30 firefighters
fro m Rutland, Scipio Township and Pomeroy battled
the fire for 2 1/2 hours. The
structure was completely
d~ s troyed . No injuries were
reported.
The cause of the fire has
yet to be determined, and
the in ciden't is still under
investigation , said Davis.

clinic will need to be read
on March 14 from 4:30 to
5:30 p.m. Additional information is available from the
office at 992-3722.

Class offered
POMEROY A free
Ohio Hunter Education
Class will be offered March
26 to 28 from 6 to 9 p.m.
and March 31 from 9 a.m.
until noon at Pomeroy Gun
Club on Pomeroy Pike. Students must attend all sessions
to receive certification. Class
size is limited. Prospective
students should preregister
by calling the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation ' District
at 992-4282.

Post to meet

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 will meet
on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
hall in Tuppers Plains. DinPOMEROY - Two indi-1 ner will be served at 6:30.
viduals were arre-sted Satltrday for domestic violence by'
the Pomeroy Police Department
j
POMEROY - Units of
Police Cpief Mark Proffitt the Meigs Emergency Sersaid Thomas R. De Weese vice answered II calls for
was arrested early Saturday assistance over the weekend.
morning and charged with Uniti responded as follows:
domestic violence.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
In an unrelated matter,
Saturday, 12:25 a.m., LinTeresa J. Howell of Pomeroy coln Heights, assisted by
was arrested on Saturday fol- Pomeroy as First Responder,
lowing a domestic violence Savannah Day, Holzer Medincident.
ical Center;
Both await court ·dates.
3:24 a.m., Middleport
Police Department, Thomas
Deweese, treated;
9;57 a.m. , State Route
POMEROY
Meigs 124, Wesley Clark, Pleasant
County Sheriff Ralph E. Valley Hospital;
Trussell · reported
three
Sunday, I :22 a.m., East
· arrests for driving under the Main Street, Lisa Zahran,
influence and other charges HMC;
recently.
10:54
a.m.,
Veterans
James A. Whittington was . Med'!orial Hospital, Robert
charged with DUI and left Davis, HMC .
of center and was released
POMEROY
pending his court appearSaturday, 10:06 a.m., State
ance.
Route 681, assisted by RutEric ]. Taylor was charged land and Scipio Township,
with DUI and marked lanes motor vehicle accident,
and is currently being hdd Frank Gives, treated, Sara
in the Middleport Jail ' on Sprunger, O'Bleness Memounrelated charges .
rial Hospital.
Ro11nie Hysell was arrestRUTLAND
Saturday,
12:07
a.m.,
ed in Columbus on a failure
to appt&gt;&lt;lr 1 warrant from a Hysell's Garage, assisted by
2000 criminal case in Meigs Pomeroy and Middleport,
County. He is .currently no injuries;
being hdd in the Meigs
4.:07 p.m., State Route
Count)' Jail pending his 143, William Gum, OBMH;
court appearance.,
Sunday, 4;21 a.m., Side
Hill Road, assisted by Scipio
Township and Pomeroy,
structure fire, Jeff Napper
. HARRISONVltLE
property, no injuries.
The Meigs County TubercuII ;55 a.m., Bradbury
losis Clinic will hold a free Road, Stephanie Pickens,
evening clinic on March 12 Raymond Dewitt, refused
from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. at the treatment;
6:48 p.m., Dexter Road,
Scipio
Volunteer · . Fire
Laura
Stephens, treated.
Department. Skin tests are

Two arrested

EMS logs calls

Arrests made

Clildc planned

LOCAL STOCKS,

••

· Preliminary inspection and preparation of rehabilitation work specifications
to meet Residential Rehabilitation Standards, of approximately 25-30 single
family homes and specifications/cost estimates for such work on each unit. The
Specialist will also assi.st in the contractor bidding process and review all bids;
attendance at pre-bid/construction meetings; interim construction inspections;
oversee compliance with Residential Rehabilitation Standards; undertake final .
inspections and payment approvals; and provide written reports.
.

.. informal

cold tonigbt

It will be cold and snowy
: : ·. across the tfi-cOunty region
,; tonight.
• A winter storm advisory is
: :. in effect for the region, with
• up to 4 inches of· snow
~.
. - : expected to accumulate by
:·;. Tuesday morning.
, . • Lows Monday night were
:• •. to be af\lund 20. Highs on

• ••

i~

•
•! AEP- 47~.
• :- Arch Coal- 25'/.

• • Akzo- 49l.

; AmTechiSBC- 46. ~
,.: . Ashland Inc. - 39
• AT&amp;T-22~
..:( Bank one - 36
• Bob Evans - 20lo
-~- BcrgWamer- 45
- Champion - 2~
• •." Charming Shops - 6~
- • City Holding - 9
~ • Federal M'1Qul - 3~
•• • USB- 23l.

The program will require the ·professional services of a rehabilitation
specialist to provide the following scopes of services:

testimony about his 176 lastminute pardons and commutations. Specter said they
have suggested that he and a
Democratic senator do the
questioning in private.
He detailed the proposal
in a letter to Clinton last
week.
Specter mlso uid he had an

·· VALLEY WEATHER
.. •

The Meigs County Commissioners will be applying for the FY's 2001
CDBG Community Housing and Improvement Program grant funding and will
accept fee proposals for REHABILITATION CONSULTING SERVICES to
implement the program, if funded, until March 8, 2001 at 10:00 a.m. at the
offices of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Fee proposals will then be opened and considered during
the regular Board of Commissioners meeting at I0:45 a.m. on the date above.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

tlon, no dr1vars license.
speed; Norman R. Sampson, Mid·
TerriL. Houser, Rutland, $20 and dletown, $1,000 and costs. six
costs, fictitious lags; Joshua D. Dick· monltl license suspanslon, 10 days
ens, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six jail suspended to three, one year

cosls, failure to control; Jonathan W.
Newsome, Middleport, $30 and and coats, fleeing, $30 and costs, months jail . suspended to time
costs, speed unsafe for conditions; seat bell, costs only, wrong way on served, one year probation, criminal
Trlna T. Lee, Middleport, $20 and four·lana highway.
simulation; Donald E. Roush, Syra·
costs, assured clear distance; Mary
Jimmie L. Maynard, Pomeroy, $20 cusa, $100 and cools, 10 days jail
A. Shoemakerr, Cheshire, $30 and and costs, failure to stop at stop suspended to thre~. three days jail
costs, speed; Mary E. Young, sign; James D•. Jones, Pomeroy, suspended upon completion of RTP
Racine. $30 and costs, speed; Gary $250 and costs, ovar1oad; Daniel E. School, reckless operafion, costs
R. Rellmlre, Pomeroy, $30 and Swisher, Cheshire, $250 and cools, only, failure to control: Ricky Miller,
costs, speed.
.
overload; Gary W. Gllmora, Casstown, $250 and costs, $250 for·
Alanna J. Grimm, Middleport, Langsville, $250 and costs, over· failure, three days jail suspended
$100 and costs, 30 days jail sus· load; Del L. Ogdln, Langsville, $250 upon completion of RTP School.
pended to five days,. five days sus· and costs, overload; Scott" A. lean· reckless operation, costs only, stop
ponded upon proof of a valid license hower, Langsville, $26 and costs, sign; Paul S. Jasovsky, Albany, $20
within 60 days, driving under sus· spaed; Lee M.. Fitchpalrlck, Rutland, and coats, speed; sarah B. Asher,

Former exec gets S&amp;Oo,ooo

Monday, March 5, 2001

Qannett-66
General Electric- 44~
Harley Davidson
44~t

.

Kmart·- 9Y• .
Kroger- 24~.
Lands End- 22~

Rockwell- 46'/._,
Rocky Boots ~D
AD Shell - 59~(;

~~~~y's 39\ ~~\46l• .

Wal·Mart -

Wai'ldy's- 24,.......

Ltd.-16~

Oak Hill Financial 14'1.
OVB-26
BBT-36~.

Peoples - 1.,.
Premler-6'1.

Worthington - t Q),
Dally stock repoils ara
lhe 4 r·m, CIQalng
quotes o the preyfous
day's transactions, pro·
vlded by Smith Part·
ners at Advesllnc•.

..
.·,...--~~--------------~
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~.

A lastins tribute to the
heart &amp; soul of NASCAR
RACING Dale Earnhardt. Intimidator
Don•t miss this OPPOrtunitY to ilet Your laminated
exclusive tribute drawlnil to cherish ·for a lifetime•.

~'

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-.•
-·.•.

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Correction Polley
Our main coneom In all slor1as Ia
to be accurate. If you know of an
. error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

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The main number Is 992·2156.
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The Pictures are $6.00 .each. rhe Proceeds from
each sale will Include a·contribution In your name to
the Dale Earnhardt Foundation of Carolinas.

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Gwen A. Baker
BUCYRUS - Gwen A. Baker, 88, of Bucy ru s, died on
Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2001 at Heartland of Bucyrus.
She was born on May 13, 1912 in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Arthur Hess, Sr. and Glenna M.Jenkenson Hess. She was a
homemaker and she and her husband were owners of Colonial
Grill. She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School and a member of First Christian Church.
She is survived by two sons anddaughters-i n-bw, Bill and
Mar,Y Ann Baker of Bucyrus and Neil E . and Catherine Baker
of Little Rock, Ark.; a half-brother and sister-in-law,Arthur and
Jane Hess of Middleport; four grandchildren and three stepgrandchildren and great-grandchildren.
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded Ill de,lth by her
husband, and a sister, Virginia H arten bach .
Private family services will be today at 2 p.m. at Wise Funeral Home in Bucyrus, with Arthur Hess officiating. Burial will
·
follow at Oakwood Cemetery.

Earl Holman
RACINE - Earl Holman, Racim·. died o n Munday. M.orch
5, 2001.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fi ~ h ~.:r-Acr~t.'
Funeral Home in Pomeroy anJ will be .1nnonncNi wh en completed.

Lucille Sparks
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Lu cille Whittington Sparks,
75, of Point Pleasant died on Saturday, March 3, ~00 1 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasani.
She was a homemaker, born on April 25 , 1'1:~5 in .Wmtield.
She was the daughter of the late Frank and Lula Belle Walker
Whittington.
Surviving are three sons: William E. Shuler of Middleport, .
Ohio, Kenneth L. Shuler of LeS age, and Joh n W. Shuler of
Point Pleasant; three daughters: D oro thy H esso n of Apple
Grove, and Caroline Sue Doss and Edith Virginia Plants, both
of Point Pleasant; two mters, Ruth Ann Strutton of Oklahoma
and Roselee Roar\&lt; of Delaware, Ohio; 10 gran dchildren; two
great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren.
In addition to her parents , she was preceded in death by her
husband, Joseph E. Sparks;. a daughter, Martha Frances Shuler;
two brothers, James Rumbaid and William Edward Whittington; and a great-granddaughter.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Crow-Husscll Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant with the Rev. Carl Swisher officiating.
Burial will follow at Mt. Union Cemetery in Pliny.
Friends may call at the funeral home on ]\!onday from 6 to ,
8 p.m., and prior to the service on Tuesday.

Bush returns to Middle
America to plug budget plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
They're not America's glamour spots, and that's the
point: President Bush is
returning w the nation'S
heartland this week. to · promote his spe11ding alld taxcut proposals.
Bush was focusing on his
Medicare plan in Washington
on Mo11day and watching
the swearing-in of disastermanagement chief Joe Allbaugh. Then he was returning to his 2001 campaign
trail a zigzagging path
that took him to five st.1les
last weok, and will hit four
this week.
The
president
has
shunned ·places like New
York and Hollywood, gravitating instead to the Midwest
and South - regions that
generally supported him on
Election Day. This week follows the pattern, as he heads
to Illinois, North . Dakota,
South Da,kota and Louisiana .
He plans to spend next
weekend at his Texas ranch.
Rather than visit Wall
Street, Bush will go Tuesday
to the Chicago Mercantile

Exchange, where intcrn::~­
tional
currenCies,
sto ck
indexes and beef and pork
futures are traded .
It offers a window on tht'
nation's economy: In 2000,
some 231 milli on contract~
worth more than S 155 tril lion changed hands al rl11..·
ex change.
"The prcsidl!nt ( ontillLlL'S ·
to take hts 111L'SS agc to thl.'
Amencan pe(&gt;plc, ourl11 H11 g
his budget and tax cut pbns,
and _t he mercantil~ exc\nnge
is a good venue to talk abotlt
l!conomic growth," White
House spokes man Gordon
Johndro e said.
On Thursday, Bush flies to
the Dakotas, which he carried easily last year with
more than 60 perce nt of the
vote, and which both have
two Democratic se nators.
In Fargo, N.D., he'll talk

taxes, · and in Sioux Falls,
S.D., he'll visit a health care
institution. Bush's budget
calls for increases .in medical
research funding, something
he highlighted in Atlanta last
week.

Diabetes Supion Group
OraanlzaUonal Meeting
Members of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education
Program will be conducting a general public
organlzatlonal meeting to assess interest in a
diabetes support group.

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

••MCIIIII'IICII. .

13 weeki

$27.30

Pleasant Valley Outpatient
Diabetes Self·Management
Education Program

52 Weelul

$105.56

(304) 675·4340, Ext. 2004

~II

sublcriDIIon

lntldl Melga eot.;t"y

26 weeki
,~

$53.62

Alto outtlde Melga County
$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

WHkl
26 Wookl
52 WHkl

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ort -lor

Deaths

elllrcll11, 1111·1 ....

or motor route

$104

Ext. 4

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Subacrlptlon

$8.70

Circulation

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Sl.. Pomemy, Ohlo 45769 .

OnlyMr

Ext. 3

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MembW: The Associated Press and
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Ohio VoHor Publlohlng Co.

According to a r-nt Gallup Poll, 42 perc&lt;int of Americana oay thay would
prefer to have 1 male child Wtho choice wort up to thlm, whHt 27 percent
would want a ftmall. Fifty-three percant of raapondtnllliiO oay that boy1

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

.....trlllllllllll.hllh II•

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Moncl.y, Maldl

s. 2001

-: The Daily Sentinel
'

-

Dear Ann Landers: I read the
letter from "Canadian Followers"
who didn't bother to show up at ;n
outdoor wedding because it was
raining. They were shocked when
they later received a bill from the
bride and groom for the cost of
their meals. I can certainly sympathize With those newlyweds. I wish
I'd had the nerve to send a bill to
some of the guests who didn't show
up at my wedding.
.
My husband and I had four couples who never bothered to RSVP
and two others who sent back rep!;
cards saying they "would be there
with bells on," and then didn't show
up. None of them called or wrote
to apologize for thei r rudene;s, and,
of course. they never sent a gtft,
either.
A bride can spend months trying
to m ake her wedding perfect, from
the fo od to th e se"ting arrange-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

· Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Lelten to tht editor 4ft wtltome. They should Nlesr tltnn 300 words. All Nrrtn
tire rubjtctto tdilint ond mrut be slgtttd tJnd indUJh IU!drtsr and telephone number.
/YIJ Ulllitntd letten wUI IH pl.lblilhttl. Utttn slroulll be in good /astt1 tUIJressing
Urws, not personu.litin.
Tht opinionr txprtutd i11 lht co/uiHn ~low on the cons,rsus tiftht Ohio Volley
fublirhint Co. '1 editorial botu'd, unleu 01herwise noted.

NATIONAL VIEWS

ic?
•

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Amendment ·g uarantees freedom of music, not free music ....

Napster had, in effect, appealed on the basis that sharing
mus1c over the Internet was no different from taping a TV
show to watch later or giving a friend a tape of favorite tunes.
The court, however, determined that taping a TV show on a
VCR or recording a compact disc on a tap e to play in the car
is limited in scope, largely for personal use and not used for
profit.
~umerous other sites exist on the Internet to exchange
ffiUSIC ....

. Enf?rcing any ban oil musi~-swapping will be difficult, especially 1f compames outs1dc the United States take over the

enterprise.

The music industry must adapt and learn to use the new
tech~ology to its advantage. That means coming up with a way
to d1stnbute muSi c onlme so that customers are less likely to
copy it illegally.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 5, the 64th day of2001. There are
301 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
()n March 5, 17:0, the Boston Massac re took place as
Brmsh sold1ers who d been taunted by a crowd of colonists
opened fire, killing five people.
On this date:
In 1849, Zachary Taylor took the ·oath of office at his pres- '
·
idential inauguration.
In 1868, the Senate was organized into a. Court of
· Impeachment to decide charges against President Andrew
. Johnson.
In 1933, in German parliamentary elections, the Nazi
Party won 44 percent of th e vote, enabling it to join with the
Nationalists to .gain a slender majority in she Reichstag.
In 1946, Wmston Churchill delivered his famous "Iron
Curtain" speech at Westminster College in Fulton, Mo.
.
In 1953, Soviet dictator josef Stalin died at age 73 after 29
years m power.
1
. In 1963, a private plane .crash near ·Camden, Tenn.,
claimed the lives of country music performers Patsy Cline;
"Cowboy" Copas and "Hawkshaw" Hawkins.
In 1970, a nucl.ear nonproliferation treaty went into effect
after 43 nations ratified it.
In 1976, the British pound fell below the equivalent of
two dollars for th e first time.
·
. In 1982, comedian john Belushi was found dead 'of a drug
overdose in a rented bungalow in Hollywood. He was 33.
In 1986, in Lebanon, Islamic Jihad issued a statement saying it had "executed" French hostage Michel Seurat, who
had been abducted almost a year earlier.
·
Ten years ago: Iraq repealed its annexation of Kuwait. The
Iraqis turned over 35 prisoners of war, including 15 Americans, to the Red Cross. An anti-Saddam Hussein uprising was
reported sweeping city after city in Iraq.
Five years ago: Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole swept
the "Junior Tuesday" primaries. Former Republican Rep.
Enid Greene Waldholtz, tangled in a financial mess that she
blamed on her estranged husband, announced she would not
seek a second term.
One year ago: Israel's Cabinet voted unanimously to withdraw its troo ps from south. l ebanon by th e following July.

•

Here's the test for compassionate conservatism
George W Bush strongly supports
increasing the involvement of faith-based
organizations in salutary government
activities. The president, therefore, would
be well-advised to. consult a recent publication of the National Conference of
Catholic Bishops, an organization I came
to know through my friendship with the
late Cardinal John O'Connor.

release than they were when they entered
these human warehouses. And those who
are mentally disturbed become much

wo;~~ bishops make ano'ther po'int that

Nat
H·e ntoff

Titled "Responsibility, Rehabilitation
and Restoration: A Catholic Perspective
on Crime and Criminal Justice," the
COl,UMNIST
statement, say the bishops, "is a major iniTh Cath li b' h
ha
· 1
tiative that is going to engage us pastorally and in advocacy·for years to come."
e
o c IS ops ve previous y
called for an end to the death: l enalty, and
In presenting the document, Cardinal h
k
· I'
Roger Mahony of Los Angeles empha- t ey spea again on that issu~)"!ncreasing
sized, "We will not tolerate the crime and reliance on the. death penalty diminishes
us and is a sign of growing disrespect for
violence that threatens the lives and dig- ·' human life." (Abortion is another form of
nity of our sisters and brothers, and we disrespect for human life.)
will not give up on those who have lost
•'We cannot overcome crime," the
their way and have been caught up in statement continues, "by simply execut1'ng crmu''nals, nor can "'e
crime and punishment:'
~- restore the lives
T h e b ishops reject "simplistic solutions of the innocent by ending the lives of
such
· daas. 'three strikes· and
· 0you're· out'
fi and those convicted of the•'r murders.... The
mrn . tory senfttencmg.
ne-SJze- ts-all death penalty offers the tragic illusion
so
unons
are
o
en
inadequate.
com- that w. e can def&lt;.end life by .taking lifie."
b · t'
f
hili.
dThe
fl 'hili'
' wll)akslOll
tyh an
eltl· ty
Moreover," As bishops we believe that
b 0 accounta
·h h
or
est Wit t ose w o are. trymg to the current trend o_f more pns·ons and
· 1· "
change th e•r •ves.
more executions, with too little educaGoing aooinst th
·
.,e current move to tion and drug treatment, does not truly
treat young offienders as tho gh th
u
ey reflect Christian values and will not real·
were adults, the bishops emphatically ly leave our communities safer."
note that "placing children in aoult jails is
According to the bishop.s, our
a sign offailure, not a solution!'
"astounding rate of incarceration, six to
In what I expect will strike many,
,
including perhaps some Catholics, as twelve times higher 'than the rate of other
"bleeding-heart liberalism," the bishops Western countries," is due not only to
point out, "We cannot ignore the fact that "three strikes and you're opt," but also to
one-fifth of our preschoolers are growing "zero tolerance for drug o!fenders."
up in poverty and far too many go to bed
The bisbops also target the growing
hungry Any comprehensive app1;0ach to number of "supermax" prisons in which .
criminal justice must address these fac- the most dangerous offeqders are kept in
tors. ."
"small cells by themselvbs for 22 to 24
A good many of these children, espe- hours each day:'
'dally in families with single mothers: are
I've reported on some1? f these priso~.
victims of the Clinton and Republlcan Such extreme isolation makes many of
we~are •:reform."
· 1
the prisoners more dangerous upon th'eir

is often ignored by those who accuse
critics of the present system ofbeing "soft
on criminals": We increasingly locate
prisons, says the statement, "in remote
areas far away from coi:nmunities where
most crimes are committed," which "creates hardships on families of inmates"
because oft)le distances they have 10 trave.l to visit family members in prison.
"Being away from support systems is
'all hard
ffi
espec1 y
on juvenile&lt;;&gt; enders, who
need family and community support," the
bishops write. "Regular inmate contact
with f:upily and friends reduces the likelihood they will rerurn to a life of crime."
Distant prisons also make it easier for
the rest of us to avoid thinking about the
burgeomng
·
·
num b ers o f incarcerated
Americans - and the abandonment of
the very idea of rehabilitation by those
who run prisons. Accordinglv, unless
there is a prison riot; the media ' keeps
'
us
comfortably ignorant of the conditions in
.
some of these prisons - conditions that
greatly
· disturbed Charles Dickens when
he visited American prisons in the 19th
cenrury.
ThUingly, much of the media have
completely ignored the message of the
bishops.
The bishops also speak of the need for
more attention to the victinJS of crime:
"Too often the criminal justice system
neglects the hurt and needs of victims or
seeks to exploit their anger and pain to
support punitive policies." And the mere
punitive the policies, the more recidivists
our prisons breed.

(Na/ Hentoff is a natiotl&lt;llly rencwned
authority on the First 'Amendment and the
Bill of Rights.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Home builders ask, 'so.what~ a recession?'
BY JOHN CUNNFF
NEW YORK - Has the housing
market lost its . role as an econolnic
weather vane? Or has it . kept ,·ts deft
touch ~ an indicator?
. In years gone by it was generally
VJew.ed as a g.ood barometer of the econd c
h fi
fi 1 h efli
0 my s 1re non, t e mt to ee t e
ect
of a downturn and a solid gauge also of
an economy's impro'ring health.
But now, amid $1oomy stock forecast~, sh. arp consumer confidence.
decli nes m ·.D ecemb er an d january. and
mamlfactunng slowdowns, measurements of housing activity remain among
the hi~est o.f the emire expans~on.
ThiS, despite SIX mterest rate mcreases
by the Federal Reserve within a 15month period, all aimed at slowing the
economy to a trot rather than a gallop.
. Hous~ng starts and new home sales
dtd dedme from 1999 to 2000, but by
e~sion rather than collapse, while home
pnces, ~wnersh1p rates
mediap.newhome SIZe rose to expans!on-era highs.
The NatiOnal Association of Home
Builders does not expect a.general ec~normc r~ces.SJon , and IS ac~lVlty stat~sttCJ
clo not mdJCate one, whiCh puts It at

an?

.,.

Monday, March 5,1001

how.ever, live near my father, and
are much closer to her. All of their
children call her "Grandma."
I have mixed feelings about this.
[ have no problems with this
woman. She has always been very
cumstances prevent them from nice to me. We are planning to
doing so, they should send a note of move closer to Dad, and hope to
apology and a gift to make up for have a better relationship. However,
ADVICE
my children already have two
their absence.
grandmothers. Would having three
D~ar Ann Landers: I read the
ments. C han ces are, the bride and letter from the woman who was "Grandmas" confuse them? Would
groom are only able to invite a por- reluctant to introduce her mother's it be bad manners for the kids to
tion of the people they want. If new husband as "stepfat her" call her by her first name, as I do'
someone doesn't attend, it is not because she barely knew him . l Please advise me. l don't want to
only disrespectful to the couple and have a similar problem, and hope mess things up. - Mannerly Mindcosts them money on food and your advice will help me.
ed Mom in Geo rgia
drink, but it has also prevented
Dear Mannerly Mom: In situMy parents were divorced when
them from inviting someone else l was a teenager. My father remar- ations such as you rs, it would be
who wou ld have enjoyed the cele- ri ed soon after I joined the military. best to ask the woman which she
bration - even in the rain.
I h ave seen my stepmo ther three wo uld prefer, " Grandma" or her
Weddings are a huge emotio nal, times in the last 10 years. My chil- firs t name. Put the ballm her c o urt,
as well as financial, investment. dren have seen her twice. I barely and let her lob it over the net. Don't
Lousy weather is no excuse to drop know the woman. My si blings, worry about .confusing the kids.

Ann
.Landers

out at the last minute. - Kate in
New York
Dear Kate: You are right. People who RSVP and say they will
attend a wedding. or any other formal affair, should show up. If cir-

SOCI.ETY SCRAPBOOK

Despite fame} remembe~
Earnhardt was mortal
• The News-Journal of Daytona Beach, on Dale Earnhardt~ death: It's easy to be swayed by the mythic nature of Dale
Earnhardt's' life and death ...
Polishing the myth eases the pain of losing the man. It distracts from the realization that racing is a blood sport. Earnhardt was the fourth driver to die in less than nine months, but
his death will make the greatest impact.
Maybe better safety equipment would have saved Earnhardt ...
Some have said that tragedy is just part of the game .. .
On the track, Earnhardt was one of the boldest and seemingly least vulnerable. He was one of the last drivers to wear an
old-fashioned open-face helmet. He visibly chafed at new safety regulations, saying they were a disservice to fans who wanted to see races the way he wanted to run th em.
If Earnhardt could have seen the reaction to his death maybe
he would have rethought what fans really want.
In Sunday's aftermath, one thing is clear. They didn't want
this.
• The (Rock Hill, S,C.) Herald, 011 music swappi11g on the
Internet: Napster may be on its way out, but America's music
industry still has to contend with the unregulated swapping of
copyrighted songs on the Internet....
· As officials with the Freedom Forum noted, the First

Page AS

Reader says bad weather is no excuse to drop wedding plans

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74().992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

By the Bend

•

odds with contrary evidence now circulacing among stock •market an\1 other
forecasters.
In "~act , the NAH
. B's own ''n - house
survey o £800 builders,' based on responses to questions regarding ~es, subdivision traffic and builder expectations, rose
.in February after dipping in January aqd
, December.
.
David Seiders NAHB economist
riow expects to se; fh~ econo;..._y grow a;
just 1 percent "or a IIi! below" this quarter, rise to 2 percen.J.!n the second quarter and to 3.5 pen:eht in the third and
fourth quarters.
1·
Bruce ·Smith, NA.HB president and
head ofBrUGe Smith Quality Homes in
Walnut Creek, CallE., believes the critical
factor in the econQtl1y is consumer confidence, . which dropped abruptly in
December and january
'·
He points · tq factors that could
change that, especially a "very, very
active" federal Reserve that has already
cut interest rates twice and is expected
by the NAHB to add two more halfpoint cuts. And the NA.HB would hope
to. further encourage sales by allowing
wtthdrawals front Individual Retirement
;

Accounts for homebuying.
Aside fiom consumer confidence and
other strictly economic factors, there are
·
d.•ents in the housing market,
mgre
demographic mainly, that builders see as
supportive of sales over the next decade .
c

•·or example, ownership rates 'IIIlong
25- to 35-year-olds are still below where
they were in 1979 and 1980, and ownership among minorities, while steadily
growing, still has far .t o go to catch up
with whites.
. Census Bureau figures show that
American home ownership, at 67.5 percent in 2000, has been inching higher
since 1993 and 1994, when it was at 64
percent, but possession is heavily skewed
toward the elderly. Levels last year
reached a peak of 83,8 percent among
ages 70-74 before tailing off to 77.7 per. cent among those 75 and older.
To get the overall percentage as high ·
as 70 would require not just a con tinuation of gains by minorities,,but in pro.viding more opportunities for potential
buyers in the 25 to 34 age group.

.

aohn Cunniff is a business analyst for Tht
Associated Press.)

,.

ed with an emotiona l ceremony where recruits were present-

. Military news

ed th e Marine Corps Emble m and were addressed as

Aavon M. Frechette
MIDDLEPORT- Marine Corps Pvt. Aavon M. Frechette
recently completed basic training . at Marine Co rps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
·
Frechette successfully completed 12 weeks · of training
destgned to challenge new Marine recruits both physically and
·
mentally.
Frechette and fellow recruits began th eir training at 5 a.m.,
!. by running three miles and performing talisthenics. In addition to the physical conditioning program, Frechette spent
numerous hours in classroom and field assignments, which
included learning first-aid, uniform regulations, combat water
, survival, marksmanship, hand- to-hand combat, and assorted
•. weapons training. They performed close order drills and oper~ ated as a small infantry unit during field training.
:
Frechette and other recruits also received instruciibn on the
·. Marine Corps' coi:e values-honor, courage and coll}mittment. and what those words mea'n in guiding personal a~ d professional Conduct.

Frechette ended the training phase with the Cr~cible, a 54- hour team effort, problem solving evolution which culminated with an emotional ceremony where recruits .were present, ed the Marine Corps Emblem and were addressed as
, "Marines" for the first time since boot camp beg•n.
Frechette is a 2000 graduate of.Meigs, ,J-Iig~ School •pd is
·
• the son of Rebecca A. and Ronald A; Frechette of,!\1jddleport.
Levi R. Burns
MIDDLEPORT -- Marine Corps Pvt. Levi R. Burns
recently completed basic training at Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
-. Burns successfully completed 12 weeks of training designed
to challenge new Marine recruits both physically and mental. ~
.
,
Burns and fellow recruits began their training at 5 a.m., by
running three miles and performing calisihenics. In addition to
the physical conditim1ing program, Burns spent nulnerou·s
hours in classroom and field assignments, which included
learning flnt-aid, uniform regulations, combat water survival,
marksmanship, hand-to-hand cmnbat, and assoited weapom
training. They performed close order drills and operated as n
sntall infantry unit during field training.
Burns and other recruit! also received instruction 011 the
Marine Corps' core values-honor, courage and conunittmentand what those words mean in guiding personal and professional conduct.
Burns ended the training phase with the Crucible, a 54hour team effort, problem solving evolution which culminat-

11

Marines 11 for the first time sin ce boot camp began.

Burns is a 2000 groduate of Meigs High School and the so n
of Debbie and David Schuler of Middlepor t.
Andrea M. Neutzling ,
CHESHIRE-- Army Pvt. Andrea M . Neutzling has graduated from military training at Fort Leonard Wood, Waynseville,
Mo.
During the training, Buckinghatn received instruction in
drill and ceremonies, weapons, map . re ading, tactics, military
courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
Neutzling is a 2000 grad11at~ of River Valley High School in
Cheshire and is the daughter of Brenda and Michael A. Neutzling of Pomeroy.
Michael T. Grinstead
CLIFTON, WVa . -- Army Pvt. Micha el T. Grinstead has
graduated from basic cotnbat training at Fort Jackson, Columbia, S.C.
During the training, the soldier re ceived instruction and
practice in drill and ceremony, marchi ng, riffie marksmanship,
armed and unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics, military
courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
Grinstead is a 2000 graduate of Wahama High School in
Mason, WVa. and the son of Dorothy Circle of Racine and
Richard Grinstead of Clifton, WVa .

Lenten breakfast held
POMEROY- About 15' area churches were represented at
the annual Lenten Breakfast and Quiet Hour observance at
Trinity Congregational· Church on Ash Wednesday
The welcome was given by Karen Crossma11 followed by a
light breakfast prepared by the women nf the church. The program began with special music by members of the Trinity
choir singing "He Did It All fOI' Me", accompanied by Mary
Stewart. A call to meditation WaR given by Gny Perrin and a
respotuive reading on sin a11d forgiveness was led by Linda
Mayer.
Following the singing of the hymn "Be11eath the Cross of
Jesus" Dianne Hawley read the story of Judas' betrayal from the
book of Matthew with the Rev. Craig Crossman assuming the
costunie and character ofJudas for the presentation of "Thirty
Pieces of Silver."
Donations received were sent to the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Road. To get on the agenda,
MONDAY
contact
the clerk at 378·6149
RACINE - Racine Village
prior
to
the
meeting.
Council, 7 p.m ., municipal
building.
SYRACUSE - Salisbury
Township
Trustees, Tuesday, 6
LfiTART FALLS - Letart
p.m.
town
hall.
Twp. Trustees, 5 p.m., office
building .
MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
port
Youth League, 6:30 p.m:
POMEROY- Musical Mon·
Tuesday,
Middleport VIllage
days at God's NET, 3 to 5:30
Council
chambers.
p.m. Free meals, games and
guitar lessons lor youth.
MIDDLEPORT- Ladies lor
POMEROY - Meigs Band the Lord, Bible study, 9 am.
Boosters, 6:30 in band room at Tuesday, Abundant Grace
Meigs High. Spring activities Church . All denominations
welcome.
to be planned.

cial events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales
or lund raisers ol any type.
Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be ·
guaranleed to be printed a
specilic
number ol days.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Athlelic Association, 6:30 p.m., Eastern Public
Library. Public invited.

County Health Dept., 1 to 7
p.m., ·112 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy. ' Bring shot records .
Child must be accompanied by
parenl or legal guardian.

ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m, home
of Osie Follrod, clerk.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - . Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday,
POMEROY - Terrilic Tues· 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m., day at God's NET, 3 to 5:30 Church, Pomeroy.
p.m . Free meal, games·J ·a nd
· Syracuse Village Hall. .
The Communily Calendar is
cralts for youth.
published
as a tree service to
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
non·profil groups wishing to
POMEROY
Childhood
Water Board, 7 p.m.
immunization clinic, Meigs announce meetings and speRACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order ol Eastern Star,
7:30 p.m. Mock initiation,
relreshments.
'

POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation Dis, lrlct Board ol Supervisors,
special session, 11 ~ . m . B+M
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
Area Holiness Association's
indoor camp meeting, Middle·
port Church ol the Nazarene,
through March '11, 7 p.m.
except March 11 , 6 p.m.
Howard Rickey, speaker;
music by The Slssons.

answers.
C1111 todiiJ for a
free rollover kit.
311 Fourlh St., Maliltta. OH 45750

~

They will figure it out . These days,
blended families are comn1on.

Dear Ann Landers: I read the
letter about usin g mint- flavored
toothpic k s to ove rc o me th e urge to
smoke. I start ed smoking at age 11 .
and made my first attempt to quit

wh en I w as 20. [ thought toothpicks might be a re ~sonabl e substitute, although I didn't care for the
mint ones. I liked the taste of wood.
Well, [ didn't stay off the c iga~
rettes, but I mana ged to be co me

addic ted to toothpi cks. There are
boxes of them in e ve ry shirt poc ket
I own. l finally quit smokin g at the
age of 40 , but I still chew o n toorhpicks cwry day.- Calgar y, Canada
Dear Calgary : Che wing on
toothpic k s will n o t cau se you to di e
from lun g can cer or e mphys~ma .

You made a ~ood trade.

SOCIAL
SECURITY
COLUMN
Remt-1nber, all So cial
Many Social Security
form s are free . For
Inore information , log o nto
Security forms www. ssa.gov or ca ll our
toll -free number, 1-800found online 772-i2
13 .
BY VALREA THOMPSON

Social Security now has
more than 65 commonly
requested Social Security
forms, well organized and
ready to download, on its
Internet site, www.ssa.gov.
Claims forms that can help

More than retirement.
You may not know it,
but Social Security is more
than a retirement progrom .
Social Security also pays
benefits to four. million di sa bled workers · and their
families too ... and to more

you prepare for your inter-

than seven milli on survivors

view with Social Security .
are now available. In addition, you'll be informed
about what information
you will need when you
apply .for benefits .
The forms are divided

of deceased workers including almos t two million children. In all, more than 45
million people cou nt on
regular monthly benefits

SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER

into five catagories:
• Benefit claims formsgives you an idea of. the
questions we will ask when
you apply for benefits ond
help you prepare for the
intervie'~· You do not need
to complete the form
before you apply.
• Benefit claims supporting forms-generally used bv
poole who have already
applied for benefm or are in
the proccu of appiying.
They are not required in all
caseswe will let. you know
when you need to compkte
one of these forms.
• Other forms-used to
access many of our programs and services.
• Forms for other age ncies-provided by Soc ial
Security for your convenience. Questions about the
forms should be addressed
to the agency re sponsible
for the form .
• Online transactions ... ca n
be co mpleted and submitted to Social Security's
website, Social Security
Online.

from Social Secur ity. So the
next titne you th ink of
Social Security, remembe r,

Social Security is for people
of all ages .
Facts about
Social Security
• The average mo)Hhly
Social Security benefit fo r
an aged widow(cr) is $81 1
in 200 1.
• Women ca n r~: t;;l.·ivc
widow's benefit! if they arc
age 60 or olde1·. If the)' arc
disabled, they ''"1 get
widow's b~.:ndits ;\~ ~.·arly ils
age 50 .
· Household workers'
wages an: cov~.· n~d und!!r
Social Secmity if they ,..•
$1,100 or more in a yea r,
unless the worke r is under
age 18 and the househo ld
work is not his or her principal job.
' If a woman waits u ntil

her full reti re ment age, her
wife's

ret ire tn en t benefit

will b e 50 pe rcent of the
amount her husband is entitled to at his full reti re m en t
age.

DOTICE Of FIRST PUBLIC HEftRinG

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first two public hearings at
the office of the Meigs County Commissioners. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio,
on March 15, 2001, at 10:00 a.m. for the purpose or providing the public
information and receiving comments as to the notice of acceptance of pre·
applications for grant funding from the USDA Rural Development Housing
Preservation Grant Program for housing rehabilitation or home repair
programs.
The Rural Development Housing Preservation Program provides grant
funding to qualified public agencies, private non-profit organizations, and other
eligible entities to assist very low-low income home owners repair and
rehabilitate their homes in rural areas. The average grant has been $75,000
based on previous awards and funding.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on March 15, 2001 , to make
suggestions and to provide public input on various activities which may be
undertaken in this program.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped material,
assistive listening device, other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria
Kloes, Clerk, prior to March 15, 2001, at (740) 992-2895 in order to ensure
that your needs will be accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is
handicapped accessible.
·
·
Written comments will be accepted until1 0:00 a.m., April 17, 2001, and may
be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
•
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

740.376-9186
TUESDAY
Olive
REE.DSVILLE .
800·726-84 12
Township Trustees , r e g u l a r u : l
John.M111er0 RJFS.com
meeting, 6:30 p.m . al the •.,.ww·. r&amp;!lr11&lt;•01,.1,cl"ll!r•n·,~"ll.·,:"c)"niiiJ•~hr!l(~~i!lltr
. ~------J~---.--------------------------------~---------------------J
townshiP oflice on J /ppaL•·----------~~----~--------Aw_•_m_o_R-JF_s_
'/)

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Moncl.y, Maldl

s. 2001

-: The Daily Sentinel
'

-

Dear Ann Landers: I read the
letter from "Canadian Followers"
who didn't bother to show up at ;n
outdoor wedding because it was
raining. They were shocked when
they later received a bill from the
bride and groom for the cost of
their meals. I can certainly sympathize With those newlyweds. I wish
I'd had the nerve to send a bill to
some of the guests who didn't show
up at my wedding.
.
My husband and I had four couples who never bothered to RSVP
and two others who sent back rep!;
cards saying they "would be there
with bells on," and then didn't show
up. None of them called or wrote
to apologize for thei r rudene;s, and,
of course. they never sent a gtft,
either.
A bride can spend months trying
to m ake her wedding perfect, from
the fo od to th e se"ting arrange-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

· Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Lelten to tht editor 4ft wtltome. They should Nlesr tltnn 300 words. All Nrrtn
tire rubjtctto tdilint ond mrut be slgtttd tJnd indUJh IU!drtsr and telephone number.
/YIJ Ulllitntd letten wUI IH pl.lblilhttl. Utttn slroulll be in good /astt1 tUIJressing
Urws, not personu.litin.
Tht opinionr txprtutd i11 lht co/uiHn ~low on the cons,rsus tiftht Ohio Volley
fublirhint Co. '1 editorial botu'd, unleu 01herwise noted.

NATIONAL VIEWS

ic?
•

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Amendment ·g uarantees freedom of music, not free music ....

Napster had, in effect, appealed on the basis that sharing
mus1c over the Internet was no different from taping a TV
show to watch later or giving a friend a tape of favorite tunes.
The court, however, determined that taping a TV show on a
VCR or recording a compact disc on a tap e to play in the car
is limited in scope, largely for personal use and not used for
profit.
~umerous other sites exist on the Internet to exchange
ffiUSIC ....

. Enf?rcing any ban oil musi~-swapping will be difficult, especially 1f compames outs1dc the United States take over the

enterprise.

The music industry must adapt and learn to use the new
tech~ology to its advantage. That means coming up with a way
to d1stnbute muSi c onlme so that customers are less likely to
copy it illegally.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 5, the 64th day of2001. There are
301 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
()n March 5, 17:0, the Boston Massac re took place as
Brmsh sold1ers who d been taunted by a crowd of colonists
opened fire, killing five people.
On this date:
In 1849, Zachary Taylor took the ·oath of office at his pres- '
·
idential inauguration.
In 1868, the Senate was organized into a. Court of
· Impeachment to decide charges against President Andrew
. Johnson.
In 1933, in German parliamentary elections, the Nazi
Party won 44 percent of th e vote, enabling it to join with the
Nationalists to .gain a slender majority in she Reichstag.
In 1946, Wmston Churchill delivered his famous "Iron
Curtain" speech at Westminster College in Fulton, Mo.
.
In 1953, Soviet dictator josef Stalin died at age 73 after 29
years m power.
1
. In 1963, a private plane .crash near ·Camden, Tenn.,
claimed the lives of country music performers Patsy Cline;
"Cowboy" Copas and "Hawkshaw" Hawkins.
In 1970, a nucl.ear nonproliferation treaty went into effect
after 43 nations ratified it.
In 1976, the British pound fell below the equivalent of
two dollars for th e first time.
·
. In 1982, comedian john Belushi was found dead 'of a drug
overdose in a rented bungalow in Hollywood. He was 33.
In 1986, in Lebanon, Islamic Jihad issued a statement saying it had "executed" French hostage Michel Seurat, who
had been abducted almost a year earlier.
·
Ten years ago: Iraq repealed its annexation of Kuwait. The
Iraqis turned over 35 prisoners of war, including 15 Americans, to the Red Cross. An anti-Saddam Hussein uprising was
reported sweeping city after city in Iraq.
Five years ago: Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole swept
the "Junior Tuesday" primaries. Former Republican Rep.
Enid Greene Waldholtz, tangled in a financial mess that she
blamed on her estranged husband, announced she would not
seek a second term.
One year ago: Israel's Cabinet voted unanimously to withdraw its troo ps from south. l ebanon by th e following July.

•

Here's the test for compassionate conservatism
George W Bush strongly supports
increasing the involvement of faith-based
organizations in salutary government
activities. The president, therefore, would
be well-advised to. consult a recent publication of the National Conference of
Catholic Bishops, an organization I came
to know through my friendship with the
late Cardinal John O'Connor.

release than they were when they entered
these human warehouses. And those who
are mentally disturbed become much

wo;~~ bishops make ano'ther po'int that

Nat
H·e ntoff

Titled "Responsibility, Rehabilitation
and Restoration: A Catholic Perspective
on Crime and Criminal Justice," the
COl,UMNIST
statement, say the bishops, "is a major iniTh Cath li b' h
ha
· 1
tiative that is going to engage us pastorally and in advocacy·for years to come."
e
o c IS ops ve previous y
called for an end to the death: l enalty, and
In presenting the document, Cardinal h
k
· I'
Roger Mahony of Los Angeles empha- t ey spea again on that issu~)"!ncreasing
sized, "We will not tolerate the crime and reliance on the. death penalty diminishes
us and is a sign of growing disrespect for
violence that threatens the lives and dig- ·' human life." (Abortion is another form of
nity of our sisters and brothers, and we disrespect for human life.)
will not give up on those who have lost
•'We cannot overcome crime," the
their way and have been caught up in statement continues, "by simply execut1'ng crmu''nals, nor can "'e
crime and punishment:'
~- restore the lives
T h e b ishops reject "simplistic solutions of the innocent by ending the lives of
such
· daas. 'three strikes· and
· 0you're· out'
fi and those convicted of the•'r murders.... The
mrn . tory senfttencmg.
ne-SJze- ts-all death penalty offers the tragic illusion
so
unons
are
o
en
inadequate.
com- that w. e can def&lt;.end life by .taking lifie."
b · t'
f
hili.
dThe
fl 'hili'
' wll)akslOll
tyh an
eltl· ty
Moreover," As bishops we believe that
b 0 accounta
·h h
or
est Wit t ose w o are. trymg to the current trend o_f more pns·ons and
· 1· "
change th e•r •ves.
more executions, with too little educaGoing aooinst th
·
.,e current move to tion and drug treatment, does not truly
treat young offienders as tho gh th
u
ey reflect Christian values and will not real·
were adults, the bishops emphatically ly leave our communities safer."
note that "placing children in aoult jails is
According to the bishop.s, our
a sign offailure, not a solution!'
"astounding rate of incarceration, six to
In what I expect will strike many,
,
including perhaps some Catholics, as twelve times higher 'than the rate of other
"bleeding-heart liberalism," the bishops Western countries," is due not only to
point out, "We cannot ignore the fact that "three strikes and you're opt," but also to
one-fifth of our preschoolers are growing "zero tolerance for drug o!fenders."
up in poverty and far too many go to bed
The bisbops also target the growing
hungry Any comprehensive app1;0ach to number of "supermax" prisons in which .
criminal justice must address these fac- the most dangerous offeqders are kept in
tors. ."
"small cells by themselvbs for 22 to 24
A good many of these children, espe- hours each day:'
'dally in families with single mothers: are
I've reported on some1? f these priso~.
victims of the Clinton and Republlcan Such extreme isolation makes many of
we~are •:reform."
· 1
the prisoners more dangerous upon th'eir

is often ignored by those who accuse
critics of the present system ofbeing "soft
on criminals": We increasingly locate
prisons, says the statement, "in remote
areas far away from coi:nmunities where
most crimes are committed," which "creates hardships on families of inmates"
because oft)le distances they have 10 trave.l to visit family members in prison.
"Being away from support systems is
'all hard
ffi
espec1 y
on juvenile&lt;;&gt; enders, who
need family and community support," the
bishops write. "Regular inmate contact
with f:upily and friends reduces the likelihood they will rerurn to a life of crime."
Distant prisons also make it easier for
the rest of us to avoid thinking about the
burgeomng
·
·
num b ers o f incarcerated
Americans - and the abandonment of
the very idea of rehabilitation by those
who run prisons. Accordinglv, unless
there is a prison riot; the media ' keeps
'
us
comfortably ignorant of the conditions in
.
some of these prisons - conditions that
greatly
· disturbed Charles Dickens when
he visited American prisons in the 19th
cenrury.
ThUingly, much of the media have
completely ignored the message of the
bishops.
The bishops also speak of the need for
more attention to the victinJS of crime:
"Too often the criminal justice system
neglects the hurt and needs of victims or
seeks to exploit their anger and pain to
support punitive policies." And the mere
punitive the policies, the more recidivists
our prisons breed.

(Na/ Hentoff is a natiotl&lt;llly rencwned
authority on the First 'Amendment and the
Bill of Rights.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Home builders ask, 'so.what~ a recession?'
BY JOHN CUNNFF
NEW YORK - Has the housing
market lost its . role as an econolnic
weather vane? Or has it . kept ,·ts deft
touch ~ an indicator?
. In years gone by it was generally
VJew.ed as a g.ood barometer of the econd c
h fi
fi 1 h efli
0 my s 1re non, t e mt to ee t e
ect
of a downturn and a solid gauge also of
an economy's impro'ring health.
But now, amid $1oomy stock forecast~, sh. arp consumer confidence.
decli nes m ·.D ecemb er an d january. and
mamlfactunng slowdowns, measurements of housing activity remain among
the hi~est o.f the emire expans~on.
ThiS, despite SIX mterest rate mcreases
by the Federal Reserve within a 15month period, all aimed at slowing the
economy to a trot rather than a gallop.
. Hous~ng starts and new home sales
dtd dedme from 1999 to 2000, but by
e~sion rather than collapse, while home
pnces, ~wnersh1p rates
mediap.newhome SIZe rose to expans!on-era highs.
The NatiOnal Association of Home
Builders does not expect a.general ec~normc r~ces.SJon , and IS ac~lVlty stat~sttCJ
clo not mdJCate one, whiCh puts It at

an?

.,.

Monday, March 5,1001

how.ever, live near my father, and
are much closer to her. All of their
children call her "Grandma."
I have mixed feelings about this.
[ have no problems with this
woman. She has always been very
cumstances prevent them from nice to me. We are planning to
doing so, they should send a note of move closer to Dad, and hope to
apology and a gift to make up for have a better relationship. However,
ADVICE
my children already have two
their absence.
grandmothers. Would having three
D~ar Ann Landers: I read the
ments. C han ces are, the bride and letter from the woman who was "Grandmas" confuse them? Would
groom are only able to invite a por- reluctant to introduce her mother's it be bad manners for the kids to
tion of the people they want. If new husband as "stepfat her" call her by her first name, as I do'
someone doesn't attend, it is not because she barely knew him . l Please advise me. l don't want to
only disrespectful to the couple and have a similar problem, and hope mess things up. - Mannerly Mindcosts them money on food and your advice will help me.
ed Mom in Geo rgia
drink, but it has also prevented
Dear Mannerly Mom: In situMy parents were divorced when
them from inviting someone else l was a teenager. My father remar- ations such as you rs, it would be
who wou ld have enjoyed the cele- ri ed soon after I joined the military. best to ask the woman which she
bration - even in the rain.
I h ave seen my stepmo ther three wo uld prefer, " Grandma" or her
Weddings are a huge emotio nal, times in the last 10 years. My chil- firs t name. Put the ballm her c o urt,
as well as financial, investment. dren have seen her twice. I barely and let her lob it over the net. Don't
Lousy weather is no excuse to drop know the woman. My si blings, worry about .confusing the kids.

Ann
.Landers

out at the last minute. - Kate in
New York
Dear Kate: You are right. People who RSVP and say they will
attend a wedding. or any other formal affair, should show up. If cir-

SOCI.ETY SCRAPBOOK

Despite fame} remembe~
Earnhardt was mortal
• The News-Journal of Daytona Beach, on Dale Earnhardt~ death: It's easy to be swayed by the mythic nature of Dale
Earnhardt's' life and death ...
Polishing the myth eases the pain of losing the man. It distracts from the realization that racing is a blood sport. Earnhardt was the fourth driver to die in less than nine months, but
his death will make the greatest impact.
Maybe better safety equipment would have saved Earnhardt ...
Some have said that tragedy is just part of the game .. .
On the track, Earnhardt was one of the boldest and seemingly least vulnerable. He was one of the last drivers to wear an
old-fashioned open-face helmet. He visibly chafed at new safety regulations, saying they were a disservice to fans who wanted to see races the way he wanted to run th em.
If Earnhardt could have seen the reaction to his death maybe
he would have rethought what fans really want.
In Sunday's aftermath, one thing is clear. They didn't want
this.
• The (Rock Hill, S,C.) Herald, 011 music swappi11g on the
Internet: Napster may be on its way out, but America's music
industry still has to contend with the unregulated swapping of
copyrighted songs on the Internet....
· As officials with the Freedom Forum noted, the First

Page AS

Reader says bad weather is no excuse to drop wedding plans

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74().992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

By the Bend

•

odds with contrary evidence now circulacing among stock •market an\1 other
forecasters.
In "~act , the NAH
. B's own ''n - house
survey o £800 builders,' based on responses to questions regarding ~es, subdivision traffic and builder expectations, rose
.in February after dipping in January aqd
, December.
.
David Seiders NAHB economist
riow expects to se; fh~ econo;..._y grow a;
just 1 percent "or a IIi! below" this quarter, rise to 2 percen.J.!n the second quarter and to 3.5 pen:eht in the third and
fourth quarters.
1·
Bruce ·Smith, NA.HB president and
head ofBrUGe Smith Quality Homes in
Walnut Creek, CallE., believes the critical
factor in the econQtl1y is consumer confidence, . which dropped abruptly in
December and january
'·
He points · tq factors that could
change that, especially a "very, very
active" federal Reserve that has already
cut interest rates twice and is expected
by the NAHB to add two more halfpoint cuts. And the NA.HB would hope
to. further encourage sales by allowing
wtthdrawals front Individual Retirement
;

Accounts for homebuying.
Aside fiom consumer confidence and
other strictly economic factors, there are
·
d.•ents in the housing market,
mgre
demographic mainly, that builders see as
supportive of sales over the next decade .
c

•·or example, ownership rates 'IIIlong
25- to 35-year-olds are still below where
they were in 1979 and 1980, and ownership among minorities, while steadily
growing, still has far .t o go to catch up
with whites.
. Census Bureau figures show that
American home ownership, at 67.5 percent in 2000, has been inching higher
since 1993 and 1994, when it was at 64
percent, but possession is heavily skewed
toward the elderly. Levels last year
reached a peak of 83,8 percent among
ages 70-74 before tailing off to 77.7 per. cent among those 75 and older.
To get the overall percentage as high ·
as 70 would require not just a con tinuation of gains by minorities,,but in pro.viding more opportunities for potential
buyers in the 25 to 34 age group.

.

aohn Cunniff is a business analyst for Tht
Associated Press.)

,.

ed with an emotiona l ceremony where recruits were present-

. Military news

ed th e Marine Corps Emble m and were addressed as

Aavon M. Frechette
MIDDLEPORT- Marine Corps Pvt. Aavon M. Frechette
recently completed basic training . at Marine Co rps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
·
Frechette successfully completed 12 weeks · of training
destgned to challenge new Marine recruits both physically and
·
mentally.
Frechette and fellow recruits began th eir training at 5 a.m.,
!. by running three miles and performing talisthenics. In addition to the physical conditioning program, Frechette spent
numerous hours in classroom and field assignments, which
included learning first-aid, uniform regulations, combat water
, survival, marksmanship, hand- to-hand combat, and assorted
•. weapons training. They performed close order drills and oper~ ated as a small infantry unit during field training.
:
Frechette and other recruits also received instruciibn on the
·. Marine Corps' coi:e values-honor, courage and coll}mittment. and what those words mea'n in guiding personal a~ d professional Conduct.

Frechette ended the training phase with the Cr~cible, a 54- hour team effort, problem solving evolution which culminated with an emotional ceremony where recruits .were present, ed the Marine Corps Emblem and were addressed as
, "Marines" for the first time since boot camp beg•n.
Frechette is a 2000 graduate of.Meigs, ,J-Iig~ School •pd is
·
• the son of Rebecca A. and Ronald A; Frechette of,!\1jddleport.
Levi R. Burns
MIDDLEPORT -- Marine Corps Pvt. Levi R. Burns
recently completed basic training at Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
-. Burns successfully completed 12 weeks of training designed
to challenge new Marine recruits both physically and mental. ~
.
,
Burns and fellow recruits began their training at 5 a.m., by
running three miles and performing calisihenics. In addition to
the physical conditim1ing program, Burns spent nulnerou·s
hours in classroom and field assignments, which included
learning flnt-aid, uniform regulations, combat water survival,
marksmanship, hand-to-hand cmnbat, and assoited weapom
training. They performed close order drills and operated as n
sntall infantry unit during field training.
Burns and other recruit! also received instruction 011 the
Marine Corps' core values-honor, courage and conunittmentand what those words mean in guiding personal and professional conduct.
Burns ended the training phase with the Crucible, a 54hour team effort, problem solving evolution which culminat-

11

Marines 11 for the first time sin ce boot camp began.

Burns is a 2000 groduate of Meigs High School and the so n
of Debbie and David Schuler of Middlepor t.
Andrea M. Neutzling ,
CHESHIRE-- Army Pvt. Andrea M . Neutzling has graduated from military training at Fort Leonard Wood, Waynseville,
Mo.
During the training, Buckinghatn received instruction in
drill and ceremonies, weapons, map . re ading, tactics, military
courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
Neutzling is a 2000 grad11at~ of River Valley High School in
Cheshire and is the daughter of Brenda and Michael A. Neutzling of Pomeroy.
Michael T. Grinstead
CLIFTON, WVa . -- Army Pvt. Micha el T. Grinstead has
graduated from basic cotnbat training at Fort Jackson, Columbia, S.C.
During the training, the soldier re ceived instruction and
practice in drill and ceremony, marchi ng, riffie marksmanship,
armed and unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics, military
courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
Grinstead is a 2000 graduate of Wahama High School in
Mason, WVa. and the son of Dorothy Circle of Racine and
Richard Grinstead of Clifton, WVa .

Lenten breakfast held
POMEROY- About 15' area churches were represented at
the annual Lenten Breakfast and Quiet Hour observance at
Trinity Congregational· Church on Ash Wednesday
The welcome was given by Karen Crossma11 followed by a
light breakfast prepared by the women nf the church. The program began with special music by members of the Trinity
choir singing "He Did It All fOI' Me", accompanied by Mary
Stewart. A call to meditation WaR given by Gny Perrin and a
respotuive reading on sin a11d forgiveness was led by Linda
Mayer.
Following the singing of the hymn "Be11eath the Cross of
Jesus" Dianne Hawley read the story of Judas' betrayal from the
book of Matthew with the Rev. Craig Crossman assuming the
costunie and character ofJudas for the presentation of "Thirty
Pieces of Silver."
Donations received were sent to the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Road. To get on the agenda,
MONDAY
contact
the clerk at 378·6149
RACINE - Racine Village
prior
to
the
meeting.
Council, 7 p.m ., municipal
building.
SYRACUSE - Salisbury
Township
Trustees, Tuesday, 6
LfiTART FALLS - Letart
p.m.
town
hall.
Twp. Trustees, 5 p.m., office
building .
MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
port
Youth League, 6:30 p.m:
POMEROY- Musical Mon·
Tuesday,
Middleport VIllage
days at God's NET, 3 to 5:30
Council
chambers.
p.m. Free meals, games and
guitar lessons lor youth.
MIDDLEPORT- Ladies lor
POMEROY - Meigs Band the Lord, Bible study, 9 am.
Boosters, 6:30 in band room at Tuesday, Abundant Grace
Meigs High. Spring activities Church . All denominations
welcome.
to be planned.

cial events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales
or lund raisers ol any type.
Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be ·
guaranleed to be printed a
specilic
number ol days.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Athlelic Association, 6:30 p.m., Eastern Public
Library. Public invited.

County Health Dept., 1 to 7
p.m., ·112 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy. ' Bring shot records .
Child must be accompanied by
parenl or legal guardian.

ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m, home
of Osie Follrod, clerk.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - . Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday,
POMEROY - Terrilic Tues· 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m., day at God's NET, 3 to 5:30 Church, Pomeroy.
p.m . Free meal, games·J ·a nd
· Syracuse Village Hall. .
The Communily Calendar is
cralts for youth.
published
as a tree service to
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
non·profil groups wishing to
POMEROY
Childhood
Water Board, 7 p.m.
immunization clinic, Meigs announce meetings and speRACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order ol Eastern Star,
7:30 p.m. Mock initiation,
relreshments.
'

POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation Dis, lrlct Board ol Supervisors,
special session, 11 ~ . m . B+M
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
Area Holiness Association's
indoor camp meeting, Middle·
port Church ol the Nazarene,
through March '11, 7 p.m.
except March 11 , 6 p.m.
Howard Rickey, speaker;
music by The Slssons.

answers.
C1111 todiiJ for a
free rollover kit.
311 Fourlh St., Maliltta. OH 45750

~

They will figure it out . These days,
blended families are comn1on.

Dear Ann Landers: I read the
letter about usin g mint- flavored
toothpic k s to ove rc o me th e urge to
smoke. I start ed smoking at age 11 .
and made my first attempt to quit

wh en I w as 20. [ thought toothpicks might be a re ~sonabl e substitute, although I didn't care for the
mint ones. I liked the taste of wood.
Well, [ didn't stay off the c iga~
rettes, but I mana ged to be co me

addic ted to toothpi cks. There are
boxes of them in e ve ry shirt poc ket
I own. l finally quit smokin g at the
age of 40 , but I still chew o n toorhpicks cwry day.- Calgar y, Canada
Dear Calgary : Che wing on
toothpic k s will n o t cau se you to di e
from lun g can cer or e mphys~ma .

You made a ~ood trade.

SOCIAL
SECURITY
COLUMN
Remt-1nber, all So cial
Many Social Security
form s are free . For
Inore information , log o nto
Security forms www. ssa.gov or ca ll our
toll -free number, 1-800found online 772-i2
13 .
BY VALREA THOMPSON

Social Security now has
more than 65 commonly
requested Social Security
forms, well organized and
ready to download, on its
Internet site, www.ssa.gov.
Claims forms that can help

More than retirement.
You may not know it,
but Social Security is more
than a retirement progrom .
Social Security also pays
benefits to four. million di sa bled workers · and their
families too ... and to more

you prepare for your inter-

than seven milli on survivors

view with Social Security .
are now available. In addition, you'll be informed
about what information
you will need when you
apply .for benefits .
The forms are divided

of deceased workers including almos t two million children. In all, more than 45
million people cou nt on
regular monthly benefits

SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER

into five catagories:
• Benefit claims formsgives you an idea of. the
questions we will ask when
you apply for benefits ond
help you prepare for the
intervie'~· You do not need
to complete the form
before you apply.
• Benefit claims supporting forms-generally used bv
poole who have already
applied for benefm or are in
the proccu of appiying.
They are not required in all
caseswe will let. you know
when you need to compkte
one of these forms.
• Other forms-used to
access many of our programs and services.
• Forms for other age ncies-provided by Soc ial
Security for your convenience. Questions about the
forms should be addressed
to the agency re sponsible
for the form .
• Online transactions ... ca n
be co mpleted and submitted to Social Security's
website, Social Security
Online.

from Social Secur ity. So the
next titne you th ink of
Social Security, remembe r,

Social Security is for people
of all ages .
Facts about
Social Security
• The average mo)Hhly
Social Security benefit fo r
an aged widow(cr) is $81 1
in 200 1.
• Women ca n r~: t;;l.·ivc
widow's benefit! if they arc
age 60 or olde1·. If the)' arc
disabled, they ''"1 get
widow's b~.:ndits ;\~ ~.·arly ils
age 50 .
· Household workers'
wages an: cov~.· n~d und!!r
Social Secmity if they ,..•
$1,100 or more in a yea r,
unless the worke r is under
age 18 and the househo ld
work is not his or her principal job.
' If a woman waits u ntil

her full reti re ment age, her
wife's

ret ire tn en t benefit

will b e 50 pe rcent of the
amount her husband is entitled to at his full reti re m en t
age.

DOTICE Of FIRST PUBLIC HEftRinG

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first two public hearings at
the office of the Meigs County Commissioners. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio,
on March 15, 2001, at 10:00 a.m. for the purpose or providing the public
information and receiving comments as to the notice of acceptance of pre·
applications for grant funding from the USDA Rural Development Housing
Preservation Grant Program for housing rehabilitation or home repair
programs.
The Rural Development Housing Preservation Program provides grant
funding to qualified public agencies, private non-profit organizations, and other
eligible entities to assist very low-low income home owners repair and
rehabilitate their homes in rural areas. The average grant has been $75,000
based on previous awards and funding.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on March 15, 2001 , to make
suggestions and to provide public input on various activities which may be
undertaken in this program.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped material,
assistive listening device, other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria
Kloes, Clerk, prior to March 15, 2001, at (740) 992-2895 in order to ensure
that your needs will be accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is
handicapped accessible.
·
·
Written comments will be accepted until1 0:00 a.m., April 17, 2001, and may
be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
•
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

740.376-9186
TUESDAY
Olive
REE.DSVILLE .
800·726-84 12
Township Trustees , r e g u l a r u : l
John.M111er0 RJFS.com
meeting, 6:30 p.m . al the •.,.ww·. r&amp;!lr11&lt;•01,.1,cl"ll!r•n·,~"ll.·,:"c)"niiiJ•~hr!l(~~i!lltr
. ~------J~---.--------------------------------~---------------------J
townshiP oflice on J /ppaL•·----------~~----~--------Aw_•_m_o_R-JF_s_
'/)

�Page A&amp;

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Group buys stake in Building
NEW YORK (AP) - A Germon investment group has
bought a 75 percent shore in the Chrysler Building for $300
million, The New York Times reported Monday.
The group, TMW, will own the majority share in the 77story Art Deco londmark, but the building's current owners,
Tishman Speyer Properties and Travelers Group will retain
operating control over the tower.
·
Included as part of the deal was the 32-story Kent Building, which is odjocent to the Chrysler tower.

·Conditions hamper recov.ery

Mond.y, M•rch 5, 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President Dick Cheney has one wand for
Democrats and Republicans alike who
want to spend more than President Bush's
budget plan allows: veto.
"If, in fact, bills come down with items
in it that he thinks are inappropriate or
excessive in terms of the total amount, I
don't think he will be bashful about using
his veto," Cheney said Sunday on CBS'
"Face the Nation." "I think we'll come to
something very close to what the president
has recommended."
Only days ago, budget writers in the
House and Senate questioned whether
t)1ey could stay within the spending levels
Bush has proposed - a 4 percent annual
increase for discretionary programs, which
constitute everything the government

does, except automatically paid benefits
such as Social Security, and Medicare.
Cheney was respo~g to a question
about comments by Ilk Senote Budget
Committee chairman, Republican Pete
Domenici of New Mexico, that the 4 percent increase would be "very hard to live
on" and that Congress haS different spending priorities than the GOP administration.
. In the House, committfe chairmen have
raised the possibility ofhifl:her sp~nding on
agriculture and science, for example.
•
Cheney's remarks som;tded a warning
that any bills sent to the White House that
spend more than the 4 percent increase
Bush has allotted will be l{e\oed, including
those from Republicans.
Over the past th ree yea~s . discretionary

spending has increased by an average of
more than 6 percent annually. Last year, it
grew by 8 112 percent, which the vice
president said was unacceptable.
"As soon as the surplus arrived, Congress and the prior administration started
spending money in a rather profligate fashion;' said Cheney. dismissing the notiqn
that Bush is trying tb starve the govern-

Navy prepares for court

Mayor tours quake damage

Mori survives vote

Officials seek to keep spy jailed
fO

"'Pfft' l@ilds

packln'f

Nancy christens Reagan .carrier.

Israeli troops
kill Palestinian.
.

Swiss state bids adieu to Rich .

&lt;

No neo-Nazi materials found

Sleet and snow pounds Northeast

. NOTICE

10

THE PUBLIC

· Meigs County Intends to llPPIY to the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Rural Housing Service (RHS) for grant funds to aid In the preservation of
BY CARDUNE BYRNE
the south, the National Guard deployed 200
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
housing stock occupied by very low and low Income homeownere· In
troops ond was prepared to call in 10,000
The Northeast was buffeted by sleet, snow, reservists.
Meigs County.
rain and biting wind Monday, and the powerThe storm began os • mixture of rain, sleet
RHS Housing Preservation funds will be provided to eligible , ·.
ful storm threatened to wallop the region with and snow in many areas. It was expected ro
households through a defirrad loan program and· may bs used for the ·
up to 2 to 3 feet of snow before it was through.
change over to snow, with strong wind bringcoat of emergency and/or Frltlcal repairs to owner occupied hom,a •':'d,
Winter storm watches were in effe~t from
ing blizzard or near-blizzard conditions. foreto remove or correct health and/or safety hazards, and for Improving
West Virginia to Maine, the National Weather
casting precise snow totals was tricky because
Service said.
· '
•
accssalblllty by handicapped persona.
warm ocean air was expected to delay the
By Monday morning, more than a foot of
The U.S.D.A., Rural Housing Service requires Meigs County to provide
changeover along the co.ast.
snow already reported in parts of Steuben ond
the public with an opport~nlty for commen~s on the proposed project to
Over the weekedd, people heeded the
Schuyler counties in upstate New York. lnlond
warnings an'd cleaned our hardware store supassure that the proposed Housing Preservation Grant Progrim Ia
areas of Pennsylvania, western Virginia and
of
snow
shovels
and
stocked
up
on
:
bread
plies
beneficial and does not !plicate curran. t activities and to make available
western Maryland reported 6 inches of snow
and qlilk.
had fallen by late Sunday.
for public review the St• mant of ActlyiU,a, which ol.rtllnea the planned
"I've
had
numerous
customers
rake
two
'
School ;ystems across the region canceled
proposed program to b submitted to the R'HS for conalder•tlon for
classes for Monday, and county and state offi- carts of stuff, like they're going to get snowed
funding.: The Meigs County Housing Preservation Statement of Actlvltlea
cials urged residents to avoid unnecessary trav- in for the weekend, like we're back in 'Lir.rle
Ia avallable and may bti reviewed at the Melgi County Annex; Gr•nta
House on the Prairie' times," said Joe Jancsarel.
.
Office, 117 East Me~T~t)!,lal Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio during tha normal
In Massach usetts, snow began falling in ics, manager at Redner's Warehouse Market in
.
bualneaa hours of 9:00. ~m. to 5:00 p.m.
. ,
,
much of the state before dawn Monday, while Trexlertown, Pa.
Delta,
Continental
and
other
airliJ1es
cansome eastern areas reported freezing rain and
A flttHn (15) day com.,.ent period ls required to allow for public review
celed dozens of flights into the Ne\v York metsleet.
of the proposed progr•m. Comments may be eubmlttad prior to 'March
New Jersey declared a state of emergency ropolitan area's La Guardia, Kennedy and
19, 2001 to tha Melga iCounty Commlealonara, Courthouea, Pomeroy,
and ordered government offices and courts Newark airports. New York City's 1.1 million
Ohio during the normal bualn•a hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Should
public school students were told to stay home
clos~d Monday.
·
the public h•ve •ny q~aatlons as to tills notice, they may contact J•n
.
"This is a matter of public safery," said New Monday.
"The storm is now mainly a Monday night Truaatll, Meigs County Grants Administrator at (740) 992·7t08.
· Jersey's acting Gov. Donald T. Difrancesco.

.

.

'

Today's Scoreboard, Page 86

Page 81.

Cheney says Bush will veto higher spending ·

ment.
.·
UNADILLA, Ga. (AP) - Military crews pulled the data
Under the preside!Jt's plan, th~ Sf&gt;'~ biland voice recorders from the wreckage of a National Guard
lion discretionary budget for fiscal 2001,
ca rgo plane but slick , muddy conditions hampered the
recovery of the 21 victims' ren1ains.
which begins this Oct. 1, would rise to
Rescue teams have waded through 3 feet of slippery mud
$661 billion in 2002. Increases would
caused by a 4-inch deluge of rain Saturday, when rhe C-23
come in education, defense, health research
Sherpa crashed in a field in south-central Georgia, killing
and embassy security, while cuts Would hit
everyone o n board.
·
·
at least 10 federal agencies, including the
" It's a quagmire," said Lt . Col. Deborah Bertrand, a
Interior and Transportation departments.
spo k e~woman at R o ~ins Air Force Base in Warner Robins
that had tracked the plane . " Re covery operations ·are going
to be dtfficult and protracted."
"Our goal is to solve this thing, do justice and get a con- to get his now controversial pardon from President Clinton.
Defen se o ffi ctals . have sent about 150 soldiers' and Air viction," Attorney General ·Philip McLaughlin said in an
While international and other Swiss public figures petiForrt.." perso nnd to the sire ro provide sec urity, remove the interview. "We haw fair trial obligations to the two young
bod1 t."" of tht" 21 N.ltiot1JI Guard m.e mbers and searc h for a men who we think were involved, and we're trying to meet tione!! Clinton on Rich's behalf, Mayor Christoph
Luchsinger and Vice Mayor Toni Guegler merely wrote a
(:I U SL' .
our obligations, and at the same time find a way to deal with
studi~sly polite letter to Rich on Dec. 5:
the n1edia frenzy."
"On your O\Vn request the City Council of Zug lconfirms
Robert Tulloch, 17, and James Parker, 16, are charged with
first-degree murder in the Jan . 27 stabbing deaths of Half the following : Mr. Marc Rich is known to the City CounHO NOLULU (AP) - One mother sobbed, clutching a and Susanne Zan top in their Hanover home near the Dart- cil of Zug for maay years as an international businessman
handkerchiei as a ukulele player strummed a melody writ- . mouth campus.·
and chairman of different firms registered in Zug. As a head
ten in re-membrance of the nine men and boys lost at sea.
McLaughlin said an ABC News report that invesrigatprs of rhis (sic) companies, Mr. Marc Rich always fulfilled his
Other rdanves cried and clasped leis. ·
found literature on neo-Nazistn, Holocaust revisionism and obligations and his duties to the City of Zug.
The oceanside memorial Sunday for those missing from a white supremacy in Tulloch's bedroom was false.
"The City Council of Zug is also aware. of the fact that
Japan ese fishing boat that was sunk by a U.S. submarine
"It was inaccurate," McLaughlin said of the report. "I have
Mr. More Rich has been very charitable for many years
came as the Navy prepared to convene a court of inquiry no idea what it was that they based their report on ."
within important projects."
into the fatal collision.
The formal investigative hearing, which begins Monday,
seeks to explain why the USS Greeneville rammed the
Ehime Maru on Feb. 9
SEATTLE (AP) -Mayor Paul Schell ducked under cau" We really need to be told what happened in 'the subma- tion tape, explored rubble-strewn buildings and reossured
TOKYO (AP) -Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori
rine," said Hirohisa Ishibashi, mayor of Uwajima, the boat's business. owners and residents Sunday that the city would survived his second no-confidence vote in Parliament on
hometown. "We have to do everything w~ can to prevent
help them recover from last week's 6 . ~ earthquake.
Monday, bu.t the win was . unlikely to ease the pressure on
anything like this from happening again."
"The buildings are all treasures," Schell said as he stopped
to talk with business owners in historic Pioneer Square, and him to go, with his popularity crushed by scandals and a
those whose homes were damaged by the largest earthquok.e stumbling economy.
to shake the area in 52 years.
·
The lower house of Parlioment voted 274-192 to defeat
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -The threat of Robert Philip · So far, the city has inspected more than 400 buildings, tqe no-confidence motion submitted earlier in the day by
Hanssen bolting and spilling more secrets
Moscow is so deeming 26 uninhabitable and 161 requiring "supervised four opposition parties. Mori, whose Liberal Democratf
great that he should remain in prison, government prosecu- entry." Initial ·estimates of damage in Seattle topped $40 hold a majority in the chamber, defeated a similar· measure
tors plan to tell a judge.
million, said Rick Krochalis, director of the city's Depart- in November.
Hal)ssen, an FBI counterintelligence agent accused of ment of Design, Constructiol) and Land Use.
~
.,
'
.
· · aroun d t h e reg1on
·
·1s est1mate
·
d at $ 2 b"ll"
S
.
The
v'o1ie
gave
Mons
enfeebled
government
a
resptte,
but
passing top-secret information to the Soviets, and later RusD a mage
1 1on. c1- . : 5
., ·.
·.
.
sians, for 15 years, was appearing in U.S. District~rt on entistt· ctedit&gt;•the quake's 33-mile depth.. from preventmg . 1~.,W.;'l·· -ci:\!,.t~.{!lif.. ~pecula~\9!\ .~a~. r~fe ,~~at he
worse drniage. Some 400 people suffered injuries,' most could ste.f. down·as soon as thiS week as the LOP readies for .
Monday for his detention hearing.
1ts annu~ party· convent10h March 13 and searches for o
The government was expected to ·ask the court- to keep. minor. · · ~
Hanssen jailed, arguing that its case against him is so strong
....,
success~ .
,
and the risks of freeing him too great for 'him to b!'rc!leased.
1'H•""rll1 ~
~Hannibal'
'pJ,.,tael( fliB*'e bn dre m.otioh.;,.·Parlianien't ,
The conditions of Hanssen's detention, such as when his
was fur , r humiliatio.q .f~r a prime 'm inister whose support
lawyers can see him, also could come up.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - . The box office went south of the ratings have fallen to under 10 percent.
border as "The Mexican" knocked "Hannibal" from the No.
.
.
·
I spot after three weeks.
The mob con~edy, starring Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt and
.
.
.
NEWPORT NEWS,Va. (AP)- Former first lady Nancy James Gandolfini of TV's "The Sopranos," debuted with
JERUSA~EM ;(A,h~ l~raeli troops killec\:'a ~alesrinlan in.
Reagan christened a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in the $20.3 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
name of her husband on their 49th wedding anniversary.
the gross-ot\t comedy "See Spot Run" overcame gener- an overnight shootout, and·'Israeli police ;wenr on nigh alert
Bur it was President Bush - not former President Rea- ally harsh reviews to debut in second place with SI 0.2 mil- Monday, setting aside other duties to concentrate on pregan- who stood at Mrs. Reagan's side Sunday as she broke lion.
venting Palestinian militant attacks after the latest deadly
a ceremonial bottle of American sparkling wine against the
"Hannibal" slipped to third place with $10.1 million.
bombing.
ship 's bow.
The overall box office was up again, with the top 12
Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharori stood poised to assum~
The former president, who turned 90 on Feb. 6, has movies grossing $76 million-· a 29 percent increase from
Alzheimer's disease and was home in California recovering the same weekend last year. Theater re"venues have risen powenhis week with the pledge to restore security to Israel
after rnore than five months of fighting with the Palestinievery weekend chis year.
·
from a broken hip he suffered in a fall in January.
Despite mixed reviews, "The Mexican" averaged a solid ans. ·1"
") want to thank the Navy for giving us such a wonderful present, such a little thing," Mrs. Reagan said of the mas- $6,879 a theater playing in 2, 951 cinemas, compared to
Sharon reached agreement with the ultra-Orthodox Shas
sive, $4 billion ship - the first carrier to ' be christened in $3,840 at 2,656 locations for "See Spot Run." .
Parryll." J' Sunday and .now has enough support for a majoa:
the name of a living former president.
· lty c~ltlon government. He was expected to present hiS
"I wish Ronnie were here," she said as the crowd cheered.
'gove~nment to parliament this we~k. possibly Oti W,tdnes"But somehow, I think he is."
day, and would take office if the coalition wins approval.
ZUG, Switzerland (AP) Zug hos bloomed into
Sh~n ~s most urgent task will be dealing with the escaSwitzerland's wealthiest state, its prettily preserved old town
·
. ,
·
surrounded by plush offtce towers and bustling factories and latm v10lence.
A olestinian bomber blew himself up and killed three
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -lnvestigotors did not find its suburbs home to hundreds of millionaires.
And so city leaders could afford to rebuff shadowy lsroe.!,js on Sunday in the coastal town ofNetanya. lt was the .
neo-Nazi materials in the home of one of the teen-agers
financier
Marc Rich - who for many years was Zug's seconp lethal bomb ottack in four days inside Israel. Also,
charged with killing rwo Dartmouth College professors,
biggest taxpayer and benefactor - when he asked for help seven Palestinians died in violence Friday and Saturday.
New Hampshire's top prosecutor said Sunday.

"This is about warning people, protecting people."
\
With 20 inches of snow expected in northern New Jersey and coastal flooding pos~ible in

The Daily Sentinel

to Tuesday event. The bulk of the heavy snow
will be occurring then," N ationa! Weather Service meteorologist Ralph lzzo said as the
storm edged north. ~~

Jeff Thornton, Preeldent
Melgl Board of CommlasloMra

4o '·

'

•

...

Monay, .rch 5, 2001

Duke shows Carolina who's boss in ACC

MONDAY'S

·HIGHLIGHTS

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Missing their inside presence, the
Duke Blue Devils stayed outside and
made ACC history.
With Jason WiUiams scoring 33
points and Shane Battier getting 25
points, 11 rebounds and five blocks,
the third- ranked Blue Devils went
14-for-38 frpm 3-poinr range Sunday
in a 95-81 victory over No. 6 North
Carolina.
·
Duke (26-4,' 13-3), playing without
injured starting center Carlos Boozer,
moved into a tie for first place with
the Tar Heels (23-5, 13-3), setting an
Atlantic Coast Conference record by

~esplaces ··

fourth In NAIA

national ii&amp;eet

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn.
;_ The University of Rio
Grande track and field squad
sent four qualifiers to the
NAIA National Meet on the
tampus East Tennessee State
University.
·
Freshman Matthew Boyles
linished fourth in the 3,000!netet race walk with a time
o£'14:07 .80. Boyles only took
up the event at mid-season
and ended up with a top-five
finish in the NAJA National
Championships.
Teammate Jim Robinson
Was fifth in the race walk with
tim:e of 14:41.76. There
were 12 competitors in the
race and four were disqualified.
Lachlan McDonald ofWisconsin-Parkside was the overevent winner with a time
of 12:40.92.
On the women's side,
junior Amy Metzler finished
12th in the weight throw
with a top effort of 45 feet, 11
1/4 inches.
Sophomore Ashly Roberts
was 13th in the weight thr:oW
With a best effort of 45 feet,
10 1/2 inches.
' April Haney of Eastern
Oregon was the overall event
champion with a throw of 53
feet, 7.5 inches. There were 29
co,wp~titors in the event.
.. Roberll · ~o threW in tlte
shot put and finished 18th,
one spot below her final ranking, with a heave of 38 feet,
3/4 inches.

winning or tying for its fifth straight
league tide.
"This is the result of coming to
work every single 'day with the dedication needed to be a champion,"
Battier said. "Not once, but five times .
That will be something to look back
on."
While it seemed everyone else was
worried about how Duke could make
up for the loss of Boozer, who broke
a bone in is right foot, the Blue Devils concentrated on other things.
"We came into this game not worrying about Xs and Os," said freshman
Chris Duhon, who had 15 points and

four assists in his first career start.
"This game was more about heart and
desire and a will to win. We knew we
were outsized, we knew we were
going against the world, but we had a
bigger heart, a bigger will to come out
and quiet all the critics."
Williams was 7-for-13 from 3-point
range, while Battier was 4-for-10 as.
the Blue Devils won in Chapel Hill
for the third straight year. The 38 3point attempts tied a school record set
earlier this season against North Carolina A&amp;T.
"The way they played broke our
rhythm," UNC coach Matt Doherry

Plose ... Top :as. 116

Mason,
Heat
too hot
forCavs

a

an

Recl•n sweep
Concord
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grartde
baseball team entered the
home opener of the 2001 season with five losses in its first
six games and wanted to show
the baseball world that that
start was ah aberration as they
posted Concord College,
which opened the season No.
30 in the NCAA Division II
preseason poll.
Rio. Grande (3-5) swept the
double dip, 4-1 and 4-3,
behind a pair of complete
game triuml'hs.
Freshman pitcher Tim Sutton (2-0) held Concord tl)
one run and five hits in seven
innings in the first game. Sutton also struck !)Ut three and
yielded rwo bases on balls.
• Rio started quickly, scoring
twice in the first inning, on a
two-run single by sophomore
backstop jason Romeo.
Romeo drove three of the
four runs, as he added an RBI
ground out in the fifth inning
for Rio's final run.
. Sophomore Adam Haip.es
dubbed his first home run of
the season in · the fourth
inning, All nine Rio Grande
batters came through with
base hits.
I[\ game two, Concord
jumped out to a 1-0 lead in
the first inning off lefty Brod
Campbell (1•1). The Redmen
would get a rwo-run blast off
the bat of Cory Maynard as
well as RBI knocks by Jarrod
Haines and Brent Ewing.
Maynard and Haines ripped
two hits apiece for the Redmen.
Campbell went the distance, .,yielding eight hits,
three .Uns and three walks
while striking out three batters in seven innings.
· Rio Grande prepares for a
busy week, with five double
headers on the schedule, a trip
to Pikeville College Thesday
hig{jights the week.
.

said. "I don't think we were real sharp
handling the basketball. You've got to
give them a lot of credit because they
came into a tough situation being a
man down."
In other games involving ranked
teanlS on Sunday, it was No. 4 Illinois
67, Minnesota 59; No. S. Florida 94,
No. 15 Kentucky 86; No.9 Kansas 75,
Missouri 59; No. 17 Syracuse 93, St.
John's 91 in double overtime; No. 18
Georgetown 79, No. 19 Notre Dame
72; No. 22 ·Wake Forest 76, North
Carolina State 58; and Dayton 65,

VIVA LAS VEGAS! - Jeff Gordon celebrates following his victory In the Las Vegas 400 Sunday, ending a
string of personal disappointments at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. (AP)

Rainbow Warrior rolls to
victory in Las Vegas 400 .
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Robbie Loomis
Last year, Gordon crashed m practiCe on Saturday
thought his luck in Las Vegas was changing when he and was never competitive in the race with the
won nearly $10,000. gainbling during an offseason repaired Monte Carlo.
test.
"We fixed the car instead of going to a backup and
The crew chiefs only. gamble Sunday came late in then, when we got home, we found our the frame
the UAW-DaimlerChrylser 400 when he chose to was bent," Loomis said. "It was terrible, terrible, tergive driver Jeff Gordon a two-tire pit stop to gain rible. When jeff Gordon is going from 10th to 40th,
some track position on Las Vegas Motor Speedway's that ain't good."
1 1/2-mile oval.
Gordon, a three-time champion, won $369,602
This one worked to perfection, roo.
· from the race purse and a $1 million bonus from the
"Robbie didn't gamble at all this weekend;' Gor- series sponsor. •
don said with a laugh. "He was afraid to because he
"Winning at this racetrack, as much as we've strugdidn't want to use up the luck he found during the gled here in the past, it means almost as much to ine
test.
,,
as the million dollars," he said.
"Tiris helps us all feel b~tter about coming to Las
"If we can run this strong at a track like this, we're
Vegas."
.·
off to a good start. We just need to keep doing what
Over the first three years that the Winston Cup we're doing and build on the momentum."
series has come to the trac~ 'im the north edge of this
The victory was his 53rd, tying Gondon with
desert gambling dey, Gondon has been left frustrated,
Plose see NASCAR. BJ
with finishes of 28th, third and 17th.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Randy Wittman's
plan for the Cleveland Cavaliers to outrun
Miami backfired.
"We made 22 turnovers, and that put them
out on the break," Wittman said after the
Heat defeated his team 91-79 Sunday night.
"We wanted to control the tempo, get some
easy baskets. It was the exact opposite, with
them going 21-4 on fast breaks."
Anthony Mason made 10 of 14 shots from
the field and scored 23 points for the Hear .
"Nothing stops us except ourselves,"
Mason said. "We played good basketball for a
whole game. We were all out collectively."
Miami broke a tie with a 10-0 run midway
through the third quarter, making it 62-52.
Eddie Jones scored five straight points during
the spurt with a fast-break layup and a 3pointer.
"We got some breakaways and long-court
things we normally don't get a lot," Heat
coach Pat Riley said. "Cleveland missed a lot
of jumpers and we were out running."
Lan10nd Murray and Andre Miller each
scored 14 points for Cleveland, which lost
for the 16th time in 18 games and is 7-29
since Dec: 16.
Tim Handaway and Jones each had 18
points for Miami, which won for the fourth
time in five games following a three-game
losing streak.
"We just pushed it," Hardaway said.
"Nobody thinks we can run, so we got some
fast-break buckets."
Cleveland went scoreless for a 4:10 span
and made just five of 13 shots (38 percent) in
the third quarter.
"That's what carries us. What we think of
first is defense," Mason said.
Any hope Cleveland had for a comeback
was dashed early in the fourth quarter when
Dan Majerle sank five consecutive free
throws. Majerle was fouled by Bimbo Coles
on a 3-poinr attempt and sank each foul
shot. Twenty-seven seconds later, he made
twa more for a 79-64 lead.
With Murray scoring 11 points, the Cavs'
reserves kept Cleveland close early, outscoring the Heat reserves 21-7 in the first half.
Mason was 6-of-9 from the field in the
first half to help the Heat take a 47-42
advantage at halftime.
Notes: Heat center Brian Grant, who

Plu..... ens.BJ

'.

Burks fitting in nicely with Cleveland
'

·

WINTER HAVEN, Flo. (AP)
Standing behind the batting cage, .
Atlanta manager Bobby C~ did a
double take and squinted as he tried
to ide.P:tify No. 23 for the Cleveland
Indians.
'l·
"Wow!" Cox yelled to Ellir Burks.
"Ellis, I hardly recognized you. you're
huge in that uniform."
"No," sa;d Burks, gazing do-tYn at
the smiling ChiefWahoo on his chest.
11

]t's just tighter." ·

· The Indians signed Burks to a
three-year, $20 million free agent
contract this winter to do much more
than flex his abundfnt muscles or look

good in his game jersey.
They're counting on him to drive
in runs, ploy both right and left field,
DH, and provide them with the same
clubhouse leadership he gave the San
Francisco Giants the past three· seosons.
'
· That would be a lot to ask 'of anyone, never mind a 36-year-old outfielder who sometimes has to ice his
surgically repaired knees three times
per day.
"I'm up for ch;illenges;' Burks said.
Burks is right where he wants to be.
He turned down offers &amp;om Colorado, Texas and St. Louis to p~y in

Cleveland partly because of the financial security, bur mosdy because he
thought the Indians would have a better chance to win a World Series.
Burks, who came up with Boston in
1987, has gotten dose bur has yet to
play in a Series. In fact, he's never
played on 3 championship team at any
' leveL
"In high school, we got beat in the
state championships," said Burks.
"College, we got beat right before
nationals. Minor leagues, each year we
got beat in the playoffs.
"Then I go to. Boston. In 1988, we
lose ro Oakland, and '90 we lose to

Oakland. '93 we lose to Thronro when
I was with the White Sox and they
win the World Series. In '95, I was
with the Rockies and we lost to the
Braves. In '98, we lose a one-game
playoff to the Cubs and 2000, of
course, the Mets beat us.
"I've always said ifl get an opportu- ·
nity to get to the World Series I'm
going to make it fun. I've waited too
long."
In his short time with the l~dians,
. Burks has already made quite an
impression on his new team.

�Page A&amp;

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Group buys stake in Building
NEW YORK (AP) - A Germon investment group has
bought a 75 percent shore in the Chrysler Building for $300
million, The New York Times reported Monday.
The group, TMW, will own the majority share in the 77story Art Deco londmark, but the building's current owners,
Tishman Speyer Properties and Travelers Group will retain
operating control over the tower.
·
Included as part of the deal was the 32-story Kent Building, which is odjocent to the Chrysler tower.

·Conditions hamper recov.ery

Mond.y, M•rch 5, 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President Dick Cheney has one wand for
Democrats and Republicans alike who
want to spend more than President Bush's
budget plan allows: veto.
"If, in fact, bills come down with items
in it that he thinks are inappropriate or
excessive in terms of the total amount, I
don't think he will be bashful about using
his veto," Cheney said Sunday on CBS'
"Face the Nation." "I think we'll come to
something very close to what the president
has recommended."
Only days ago, budget writers in the
House and Senate questioned whether
t)1ey could stay within the spending levels
Bush has proposed - a 4 percent annual
increase for discretionary programs, which
constitute everything the government

does, except automatically paid benefits
such as Social Security, and Medicare.
Cheney was respo~g to a question
about comments by Ilk Senote Budget
Committee chairman, Republican Pete
Domenici of New Mexico, that the 4 percent increase would be "very hard to live
on" and that Congress haS different spending priorities than the GOP administration.
. In the House, committfe chairmen have
raised the possibility ofhifl:her sp~nding on
agriculture and science, for example.
•
Cheney's remarks som;tded a warning
that any bills sent to the White House that
spend more than the 4 percent increase
Bush has allotted will be l{e\oed, including
those from Republicans.
Over the past th ree yea~s . discretionary

spending has increased by an average of
more than 6 percent annually. Last year, it
grew by 8 112 percent, which the vice
president said was unacceptable.
"As soon as the surplus arrived, Congress and the prior administration started
spending money in a rather profligate fashion;' said Cheney. dismissing the notiqn
that Bush is trying tb starve the govern-

Navy prepares for court

Mayor tours quake damage

Mori survives vote

Officials seek to keep spy jailed
fO

"'Pfft' l@ilds

packln'f

Nancy christens Reagan .carrier.

Israeli troops
kill Palestinian.
.

Swiss state bids adieu to Rich .

&lt;

No neo-Nazi materials found

Sleet and snow pounds Northeast

. NOTICE

10

THE PUBLIC

· Meigs County Intends to llPPIY to the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Rural Housing Service (RHS) for grant funds to aid In the preservation of
BY CARDUNE BYRNE
the south, the National Guard deployed 200
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
housing stock occupied by very low and low Income homeownere· In
troops ond was prepared to call in 10,000
The Northeast was buffeted by sleet, snow, reservists.
Meigs County.
rain and biting wind Monday, and the powerThe storm began os • mixture of rain, sleet
RHS Housing Preservation funds will be provided to eligible , ·.
ful storm threatened to wallop the region with and snow in many areas. It was expected ro
households through a defirrad loan program and· may bs used for the ·
up to 2 to 3 feet of snow before it was through.
change over to snow, with strong wind bringcoat of emergency and/or Frltlcal repairs to owner occupied hom,a •':'d,
Winter storm watches were in effe~t from
ing blizzard or near-blizzard conditions. foreto remove or correct health and/or safety hazards, and for Improving
West Virginia to Maine, the National Weather
casting precise snow totals was tricky because
Service said.
· '
•
accssalblllty by handicapped persona.
warm ocean air was expected to delay the
By Monday morning, more than a foot of
The U.S.D.A., Rural Housing Service requires Meigs County to provide
changeover along the co.ast.
snow already reported in parts of Steuben ond
the public with an opport~nlty for commen~s on the proposed project to
Over the weekedd, people heeded the
Schuyler counties in upstate New York. lnlond
warnings an'd cleaned our hardware store supassure that the proposed Housing Preservation Grant Progrim Ia
areas of Pennsylvania, western Virginia and
of
snow
shovels
and
stocked
up
on
:
bread
plies
beneficial and does not !plicate curran. t activities and to make available
western Maryland reported 6 inches of snow
and qlilk.
had fallen by late Sunday.
for public review the St• mant of ActlyiU,a, which ol.rtllnea the planned
"I've
had
numerous
customers
rake
two
'
School ;ystems across the region canceled
proposed program to b submitted to the R'HS for conalder•tlon for
classes for Monday, and county and state offi- carts of stuff, like they're going to get snowed
funding.: The Meigs County Housing Preservation Statement of Actlvltlea
cials urged residents to avoid unnecessary trav- in for the weekend, like we're back in 'Lir.rle
Ia avallable and may bti reviewed at the Melgi County Annex; Gr•nta
House on the Prairie' times," said Joe Jancsarel.
.
Office, 117 East Me~T~t)!,lal Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio during tha normal
In Massach usetts, snow began falling in ics, manager at Redner's Warehouse Market in
.
bualneaa hours of 9:00. ~m. to 5:00 p.m.
. ,
,
much of the state before dawn Monday, while Trexlertown, Pa.
Delta,
Continental
and
other
airliJ1es
cansome eastern areas reported freezing rain and
A flttHn (15) day com.,.ent period ls required to allow for public review
celed dozens of flights into the Ne\v York metsleet.
of the proposed progr•m. Comments may be eubmlttad prior to 'March
New Jersey declared a state of emergency ropolitan area's La Guardia, Kennedy and
19, 2001 to tha Melga iCounty Commlealonara, Courthouea, Pomeroy,
and ordered government offices and courts Newark airports. New York City's 1.1 million
Ohio during the normal bualn•a hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Should
public school students were told to stay home
clos~d Monday.
·
the public h•ve •ny q~aatlons as to tills notice, they may contact J•n
.
"This is a matter of public safery," said New Monday.
"The storm is now mainly a Monday night Truaatll, Meigs County Grants Administrator at (740) 992·7t08.
· Jersey's acting Gov. Donald T. Difrancesco.

.

.

'

Today's Scoreboard, Page 86

Page 81.

Cheney says Bush will veto higher spending ·

ment.
.·
UNADILLA, Ga. (AP) - Military crews pulled the data
Under the preside!Jt's plan, th~ Sf&gt;'~ biland voice recorders from the wreckage of a National Guard
lion discretionary budget for fiscal 2001,
ca rgo plane but slick , muddy conditions hampered the
recovery of the 21 victims' ren1ains.
which begins this Oct. 1, would rise to
Rescue teams have waded through 3 feet of slippery mud
$661 billion in 2002. Increases would
caused by a 4-inch deluge of rain Saturday, when rhe C-23
come in education, defense, health research
Sherpa crashed in a field in south-central Georgia, killing
and embassy security, while cuts Would hit
everyone o n board.
·
·
at least 10 federal agencies, including the
" It's a quagmire," said Lt . Col. Deborah Bertrand, a
Interior and Transportation departments.
spo k e~woman at R o ~ins Air Force Base in Warner Robins
that had tracked the plane . " Re covery operations ·are going
to be dtfficult and protracted."
"Our goal is to solve this thing, do justice and get a con- to get his now controversial pardon from President Clinton.
Defen se o ffi ctals . have sent about 150 soldiers' and Air viction," Attorney General ·Philip McLaughlin said in an
While international and other Swiss public figures petiForrt.." perso nnd to the sire ro provide sec urity, remove the interview. "We haw fair trial obligations to the two young
bod1 t."" of tht" 21 N.ltiot1JI Guard m.e mbers and searc h for a men who we think were involved, and we're trying to meet tione!! Clinton on Rich's behalf, Mayor Christoph
Luchsinger and Vice Mayor Toni Guegler merely wrote a
(:I U SL' .
our obligations, and at the same time find a way to deal with
studi~sly polite letter to Rich on Dec. 5:
the n1edia frenzy."
"On your O\Vn request the City Council of Zug lconfirms
Robert Tulloch, 17, and James Parker, 16, are charged with
first-degree murder in the Jan . 27 stabbing deaths of Half the following : Mr. Marc Rich is known to the City CounHO NOLULU (AP) - One mother sobbed, clutching a and Susanne Zan top in their Hanover home near the Dart- cil of Zug for maay years as an international businessman
handkerchiei as a ukulele player strummed a melody writ- . mouth campus.·
and chairman of different firms registered in Zug. As a head
ten in re-membrance of the nine men and boys lost at sea.
McLaughlin said an ABC News report that invesrigatprs of rhis (sic) companies, Mr. Marc Rich always fulfilled his
Other rdanves cried and clasped leis. ·
found literature on neo-Nazistn, Holocaust revisionism and obligations and his duties to the City of Zug.
The oceanside memorial Sunday for those missing from a white supremacy in Tulloch's bedroom was false.
"The City Council of Zug is also aware. of the fact that
Japan ese fishing boat that was sunk by a U.S. submarine
"It was inaccurate," McLaughlin said of the report. "I have
Mr. More Rich has been very charitable for many years
came as the Navy prepared to convene a court of inquiry no idea what it was that they based their report on ."
within important projects."
into the fatal collision.
The formal investigative hearing, which begins Monday,
seeks to explain why the USS Greeneville rammed the
Ehime Maru on Feb. 9
SEATTLE (AP) -Mayor Paul Schell ducked under cau" We really need to be told what happened in 'the subma- tion tape, explored rubble-strewn buildings and reossured
TOKYO (AP) -Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori
rine," said Hirohisa Ishibashi, mayor of Uwajima, the boat's business. owners and residents Sunday that the city would survived his second no-confidence vote in Parliament on
hometown. "We have to do everything w~ can to prevent
help them recover from last week's 6 . ~ earthquake.
Monday, bu.t the win was . unlikely to ease the pressure on
anything like this from happening again."
"The buildings are all treasures," Schell said as he stopped
to talk with business owners in historic Pioneer Square, and him to go, with his popularity crushed by scandals and a
those whose homes were damaged by the largest earthquok.e stumbling economy.
to shake the area in 52 years.
·
The lower house of Parlioment voted 274-192 to defeat
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -The threat of Robert Philip · So far, the city has inspected more than 400 buildings, tqe no-confidence motion submitted earlier in the day by
Hanssen bolting and spilling more secrets
Moscow is so deeming 26 uninhabitable and 161 requiring "supervised four opposition parties. Mori, whose Liberal Democratf
great that he should remain in prison, government prosecu- entry." Initial ·estimates of damage in Seattle topped $40 hold a majority in the chamber, defeated a similar· measure
tors plan to tell a judge.
million, said Rick Krochalis, director of the city's Depart- in November.
Hal)ssen, an FBI counterintelligence agent accused of ment of Design, Constructiol) and Land Use.
~
.,
'
.
· · aroun d t h e reg1on
·
·1s est1mate
·
d at $ 2 b"ll"
S
.
The
v'o1ie
gave
Mons
enfeebled
government
a
resptte,
but
passing top-secret information to the Soviets, and later RusD a mage
1 1on. c1- . : 5
., ·.
·.
.
sians, for 15 years, was appearing in U.S. District~rt on entistt· ctedit&gt;•the quake's 33-mile depth.. from preventmg . 1~.,W.;'l·· -ci:\!,.t~.{!lif.. ~pecula~\9!\ .~a~. r~fe ,~~at he
worse drniage. Some 400 people suffered injuries,' most could ste.f. down·as soon as thiS week as the LOP readies for .
Monday for his detention hearing.
1ts annu~ party· convent10h March 13 and searches for o
The government was expected to ·ask the court- to keep. minor. · · ~
Hanssen jailed, arguing that its case against him is so strong
....,
success~ .
,
and the risks of freeing him too great for 'him to b!'rc!leased.
1'H•""rll1 ~
~Hannibal'
'pJ,.,tael( fliB*'e bn dre m.otioh.;,.·Parlianien't ,
The conditions of Hanssen's detention, such as when his
was fur , r humiliatio.q .f~r a prime 'm inister whose support
lawyers can see him, also could come up.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - . The box office went south of the ratings have fallen to under 10 percent.
border as "The Mexican" knocked "Hannibal" from the No.
.
.
·
I spot after three weeks.
The mob con~edy, starring Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt and
.
.
.
NEWPORT NEWS,Va. (AP)- Former first lady Nancy James Gandolfini of TV's "The Sopranos," debuted with
JERUSA~EM ;(A,h~ l~raeli troops killec\:'a ~alesrinlan in.
Reagan christened a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in the $20.3 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
name of her husband on their 49th wedding anniversary.
the gross-ot\t comedy "See Spot Run" overcame gener- an overnight shootout, and·'Israeli police ;wenr on nigh alert
Bur it was President Bush - not former President Rea- ally harsh reviews to debut in second place with SI 0.2 mil- Monday, setting aside other duties to concentrate on pregan- who stood at Mrs. Reagan's side Sunday as she broke lion.
venting Palestinian militant attacks after the latest deadly
a ceremonial bottle of American sparkling wine against the
"Hannibal" slipped to third place with $10.1 million.
bombing.
ship 's bow.
The overall box office was up again, with the top 12
Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharori stood poised to assum~
The former president, who turned 90 on Feb. 6, has movies grossing $76 million-· a 29 percent increase from
Alzheimer's disease and was home in California recovering the same weekend last year. Theater re"venues have risen powenhis week with the pledge to restore security to Israel
after rnore than five months of fighting with the Palestinievery weekend chis year.
·
from a broken hip he suffered in a fall in January.
Despite mixed reviews, "The Mexican" averaged a solid ans. ·1"
") want to thank the Navy for giving us such a wonderful present, such a little thing," Mrs. Reagan said of the mas- $6,879 a theater playing in 2, 951 cinemas, compared to
Sharon reached agreement with the ultra-Orthodox Shas
sive, $4 billion ship - the first carrier to ' be christened in $3,840 at 2,656 locations for "See Spot Run." .
Parryll." J' Sunday and .now has enough support for a majoa:
the name of a living former president.
· lty c~ltlon government. He was expected to present hiS
"I wish Ronnie were here," she said as the crowd cheered.
'gove~nment to parliament this we~k. possibly Oti W,tdnes"But somehow, I think he is."
day, and would take office if the coalition wins approval.
ZUG, Switzerland (AP) Zug hos bloomed into
Sh~n ~s most urgent task will be dealing with the escaSwitzerland's wealthiest state, its prettily preserved old town
·
. ,
·
surrounded by plush offtce towers and bustling factories and latm v10lence.
A olestinian bomber blew himself up and killed three
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -lnvestigotors did not find its suburbs home to hundreds of millionaires.
And so city leaders could afford to rebuff shadowy lsroe.!,js on Sunday in the coastal town ofNetanya. lt was the .
neo-Nazi materials in the home of one of the teen-agers
financier
Marc Rich - who for many years was Zug's seconp lethal bomb ottack in four days inside Israel. Also,
charged with killing rwo Dartmouth College professors,
biggest taxpayer and benefactor - when he asked for help seven Palestinians died in violence Friday and Saturday.
New Hampshire's top prosecutor said Sunday.

"This is about warning people, protecting people."
\
With 20 inches of snow expected in northern New Jersey and coastal flooding pos~ible in

The Daily Sentinel

to Tuesday event. The bulk of the heavy snow
will be occurring then," N ationa! Weather Service meteorologist Ralph lzzo said as the
storm edged north. ~~

Jeff Thornton, Preeldent
Melgl Board of CommlasloMra

4o '·

'

•

...

Monay, .rch 5, 2001

Duke shows Carolina who's boss in ACC

MONDAY'S

·HIGHLIGHTS

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Missing their inside presence, the
Duke Blue Devils stayed outside and
made ACC history.
With Jason WiUiams scoring 33
points and Shane Battier getting 25
points, 11 rebounds and five blocks,
the third- ranked Blue Devils went
14-for-38 frpm 3-poinr range Sunday
in a 95-81 victory over No. 6 North
Carolina.
·
Duke (26-4,' 13-3), playing without
injured starting center Carlos Boozer,
moved into a tie for first place with
the Tar Heels (23-5, 13-3), setting an
Atlantic Coast Conference record by

~esplaces ··

fourth In NAIA

national ii&amp;eet

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn.
;_ The University of Rio
Grande track and field squad
sent four qualifiers to the
NAIA National Meet on the
tampus East Tennessee State
University.
·
Freshman Matthew Boyles
linished fourth in the 3,000!netet race walk with a time
o£'14:07 .80. Boyles only took
up the event at mid-season
and ended up with a top-five
finish in the NAJA National
Championships.
Teammate Jim Robinson
Was fifth in the race walk with
tim:e of 14:41.76. There
were 12 competitors in the
race and four were disqualified.
Lachlan McDonald ofWisconsin-Parkside was the overevent winner with a time
of 12:40.92.
On the women's side,
junior Amy Metzler finished
12th in the weight throw
with a top effort of 45 feet, 11
1/4 inches.
Sophomore Ashly Roberts
was 13th in the weight thr:oW
With a best effort of 45 feet,
10 1/2 inches.
' April Haney of Eastern
Oregon was the overall event
champion with a throw of 53
feet, 7.5 inches. There were 29
co,wp~titors in the event.
.. Roberll · ~o threW in tlte
shot put and finished 18th,
one spot below her final ranking, with a heave of 38 feet,
3/4 inches.

winning or tying for its fifth straight
league tide.
"This is the result of coming to
work every single 'day with the dedication needed to be a champion,"
Battier said. "Not once, but five times .
That will be something to look back
on."
While it seemed everyone else was
worried about how Duke could make
up for the loss of Boozer, who broke
a bone in is right foot, the Blue Devils concentrated on other things.
"We came into this game not worrying about Xs and Os," said freshman
Chris Duhon, who had 15 points and

four assists in his first career start.
"This game was more about heart and
desire and a will to win. We knew we
were outsized, we knew we were
going against the world, but we had a
bigger heart, a bigger will to come out
and quiet all the critics."
Williams was 7-for-13 from 3-point
range, while Battier was 4-for-10 as.
the Blue Devils won in Chapel Hill
for the third straight year. The 38 3point attempts tied a school record set
earlier this season against North Carolina A&amp;T.
"The way they played broke our
rhythm," UNC coach Matt Doherry

Plose ... Top :as. 116

Mason,
Heat
too hot
forCavs

a

an

Recl•n sweep
Concord
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grartde
baseball team entered the
home opener of the 2001 season with five losses in its first
six games and wanted to show
the baseball world that that
start was ah aberration as they
posted Concord College,
which opened the season No.
30 in the NCAA Division II
preseason poll.
Rio. Grande (3-5) swept the
double dip, 4-1 and 4-3,
behind a pair of complete
game triuml'hs.
Freshman pitcher Tim Sutton (2-0) held Concord tl)
one run and five hits in seven
innings in the first game. Sutton also struck !)Ut three and
yielded rwo bases on balls.
• Rio started quickly, scoring
twice in the first inning, on a
two-run single by sophomore
backstop jason Romeo.
Romeo drove three of the
four runs, as he added an RBI
ground out in the fifth inning
for Rio's final run.
. Sophomore Adam Haip.es
dubbed his first home run of
the season in · the fourth
inning, All nine Rio Grande
batters came through with
base hits.
I[\ game two, Concord
jumped out to a 1-0 lead in
the first inning off lefty Brod
Campbell (1•1). The Redmen
would get a rwo-run blast off
the bat of Cory Maynard as
well as RBI knocks by Jarrod
Haines and Brent Ewing.
Maynard and Haines ripped
two hits apiece for the Redmen.
Campbell went the distance, .,yielding eight hits,
three .Uns and three walks
while striking out three batters in seven innings.
· Rio Grande prepares for a
busy week, with five double
headers on the schedule, a trip
to Pikeville College Thesday
hig{jights the week.
.

said. "I don't think we were real sharp
handling the basketball. You've got to
give them a lot of credit because they
came into a tough situation being a
man down."
In other games involving ranked
teanlS on Sunday, it was No. 4 Illinois
67, Minnesota 59; No. S. Florida 94,
No. 15 Kentucky 86; No.9 Kansas 75,
Missouri 59; No. 17 Syracuse 93, St.
John's 91 in double overtime; No. 18
Georgetown 79, No. 19 Notre Dame
72; No. 22 ·Wake Forest 76, North
Carolina State 58; and Dayton 65,

VIVA LAS VEGAS! - Jeff Gordon celebrates following his victory In the Las Vegas 400 Sunday, ending a
string of personal disappointments at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. (AP)

Rainbow Warrior rolls to
victory in Las Vegas 400 .
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Robbie Loomis
Last year, Gordon crashed m practiCe on Saturday
thought his luck in Las Vegas was changing when he and was never competitive in the race with the
won nearly $10,000. gainbling during an offseason repaired Monte Carlo.
test.
"We fixed the car instead of going to a backup and
The crew chiefs only. gamble Sunday came late in then, when we got home, we found our the frame
the UAW-DaimlerChrylser 400 when he chose to was bent," Loomis said. "It was terrible, terrible, tergive driver Jeff Gordon a two-tire pit stop to gain rible. When jeff Gordon is going from 10th to 40th,
some track position on Las Vegas Motor Speedway's that ain't good."
1 1/2-mile oval.
Gordon, a three-time champion, won $369,602
This one worked to perfection, roo.
· from the race purse and a $1 million bonus from the
"Robbie didn't gamble at all this weekend;' Gor- series sponsor. •
don said with a laugh. "He was afraid to because he
"Winning at this racetrack, as much as we've strugdidn't want to use up the luck he found during the gled here in the past, it means almost as much to ine
test.
,,
as the million dollars," he said.
"Tiris helps us all feel b~tter about coming to Las
"If we can run this strong at a track like this, we're
Vegas."
.·
off to a good start. We just need to keep doing what
Over the first three years that the Winston Cup we're doing and build on the momentum."
series has come to the trac~ 'im the north edge of this
The victory was his 53rd, tying Gondon with
desert gambling dey, Gondon has been left frustrated,
Plose see NASCAR. BJ
with finishes of 28th, third and 17th.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Randy Wittman's
plan for the Cleveland Cavaliers to outrun
Miami backfired.
"We made 22 turnovers, and that put them
out on the break," Wittman said after the
Heat defeated his team 91-79 Sunday night.
"We wanted to control the tempo, get some
easy baskets. It was the exact opposite, with
them going 21-4 on fast breaks."
Anthony Mason made 10 of 14 shots from
the field and scored 23 points for the Hear .
"Nothing stops us except ourselves,"
Mason said. "We played good basketball for a
whole game. We were all out collectively."
Miami broke a tie with a 10-0 run midway
through the third quarter, making it 62-52.
Eddie Jones scored five straight points during
the spurt with a fast-break layup and a 3pointer.
"We got some breakaways and long-court
things we normally don't get a lot," Heat
coach Pat Riley said. "Cleveland missed a lot
of jumpers and we were out running."
Lan10nd Murray and Andre Miller each
scored 14 points for Cleveland, which lost
for the 16th time in 18 games and is 7-29
since Dec: 16.
Tim Handaway and Jones each had 18
points for Miami, which won for the fourth
time in five games following a three-game
losing streak.
"We just pushed it," Hardaway said.
"Nobody thinks we can run, so we got some
fast-break buckets."
Cleveland went scoreless for a 4:10 span
and made just five of 13 shots (38 percent) in
the third quarter.
"That's what carries us. What we think of
first is defense," Mason said.
Any hope Cleveland had for a comeback
was dashed early in the fourth quarter when
Dan Majerle sank five consecutive free
throws. Majerle was fouled by Bimbo Coles
on a 3-poinr attempt and sank each foul
shot. Twenty-seven seconds later, he made
twa more for a 79-64 lead.
With Murray scoring 11 points, the Cavs'
reserves kept Cleveland close early, outscoring the Heat reserves 21-7 in the first half.
Mason was 6-of-9 from the field in the
first half to help the Heat take a 47-42
advantage at halftime.
Notes: Heat center Brian Grant, who

Plu..... ens.BJ

'.

Burks fitting in nicely with Cleveland
'

·

WINTER HAVEN, Flo. (AP)
Standing behind the batting cage, .
Atlanta manager Bobby C~ did a
double take and squinted as he tried
to ide.P:tify No. 23 for the Cleveland
Indians.
'l·
"Wow!" Cox yelled to Ellir Burks.
"Ellis, I hardly recognized you. you're
huge in that uniform."
"No," sa;d Burks, gazing do-tYn at
the smiling ChiefWahoo on his chest.
11

]t's just tighter." ·

· The Indians signed Burks to a
three-year, $20 million free agent
contract this winter to do much more
than flex his abundfnt muscles or look

good in his game jersey.
They're counting on him to drive
in runs, ploy both right and left field,
DH, and provide them with the same
clubhouse leadership he gave the San
Francisco Giants the past three· seosons.
'
· That would be a lot to ask 'of anyone, never mind a 36-year-old outfielder who sometimes has to ice his
surgically repaired knees three times
per day.
"I'm up for ch;illenges;' Burks said.
Burks is right where he wants to be.
He turned down offers &amp;om Colorado, Texas and St. Louis to p~y in

Cleveland partly because of the financial security, bur mosdy because he
thought the Indians would have a better chance to win a World Series.
Burks, who came up with Boston in
1987, has gotten dose bur has yet to
play in a Series. In fact, he's never
played on 3 championship team at any
' leveL
"In high school, we got beat in the
state championships," said Burks.
"College, we got beat right before
nationals. Minor leagues, each year we
got beat in the playoffs.
"Then I go to. Boston. In 1988, we
lose ro Oakland, and '90 we lose to

Oakland. '93 we lose to Thronro when
I was with the White Sox and they
win the World Series. In '95, I was
with the Rockies and we lost to the
Braves. In '98, we lose a one-game
playoff to the Cubs and 2000, of
course, the Mets beat us.
"I've always said ifl get an opportu- ·
nity to get to the World Series I'm
going to make it fun. I've waited too
long."
In his short time with the l~dians,
. Burks has already made quite an
impression on his new team.

�Page

B2 • The

Monday, March

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deily Sentinel

5 2001

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$7 An hour + 8onUMI

We Are LOOk nlf Fo EltrN:tl\10
Communicators To Make Ca s
For MaJO Nat ona Christian
0 gan zaHons Preserv ng
Fam ry Values

SECURTY
$810 ~R
Thl Waekenhut Co p s Reau
Wig Fo Several Positions Must

310

HaveGEDO HS OpornB
Pease Apply A James M Gav n
Power P an State Route 7 Or Ca

cap Evans Al(740)925-30 0
EOEMIFIWV

340

Bu•lnea• end
Buildings

12~2.4

Bu ld ng To Be Moved

$500080 (7&lt;10)4&lt;18-4292

720 Second Avenue 1 Bed oom
Upsla rs Apa tment $300 +De
post We e Sewer 1 ash Pad

(710)441 e2 e (Day) (74o &lt;46
010 !Evon ngs)

WeOite
•Mad ca and Dental
•401K
•Pt~

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO

'

nene useswaned

$2000 $i5000/mo
www e commb z ne

•
I

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OWHI&lt;Iy Pay
•FXIdScllod•P oleulona Env onment
Make A Dlfflrence n Our Worktl

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Ea n Onl nt ncome

Ca Today For An lnllr\'low!

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lli112T

$2 000 $5 000/mo.

AIIIMILY AT HOMIII Cralto
Toyo Jawo ry wood Sow ng
Typ ng., G 111 Pay CALL 1 10
795-0310 E•t 201 (21hre)
Altlntlon
Workl'romHome
ltJOO 15 OOOimo
I 111112 I011
ATTINTION
Ea n On na naoma
1500.17800/monlh
t 100-71...111
wwwpc-com

1774 Ches nul By Owner Bull In
1997 3 Bed oom To Aba ement

vaeauonl Pad H&lt;&gt;lldaye

, .....2311141

T 20 3 $B9 500 00 (7(0)••8
2914

FINANCIAL
The Athena Me go Educallonal
S• v ce Ctn " s ••ate ng qua
I lid cand dllll for 111 pooruon or
Trtllu er Appl can 1 mutt pos
1111 I T IIIU 1 I I conu
otuad by hi Oh o Dop of Edu
cat on or tvldtnct that 1uct1 I
cen11 can be o~ltUntCI E~~:per
tnct n IC:hOOI d atr Cl 1.1n Vttl ty

or goYornmanlalacccunt ng do
I rid l•po ronco II I Ohllf I lOll
cHico prlftrrod App aantl muot
ojoo hm lho abl 1y to ba bOndld
and to proYicll lht own lran~PC~
tat., lubm t IIHor of ntlrtot "'
auma ~ rofa onoto and oopy of
ourron conat to John conolan
10 lupo nllndlnl 107 ~loh anG
Avanuo lu II 101 Athena OhiO
11101 Appllcallon dlld na II
Apr 5 2001 Thl AMIIC I anG
lquol Opportun 1)1 Imp OYI "'"
;;•lcl:::":;:__ _ _ _ _ _..,l

210

A Good """tmont Prope ty That
W I Pay Fo h.. f Oay (7&lt;10)44110855 EYOnlng (7&lt;10)248-5.252

r.' -•

-

100 sot 1m 1111 n11

Mt Vernon AYonua 1 learpom
HOUM Now C1M 'urn10t 0 ..11111
A lnolorNowy,utu Net
K tchtn Applancaa laoamtnt
COYI ld ,11 0 , 011 10 1
(:104)1111o117 (304)111.. &lt;105
(

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Grttn Sundance Ouster

85 ooo M u va A Auto
$2700 oso (7&lt;10 21le- 233

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n.,..

A•lnllu
a-llttlall

rci 11111

t Oodgo lila h II 150H~
5 Bpotcl Claron CD ~ IYO! Tint
Runa Great lliU (710)1111717
LIYIIY 1 Aulo II II t 911 Pord
loco t I W ltOO 1111 Oldl
Cull Ill Cit!I It 200 1812 to~ or
cury Lyn• IW 1•50 1111 Mer
ou y Cougor 11 •oo tell Mil
cury TbPII 11100 1111 Ponlac
a and Am 11100 11110 Oldo Cut
111 C ora 11100 1811 Oklt Oo
II II 1800 11e3 Mercury TOpaz
11100 Call MOnday Th u Friday
e ooam 5 oot&gt;m (740)318-1303

720

Truck• tor Sell

c:-er

011

a Manor Apartmtntl

Now

Aootpt ng AppHoat ont ~or 1 81'1
HUD lubt dlzod Aportmanta 'or
lldtr And Ha"d capped lqu1
Houa ng Opporlun ly (UO)UI

...

v

apart~nlt If V ago Minor and
~ Ytroldo Aponmonta n Mdd t
po 1 from 117~ l13a Ca r.o

ita 1011 lqull HOUI ng Oi&gt;POF
lun 1111

~

Exaroltl 81kl 1100 Zan th 1t
lloek 1 White To •• alon
1:1041112 2702
EZI'ETIIX COM 81YI up to SO%
on ALL pat mid cal ono end oup
pllto lncludlog Hllr gord ntor
otptor Front lnt morolll f~EE
SMIPPINO Ordtr on lne WWW Ez
pttR• com 1

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

-

For

8211 (7&lt;10)311

Salt (7&lt;10)3111211(

Full and part time po11tlona avelllble
Camplllllrllnlng provldtd with llexlblt houra

Fu 1 I oodtd Doberman• 5 Ft
moll ~ Maltl and t Rtcl Mill 5
wkl Old (7A0)44H&amp;71

Goldin RotriiYtr pupo lui blood
td f tt ll'lo 1 end wo mtd 1

ma 1 11omo t 1125 110 te2

7111

P'ull limo potltiOna oller bentrllt paoktge whloh
lnoludN Modloei!Ointlll!.o11&lt;/Pd Ylaallon..
CALL TODA~ STAAT TOMORROW!

1-888-974-JOBS
CIVIa

Pd 1or 117 cwua.
AllllllaJ Welf&amp;NIM!IUI

aroc oua IIYing 1 and 1 blcfroom

Looking To luy A Now Homo?
Con t HIYI !.and? Wt Doll Hu ry
Oh~ I0 Lota 1.1" :104 7317HI

e.c

PL&amp;UI. CALL TODAY

3 Acra a Bottom of 11111 on right on
~odman ~ldgo ~d (301)171

,O~ICLOIID QOV T HOM II
10 0~ LOW DOWN TAM
~1'0 I a IANK~U,TC:III OK
CI'IIC T ~0~ LilTING CALL 1

O...SH,n
St llnal'llllla

WIIIMI Ttrrllr

3111

rtqu td 01 11 1
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13000 wook yl MAILING •oo
D OChUFII AT HOM II Qua
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onca t 100 11a1711 (II hOUri)
• 113
1150 11000 waok y POll btl Un
mlltcl cpportun ly f~ll dltllla
IAII NMQ ttOO W Unlva tlty,
Iuiie I PMI 230 ldlnburg TK
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u

COMPUTE~I WI ~INANCI
DILL COMPUTE~II IYtn with
eta than porfacl c odltl 1 100
411 1011 Code WJ7 www orne
t!Oiutlono com

&amp; 2 ac 1 build ng o 1 sur
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liP C P I II)P OVId dOUb 1W dt
accapltd a8 1185 &amp; up 7(0 712

IIIPI' enct

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Pet

IUILDINQI 21•~0
w11 11 ~oo aarr
•oo 40•11
~II ItO IDO atl f5 100 5011110
INti 181 100 otll 111 100 ~Mr
~ul Upl can DIIIYI~ Tom t (aOO)

'o11oo mpcunca a Aaproa
:fOVOIII ChiYY • JIIPII ~, ....
0•11 Po LIt nga 1 IOo-111 OIDO
1111 CHIT

Downtown Of ca Andl Or Apa t
mom Bu ld ng 011 Streo Park ng

Buslnell

It 000 WEEKLY POSS BLE
fAOM Homo FrH wob 1111 No

a ITEIL

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Earn up to $15 /hour

"" 1103
AUTOII'IIDIIIIII DO

350 Lot• &amp; Acreage

Opportunity

0

GALLIA COUNTY
DOG SHitLT£R
HODRS 1·5 M·l"'

Homea for Sale

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CAEDIT FOR LIST NGS CAll
t 800.338 0020 IX 98

(304)675 2714
(300)878 70 8

Ml1cellaneous
MtrchlndiM

REAL ESTAfE

$987 85 WEEKLY P ocesslng
HUD FHA Mo tgage Refunds No

M eo

21'1&lt;1 Avo pl\one (740)44&amp;-18 5

540

Make Money

2000 Black cnevy Ex ame
L-oaded Low M eage 4 000

La ge Collec on of AnUque Pock
e Watcheli Good Condn on 422

y 8 s Gttt ng Most Of Vour

Payehoekl Cal (740)446 3093
Fo Your Now Home Today

He p ng Peop a Race ve Gove n
men Refunds Free Data sl (24

110 Help Wented

530

3 Bed oom 2 Ba h 1 877 777

B9 F 110 KLT ll at P U load
od High Milt Body Exeo ont
Shape Mull 6" To App tc all
$2000 (710)4411-117•
t3 Chevy B tO Standi d LOOkl
Good Run• Qood Mutt Sn To
~pp

)595

110 Help Wanted

w hta e o aale $4000 cal

9812

II~ ohtd 1975 Cal 24 HrL (7&lt;10)
4(8 OB70 t 800.287 0576 Rog

Now Ftatlwood t4x70 S 8 999 00

f2 000 WEEKLY! Ma lng 400

6323

Boatl 6 Motor•
for Sale

ere Wa erprooflng

110

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Condition $4900 12 lltlf 0 IH

750

$0 DOWN CARS POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29
MOS 0 99o/. FOR LSTNGS

Sporting
Goode

100 891-8777

840

Eng ne $300 F ba G ass 'Ti uek

Building
Supplies

pllances Gua anteed Skaggs
App lanees 76 V ne St eet

New .C fl w de 1499 down on y
$199 pe mon call now 800

Home
Improvements

Toppor 10 a Dodgt ytlrl 77 92 1
YtarOid $200 (7&lt;10!44HM7

WHITE S METAL DETECTOR S
Ron All son sea Watson Road
Bldwe Oh o 45814 (7(0)448
(338

Range $95 Frolltleo Rei lgerato
St50 Freeze S so Neo Wash
e &amp; D ye Sel $300 At Ap

t -800-89 t 8777

High School Diploma at Home
Sta 1 L &amp; ed P lvate Schoo New
Unique Fas Program Fa lu e
P oot Lowest Tu ton College
Gus antee Ca Fee Now F ee
l!roellure 800-888-3997

~8

Wh lpoo Washe $95 E ec r c

Make 2 Payments &amp; Move n

810

C&amp;C Gene a Home Man
anence Pa nl ng v ny s d ng
carpentry doo 1 w ndows tJa hs
mob a home tl)&amp;if and mo t Fo
f ae est mae ca Ct1et 740 992

now $19 990 70K15Dx16 was
$59 990 now $42 990 80l!200K16
was $94 500 now $59 990 1 Boo-

550

Mus Se 18•10

800-984-83 6

Motorcycle•

STEEL BUILDINGS NEW MUST
SELL 40lC60x 2 was $17 SOO now
$ 0 971 50&gt; 00• 8 was $3 500

Homtt US SO Eut Athena Oh

BR DGE STATE UN VERSITY

740

985 3956

Wa e I ne Spec a 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 Pe 100 1 200 PSI

14lC70 2

Doc o a e by cor espondence
ba&amp;ed upon p o educat on and
sho study coursa Fo FREE no ma on book at phone CAM

B1mbo Coles and Wesley Per
son shot a co mbmed II fo r
32 ( 343) Mtam outscored
the Cavs 30 6 0 1 3 po nt
shots Cavs opponents h ve
413 more 3 pont attempts
than Cleveland th s seaso n an
average of7 I mor per game

363 EXT 2QO.U

Ask ng

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay

he touched the ball Grant
had stx pmms on 3 for 10
shoottng Riley has a 205 64
( 762) career record m March
Smce Riley came to Mtanu
the Heat are 76 45 ( 796)
when they hold the oppos1
non under 90 pomts Cavs
guards M ller Jtm Jackson

race

We got a set of t;Jres where
the en JUSt ~ent crazy loose
and that kind of spooked me
he sad We never got t bac k
free enough and tt never let
me race Jeff
Johnny Benson fintshed
fourth n a Pont ac (; llo ved
by the Fords of Todd Bod ne
and Mart 1 a d the Ch vy of
last w eks V.l 1er Seve Pa k
- the best fin sl a o g the
three Dale Ear ha d In c
entnes
Daytona
v nn r
M1chael Waltr p va
tn ng
early but fad d to 3th vh
Dak Earn! ard Jr kd b efl)
c 1t re tea n that vc have to a 1d shppcd b c k o fi sl
snck togeth r a d never g ve 23rd
Ha vtc k
ho
Kev n
up Gordon satd Its some
th ng we 1 cd to keep domg replaced th eld r Eanl arit
c\ery race
at R chard Ch ldr ss Ract g
The wm als &gt; broke a str ng after NASCAR s b gg sr st
of three stmght L s Vegas VIC
w s killed
a cr sh 1 tl e
tortes by the Ro t&lt;h Racmg last lop of h Da~ to a or 0
Fords of Mark Martm and Jeff vas tl e top fi sh g rook
He vas e.gl t)
B rton
Burto
vho vo I c c
Jarrett sa d tl e Fords con
here the last t vo ye s
s
tmue to tace wtth an aerody
the first dr ve el 1 a ted
nam c diSadHntage thiS sea
son because of rule changes from content on when he lost
that have g1ven other makes control and h t the v 11 o lap
two
an edge
You can really feel tt when
you pull up on another car

refused a trade to Cleveland
from Portland last summer
and eventually went to
M1anu was booed each time

mo e opt ons manutac u a of
sawm a edge a and sk dde s

(740)446 9662
St 7 000 TWo Btclroom "TWo Botto

ltke Gordon s Monte Carlo
and your momentum JUSt
sto ps the 1999 senes c1 am
pton sa1d
Jarrett who started from
the pole added that hts car
became very loose late 11 the

fromPapB1

ba "'"'" 2000 a ger eapae 1es

Kanuaga Mob e Home Sa es
Start You Bus ness Today
P me Shopp ng Can e Space
Ava abe A Aflo dable ~ate
Sp ng Va ev P aza Ca 740 448
0 01

83

aon penods dunng the race
and With the two-tire stop
mstead of four Gordon who
went 1nto the pm stxth came
out th1rd behmd Hendrtck
Motorsports teammate Jerry
Nadeau and the Marlm s
Dodge
Marhn took the lead on lap
202 and Gordon got by
Nadeau for second on the
next lap Gordon stalked Mar
hn curung steadily mto his
lead before chargmg past on
lap 225 to become the 12th
leader m the race
Gordon lost the lead for a
wh1le dur ng a ser es of
green flag p1t stops but came
back out on top on lap 248
and pulled away from the sec
ond place Ford of Jarrett to
wm by 1 477 seco nds about 15 car lengths
That sho ved nc and thiS

cavs

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Hea

Sawm

Houaehold
Good a

Daily Sentinel • Page

800 872 5&amp;67 www orvt eom/ben

Pumps LP &amp;Naua GaaFu
naces f You Con t Ca 1 Us We
Both Losa (740)448 B308 &amp;
t 800-29 t 0098

t 995 Schult 18x80 3 Bed oom
2 aa h Sharp Home S2 500

SFR EE CASH NOW$ from
wea I'Pf am es unklad ng m klns

ht p

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Peasant VaHey Nu s ng And Re
hab lltatlon Cen e Cu rent y Has
Openings Fo LPN 1 Twtlvll Hour
Sh Its Exce lent Pay And Bene
I s Contact Human R11ou ces
At P eaaanl Va ey Hosp ta 2520

w th SO down low month y pay

Palomino Stillion

Space tor Rent

Downtown Second Avenue Nea
Cou thouse And City Bu d ng

AT HOME Bu d you own sue
cesatu bua ness Ma I o de E

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD ES Home S udy Ap

800 B26 922B PO Box 701449

(740)881&gt;2268

(7&lt;10)446-7300

or Judy At (740)4(8 7323 (L
brary) To Sa Up An Appolnl

appo ntmant 740 885-3917

www blackstone aw com

STUD ES Comp ehens ve af
fordable Homa Study ega t a n
ng S nee 1890 F ee catalog
TX 75370 o

NEW AND USED STEEL Stu
Beams P pe Reba Fo Gone eta
Ang a Channa Fat Ba S ee
G at ng Fo 0 ana 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways l&amp;l So ap Me as

s

td In Easte n 0 lt ct Must see
o 1pp tc:1 alt $72 000 Ca fo

cash fo em an ng payments on
P ope ty So d Mo t~ages Annu
les Set emen s lmmed ate
Quoits Nobody bl!la s our p lc
es Nat onal Coni act Buye s
(800) 490 073 ext 01 www na
tlonalcont actbuyers com

Da as

740J44H30B t 800.291 0098

ERS A mos eve yone app oved

$67 000 Co I (304)773 5454 o
304)773-5391

Commareo $1000 $7000 PT FT

New &amp; Used E ec c And Gas
Fu naces Fo Sa e Cal Fo S z
es
Ins a a ion
Ava abe

NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT

3 Room UPIII'I Apl One Bed
oom At 851 Second Avenue
Gall polls Oepos t Requ ed x
Monlhs Leaae Uti ties Not In
c uded except Wa e Ca I Oebb a

320

MOB LE HOME OWNERS
Huge nvan o y D scount P ces
On V ny Sk ng Ooo s w nd
ows Anctlo s Wa e Htall s
P umb ng &amp; Etec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Benne s
Mobl e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb comlbel'lnell

NORWOOD NDUSTRIES 252

FREE Ca a og 800 828 9228
w e PO Box 701449 Dallas TX
75370 NA o http www backs o

,

ux tamH at statui or national
origin or any ntentlon to
mako any ouch preference

St tam + Barn $33.000 Vinton 0
Acres S12 0001
Molgl Co 1\.lppt P a 111

hea pump 2 ear garoga b g yard
on ttpproodmataly 1 aero ot local

Buslne11
Training

Apply Today n PoriOn

A 8204 Carla Drive Or Ca I
(7&lt;10~tUnd Ask lo Roberta 0 Mary An e&lt;il'll Oppo
tun 1y Employer
Port Time LPN 5

F NALLY A LEGITIMATE HOME
BUSINESS Become a h ghly ptld
ega o med ca 1ansc bar cod

90

TO~S P va 1 s ock 18 1 NAS
DAQ a ng soon No min mum In
vestment! www wetbee com

Nmltatlon or dllcl1mlnatlon

baaed on race colOr re lgiOn

s 35000r20Acas $19500
c ay Townsh p 3 Aerts Wit11

Rusty Wallace for the most
wms among act:tve dnvers
The first w1n for Gordon
smce last September 10 R1ch
mond Va moved h1m mto
second place m the season
standmgs trathng Sterling
fhlarhn Sundays thud
\phce finiSher- by 35 pomts
after three of 36 races
Gordon
NASCAR s
b1ggest star now that Dale
Earnhardt ts gone took the
lead wtth 20 laps remammg
and drove off to an easy v1cto
ry over Dale Jarrett As great
as the car was at the end 1t
was a handful early m the
race
The car was real real ttght
n traffic and we were JUSt
st ugghng Gordo lSatd
The qu1ck two ttre stop
late n the ?6 7 lap race was
the key
That freed the car L p q tte
a lot and all of a sudden tt
came to life Gordon satd
beanung at Loonus the
man who had the d1fficult JOb
of replacmg longtime Gordon
crew chief and mentor Ray
Evernham I was gomg by
guys that had four (new) tires
and JUSt walking away from
them after that
All the leaders p1tted on lap
179 durmg the last of SIX cau

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS

'*247 com

ed lmmed at y Home compute
needed FREE n e net 1 BOO
29 t 4883 Dep t 09

P O&lt;lucte a Homa No Exporlenea

$25 00 up to $75 00/h p ft

Vet

People WhO Wlnt To Make A
Dffereneo n Worldng Wltl1 Ptople wnh DlaabH~• 'lbu ca ng
Attnude WIH BaA Pus When
You Apply For One Of Ou 0 ed
Support Stiff Po~tlone Do~t

$500 P us a Week Auemb ng

Nl real-··-~ ng In
this newspaper saubtaet to
tho Ftderal Fair Housing lv:J.
of 1868 which makes h I!ega
t o - any prela&lt;ence

hml'llp11

And Long Hal td

FAI •• 1 SUPPLI~S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

es S2 000 0 5 Acres w th
Pond $25 000 RIO G ancte Seen~
P Iva a 8 A.c 11 With Pond
$25 000 Or 13 Acres At Dead
end $27 000 Che&amp;hi e 8 Acres

Work from home

Mt 9057 Ext 1(0 www land com

0 vert P A M Transport No tlC
per ence needed 2 week COL
tanng S34000y yea pustu
benelts &amp; pad t an ng D v.,s
based n M dwest 1 877 230
6002 Sunday Bam 4pm Monday
7am &amp;pm Tue-Fr 7am 4pm

BEER ORINKERoBEER INVES

WORK fROM HOME

lrH bOOkllt ea BOQ-428 51153 or

Tanng
Povded
www homowlthklde oom

Dep
45103 P 0 4236 C ssom 0 Oh

age Send Resume To Cec I a
Bake Buckeye Commun ty Se v
Cll PO BoK 604 Jack1on OH

Own a PC 1 Put 110 Work tor a

a Need

make you $20 000 S30 000 evan
$50 000 up I om sa es of p omo
1ona p oduc s to oca bus ness
commun y p us $1 000 up
mon h y n ove desl Top com
rn ss ons advanced da y No col
ec ons no nven o y no del va
es No bus ness nvestment A
sk ess oppo un y Full o pa
me You ca the sho s and se
you own hou s Ask o free
p ospec us and 2 e page com
pet on ass ca a og To f ae
phone suppo t Ou c edent as
07 you s con nuous ope at on
D&amp; B a ed 3A Fo ns an achon
phone L nda Burb nk 800 642
0790 o w a Kaese &amp; Bla Jnc

hou s week y Ca Sea Tee 740
592 6651

qu 1 no tuperv 1 on Fu I Tra n
lng Sit Own Hou 1 Compute w
modlm rtqulld Ca To F H 1

267 3944 x13B

T uok cads Of New &amp; Used I ems
F om Seve a S atas sa ng To
The Pub lc &amp; Oea e s One Place
Dozens &amp; Case lots Gary
Bowen Auc onae P octo " Ia
Oh o F ea Ma ke1 Jus Ac ou
Hun ngton WV 31s S eet

STAY HOMEIWORK ONLINE
$500 $7000 mon h PT FT Com

(5MO Dead no 1o app !cants 3J
511)1 Equa Opportun ly EmplOye

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 y
Meet ca nsu ance B ng Naed

80

wwwc eo me com To Fee 1
866 873-31193

Put nTo Work!
52l5 $7Sih PTIFT
-811115 1325
www l&gt;httpl eom

I

A Frleftd? 1oiCJ0.32N220 Ell
8212 $2 99 Pt m nu o Mull Be

$500 $7000/mon h PT FT Com

p ele Tan ng F aa no ma on

d v ng r.qu ed Hours 7am 3pm

OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to

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Look ng For Romence Or Juet

Moroh 1'111

AskFo Maw 11

(304)875-

STAY HOMEIWORK ONLINE

Waned
NLH'S8 fo a community home fo
ptop 1 with man al rtttrdat on n
B dwell Cu ent LPN L ctnst

3 00t&gt;m Until a OOpm ONLY

a

t act ..,, campusu Make a ct
Hf' out of male no a d ffe ence t

BRUNER LAND
(110)«1 UIZ
Gal Ia Co Ko Rd 3-2 Home
On 5 Ac as Now $63 900 B Ac

boom ndus y And one tha can

pe enced eps and agenc es
wan ed fo exce en e o y
Same !Jay app ova s 1 49 2 20

$7 so An Hour To Stlrt

to

Opportunity

ADVERTIS NG SPEC AL T ES a

Na ona Bankca d p ocesso ex

800-680 9468

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

acommendl hal you do bus
ness w tn !)tOP e you know and
NOT to sand money lh ough the
ma un you nave nves gated
tne olfer ng

No experlon(:e , . _
lianngp~lded

Bualneu

NOTICE I
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL 5H NG CO

WORK FROM HOME
$500-$1500 pe mo PIT
52000-$8000 pe roo FIT

SENTINEL; QEAPYNE

1 00 p m , ... day before
the ad 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday ldltlon
1 00 p m Friday
AEQISIEA QfAQUNE
2 daya belorelhl ad Ia to
run by 4 30 p m Slturday
a Monday ldltlon- 4 30

210

110 Help Wentld

NASCAR

Atoll tred 011tlound1 6 WHk
Old P -

G-~

The

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

tO It $1000 (U01245

University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Crossroads
Program Is accepting apphcat1ons for
Its' Youth Employment Serv1ces (YES)
Program Participating youth, ages
18·21 years, will receive $6 15 per
hour for up to 120 hours of pa1d work
experience at public and/or pr1vate
worksltes In Meigs County
YES partlclpante will receive comprehensive assessment
""ploymant rHdlnoaa training and assistance to find
lull time parmanent amployment as part of the overall
work txparlence program
High achoollludtnla college atudanta and our ol work
youth are oncouragtd to apply Applicants must be
Malgt County re1ldente agas 18-2t years and meet
Worklorcl lnveatment Act eligibility requirements
To apply vlalt tha Unlvaralty of Rio Grande/Crosaroads
olllce It 1150 Mill StrNt Middleport Ohio (office upstairs)
or call 1-800-282 7201 1xt 7164 or 982-6420/992 7004

DJ"

Thla WIA atrVICI Ia !undid by the USDOL through the
Ohio
1nd lha Mtlga County Departmant of Job and
Family Strvlc1a
UniYtt'llty Df ,.lo Q tndt

flto Qran~e CDmmunlty Co Ita•
lqy1 Opportunity Imp oyer

�Page

B2 • The

Monday, March

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deily Sentinel

5 2001

440 Aplrtments
540
·::-~...:..:
'o:..:rR;:,:en::.::._t_ _

Mlacellanaoua
Merchandl11

F IWOOd For Sale S10 A Load
170 Co d HEAP ACCIP11d
(7&lt;10l2511-e103

lillor

(304)773-5111

La! I Found Yard SIIH
and Wanted To Do Adt
Mull lie Palclln AdYince
m!RUNE DfAQYNI!
2 00 p m tiM day before
!hOld lito run Sunday a
Monday ldltlon 2 00 p m
Friday

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put h to work $25/hr $75/hr FT
PT FREE nlo 800 171 80.5 e&lt;t
801 www lahOmeblz com

Deadline•
due to

CAREER OPPORTUNITY Ea n
exce ent ncome Easy c a ms
process ng Ful I a n ng Home
PC equ ed Ca Phys can &amp;
Heal hea e Oeve opmenu to I

I H -w&gt;- 772 5933 e&lt;t 2070

005

vasljt(l es due benefils ca a

aw

aval 800 597 3 40
NOW HIRING
EARN UP TO $10 00 AN H0UR

(GUlli,_ Salary)
Men and Women Needed To Do
Telephone Opera or Work Fo
RAD 0 STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemake worlt wh le
chicken n schOOl

'DAY AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

FULL AND PARf.TIIIE

OPENINGS
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
TRAIN NG PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
WELCOME

Peraonala

Appy nPesonA

COTIAGE COUPLES Chooso a
ca H n caring w th flo da St"ler
f1 Youtn Rancl'lts EXctltnt ben
tf tl egullr t me off hou1 ng op
ton a Fam y stye set

no on

303 Man Stree
Point P-nt WY
Mondly Maroh lth
lUIIdoy Moroh llh
w.c~.-ey

800 715 3797 OR www youth
r~nchee ora Eoe oFW

8Yeas0d SevU(819645
8434
New To You Tn ift Shoppe

9 West St mson Athens

7o!Q-592 M2

Qual v cto h ng and houaeho d
tems S 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day

900530

I

Auction
and Flea Market

AUCTION Eve y Saturday 6pm

a ~ge

peeTanng F ee noma on
www c eB me com To F •• 1

866 873 3693

p aama
donas ean$45 o$60kl 2o 3

URGENTLY NEEDED

wo k S25 $7&amp; hou Free De alta
W Train www ~111ucc:e11 com
Own A Computer?

o

OOPNES

NAPNES vahd d lv

tr'l cense and thrtt yeara good

M TH

12 Spm Fr day Sa a y

S o00/h heel ont Benoit Pack

118-52~

W 1)0.171 OOihr PTIFT
Moll Order
l.qe.:z»ef13

www g~tpewortt com

811 I I II I WhO I

7 ... 884

0 ve a YOUR SEARCH S
OVER I Nltci I ltlb I tuturt and
home me with )'OU tam y? Jon
ou w nn ng agklna tatbfld eam
Tandem Trantporr Co p 800

YI I Ul onHI'II

PARENTS DAEAMI Stay Homo
Ee ~ Money Se your own nourt

PtrtTlme

II you HaYI ABig Hurt You Ml)l
Want TO Join our Team Of Caring

EASY WORKI G eat Payl Ea n

Miss Out On Tha NoxtTro nlng

Necessa y Ca Tol F ee 1 800

C ass

In arneVMa

orne

888-805-058'
WORK FAOM HOME Ea n
$1500 p
o $5000 It
mon h !CALL TODAY BOO 895
02 9 o
www wo k omho

140

mftatlon or d scrim nation
This newapape wiH 1101
knowingly acwpl
adYtrtltements for real eslate
whiCh 11 in vkllatlon of the
llw Out readerS are hereby
nfDnned that a dwe ngs

~~~~~~~~~~~I

One bedroom apa men &amp; 3 bedoom mobla home no pe &amp; 740

992 5858

SR6B 3 Aerea $28 500 Large
Home On 3 Ac ea Free Gae
$311 500 5 Aerll St 2 500 Or 7
Acres Whh Poll ba n $23 500
Carr Rd 8 Ac IS $13 000 0 6
Acres W th Horse Bams
S28 000 Danv II 5 Wooded
Acres S13 500 Rutland 9 Ac es

$8500 Co Wa e
Now Fo

Ca

Maps Owne

F nane ng Whh S gh Propeny
Ma kup

actvenllad n this newspaper
are lVI able on an aqua
opponuntty balls

Repa ed New &amp; Albu t n s ock
Ca ROO Evans --80Q.537 9528

RENTALS

----------

Ta a Townhouse Ape men s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA 1 12 Bah Fu y Ca
pe ed Adult Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa lo Sla t $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease P us Secu ty Capos Re
qu ed Days 740 448 34B1
-Even nga 740 367 0502 740
:«8-010
Tw n RlverTowa s now aceepung
app lea ~ns lor SA
HUD Subs d zad ap lo elde ~

and d sabtad EOH (304)875
6679

Must See I Beau ul 3 Bedroom 2
Bath CA FR W Fl ep aca 2
Lo s New Roof Ref ge ator
S ove OW Ia ge 2 Ca Ga age
8 g Va d La ge Rooms Lots Of
Ext as Rtloca ng Out Of Sta!t

GatllpOIII ca-r Collage
(C811ere Close To Homo)
Call Today 740-446-&lt;1367
1 BOO 214 0452

Reg 190 05 274B

150

Provide To lndMclu-

Schools
Instruction

BI,ACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
StiJO ES Comp ehena vt af
o dab e Home Study egal an
ng S nee 1890 F ee ca alog
800 828 9228 ~ 0 Box 70 U49

Cal as TX 75370

D

hi p

www blackstone aw com

e o b le n as I tile a1 10
weeks F nanc ng e.va able medl
ec com 877 335-4072

BLACKSTONE

PARALEGAL

Newly remodeled country homa w.
4 badroome 1 bath oom a eel c

ment

460

Ncely Docoralod AIC 3 Rooms
Bu ding By I ealf 448 2nd Ave
(7&lt;10)448-9539

Mobile Hom11
tor Slit

470

F YOU MUST WORK WOAK

Gal pol 1 750 3rd Avo $180
Month 1 BR
Ba h Frame
Hou., Gat Heat No Pats wae
lcOI'Idsl Nights (740)44&amp;-6814

Free nlo mat on www FocusOn
Freedom com 800-73&amp;-2334

Wanted to Rent

Chr stlan couple ook ng for
housa to ant no pets no k da

J m 7&lt;10-992 3 B7

Vallay 0 lve Po nt P uaan WV
2515SO Or Fax To (3041675 8975
AAIEOE

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE'&gt;

men s aoo-s 7 347B e~et 330

Rog AQHA 19111
'3 H H Wo ld Champion m
p ess ve BloOd ne NIN West&amp; n

Pleasure Ha tar Barrell Soand
ng Stud Fee $250 304 675
1!440

MERCHANDISE

510

Tappan H Ell c ency 90~ Gas
Fu nacea 0 Fu necei 2 Set
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond t on ng
Systems F111 8 Yta Wa anty
Bennet 1 Heat ng &amp; Coo ng

non

$3 795 New Supe Lum

230

(1&lt;10)448-1773

Profe881onal
Servlcas

998

14x72 Norr

a

Sonw 0 ve Buffa o NY 1422&amp;
FREE Info mat on 1 800 578
Sma ch cken eggs 20¢ a pozen
o case $6 Gary Michael 740'
Fo Sa e Recond toned wash
e s d ve &amp; and • ge ato s
ThOmpsons App ance 3407

A App ancn Inc udtd Must Ba
Moved
II Interested Cat

Jackson AYI!nue (3041675-7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washe s d ye 1 e ge ato s
anges Skaggs App ancas 78

y no Stclll

Call
888&gt;8 B.O 2B

$$ NEED A LOAN? Try debt coh
so Ida on Cut payments up 10
60% Same day approval 1-877

of do ara to hep mnmze he
ues Wr a lmmad ately Wind

a Is 30 0 W L5H RE BLVO
088 LOS ANGELS CAL FOR
NIA 90010

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGAEE
QUICKLY baehelo s Maste a

74~ 446

7398

Kenmora WP: Mey ag Waahers
$65 each La e Mode Fr dgea e

769 81158

p oved Aflo dab e comprehen
s ve ega t a n ng s nee 1890

14M e Out 218 3 Bed oom

Bah (740)44&amp;-7322

D ye $75 Otho D yore $60
each A wh to (7(01448-9088

14x60 E ec c Heat AC 2 Bed

oom

W 0 S ove Rele ences no
Pets Refe ences $300 mo

(7(0)21le-1044

Bedroom 2 Bah
n C own City $3001 mo Plus
Oepost (740)25&amp;-1968
2 Bedroom At G enwooCI Has
S ove &amp; Aef ge ato Sect on 8
Approvod (304)578 9991

Main Street Fu rnlu e

304)675 1422
515 Ma n Stree Pont Pleasant
New &amp; Used Fumltu e
NttW 2 Plica L v ngroom Su les

$399 Buy Sel T ade
Lot mode c eerance save up to
SB 625 w th any home cl'leck us
out we a dea ng Coes Mob e

406 5

SUN SAND SURF Wt1 1 sandy
beachea tabu ous sunse a De
lu.:a ooms k chene tes &amp; ba co
ntes ove ook ng he Gu o Mex
co I&amp; and nn Beach Reso
T easurt s and FLA 800 241
9980 www sland nn eso I co m
Nea Sl Petaf&amp;burg

$37 00 Pe 00 A B ass Com
p esslon Fillings n S ock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jad!eon Oh o 1-&amp;oo-537 9528

~;;~~;.;:;;:-20;;s;;;rt,

TRANSPORTATION

710

t

891-8777

(740)446-7398

New 16 ft w de $499 per mon
on y $270 per mon ca now 1

520

Autos for Sate

800 45 0050 n

CALL

I

450 Fo eman 4x4 Eleclt 0 Shih 4
whtt., 1300 mitt Exce enr

Help Wanted

97 Kawaoak STX11 00 Jo Ski

C

74099250 t

18 SH Nymph Bua Boet 70HP

Johnson Mo o Exca en Cond

on $2800 (740)245 9430 A1e
800pm
1989 Sylvan Bass Baa 17 Foot
A um num w h B8 Ho aepowe
Ev n Rude Moto Works We n
R ve 0 Lakel Fo Bass 0

c appll (7&lt;10) 381-8358
991 Grand Am S 495
Caval 1

$ 99S

$41!95 994

SERVICES

992

997 Lum na

s 10 $3695

995

s

810

0$4295 Ohes nsock we

Teke Trades COOK MOTORS
(740)441Hll03

Home

85 Jeep Che okee Wagon Good ___l_mO::p-::ro::::::ve::m=e_n_t•_ _
Cond on (304)875 5182
BASEMENT
I
WATERPROOFING
740 M0 t orcyc e1
Uncond t ona let me gua antae
Loca e e ences fu n shed Ea

D ocnu est Sa s act on Gua
anteed Pels age &amp; Supples pro
v ded Rush Se I Add tssad
5 amped Enve ope G CO DEPT
5 Box 438 ANT OCH TN

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
oil ce vs 1 neceuary Up ro $500
ns an y by ptlo"e
877 EAR
LYPAY l c 1750005 1 s AO

New
Flee wood
161180
$19 999 00 3 Bedroom 2 Ba h 1

VANCE FREE

877 77Ht70

370 1 438 Stan mmedlata y

I

$125 WEEKLY

4170

Ul

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING W TH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PARe
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OU RED I 800 748 5716 EXT
X 01

1 and 2 bedroom apartmtn s u
11 shed and unfu n shed secu y
depoe equ red no pe s 740
992 22 B

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
No Fee un ..swewn
t 888 582 33411

h s ) I 800-449-4825 Ext 5700

ntoellton Expanding
In Clo llpolle

Exper ance Requ ad Fo FREE
nlo ma on Ca 1 BOO 601 6832
e. 300

$7 An hour + 8onUMI

We Are LOOk nlf Fo EltrN:tl\10
Communicators To Make Ca s
For MaJO Nat ona Christian
0 gan zaHons Preserv ng
Fam ry Values

SECURTY
$810 ~R
Thl Waekenhut Co p s Reau
Wig Fo Several Positions Must

310

HaveGEDO HS OpornB
Pease Apply A James M Gav n
Power P an State Route 7 Or Ca

cap Evans Al(740)925-30 0
EOEMIFIWV

340

Bu•lnea• end
Buildings

12~2.4

Bu ld ng To Be Moved

$500080 (7&lt;10)4&lt;18-4292

720 Second Avenue 1 Bed oom
Upsla rs Apa tment $300 +De
post We e Sewer 1 ash Pad

(710)441 e2 e (Day) (74o &lt;46
010 !Evon ngs)

WeOite
•Mad ca and Dental
•401K
•Pt~

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO

'

nene useswaned

$2000 $i5000/mo
www e commb z ne

•
I

•Paid Tra nlng
OWHI&lt;Iy Pay
•FXIdScllod•P oleulona Env onment
Make A Dlfflrence n Our Worktl

Ab10 u ely Frttlnfo
Ea n Onl nt ncome

Ca Today For An lnllr\'low!

WorkF omHomoCoi com

lli112T

$2 000 $5 000/mo.

AIIIMILY AT HOMIII Cralto
Toyo Jawo ry wood Sow ng
Typ ng., G 111 Pay CALL 1 10
795-0310 E•t 201 (21hre)
Altlntlon
Workl'romHome
ltJOO 15 OOOimo
I 111112 I011
ATTINTION
Ea n On na naoma
1500.17800/monlh
t 100-71...111
wwwpc-com

1774 Ches nul By Owner Bull In
1997 3 Bed oom To Aba ement

vaeauonl Pad H&lt;&gt;lldaye

, .....2311141

T 20 3 $B9 500 00 (7(0)••8
2914

FINANCIAL
The Athena Me go Educallonal
S• v ce Ctn " s ••ate ng qua
I lid cand dllll for 111 pooruon or
Trtllu er Appl can 1 mutt pos
1111 I T IIIU 1 I I conu
otuad by hi Oh o Dop of Edu
cat on or tvldtnct that 1uct1 I
cen11 can be o~ltUntCI E~~:per
tnct n IC:hOOI d atr Cl 1.1n Vttl ty

or goYornmanlalacccunt ng do
I rid l•po ronco II I Ohllf I lOll
cHico prlftrrod App aantl muot
ojoo hm lho abl 1y to ba bOndld
and to proYicll lht own lran~PC~
tat., lubm t IIHor of ntlrtot "'
auma ~ rofa onoto and oopy of
ourron conat to John conolan
10 lupo nllndlnl 107 ~loh anG
Avanuo lu II 101 Athena OhiO
11101 Appllcallon dlld na II
Apr 5 2001 Thl AMIIC I anG
lquol Opportun 1)1 Imp OYI "'"
;;•lcl:::":;:__ _ _ _ _ _..,l

210

A Good """tmont Prope ty That
W I Pay Fo h.. f Oay (7&lt;10)44110855 EYOnlng (7&lt;10)248-5.252

r.' -•

-

100 sot 1m 1111 n11

Mt Vernon AYonua 1 learpom
HOUM Now C1M 'urn10t 0 ..11111
A lnolorNowy,utu Net
K tchtn Applancaa laoamtnt
COYI ld ,11 0 , 011 10 1
(:104)1111o117 (304)111.. &lt;105
(

•

Grttn Sundance Ouster

85 ooo M u va A Auto
$2700 oso (7&lt;10 21le- 233

ltllwlllll'

n.,..

A•lnllu
a-llttlall

rci 11111

t Oodgo lila h II 150H~
5 Bpotcl Claron CD ~ IYO! Tint
Runa Great lliU (710)1111717
LIYIIY 1 Aulo II II t 911 Pord
loco t I W ltOO 1111 Oldl
Cull Ill Cit!I It 200 1812 to~ or
cury Lyn• IW 1•50 1111 Mer
ou y Cougor 11 •oo tell Mil
cury TbPII 11100 1111 Ponlac
a and Am 11100 11110 Oldo Cut
111 C ora 11100 1811 Oklt Oo
II II 1800 11e3 Mercury TOpaz
11100 Call MOnday Th u Friday
e ooam 5 oot&gt;m (740)318-1303

720

Truck• tor Sell

c:-er

011

a Manor Apartmtntl

Now

Aootpt ng AppHoat ont ~or 1 81'1
HUD lubt dlzod Aportmanta 'or
lldtr And Ha"d capped lqu1
Houa ng Opporlun ly (UO)UI

...

v

apart~nlt If V ago Minor and
~ Ytroldo Aponmonta n Mdd t
po 1 from 117~ l13a Ca r.o

ita 1011 lqull HOUI ng Oi&gt;POF
lun 1111

~

Exaroltl 81kl 1100 Zan th 1t
lloek 1 White To •• alon
1:1041112 2702
EZI'ETIIX COM 81YI up to SO%
on ALL pat mid cal ono end oup
pllto lncludlog Hllr gord ntor
otptor Front lnt morolll f~EE
SMIPPINO Ordtr on lne WWW Ez
pttR• com 1

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

-

For

8211 (7&lt;10)311

Salt (7&lt;10)3111211(

Full and part time po11tlona avelllble
Camplllllrllnlng provldtd with llexlblt houra

Fu 1 I oodtd Doberman• 5 Ft
moll ~ Maltl and t Rtcl Mill 5
wkl Old (7A0)44H&amp;71

Goldin RotriiYtr pupo lui blood
td f tt ll'lo 1 end wo mtd 1

ma 1 11omo t 1125 110 te2

7111

P'ull limo potltiOna oller bentrllt paoktge whloh
lnoludN Modloei!Ointlll!.o11&lt;/Pd Ylaallon..
CALL TODA~ STAAT TOMORROW!

1-888-974-JOBS
CIVIa

Pd 1or 117 cwua.
AllllllaJ Welf&amp;NIM!IUI

aroc oua IIYing 1 and 1 blcfroom

Looking To luy A Now Homo?
Con t HIYI !.and? Wt Doll Hu ry
Oh~ I0 Lota 1.1" :104 7317HI

e.c

PL&amp;UI. CALL TODAY

3 Acra a Bottom of 11111 on right on
~odman ~ldgo ~d (301)171

,O~ICLOIID QOV T HOM II
10 0~ LOW DOWN TAM
~1'0 I a IANK~U,TC:III OK
CI'IIC T ~0~ LilTING CALL 1

O...SH,n
St llnal'llllla

WIIIMI Ttrrllr

3111

rtqu td 01 11 1
www wtubmlt ws/WOI'Uihome

13000 wook yl MAILING •oo
D OChUFII AT HOM II Qua
antood ~roo Supp II 1 100
11:1-3110 Ill 1311 (2Urs )
not
-•1 tlmt workl;f,
~
wlh t 1 Oo•ornmont No "PI
onca t 100 11a1711 (II hOUri)
• 113
1150 11000 waok y POll btl Un
mlltcl cpportun ly f~ll dltllla
IAII NMQ ttOO W Unlva tlty,
Iuiie I PMI 230 ldlnburg TK
-1115

u

COMPUTE~I WI ~INANCI
DILL COMPUTE~II IYtn with
eta than porfacl c odltl 1 100
411 1011 Code WJ7 www orne
t!Oiutlono com

&amp; 2 ac 1 build ng o 1 sur
veyed waft &amp; tltctrlc lVI ab 1
liP C P I II)P OVId dOUb 1W dt
accapltd a8 1185 &amp; up 7(0 712

IIIPI' enct

Adopt A
Pet

IUILDINQI 21•~0
w11 11 ~oo aarr
•oo 40•11
~II ItO IDO atl f5 100 5011110
INti 181 100 otll 111 100 ~Mr
~ul Upl can DIIIYI~ Tom t (aOO)

'o11oo mpcunca a Aaproa
:fOVOIII ChiYY • JIIPII ~, ....
0•11 Po LIt nga 1 IOo-111 OIDO
1111 CHIT

Downtown Of ca Andl Or Apa t
mom Bu ld ng 011 Streo Park ng

Buslnell

It 000 WEEKLY POSS BLE
fAOM Homo FrH wob 1111 No

a ITEIL

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Earn up to $15 /hour

"" 1103
AUTOII'IIDIIIIII DO

350 Lot• &amp; Acreage

Opportunity

0

GALLIA COUNTY
DOG SHitLT£R
HODRS 1·5 M·l"'

Homea for Sale

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CAEDIT FOR LIST NGS CAll
t 800.338 0020 IX 98

(304)675 2714
(300)878 70 8

Ml1cellaneous
MtrchlndiM

REAL ESTAfE

$987 85 WEEKLY P ocesslng
HUD FHA Mo tgage Refunds No

M eo

21'1&lt;1 Avo pl\one (740)44&amp;-18 5

540

Make Money

2000 Black cnevy Ex ame
L-oaded Low M eage 4 000

La ge Collec on of AnUque Pock
e Watcheli Good Condn on 422

y 8 s Gttt ng Most Of Vour

Payehoekl Cal (740)446 3093
Fo Your Now Home Today

He p ng Peop a Race ve Gove n
men Refunds Free Data sl (24

110 Help Wented

530

3 Bed oom 2 Ba h 1 877 777

B9 F 110 KLT ll at P U load
od High Milt Body Exeo ont
Shape Mull 6" To App tc all
$2000 (710)4411-117•
t3 Chevy B tO Standi d LOOkl
Good Run• Qood Mutt Sn To
~pp

)595

110 Help Wanted

w hta e o aale $4000 cal

9812

II~ ohtd 1975 Cal 24 HrL (7&lt;10)
4(8 OB70 t 800.287 0576 Rog

Now Ftatlwood t4x70 S 8 999 00

f2 000 WEEKLY! Ma lng 400

6323

Boatl 6 Motor•
for Sale

ere Wa erprooflng

110

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Condition $4900 12 lltlf 0 IH

750

$0 DOWN CARS POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29
MOS 0 99o/. FOR LSTNGS

Sporting
Goode

100 891-8777

840

Eng ne $300 F ba G ass 'Ti uek

Building
Supplies

pllances Gua anteed Skaggs
App lanees 76 V ne St eet

New .C fl w de 1499 down on y
$199 pe mon call now 800

Home
Improvements

Toppor 10 a Dodgt ytlrl 77 92 1
YtarOid $200 (7&lt;10!44HM7

WHITE S METAL DETECTOR S
Ron All son sea Watson Road
Bldwe Oh o 45814 (7(0)448
(338

Range $95 Frolltleo Rei lgerato
St50 Freeze S so Neo Wash
e &amp; D ye Sel $300 At Ap

t -800-89 t 8777

High School Diploma at Home
Sta 1 L &amp; ed P lvate Schoo New
Unique Fas Program Fa lu e
P oot Lowest Tu ton College
Gus antee Ca Fee Now F ee
l!roellure 800-888-3997

~8

Wh lpoo Washe $95 E ec r c

Make 2 Payments &amp; Move n

810

C&amp;C Gene a Home Man
anence Pa nl ng v ny s d ng
carpentry doo 1 w ndows tJa hs
mob a home tl)&amp;if and mo t Fo
f ae est mae ca Ct1et 740 992

now $19 990 70K15Dx16 was
$59 990 now $42 990 80l!200K16
was $94 500 now $59 990 1 Boo-

550

Mus Se 18•10

800-984-83 6

Motorcycle•

STEEL BUILDINGS NEW MUST
SELL 40lC60x 2 was $17 SOO now
$ 0 971 50&gt; 00• 8 was $3 500

Homtt US SO Eut Athena Oh

BR DGE STATE UN VERSITY

740

985 3956

Wa e I ne Spec a 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 Pe 100 1 200 PSI

14lC70 2

Doc o a e by cor espondence
ba&amp;ed upon p o educat on and
sho study coursa Fo FREE no ma on book at phone CAM

B1mbo Coles and Wesley Per
son shot a co mbmed II fo r
32 ( 343) Mtam outscored
the Cavs 30 6 0 1 3 po nt
shots Cavs opponents h ve
413 more 3 pont attempts
than Cleveland th s seaso n an
average of7 I mor per game

363 EXT 2QO.U

Ask ng

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay

he touched the ball Grant
had stx pmms on 3 for 10
shoottng Riley has a 205 64
( 762) career record m March
Smce Riley came to Mtanu
the Heat are 76 45 ( 796)
when they hold the oppos1
non under 90 pomts Cavs
guards M ller Jtm Jackson

race

We got a set of t;Jres where
the en JUSt ~ent crazy loose
and that kind of spooked me
he sad We never got t bac k
free enough and tt never let
me race Jeff
Johnny Benson fintshed
fourth n a Pont ac (; llo ved
by the Fords of Todd Bod ne
and Mart 1 a d the Ch vy of
last w eks V.l 1er Seve Pa k
- the best fin sl a o g the
three Dale Ear ha d In c
entnes
Daytona
v nn r
M1chael Waltr p va
tn ng
early but fad d to 3th vh
Dak Earn! ard Jr kd b efl)
c 1t re tea n that vc have to a 1d shppcd b c k o fi sl
snck togeth r a d never g ve 23rd
Ha vtc k
ho
Kev n
up Gordon satd Its some
th ng we 1 cd to keep domg replaced th eld r Eanl arit
c\ery race
at R chard Ch ldr ss Ract g
The wm als &gt; broke a str ng after NASCAR s b gg sr st
of three stmght L s Vegas VIC
w s killed
a cr sh 1 tl e
tortes by the Ro t&lt;h Racmg last lop of h Da~ to a or 0
Fords of Mark Martm and Jeff vas tl e top fi sh g rook
He vas e.gl t)
B rton
Burto
vho vo I c c
Jarrett sa d tl e Fords con
here the last t vo ye s
s
tmue to tace wtth an aerody
the first dr ve el 1 a ted
nam c diSadHntage thiS sea
son because of rule changes from content on when he lost
that have g1ven other makes control and h t the v 11 o lap
two
an edge
You can really feel tt when
you pull up on another car

refused a trade to Cleveland
from Portland last summer
and eventually went to
M1anu was booed each time

mo e opt ons manutac u a of
sawm a edge a and sk dde s

(740)446 9662
St 7 000 TWo Btclroom "TWo Botto

ltke Gordon s Monte Carlo
and your momentum JUSt
sto ps the 1999 senes c1 am
pton sa1d
Jarrett who started from
the pole added that hts car
became very loose late 11 the

fromPapB1

ba "'"'" 2000 a ger eapae 1es

Kanuaga Mob e Home Sa es
Start You Bus ness Today
P me Shopp ng Can e Space
Ava abe A Aflo dable ~ate
Sp ng Va ev P aza Ca 740 448
0 01

83

aon penods dunng the race
and With the two-tire stop
mstead of four Gordon who
went 1nto the pm stxth came
out th1rd behmd Hendrtck
Motorsports teammate Jerry
Nadeau and the Marlm s
Dodge
Marhn took the lead on lap
202 and Gordon got by
Nadeau for second on the
next lap Gordon stalked Mar
hn curung steadily mto his
lead before chargmg past on
lap 225 to become the 12th
leader m the race
Gordon lost the lead for a
wh1le dur ng a ser es of
green flag p1t stops but came
back out on top on lap 248
and pulled away from the sec
ond place Ford of Jarrett to
wm by 1 477 seco nds about 15 car lengths
That sho ved nc and thiS

cavs

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Hea

Sawm

Houaehold
Good a

Daily Sentinel • Page

800 872 5&amp;67 www orvt eom/ben

Pumps LP &amp;Naua GaaFu
naces f You Con t Ca 1 Us We
Both Losa (740)448 B308 &amp;
t 800-29 t 0098

t 995 Schult 18x80 3 Bed oom
2 aa h Sharp Home S2 500

SFR EE CASH NOW$ from
wea I'Pf am es unklad ng m klns

ht p

nelawcom

Peasant VaHey Nu s ng And Re
hab lltatlon Cen e Cu rent y Has
Openings Fo LPN 1 Twtlvll Hour
Sh Its Exce lent Pay And Bene
I s Contact Human R11ou ces
At P eaaanl Va ey Hosp ta 2520

w th SO down low month y pay

Palomino Stillion

Space tor Rent

Downtown Second Avenue Nea
Cou thouse And City Bu d ng

AT HOME Bu d you own sue
cesatu bua ness Ma I o de E

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD ES Home S udy Ap

800 B26 922B PO Box 701449

(740)881&gt;2268

(7&lt;10)446-7300

or Judy At (740)4(8 7323 (L
brary) To Sa Up An Appolnl

appo ntmant 740 885-3917

www blackstone aw com

STUD ES Comp ehens ve af
fordable Homa Study ega t a n
ng S nee 1890 F ee catalog
TX 75370 o

NEW AND USED STEEL Stu
Beams P pe Reba Fo Gone eta
Ang a Channa Fat Ba S ee
G at ng Fo 0 ana 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways l&amp;l So ap Me as

s

td In Easte n 0 lt ct Must see
o 1pp tc:1 alt $72 000 Ca fo

cash fo em an ng payments on
P ope ty So d Mo t~ages Annu
les Set emen s lmmed ate
Quoits Nobody bl!la s our p lc
es Nat onal Coni act Buye s
(800) 490 073 ext 01 www na
tlonalcont actbuyers com

Da as

740J44H30B t 800.291 0098

ERS A mos eve yone app oved

$67 000 Co I (304)773 5454 o
304)773-5391

Commareo $1000 $7000 PT FT

New &amp; Used E ec c And Gas
Fu naces Fo Sa e Cal Fo S z
es
Ins a a ion
Ava abe

NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT

3 Room UPIII'I Apl One Bed
oom At 851 Second Avenue
Gall polls Oepos t Requ ed x
Monlhs Leaae Uti ties Not In
c uded except Wa e Ca I Oebb a

320

MOB LE HOME OWNERS
Huge nvan o y D scount P ces
On V ny Sk ng Ooo s w nd
ows Anctlo s Wa e Htall s
P umb ng &amp; Etec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Benne s
Mobl e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb comlbel'lnell

NORWOOD NDUSTRIES 252

FREE Ca a og 800 828 9228
w e PO Box 701449 Dallas TX
75370 NA o http www backs o

,

ux tamH at statui or national
origin or any ntentlon to
mako any ouch preference

St tam + Barn $33.000 Vinton 0
Acres S12 0001
Molgl Co 1\.lppt P a 111

hea pump 2 ear garoga b g yard
on ttpproodmataly 1 aero ot local

Buslne11
Training

Apply Today n PoriOn

A 8204 Carla Drive Or Ca I
(7&lt;10~tUnd Ask lo Roberta 0 Mary An e&lt;il'll Oppo
tun 1y Employer
Port Time LPN 5

F NALLY A LEGITIMATE HOME
BUSINESS Become a h ghly ptld
ega o med ca 1ansc bar cod

90

TO~S P va 1 s ock 18 1 NAS
DAQ a ng soon No min mum In
vestment! www wetbee com

Nmltatlon or dllcl1mlnatlon

baaed on race colOr re lgiOn

s 35000r20Acas $19500
c ay Townsh p 3 Aerts Wit11

Rusty Wallace for the most
wms among act:tve dnvers
The first w1n for Gordon
smce last September 10 R1ch
mond Va moved h1m mto
second place m the season
standmgs trathng Sterling
fhlarhn Sundays thud
\phce finiSher- by 35 pomts
after three of 36 races
Gordon
NASCAR s
b1ggest star now that Dale
Earnhardt ts gone took the
lead wtth 20 laps remammg
and drove off to an easy v1cto
ry over Dale Jarrett As great
as the car was at the end 1t
was a handful early m the
race
The car was real real ttght
n traffic and we were JUSt
st ugghng Gordo lSatd
The qu1ck two ttre stop
late n the ?6 7 lap race was
the key
That freed the car L p q tte
a lot and all of a sudden tt
came to life Gordon satd
beanung at Loonus the
man who had the d1fficult JOb
of replacmg longtime Gordon
crew chief and mentor Ray
Evernham I was gomg by
guys that had four (new) tires
and JUSt walking away from
them after that
All the leaders p1tted on lap
179 durmg the last of SIX cau

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS

'*247 com

ed lmmed at y Home compute
needed FREE n e net 1 BOO
29 t 4883 Dep t 09

P O&lt;lucte a Homa No Exporlenea

$25 00 up to $75 00/h p ft

Vet

People WhO Wlnt To Make A
Dffereneo n Worldng Wltl1 Ptople wnh DlaabH~• 'lbu ca ng
Attnude WIH BaA Pus When
You Apply For One Of Ou 0 ed
Support Stiff Po~tlone Do~t

$500 P us a Week Auemb ng

Nl real-··-~ ng In
this newspaper saubtaet to
tho Ftderal Fair Housing lv:J.
of 1868 which makes h I!ega
t o - any prela&lt;ence

hml'llp11

And Long Hal td

FAI •• 1 SUPPLI~S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

es S2 000 0 5 Acres w th
Pond $25 000 RIO G ancte Seen~
P Iva a 8 A.c 11 With Pond
$25 000 Or 13 Acres At Dead
end $27 000 Che&amp;hi e 8 Acres

Work from home

Mt 9057 Ext 1(0 www land com

0 vert P A M Transport No tlC
per ence needed 2 week COL
tanng S34000y yea pustu
benelts &amp; pad t an ng D v.,s
based n M dwest 1 877 230
6002 Sunday Bam 4pm Monday
7am &amp;pm Tue-Fr 7am 4pm

BEER ORINKERoBEER INVES

WORK fROM HOME

lrH bOOkllt ea BOQ-428 51153 or

Tanng
Povded
www homowlthklde oom

Dep
45103 P 0 4236 C ssom 0 Oh

age Send Resume To Cec I a
Bake Buckeye Commun ty Se v
Cll PO BoK 604 Jack1on OH

Own a PC 1 Put 110 Work tor a

a Need

make you $20 000 S30 000 evan
$50 000 up I om sa es of p omo
1ona p oduc s to oca bus ness
commun y p us $1 000 up
mon h y n ove desl Top com
rn ss ons advanced da y No col
ec ons no nven o y no del va
es No bus ness nvestment A
sk ess oppo un y Full o pa
me You ca the sho s and se
you own hou s Ask o free
p ospec us and 2 e page com
pet on ass ca a og To f ae
phone suppo t Ou c edent as
07 you s con nuous ope at on
D&amp; B a ed 3A Fo ns an achon
phone L nda Burb nk 800 642
0790 o w a Kaese &amp; Bla Jnc

hou s week y Ca Sea Tee 740
592 6651

qu 1 no tuperv 1 on Fu I Tra n
lng Sit Own Hou 1 Compute w
modlm rtqulld Ca To F H 1

267 3944 x13B

T uok cads Of New &amp; Used I ems
F om Seve a S atas sa ng To
The Pub lc &amp; Oea e s One Place
Dozens &amp; Case lots Gary
Bowen Auc onae P octo " Ia
Oh o F ea Ma ke1 Jus Ac ou
Hun ngton WV 31s S eet

STAY HOMEIWORK ONLINE
$500 $7000 mon h PT FT Com

(5MO Dead no 1o app !cants 3J
511)1 Equa Opportun ly EmplOye

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 y
Meet ca nsu ance B ng Naed

80

wwwc eo me com To Fee 1
866 873-31193

Put nTo Work!
52l5 $7Sih PTIFT
-811115 1325
www l&gt;httpl eom

I

A Frleftd? 1oiCJ0.32N220 Ell
8212 $2 99 Pt m nu o Mull Be

$500 $7000/mon h PT FT Com

p ele Tan ng F aa no ma on

d v ng r.qu ed Hours 7am 3pm

OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to

DATA ENTRY U5 000/y po on

Look ng For Romence Or Juet

Moroh 1'111

AskFo Maw 11

(304)875-

STAY HOMEIWORK ONLINE

Waned
NLH'S8 fo a community home fo
ptop 1 with man al rtttrdat on n
B dwell Cu ent LPN L ctnst

3 00t&gt;m Until a OOpm ONLY

a

t act ..,, campusu Make a ct
Hf' out of male no a d ffe ence t

BRUNER LAND
(110)«1 UIZ
Gal Ia Co Ko Rd 3-2 Home
On 5 Ac as Now $63 900 B Ac

boom ndus y And one tha can

pe enced eps and agenc es
wan ed fo exce en e o y
Same !Jay app ova s 1 49 2 20

$7 so An Hour To Stlrt

to

Opportunity

ADVERTIS NG SPEC AL T ES a

Na ona Bankca d p ocesso ex

800-680 9468

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

acommendl hal you do bus
ness w tn !)tOP e you know and
NOT to sand money lh ough the
ma un you nave nves gated
tne olfer ng

No experlon(:e , . _
lianngp~lded

Bualneu

NOTICE I
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL 5H NG CO

WORK FROM HOME
$500-$1500 pe mo PIT
52000-$8000 pe roo FIT

SENTINEL; QEAPYNE

1 00 p m , ... day before
the ad 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday ldltlon
1 00 p m Friday
AEQISIEA QfAQUNE
2 daya belorelhl ad Ia to
run by 4 30 p m Slturday
a Monday ldltlon- 4 30

210

110 Help Wentld

NASCAR

Atoll tred 011tlound1 6 WHk
Old P -

G-~

The

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

tO It $1000 (U01245

University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Crossroads
Program Is accepting apphcat1ons for
Its' Youth Employment Serv1ces (YES)
Program Participating youth, ages
18·21 years, will receive $6 15 per
hour for up to 120 hours of pa1d work
experience at public and/or pr1vate
worksltes In Meigs County
YES partlclpante will receive comprehensive assessment
""ploymant rHdlnoaa training and assistance to find
lull time parmanent amployment as part of the overall
work txparlence program
High achoollludtnla college atudanta and our ol work
youth are oncouragtd to apply Applicants must be
Malgt County re1ldente agas 18-2t years and meet
Worklorcl lnveatment Act eligibility requirements
To apply vlalt tha Unlvaralty of Rio Grande/Crosaroads
olllce It 1150 Mill StrNt Middleport Ohio (office upstairs)
or call 1-800-282 7201 1xt 7164 or 982-6420/992 7004

DJ"

Thla WIA atrVICI Ia !undid by the USDOL through the
Ohio
1nd lha Mtlga County Departmant of Job and
Family Strvlc1a
UniYtt'llty Df ,.lo Q tndt

flto Qran~e CDmmunlty Co Ita•
lqy1 Opportunity Imp oyer

�I

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

PUBLIC
NOTICE

...

Monday, March

STATE OF OHIO
OHIO SCHOOL
FACILITIES
COIIIIISSION
NOTICE TO BIDOERS
1. Bide will be
recelvod by the llelgl
Local School Dletrlct
Board, at 320 Eoot
lloln Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio , 45769, Attn:

Truckini!

Inc.

lor the following
Prajoot:
Melgo High School
Pomaroy. Ohio

In accordance with tho
Drawings ·

and

Spaclflcatlona
proparad by:
SSOE Studloa
Architects
1001 Madlaon Avenuo
Toledo,~: 43824·

Phone: (419) 255-31138Fax: (419) 255-8101
SEM Partners, Inc.

167 South Stitt Stroot
Wootorvllla, OH 43081
Phone: (614) 794·31og;
Fox (614) 794·3088
The Construction
Manager for the
Prajactlo:
The Quandal Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington
Road
Waatarvtlle, Ohio
43082

'·'

Public Nolle,

-:-..:...::=::::::;..:;=~-:-I

Quandal Group, Inc.
8181
Worthington
Road, Weatervilla,
Ohio 43082. No moro
than throe (3) sole will
bo provided on I
rofundoblo baalo to •
Blddor. Deposit will bt
refunded to Primo
Blddora only per
Article 2.10 of tho
lnetructlons
to
Bidders.
.
7. The Contract
Documonta may be
reviewed lor bidding
purpouo without
charge
during
business hours at tho
following, locations:
Archltocll Office:
SSOE Studloa
Architects
1001 Medloon Avanuo
Tolado,!?H
43624·1535
SEM Partners
ArchltiCio
167 South Stole Street
Weetarville, OH 43081
Conatructlon
Manager's Office:
Tho Quandel Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington Rd.
Weolarville, Ohio
43082
Owner Office:
Meigs Local School
Dlatrlct
320 Eoat Main Streit
Pomoroy,Ohlo45769
F.W.
Dad go Plan
Room a In I h a
following clllaa:
• Cincinnati, Ohio
(45202·6001), The
Grand
Baldwin
Building, 855 Eden
Park Drlva, Sullo 515
• Independence, Ohio
(44131),
6200
Ro~kllda Wooda Blvd.
(Citve..,nd)
• Columbua, Ohio
(43216·1073), 1175
Dublin Rood
• Doyton, Ohio (45439),
3077
Boulevard,Kottortng
Point Woet

• Room Addlllona &amp;
Remodeling
•H.,.~

'

•

•

f

'

.74().992.()459
Clean basements,
attics, garages &amp;
barns. Free
estimate Ught
Hauling Jobs

LINCOLN
Mercury

SI'EtCIAL FJN}INCE DEPARTMENI'
Bankruptcy? Credit Prpblems?
'We Can Help"!!

C&amp;U Us

hr.t Or We Both Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
1·800-272-5179 or 446·9800
General Contradlno

Homes,
Renovotlons, Rat
roof speclallsls

Allto Upllolstwy· Pill, lie.

BISSELL

Rutland, Ohio
TnK:k seats, car seats. headliners, truck tarps,
· Cl&gt;nvenible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler scats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

BUILHitiiNC.
Now Ho,... • Vlayl

Over 40 yr• a)(perlenca

(740) 742 8888

740.992-7599

1~521..()916

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Mon-Frl

8:30 • 5:00

6 I 1I

CONlRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 41771

CONCREif/BLOo:/BRICK

Septic systems,

water, oasunes
HOME CREEK
ENT., INC •.
992-7943

• Footers, Wall1, Step•

•Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
ond Driveo • 8teDcU
Crete Free Elllmateo

Se"'lll Ohio ond W. V.
WVI03171l

Public Notice

---~---

Ohio, 1175 Dublin
Road, Columbuo, Ohio
43215 .
• Morlotto Contractore
Aeaocllllon, 4424 B
Emenon Avenue;
LARRY SCHEY
Porkeroburg, Wtat
VIrginia 26104
• Parktreburg·Marlelll
B u II d I n g
&amp;
Conotructlon Trodae
Council, 1408 1/2 13th 750 East State Street Phone (740)593-667
Str11t, Parktreburg,
Athens, Ohio
WlltVIrgln..,26101
8.
The OWner ro11rv11 ~
tho right to reJect any
• U-llt ... Fl'llll Ellll. . .
or oil bldo and to
wolve ony or all
•llft&amp;lll
lrrilgultrltltl,
•EtdllllltWII'l •Tt. . .IIIIMifltlrl
mlotaktl, omloolono
•lrlliWirl
or Informal II Ito
rototlye thereto.
•NtwTirn
AII
q uI I II on •
• Uood Tlroa .
IDd
penolnlng to 11aurtng
Bidding Documento,
Blddtr'l lilt, etc. eholl
bo dlroottd to Gandtl
&amp; Aooocloltl, ·Inc.,
4488 Mobile Drlva,
Ohio 43220 (614) 459·

L::===============.

8338.

Olilnor: llolgo Loco I
School Dlatrtot Board
of Educoilon
(2) 19, 26, (3) 6 3tc
Public Notice
BUILDING FOR BID
The Villoge of
Rutland will betaking
eaaled bldlll on tho
building at tho tnd of
Depot Str11t. The
building
hu
collopead. There art
approximately · 18
factory buill 30x80'
treaeae. All motorlole
from the building will
be Included In tho
bid. lllnlmum bid to
$500.
Whoever
obtalne tho building
will have 2 Wtlkl to
.move all moterlale
from
tot.
Bldo the
muotVllloge
be modo
by March 18, 2001.
Bldo m1y be turned
In et the VIllage
Olllco.

l___l!~~~~~~rt_.!!!!,~.J

r------..
WANTED
o1

edl
Old redlot, d r 0
tullte, &amp; parte
~~

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Paru
Factory Authorized
Case·IH Paru
· Dealers

~

2/271 ""'od

-...

1000$1. Rl. 7 Soufh
CDoltillle, OH 46723

PLNIII

(tU) IU4111
.
.
lilt Quality For The LDRit Ptlce,

740 ••, ......

BARNEY
. HERE'S SOM.E
BARBER POLE CANDY
FER PAYIN' CASH

GUAIWITII!DI

46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!1-3301

LJOinel, MTH, K-Line,
Atl1&amp;~1rn. Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
9, HO, &amp; N Guage
· Estes Rockets
WHY-DRIVE
ELSE?
SH~DE RIVER AG. SERVICE

&lt;:;: "AhNd In urvlce"
.J1.6"'Frollln llvlotodr/adllt lied SUS/100
-211l Hlllllln 1'r1t1a Dag IGotl S6.7S/50
-lfli W1st1m pddt hone IIIII $5.60/50
$1.00 off Collpon makes IIIXI ptlllhtst 54.60/50
-

1.ayet CrutnWes SSlS
T.M. Salt llocb 5415/50 ••

SHADE RIVER AO. SERVICE
l--~:...~!!!:J!!!!::!

.FRANK. &amp; EARNEST .·

·~
33795 Hiland Rd.

740-992-5232

;:.:. ,____, !-------'

Warld'l Btlt Root"

The CRAF1Y,

enendtol•~

IT viA$ O~t,.y A JOICf··· .t CAN'T
tft,.ltvf Tt40Sf 6UY r TOOX
Tt4f EL.EC:. TO~AL COt,.LfGf
ll&gt;f/f rttciOIJfLY.

Htef\ll Dt7
Self·Sto.-age
PorMroy, Ohio

THE BORN .O..VO:IO:.

't'tl e£ ~,1 f t we:J:f. "(0\) !'
Kf&gt;VOO '(00 ~0,'1'00 :ii'OOLD

&amp;. ~IC£. IO T~ !'EO('(£ Y()J
({If£"(
WP.."f UP.. . ,...~::.11

'&amp;c.ME"fooU;~ ~ ~~
0(11

Wit WP..."f

DOW~\

..

. (flctoty 011!111)

All nilll!al blholo are
mode io'order II 0111'
• Vertle.U • Woad

11 Madrid Mro. 34 Poker polo
Mock
35 About
GaHOuo 39 GrHk lyric
fuel
poet
18 lllochl
43 - Aralll
Elman'o
45 Tommy
lnotrument
Dor11y hod
dag.
211 Gannan
20 Clrloonlll
ono
2 HaiUng
Chlrln -' 47 Wampum
30 Brick·
22 Acqulrad
48 tnoectloldo
corrylng
3 Roman 58
by lobar
lnHa.
4 "Three
davlcal
23 More
49 Mlnor'o find
blind
31 U.aotho
unconny 50 Col. box
wortc lorco
"
24 Waltz city 52 Actroso
33R-tof 5 About
25 Comaa
Hogen
Folrbanke 8 Sal nymph
after
53 Aok lor
7 Tloro
38Joponoea
27 Kind ol
payment
oborlglne I Me1n one
curve
from
37 Staol,
8Gruly- 32 Actor
54 CIA'o
akktylt IO Mike lece
Zlerlna
1orerunner

•Qt
II Botll

1441lilnl An. G~

Home Cl'ltk Ent., Inc
992·7943

'1

. 446-4995
SoiiJSPI

Horne

Conslluct1on
New Homes, Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Mtlke Your .
Dream A Reality! .
.740· 742·3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

89

OX 1
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843·5284

we'll get you going for ..........
~very Spring
~ FREE

a

Blade Sharpening.

New equipment arriving d•lly
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
for a REAL DI!AI on a new lawn
tractor, lawn mower or weed

(3) 15,2001

IN!

AI,_

IT'S 60tN6 TO BE A HISTORI(

TEST, AND l NEED 'lOUR HELP

740.985-4180

by Lula Campo•
Colobrlty Clphor cryp10grama oro created 1rom quollllono by lomouo

people, put and prelfnt. Eact'lltner In thl cipher atandllor another.
Todly's Clue: M equals D

'AH

SRN

WAOM

SRAHAOT

YAWU

NROHR

K E P

MR I U

, BVRXN.'-

E0

8 A· 0 K A U Y II ,

BZ E NUG

EK

AG HE

'J U A G T
J R N UJ R YY ' N

zRyy

EK
K RLu.
· pj:i'Evtoui'!sOLlJTION: 'You can say something In a certain
spirit, with a smile ... when II appears In prinl, there's no
amite.'- Marion Branda
·

flls•

sequence; I don't.
ST0 UBE
At trick one, you
I I I 11 I
must drop the spade
six. If you play the
three, East will know
A L MA L
•
that his partner started
with only four spades.
Then, he will switch to
hearts and defeat your
H y L I L• ~
'
·As a community volunteer I re·
ld
(H
h
contract.
esou
. . . . . celved a needlepoint that rea d :
select the heart jack, a
surrounding play in
'Kindness Is ~n investment that
case you have queen· .
KRy S 1 F
never - • • : •.
third.) Yet if you false· 4
S
Complete tht &lt;huck to quoled
card with the spade . . . . . . .
by lilhnt In tho
-d•
six, East will probably
·
you diVIIop from otep No. below.

I

FOim/NATELV, I TlllNI&lt;
IT 1LL PROI!A.IILV BE .

I I I I I I I0

ml:."l

1.

I' r I' I" ,. I
toes~- ~n~'HE;;,H~SQUA!~~c~s;;;~mii==~·=~-:::;-~~-=~·=:·
:· :· UNSCWiif AIOVE urifts
I I I I I· l
·. ":-'~O~GE'IS!..JIIII~S~WE:!la~----"·....1.-.&amp;.._...............,_

the 'pain. out
ofpainri"'J• Le1 me
do it for Ybu"

llave Message ·
Ah116 pm

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ll"ll,

~' Take

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Belore6 p.m.

What kind of bridge
book do you prefer to
read? The "regular"
200-page offerings
contain lots ofmateri·
a!, so they provide
good value for the
money. But short
booklets that concentrate on one topic are
becoming more and
more popular. The !at·
est three to reach me
were written by Eng·
lishmen David Bird
and Marc Smith:
" Deceptive
. Card
Play;' "Eliminations
and Throw~Ins," and
"Planning in Suit
Contracts" (Master
Point Press). They all
contain good instruc·
tion, and each chapter
ends with a useful
"points to remember"
section and a quiz.
(My
reservations
about them tomorrow.)
This
deal contains
I
,
,
an 1mportant pomt.
Look only at the North ·
and South hands.
pt AAI/~ NO 11&gt;\TC.r-.ITIOI-I Of(,()(~&gt;\~ Against your contract
&amp;a. OOWI&gt;IN:.NN, T~! of three no-trump,
West leads the spade
five and East wins
with the ace. How do

13
11

.........

""'

I 1• I I

LINDA'S
PAIN.TING

BrJntlt1n your rtpalr work

.....

66 Oop

0

• MbUt • Etc

•

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

(2) 18, 28, 2001

Ill

surprising, because r ~~~
••'ra"'Lin;lr OJ'ii'Q-Q
.h ... , - 1)"(1
IVOaD
couldn''t find a clear·
p\!jl J:'QU tv~ ~ pq•
UMI
cut auction to three
l~h4 1oJ C&amp;AY 1. POI&amp;AN
no-trump by South.
aoorrongo lotttro of tht ,...,~~:-.....~~
So, don't assume I
lour tc111mbled _ , be- \
condone
· this low to form lour tlmplo wordo.

loeadoo

UPTO 70%0FF

.MQN.UMENTAL
LifE INSURANCE (0.
to

L---------~""::.:""""::::'"'~"'::~=..•

-I

(-.

17 ~1111 IIIII 57 lolncllnad
11 A Otboi
58 Church
21 ConMctloll
lnotrumante
23 1:1131, e.g.
28 Ocaan
DOWN
rncwetnellt
10rlho21 Florida
dontlat'l
COIInly

you plan to get home
safely?
.
The authors give no
bidding,"which isn't

BLIND SPOT

month

/JJ/

•atltl

BY PHILLIP ALDER

IIHIIIJH

~~~r

Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
d' I N · H
Major Me ICa • ursmg orne~

9lt.flt
• ' . fo

Concentrate!

l~
PUIIIT. .TU
!l IT..) JII.HI4

Advertise rz•-+""!
In thiS space

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,

•••

~illld:•l

~

'======::~::::;:::;:::;::;;;::;:;:~
r

B

-

tKQJII

y.

title

45aunll
14 Butchlr'o 48 Baby ood
tool
48 Raolm
1S Prtnlaclllot 51 Flloa
of m l - 5!1 Midi bel
18 Comooundo

• It I I

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

304-882·2220

=..

• It' •

t II t I
• A It If

W&amp;lAll Home
ce•mumo•
Improvements

ll...littltlt..

42Now
44 Ethiopian

13TUIIIICI-

. . . . . . . . . . . 1111

DIMYIII
Plllfl

,..
41 _
'~-·

........

Sldlq • Now Garoga

• Reptocoma~t
Wlndowo • Room
Addition• • Roollq
COMM!l&lt;W. aod IBIOOOIAI
FREE ESTIMATES

31 tnc.-uo

40 Howollon

12 ttao.. lly

P/B
740.985·3948

Excovotlno

IMONDAY

return his. remaining
spade, ht;&gt;pmg
hsh hts partner. s
apparent five-card smt.
If East does that, you
g~ab th~ trick withdthe
kmg, dnve out the ta·
mend ace, and cruise
home.

PIINT NI.MElED lETTERS IN

-

1\T.liT.l re;1 IR,l IA,l fT,l ~

RACK 1

•

JU•J ~ JC•J [E] jv.j [E] [9

RACK 2

•

RACK 3

•

RACK4

•

t.:.:J t.::.J t:::J 1.!..::1 0

·

t...:..:J

0

~ [EJ ~ [EJ [!±] ~

fQ.l ~ fT.]

m

[Ej ~ [!±]

t! 1Wl55

'Your .:

...!!!..

...!!!..
...!!!..
:

JUOO'S TOTAL

~------

'Birthday'

...,...

·. BLli'E MECHANIC4L CONTaACTORS

Hill'• Self

I'

l

$Dollar
Daves

URNPIKE

43082
(614) 885·9000

Phone: (614) 885-11000Fax: (614) 865-9001
www.quandel.com
2. Any propoaad Equal
for a Standard eholl bo
oubmlttod to the
Architect no IalOr thon
ton (10) buolnooa dayo
prior to tho bid
opening. If no
Addenda 11 laouod In
aosoclatlon with tho
Bidder'• roqunt, the
propoead Equal ehall
be
aoneldarad
roJICtad.
Sealed blda will bo
racalved for:
llelge High School,
Estimated Contract Office Pork, Suite 301 receipt of 1 roquaet,
VI lUI
• Toledo, Ohio (43623), accompanied by a
Phalli
3930 Sunloreat Court, depoe it ao nemtd
Bid Package No. 01 :, P.O. Box 8598
above, the Englnoar
GoneraiTradoa,
• Charlaaton, Woat will forward copieS of
$1,761,000
VIrginia (25302), 405 bidding documonto to
Alt. IGT·OI, Elevator
~~
~~
Upgrada ......... $33,00C! and
tho following 5. Shipping chergtl
Bid Pockaga No. 02:, additional plan rooms: lor all Bidding
Food Sorvlca Equip....
Aillad Construction, Documents ara non·
........................ $68,000 •1010
Vale Avenue, refundable and aro to
Bid Pockago No. 03:, Cincinnati, Ohlo45206 bo paid vla 1 eaparoto
Cosawork ..... $100,000 • Dodge/Scan, Bank chock In tho · amount
Bid Packoge No. 04:, One Building, 3rd of $25.00, atao made
Plumblng ......s2n,ooo Floor, 1255 Euclid out to Gandaa &amp;
Bid Package No. 05:, Avenue, Cleveland, Auoclataa, Inc. and
Flra
forwarded to the
Protectlon ....$294,000 •Ohlo44115
The
Bulldere
Engineer with the
Bid Package No. 06:
Exchange, ~ulta One daposlt chack.
HVAC ......... $1,363,000 Construction Center, , lntoreatod Blddore
Bid l!ackage No. 07:, 981 Keynote Circle, 6ohould
contact
Elootrlc ......... $747,000 Cleveland, Ohio 44131 Gandao &amp; Asaaalatoa,
Bid Package No. 08:
• Tho Builders Inc. at ( ) 459.8338
Technology .. $415,000 Exchange of Central or oend614
deposit and
Bid Package No. 09:
Ohio,
1175
Dublin
ehlpplng
chocks
Wlndawa ...... $258,000 Road, Columbus, Ohio directly to Gandeo
&amp;
Bid Package No. 10:
43215
Alloclatoa, Inc.
4488
Modular
Dayton Bulldora Mabile
Drlvo,
Clasaroom •.. $200,000 Exchange , I 077 Columbua, Ohio
until the Bid Date of Embury Park Road, 43220 , No moro than
March 14 02001 at I :00 Dlylon, Ohio 45414
thrtl (3) 1111 will bl
· pm (IOCII llanderd • Bulldoro Exchange of provided
on
time), when they will Eut Control Ohio, ralundablo bllll to 11
bo optntd and rood.
2521 34th Slrlll NE, Bidder. Dopolll will be
3. A pro·bld m11t1ng Centan, Ohio 44705
refunded 10 Prime
will bt hold on • Ctntrol Ohio Minority Blddtrl only
per
February 27, 2001, at 8uolntlt
Article
2.1
o
of
1:00 p.m. at the Admlnletratlon, Bt5 ,1netruotlonl tht
to
· following looellon:
Etlt Maund Straot, :Biddoro.
Mtlge High School Columbuo, Ohio 43205 o7 . Tho cantroot
Ubrary
Ohio
Valley Dooumonte mey be
42011 Pomeroy Plko •Conetructlon
tor bidding
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788 Employero Cl)uncll, 21 .rovlewod
purpoet• without
4. Bldd)ng Document• Armory
Drlvo, oh1rg1
during
moy be oblllnod from Whitling, WV 28003 bUIIntll hOUri 11 tho
the Conllrucllon • llorlttlo Controctoro following loootlone:
Monagtr by Prime Auoclallon, 4424 a EnglnHr'l 011101:
Blddero only, upon Em 1 r 1 on Avenue, i GlndH &amp; Aatoelltn,
receipt of 1 check, Porkoreburg , WV ·
Inc.
which lo rofundablt, In 26104
j
4488 Mabile Drive
tho omountol$150.00. • Plrkertburg·Morlalla
Columbue, Ohio
Chocko lhall be mede Building
&amp;
432220
payeble to the Molgo ConetructiC)n Tradot
conttructlon
Local School Dlllrlct Council, 1406 1/2 13th I Manager'• Office:
and lorwardod to tha Strest, Parkereburg, I Tho Quondol Oroup,
Conetructlon llan-r. WV 26101
·
Inc.
Upon receipt of 1 8. Tho Owner rt1trvt1 8181 Worthington Rd.
roquoot, occompanled tho right to rojoct ony Wollervlllt, Ohio
by 1 depoollu no mod or all bide and to
43082 . ·
above,
the wolve any or oil
owner Office:
Conetructlon Manager lrregulorltlta,
llolgo Locol School
will forward copl11 of mletakoo, omloolone
Dlotrlot
bidding dacumonte to or lnlormolljloo 320 Eoetlloln Stroot
the bidder.
.
rolallvo thereto.
Pomeroy, Ohio 41789
5. Shipping cherg11 All
queetlone F.W. Dodge Pion
lor 111 bidding penelnlng to oocurlng Roomo
In tho
document• aro non· Contract Documont1, 1totlowlng ctttoo:
refundable and art to 8ldder'1 Llet, etc; • Cincinnati, Ohio
be pold vlo 1 11porot1 ehall bo dlroctad to (45202·8001), The
check In the amount Mogon Bohlen, Tho Orand
Baldwin
or $25.00, alao made Quando! Group, Inc. Building, 855 l!den
out to tho Meta• Local 8181
Worthington PlrkDrlvl,8uiii51S
School OlotrTct and Road, W11torvllle, Oh • Columbuo, Ohio
forwarded to the 430112 (814) BBHOOO. (43218·1073),' 1175
Conotructlon Manoger Owner: Melgl Locol Dublin Roed
I
with tho dtpoell School Dlotrlct Boord ·• Charletton, Well
chock.'
of Eduelllon
Vlrglnll (25302), 405
e. lnter11t1d blddere (2 11, 28 3 5 3tc
Clpltol Street
ehould con..i:t Mogan CLEAN HOUSE
and the following
tddttlonat plan roorno:
Bohlen II (814) US·
WITH THE
• The aulldore
11000 or eend dopoelt
~ chock directly to Tho CLASS IF~EDS i
Exchange of Control

ACROSS
I Typeol
7Young
......

IN!

• Eloctrtctl &amp; Plumblllf
4488 Mobile Drlvo
Columbuo, Ohio 43220 ~:~~~~.:e~u-.
Phone (614) 459-8338 •
Fax (614) 442·2158
Tho Conetrucllon
Manager for. tho
Project is:
Tho Quandal Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington
Rood
waatervilla, Ohio
Phono:
. Fax: (614) 865-9001
www.quandel.com
2. Any Proposed Equtl
tar a Standard ehtll bl
submitted to tho
Engineer no later then
ten(10)buelneudoye
prior to tho bid
11
na
0 pen 1n 9 •
Addendum 11 luuod
accept! n g
th 1
Prapoood Equal, tho
Propolod Equol eholl
be
conelderod
rojocted.
.
Saalad bldo will be
received lor:
Molgo High School
Estlmatod Contract
Vllua
Aebutoe Hazard
Abatement Work,
$146,000
until the Bid Dote of
March 14, 2001 ott :00
pm (local allndtrd
time), when they will
bl optnad and rood.
3; A pro-bid mtotlng
will be held on
February
27, 2001,
11
1:00
p.m.
at the
following locotlon:
Malgo High School
Ubrary
42091 PomeroyPikt
· Pomaroy,Ohla .
4. Bidding Dacumonto
moy bo oijtalned from
tho Englnoor by Primo
Blddoro only; upon
receipt' of a chock,
which 11 retundeble, In
tho amount o1 sso.oo.
Checke eholl ba madt
peyabtt to tho Molgo
Local School Oletrlct
and
forwarded Upon
to tho
Englnaer.

• NewHomee

740.992·1671

In accordance with

Drawing•
and
Speclflcatlons
proparod by:
Gandao &amp; Aoooclatn,

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

following Project:
Aoblotoo Hazard
Abatomont Work
Molgo High School
Pomeroy, Ohio

Benefit Gun Shoot
for John Williams
March 1Oth
12 noon
IS~&gt;on:sorl3d by Racine Gun
1/2 shot /1/2 slug

Mark E. Rhonemua,

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PIIILLIP

Mark E. Rhonemua,
Traasurer, for the

Ohio, 45769, Alln:

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page BS

M!ddleDOrt, Ohio

ALDER

Public Notlct

A1n•

............ week...,.
1111" ...... lllclt ....,.
CAU. OUJ O.. ICII1992·2155

Main Street, Pomeroy,

Po~~roy,

Public Notkt1 in Ncw5papers. A
Yo..r Rlaht to Kaow, l)elilllettd Ri&amp;NIC) Your Door.....

BULLETII BOARD

STATE OF OHIO
OHIO SCHOOL
FACILmES
COMMISSION
·NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1. Bldo will be
received by tho Malga
Local School District
Board, at 320 East

2001

ALLEYOOP

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

Public Notice

s,

'

'

211170 ..lhan Ralld

Roofing • Home

llactnt, Ohio

Malntenlnce-

45nt

740-941-2217
Your LINK to
the perfect
Job ...

·oally
Sentinel

Howardl.
Wrtteset

BIZH5' X10'
· to10'x30'
llcMn

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Guttei'I-Down
Spout
F'" EltlrrtltH

848-1405
591-5011

l-304-675-7124
1 teo 21Ut77
Cwm dol N"' CCH!IIIidlon
Soleo Senl&lt;e ~latloa
Spodallzi"'la ShMt Mtfll lhtctwCHk
~· Solei a Senlce l!'or
Gollo, ,._,, oad Melp Counll•
Llceniod ond 1-...1
WV 1051"

VOUR ·
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Oltlllly Drlvtwayl,
Pltloe, Sldll'l'llkl.

as y-.IXjlllllnct

Classifieds
992-~1

IMIMI,'A ....t~

Cellular .
Warner Ins.
992-5479

F'" Eltlfllllll
7.742-8015 Of

1-877-353-7022

Tuesday, March 6, 200I
What's good for you might not be
Trustwonhy friends could play equally so for others and they'll
conitructive roles in your affairs resent your demands.
·
In the year ohcad, including helpGEMINI (May 21-June 20) :
ing you in some manner of fur· Lady Luck mighrhave her eye on
ihering your career or 1111bkions. you today, but if your thinking is
Be sure to n:ciprocate.
too negative, she may not be able
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) to do her stuff for you. To feel her
Do not get involved in any com· blessings, keep an open and opti·
pany politics at work today. It's mistic mind.
futile and counterproductive, and
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
somebody always has to lose in The wisest course of action is
the process. Don'tlet that some- always to think first and act sec·
body be you. trying to patch up ond. Should you reverse this order
a broken romance? The Aatro- today, you mlsJ!t make a flniiiCial
Graph Matchmllker can help you blunder not eully rectified.
undentand whatto do to mike the
LBO (July 23·Aua. 22)
relatlanahip work. Mail $2.75 to Althouah you moy not tel an opt!.
Matchmaker, c/o thil newsp~per, mum deal whlrt neJOIIalinlwday,
P.O. Box 1751, Murray Hill Silo you can Improve upon your poll·
don, Now York, NY 10156.
tlon 1r you don't act tao huty ~
AIUI!S (Much ~!·April 19) -ptlna whalla flrat ofl'erld.
UnllllfOII find a way to cooptro
VlRGO · (AUI• 2.3•8tpt, 2.2)
ate with othen t~. you're not Wl•hfulthlnldna 11 not 101na10
apt to r.ocomplilh what·YOU had producoaclunlhlnaiOda)'.lfyou
your hlllt 111 on dolna. Be lht wantiOtllllhlna doril, be pNpllld
lint to do for them and they'll to 111lllip your •l•vu llld wade
then do for you. ·
· until It'• a faltiiCCOIIIpll.
. TAURUS IAprtl 20-Moy 20)
LIBRA (Sipt. 23·0ct. 23)
Don't make too bil ofa flla1over When you dl111111'11 the lhort·
havln.l your way today lnvolvlna comlna• of othen, it opet11 up the
•omeihltll
lnconaequentlal. way for them to ~vertook youfl.

Be tolerant IIJ!d forgiving todai
and both panies can win.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Although you might run inlo a
snag today, if you "'main persistent and tenacious, Lady Luck
will come to your aid and get you
over the hump.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you keep all your options
open today, you can fulfill your
hopes and expectations. Things
might not go as you originally·
planned, but they can be accom·
plishcd by taking an alternative
route.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Should things not be going
your way today and you feel
· you're llklna a beatlna. remember
that aornetlmea we octually tum
out to be lhe victor when it flrat
appean we are vanquiahcd.
AQUARIUS (lan. 20-Peb. 19)
Bverythlna can be neaotlatod
even whan you hove a dlmcult
l&amp;f'ltnlnt 10 hammer out. Ju11 .
kelp· a flexible mlndnt today,
beclllll the othar JUY Ia looklna
fill' comproml.. u won.
.

�I

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

PUBLIC
NOTICE

...

Monday, March

STATE OF OHIO
OHIO SCHOOL
FACILITIES
COIIIIISSION
NOTICE TO BIDOERS
1. Bide will be
recelvod by the llelgl
Local School Dletrlct
Board, at 320 Eoot
lloln Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio , 45769, Attn:

Truckini!

Inc.

lor the following
Prajoot:
Melgo High School
Pomaroy. Ohio

In accordance with tho
Drawings ·

and

Spaclflcatlona
proparad by:
SSOE Studloa
Architects
1001 Madlaon Avenuo
Toledo,~: 43824·

Phone: (419) 255-31138Fax: (419) 255-8101
SEM Partners, Inc.

167 South Stitt Stroot
Wootorvllla, OH 43081
Phone: (614) 794·31og;
Fox (614) 794·3088
The Construction
Manager for the
Prajactlo:
The Quandal Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington
Road
Waatarvtlle, Ohio
43082

'·'

Public Nolle,

-:-..:...::=::::::;..:;=~-:-I

Quandal Group, Inc.
8181
Worthington
Road, Weatervilla,
Ohio 43082. No moro
than throe (3) sole will
bo provided on I
rofundoblo baalo to •
Blddor. Deposit will bt
refunded to Primo
Blddora only per
Article 2.10 of tho
lnetructlons
to
Bidders.
.
7. The Contract
Documonta may be
reviewed lor bidding
purpouo without
charge
during
business hours at tho
following, locations:
Archltocll Office:
SSOE Studloa
Architects
1001 Medloon Avanuo
Tolado,!?H
43624·1535
SEM Partners
ArchltiCio
167 South Stole Street
Weetarville, OH 43081
Conatructlon
Manager's Office:
Tho Quandel Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington Rd.
Weolarville, Ohio
43082
Owner Office:
Meigs Local School
Dlatrlct
320 Eoat Main Streit
Pomoroy,Ohlo45769
F.W.
Dad go Plan
Room a In I h a
following clllaa:
• Cincinnati, Ohio
(45202·6001), The
Grand
Baldwin
Building, 855 Eden
Park Drlva, Sullo 515
• Independence, Ohio
(44131),
6200
Ro~kllda Wooda Blvd.
(Citve..,nd)
• Columbua, Ohio
(43216·1073), 1175
Dublin Rood
• Doyton, Ohio (45439),
3077
Boulevard,Kottortng
Point Woet

• Room Addlllona &amp;
Remodeling
•H.,.~

'

•

•

f

'

.74().992.()459
Clean basements,
attics, garages &amp;
barns. Free
estimate Ught
Hauling Jobs

LINCOLN
Mercury

SI'EtCIAL FJN}INCE DEPARTMENI'
Bankruptcy? Credit Prpblems?
'We Can Help"!!

C&amp;U Us

hr.t Or We Both Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
1·800-272-5179 or 446·9800
General Contradlno

Homes,
Renovotlons, Rat
roof speclallsls

Allto Upllolstwy· Pill, lie.

BISSELL

Rutland, Ohio
TnK:k seats, car seats. headliners, truck tarps,
· Cl&gt;nvenible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler scats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

BUILHitiiNC.
Now Ho,... • Vlayl

Over 40 yr• a)(perlenca

(740) 742 8888

740.992-7599

1~521..()916

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Mon-Frl

8:30 • 5:00

6 I 1I

CONlRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 41771

CONCREif/BLOo:/BRICK

Septic systems,

water, oasunes
HOME CREEK
ENT., INC •.
992-7943

• Footers, Wall1, Step•

•Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
ond Driveo • 8teDcU
Crete Free Elllmateo

Se"'lll Ohio ond W. V.
WVI03171l

Public Notice

---~---

Ohio, 1175 Dublin
Road, Columbuo, Ohio
43215 .
• Morlotto Contractore
Aeaocllllon, 4424 B
Emenon Avenue;
LARRY SCHEY
Porkeroburg, Wtat
VIrginia 26104
• Parktreburg·Marlelll
B u II d I n g
&amp;
Conotructlon Trodae
Council, 1408 1/2 13th 750 East State Street Phone (740)593-667
Str11t, Parktreburg,
Athens, Ohio
WlltVIrgln..,26101
8.
The OWner ro11rv11 ~
tho right to reJect any
• U-llt ... Fl'llll Ellll. . .
or oil bldo and to
wolve ony or all
•llft&amp;lll
lrrilgultrltltl,
•EtdllllltWII'l •Tt. . .IIIIMifltlrl
mlotaktl, omloolono
•lrlliWirl
or Informal II Ito
rototlye thereto.
•NtwTirn
AII
q uI I II on •
• Uood Tlroa .
IDd
penolnlng to 11aurtng
Bidding Documento,
Blddtr'l lilt, etc. eholl
bo dlroottd to Gandtl
&amp; Aooocloltl, ·Inc.,
4488 Mobile Drlva,
Ohio 43220 (614) 459·

L::===============.

8338.

Olilnor: llolgo Loco I
School Dlatrtot Board
of Educoilon
(2) 19, 26, (3) 6 3tc
Public Notice
BUILDING FOR BID
The Villoge of
Rutland will betaking
eaaled bldlll on tho
building at tho tnd of
Depot Str11t. The
building
hu
collopead. There art
approximately · 18
factory buill 30x80'
treaeae. All motorlole
from the building will
be Included In tho
bid. lllnlmum bid to
$500.
Whoever
obtalne tho building
will have 2 Wtlkl to
.move all moterlale
from
tot.
Bldo the
muotVllloge
be modo
by March 18, 2001.
Bldo m1y be turned
In et the VIllage
Olllco.

l___l!~~~~~~rt_.!!!!,~.J

r------..
WANTED
o1

edl
Old redlot, d r 0
tullte, &amp; parte
~~

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Paru
Factory Authorized
Case·IH Paru
· Dealers

~

2/271 ""'od

-...

1000$1. Rl. 7 Soufh
CDoltillle, OH 46723

PLNIII

(tU) IU4111
.
.
lilt Quality For The LDRit Ptlce,

740 ••, ......

BARNEY
. HERE'S SOM.E
BARBER POLE CANDY
FER PAYIN' CASH

GUAIWITII!DI

46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!1-3301

LJOinel, MTH, K-Line,
Atl1&amp;~1rn. Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
9, HO, &amp; N Guage
· Estes Rockets
WHY-DRIVE
ELSE?
SH~DE RIVER AG. SERVICE

&lt;:;: "AhNd In urvlce"
.J1.6"'Frollln llvlotodr/adllt lied SUS/100
-211l Hlllllln 1'r1t1a Dag IGotl S6.7S/50
-lfli W1st1m pddt hone IIIII $5.60/50
$1.00 off Collpon makes IIIXI ptlllhtst 54.60/50
-

1.ayet CrutnWes SSlS
T.M. Salt llocb 5415/50 ••

SHADE RIVER AO. SERVICE
l--~:...~!!!:J!!!!::!

.FRANK. &amp; EARNEST .·

·~
33795 Hiland Rd.

740-992-5232

;:.:. ,____, !-------'

Warld'l Btlt Root"

The CRAF1Y,

enendtol•~

IT viA$ O~t,.y A JOICf··· .t CAN'T
tft,.ltvf Tt40Sf 6UY r TOOX
Tt4f EL.EC:. TO~AL COt,.LfGf
ll&gt;f/f rttciOIJfLY.

Htef\ll Dt7
Self·Sto.-age
PorMroy, Ohio

THE BORN .O..VO:IO:.

't'tl e£ ~,1 f t we:J:f. "(0\) !'
Kf&gt;VOO '(00 ~0,'1'00 :ii'OOLD

&amp;. ~IC£. IO T~ !'EO('(£ Y()J
({If£"(
WP.."f UP.. . ,...~::.11

'&amp;c.ME"fooU;~ ~ ~~
0(11

Wit WP..."f

DOW~\

..

. (flctoty 011!111)

All nilll!al blholo are
mode io'order II 0111'
• Vertle.U • Woad

11 Madrid Mro. 34 Poker polo
Mock
35 About
GaHOuo 39 GrHk lyric
fuel
poet
18 lllochl
43 - Aralll
Elman'o
45 Tommy
lnotrument
Dor11y hod
dag.
211 Gannan
20 Clrloonlll
ono
2 HaiUng
Chlrln -' 47 Wampum
30 Brick·
22 Acqulrad
48 tnoectloldo
corrylng
3 Roman 58
by lobar
lnHa.
4 "Three
davlcal
23 More
49 Mlnor'o find
blind
31 U.aotho
unconny 50 Col. box
wortc lorco
"
24 Waltz city 52 Actroso
33R-tof 5 About
25 Comaa
Hogen
Folrbanke 8 Sal nymph
after
53 Aok lor
7 Tloro
38Joponoea
27 Kind ol
payment
oborlglne I Me1n one
curve
from
37 Staol,
8Gruly- 32 Actor
54 CIA'o
akktylt IO Mike lece
Zlerlna
1orerunner

•Qt
II Botll

1441lilnl An. G~

Home Cl'ltk Ent., Inc
992·7943

'1

. 446-4995
SoiiJSPI

Horne

Conslluct1on
New Homes, Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Mtlke Your .
Dream A Reality! .
.740· 742·3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

89

OX 1
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843·5284

we'll get you going for ..........
~very Spring
~ FREE

a

Blade Sharpening.

New equipment arriving d•lly
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
for a REAL DI!AI on a new lawn
tractor, lawn mower or weed

(3) 15,2001

IN!

AI,_

IT'S 60tN6 TO BE A HISTORI(

TEST, AND l NEED 'lOUR HELP

740.985-4180

by Lula Campo•
Colobrlty Clphor cryp10grama oro created 1rom quollllono by lomouo

people, put and prelfnt. Eact'lltner In thl cipher atandllor another.
Todly's Clue: M equals D

'AH

SRN

WAOM

SRAHAOT

YAWU

NROHR

K E P

MR I U

, BVRXN.'-

E0

8 A· 0 K A U Y II ,

BZ E NUG

EK

AG HE

'J U A G T
J R N UJ R YY ' N

zRyy

EK
K RLu.
· pj:i'Evtoui'!sOLlJTION: 'You can say something In a certain
spirit, with a smile ... when II appears In prinl, there's no
amite.'- Marion Branda
·

flls•

sequence; I don't.
ST0 UBE
At trick one, you
I I I 11 I
must drop the spade
six. If you play the
three, East will know
A L MA L
•
that his partner started
with only four spades.
Then, he will switch to
hearts and defeat your
H y L I L• ~
'
·As a community volunteer I re·
ld
(H
h
contract.
esou
. . . . . celved a needlepoint that rea d :
select the heart jack, a
surrounding play in
'Kindness Is ~n investment that
case you have queen· .
KRy S 1 F
never - • • : •.
third.) Yet if you false· 4
S
Complete tht &lt;huck to quoled
card with the spade . . . . . . .
by lilhnt In tho
-d•
six, East will probably
·
you diVIIop from otep No. below.

I

FOim/NATELV, I TlllNI&lt;
IT 1LL PROI!A.IILV BE .

I I I I I I I0

ml:."l

1.

I' r I' I" ,. I
toes~- ~n~'HE;;,H~SQUA!~~c~s;;;~mii==~·=~-:::;-~~-=~·=:·
:· :· UNSCWiif AIOVE urifts
I I I I I· l
·. ":-'~O~GE'IS!..JIIII~S~WE:!la~----"·....1.-.&amp;.._...............,_

the 'pain. out
ofpainri"'J• Le1 me
do it for Ybu"

llave Message ·
Ah116 pm

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ll"ll,

~' Take

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Belore6 p.m.

What kind of bridge
book do you prefer to
read? The "regular"
200-page offerings
contain lots ofmateri·
a!, so they provide
good value for the
money. But short
booklets that concentrate on one topic are
becoming more and
more popular. The !at·
est three to reach me
were written by Eng·
lishmen David Bird
and Marc Smith:
" Deceptive
. Card
Play;' "Eliminations
and Throw~Ins," and
"Planning in Suit
Contracts" (Master
Point Press). They all
contain good instruc·
tion, and each chapter
ends with a useful
"points to remember"
section and a quiz.
(My
reservations
about them tomorrow.)
This
deal contains
I
,
,
an 1mportant pomt.
Look only at the North ·
and South hands.
pt AAI/~ NO 11&gt;\TC.r-.ITIOI-I Of(,()(~&gt;\~ Against your contract
&amp;a. OOWI&gt;IN:.NN, T~! of three no-trump,
West leads the spade
five and East wins
with the ace. How do

13
11

.........

""'

I 1• I I

LINDA'S
PAIN.TING

BrJntlt1n your rtpalr work

.....

66 Oop

0

• MbUt • Etc

•

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

(2) 18, 28, 2001

Ill

surprising, because r ~~~
••'ra"'Lin;lr OJ'ii'Q-Q
.h ... , - 1)"(1
IVOaD
couldn''t find a clear·
p\!jl J:'QU tv~ ~ pq•
UMI
cut auction to three
l~h4 1oJ C&amp;AY 1. POI&amp;AN
no-trump by South.
aoorrongo lotttro of tht ,...,~~:-.....~~
So, don't assume I
lour tc111mbled _ , be- \
condone
· this low to form lour tlmplo wordo.

loeadoo

UPTO 70%0FF

.MQN.UMENTAL
LifE INSURANCE (0.
to

L---------~""::.:""""::::'"'~"'::~=..•

-I

(-.

17 ~1111 IIIII 57 lolncllnad
11 A Otboi
58 Church
21 ConMctloll
lnotrumante
23 1:1131, e.g.
28 Ocaan
DOWN
rncwetnellt
10rlho21 Florida
dontlat'l
COIInly

you plan to get home
safely?
.
The authors give no
bidding,"which isn't

BLIND SPOT

month

/JJ/

•atltl

BY PHILLIP ALDER

IIHIIIJH

~~~r

Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
d' I N · H
Major Me ICa • ursmg orne~

9lt.flt
• ' . fo

Concentrate!

l~
PUIIIT. .TU
!l IT..) JII.HI4

Advertise rz•-+""!
In thiS space

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,

•••

~illld:•l

~

'======::~::::;:::;:::;::;;;::;:;:~
r

B

-

tKQJII

y.

title

45aunll
14 Butchlr'o 48 Baby ood
tool
48 Raolm
1S Prtnlaclllot 51 Flloa
of m l - 5!1 Midi bel
18 Comooundo

• It I I

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

304-882·2220

=..

• It' •

t II t I
• A It If

W&amp;lAll Home
ce•mumo•
Improvements

ll...littltlt..

42Now
44 Ethiopian

13TUIIIICI-

. . . . . . . . . . . 1111

DIMYIII
Plllfl

,..
41 _
'~-·

........

Sldlq • Now Garoga

• Reptocoma~t
Wlndowo • Room
Addition• • Roollq
COMM!l&lt;W. aod IBIOOOIAI
FREE ESTIMATES

31 tnc.-uo

40 Howollon

12 ttao.. lly

P/B
740.985·3948

Excovotlno

IMONDAY

return his. remaining
spade, ht;&gt;pmg
hsh hts partner. s
apparent five-card smt.
If East does that, you
g~ab th~ trick withdthe
kmg, dnve out the ta·
mend ace, and cruise
home.

PIINT NI.MElED lETTERS IN

-

1\T.liT.l re;1 IR,l IA,l fT,l ~

RACK 1

•

JU•J ~ JC•J [E] jv.j [E] [9

RACK 2

•

RACK 3

•

RACK4

•

t.:.:J t.::.J t:::J 1.!..::1 0

·

t...:..:J

0

~ [EJ ~ [EJ [!±] ~

fQ.l ~ fT.]

m

[Ej ~ [!±]

t! 1Wl55

'Your .:

...!!!..

...!!!..
...!!!..
:

JUOO'S TOTAL

~------

'Birthday'

...,...

·. BLli'E MECHANIC4L CONTaACTORS

Hill'• Self

I'

l

$Dollar
Daves

URNPIKE

43082
(614) 885·9000

Phone: (614) 885-11000Fax: (614) 865-9001
www.quandel.com
2. Any propoaad Equal
for a Standard eholl bo
oubmlttod to the
Architect no IalOr thon
ton (10) buolnooa dayo
prior to tho bid
opening. If no
Addenda 11 laouod In
aosoclatlon with tho
Bidder'• roqunt, the
propoead Equal ehall
be
aoneldarad
roJICtad.
Sealed blda will bo
racalved for:
llelge High School,
Estimated Contract Office Pork, Suite 301 receipt of 1 roquaet,
VI lUI
• Toledo, Ohio (43623), accompanied by a
Phalli
3930 Sunloreat Court, depoe it ao nemtd
Bid Package No. 01 :, P.O. Box 8598
above, the Englnoar
GoneraiTradoa,
• Charlaaton, Woat will forward copieS of
$1,761,000
VIrginia (25302), 405 bidding documonto to
Alt. IGT·OI, Elevator
~~
~~
Upgrada ......... $33,00C! and
tho following 5. Shipping chergtl
Bid Pockaga No. 02:, additional plan rooms: lor all Bidding
Food Sorvlca Equip....
Aillad Construction, Documents ara non·
........................ $68,000 •1010
Vale Avenue, refundable and aro to
Bid Pockago No. 03:, Cincinnati, Ohlo45206 bo paid vla 1 eaparoto
Cosawork ..... $100,000 • Dodge/Scan, Bank chock In tho · amount
Bid Packoge No. 04:, One Building, 3rd of $25.00, atao made
Plumblng ......s2n,ooo Floor, 1255 Euclid out to Gandaa &amp;
Bid Package No. 05:, Avenue, Cleveland, Auoclataa, Inc. and
Flra
forwarded to the
Protectlon ....$294,000 •Ohlo44115
The
Bulldere
Engineer with the
Bid Package No. 06:
Exchange, ~ulta One daposlt chack.
HVAC ......... $1,363,000 Construction Center, , lntoreatod Blddore
Bid l!ackage No. 07:, 981 Keynote Circle, 6ohould
contact
Elootrlc ......... $747,000 Cleveland, Ohio 44131 Gandao &amp; Asaaalatoa,
Bid Package No. 08:
• Tho Builders Inc. at ( ) 459.8338
Technology .. $415,000 Exchange of Central or oend614
deposit and
Bid Package No. 09:
Ohio,
1175
Dublin
ehlpplng
chocks
Wlndawa ...... $258,000 Road, Columbus, Ohio directly to Gandeo
&amp;
Bid Package No. 10:
43215
Alloclatoa, Inc.
4488
Modular
Dayton Bulldora Mabile
Drlvo,
Clasaroom •.. $200,000 Exchange , I 077 Columbua, Ohio
until the Bid Date of Embury Park Road, 43220 , No moro than
March 14 02001 at I :00 Dlylon, Ohio 45414
thrtl (3) 1111 will bl
· pm (IOCII llanderd • Bulldoro Exchange of provided
on
time), when they will Eut Control Ohio, ralundablo bllll to 11
bo optntd and rood.
2521 34th Slrlll NE, Bidder. Dopolll will be
3. A pro·bld m11t1ng Centan, Ohio 44705
refunded 10 Prime
will bt hold on • Ctntrol Ohio Minority Blddtrl only
per
February 27, 2001, at 8uolntlt
Article
2.1
o
of
1:00 p.m. at the Admlnletratlon, Bt5 ,1netruotlonl tht
to
· following looellon:
Etlt Maund Straot, :Biddoro.
Mtlge High School Columbuo, Ohio 43205 o7 . Tho cantroot
Ubrary
Ohio
Valley Dooumonte mey be
42011 Pomeroy Plko •Conetructlon
tor bidding
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788 Employero Cl)uncll, 21 .rovlewod
purpoet• without
4. Bldd)ng Document• Armory
Drlvo, oh1rg1
during
moy be oblllnod from Whitling, WV 28003 bUIIntll hOUri 11 tho
the Conllrucllon • llorlttlo Controctoro following loootlone:
Monagtr by Prime Auoclallon, 4424 a EnglnHr'l 011101:
Blddero only, upon Em 1 r 1 on Avenue, i GlndH &amp; Aatoelltn,
receipt of 1 check, Porkoreburg , WV ·
Inc.
which lo rofundablt, In 26104
j
4488 Mabile Drive
tho omountol$150.00. • Plrkertburg·Morlalla
Columbue, Ohio
Chocko lhall be mede Building
&amp;
432220
payeble to the Molgo ConetructiC)n Tradot
conttructlon
Local School Dlllrlct Council, 1406 1/2 13th I Manager'• Office:
and lorwardod to tha Strest, Parkereburg, I Tho Quondol Oroup,
Conetructlon llan-r. WV 26101
·
Inc.
Upon receipt of 1 8. Tho Owner rt1trvt1 8181 Worthington Rd.
roquoot, occompanled tho right to rojoct ony Wollervlllt, Ohio
by 1 depoollu no mod or all bide and to
43082 . ·
above,
the wolve any or oil
owner Office:
Conetructlon Manager lrregulorltlta,
llolgo Locol School
will forward copl11 of mletakoo, omloolone
Dlotrlot
bidding dacumonte to or lnlormolljloo 320 Eoetlloln Stroot
the bidder.
.
rolallvo thereto.
Pomeroy, Ohio 41789
5. Shipping cherg11 All
queetlone F.W. Dodge Pion
lor 111 bidding penelnlng to oocurlng Roomo
In tho
document• aro non· Contract Documont1, 1totlowlng ctttoo:
refundable and art to 8ldder'1 Llet, etc; • Cincinnati, Ohio
be pold vlo 1 11porot1 ehall bo dlroctad to (45202·8001), The
check In the amount Mogon Bohlen, Tho Orand
Baldwin
or $25.00, alao made Quando! Group, Inc. Building, 855 l!den
out to tho Meta• Local 8181
Worthington PlrkDrlvl,8uiii51S
School OlotrTct and Road, W11torvllle, Oh • Columbuo, Ohio
forwarded to the 430112 (814) BBHOOO. (43218·1073),' 1175
Conotructlon Manoger Owner: Melgl Locol Dublin Roed
I
with tho dtpoell School Dlotrlct Boord ·• Charletton, Well
chock.'
of Eduelllon
Vlrglnll (25302), 405
e. lnter11t1d blddere (2 11, 28 3 5 3tc
Clpltol Street
ehould con..i:t Mogan CLEAN HOUSE
and the following
tddttlonat plan roorno:
Bohlen II (814) US·
WITH THE
• The aulldore
11000 or eend dopoelt
~ chock directly to Tho CLASS IF~EDS i
Exchange of Control

ACROSS
I Typeol
7Young
......

IN!

• Eloctrtctl &amp; Plumblllf
4488 Mobile Drlvo
Columbuo, Ohio 43220 ~:~~~~.:e~u-.
Phone (614) 459-8338 •
Fax (614) 442·2158
Tho Conetrucllon
Manager for. tho
Project is:
Tho Quandal Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington
Rood
waatervilla, Ohio
Phono:
. Fax: (614) 865-9001
www.quandel.com
2. Any Proposed Equtl
tar a Standard ehtll bl
submitted to tho
Engineer no later then
ten(10)buelneudoye
prior to tho bid
11
na
0 pen 1n 9 •
Addendum 11 luuod
accept! n g
th 1
Prapoood Equal, tho
Propolod Equol eholl
be
conelderod
rojocted.
.
Saalad bldo will be
received lor:
Molgo High School
Estlmatod Contract
Vllua
Aebutoe Hazard
Abatement Work,
$146,000
until the Bid Dote of
March 14, 2001 ott :00
pm (local allndtrd
time), when they will
bl optnad and rood.
3; A pro-bid mtotlng
will be held on
February
27, 2001,
11
1:00
p.m.
at the
following locotlon:
Malgo High School
Ubrary
42091 PomeroyPikt
· Pomaroy,Ohla .
4. Bidding Dacumonto
moy bo oijtalned from
tho Englnoor by Primo
Blddoro only; upon
receipt' of a chock,
which 11 retundeble, In
tho amount o1 sso.oo.
Checke eholl ba madt
peyabtt to tho Molgo
Local School Oletrlct
and
forwarded Upon
to tho
Englnaer.

• NewHomee

740.992·1671

In accordance with

Drawing•
and
Speclflcatlons
proparod by:
Gandao &amp; Aoooclatn,

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

following Project:
Aoblotoo Hazard
Abatomont Work
Molgo High School
Pomeroy, Ohio

Benefit Gun Shoot
for John Williams
March 1Oth
12 noon
IS~&gt;on:sorl3d by Racine Gun
1/2 shot /1/2 slug

Mark E. Rhonemua,

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PIIILLIP

Mark E. Rhonemua,
Traasurer, for the

Ohio, 45769, Alln:

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page BS

M!ddleDOrt, Ohio

ALDER

Public Notlct

A1n•

............ week...,.
1111" ...... lllclt ....,.
CAU. OUJ O.. ICII1992·2155

Main Street, Pomeroy,

Po~~roy,

Public Notkt1 in Ncw5papers. A
Yo..r Rlaht to Kaow, l)elilllettd Ri&amp;NIC) Your Door.....

BULLETII BOARD

STATE OF OHIO
OHIO SCHOOL
FACILmES
COMMISSION
·NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1. Bldo will be
received by tho Malga
Local School District
Board, at 320 East

2001

ALLEYOOP

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

Public Notice

s,

'

'

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Tuesday, March 6, 200I
What's good for you might not be
Trustwonhy friends could play equally so for others and they'll
conitructive roles in your affairs resent your demands.
·
In the year ohcad, including helpGEMINI (May 21-June 20) :
ing you in some manner of fur· Lady Luck mighrhave her eye on
ihering your career or 1111bkions. you today, but if your thinking is
Be sure to n:ciprocate.
too negative, she may not be able
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) to do her stuff for you. To feel her
Do not get involved in any com· blessings, keep an open and opti·
pany politics at work today. It's mistic mind.
futile and counterproductive, and
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
somebody always has to lose in The wisest course of action is
the process. Don'tlet that some- always to think first and act sec·
body be you. trying to patch up ond. Should you reverse this order
a broken romance? The Aatro- today, you mlsJ!t make a flniiiCial
Graph Matchmllker can help you blunder not eully rectified.
undentand whatto do to mike the
LBO (July 23·Aua. 22)
relatlanahip work. Mail $2.75 to Althouah you moy not tel an opt!.
Matchmaker, c/o thil newsp~per, mum deal whlrt neJOIIalinlwday,
P.O. Box 1751, Murray Hill Silo you can Improve upon your poll·
don, Now York, NY 10156.
tlon 1r you don't act tao huty ~
AIUI!S (Much ~!·April 19) -ptlna whalla flrat ofl'erld.
UnllllfOII find a way to cooptro
VlRGO · (AUI• 2.3•8tpt, 2.2)
ate with othen t~. you're not Wl•hfulthlnldna 11 not 101na10
apt to r.ocomplilh what·YOU had producoaclunlhlnaiOda)'.lfyou
your hlllt 111 on dolna. Be lht wantiOtllllhlna doril, be pNpllld
lint to do for them and they'll to 111lllip your •l•vu llld wade
then do for you. ·
· until It'• a faltiiCCOIIIpll.
. TAURUS IAprtl 20-Moy 20)
LIBRA (Sipt. 23·0ct. 23)
Don't make too bil ofa flla1over When you dl111111'11 the lhort·
havln.l your way today lnvolvlna comlna• of othen, it opet11 up the
•omeihltll
lnconaequentlal. way for them to ~vertook youfl.

Be tolerant IIJ!d forgiving todai
and both panies can win.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Although you might run inlo a
snag today, if you "'main persistent and tenacious, Lady Luck
will come to your aid and get you
over the hump.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you keep all your options
open today, you can fulfill your
hopes and expectations. Things
might not go as you originally·
planned, but they can be accom·
plishcd by taking an alternative
route.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Should things not be going
your way today and you feel
· you're llklna a beatlna. remember
that aornetlmea we octually tum
out to be lhe victor when it flrat
appean we are vanquiahcd.
AQUARIUS (lan. 20-Peb. 19)
Bverythlna can be neaotlatod
even whan you hove a dlmcult
l&amp;f'ltnlnt 10 hammer out. Ju11 .
kelp· a flexible mlndnt today,
beclllll the othar JUY Ia looklna
fill' comproml.. u won.
.

�••

•
Page B8 • The Dally S.ntlne•

Community news and notes, AS
Cats claw Bulls, Eagles preview, B1

Monday, March 5, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Details,

s Scoreboard

•

.l

Trotwood-Madison 98, Spring. Kenton

o H gh

oy1 HketU
S1turd1y'1 A..utta

Toumamtnt
Dlvl1lon I

C~.

.
Zanesville 65, E. Liverpool 52
Dlvlalon II
Akr. Hoban 77, Medina Highland 35
Avon Lake 66, Oberiln Fire!ands 48
Can. Cent Cath. 55, NB:vafle Fairless

37

Chagrin Falls Kenston as, Mogadore
Field 69
Cln. Purcell-Marian 70, Cin . McNicholas

65
Cln, Roger Bacon 78, Goshen 48
Cortland Lakeview 34, Chardon NDCL
33
, Day. Col . White 53, Day. Chaminmde·
Jullenn 49, OT
Elyria Cath. 74, Rocky River 64
Hunting Valley University 91 , Ravenna

47
Kellering Alter 63, Day. Dunbar 54
Perry 80, Conneaut 65
Poland Semianry 51, Canfield 50
Portsmouth sa, Washington C.H. 56
Tallmadge 82. Akr. Kenmore 51
Vincent Warren 61 , Greenfield McClain
Youngs. Wilson 57. StrUthers 55
Division Ill
Akr. SVSM 99, Hanoverian United 42
casstown Miami E. 73 , Broo!MIIe 30
Cia. VASJ 73, Burton Berkshire 6
Cols. Ready 42, London Madison
Plains 32
Hannibal River 53, Beverly Ft. Frye 51
Morral Ridgedale 50, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 41
Oberlin 72, Sullivan Black River 46
Richmond HIS. 57, Gales Mills Hawken
54
w. Salem NW 71, Rittman 61
Waynesville 49, Versailles 38

o

Findlay Llt&gt;erty·Benton

OT

. LaGrange Keystone 46, Brooklyn 42
Lancaster Fairtleld Union "-8, Oak Hill
39
S. EucUd Regina 83, Warrer~ JFK 23
Versailln 59, Jamestown Greeneview
37
.
W, Uberty·SIIem 38, Cln. Marlemont35
Youngs. Ursuline 44, Newton Falls 32
Dlvl1lon IV
Bedford Chane! 83. Windham 49
Bellaire St. John's 42, Shadyside 39
E. Can. 48 , Mogadore 33
Ft. Recovery 55, Maria Stein Marion
Local 52
Holgate 60, Hllnop 51
Jackson Center 53, Cln. Cour~try Day

41
leetonia 45, Southlngton.Chalkar 21
McComb 64, Carey 54
·
Norwalk St . Paul 59, New london 39
Ottoville 51, Convoy Crestview 38
A!.JSSia 57, Union City MISSI&amp;sinawa VII·
ley 41
.
S. Charleston SE 44, New Madison Tri·
Village 37 .
.
Tol. Ottawa Hills 50, Gibsonburg 41
Worthington CMstlan 63, Newark Cath.

The top 25 teams In The Associated PreS$'
11 t
men's college basketball poll, with rs ·
place votes In parentheses, recorda
through Feb. 25, total points based on 25
points lor a first.nlace vote through one

1. Stanford (70)
2. Michigan St.

27·1 1,750
24·3 1.648

Wellington 79, LAGrange Keystone 71
Dlvlolon IV

7.1owa St.

'5
2~ 1,404
25-4 1,31B

Botkins 54, Anna 52
Cedarville 60, Ansonia 53
Cle. Hts. Lutheran East 84, Elyrta FBCS

8. Artzona
9. Kansas
10. Boston College

21-7 1,279
23·5 1,143
23-4 1,119
20..7

20·7
23-s

B78

15. Kentucky
16. Oklahoma

19·9
23-6

896

684

Shadyside 77, S1eubenvllle Cath. Cent.

17. Syracuse
18. Georgetown

22·7
23-E

594
508

llpp City Bethel69, Spring. Cath. Cent.

19. Not,. Dame
20. Texas

19-8
23·7

431
39t

Worthington Christian 69, cardington· 21 . St. Joseph's
Llncoln 59, or
22. Wake Forest
zanesville Rosecrans 61, Beallsville 48 · 23. Wisconsin

24·5
19·9
' 18·9

287
274
212
158

Hudson 64, Wadsworth 50
Mason 37, Centerville 19
Parma Padua 53, Berea 51
Pickerington 56, Reynoldsburg 40
Rocky River Magnificat 65, Elyria 60
Tol. Cent. Cath. 63, Sylvania Nonhview

!
61

Warren Howland 41, Shaw 38
Youngs. Boardman 52. Can. McKinley

41

39

Division II
Avon Lake 61, Cle. His. Baaumont31
Can. Cent. Cath. SB. OrrvKie 40
Canfield 49, Niles McKinley 32
Cin. McNicholas 54, Cin. Roger Bacon

,

Cois. Hanley 59, Cols. Mifflin 55, OT
Conneaut 50, Perry 46
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 53, .Cop·
tey 42
Day. Dunbar 67, Keltering Alter 57
Hamilton Badin 39, Cln. Purcell-Marian
29
'
Lima Bath 39, Defiance 37
Pemberville Eastwood 74, Clyde 61

Canlsius 76, Siena 64
lona 75, Marls! 71

Mld.Con11ri1n1 Conference

Ou1rterftnals

I"'

23-6 1,488
22·5 1,469

Ohio High SChool Glrlt Basketball
Sllurdef!'l fhtulta
Toumarnem
Dlvlllon 1
Beavercreek 50, FairUetd 4 a
C.llr~a 64, Mansfield 49
Cln. Molher ol Mercy 59, Greenville 47
Cln. St. Ursula 49, ern. Colerain 43
Cle. E. Tech 56, Brecksville 49
Cols. Brookhaven 4&lt;4, Newark 32
Day. Chamlnacle-Julianne 57, Cln. Oak
Hills 53
Grove City 70, Westerville N. 45

Somlllnalo

3
2
5

lnd.-Pur..lndpls. 54, UMKC 52
Oral Roberta 73, YoungSiown St. 70
S. Utah 66, W. Illinois 53
Valparaiso 84, Chicago St. 72
Mlctw..lem CoMtal.W Conr.renc.
S.-niiTnele
But~r 66, Wright St. 58 .

6

Detroit 91 , Cleveland St. 81

4

' Mlaoourl Valley COnftrtnca
&amp;tmlflnalo
Bralley 73. lllnoiS Sl 66
Indiana St 87, Creighton 74
NorthHII Conterenc•
Stmlflnalo
Monmouth. N.J. 67. UMBC 54 •

point for a 25tt1-ptace vote and previous
ranking:
W·L Ptl

26·4 1,609

59

George Mason 62. James Madison 36
N.C.·WIImlngton 57, Old Dominion 54
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conferenc.

AP Mon'o Top 25 Poll

20·9

47

Stmlll nala

Stmlllnlll

3. Duke

.
Lorain Cath. 72, Fuchs Mlzrachl32
Mogadore 47, Cortland Maplewood 40

" When he walks into the
15. Kentucky (19-9) beat Aub&lt;Jm 90·78: room, you know it's time to
losl to No. 6 Florida 94-86.
play baseball," said first base16. Maryland {20·9) beat No. 2 Duke
man Jim Thome.
9t.SO: beet No. 7 Vi ~nll 102-67.
17. Ol&lt;latloma (23-6) beat Colorado as.
Burks came down to train67; beat Oklatlc&gt;fN State 68·56.
18. SL Joseph's (24-5) belt MIISIChu• ing camp a few days early so
seru. 84~9; lost to La Salle 91 ·90.
he'd have more time to get to
19. Srracuse (22·7) beat PittSburgh 80know everyone on Cleve69: beat SL JOhn's 93·91 , 20T.
20. Alabama (20·9) lost to ArQnsas 66·
land's roster, and watching
63; losttoNo. 14M!sslsslppi 105-71 . ·
21 . Georgetown (23-6) beat Autgef1
him interact with his new
74: S8; beat No. 13 Notre Dame 7~72 .
teammates, you'd think he'd
22. Wisconsin (18·9) lost to No. 3 Michl·
gan State 51-47; beat Iowa 59·57.
been here for years.
23. Wake Forest (19·9) beat North CarIn the past few weeks, he
olina State 76·58.
2-4 . Texas {23·7) beat Missouri 76-61 ; also has spent time with some
beat Texas Tech 78-55.
of the club's minor league
2!5 . Xa\liar (21 ·6) lOsito Dayton 65-62.
players, giving advice and
Mtn'a College B11kelblll
offering encouragement.
Sunday'• Scor. .
EAST
"He's got quite a presence
Syract~se 93, St. John's 91, 20T
about him," said Indians manSOUTH
Ouke 95, North Carolina 81
ager Charlie Manuel. "Ellis
Florida 94 , Kentucky 86
looks you in the eye, and I just
Wake Forest 76 , N.C. State 58
.
MIDWEST
get a good feeling whenever I
Cayton 65, Xavier 62
talk to him. He's solid."
GeorgetoWfl 79, Notre Dame 72
Illinois 67, Minnesota 59
His knees aren't.
Kansas 75, Missouri 5~
FAR WEST
Burks underwent surgeries
Long Beach St. 82, Pacific 72
.on both knees after the 1998
TOURNAMENT
Amerlea Ealt Conterenc1
season and has long scars as

this season yet, but ~\ sure
he'D benefit fiorn the rest he'D
get as DH. He'D likely bat

24. Ohio St.
25. Freano 51.

993

961
734

....
t

8
9
10
t1
t6
1
t2
t4
15
17
t9
21
t3
24
18
23

St. Francis, NY 72, Wagner El5 •

Patllot LHguo . ·
Stmlflnala
Holy Croso 69, Lehigh 57
Navy 88, BuckneU 64
.Southern COnference

Chlmplonahlp
,
UNC·Greansboro 67, Chaltanooga 66
Sun Belt Confllf'llnCI
Qulrterflnllt

22

Alt&lt;ansa&amp; St. 82, New Orlean&amp; 73

l!o-9
24-5 114
Others receiving voles: Tennessee 101,
Providence 95, Alabama 89, Al1cansas 63,
Clr&lt;innetl 53, Gonzaga 40, Indiana 35,
Georgia St 31, UC INine 23, Creighton 22,
&gt;Caviar 20, Hofstra 12, W. Kentucky 10,
California 4, Southam Cal 3, St. John's 3,
Richmond 2, S. Utah 2, BVU 1, Southem
Miss. 1.

. ,

The AP M1n'1 Top 25
How They Fared

\

t. Stanford (27·1) belt Soutttem Call·
lamia 70·68; beat No. 12 UCLA85·79.
2. Duke (26-4) lost to No. 16 Maryland
91·80; beal No.4 North Carolina, 95-8~ .

3. Michigan State (24-3) beat No. 22
Wisconsin 51·47; beat Michigan 78·57.
4. North Carolina {23·5) beat Nonh Carolina State 78--63: lost to No, 2 Duke 95·81.
5. Illinois (23·8) beat Minnesota El7·59.
e. Aorida (22·5) beat VandeltJilt 72·62;
beat No. 15 Kentucky 94-88,
7. Virginia (20·7) beal Clemson 84-65:
lost to No. 16 Maryland 102--e1.

e. Iowa State (25-4) beat TeKas Tech
80-63: beat Nebraska 86·73.
9. Arizona (21·7) beat Oregon State 65-

54; beat Oregon 104--es.
10. Kansas (23·5) bea1 Kansas Stale
77-65; beat Missouri 75·59.
11. Boston College (23·4) beat Morris
Brown 84·§3; bea1 St. . John's 67-62; beat
West Vlrglnla 9Ei-es.
12. UCLA (20·7} beat California 79·75:
1os110 No . .2 S11nford 85·79.
13. Notre Dame (19-8) lost to ConnecUcut 75·59; lost to No. 21 Georgetown 79·

Loulsia.na-Lifayana 63, louisiana Tech
56
Welt Caatl Conferlnce
Btmlflnall
Gonzaga 76, San Diego 68
Santa Clara 84, Pepperdlne 78

•

E. Michigan at Toledo, 7:301
W. Michigan a1 Bowling Green. 7
N. Illinois at Ball St.. 7
'
At Oiund Arena, CleVeland
Ouartaiflnllll
Thursday
Miami (Ohlo)IA~ron winner vs. Cent.
. Michigan, Noon
Buffalo/Ohto
winner
vs .
E.
Michigan/Toledo winner. 2 p.m.
W. MlchlganiBowling Green w!nner vs.
Kent St.; 7
N. Illinois/Ball St. winner vs. Marshall, 9
Semifinal•
Friday
Miami (Ohlo)/Akron·Cent Michigan
winner vs. Buffalo/Ohio-E. MichlgarVTole·
do winner, 7 p.m.
W. Michigan/Bowling Green-Kent St.
wmn&amp;t' vs. N. Illinois/Ball St.-Marshall win·
ner, 9
Championship

Saturday, March 10
SemHinal winners, 7 p.m.

Melp County's

Water

Topl5

25 points to lead the R~d
Storm (14-14., 8-8), who h.avtt
lost three straight, five of si~
and eight of 1 1 and had their
15-game winning stf(:ak
against Big East opponents at
Madison Square Garden
snapped.
.
No. 18 Georgetown 79,
No. 19 Notre Dame 72
Mike Sweetney scored 19
points and Ruben Boumge
Boumge added 16 as the vis-.
iting f:{oyas (23-6, I 0-6)
clinched a first-round bye for
this .week's Big East tournament.
1roy Murphy had 19 points
for Notre Dame (1 9-8, 11-5),
which was trying to win 20
games in the regular season ·
for the first time in 12 years.
No. 22 Wake Forest 76, N.
Carolina St. 58
Darius Songaila scored' 21
points arid Robert O'Kelley ·
had 15 to lead the visiting
Demon Deacons (19-9, 8-8), ·
who finished . 500 in the ,
ACC for the first time in four
seasons.
Cliff Crawford had 18 •
points for the Wolfpack (1 315, 5-11), who have lost four
of five.
Dayton 65, Xavier 62
Yuanta HoUand ·scored half
of his 16 points in a closing ·
15-4 run for the Flyers (1811,9-7 Atlantic 10).
David West had 18 points
and l1 rebounds for the Musketeers .(21-6; !2-4), who :
have lost six in a row· at Dayton Arena and are 5-25 over- ,
aU against the Flyers on their
home court. The loss knocked
Xavier out of the poD from
25th.

rC!

Hometown Newspaper

50 Ce n t&gt;

cable time

POMEROY

Police
training

line job
moves
forward

course

BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - An engineering project to improve
Racine's water system has
been approved by ViUage
Council.
Mayor
Scott
Hill
reported to council at a
recent meeting that applications have been filed
·~th the governor's office
for a $10,000 grant and the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency for a
$7,000 loan.
The requested monies
will go toward a new engineering project that will
improve the water system
in the village.
Council approved the
engineering contract and
agreed that a public meeting on the project will be
held at a later time.
"The village water lines
have been in the ground
for over 50 years," said Hill.
"Regardless of the fact that
we ·receive the grant or
complete any improve. ments, the water rates will
have to be raised because

. ''

Te~~;~nce .Simmons had 19
poinq,tto lead the Gophers
(17-1'2'; 5-1 1) ..
. No. 5 Florida 94, No. 15
fromPageB1
Kentucky 86
Xavier 62.
Teddy Dupay matched his
Joseph Forte, the ACC'; career ihigh with 28 points,
leading scorer, led the Tar and tt1~ Gators (22-5, 12-4)
Heels with 21 points.
earned a share of the SouthDuke led by two at half- eastern Conference title with
time, but gradually pulled the win over the other coaway midway through the champion.
Keith''Hogans had a careersecond hal£ The Blue Devils
went up 72-57 with 11:55 left high 29 ,Points for the visiting
on a layup by Mike Dunleavy. Wildca\j (19-9, 12-4), who
The Tar Heels were shoot- made several runs in the secing for their first outright ond halt but couldn't overACC regular-season title ·in come a 15-point deficit.
eight seasons, but the Smith Because of a better diyision
Center crowd instead exited record, ~ntucky will be the
early on Senior Day as Duke· top seed for the league tourimproved to 19-0 this seaspn nament.
Nj&gt;. 9 Kansas 75,
when scoring 90 or more
,Missouri 59
points.
"They took something
Drew Gooden scored 19
away from us - definitely;' points a\14 sparked a i -7 secNorth Carolina's Jason Capel ond-half run to lead the Jaysaid.
hawks (2~-5, 12-4 Big 12),.
The victory also gave Duke who WOIJ. on Senior Day for
an ACC-record 124 wins in a the 18th ~onsecutive season.
Kareem Rush, the Big 12's
four-year period, breaking the
mark of the Duke teams from . leading scorer, returned after a .
1989-92.
seven-game absence because
No. 4 Illinois 67,
of a thumb injury and was
Minnesota 59
just 1- 9 f-7 for a season-low
Frank WiUiams scored 15 two pomts. Clarence Gilbert
points to lead the visiting IUi- led Missouri (1 8-1 1, 9-7)
ni (23-6, 13-3) to a share of with t9 ,' points.
their second Big Ten1 ConferNil. 17 Syracuse 93,
· Sf; John's 91, 2 OT
ence title in four seasons. Bill
Senfo~ poirit guard Allen
Self becalne the first coach in
22 years to win a title in his Griffiil scored 17 of his
31 points in the
first season in the Big Ten. career2high
' II!
two
overtimes
and the
Because of their win over co'1
champion Michigan State in Orang'emen (22-7, 10-6)
their only meeting, the !Uini went 20-for-22 from the freewill be the top seed in this throw! line in the two extra
. w
,
week's conference tourna- penoos.
FresHman
Willie
Shaw had
ment.
. l'

entine

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Numbe r 159

a

i

Mld-Amalic:an Co~erence
Men't Tourn~~ment
Fli'lt Round
Monday
· Akron a't Miami (Ohio). 7 p.m.
BuHelo at Ohio, 7:30

•

filth in Cleveland's lineup,
behind Jum Gonzalez and
Jim Thome.
"I'D talk to Ellis every day
and see how he's feeling,"
Manuel said. "I'm going to'
get him 500 at-bats."
The Indians know Burks
can help them in the clubhouse, too. He leads by example and his work ethic and
commitment have rubbed off
on teammates everywhere
he's been.
True to form, Burks, the,
consummate
teammate.
•
downplays his ability to
inspire others.
"I'm not a clubhouse ·
leader," he said. ''I'm just part
of the machine trying to get
to one goal. We've · got guys
who have been around here
for years. Guys know ..lvhat's
his time.
In 122 games last year, he going on, I'm here just to give
hit .&amp;44 with 24 homers and . them little help if I ~:an."
96 RBis in just 393 at-bats.
Bt rks said he and Manuel
haven't formulated a plan for

Pelawara 110, Nonheastern 66
Hofstra 78, MQ[ne 66
Colonial Athletic Aasociallon

4. HUnols
5. Florida
C
6. North orollna

Kirtland 52, Newbury .tl8
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 59, Centerburg

72.
t• . ....iSSipp (23-6) lost Ia LSU 78·n,

39

11. Maryland

43

\

so. Uberty Con·

ter48
Hamler Patrick Henry 66, Archbold 84,

12. VIrginia
t3. UCLA
14 _Mlsslsslpl)l

32

i

Doylestown

Cln. Wyoming 57, Felidty·Frlinldin 34
Cle. VASJ 76 , Klnaman Badger 37

60, 20T

.,'

68,

garetta 67

Hudson 62, Akr. Eliot 40
Lakewood -48, Lorain Admiral King 41
Lakewoocl St. Edward 70, Amherst 53
logan 58, Marlena 49
Masslllon Washington 56, AUStintown
17itch 46
Maumee 66. Tol. Bowsher 53 ,
Reynoldsburg 45, Pk:kertngton 44
Thomas Worthington 55, Galloway
Westland 33
Tol. Scott 64, Tot Start 56
Youngs. Boardman 52, Can. McKinley

i

Manchester

Ct&gt;Wewa 55
Beverly Fl Frye 66. Belmont Ur;on
Bucvrus Wynford 69, Castalia Mar·

C&lt;;llnwood 6t, Mayfield 46
Glenville 62. Maclson 40

49

Akr.

·fnim Pap 11

OT; beat No. 20 Alabami 105-71,

Local61

Brecki.ville 65, Barberton 35
C~ .

Rldge72
WIIIOrd 52, Loidngton 34
Dlvlolon ..

Tribe

j:lroof. A year later, he had
arthroscopic procedures done .
"Since the second ones
~hey've felt better," he sai&lt;\. " I
don't have the aching I had
bc:fon;."
' Burks foUow. a gameday
r!rual for his knees. He applies
ice first thing in the morning,
again when he arrives at the
baUpark for treatment and
again after the game.
"Jc~ is something," he said.
"They say milk is good. Ice is
good. When my knees are
inflamed they're bad. But it
never has affected the way I
go after it. I always feel like
yo~ go hard, and then you go
home."
Bilrks credited the Giants'
traih_ing staff for helping him
stay in the lineup for 242
games over the past two seaSOf\S, And when he's played,
Bu~s has made the most of

.

gets nod
BY TONY M. LEAcll
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

o(~ c,os~;~s~ciated ~th

· ill~: Pl'\lJect. " ·~""

' Council approved a
,request by Dale Hart, park
board represent~tive, to
increase rental charges for
both the large shelter
house and the small shelter
house in Star Mill Park.
· Hart also informed
eouncil that a sewer line
fiom the park building to
the septic tank was backed
up and that recent efforts
to unclog \he , pipe had
(ailed.
Han advised that the line
should be connected to the
district sewer line along
Ohio 338 so that new
restrooms can be built on
the north side of the park
building.
Estimates to begin work
under the road bore so that
the lfues can be connected
have been completed and
construction will be funded with park board money,
said Hart.
Council approved Hart's
request pending approval
of \he Ohio Department of
Transportatio!l and · the
American Legion post.
Racine
Fire Chief
David Neigler said the fire
department had applied to
•

: ,.._ _ . . . .,AJ

March 6, 200

Thi! Blchman Building's clock made for a dramatic background as a crew from O'Connor Cable Construction Co. of Kentuc~ 'f.'Drl&lt;ed on Court Street In Pomeroy Monday. In the midst of a March snow show show·
er, worl&lt;mEin ~re ln,talllng new television cable for Charter Communications Co. (Brian J. Reed photo)

POMEROY -A new law enforcement training course was approved for the Pomeroy Police
Department at Village Council's regular meeting
on Monday.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt.informed council of
the availability of an in-service law enforcement
training program aimed at creating a more professional, efficient law enforcement community.
The Law Enforcement Training Network
(LETN) is one of the most popular su\&gt;scriptionbased computer training networks for police
departments throughout the countty and reaches
more than 150,000 officers on a daily basis.
The LETN can:
• Provide consistent training on updated law
enforcement techniques and basic criteria far:
every member of the department;
• Reduce legal liability with third-party docu~
mentation of the training;
• Reduce travel costs and overtime associated
with other types of training;
• Improve community relations and enhance
public
.mg; image through .conununity relations
. train'
• Stay current wilh law enforcement nCWB and
information from nationally known expertS.
Proffitt said the cost of training is around
$2,200 for the initial year of service, and S1,700
for foUowing years. A computer, video cassette
recorder and all necessary software is included in
the program.
c;ouncil approved the purchase of the training

Pllan 1ft Pollee, Al

•

o·o.ctors 'expect Cheney to return to work after angioplasty
ASHINGTON
(AP) Vice
President Dick
Cheney should
be · able to conthtue in his job unimpeded by his
latest heart problems, doctors say,
shrugging ofF any suggestion \hat he
shdl,l}d cunail travel or his intense
wOrl,loim.
·'~&gt;"
But Cheney also wls given some
tough nCWi alter he lwj. .., angioplasty
to .unclog a coronary
Monday.
:E:ven if he sticks to his
and
rigorous workout
there is a
fait chance he will be
in the hospital facing the same
soon, his
physicians said.
''Well, ;it\ possible for the narrowing
!0 caine back, and I think I quoted
around 40 percent;' Dr. Jonathan Rein-

.

"There is a very high likelihood he can .finish out his term in
hitfully t'lgorou! capacity."
.

er, who petformed the surgery at
George Washington University, told a
crowded news conference. "There are
studies that may show, you k:now,.' a little
bit higher than that. If the narrowing is
going to come back, usuaUy it . comes
back within the first six months."
Cheney, . who has had four heart
attacks, underwent the angioplasty after
he experienced a series of subtle pains
in his chest. Doctors said their best evidence indicated that Cheney, 60, had
not suffered another heart attack.
The artery, which had been opened
du•ing surgery at the same hospital in
November, had partiaUy reclosed, Rein-

er said. The culprit was scar tissue building up in the same channel doctors had
opened previously. .
Monday night Cheney was groggy
and sedated, but Reiner said he should
be back at work this week. When asked
whether Cheney could face travel
restrictions, or any restrictions at all,

Reiner said, "no."
Cheney could be released Tuesday; a
decision was expected Tuesday mornmg.
"There is a very high likelihood he
can finish out his term in his fully vig"
orous capacity," Reiner said. Cheney
quickly resumed a fuU schedule after

the November operation.
President Bush caUed the vice .president to wish him well, White House
·spokesman Ari Fleischer said. "During
their five-minute phone call, the vice
president told the president that he was
feeling fine and looked forwatd to
rerurning to work." .
In · this latest incident, 'Cheney
checked himself into George Washington University Hospital, about six
blocks west of the White House, alter
feeling chest pain briefly on twO occasions Monday. He also had felt chest
discomfort Satuttlay after stepping off
an exercise machine, and on Sunday,
after taking a walk.
He said the episodes were "much
milder and very brief" compared with
the chest pains he experienced in
November. "The symptoms were subtle" this time, Reiner said.

Speak Out:

\,

Toclay"s

What do you think about for~er .President Clinton's pardons? Sentinel
1 Sedla•- 12 Plpl

calendar
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#5 It APPears In The GalliPolis DailY Tribune. Point Pleasant Reeister. And .The DailY Sentinel

Sports
weather

I

AS

82-4
85
A4
A3
81,3,6

A3

Lotteries·

I

OHIO
'I ttnt lrylng nat to tona an opinion one

way or the Oilier until}.hMr all or lhe

tacil. I 111111 to NY - l n g II wrong
un- Iteam -vthlng lbout ~. That'o

only fair.'

Miry.:;

'I don1 think he lhould have done H. H
makH H1oo1&lt; like a payoff - you ·
ICI'Itch my biCI&lt; and I'll ICJ&amp;tch youre.
IIMwn Marcinko

Pomeroy

•1 juot want to know Why he'elhe only
p t - thal'a llngled out? Other
ptMidenla have l8eued ~ par·
dona and nothing Wll Ovtll' lllld about It
I underlland that many people In WUh·

lngtoo, D.C. aren1too truiiiWonhy, but
why II Cllnlon getting all the alack 'I"

a.nny 11lla

.

•

•

Ftudand

Pick 3: 6-5-6; Pick 4:

2~
~5: ~21).30

W.VA.
Doily 3:.0·&lt;&gt;-3 Doily 4: 5·1+4
C 2001 Ohio v.n~ Publbhina Co.

'I

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