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LETS GO EASTERN EAGLES!

ALL THE WAY TO STATE!
Community news and notes, AS
Buckeyes bounce in tourney, Bl

s.turd.y
Hlp: 40s; Low: 101

Details,

•
Meigs County's

March 16. 2001

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vol ume 51 . Number 167

Friday

·

50 Cents

Davenport testifies on CDBG formUla issue
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meigs County and
other Appalachian counties in Ohio
could benefit from a new Community Development Block Grant formula,
accof\ling to County Conunissioner
Mick~'Davenport, who discussed his
&gt;estimony at a public hearing in
Columbus during the conunissioners'
regular meeting on Thursday.
Davenport, and representatives
fi:om Vinton and Adams counties, tes-

..

.

titled at Wednesday's public hearing on
the 2001 fiscal budget of the Ohio
Deparnnent of Development's Division of Housing and Community
Partner&lt;hip, the division which
administers the CDBG formula program for the state.
CDBG formula funds are distributed in a block grant to counties, based
on each county's low-to-moderate
income population. Last year, Meigs
County received S166,000 in CDBG

formula funds, which were then toward favoring larger and more popawarded on a competitive basis to vil- ulous counties," Davenport said. "It
lages, ·townships, fire departments and docsn 't take the economy of the councounty agencies, for equipment; roaJ ty or oth er important factors into
account."
and street repairs and other projects.
For example, Davenport said, one
The existing formula used to detertiline CDBG allocations, Davenport more populous county in so uthern
said, gives an advan't.1gc to larger, more Ohio receives $800,000 in formula
populous counties, although the need funds each year, while Vin ton County,
for the funds may be greater in small- the state's smallest county, receives only
$811,0UO.
er counties.
D.wenport said he and other
"The formula as it stands now tilts

Rutland
Council
approves·
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RUTLAND New
sewer
pumps
were
approved for purchase
during Rutland Village
Council's regular meeting.
Council approved the
purchase of new pumps
for the sewer departme,nt
following, a discussion on
the mechanical problems
of the village's current
pumps.
Maintenance
Supervisor David Davis
said that he would search
for pumps that are compatible with the existing
ones.
Amanda Ramage, office
manager, informed council of the location of several individuals who had
moved away and left
delinquent
accounts.
Ramage also indicated
that the sewer grinder
accounts that have not
'been paid are being turned
over to Chuck Knight to
determine the legalities
· for shutting the service
off.
Cou,ncil accepted the
letter
of
resignation
Joanne May as treasurer
· for the Civic Center
Committee. Ramage will
take over the position for
the committee once the
books, which are currently
• peing audited, have be~n
• turned over.
In other matters, coun£il:
. • decided to purchase a
new cruiser for the police
Ciepartment. It is currently
looking' at a 1997 Crown
Victoria;
• accepted the annual
~ppropriations ordinance;
• began working on
grants and seeking donations of materials for she!..• terhouses and walking trail
in Rutland's park. 1
, Attending the meeting,
in addition to Ramage
and Davis, were Mayor
Richard Fetty, Council!f1en Tammy Searles, Judy
• Denney, Martin Andrew,
Ralph Bales, Rutland
P?lice ChiefJeffrey Miller,
and
Patrolman Steve
. Williams.

BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION - Workers from DGM Construction Inc. prepare .for the Installation
of temporary support beams as construction on Rutland's new bridge gets underway. The new
concrete bridge on Main Street will cost $546,250 and is expected to be completed around
Nov. 15. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Rutland bridge replacement begins
BY ToNY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

R

UTLAND - Motorists traveling
through Rutland will do so at a
slower pace now that cons~uction
has begun on the villages new

bridge.
The new threC:.span concrete bridge Will
replace ·the existing concrete structure on Main
Street, erected in the early 1930s, because of high
tiaffic volumes and general deterioration.
The existing briflge, which spans Leading
Creek, takes its share of heavy traffic, especially
· ' fiom coal tru~ks traveling to and from the Southern ·Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mines, located in

Salem Township.
The Ohio Department of Transportation said
the project will involve a total bridge replacement with construction set for completion
·
around Nov. 15.
Cost of the new bridge will total $546,250.
Justin McBee, head contractor for DGM
Construction Inc., said Thursday the project is
'
proceeding as scheduled and that temporary
support beams are currendy being installed.
"The project is proceeding as planned and \Ve
don't foresee any delays slowing the bridge's
progress," said McBee. "Demolition of th e existing bridge should begin sometime 'next week."

Ple..e see Brldl•· Al

Appalachian county officials favor a
different formula first proposed in .
1995, but never approved.
That formula could provide for a
significant increase in CDBG awards
to smaller counti es - as much as
$65,000 more each year for Meigs
County.
Meigs County and five other "very
distressed" Appalachian Ohio counties
have recently joined together 111 an

Please see CDBG. AJ

Debate over
school funding
.plan grows
COLUMBUS (AP) -The caseloads without being able
debate over a new school- to afford new hires.
Homeholder said his plan
funding plan grew . louder
Thursday as advocates for will be funded out of existing
more money for mental state revenues. After it is fund&gt; \J,calth. progr,uns ra\li;d outed, he will look for additional
! ··.~at t;he Siatehouse ahd piP- revenue, which could include
education groups rallied deeper budget cuts.
inside.
"We just have to keep
Mental health advocates. looking at the operating budalready upset at Gov. Bub get to see what money is
Taft's tight twoavailable. It's
year budget, said
"J# just have to about priorities," Housethey fear further
cuts that might keep looking at the holder
said
be ·required by operating budget to Thur&lt;day.
the $12.4 billion see what money is
At least 500
school-fl.mding~
available. It's
of the mental
plan introduced
health advoby
House
about priorities," cates attended
Speaker Larry
an
outdoor
Householder
larry Householder
rally while repearlier this week.
resentativeS of
"We tremble
12 education
when we hear people talk groups met inside to support
about · siphoning funds off Householder's plan.
existing agencies," said Terry
They ·followed the lead ·of
Ru~"ll, executive director of the coalition of schools that
the Ohio branch of the sued the state over its schoolNational Alliance for the . nmding S)~tem 11 years ago.
Mentally Ill.
The Ohio Coalition for £quiAdvocates say the cuts will ty &amp; Adequacy of School
nlfther erode a system already Funding s.1id it will drop its
in crisis. Services built over lawsuit if Householder's plan
the last 10 year&lt; arc being dis- is adopted.
mantled because they can't be
"We believe this plan, if
sustained anymore without enacted as described, will end
funds. ·
the long-standing schoolSome community hospitals funding litigation and will
are forced to discharge result in high quality educapatients prematurelY. and tion a! opportunities for
some people have to wait Ohio's children," said Warren
months for psychiatric evalua- Russell. executive director of
tions. M ental health care the Ohio School BoardsAssoproviders are seeing increa.&lt;ing ciation.

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Big Bend area Scouts
Toclay's
celebrate Girl Scout Week Sentinel
BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SPECIAL
-Thinking Day is about remembering scouts
around the world, A special guest at the Big Bend observance
was Holly Johnson, adopted daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Johnson of Pomeroy. Mrs. Johnson spoke about the couple's
trip to China to get their daughter. Jodi Bissell, leader of
Btownle Troop 1067 of R~svllle, one of the host groups, pre:
sented a gift to Holly.

POMEROY - This week
Girl Scouts everywhere are celebrating the 89th anniversary
of the Ofb'&lt;lnization's founding
with the observance of Girl
Scout Week.
With the same dedication
the 12 iilitial Girl Scouts had in
,1912, local girls have been participating in activities that celc·
brate the fun and friendship
that Girl Scouting provides.
The highlight of Girl Scout
Week is·" Thinking Day" where
Girl Guides and Girl Scouts
everywhere take a moment to
think about d1eir sister&lt; in the
World Association of Girl
Guides and Girl Scouts.
;

This is a special time in the
Girl Scout year because it
marks the birthdJys of both
Lord
Baden - Powell , th e
founder of l3oy Scouting, and
his wife, Lady l3aden- Powe11.
the World Chief Guide of the
Girl Guide / Girl Scout movement.

The Thinking Day observance for the Big Bend area
Girl Scouts was hosted by
Reedsville l3rownie Troop
1067 and Junior Troop 1042
\Vith a program at R eedsville
Nazarene Church.
The traditional opening flag
ceremony was followed by the
parade of flags with a girl from
each troop representing a spe-

Pieese see Scouts. AS

1 Sections - 11 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

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BS

A4
A3
Bl ·3

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 1·1·5; Pick 4: 9-7-3·8
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5: 2-21-2&amp;26-33

W.VA.
Daily 3: 4-8-2 Daily 4: 8-2-2~
C 2001 Oh1o Valley Publi!.hing Co.

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The Daily Sentinel

VICtims see molester sentenced
CLEVELAND (AP) - Seven young boys who had been sexually molested came to court, despite their fears, to see their
attacker sentenced.
David K. King, 32, of Cleveland, on Thursday pleaded guilty to
rape, gross sexual imposition and felonious assault in a plea deal
worked out \vith prosecutors.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Christopher A. Boyko
sentenced King to . 18 years in prison and labeled him a sexual
predator. Boyko said the only reason he accepted the plea agreement was to spare the boys from having to testifY at trial. King had
faced life in pri\on if convicted of_all 29 charges against him.
Assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Kestra Smith said King
molested at least eight boys, preying on the children of vulnerable
adults. He gained their trust and offered to take their children on
outing-; and sleepovers. One of the mothers he befriended is
homebound. One of tl:&gt;e fathers is blind.

. Village

biis claim

LINCOLN HEIGHTS (AP) - A discrimination claim by a
former village police offi cer who said he was treated unfairly
because he was a white officer in a predominantly black department bas been sectled.
Former officer Joseph Euton, who was the handler for the suburban Cincinnati village's first and only police dog, was fired last
yea,r. In a complaint to the C ivil Rights Comnussion, he said he
was denied promotions that went w lc::ss qualified officers.
An investigation by the comnussion found that one of the officers promoted ahead of Euton was not yet eligible for the job and
that there was "_probable cause" to support Euton's claim of discnnunaoon.
Village officials agreed last month to pay Euton $2,400 in back
pay and another $ 1,000 in overtime and "canine maintenance."
Euton also gets to keep the forp1er. police dog, Ero.

University gets S3 million
DEFIANCE (AP) -A longtime attorney who had to borrow
$25 to take the bar exam during tile depths of the Depression has
bequeathed nearly $3 million in cash and stock to his alma mater,
Ohio Northern University Law School.
Erwin Clemens gave another $748,000 to St. Paul's United
M ethodist C hurch in Defiance.
was a partner at the firm ofKorhn, Lin1ing &amp; Warncke from
1934 until his death in 1999.
"Ohio Northern is deeply grateful that such an accomplished
and decent man as ... Erwin Clemens has · remembered his old
school through such a remarkable bequest;' Ohio Northern President Kendall Baker said.

Tie

FRA=~~~~dm,.,

Friday. March 16,1001

Ford worker's death linked to disease
"He probably was only sick two days in
his 27 years there;· Chokan said. "He was a
responsible man. He would work any
overtime that Ford would offer."
Tafoya's job was at the end of the assembly line as a checker, she said.
. Roman Krygier, Ford vice president of
powertrain operations, expressed the company'ssympathy to Tafoya's family.
"To the C leveland community and our
employe es here, we want to reiterate that
ou.r company is taking extraordinary measures to deal with t!Us issue;' Krygier said
in a prepared statement Thursday night.
" We are cooperating with alf public health
authorities. Nothing is more important to
us than the · safety and welfare of our
employees."

Health inspectors at the plant are trying
to find out if there was a single source or
multiple souoces of contanunation.A cooling tower, a large tank of stea.m-p~ducing
water that is part of the plants heatmg system, was identifi~d as one possible source.
Investigators from the federal Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention and
the Ohio Department of Health joined
local health officials and federal job-safety
experts wtio arrived at the plant earlier in
the week.
The Cleveland Casting Plant, which
employs 2,500 and makes engine paru,
was closed late Wednesday at least through
the weekend, although it hasn't been confirmed as the disease source.

'
Reservation of the Cleveland Metroparks.
Legend has it that Hinckley 's flock .of buzzards returns each
March 15 to this area southwest of Cleveland where the re was btg
hunt for livestock predators in December 1819. The carcasses
froze that v.-inter, and the scavenger birds feasted during the n1idM arch thaw.
.
For decades, people have gath ered at the reservation on Ma~h
15 to spot the first buzzard of the season. The buzzards may have
returned to the area before Thursday but, by tradition, the
BOWLING GREEN (AP) - A 15-year-old boy who had M etroparks system says only a sighting by the official spotter ?n
been taunted and teased in school has been arrested for making a M arch 15 counts.
" hit list" of students, polic e said.
·
John-Paul Huntoon, 15, of Bloomdale, told police he hoped the
·
list would scare students into leaving him alone.
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A woman whose 11-month-old son
His parent5 said students· had beaten and ridiculed their son for
years. They said the harassment had gotten so bad that the youth died of dehydration after he was left alone for about a day and a
had appeared on television last year to discuss the problem.
half has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and c]illd
"He's been hit, punched;' said his father, Paul Huntoon. "He's endangering, police said.
.
.
been slapped. He's had things stolen out of his locker. He's had
Tara Pollock, 23, of Zanesville, had told pohce she had been out
thing-; taken from his book bag - his book bag torn apart!'
with friends and found her son, Zane Gossett, dead on Jan" 1
when she returned home, said Detective John Rodman .
,
Pollock was indicted-Wednesday. The investigation had been
hdd up pending a complete autopsy report, which arrived aboht
TOLEDO (AP) - A 64-year-dd man apparently disoriented a week ago, Rodman said.
.
.
from a bump on the head drove across country for nine days, travPollock was b eing held Thursday at the Muskingum County
eling as far as Las Vegas before being found only 45 miles from his Jail. If convicted, she could be sentenced to up to 13 years in
home.
·
prison.
Police found Richard Burner on Wednesday night after a couple spotted his car in a Wai-Mart parking lot. In his car were some
empty chocolate milk cartons, a couple packs of cigarettes, a can
of Spam and ·a sleeping bag.
CHILLICOTHE (AP) -Two inmates tried to escape ThursHe was exhausted b1lt in relatively good health Thunday at a day from Ross Correctional Institution but were stopped at the
Toledo hospital.
tol' of a fence, a prisons spokesman said.
,
,
Doctors told his family that he may have been suffering from
The inmates were cut by razor wire, said Joe Andrews of t,he
selective amnesia. "They're kind of in shock too;' ·said da11ghter,
Olllo Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. They we~
Julie Setzer.
treated at Adena Regional' Medical Center.
.
,
'
Richard Harrell, 26, and Thomas Sperry, 29, had been released
from their cells for breakfast when they went behind a building
and tried to go over the fence, setting off an alarm, Andrews said.
MARYSVILLE (AP) - A man has decided to do somet!Ung
Charges would be possible after the case is presented to a Ross
about a string of bad luck that includes getting broadsided by an
County grand jury, said State High my Patrol spokesman Lt. Gary
ambulance. ·
Lewis.
He's changing his entire name to Seven.
Thursday lie had not seen the lawsuit.
Harmon said it is the third lawsuit he is aware of relating to
police actions during the annual conference of the Transatlantic
Business Dialogue. The organization of international business
executivc:s and se,nior government offic ials recOinnlends· trade
policies to European and American governments.

Teen accused as -'hit lisf author

'

Deaths

•

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ln•tes hurt in escape try

southwestern Ohio city has agreed to plead .guilty and pay a
$600,000 fine for its part in an international conspiracy to fix the
price of a carbon product, federal authorities said Thursday.
Anchor Industrial Products Inc., formerly Hepworth Refractories Inc. of Franklin, was charged Thursday in U.S. District Court
in Pluladelphia with conspiring with unnamed..co-conspiraton to
suppress and elin1inate competition in the carbon cathode block
industry from February 1996 until at least December 1997, officials with the Department of Justice said.
Anchor could not be reached for commentThuf.Sday.There was
no telephone listing for Anchor or Hepworth in Franklin, which
is about 25 miles south oT Dayton.
Carbon cathode block, which has superior conductivity p·roperties, is commonly used in alun1inumsmelters or pots in the pro-·
"I figure at this cite, the only worse .things that can happen are
duction of primary alununum sold in the United States and else- .a vital organ- will stop functioning, I'll lose • the use of an
where.
appendage or I'll just flat-out die," said Jeremy DeBord, 21, who
was once nicknamed Agent Orange because of his orange hair
and. orange contact lenses.
DeBord said in the past four years, he's had relationship troubles,
CINCINNATI (AP) - A third lawsuit has been filed against a four- day- old stereo ,ystem stolen from his car, and has learned
Cincinnati police in connection with their crackdown on street of a family member's impending death.
demonstrators during protests at an international trade conference
in November.
Steven C. Steel filed the suit Wednesday in U.S. District Court.
It alleges that police arrested him without cause during a Nov. 18
HINCKLEY (AP) -The buzzards didn't disappoint dozens of
protest at Fountain Square downtown . The lawsuit against police people who gathered early Thursday to watch the 182-year-old
officer Thomas Traine and five unidentified defendants demands a traditional return of the scavenger bird.
trial, unspecified monetary damages and attorney's fees.
,fl. buzzard was spotted shortly after 6:30 a.m. at ttie Hinckley
Mike H armon, chief counsel for the city solicitor's' office, said

Man tries 1ucky' name

Crackdown yields third lawsuit

Buzzards back in Hinckley

..
NEW ·MATAMORAS (AP) - A West Virginia man was
indicted Thursday on charges stemnung from a traffic accident
that killed five people.
A Washington County grand jury charged Ryan Cisar, 24,.of
New Martinsville, WVa., with 10 counts of aggravated vehicular
honucide, five counts of vehicular hon1ictde and two counts of
driving while intoxicated.
Cisar was· driving a pickup truck that collided with a n1inivan
on Dec. 22 on Ohio Route 7 near New Matamoras:
Killed in the accident were the nunivan's passengers,Violet Jef. fers , 54; Bubble Jeffers, 51; Nancy Stewart, 32; and Steven Cronin,
24, all of New Matamoras; and Charles G . Robinson ll, 29, of
New Martinsville, who was in Cisar's pickup.

CDBG

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

MIDDLEPORT -Word has been received here of the death
" of Coradell Seines Casanova, 80, formerly of Middleport, on
Monday, Feb. 26, 2001, at Masonic Home Care Center in
.. Wallingford, Conn.
, , · She was born on Aug. 13, 1920 in Middleport, daughter of the
·_late John and Laura Pickens Seines. She was a graduate of Holzer Hospttal School of Nursing in Gall ipolis, and worked in nursing her entire life.
She is survived by four sons: Greg Casanova of Southington,
Conn., Guy Casanova ofWallingford, Gary Casanova ofYalesville,
'· Conn., and Glen Casanova of Louisville, Ky.; two si.lters, Mary
~ Rose Mitch ofWheeling, WVa., and Laura June Du~ld of Mid,.. _d leport; one brother, Charles A. Seines of Escondido, Calif.; and
several grandchildren and great grandchildren.
. , In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two
· !isters, Ruth Roush and Martha Magnotta.

Helen Irene Kemper
GALLIPOLIS - Helen Irene Kemper, 75, Gallipolis, died ·
Thursday, March 15,2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
- Born Oct. 9, 1925 in Gallia County, daughter of the late ·
George A. and Sylvia R. Mooney, she \Vas a homemaker.
·: ' She was also preceded in death by four brothers, Alva, Leroy.
'· Fred and Clifford; and a sister, Dorothy.
'. Surviving are her husband , George Kemper Jr.; son and daugh:rer-tn-law, Ronald L. and Marge Kemper of Gallipolis; a grandson and two great-grandchildren; two sisters, Eileane Johnson of
''Crown City, and Eva Queen of Gallipolis; and a brother, Garland
· Mooney of Columbus.
: Se.rvices will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Willis Funeral H ome, Gal-.
:· lipolis, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6-9 p.m. Saturday.

Polly Chartene Wiseman

ll.

'

, : MIDDLEPORT- Polly Charlene Woods Wiseman, 49, Midi ,dleport, died at her residence on Thursday, March 15, 2001.
She was born on Sept. 24,1951 in Paintsville, Ky., daughter of
•, the late John and Gertie Arms Woods. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband, Greg Wiseman; four children,
Richard, Charles, Tammy and Sally Green of Middleport; a step'. daughter, Brittany Wiseman of Tiffin; three brothers, Charles,
, . l,.arry and Jim Woods, all of Kentucky; three sisters, Mary Shell
and Dottie Hamilton, both of Kentucky, and Joan Root of Ohio;
,. ~er mother-in-law and father-in-law, Janet and Rod Wiseman of
,. California, and a brother-in-law, Richard Wiseman of California.
She was also preceded in death by her sister, ·Pat Meek; and a
half-sister, Loretta Knapp.
'
Services will be Sunday in Jones-Preston Funeral Home, 807 S.
Mayo Trail, Paintsville, 'Ky., with burial following at the Fraley
.Family Cemetery in Paintsville. Friends may call at the Jones-Pre. .stan Funeral Home on Saturday evening.
- .. Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice,
. Meigs County Branch; 115 E . Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
"'45769, or ro James Development Office for the Reseaoch ofColJ''6rectal 'Cancer, 300 W lOth Ave., Suite 519, Columbus, Ohio
I 43210.
,.

name

attempt to lobby state officials
for additional resources to aid
in economic developtnent.
_ In other business, Fair
Housing Coordinator Jean
Trussell held the first of two
public hearings on the county's
Rural Housing Preservation
grant application, to be subnutted through the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's
Section 533 housing program.
Trussell said counties are
eligible to apply for up to
$75,000. The county has
receive d the grant twice
before.
Trussell sa id that the county,
if the grant is received, will
likely usc the funds for "nunirehab " projects for 10 to 12·
very-low and low:income
households . Those projects
include smalle r improvements,
such as roof and heating system
rl'pla cements.
A second public hearin g
will be announced.
County Engineer Gene
Triplett met with th e coJunlissioners to re com tnend the
closing of portions of Park
Road in Bedford Township
and Schick Road in Scipio
Township, which the comnussioners approved, following a
viewing prior to yesterday 1s
meeting.
The comn1issioners also discussed a request from James
·and Cheryl Adam s, who
requested that Schick Road be
renamed. The commissioners

Scouts
from Page AI

cific country in the .parade.
Cultures of the various
countries were presented using
foods, displays , entertainment
and collections of facts, with
the scouts being joined by
troop leaders and fanUI.ies to
learn about those represented.
Troops arid the countries
they .represented were M eigs
County Daisy Troop 1292,
' .
.~··----------------------------------------------- Spain; Reedsville Daisy Troop
0•
1334, France;
Reedsville
Brownie Troop 1067, China;
Pomeroy Junior Troop 1309,
England; Racine Brownie and
chance of rain showers. Low
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Juni o r Troop 1100, Germany ;
Colder weather is descend- in the upper 30s. Southwest
C hester Brownie Troop 1316,
ing on the tri-county area wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
Isra el; Mi ddlepo rt Bro.wnie
.. -t,onight and Saturday.
rain 40 percent .
, ,.. Snow also was forecast, but
Saturday.. ,Cloudy with a
chance
of ram showers
little or no accumulation is
through early afternoon., then
-1- likely.
,. · Temperatures were to dip a chance of snow or rain
•·nearly into the 20s tonight showers late. High 41 to 46.
·and warm only into the 40s West wind around 10 mph.
C han ce of precipitation 30
'.on Saturday.
MIDDLEPORT- Big Bend
Community
Band will perfonn a
Sunset tonight will be at . percent.
Heath
United
Saturday
night ... M ostl y conoert at
•'6:39, and sunrise on Saturday
2
Med1odist
Church
,
Middleport,
cloudy with a chanc e of flur. is at 6:40 a.m.
ries.' Partial clearing late. Low p.m. Sunday. Light concert band
i•
Weather forecast:
numbers will be presented.
Tonight.. .Cloudy with a 26 to 29.
The conmlllnity band, directed
by Roger D. Williams, is open to all

:VALLEY WEATHER

r~main

the same, in

area musicians. and rehearsals are

Rockwell - 45~
Rocky BooIs - 4~.
RD Shell-57%
Sears- 37
Shoney's-1
Wai-Mart - 47r.
Wendy's- 23}.
Worthington- 9%
Daily stock repOrts are
lh e 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe previous

Gannett·- 61
General Electnc - 41
GKNLY ...,.10%
Harley Davidson - 39
Kmart -8''
Kroger- 22~
Lands End - 26~
Lid. -16
Oak Hill Financial
13 ~t

OVB-25
BBT- 35%
Peoples - 17\
Premier -.6,4

day's transac1ions, pro-

vided by Smith Partners at Actvest Inc.

held each Monday ni ght with the
exception of d1e first Monday of
. each month, in the Meigs High
School band room. 7 p.m. The
public ~ invited to clte concert and
to participate in tlt e band. ·

•

Council to meet

RACINE ~ Racine Village
Council, 7 p.m. Monday, recessed

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-prof~ groups wishing to
announce meetl!lgs and special
events. The calendar is no1
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type . Items
are printed only as space permrts and cannol be guaranleed
10 be prinled a specrtic number
of days.

honor 9f a former reSident on
the road.
The com1nissioners also
referred two road closing
requestl to Triplett, as subnutted by the Sctpio trustees.
Comnussioner Jeff Thornton reported that the county
will apply for grant funds
through the Scenic Byway
program for a memorial and
visitor1s center at Buffington
Island.
Thornton estimated the
cost of the project, which
would be constmcted on land
adjacent to Portlan d Park, at
$500,000.
Thomton said that the
counry has begun discussions
with Shelly Co., which owns
the land, about a possible cash
match from funds that the
co mpany has set ·aside ·for histori cal markers arid other Civil
WJr-rcbted memoria ls.
The com missioners also:
• Approved bids w1th MulaCom lnc., Jackson, for work as
lead inspector and rehab specialist for the county's Corn -

COOLVILLE- Revival begins
al White's Chapel Wesleyan
Church, 7 p.m., -10:30 a.m. Sunday service. Evangelisl Roger
Parsons.

POMEROY- Pomeroy Alumni
Association, Monday, 7 p.m. al
lhe home ol Yvonne Young. •
POMEROY - Meigs Counly
Right to Life. 7:30 Monday al
lhe Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY - Musical Monday
al God's NET, 3 lo 5:30p.m.
Free meal, games and guilar
lesson for you1h.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Women's Auxiliary, Velerans Memorial Hospi1al, 1_:30 p.m., conference room.
POMEROY- Terrific Tuesday
at God's NET, 3 lo 5:30 p.m.
Free meal . games and crafts lor
youlh.

RACINE- Racine Youth
League Sign-ups, 11 :30 a .m. lo
1 p.m. , Racine United Methodist
Church. Those inlerested in
coaching a team should attend.

MIDDLEPORT - Brooks-G rant
Camp, Sons ol Union Veterans
ol1he Civil War, 7:15p.m Tues·
day, annex of Hope Baplisl
Church.

RACINE- Special meeling,
Southern Local Board of Educalion, 8 a.m., Southern High
School. (Meeting poslponed
!rom Friday.)

MIDDLEPORT - Major David
McCook Circle, Ladies ollhe
Grand Army of the Republic,
7:15p.m., Tuesday, annex of
Hope Baplil;t Church.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Youth
Baseball League signups, Saturday and March 24, 10 a.m. lo
noon, Syracuse Mayor's Office.
March 29 is deadline for regislralion.

MIDDLEPORT- Revival
through Sunday, Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church. Rev. Mark
Hunter, evangelist Services
nighlly, 7:30p.m.; Sunday services, 9:30a.m. and 7:30p.m.

Bridge
from PapAl
A half-width construction
process, which is w here one
lane of traffic stays operational
with stop lights being p-ositioned at each end, will be utili zed to help aid in vehicular
flow.
11
Traffic was som ewhat congested last week when we first
sta rted constructio n . on the

· bridge," added McBee. " However, cinco th e stop light system
was in stalled , traffic began
moving through the area much

eas1er."

ODOT purchased property
from the Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department, which is
adjacent to · the proposed
bridge, in June of last yea r for
additional construction purposes. The cost of the property
t0~1!ed $1 ,150
A temporary lease W:L'i also
obtained by ODOT for a section o f prope rty that borders
the la nd purchased from the
fire department. This property
will be used for the construction of an unproved parki ng
area and an extended' green
span·.
, ,·

· day (J:30 p.m. with D&lt;~vid Cooper ha&lt;; h('en postponed 11ntil Saturday
from Guatemala.
at Xa.m. at Southern High School.

Saturday, beginning at I0 a.m.
All eight vnieties of cookies

offered tllis year will be available
while supplies last, at $3 per box.
Girl Scout wall calendars an~
pocket calendars will also be avail-

able.

MONDAY
ATHENS - Soulheast Ohio
Woodland lnlerest Group, 7 p.m.
Athens Counly Exlension office,
280 W. Union Slreel, Alhens.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 a~d Star Junior
Grange 878, Saturday lun nighl
and polluck supper. Polluck al
6:30p.m.
·

Troop 1015 , Greece; Middleport Junior Troop 1276,
Monaco; Syracuse Junior
Troop 120 4, Japan; Reedsville
Junior Troop _1042, Australia;
and Pomeroy Senior Troop,
Jamaica.
A highlight ofThinking Day
was a visit from Marie Johnson
and her 3-year-old daughter,
Holly. The young-;ter was
adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Johnson of Pomeroy when she
was 9 months old from an
orphanage in Huangvhou,
China. Her mother talked to
those attending abou t their
experiences in China , the liv. ing condition of the people
there as well as in the orphanage where they picked up their
daughter. Brownie Troop 1067
pre sent~d Holly a gift for
attending.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Ju nior Girl Scout Troop 127(,
and Brown.ie Troop 1015 will hold
a booth sale for Girl Scout Cookies at Vaughan's Supem1arket on

POMEROY - Fun, food and
fellowship al God's NET, 6 1o
10:30 p.m. Nutrilional meals,
video games, pool, ·other aclivi·
lies.

APPLE GROVE- Round and
square dance, Red Barn , Slo 11
p.m. Music by Happy Hollow
Boys.

•'

REEDSVILLE - Northeast
Cluster hymn sing, Sunday, 7
p.m. Reedsville United
Methodisl Church , fealuring
Marty Short. Pastor John Frank
invites public.
MIDDLEPORT- ' Well Glory,"
Hymn Sing, Ash Streel Church,
6 p.m. Public inviled. Free will
offering.

room .

Program, at a cost of $2,500
per housing unit , and $52,000,
respectively;
• Approved appropriation of
$8,459 in gra nt funds into line
items for the Litter Control
and Recycling program: ·
• Approved payment of bills.
Presen t, in addition to
Commissioners
Davenport
and Thornton, were Comn1issioner Jim Sheets and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Bobby O'Con•
nor and 10-loot model of Noah's
Ark, 10 a.m., Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church .

FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;A.M.
annual inspeclion, 6:30 dinner
followed by degree work at 7:30
p.m. All masler masons inviled.

POMEROY- Meigs Counly
Cancer Initiative Coal ition meeling, 1:30 1o 3 p.m., Velerans
Memorial Hosp ilal conference

muniry Housing lmproventent

LOCAL BRIEFS
Concert set
Cookies on sale

LOCAL STOCKS

LOCAL EVENTS

noted that the Scipio Township
trustees have requested that the

from PapAl

Coradell casanova

Mom indicted in son's death

Missing man has no memory

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. •--~~~~----------------~~~==~~~------------~~~==~~

PageAl

Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) - A Ford Motor
Co. employee whose death last week has
been linked to Legionnaires' disease was
seldom sick during his long career as a factory worker, his daughter said.
Four Ford workers at an engine casting ·
plant, including the worker who died, have
now been diagnosed with the illness.
Donald Tafoya, 61, a 27-year Ford
worker from suburban Westlake, died
Match 9. Cuyahoga County Health Comn1issioner Timothy Horgan said Thursday
night test results on Tafoya were positive
for the bacteria that causes Legionnaires'
disease.
Tafoya's daughter, Hilah Cbokan of
suburban North O lmsted said her father
was a. hardworking man w ho was rarely ill.

friday, March 16, 2001

·

Altar workers
MIDDLEPORT -Alrar work-

Services -wilt
continue

ers for· the Power Team .Ministry

POMEROY- Lenten Worship
March 2K-April I at Meigs High
Setvice~
sponsored by the Meigs
School will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Ministerial
Association \vill continrtt the Ash Stre~t Church. For more
ue on March 22 at 7:30 p.m . :1t
mformation , call &lt;:N2-h443.
Trinity Congregation;~ Church .

Date changed

Service slated
PORTLAND - A missionary
service will be-held at the Pordarid
First Church of the Nazarene Sun-

RACINE -The special meeting of the Southern Local Board of
Education, previously set for Friday,

..

meeting, municipal building.

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The Daily Sentinel

VICtims see molester sentenced
CLEVELAND (AP) - Seven young boys who had been sexually molested came to court, despite their fears, to see their
attacker sentenced.
David K. King, 32, of Cleveland, on Thursday pleaded guilty to
rape, gross sexual imposition and felonious assault in a plea deal
worked out \vith prosecutors.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Christopher A. Boyko
sentenced King to . 18 years in prison and labeled him a sexual
predator. Boyko said the only reason he accepted the plea agreement was to spare the boys from having to testifY at trial. King had
faced life in pri\on if convicted of_all 29 charges against him.
Assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Kestra Smith said King
molested at least eight boys, preying on the children of vulnerable
adults. He gained their trust and offered to take their children on
outing-; and sleepovers. One of the mothers he befriended is
homebound. One of tl:&gt;e fathers is blind.

. Village

biis claim

LINCOLN HEIGHTS (AP) - A discrimination claim by a
former village police offi cer who said he was treated unfairly
because he was a white officer in a predominantly black department bas been sectled.
Former officer Joseph Euton, who was the handler for the suburban Cincinnati village's first and only police dog, was fired last
yea,r. In a complaint to the C ivil Rights Comnussion, he said he
was denied promotions that went w lc::ss qualified officers.
An investigation by the comnussion found that one of the officers promoted ahead of Euton was not yet eligible for the job and
that there was "_probable cause" to support Euton's claim of discnnunaoon.
Village officials agreed last month to pay Euton $2,400 in back
pay and another $ 1,000 in overtime and "canine maintenance."
Euton also gets to keep the forp1er. police dog, Ero.

University gets S3 million
DEFIANCE (AP) -A longtime attorney who had to borrow
$25 to take the bar exam during tile depths of the Depression has
bequeathed nearly $3 million in cash and stock to his alma mater,
Ohio Northern University Law School.
Erwin Clemens gave another $748,000 to St. Paul's United
M ethodist C hurch in Defiance.
was a partner at the firm ofKorhn, Lin1ing &amp; Warncke from
1934 until his death in 1999.
"Ohio Northern is deeply grateful that such an accomplished
and decent man as ... Erwin Clemens has · remembered his old
school through such a remarkable bequest;' Ohio Northern President Kendall Baker said.

Tie

FRA=~~~~dm,.,

Friday. March 16,1001

Ford worker's death linked to disease
"He probably was only sick two days in
his 27 years there;· Chokan said. "He was a
responsible man. He would work any
overtime that Ford would offer."
Tafoya's job was at the end of the assembly line as a checker, she said.
. Roman Krygier, Ford vice president of
powertrain operations, expressed the company'ssympathy to Tafoya's family.
"To the C leveland community and our
employe es here, we want to reiterate that
ou.r company is taking extraordinary measures to deal with t!Us issue;' Krygier said
in a prepared statement Thursday night.
" We are cooperating with alf public health
authorities. Nothing is more important to
us than the · safety and welfare of our
employees."

Health inspectors at the plant are trying
to find out if there was a single source or
multiple souoces of contanunation.A cooling tower, a large tank of stea.m-p~ducing
water that is part of the plants heatmg system, was identifi~d as one possible source.
Investigators from the federal Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention and
the Ohio Department of Health joined
local health officials and federal job-safety
experts wtio arrived at the plant earlier in
the week.
The Cleveland Casting Plant, which
employs 2,500 and makes engine paru,
was closed late Wednesday at least through
the weekend, although it hasn't been confirmed as the disease source.

'
Reservation of the Cleveland Metroparks.
Legend has it that Hinckley 's flock .of buzzards returns each
March 15 to this area southwest of Cleveland where the re was btg
hunt for livestock predators in December 1819. The carcasses
froze that v.-inter, and the scavenger birds feasted during the n1idM arch thaw.
.
For decades, people have gath ered at the reservation on Ma~h
15 to spot the first buzzard of the season. The buzzards may have
returned to the area before Thursday but, by tradition, the
BOWLING GREEN (AP) - A 15-year-old boy who had M etroparks system says only a sighting by the official spotter ?n
been taunted and teased in school has been arrested for making a M arch 15 counts.
" hit list" of students, polic e said.
·
John-Paul Huntoon, 15, of Bloomdale, told police he hoped the
·
list would scare students into leaving him alone.
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A woman whose 11-month-old son
His parent5 said students· had beaten and ridiculed their son for
years. They said the harassment had gotten so bad that the youth died of dehydration after he was left alone for about a day and a
had appeared on television last year to discuss the problem.
half has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and c]illd
"He's been hit, punched;' said his father, Paul Huntoon. "He's endangering, police said.
.
.
been slapped. He's had things stolen out of his locker. He's had
Tara Pollock, 23, of Zanesville, had told pohce she had been out
thing-; taken from his book bag - his book bag torn apart!'
with friends and found her son, Zane Gossett, dead on Jan" 1
when she returned home, said Detective John Rodman .
,
Pollock was indicted-Wednesday. The investigation had been
hdd up pending a complete autopsy report, which arrived aboht
TOLEDO (AP) - A 64-year-dd man apparently disoriented a week ago, Rodman said.
.
.
from a bump on the head drove across country for nine days, travPollock was b eing held Thursday at the Muskingum County
eling as far as Las Vegas before being found only 45 miles from his Jail. If convicted, she could be sentenced to up to 13 years in
home.
·
prison.
Police found Richard Burner on Wednesday night after a couple spotted his car in a Wai-Mart parking lot. In his car were some
empty chocolate milk cartons, a couple packs of cigarettes, a can
of Spam and ·a sleeping bag.
CHILLICOTHE (AP) -Two inmates tried to escape ThursHe was exhausted b1lt in relatively good health Thunday at a day from Ross Correctional Institution but were stopped at the
Toledo hospital.
tol' of a fence, a prisons spokesman said.
,
,
Doctors told his family that he may have been suffering from
The inmates were cut by razor wire, said Joe Andrews of t,he
selective amnesia. "They're kind of in shock too;' ·said da11ghter,
Olllo Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. They we~
Julie Setzer.
treated at Adena Regional' Medical Center.
.
,
'
Richard Harrell, 26, and Thomas Sperry, 29, had been released
from their cells for breakfast when they went behind a building
and tried to go over the fence, setting off an alarm, Andrews said.
MARYSVILLE (AP) - A man has decided to do somet!Ung
Charges would be possible after the case is presented to a Ross
about a string of bad luck that includes getting broadsided by an
County grand jury, said State High my Patrol spokesman Lt. Gary
ambulance. ·
Lewis.
He's changing his entire name to Seven.
Thursday lie had not seen the lawsuit.
Harmon said it is the third lawsuit he is aware of relating to
police actions during the annual conference of the Transatlantic
Business Dialogue. The organization of international business
executivc:s and se,nior government offic ials recOinnlends· trade
policies to European and American governments.

Teen accused as -'hit lisf author

'

Deaths

•

·'

ln•tes hurt in escape try

southwestern Ohio city has agreed to plead .guilty and pay a
$600,000 fine for its part in an international conspiracy to fix the
price of a carbon product, federal authorities said Thursday.
Anchor Industrial Products Inc., formerly Hepworth Refractories Inc. of Franklin, was charged Thursday in U.S. District Court
in Pluladelphia with conspiring with unnamed..co-conspiraton to
suppress and elin1inate competition in the carbon cathode block
industry from February 1996 until at least December 1997, officials with the Department of Justice said.
Anchor could not be reached for commentThuf.Sday.There was
no telephone listing for Anchor or Hepworth in Franklin, which
is about 25 miles south oT Dayton.
Carbon cathode block, which has superior conductivity p·roperties, is commonly used in alun1inumsmelters or pots in the pro-·
"I figure at this cite, the only worse .things that can happen are
duction of primary alununum sold in the United States and else- .a vital organ- will stop functioning, I'll lose • the use of an
where.
appendage or I'll just flat-out die," said Jeremy DeBord, 21, who
was once nicknamed Agent Orange because of his orange hair
and. orange contact lenses.
DeBord said in the past four years, he's had relationship troubles,
CINCINNATI (AP) - A third lawsuit has been filed against a four- day- old stereo ,ystem stolen from his car, and has learned
Cincinnati police in connection with their crackdown on street of a family member's impending death.
demonstrators during protests at an international trade conference
in November.
Steven C. Steel filed the suit Wednesday in U.S. District Court.
It alleges that police arrested him without cause during a Nov. 18
HINCKLEY (AP) -The buzzards didn't disappoint dozens of
protest at Fountain Square downtown . The lawsuit against police people who gathered early Thursday to watch the 182-year-old
officer Thomas Traine and five unidentified defendants demands a traditional return of the scavenger bird.
trial, unspecified monetary damages and attorney's fees.
,fl. buzzard was spotted shortly after 6:30 a.m. at ttie Hinckley
Mike H armon, chief counsel for the city solicitor's' office, said

Man tries 1ucky' name

Crackdown yields third lawsuit

Buzzards back in Hinckley

..
NEW ·MATAMORAS (AP) - A West Virginia man was
indicted Thursday on charges stemnung from a traffic accident
that killed five people.
A Washington County grand jury charged Ryan Cisar, 24,.of
New Martinsville, WVa., with 10 counts of aggravated vehicular
honucide, five counts of vehicular hon1ictde and two counts of
driving while intoxicated.
Cisar was· driving a pickup truck that collided with a n1inivan
on Dec. 22 on Ohio Route 7 near New Matamoras:
Killed in the accident were the nunivan's passengers,Violet Jef. fers , 54; Bubble Jeffers, 51; Nancy Stewart, 32; and Steven Cronin,
24, all of New Matamoras; and Charles G . Robinson ll, 29, of
New Martinsville, who was in Cisar's pickup.

CDBG

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

MIDDLEPORT -Word has been received here of the death
" of Coradell Seines Casanova, 80, formerly of Middleport, on
Monday, Feb. 26, 2001, at Masonic Home Care Center in
.. Wallingford, Conn.
, , · She was born on Aug. 13, 1920 in Middleport, daughter of the
·_late John and Laura Pickens Seines. She was a graduate of Holzer Hospttal School of Nursing in Gall ipolis, and worked in nursing her entire life.
She is survived by four sons: Greg Casanova of Southington,
Conn., Guy Casanova ofWallingford, Gary Casanova ofYalesville,
'· Conn., and Glen Casanova of Louisville, Ky.; two si.lters, Mary
~ Rose Mitch ofWheeling, WVa., and Laura June Du~ld of Mid,.. _d leport; one brother, Charles A. Seines of Escondido, Calif.; and
several grandchildren and great grandchildren.
. , In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two
· !isters, Ruth Roush and Martha Magnotta.

Helen Irene Kemper
GALLIPOLIS - Helen Irene Kemper, 75, Gallipolis, died ·
Thursday, March 15,2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
- Born Oct. 9, 1925 in Gallia County, daughter of the late ·
George A. and Sylvia R. Mooney, she \Vas a homemaker.
·: ' She was also preceded in death by four brothers, Alva, Leroy.
'· Fred and Clifford; and a sister, Dorothy.
'. Surviving are her husband , George Kemper Jr.; son and daugh:rer-tn-law, Ronald L. and Marge Kemper of Gallipolis; a grandson and two great-grandchildren; two sisters, Eileane Johnson of
''Crown City, and Eva Queen of Gallipolis; and a brother, Garland
· Mooney of Columbus.
: Se.rvices will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Willis Funeral H ome, Gal-.
:· lipolis, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6-9 p.m. Saturday.

Polly Chartene Wiseman

ll.

'

, : MIDDLEPORT- Polly Charlene Woods Wiseman, 49, Midi ,dleport, died at her residence on Thursday, March 15, 2001.
She was born on Sept. 24,1951 in Paintsville, Ky., daughter of
•, the late John and Gertie Arms Woods. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband, Greg Wiseman; four children,
Richard, Charles, Tammy and Sally Green of Middleport; a step'. daughter, Brittany Wiseman of Tiffin; three brothers, Charles,
, . l,.arry and Jim Woods, all of Kentucky; three sisters, Mary Shell
and Dottie Hamilton, both of Kentucky, and Joan Root of Ohio;
,. ~er mother-in-law and father-in-law, Janet and Rod Wiseman of
,. California, and a brother-in-law, Richard Wiseman of California.
She was also preceded in death by her sister, ·Pat Meek; and a
half-sister, Loretta Knapp.
'
Services will be Sunday in Jones-Preston Funeral Home, 807 S.
Mayo Trail, Paintsville, 'Ky., with burial following at the Fraley
.Family Cemetery in Paintsville. Friends may call at the Jones-Pre. .stan Funeral Home on Saturday evening.
- .. Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice,
. Meigs County Branch; 115 E . Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
"'45769, or ro James Development Office for the Reseaoch ofColJ''6rectal 'Cancer, 300 W lOth Ave., Suite 519, Columbus, Ohio
I 43210.
,.

name

attempt to lobby state officials
for additional resources to aid
in economic developtnent.
_ In other business, Fair
Housing Coordinator Jean
Trussell held the first of two
public hearings on the county's
Rural Housing Preservation
grant application, to be subnutted through the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's
Section 533 housing program.
Trussell said counties are
eligible to apply for up to
$75,000. The county has
receive d the grant twice
before.
Trussell sa id that the county,
if the grant is received, will
likely usc the funds for "nunirehab " projects for 10 to 12·
very-low and low:income
households . Those projects
include smalle r improvements,
such as roof and heating system
rl'pla cements.
A second public hearin g
will be announced.
County Engineer Gene
Triplett met with th e coJunlissioners to re com tnend the
closing of portions of Park
Road in Bedford Township
and Schick Road in Scipio
Township, which the comnussioners approved, following a
viewing prior to yesterday 1s
meeting.
The comn1issioners also discussed a request from James
·and Cheryl Adam s, who
requested that Schick Road be
renamed. The commissioners

Scouts
from Page AI

cific country in the .parade.
Cultures of the various
countries were presented using
foods, displays , entertainment
and collections of facts, with
the scouts being joined by
troop leaders and fanUI.ies to
learn about those represented.
Troops arid the countries
they .represented were M eigs
County Daisy Troop 1292,
' .
.~··----------------------------------------------- Spain; Reedsville Daisy Troop
0•
1334, France;
Reedsville
Brownie Troop 1067, China;
Pomeroy Junior Troop 1309,
England; Racine Brownie and
chance of rain showers. Low
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Juni o r Troop 1100, Germany ;
Colder weather is descend- in the upper 30s. Southwest
C hester Brownie Troop 1316,
ing on the tri-county area wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
Isra el; Mi ddlepo rt Bro.wnie
.. -t,onight and Saturday.
rain 40 percent .
, ,.. Snow also was forecast, but
Saturday.. ,Cloudy with a
chance
of ram showers
little or no accumulation is
through early afternoon., then
-1- likely.
,. · Temperatures were to dip a chance of snow or rain
•·nearly into the 20s tonight showers late. High 41 to 46.
·and warm only into the 40s West wind around 10 mph.
C han ce of precipitation 30
'.on Saturday.
MIDDLEPORT- Big Bend
Community
Band will perfonn a
Sunset tonight will be at . percent.
Heath
United
Saturday
night ... M ostl y conoert at
•'6:39, and sunrise on Saturday
2
Med1odist
Church
,
Middleport,
cloudy with a chanc e of flur. is at 6:40 a.m.
ries.' Partial clearing late. Low p.m. Sunday. Light concert band
i•
Weather forecast:
numbers will be presented.
Tonight.. .Cloudy with a 26 to 29.
The conmlllnity band, directed
by Roger D. Williams, is open to all

:VALLEY WEATHER

r~main

the same, in

area musicians. and rehearsals are

Rockwell - 45~
Rocky BooIs - 4~.
RD Shell-57%
Sears- 37
Shoney's-1
Wai-Mart - 47r.
Wendy's- 23}.
Worthington- 9%
Daily stock repOrts are
lh e 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe previous

Gannett·- 61
General Electnc - 41
GKNLY ...,.10%
Harley Davidson - 39
Kmart -8''
Kroger- 22~
Lands End - 26~
Lid. -16
Oak Hill Financial
13 ~t

OVB-25
BBT- 35%
Peoples - 17\
Premier -.6,4

day's transac1ions, pro-

vided by Smith Partners at Actvest Inc.

held each Monday ni ght with the
exception of d1e first Monday of
. each month, in the Meigs High
School band room. 7 p.m. The
public ~ invited to clte concert and
to participate in tlt e band. ·

•

Council to meet

RACINE ~ Racine Village
Council, 7 p.m. Monday, recessed

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-prof~ groups wishing to
announce meetl!lgs and special
events. The calendar is no1
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type . Items
are printed only as space permrts and cannol be guaranleed
10 be prinled a specrtic number
of days.

honor 9f a former reSident on
the road.
The com1nissioners also
referred two road closing
requestl to Triplett, as subnutted by the Sctpio trustees.
Comnussioner Jeff Thornton reported that the county
will apply for grant funds
through the Scenic Byway
program for a memorial and
visitor1s center at Buffington
Island.
Thornton estimated the
cost of the project, which
would be constmcted on land
adjacent to Portlan d Park, at
$500,000.
Thomton said that the
counry has begun discussions
with Shelly Co., which owns
the land, about a possible cash
match from funds that the
co mpany has set ·aside ·for histori cal markers arid other Civil
WJr-rcbted memoria ls.
The com missioners also:
• Approved bids w1th MulaCom lnc., Jackson, for work as
lead inspector and rehab specialist for the county's Corn -

COOLVILLE- Revival begins
al White's Chapel Wesleyan
Church, 7 p.m., -10:30 a.m. Sunday service. Evangelisl Roger
Parsons.

POMEROY- Pomeroy Alumni
Association, Monday, 7 p.m. al
lhe home ol Yvonne Young. •
POMEROY - Meigs Counly
Right to Life. 7:30 Monday al
lhe Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY - Musical Monday
al God's NET, 3 lo 5:30p.m.
Free meal, games and guilar
lesson for you1h.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Women's Auxiliary, Velerans Memorial Hospi1al, 1_:30 p.m., conference room.
POMEROY- Terrific Tuesday
at God's NET, 3 lo 5:30 p.m.
Free meal . games and crafts lor
youlh.

RACINE- Racine Youth
League Sign-ups, 11 :30 a .m. lo
1 p.m. , Racine United Methodist
Church. Those inlerested in
coaching a team should attend.

MIDDLEPORT - Brooks-G rant
Camp, Sons ol Union Veterans
ol1he Civil War, 7:15p.m Tues·
day, annex of Hope Baplisl
Church.

RACINE- Special meeling,
Southern Local Board of Educalion, 8 a.m., Southern High
School. (Meeting poslponed
!rom Friday.)

MIDDLEPORT - Major David
McCook Circle, Ladies ollhe
Grand Army of the Republic,
7:15p.m., Tuesday, annex of
Hope Baplil;t Church.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Youth
Baseball League signups, Saturday and March 24, 10 a.m. lo
noon, Syracuse Mayor's Office.
March 29 is deadline for regislralion.

MIDDLEPORT- Revival
through Sunday, Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church. Rev. Mark
Hunter, evangelist Services
nighlly, 7:30p.m.; Sunday services, 9:30a.m. and 7:30p.m.

Bridge
from PapAl
A half-width construction
process, which is w here one
lane of traffic stays operational
with stop lights being p-ositioned at each end, will be utili zed to help aid in vehicular
flow.
11
Traffic was som ewhat congested last week when we first
sta rted constructio n . on the

· bridge," added McBee. " However, cinco th e stop light system
was in stalled , traffic began
moving through the area much

eas1er."

ODOT purchased property
from the Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department, which is
adjacent to · the proposed
bridge, in June of last yea r for
additional construction purposes. The cost of the property
t0~1!ed $1 ,150
A temporary lease W:L'i also
obtained by ODOT for a section o f prope rty that borders
the la nd purchased from the
fire department. This property
will be used for the construction of an unproved parki ng
area and an extended' green
span·.
, ,·

· day (J:30 p.m. with D&lt;~vid Cooper ha&lt;; h('en postponed 11ntil Saturday
from Guatemala.
at Xa.m. at Southern High School.

Saturday, beginning at I0 a.m.
All eight vnieties of cookies

offered tllis year will be available
while supplies last, at $3 per box.
Girl Scout wall calendars an~
pocket calendars will also be avail-

able.

MONDAY
ATHENS - Soulheast Ohio
Woodland lnlerest Group, 7 p.m.
Athens Counly Exlension office,
280 W. Union Slreel, Alhens.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 a~d Star Junior
Grange 878, Saturday lun nighl
and polluck supper. Polluck al
6:30p.m.
·

Troop 1015 , Greece; Middleport Junior Troop 1276,
Monaco; Syracuse Junior
Troop 120 4, Japan; Reedsville
Junior Troop _1042, Australia;
and Pomeroy Senior Troop,
Jamaica.
A highlight ofThinking Day
was a visit from Marie Johnson
and her 3-year-old daughter,
Holly. The young-;ter was
adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Johnson of Pomeroy when she
was 9 months old from an
orphanage in Huangvhou,
China. Her mother talked to
those attending abou t their
experiences in China , the liv. ing condition of the people
there as well as in the orphanage where they picked up their
daughter. Brownie Troop 1067
pre sent~d Holly a gift for
attending.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Ju nior Girl Scout Troop 127(,
and Brown.ie Troop 1015 will hold
a booth sale for Girl Scout Cookies at Vaughan's Supem1arket on

POMEROY - Fun, food and
fellowship al God's NET, 6 1o
10:30 p.m. Nutrilional meals,
video games, pool, ·other aclivi·
lies.

APPLE GROVE- Round and
square dance, Red Barn , Slo 11
p.m. Music by Happy Hollow
Boys.

•'

REEDSVILLE - Northeast
Cluster hymn sing, Sunday, 7
p.m. Reedsville United
Methodisl Church , fealuring
Marty Short. Pastor John Frank
invites public.
MIDDLEPORT- ' Well Glory,"
Hymn Sing, Ash Streel Church,
6 p.m. Public inviled. Free will
offering.

room .

Program, at a cost of $2,500
per housing unit , and $52,000,
respectively;
• Approved appropriation of
$8,459 in gra nt funds into line
items for the Litter Control
and Recycling program: ·
• Approved payment of bills.
Presen t, in addition to
Commissioners
Davenport
and Thornton, were Comn1issioner Jim Sheets and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Bobby O'Con•
nor and 10-loot model of Noah's
Ark, 10 a.m., Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church .

FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;A.M.
annual inspeclion, 6:30 dinner
followed by degree work at 7:30
p.m. All masler masons inviled.

POMEROY- Meigs Counly
Cancer Initiative Coal ition meeling, 1:30 1o 3 p.m., Velerans
Memorial Hosp ilal conference

muniry Housing lmproventent

LOCAL BRIEFS
Concert set
Cookies on sale

LOCAL STOCKS

LOCAL EVENTS

noted that the Scipio Township
trustees have requested that the

from PapAl

Coradell casanova

Mom indicted in son's death

Missing man has no memory

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. •--~~~~----------------~~~==~~~------------~~~==~~

PageAl

Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) - A Ford Motor
Co. employee whose death last week has
been linked to Legionnaires' disease was
seldom sick during his long career as a factory worker, his daughter said.
Four Ford workers at an engine casting ·
plant, including the worker who died, have
now been diagnosed with the illness.
Donald Tafoya, 61, a 27-year Ford
worker from suburban Westlake, died
Match 9. Cuyahoga County Health Comn1issioner Timothy Horgan said Thursday
night test results on Tafoya were positive
for the bacteria that causes Legionnaires'
disease.
Tafoya's daughter, Hilah Cbokan of
suburban North O lmsted said her father
was a. hardworking man w ho was rarely ill.

friday, March 16, 2001

·

Altar workers
MIDDLEPORT -Alrar work-

Services -wilt
continue

ers for· the Power Team .Ministry

POMEROY- Lenten Worship
March 2K-April I at Meigs High
Setvice~
sponsored by the Meigs
School will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Ministerial
Association \vill continrtt the Ash Stre~t Church. For more
ue on March 22 at 7:30 p.m . :1t
mformation , call &lt;:N2-h443.
Trinity Congregation;~ Church .

Date changed

Service slated
PORTLAND - A missionary
service will be-held at the Pordarid
First Church of the Nazarene Sun-

RACINE -The special meeting of the Southern Local Board of
Education, previously set for Friday,

..

meeting, municipal building.

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General Manager

Friday, March 16,2001

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PageA4

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Controller ·

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OHIO VIEWS

AOLTIA\E
WARNE~

-o. .

MERSE

5

Unheard

•

.·

. ....

----

• The Columbus Dispatch: Charles Andrew Williams, the
teen-ager accused of killing two students · and wounding 13
students and adults at a southern California high school this
week, did just about everything to announce his deadly intentions except put an ad on television.
And yet, no one who heard the angry boy's thr~ats thought
to tell police or school officials.
If this had been the first school shooting in the nation, that
failure might not look so bad. After all, there was a time when
the idea of someone deliberately shooting schoolchildren
seemed impossible and unthinkable. Back then, nobody would
take such a threat seriously.
But those days are long gone.
• The . (Canton) Repository: President Bush's tax plan
deserves bipartisan scrutiny. But Bush deserves high marks for
his campaign .to pass the plan.
At a time of record budget surplus, and the great temptation
in Washington to spend those surpluses, it is time to cut taxes
for taxpayers who created the surplus. But cutting and spending too much at the same time will be disastrous. We need to
study the most sober projections of government income to
know what we can afford. And in the Senate, where the body
is evenly split between Republicans and Democrats, we expect
that kind of prudent study.
Nevertheless, Bush continues to uplift his supporters and
confound his critics with his skill in delivering his message that
taxpayers deserve a break. His address to the nation before a
joint session of Congress was matched only by his aggressive
journey across the nation to sell his plan to the taxpayers in
person. Don't underestimate this president.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, March 16, the 75th day of 2001. There are
290 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 16, 1751,James Madison, fourth president of the
United States, was born in Port Conway, Va.
On this date:
In 1802, Congress authorized the establishment of the U.S . .
Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.
In 1836, the Republic ofTexas approved a constitution.
In 1850, "The Scarlet Letter," Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel
about adultery, revenge and redemption, was first published.
In 1915, the Federal Trade Commission v.'as organized,ln 1935,AdolfHitler scrapped the Treaty ofVersailles.
In 1945, lwo Jima was declared secured by the Allies.
In 1968, during the Vietnam War, the My Lai massacre was
carried out by U.S. troops under the command of Lt. William
L. Calley Jr.
In 1978, Italian politician Aldo Mora was kidnapped by !eliwing urban guerrillas, who later murdered him.
In 1985, Terry Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent
for The Associated Press, was abducted in Beirut.
Ten years ago: In a broadcast address, Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein promised to allow multiparty democracy New York
Mayor David Dinkins was booed as he marched with an IrishAmerican gay group during the city's St. Patrick's Day parade.
Seven members of country singer Reba McEntire's band were
killed in a plane crash near San Diego. U.S. skaters Kristi Yam- ·
aguchi, Tanya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan swept the World
Figure Skating Championships in Munich, Germany.
Five years ago: In his weekly radio address, President Bill
Clinton accused the Republican-controlled House of bowing
to "the back-alley whispers of the gun lobby" by gutting arttiterrorism legislation he'd submitted in response to the Oklahoma City bombing. For the
time, olliinary citizens were
- .allowed inside the central archives of the Stasi, the former East
German secret police.
One year ago: Independent Counsel Robert Ray said he
found no credible evidence that Hillary Rodham Clinton or
. senior White House officials had sought FBI background files
of Republicarls. Thomas Wilson Ferebee, the Enola Gay bombardier who dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, died in
Windermere, Fla., at age 81.
Today's Birthdays: Statesman Mike Mansfield is 98. Actor ·
Leo McKern is 81. Comedian-director Jerry Lewis is 75. Jazz
musician Tommy Flanagan is 71. Movie director Bernardo
Bertolucci is 61. Game show host Chuck Woolery is 60.
Singer-songwriter Jerry Jeff Walker is 59. Country singer
Robin Williams is 54. Actor Erik Estrada is 52. Actor Victor
Garber is 52. Actress Kate Nelligan is 50. Country singer Ray
Benson (Asleep at the Wheel) is 50. Rock singer-musician
Nancy Wilson (Heart) is 47. Golfer Hollis Stacy is 47. Actress
Isabelle Huppert is 46. Rapper Flavor Flav (Public Enemy) is

••

fi"'

42.

•

DEAR ABBY: I'm a 34-year-old
mother of four kids, ages 17 to 6. My
9-year-old boy has been raised by my
mother since he was 6 months old. I
was in the middle of a divorce when
he was born. I wanted "to give him up
for adoption, but Mother would not
have it. I usually never let my mother
make decisions for me, but in that
case, I thought she might be right. My
dad, mother and older sister took the
baby and moved away.
Three years ago, they all moved
back into the subdivision in which I
live with· my second husband and
three other kids. Dad died· four
months later. My sister (age 50) died
the following year. Now my 76-yearold mother - who does not drive depends on my two older brothers

COWMNIST
. AEEAs that We are "Anglos:' Remember
Zangwill wrote about "all the races of
Europe." In his time · the pillars of the
American elite, inclttding the mosi eminent social scientists, thought that AAEAs
were of inferior races · - perhaps even
Catholic. Through the magic of cultural
alchemy, all those race&lt; are now considered
Anglo. From shtetl to WASP in a single
century!
Zangwill doesn't even mention blacks in
his thundering blast, so low were they on
the fuod chain, beneath mere inferiority.
And of course, Zangwill's hero doesn't
bother to list Hispanics either, although
Spanish immigration goes back to the
beginning. And for the record, in later life
Zangwill, the great assimilationist, became
an ardent Zionist! (Definition of the time:
A Zionist is a Jew who tries to persuade a
second Jew to convince a third Jew to emigrate to Palestine.)
So why does "multiculturali•m" suffer?
Because, as used these days, it typically
stresses the idea of separatism. But while
separatism may be trendy among foundation-supported "grass roots" advocacy
groups, it is losing its war where it counts
most - between the sheets. The 1990
Census revealed that exogamy was booming.Just 13 percent of first generation Hispanics intermarry. The figure for second
generation was 34 percel)t, and 54 percent

Ben Wauenberg, a senior felldw at the American Enterprise Institute, is the host-essayist of the
PBS special "The First Measured Century" and
co-authur of a new book of the same title (AEl
Pre~s, 2000). He is the l1ost of the weekly public television program "Think Tclnk." )i)u may
send comment.s to him via e-mail:
Watmailaol.mm. ·

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

Promoting fifty-nine ways to improve ourselves
According to· a magazine I read many
years ago. when Charles Lindbergh was a
young man, he used to review himself
each night on 59 character traits he wanted to develop.
The alphabetical list began with altruism - doing good fqr others without
hope or expectation of being rewarded,
repaid or benefited - and ended with
unselfishness.
Undbergh was said to hal(e put a red X
next to the traits he had satisfactorily mastered that day. Those he failed would get a·
black X. If he had not had an opportunity to demonstrate a particular trait, there
would be no mark at all.
For years, I gave talks based on "Lindy's
59:' 1 also used the character traits as a
Lenten checklist for readers of my newspaper column.
·
Then the idea came to me to write to
Lindbergh, asking him how he happened
to compile the list, how long he had stuck
to it, etc. I never really expected to get a
reply. Lindbergh felt a deep hostility
toward the press after the kidnapping and
murder of his baby son. He resented the
.media's hounding of him and his wife,
Anne. It made him bitter and aloo£
So I was surprised to find in my mail
one morning a letter fiom Lindbergh, sent
fiom his home in Hawaii.
He apologized graciously for his reply

headlines as "Lindy Debunks 'CharacterBuilding' Myth" and "Lindy Calls Character List 'Bunk:"
Scott Berg also published the story in
the recent best-selling biography of Lindbergh. .
.
.
.
Whether Lindy's 59 is pure bunk or
not, it would do us all good to grade ourselves every night on qualitie• such as
"cheerfulness, no fault-finding, no sarcasm, perseverance, politeness, self-con- .
COLUMNIST
trol, no talking about others, dean speech
and pleasant voice."
being late. Then he let the bombshell
Such a character-building program
drop. He wrote: "The character-trait list is would cure many of the problems in the
pure bunk, one of those numberless con- world today - problems tbat . Alan
coctions of the press that have no basis in Greenspan and a tax cut can't touch.
faci whatsoever -like the cat I was supWhile public wickedness and vice (the
posed to have carried wi\11 me in the kind of sins we go to jail for) are pulling
'Spirit of St. Louis' to Paris.
· America down, these things are not as '
"These stories get into the· newspaper responsible for our, country's decline as
fi'Cord files and are carried over tnd over the lack of ordinary goodness in ordinary
again through the years until they are people - what we call "lack of character:•
rather generally accepted as factual.
But when we use the term, we usually
"The •character-trait' list attributed to · mean a lack of character in other people,
me has even been carried in a dictionary.· not 0\1rselve~, ·
·
Actually, I had no such list and had no
The best Idea ~u for s~cttng Ameriinterest in this type of thi ..
ca back on the sttaight-and•t!Rtrow might
. dbe gh' 1
· ng.d .
be for ·each of us to go 011 1 charaCterLan
r ths ettel' appeare m newspa- building program.
pers across e country - mcluding The .
New York Times, The Boston Globe and
George R.. Plagon:~~lt a {itJ fllllitliJtjor NewsThe Philadelphia Inquirer. It carried such paper Enterprise Amdatlon,

George
Plagenz

or

•

ADVICE
and me to get around.
My brothers won't allow Mother to
move in ·with them unless she gives
my son back to me, because their children are grown and gone. She said,
"Over my dead body." Now she is
asking my husband and me to sell our
home so we can buy a bigger one
with her.

_fimilp

~dioine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

melting pot has melted
for third generation. The corresponding
rates for Asian Americans were 14 percent,
34 percent and 54 percent. About half of
Jews intermarry. The black rates are much
lower, but climbing rapidly. The final 2000
Census results will reveal this pattern more
fully.
How to regard all this? With .interest.
Americans have had a tangled view of
racial and ethnic skeins. Only a few decades
ago the elimination oflegal segregation was
denounced by racists as a precursor to
"mongrelization." But when they're called
"mutts;' Americans think mongrels are
cute. When we hear that someone is "mean
as a junkyan:l dog." we're not condemning.
dogs, junkyards or even meanness, only
indicating that those half-breeds are plenty
tough, maybe like Tiger and D~k.
From "The Melting Pot" and "Abie'a.
Irish Rose" to ''Guess Who's Coming to
Dinner," Americans have had a, uh, mixed
artirude toward melting-pottism. And we
still do. Some Anglos fear that America will
become "a third-world nation:• In a world
where Indian techies are worth their
weight in ~emi-conductors, not to worry.
We're becoming the first universal nation.
There are lots ·of jokers and wild cards
left in the cosmic demographic deck. Just
recently the principal Mexican demographic agency announced that the Mexican fertility rate has gone below the 2.1
children per woman rate required to
replace a population. .If you're worried
about a great tan tide sweeping across
America, you might ask whether anyone
will be lefi in Mexico.

Abigail
Van
Buren

Abby, I'm not sure 1 can handle my
mother living with us, constantly
checking on me and my every move.
My husband and I like to have time
alone. We can't afford to do much, so
we let the kids stay overnight with
friends so we can have the house to
ourselves. Mother told me it's wrong
to have sex in the middle of the day,
and that I should spend all my waking
hours with the kids until they're
grown. Only then will I have time
alone with my husband. ! told her that
may have been good for her, but it's
not for me.
What do you think' - TRYING
TO DO THE RIGHT TlllNG
DEAR TRYING: While I understand your mother's firm stance in not
"giving back" her grandchild, what

she is proposing is a recipe for disaster.
Do NOT buy a home with her unless
it is a duplex or one t)lat includes a
separate mother-in-law unit. Privacy
is essential to your marriage, and your
mother's ideas, while they may have
worked for her, are outdated.
DEAR ABBY; After reading the
letter from "Hurting in New York;' I
feel compelled to share my story. Her
son's wife had died, but "Hurting"
didn't attend the calling hours at the
mortuary because there had been a
falling-out after the family business
split up.
Several years ago, my husband and
his father also parted ways in business.
He spoke to his father only if
absolutely necessary. I didn't talk to
anybody. A few years later, ou r son was

killed in an accident, and my motherm-law was one of the first people at
our door. She wrapped her arms
around me, and we cried together.
Mony years before, she hod lost a son,
too, and I knew she understood my
pain more than anyone. Our rebtionship isn't perfect now, but it's much
better than it was. I know "Hurting"
was trying to do the right thing in a
diffic; ult situation, but times of grief
often give us the opportunity to say,
''1'~1 sorry," in more ways than one.
-HEALING IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR HEALING: Your argument is a compelling one, and you
may very well be right. Howeve r, I
caution people who are tryin g to :
bridge a family rift during an emo- ·
tiqnally charged situation.

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES ·

BERG'S VIEW

Welcome back, Israel Zangwill.
In 1908, a Zan.gwill drama was the
biggest Broadway hit - ever. It's title introduced a phrase still with us and that,
according to a new Census 2000 report, is
beating to smithereens a hardy modernist
competitor, "multiculturalism:•
Zangwill's play was entitled "The Melting Pot." In the climactic scene, the hero
speaks: "America is God's crucible, the
Great Melting Pot where all the races of
Europ~ are melting and re-forming! Here
you stand, good folk ... in your 50 groups,
with your 50 languages and histories, and
your 50 blood hatreds and rivalries .... A fig
for your feuds and vendettaS! Germans and
Frenchmen, Irishmen and Englishmen,
Jews and Russians - into the crucible
with you alii God is malting the American."
Now comes the 2000 Census, which
·says, yes, He is. Diversity is here. America is
changed, and will keep changing. in some
ways you might not imagine.
Do bot think that is the end of the story.
or even the end of the beginning. The
macro datum to watch concerns the category"Non-HispanicWhites;• commonly, if
misleadingly, called ·1' Anglos:· (Has there
ever been another country that describes its
putative majority group by what it's not?)
In 1990 Anglos made up 76 percent of the
total population. In 2000 the rate was 69
percent. Recent Census projections show
that tl!e Anglo proportion should drop to
52 percent by .2050. It is that number, a
weird one, that is driving some nativists
nuts.
Why has the proportion of the Anglo
population diminished? Not -because their
n11mbers are shrinking. Actually the number of Anglos increased by 3 percent during the 1990s. But Hispanics grew by 58
percent (!) -more than expected -to
about 13 percent of the population.
It comes as a surprise to many of us

Friday, March 16,2001

•

'

jstahler@fuse.net

System, community
ignored warning signs

Page AS

Sharing house with motherfills daughter with dread

c;r~~.
WeftDMlRfr· ·

!iE

a.c=:=

By the Bend

, The Daily Sentinel

Support stockings, walking
may help swelling

Charter Day
luncheon held
POMEROY

Peggy Conference.
The next meeting will be
when the Return Jonathan April 14 at the Racine Meigs
Meigs Chapter of the Return Library with John Milhoan ,
Jonathan Meigs !&gt;eld its Charter, state vice president of Retired
Day Luncheon meeting at the Teachers Association as guest
Pomeroy Trinity Church.
speaker.
The luncheon was served to
24 members and guests by the
Trinity special projects comMoore, vice regent, presided

enefit d"Inner
planned

B

mittee.
Michael Owen, a sixth grader, and Daniel Buckley, a fifth
grader, both of Easter~ Elementary School were recognized as winners in U,e Ameri-.
can History essay contest. Each
re.re...ed a certificate, a bronze
m~cW and $10.00 from tbe
Chapter. Over 80 students participated and will receive a certificate at the May 11 meeting
at Eastern Meigt Library.
The essay theme was "IfThe
United States , Capitol WallS
. Could Talk." Mich~el's essay
was aboll~ the Dred ScottDeci. sian whic)1 served to widen the
pp bet;ween the North and
South and helped bring on the
American Civil War. His other
topic was the Indian Removal
Act and the "Trail ofTears."
Daniel wrote about Abraham
Lincoln and the many decisions
he made during his terms as
President. He also told of the
leaders in the Civil War and
noted that more than 600,000
Americans died in the war.
Both essays were well-written and documented, according
to Pat Holter, chairman of the
competition.
Emma Ashley, Citizenship
chairman, presented awards to

Question: I have a prob- tug on us, including upon
~em with my legs swelling. our blood. It tends to puU
My left is somewhat worse blood to the lowest parts of
than my right perhaps the body, and that is usually
because I broke my left . hip into the legs. Any mild
nine years ago.
impediment to the return of
What is· causing the blood to the heart will cause
swelling in my legs and what swelling within the legs. This
can I do about it?
is probably the reason you
AniWer: Leg swelling can have leg swelling.
develop because of several
You · probably have a bit
conditions that alter circula- more trOuble with swelling
lion. The commonly used in your left leg because you
inodel of circulation portrays previously broke it and this
the system in a way that made a subtlc change in circ:loem't ~xplain les swellins. culation either from the fract I'll review the simple model ture inelf or from the surgery
· that you probably remember that was necessary to repair
from health class. In this it.
model the left side of the
If your leg swelling is due
heart is viewed as a pump to "bad veins," then the most
that pressurizes the arteries. effective treatment is wearing
Blood flows from the arteries support hosiery whenever
, into fine branches, the capil- you are awake. The. pressure
!aries, that empty into veins. provided by the stockings
The veins return blood to helps the blood flow back to
the right side of the heart to the heart without "pooling"
be pumped through the in the legs. ·Avoiding prolyngs1 and from ·there the longed periods of sitting with
blood returns to the left side your legs hanging down also
of the heart to start its jour- · helps. Standing is also a probney over again.
!em, but walking Isn't. You
This general view is accu- see, the rhythmic contraction
rate, but it portrays the arter- of leg muscles during walkseniors, Brenna Sisson of
ies, capillaries and veins as ing tends to help "pump"
Southern High School and
simple conduits - like the blood back to the heart and,
Whitney Ashley of Meigs High
pipes in your house plumb- thereby, reduce leg swelling.
School for their essays on citiing -, when in reality they
Check with your doctor.
zenship. E:ich received a certifiare more complex. Unlike a
He or she will help you
cate of achievement and a
water pipe, your arteries determine the cause of your
chapter pin with a wall plaque.
stretch when your heart beats leg swelling and then recomWhitney was the county winand forces blood through mend diet, exercise, •nediner.
them. After the peak pressure cine, support stockings or
All of these essays were
is , reached, your arteries other treatments that can
judged by impartial judges outrecoil. This prevents your help you . .
side of the DAR membership.
blood pressure from getting
Ashley reported that she and
("Family Medicine" is a
too high when your heart
her family had attended the
beats or dropping too much weekly column. To submit quesState DAR Conference and
berween beats. In other tions, write to John C. Wolf,
took part in the debutante pro~
words, it helps maintain a D. 0., Ohio University College
gram which graduated her into
Medicine,
more constant pressure level. of Osteopathic
membership as an adult into
Grosvenor
Hall,
Athens,
Ohio
. Capillaries are more than
the Return Jonathan Meigs
just the smallest branches of 45701. Past cclunms are availarteries - they are the place able at wwwjhradio.org!Jm.)
where oxygen is passed into
the tissues and the blood
picks up waste products and
carbon dioxide. You can
think of them as the location
· where the features that make
"circulation" essential for life
occur. And consequently, you
might accurately guess that
they are involved in some
types of leg swelling.
.
Wonderful opportunities are avallabla In Tom
If only slightly more flmd
Paden
Country. We are axpandlng our facUlties
leaks into the spaces around
and need mora ulea people. No experience Is
the capillaries thait is pulled
required, onl·y a willingness to learn, work as a
.back into the vein . side, the
team, and have strong lnltlatlva.
affected tissues will swell.
This can happen because of
EXCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN
diseases that damage the cap0REAT
BENEFITS
(INCLUDING DEMO PROGRAM)
illaries, from 'decreased conWORK AT THE #1 DEALERSHIP
' centration of proteins in the
blood, and ocher ·disorders.
Call Tg Scbadult An Interview;
This type of swelling is called
Tom Peden Country
lymphedema, and it probably
, is not the reason your legs are
1·800-822-0417 • (304) 344-5947
Church Street • Ripley, WV
swelling..
The .most common cause
for leg swelling is due to a
subtle problem with veins.
·Gravity produces a relentless

••

Chapter.
Tickets for the baked steak
Regent Mrs . John Rose and dinner to include beverage and
chapter secretary, Mrs. Wendel dessert are $10, and may be
Cleland also attended the State purc]'ased by calling members
of che comm.ittt!e or from various businesses in Chester and
Pomeroy. More information

may be obtained by callmg Pat
Holter, 992-7261.

Inducted into

honorary
MIDDLEPORT -

Melissa

D. Swisher of Middleport was

through the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and
Programs. Kappa Beta Delta
membership is available exclusively to business students
enrolled at schools accredited .
by AC:BSP.
To · be eligJble, business students must rank in the upper 20
percent of their class and maintain a minimum grade point
average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale.
The purposes of Kappa Beta
Delta are to encourage and to
recogmze scholarship and
accomplishment among studen):! of business pursuing associate degrees;. and to encourage
and promote personal and professional improvement and a life
distinguished by honorable services to humankind.

CHESTER - The annual recently inducted into the
benefit dinner for the Chester Hocking College Tau Chapter
Courthouse restoration will be of Kappa Beta Delta. Twenty
held Friday at 6:30 p.m. at members were initiated during
Royal Oak Resort.
ceremonies on Feb. 28.
Speaker will be Nicole
Kappa Beta Delta member
Norelli district representative of institutions are accredited
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission. She will talk on the
planned Morgan's Raid enactment to take place in September 2003.
The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
The program will be presentguidelines for submissions:
·
ed by Michael"Moon" Mullen
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus
·on unusual instruments and
and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
please Include a print along with the negative.
music. He is executive director
• Black-anel-l)hOtOCJ'aphs are accepted, provided they are In
of Ohio Hill Counay Deveifacu1 and have !lOad contrail. Ne.-tlves also are accepted; howopment Area office In Marietta.
ever, please Include a print along with the negative.
An auction will be held fol• Standard-size slides are accepted , provided they are In focus
lowing the program and those
and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller t11an standard wal·
attending are to take items for
let
size and no larger than 8 x 10.
the sale, tither new or some• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reprothing they no longer have a use
duce well on newsprint.
for to be auctidned off.
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are
saved as high-resolution, high-quality JPEG flies.
Donotions toward the dinner
• Advantlx·type photographs are discouraged due to their
are being accepted. Again this
unique sizes, which do not translate well to newspaper columns .
year the group will work
Advantlx·type negatives are not accepted.
towa~d receiving a matching
"' Laserwrlter prints of digital images are discouraged since
fund grant from the Modern
t11ey do not reproduce well on newsprint.
• Please be sure all subjects in photographs are clearly iden·
Woodmen.
tified
on the back of the photograph or on an attached sheet of
Royal Oak donates the use of
paper.
its facility each year for the benee:fi~t~di~·~n~nc~r~a~n~d~a~u~c~tio~n~·;.._ _..:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:

We want your photos!

I

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

• ~oint ~leasant l\egister
• ®allipolis 11\atlp mrthune
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY,APRIL 13,2001
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Dave Harris or Debbie Call
For More Information

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,,

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

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General Manager

Friday, March 16,2001

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The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

PageA4

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Controller ·

Untn 10 tlu tdilnr Dn wlcoN. TJu1 tluJuld 1¥ leJIIJuJn 300 won/1. .tlll«un
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No IUitifntd Jetun wiU H pubiUW LttUn tluJuld 1H in pod
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OHIO VIEWS

AOLTIA\E
WARNE~

-o. .

MERSE

5

Unheard

•

.·

. ....

----

• The Columbus Dispatch: Charles Andrew Williams, the
teen-ager accused of killing two students · and wounding 13
students and adults at a southern California high school this
week, did just about everything to announce his deadly intentions except put an ad on television.
And yet, no one who heard the angry boy's thr~ats thought
to tell police or school officials.
If this had been the first school shooting in the nation, that
failure might not look so bad. After all, there was a time when
the idea of someone deliberately shooting schoolchildren
seemed impossible and unthinkable. Back then, nobody would
take such a threat seriously.
But those days are long gone.
• The . (Canton) Repository: President Bush's tax plan
deserves bipartisan scrutiny. But Bush deserves high marks for
his campaign .to pass the plan.
At a time of record budget surplus, and the great temptation
in Washington to spend those surpluses, it is time to cut taxes
for taxpayers who created the surplus. But cutting and spending too much at the same time will be disastrous. We need to
study the most sober projections of government income to
know what we can afford. And in the Senate, where the body
is evenly split between Republicans and Democrats, we expect
that kind of prudent study.
Nevertheless, Bush continues to uplift his supporters and
confound his critics with his skill in delivering his message that
taxpayers deserve a break. His address to the nation before a
joint session of Congress was matched only by his aggressive
journey across the nation to sell his plan to the taxpayers in
person. Don't underestimate this president.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, March 16, the 75th day of 2001. There are
290 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 16, 1751,James Madison, fourth president of the
United States, was born in Port Conway, Va.
On this date:
In 1802, Congress authorized the establishment of the U.S . .
Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.
In 1836, the Republic ofTexas approved a constitution.
In 1850, "The Scarlet Letter," Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel
about adultery, revenge and redemption, was first published.
In 1915, the Federal Trade Commission v.'as organized,ln 1935,AdolfHitler scrapped the Treaty ofVersailles.
In 1945, lwo Jima was declared secured by the Allies.
In 1968, during the Vietnam War, the My Lai massacre was
carried out by U.S. troops under the command of Lt. William
L. Calley Jr.
In 1978, Italian politician Aldo Mora was kidnapped by !eliwing urban guerrillas, who later murdered him.
In 1985, Terry Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent
for The Associated Press, was abducted in Beirut.
Ten years ago: In a broadcast address, Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein promised to allow multiparty democracy New York
Mayor David Dinkins was booed as he marched with an IrishAmerican gay group during the city's St. Patrick's Day parade.
Seven members of country singer Reba McEntire's band were
killed in a plane crash near San Diego. U.S. skaters Kristi Yam- ·
aguchi, Tanya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan swept the World
Figure Skating Championships in Munich, Germany.
Five years ago: In his weekly radio address, President Bill
Clinton accused the Republican-controlled House of bowing
to "the back-alley whispers of the gun lobby" by gutting arttiterrorism legislation he'd submitted in response to the Oklahoma City bombing. For the
time, olliinary citizens were
- .allowed inside the central archives of the Stasi, the former East
German secret police.
One year ago: Independent Counsel Robert Ray said he
found no credible evidence that Hillary Rodham Clinton or
. senior White House officials had sought FBI background files
of Republicarls. Thomas Wilson Ferebee, the Enola Gay bombardier who dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, died in
Windermere, Fla., at age 81.
Today's Birthdays: Statesman Mike Mansfield is 98. Actor ·
Leo McKern is 81. Comedian-director Jerry Lewis is 75. Jazz
musician Tommy Flanagan is 71. Movie director Bernardo
Bertolucci is 61. Game show host Chuck Woolery is 60.
Singer-songwriter Jerry Jeff Walker is 59. Country singer
Robin Williams is 54. Actor Erik Estrada is 52. Actor Victor
Garber is 52. Actress Kate Nelligan is 50. Country singer Ray
Benson (Asleep at the Wheel) is 50. Rock singer-musician
Nancy Wilson (Heart) is 47. Golfer Hollis Stacy is 47. Actress
Isabelle Huppert is 46. Rapper Flavor Flav (Public Enemy) is

••

fi"'

42.

•

DEAR ABBY: I'm a 34-year-old
mother of four kids, ages 17 to 6. My
9-year-old boy has been raised by my
mother since he was 6 months old. I
was in the middle of a divorce when
he was born. I wanted "to give him up
for adoption, but Mother would not
have it. I usually never let my mother
make decisions for me, but in that
case, I thought she might be right. My
dad, mother and older sister took the
baby and moved away.
Three years ago, they all moved
back into the subdivision in which I
live with· my second husband and
three other kids. Dad died· four
months later. My sister (age 50) died
the following year. Now my 76-yearold mother - who does not drive depends on my two older brothers

COWMNIST
. AEEAs that We are "Anglos:' Remember
Zangwill wrote about "all the races of
Europe." In his time · the pillars of the
American elite, inclttding the mosi eminent social scientists, thought that AAEAs
were of inferior races · - perhaps even
Catholic. Through the magic of cultural
alchemy, all those race&lt; are now considered
Anglo. From shtetl to WASP in a single
century!
Zangwill doesn't even mention blacks in
his thundering blast, so low were they on
the fuod chain, beneath mere inferiority.
And of course, Zangwill's hero doesn't
bother to list Hispanics either, although
Spanish immigration goes back to the
beginning. And for the record, in later life
Zangwill, the great assimilationist, became
an ardent Zionist! (Definition of the time:
A Zionist is a Jew who tries to persuade a
second Jew to convince a third Jew to emigrate to Palestine.)
So why does "multiculturali•m" suffer?
Because, as used these days, it typically
stresses the idea of separatism. But while
separatism may be trendy among foundation-supported "grass roots" advocacy
groups, it is losing its war where it counts
most - between the sheets. The 1990
Census revealed that exogamy was booming.Just 13 percent of first generation Hispanics intermarry. The figure for second
generation was 34 percel)t, and 54 percent

Ben Wauenberg, a senior felldw at the American Enterprise Institute, is the host-essayist of the
PBS special "The First Measured Century" and
co-authur of a new book of the same title (AEl
Pre~s, 2000). He is the l1ost of the weekly public television program "Think Tclnk." )i)u may
send comment.s to him via e-mail:
Watmailaol.mm. ·

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

Promoting fifty-nine ways to improve ourselves
According to· a magazine I read many
years ago. when Charles Lindbergh was a
young man, he used to review himself
each night on 59 character traits he wanted to develop.
The alphabetical list began with altruism - doing good fqr others without
hope or expectation of being rewarded,
repaid or benefited - and ended with
unselfishness.
Undbergh was said to hal(e put a red X
next to the traits he had satisfactorily mastered that day. Those he failed would get a·
black X. If he had not had an opportunity to demonstrate a particular trait, there
would be no mark at all.
For years, I gave talks based on "Lindy's
59:' 1 also used the character traits as a
Lenten checklist for readers of my newspaper column.
·
Then the idea came to me to write to
Lindbergh, asking him how he happened
to compile the list, how long he had stuck
to it, etc. I never really expected to get a
reply. Lindbergh felt a deep hostility
toward the press after the kidnapping and
murder of his baby son. He resented the
.media's hounding of him and his wife,
Anne. It made him bitter and aloo£
So I was surprised to find in my mail
one morning a letter fiom Lindbergh, sent
fiom his home in Hawaii.
He apologized graciously for his reply

headlines as "Lindy Debunks 'CharacterBuilding' Myth" and "Lindy Calls Character List 'Bunk:"
Scott Berg also published the story in
the recent best-selling biography of Lindbergh. .
.
.
.
Whether Lindy's 59 is pure bunk or
not, it would do us all good to grade ourselves every night on qualitie• such as
"cheerfulness, no fault-finding, no sarcasm, perseverance, politeness, self-con- .
COLUMNIST
trol, no talking about others, dean speech
and pleasant voice."
being late. Then he let the bombshell
Such a character-building program
drop. He wrote: "The character-trait list is would cure many of the problems in the
pure bunk, one of those numberless con- world today - problems tbat . Alan
coctions of the press that have no basis in Greenspan and a tax cut can't touch.
faci whatsoever -like the cat I was supWhile public wickedness and vice (the
posed to have carried wi\11 me in the kind of sins we go to jail for) are pulling
'Spirit of St. Louis' to Paris.
· America down, these things are not as '
"These stories get into the· newspaper responsible for our, country's decline as
fi'Cord files and are carried over tnd over the lack of ordinary goodness in ordinary
again through the years until they are people - what we call "lack of character:•
rather generally accepted as factual.
But when we use the term, we usually
"The •character-trait' list attributed to · mean a lack of character in other people,
me has even been carried in a dictionary.· not 0\1rselve~, ·
·
Actually, I had no such list and had no
The best Idea ~u for s~cttng Ameriinterest in this type of thi ..
ca back on the sttaight-and•t!Rtrow might
. dbe gh' 1
· ng.d .
be for ·each of us to go 011 1 charaCterLan
r ths ettel' appeare m newspa- building program.
pers across e country - mcluding The .
New York Times, The Boston Globe and
George R.. Plagon:~~lt a {itJ fllllitliJtjor NewsThe Philadelphia Inquirer. It carried such paper Enterprise Amdatlon,

George
Plagenz

or

•

ADVICE
and me to get around.
My brothers won't allow Mother to
move in ·with them unless she gives
my son back to me, because their children are grown and gone. She said,
"Over my dead body." Now she is
asking my husband and me to sell our
home so we can buy a bigger one
with her.

_fimilp

~dioine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

melting pot has melted
for third generation. The corresponding
rates for Asian Americans were 14 percent,
34 percent and 54 percent. About half of
Jews intermarry. The black rates are much
lower, but climbing rapidly. The final 2000
Census results will reveal this pattern more
fully.
How to regard all this? With .interest.
Americans have had a tangled view of
racial and ethnic skeins. Only a few decades
ago the elimination oflegal segregation was
denounced by racists as a precursor to
"mongrelization." But when they're called
"mutts;' Americans think mongrels are
cute. When we hear that someone is "mean
as a junkyan:l dog." we're not condemning.
dogs, junkyards or even meanness, only
indicating that those half-breeds are plenty
tough, maybe like Tiger and D~k.
From "The Melting Pot" and "Abie'a.
Irish Rose" to ''Guess Who's Coming to
Dinner," Americans have had a, uh, mixed
artirude toward melting-pottism. And we
still do. Some Anglos fear that America will
become "a third-world nation:• In a world
where Indian techies are worth their
weight in ~emi-conductors, not to worry.
We're becoming the first universal nation.
There are lots ·of jokers and wild cards
left in the cosmic demographic deck. Just
recently the principal Mexican demographic agency announced that the Mexican fertility rate has gone below the 2.1
children per woman rate required to
replace a population. .If you're worried
about a great tan tide sweeping across
America, you might ask whether anyone
will be lefi in Mexico.

Abigail
Van
Buren

Abby, I'm not sure 1 can handle my
mother living with us, constantly
checking on me and my every move.
My husband and I like to have time
alone. We can't afford to do much, so
we let the kids stay overnight with
friends so we can have the house to
ourselves. Mother told me it's wrong
to have sex in the middle of the day,
and that I should spend all my waking
hours with the kids until they're
grown. Only then will I have time
alone with my husband. ! told her that
may have been good for her, but it's
not for me.
What do you think' - TRYING
TO DO THE RIGHT TlllNG
DEAR TRYING: While I understand your mother's firm stance in not
"giving back" her grandchild, what

she is proposing is a recipe for disaster.
Do NOT buy a home with her unless
it is a duplex or one t)lat includes a
separate mother-in-law unit. Privacy
is essential to your marriage, and your
mother's ideas, while they may have
worked for her, are outdated.
DEAR ABBY; After reading the
letter from "Hurting in New York;' I
feel compelled to share my story. Her
son's wife had died, but "Hurting"
didn't attend the calling hours at the
mortuary because there had been a
falling-out after the family business
split up.
Several years ago, my husband and
his father also parted ways in business.
He spoke to his father only if
absolutely necessary. I didn't talk to
anybody. A few years later, ou r son was

killed in an accident, and my motherm-law was one of the first people at
our door. She wrapped her arms
around me, and we cried together.
Mony years before, she hod lost a son,
too, and I knew she understood my
pain more than anyone. Our rebtionship isn't perfect now, but it's much
better than it was. I know "Hurting"
was trying to do the right thing in a
diffic; ult situation, but times of grief
often give us the opportunity to say,
''1'~1 sorry," in more ways than one.
-HEALING IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR HEALING: Your argument is a compelling one, and you
may very well be right. Howeve r, I
caution people who are tryin g to :
bridge a family rift during an emo- ·
tiqnally charged situation.

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES ·

BERG'S VIEW

Welcome back, Israel Zangwill.
In 1908, a Zan.gwill drama was the
biggest Broadway hit - ever. It's title introduced a phrase still with us and that,
according to a new Census 2000 report, is
beating to smithereens a hardy modernist
competitor, "multiculturalism:•
Zangwill's play was entitled "The Melting Pot." In the climactic scene, the hero
speaks: "America is God's crucible, the
Great Melting Pot where all the races of
Europ~ are melting and re-forming! Here
you stand, good folk ... in your 50 groups,
with your 50 languages and histories, and
your 50 blood hatreds and rivalries .... A fig
for your feuds and vendettaS! Germans and
Frenchmen, Irishmen and Englishmen,
Jews and Russians - into the crucible
with you alii God is malting the American."
Now comes the 2000 Census, which
·says, yes, He is. Diversity is here. America is
changed, and will keep changing. in some
ways you might not imagine.
Do bot think that is the end of the story.
or even the end of the beginning. The
macro datum to watch concerns the category"Non-HispanicWhites;• commonly, if
misleadingly, called ·1' Anglos:· (Has there
ever been another country that describes its
putative majority group by what it's not?)
In 1990 Anglos made up 76 percent of the
total population. In 2000 the rate was 69
percent. Recent Census projections show
that tl!e Anglo proportion should drop to
52 percent by .2050. It is that number, a
weird one, that is driving some nativists
nuts.
Why has the proportion of the Anglo
population diminished? Not -because their
n11mbers are shrinking. Actually the number of Anglos increased by 3 percent during the 1990s. But Hispanics grew by 58
percent (!) -more than expected -to
about 13 percent of the population.
It comes as a surprise to many of us

Friday, March 16,2001

•

'

jstahler@fuse.net

System, community
ignored warning signs

Page AS

Sharing house with motherfills daughter with dread

c;r~~.
WeftDMlRfr· ·

!iE

a.c=:=

By the Bend

, The Daily Sentinel

Support stockings, walking
may help swelling

Charter Day
luncheon held
POMEROY

Peggy Conference.
The next meeting will be
when the Return Jonathan April 14 at the Racine Meigs
Meigs Chapter of the Return Library with John Milhoan ,
Jonathan Meigs !&gt;eld its Charter, state vice president of Retired
Day Luncheon meeting at the Teachers Association as guest
Pomeroy Trinity Church.
speaker.
The luncheon was served to
24 members and guests by the
Trinity special projects comMoore, vice regent, presided

enefit d"Inner
planned

B

mittee.
Michael Owen, a sixth grader, and Daniel Buckley, a fifth
grader, both of Easter~ Elementary School were recognized as winners in U,e Ameri-.
can History essay contest. Each
re.re...ed a certificate, a bronze
m~cW and $10.00 from tbe
Chapter. Over 80 students participated and will receive a certificate at the May 11 meeting
at Eastern Meigt Library.
The essay theme was "IfThe
United States , Capitol WallS
. Could Talk." Mich~el's essay
was aboll~ the Dred ScottDeci. sian whic)1 served to widen the
pp bet;ween the North and
South and helped bring on the
American Civil War. His other
topic was the Indian Removal
Act and the "Trail ofTears."
Daniel wrote about Abraham
Lincoln and the many decisions
he made during his terms as
President. He also told of the
leaders in the Civil War and
noted that more than 600,000
Americans died in the war.
Both essays were well-written and documented, according
to Pat Holter, chairman of the
competition.
Emma Ashley, Citizenship
chairman, presented awards to

Question: I have a prob- tug on us, including upon
~em with my legs swelling. our blood. It tends to puU
My left is somewhat worse blood to the lowest parts of
than my right perhaps the body, and that is usually
because I broke my left . hip into the legs. Any mild
nine years ago.
impediment to the return of
What is· causing the blood to the heart will cause
swelling in my legs and what swelling within the legs. This
can I do about it?
is probably the reason you
AniWer: Leg swelling can have leg swelling.
develop because of several
You · probably have a bit
conditions that alter circula- more trOuble with swelling
lion. The commonly used in your left leg because you
inodel of circulation portrays previously broke it and this
the system in a way that made a subtlc change in circ:loem't ~xplain les swellins. culation either from the fract I'll review the simple model ture inelf or from the surgery
· that you probably remember that was necessary to repair
from health class. In this it.
model the left side of the
If your leg swelling is due
heart is viewed as a pump to "bad veins," then the most
that pressurizes the arteries. effective treatment is wearing
Blood flows from the arteries support hosiery whenever
, into fine branches, the capil- you are awake. The. pressure
!aries, that empty into veins. provided by the stockings
The veins return blood to helps the blood flow back to
the right side of the heart to the heart without "pooling"
be pumped through the in the legs. ·Avoiding prolyngs1 and from ·there the longed periods of sitting with
blood returns to the left side your legs hanging down also
of the heart to start its jour- · helps. Standing is also a probney over again.
!em, but walking Isn't. You
This general view is accu- see, the rhythmic contraction
rate, but it portrays the arter- of leg muscles during walkseniors, Brenna Sisson of
ies, capillaries and veins as ing tends to help "pump"
Southern High School and
simple conduits - like the blood back to the heart and,
Whitney Ashley of Meigs High
pipes in your house plumb- thereby, reduce leg swelling.
School for their essays on citiing -, when in reality they
Check with your doctor.
zenship. E:ich received a certifiare more complex. Unlike a
He or she will help you
cate of achievement and a
water pipe, your arteries determine the cause of your
chapter pin with a wall plaque.
stretch when your heart beats leg swelling and then recomWhitney was the county winand forces blood through mend diet, exercise, •nediner.
them. After the peak pressure cine, support stockings or
All of these essays were
is , reached, your arteries other treatments that can
judged by impartial judges outrecoil. This prevents your help you . .
side of the DAR membership.
blood pressure from getting
Ashley reported that she and
("Family Medicine" is a
too high when your heart
her family had attended the
beats or dropping too much weekly column. To submit quesState DAR Conference and
berween beats. In other tions, write to John C. Wolf,
took part in the debutante pro~
words, it helps maintain a D. 0., Ohio University College
gram which graduated her into
Medicine,
more constant pressure level. of Osteopathic
membership as an adult into
Grosvenor
Hall,
Athens,
Ohio
. Capillaries are more than
the Return Jonathan Meigs
just the smallest branches of 45701. Past cclunms are availarteries - they are the place able at wwwjhradio.org!Jm.)
where oxygen is passed into
the tissues and the blood
picks up waste products and
carbon dioxide. You can
think of them as the location
· where the features that make
"circulation" essential for life
occur. And consequently, you
might accurately guess that
they are involved in some
types of leg swelling.
.
Wonderful opportunities are avallabla In Tom
If only slightly more flmd
Paden
Country. We are axpandlng our facUlties
leaks into the spaces around
and need mora ulea people. No experience Is
the capillaries thait is pulled
required, onl·y a willingness to learn, work as a
.back into the vein . side, the
team, and have strong lnltlatlva.
affected tissues will swell.
This can happen because of
EXCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN
diseases that damage the cap0REAT
BENEFITS
(INCLUDING DEMO PROGRAM)
illaries, from 'decreased conWORK AT THE #1 DEALERSHIP
' centration of proteins in the
blood, and ocher ·disorders.
Call Tg Scbadult An Interview;
This type of swelling is called
Tom Peden Country
lymphedema, and it probably
, is not the reason your legs are
1·800-822-0417 • (304) 344-5947
Church Street • Ripley, WV
swelling..
The .most common cause
for leg swelling is due to a
subtle problem with veins.
·Gravity produces a relentless

••

Chapter.
Tickets for the baked steak
Regent Mrs . John Rose and dinner to include beverage and
chapter secretary, Mrs. Wendel dessert are $10, and may be
Cleland also attended the State purc]'ased by calling members
of che comm.ittt!e or from various businesses in Chester and
Pomeroy. More information

may be obtained by callmg Pat
Holter, 992-7261.

Inducted into

honorary
MIDDLEPORT -

Melissa

D. Swisher of Middleport was

through the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and
Programs. Kappa Beta Delta
membership is available exclusively to business students
enrolled at schools accredited .
by AC:BSP.
To · be eligJble, business students must rank in the upper 20
percent of their class and maintain a minimum grade point
average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale.
The purposes of Kappa Beta
Delta are to encourage and to
recogmze scholarship and
accomplishment among studen):! of business pursuing associate degrees;. and to encourage
and promote personal and professional improvement and a life
distinguished by honorable services to humankind.

CHESTER - The annual recently inducted into the
benefit dinner for the Chester Hocking College Tau Chapter
Courthouse restoration will be of Kappa Beta Delta. Twenty
held Friday at 6:30 p.m. at members were initiated during
Royal Oak Resort.
ceremonies on Feb. 28.
Speaker will be Nicole
Kappa Beta Delta member
Norelli district representative of institutions are accredited
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission. She will talk on the
planned Morgan's Raid enactment to take place in September 2003.
The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
The program will be presentguidelines for submissions:
·
ed by Michael"Moon" Mullen
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus
·on unusual instruments and
and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
please Include a print along with the negative.
music. He is executive director
• Black-anel-l)hOtOCJ'aphs are accepted, provided they are In
of Ohio Hill Counay Deveifacu1 and have !lOad contrail. Ne.-tlves also are accepted; howopment Area office In Marietta.
ever, please Include a print along with the negative.
An auction will be held fol• Standard-size slides are accepted , provided they are In focus
lowing the program and those
and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller t11an standard wal·
attending are to take items for
let
size and no larger than 8 x 10.
the sale, tither new or some• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reprothing they no longer have a use
duce well on newsprint.
for to be auctidned off.
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are
saved as high-resolution, high-quality JPEG flies.
Donotions toward the dinner
• Advantlx·type photographs are discouraged due to their
are being accepted. Again this
unique sizes, which do not translate well to newspaper columns .
year the group will work
Advantlx·type negatives are not accepted.
towa~d receiving a matching
"' Laserwrlter prints of digital images are discouraged since
fund grant from the Modern
t11ey do not reproduce well on newsprint.
• Please be sure all subjects in photographs are clearly iden·
Woodmen.
tified
on the back of the photograph or on an attached sheet of
Royal Oak donates the use of
paper.
its facility each year for the benee:fi~t~di~·~n~nc~r~a~n~d~a~u~c~tio~n~·;.._ _..:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:

We want your photos!

I

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

• ~oint ~leasant l\egister
• ®allipolis 11\atlp mrthune
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY,APRIL 13,2001
Call

Dave Harris or Debbie Call
For More Information

992-

,,

�Page A&amp;

Nation,• World

The Daily Sentinel

Carriers may re-route flights
WASHINGTON (AP) -At some overcrowded airports,
flights routinely are delayed ar peak travel times. Other airpores, though, have plenty of clear runways.
Under pressure from lawmakers, the airline industry has
agreed to see if it can reroute some flights away from busier
airports.
An official of the airlines' trade association told the House
Appropriations transportation subcommittee Thursday that
he would talk about shifting flights with his members.
"Whether that can be done through landing fees or other
incentives is worth exploring," said Edward Merlis, senior
vice president for the Air Transport Association.

Eledions offer 2002 warm-up
WASHINGTON (AP) - The two major political parties
get a great opportunity co test their campaign muscle later
this year in closely Wiltched ·governors' races in Ne-w Jt•rsey
and Virginia-·- races that will be a warm-up for a busy election hneup in 2002.
Democrats have gubc.:rnacorial caudidates in both states
who look strong on papt'r and fil cc no primary opposition,
giving the party hopes of a two-state sweep. Repubhcans, of
course, have other ideas.
"Democrats .1re in perfe ct position ,'' boa sted Terry McAuliffe, the national Dem,ocratic cllJirman. "We think we'Jl win
two; there's Ii.o question we 'II win at least one. Thi s will b~ :1
huge launchpad for us in 2002 and then 200 4."
The national Rcpubli c m chairman, Jun Giltnorc-, the outgoing Vi.r ginia governor, isn't ready to accept McAuliffe's
VIeW.

Senate OKs bankruptcy bill
W~SHINGTON (AP) -

Friday. March II, 200.1
a..m.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Color matters. After months of wrangling with
Army brass in the Pentagon, the elite
Rangers have won approval to switch
the color of their berets from black to
tan.
Col. P.K. Keen, commander of the
75th Ranger Regiment at Fort Benning,
Ga.,saidThursday that the Army's senior
leaders approved the Rangers' request to
make the change.
Normally a fashion fuss inside the
Army would not draw much outside
attention. But this is no ordinary fuss .
The Rangers raised a ruckus when
Army chief of statf Gen . Eric Shinseki
announced in OCtober that the black
beret the Rangers wear proudly as an
exclusive _badge of honor would bccom~
stamlard-issue headgear for everyone
from Army cooks and clerks to colonels
and generals.
"The Ran·gers considered it a slap in
the face, a cheapening of their hard-won
right .to wear an exc1usive J"lat. They

managed to stir interest in their cause on
Capitol Hill and even at the White
House. On Thursday they declared victory, although their initial efforts had
been aimed, unsuccessfully. at retaining
the black beret instead of switching colors.
· "The Ranger tan beret will represent
for the Ranger of the 21st century what
the black beret represented- a unit that
leads the way in our conventional and
special operations forces," Keen said.
The Army's decision to approve the
Ranger color change appeared to settle
the major element of the controversy.
However, the deputy defense secretary,
Paul Wolfowitz, is reviewing whether the
Army erred in contracting with China
an~ other foreign manuf.1 cturers to sup ply the black berets.
For years, the black beret has been the
exclusiv~ headgear of the ·Rangers, a
small, elite force with a glory-covered
history. Currendy, only three Army units
are authori zed to wear bt·ret s~ Airborne

Handyman convicted of slayings
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 34-year-old handyman has
been convicted of strangling two women, including .1n actress
who provided the voice of Norman Bates' mother in the
classic Alfred. Hitchcock film "Psycho."
Kenneth Dean Hunt was found guilty Thursday of two
counts of first-degree murder. He could receive the death
penalty at his sentencing, set for Monday.
Hunt avoided suspicion in the 1988 killing of actress Myra
Davis for 10 years. Authorities originally thought his 1998
victim, Jean Orloff, 60, died of a heart mack.
It wasn't unci] Orloff's family was preparing to have her
body cremated that it was discovered she had been strangled.

Combs jurors review testimony

lOOfo of citizens disabled

units wear maroon berets, Special Forces
wear green (and are known famously as
the Green Berets) and Rangers wear
black.
In their announcement Thursday
evening, the 75th Ranger Regiment said
the Army had approved 1ts request to
change its beret color "to maintain rhe
distinctiveness of the unit and reflect the
legacy of inore than two centuries of
Ranger history."
"After studying several options, · the
Rangers decided on the Ranger tan
beret," the announcement said. It sa id
Keen sent :1 memorandum co Shinseki
on Morch 9, requesting the change from
black to tan.
Shinseki approved it Thursday.
"The decision to adopt the Ranger
tan beret is based upon maintajning a
distinctive beret for our Rangers as the
Army rran s1t1ons to the black beret,"
Keen said. He said the Rangers support
the Army's decision to make the black
beret the standard headgear.

\"t'lllhh ol ( ,od
Liberty A..,.bl, of GOO
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pa&amp;IOI': Neil Tennant
Sunday Service!-. 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Burlingham - 742-7«l6
Plllltm: John Swanson
S.unday School- 10:00 a.m.
Momi11g Service 11:00 a.m.
Evening Service. 6:00p.m.
Wcdnesd,ay Service-7:30p.m.

Hope laptlot Clourcb (Sou !hem)
~70 Gram St., MkldJepon
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday_Service - 7 p.m.

First Sou•hem Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Services. 7:00p.m.

nnt Baptist Cburth

"

Pattor: Mark MorroW
6th and Palmer Sc., Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:1.5 a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wedneiday Service-7:00p.m.

Radne Flnl BapU.t
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School- 9;30 a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Silnr Run Bapllrt

,,

..
'

/,
,·,

Disease spurs slaughter order
LONDON (AP) - Britain's livestock farmers braced on
Friday for a broadened slaughter that could see up to 1 million animals destroyed because of foot-and-mouth disease.
The National farmers' Union has backed the Agriculture
Ministry's new prevention measure, which calls for healthy
sheep and pigs to bo destroyed around three areas where the
disease has been detected.

R11tlallll First Baptist Churcb
Sunday School - 9~30 a.m.
Worship ~ i0:4.5 a.m.

Pome.my Flrsl Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Saudis storm hijacked plane

sub
commander

Pastor: Steven K. LiUie
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worspip- !I a.m., 7:00p.m.
' Wednesday Scrvices- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Union Baptisl
Pastor : Joe N, Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SerYice~ • 6:30p.m.

.. ,.

Hlllllde Boptbt Chlll'&lt;h
St. Rt. l43justoffR1.1 .
Pulor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

52511. 2nd St. Mlddlepon
Pastor: Junea E. Keesee
Won.hlp- IO•.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p .m.

Failla Baptllt Churtb
Railroad St, Muon
Sunday Sch...ol ~ 10 Lm.
Wonhip • J I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp;-.7 p.m.
•

March 29, 2001

Report: tax returns vulnerable

Golf protest spurs resignation

•

:1llatlp m:rtbune
~otnt ~leasant laegtster

~alltpolt~

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Forest RUI B1,u.t
Putor: Arius Hun

Middleport Church or Christ
'lh and Main
Pastor: AI tUrtson
Youth Minister: Bill Fraticr
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1S, !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

· Rudaod Fne Wllllaptlol
Salem St.
Pasror: Rev. Paul Taylor
·Sundly School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Dorothy Jones

Wedneld.oy 7 p.m.

Owner &amp;.. Stylist
1Syears

( atlwlit
Sacred- Catllollc Clour&lt;h

FomtRu•

Rose of Sharon Holine!15 Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: R~v. Dewey King
Sunday sc.:hool- 9:30 a.m.

Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip- I 0 a.m.

Thpptn Plain Church or Cltrht
lnstrum.:ntaJ
Womhip Service - 9,a.m.
, Cnmlnunion- 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youth• .5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wed~ay 7 pm

Sunday wonlhip •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Pearl Ch1pel
Su11day School- 9a.m.
Wonhip- I 0 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible HoHIJISII Chun:b
7~ Pearl St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wonihip- 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Rutland Churth or Christ .
Sunda}' School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

., '

Faith FuU Gutpel Churth

Long Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday " rellowship service 7 p.m.

Chun:h ol' Chrllt
Jntcrsc:ctioo 7 antl124 W
Eyangelis1: Dennis Saraent
Sunday Bible Study· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. ancl6:30 p.m.
Wedneaday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

( 'hri,tian I nion

RejolclnK Lire Church
.500 N. 200 Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritu~&gt; lawten!.:e Foreman

Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Serv.tces- 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabtrn11cle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Womhip • 7 p.m.
Wednc5day Service_- 7 p.~.
New Life Vitlory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road. Gallipol is, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services • I 0 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wroncsday · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Churt"h of tht Living Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity ·

Pnstor: Jesse Morris
Ass1. Pa•nors: Jim Morris
. Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

New Lime Rd.. Rutland
Pastor: Rev.' Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

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

Harriaoo'Ville Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:l0 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Middleport Communlly Chun:h
.575 Pearl St, Middleport '
Pastor: Sam A11derson
Su{lday School I 0 a.m.
EvcniiiJ • 7~30 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.
Faith VaHey tabernacle Cbun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evenin&amp; 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.
SyratUM Mission
1411 Bridaeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thorripson.Putot
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenina - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m;

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m. ·
Wedneld.oy • 7 p.m.

HueJ Commlllllty Chun:b
OffRt 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
. Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Coolvtlle United Methodlat hrflll
Pa.slor:.Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp;: Fifth St.
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Wonhlp - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

St. Paul Lutlltran Churtb
Comer S ycamorc &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Stivenvlllr Community Chun:b
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m ,
Thursday · 7:00p.m.

SnoW\'IUe
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

JladM
PastOr: Brian Hartnell
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- ll a.m.
Wednelday 7 p.m.

Our S11'VIour Lutlleran Church
Walnul and Henry Sis., Raven1wood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Ruuell
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

C11lvaty Bib~ Church
Pomeroy Pik~. Co. Rd:
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sdtool- 9:30 &lt;a.m.
Worship IU:JO a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi~e · 7:30p. m.

The Bellt•en• Fellowship Ministry

Mornlna Statr
P.astor: Dewaync Stutler
Sunday School~ II a,m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

•

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Frida)'. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip-10:15 a.m.

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd5.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dew.YIICI Stutler
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed~ 7:00p.m .

Dy~::~vllle

Com111unlty Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Mont Chapel Church
Sunday ~chool - 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

f'airview Bible Chun-h
Letart. W.Va. R.I. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School -- ~ : 30 a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
W~dn~~Y Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
t'aith Fellowship Crusade fur Chi"LU

Han-at Out~•ch Millistrla
4 7439 R~ibel Rd., Chesler
PastUlli: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

C•~SuKon

Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Wonhip • 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday SerVice . 7 p m.

.r

Rutlud Church lbe Naurene
Pastor; Rev. Samuel W. Bll!i)'e

A1h Stm:t Church
Ash St., Middlepon
Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday School • I0:00a.m.
Sunday Service- 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Salem Center

SL Jobn Lutheran Church

While's Chii)R:I Weslcy•n
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip RHJenuur
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Other ( ' hurl'he~

Eoot Lelart
Pucor: Brian Hukneu

D&lt;Xter Clourdl of Cbrllt
Pastor: Nathan Robinson
Sunday school 9:30a.m:
Norman WiU, superintendent
Sunday won,hlp - 10:30 a.m.

Fret"dom Gospd Mflsion
Bald Knob •.on Co. Rd . ll
Pastor: Re\'. Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wot1ihip- 7 p.m.

Cltnkr Oaureb of tiJto Naurme
Paslor; RcY, Herbert Gn1t~
Sunday School· 9 :30 ll.m.
Worship · II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

RuU.nd

The Chun:h ol JaWJ
Chrisl of'l.atter-Day s.JniB
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood JI :0.5-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homcmakina meeting, lstThu,ra. -7 p.m.

ReednDie Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship SerYice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy Cburcll or tM NaZII"flle
Pastor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunda}' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Reorpnbed Chun:h •f Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints
Portland.-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneiday Services - 7:00p.m.

Won;htp Service 10:30 a.m
NCJ Sunrlay or Wcdnc'iday Nighl Scnlices

Abundant Grart R.F. J.
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday iiervice, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and6 p.m.
Wed~sday Service· 7:00p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SerYites. 7 p.m.

Kinasbury Ro.d
Pa~lor: Robert IJancc
Sunday School · 9 :30a.m

Sunday School . 9:30am
Wunhip - 10 30 a.m . 6 p m
Wedrtesday Service&lt;.; _ 7 (I m

Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School . 9:1.5 a.m.
Won~ttip- I 0 a.m.
Youth Fellowship. Sunday- 6 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Fret Methodist Cburth

Hldt.ory Hills Churth of Chrilt
Evangelist Mike Moore

C1ritlM lnkrdenominaltoftal Churdt

Pa~mr Mike Adkins

Pomeroy
· Pas1or: Rod Brower
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10.:35 a.m.

HyJtll Run Holluas Cllurdl
Rev. Mark Micb.ael
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10;45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study IIJ1d Youth - 7 p.m.

BnMirord Church of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minl5ter. Doug Shamblin
Youth Minisrer: Bill Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship-8 :00a. m., 10;30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.

s,.._._ Churth of lht Nazarent

Agape Llrt Center
"Full-Gospel Church"
· Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time~ Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedntsday 7 pm

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Clmrth
In mile off Rt. 325
Pastor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Bndbury Churth or ChrUt
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:30 a.m.

Sun. Wor'ilup 10:10 v.rn .. 6 p m
Wcdne!&gt;d&lt;ty SrmL"c - 7 p.m.

Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School-10:00 a,m,
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Seroice • 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· II :00 a.m.

SumJ;:,) Sl.:hool · 9 a.m.

Wedntsda) ServiCe§. 7 p m.

Portland First Church ot the N11u~ .

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 • .m.
10
Worship-lla.m.

Calvary Pilxrim Chllpe:l
Harrisonville Road
Pastor. Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

~~.~m~.----~~_;~~~:_~:!~~:

Worship. 10:45 11 .m.• 7 p m

Sunday SctKJOI- 9:l0 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedlle$day Services- 7 p.m.

Mlnersovllle

God '1 Templt of Pr.ist
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomemy. Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nile!! 7:00 pm
New church. No Sunday ·service c~&gt;~ab li s b.cd .
S11lem Community Church
Lieving Ro11d. West Columbia. W.Va.
Pastor: Oydc Ferrell
Sunday Schooi 9:30am
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

l't·n t l'ros t a I
Pt:nteeosbll Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School- I 0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

'

'

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.tn.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m.

l'resll\

tnian

Syracu5e Flnt United P~1byterlan
Pastor: R~v. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.ni.
Worship . I I a.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Worship · 9a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4.5 u.m.
Middleport Pm&gt;byterian
Sunday S~::hool · 9 11.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Bedlel Chinch
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
WedneMiay Services- 10 a.m.

l nited \ll'lhodbt
Graham Ualttd Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (hi&amp;. 2nd Sun),
· 7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

ML Morllh Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School- 9:4~ a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

UnUtd Fallh Churth

Rt . 7 on Pomeroy By-Pats
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
SundD}' School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

'\,J/&lt;Irl'IH'
Mldtllepor1 Church or the Nazarene
Paslor: A.lle11 Midcap

Chester
Plll!tor: Jane Beattie

Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Paator: Allen Midcap

Full Gospel Llx:hthoust
33045 Hilarid Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
SundaySchool - IOa.m.
E~ening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday -1:30 p.m.

Rtetk¥11.51! Fellowship
Church or the: NIWIR:ne
Pastor: Tmsa Waldeck

South Bethel New Testamenl
Silver Ridge
· Pastor: Robert Barber

Worship ~

Worship· 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Church of GOO ol Propbeq
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
P111t0r: P.J. Chapman

Mt. OU•n Comm•nfly Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wedneday Service . 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School- ~:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Melp Cooperalhe Parish
Northeast Cluster ·
Alfred.
Pas1or: Jane Beanie
Sunday School - 9~30 a.m.
Worship · II a.m ., 6:30p.m.

Syraaue Plrwt Churth of God
Apple and Second Su .
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evenins Services. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser.olcet- 6:30p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4~ a.m .. 7:30p.m.

Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Pastor. Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service~ - 7 p.m.

if:utblnd Cbun:h ol God
Pastor. Ron Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Folth Goopel Church
Long Bottom

Hoddngport Churth
Grand Srreet
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wedneaday·Services • 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Mtlhodlat
Off 124 behind Wilkesville

Secoodllaptlot Churdl
Ravenswood, WV
Pasror: David W. McClain
Sunday SehooiiO amMorning worship II am Evening · 7 pm

Enterprt.
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

Dan1'111e HoUaeu Churth
31057 State Route 32.5, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school • 9~30 a.m. '
Sunday wo111hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m.
Wcdtlt:sday prayer service - 1 p.m.

Zion Churth of Christ
Pomeroy, Harriso11ville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WU11ihip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

( hurl'11 ol ( ;od

Albury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:45 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Communlt} Chun:h
Pas10r. Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Snut, Rutland
Sunday Worship-! 0:00a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

BearwaUow Ridge Church ot Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~ -.6:30p.m.

A.Uqulty Baptlllt

c...n~ Cluoler

llolint·~~

Keno Church of Christ
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
· I §t and 3rd Sunday

Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m,
Wednesday S~rvice8 -1:30 p.m.

Sundly School- 9 a.m.
Wonttip • 10 a.m.
Tueidly Services - 7:JO p.m.

G""" £p1Kopol Churdo
326 E. Main St., PomeroY
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev, Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Sunday: Adult Education·
Sund.y School I 0: I 5 a.m.
Holy Eucharist I I:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist ~:00 p.m.

Worship· IOil.m., 6 p.m.
Weduesday Service&amp; - 7 p.m.

M"Mo-Boptlot
Founh &amp;. Main SL, Midd1eport
Polor: Rev. Gilbert Cmig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4~ a.m.

Woritnp · 9:30a.m.
Sundo&amp;y Sehoul - 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday or Month - 7:00p.m. service
1\lppen PW• SL Pt.MI
Putor: Jane Beattie

Pomeroy Watside Cbun:b ol Cl11ist
33226 Children "s Home Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.

Hartford Chun:h or Christ In
Chrlsdan Union
Hanford, W.Va.

.....,...

Trillity Cburch
Second &amp;. Lynn. Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Cr.tij Crossman
Woofup 10:2~ a.m.
SW'Iday ~hool'il : I' a.m.

212W. Main St.
Minis&amp;er: Neil Proodfooc
Sunday SchoQI · 9:30a.m.
Wor,hip- 10:3p a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedacsd.ay Service• • 7 p.m.

Sundby ~ebool ~ I 0:30a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m.,
Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Lone Boi:IOift
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
WUBhip • 10:30 a.m.

•

Pa.eroy CbuiTh of Clrlrltt

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

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening • fi:OO p.m.

WcJnuday Serviccl . 1 p.m.

( hun h ol ( h ri't

Old Bethel Flft Will Baptist Churrh

Suday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:00p.m.
ThUtlday Services- 7:00

Sund.ly Sdlool - 10·30 a.m

Dailey Mut· 8:30a.m.

Hemlork Grove Chrlldan Cllurdl
PastOr: Richard Nease

· n.·.28601 SL Rt. 7, Mlddlej,on

Woohip _ 11 a.m.

Sal. Con. 4:4S-5: 15p.m.; MIW· .5.30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4S..9: 1s a.m.,
Sun. Mus. 9:30a.m.

Lanpvllle Chrkdan Church
Pastor: Roben Musstr
Sunda}' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Vldo17 Baptkt lndt~Hdant

Over the last several decades, American women have
come a long way In gaining equal opportunity and
repres~ntatlon In the business world.
.Th.anks to the social reform efforts and contributions of
so many women before them, American women today have
the opportunity to pursue whatever career path or lifestyle
they choose. In recognition of the countless achievements
these women realize ln the business world and the American
family, we are offering a way to salute your favorite Woman In
Business.

Pulor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Bethlehem Baplllt Cburrh
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor: Daniel Mecca
Sunday Sc.hool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Womhip ,. 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study.· 6:00 p.m

take the
stand?

WASHINGTON (AP) - , The Bush administration
endorsed legislation Thursday to increase by $50,000, to
$250,000, maximum death benefits for families . of military
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
· personnel killed in a series of rece nt military disasters.
(AP) - He watches solemnly
The legislation would make the survivo r benefit increase as the men he commanded
- which had been scheduled to take efrect April 1 testify at a hearing that could
retroactive to Ocr. 1.
·
end his career. He has praised
That would allow the additional benefits to go to the fa~­ them for speaking truthfully,
ilies df the 17 .f.merican sailors killed in the Oct. 12 terrorist for making him proud.
bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen, said White House
Yet as a cadre of crewmen
spokesman Ari Fleischer.
from the USS Greeneville rake
Families of the five Americans who were among six killed 'the stand at a Navy court of
earlier this week in Kuwait when a Navy jet mistakenly inquiry, " rhe question of
dropped a b&lt;?mb on the wrong location would also be eligi- whether their skipper will tesble.
tify ren1ains unanswered.
· .An attorney for Cmdr.
Scott Waddle submitted an
outline to the court Thursday
WASHINGTON (AP) -Government investigators were of what Waddle might say
able to hack into the Internal Revenue Service computer about his submarine's collision
system last year and access Social Security numbers and other with a Japanese boat. But the
sensitive information from electronically filed tax returns, a decision on whether ·he testicongressional report said Jhursday.
fies hinges on a request for
"We demonstrated that unauthorized individuals, both "testimonial immunity," which
internal and external to IRS, could have gained access to would protect Waddle from
IRS' electronic filing systems and viewed and modified tax- prosecution based on what he
payer data contained in those systems during the 2000 tax fil- says.
ing season," the General Accounting Office report stated. ·
The court hasn't indicated
The investigators said they were able to gain access to tax- when it will rule on immunipayer information because the IRS had not securely config- ty; Waddles lawyer says he
ured its bperaring systems, implemented adequate password won't testify without it.
management practices or used encryption technology.
The commander is "ready
The IRS said it had no evidence that real intrusions actu- and willing to accept responsially occurred, but the GAO concluded the agency did not bility for his actions and that of
have ''adequate procedures to detect such intru.sions."
his crew," civilian attorney
Charles Gittins wrote in the
oudine. Gittins added, however, that Waddle's testimony
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) - The president of would "aid in the understandthe local NAACP chapter has resigned, saying he could not ing of the reasons for this accisupport the civil rights group's planned protest at the World- dent and serve as a preventacom Classic golf tournament here i1ext month .
tive example."
"It is clear to me that my views arc not ii1 accordance with
In general terms, the sumNAACP policy," John Ingram wrote in a letter sent to the mary said Waddle would
group's leaders Thursday.
'
address testimony alleging he
The National Association for the Advan ceme nt of Colored rushed preparations to surface
People began the boycott in January 2000 co protest 'che fly- the subma~· inc because the
ing of the Confederate flag atop rhe Statehouse dome.
ship was late gcuing back to
That flag was removed in July and a similar one was placed port. He. abo would clarify
at the Confederate Soldier ·Monument on the Capitol what sonar data he had before
grounds. The NAACP has vowed to co ntinue its protest until surfacing and explain predsely
that flag is removed.
·how he conducted a periscope
search.

•

Cburdl ol Jnut Chritt
Apottolic Faith
New Ullll Road
Sunday. 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

were to resume Friday.

MEDINA, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Saudi security forces
stormed a hijacked Russian plane Friday, freeing more than
I 00 hostages and ending a crisis that began· when armed
Chechen men cm,.;mand eered the plane after takeoff from
Istanbul. Three people were killed and several others injured,
paramedics said, while three suspects were ttportedly in custody.
A representative of the breakaway Chechen Republic identified one of the hija ckers as a former Chechen interior minister. The report could not immediately be confirmed.
Those killed we're one Turkish passenger, one hijacker "apparently the younger one" ·- and one stewardess, aides to
· Kremlin envoy Sergei Yastrzhembsky said. The paramedics
said the woman was stabbed to death while the two men
were shot.
A passenger with bloodied trousers was seen being car.ried
away from the plane. One man was handcuffed and led away
by Saudi security forces, the paramedics said.

or.._

Evening · 7:30p.m.

"

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r------ul6"l"M~u~l~=_,~.:~~..~~:me::ro:~~~~2~·'~'~"'~----------~,,·~
~y~s~,~~~
~ . ~IO~o~.m~.~~~~~~~~~~~hl~pa·9~o~~~.~.m•..-.-.-.--...~, y

Cloriol ApooiOik
VanZancll: and W11d Rd.
Putor. lamet Miller ·
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m..

Rangers declare victory in battle over berets

The Senate has voted to make it
more difficult for people to erase their debts in bankruptcy
courts and closed a loophole in present law that allows
wealthy debtors to ·shield their assets in luxury hop1es.
Thursday's 83-15 vote in favor of the most sweeping overhaul of bankruptcy laws in 20 years occurred just two weeks
after the House passed a similar bill, but one that left wealthy
homeowners in some states protected.
The measure garnered the votes of 47 Republicans and 36
Democrats in the evenly divided Senate, while 13 Democrats
and two Republicans opposed it. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald, R-111.,
voted present to avoid a conflict of interest because his family owns a bank.
NEW YORK (AP) -Jurors in the trial of hip-hop magTo speed a final package to a receptive President Bush, the
bill's supporters now want the House to either· approve the nate Sean "PuffY" Combs .spent their second day of deliberaSenate version or make changes in it and send it hack to tions rehearing the testimony of a ballistics expert.
avoid having to negotiate rhe differences between the two . Detective William Wallace had recreated the trajectories of
the bullets fired in a Times Square dance club that Combs
versions.
and ex-girlfriend Jennifer Lopez fled .after a shooting in late
1999. Three people were injured.
Combs, 31, is · charged with weapons possession and
WASHINGTON (AP) - Half the adult Americans with bribery. His protege and co-defe11dant, Jarn.aal "Shyne" Bardisabilities have jobs, and the employed typically earn less row, is charged with three counts of attempted murder for
than the average American, new Census Bureau estimates allegedly shooting three people in the club. Combs' bodyguard, Antl10ny "Wolf" Jones, faces the same charges as
show.
'
The disparity is worse among those people whose disabili- Combs.
The jurors ended deliberations Thursday at about 6:30
ties are considered "severe,'' according to the Census Bureau
p.m.,
more than eight hours after they began. They wrote a
report being released Friday.
The results show t4at more needs to be done by the feder- note to the judge saying they were "very exhausted, and any
al government and the private sector for people with disabil- further deliberations would be counterproductive." They
ities who actively seek work to become more accepted in the
workplace, said Olivia Raynor, dire ctor of th e National Arts
and Disabilities Center at rhe University of Califorma, Los
Angeles.
Overall, 20 perce nt of Americans in 1997, or 52.6 million
people, said they had disabiliti.es. Of that total, 33 million said
their disability was severe.
·

Bush backs survivor benefits

Friday, March 18, 2001

Jopl*
Pastor: Bob Randolph ·

Snl"n1h-D,n \dH·n1i'1

'

y

'

Mulbcny Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Saturday Servkes:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

l nit l'd Brl'l h rl'll
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
in Chrisl Churth
Texas Community o!TCR 82
Pastor: Roben Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 n.rn ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 1f2 miles non.h of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robcn Markley
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7·00 p.m
WednesdAy Services · 7:30 p.m
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30 p_rn _

Dotty's swle

salon

Crow's Family Restaurant

"Fftturltlg Kentucky FrltKI 264 Sooii!S...a.Un. ~Mill ;ort, OH 45760
7411-992-5141
Chicken"
ln&lt;tl. flsMr· D1rKier
228 W. Main St., Pon~erc•vl 590 lAst M Stnot • P-.r, OH 45769

•

1234 Main·Street
Anytown, OH
555-4444

-992-5432

Deadline Is March 22, 2001
For More Information, Call
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

992·2156

llatt .:funeral

Ingel's Carpet
189 N2ndAve.
Middleport, OH

992-7028
.,,

Service &amp;

Brogan·Warner

137-C N: 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH .
992-6376

214 E. Meln

INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
992·5130

•w ... 11nd vow thcK!thf1 wtth .._t,la,..•
740-9112-2844

..

Pomeroy

FUNERAL

Florist
MoW• County~ Olde11 FIDriot
East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

-

HOME

Dignity and Strvlc. Alway•
Eltabll•hed 1913

992-2121
108

Ave.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
~unv FLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BIITI'ERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
Po~OY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions
"Flowers lor all occasions'
992·2955 ·
Pomeroy

NEW HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME

.-we accept Prenead Transfers"
.

882·8200

Lundy Brown
Director

Regan
174 Layne

740-992-5444

J-R.

Jr.."Dinctar

Commit thY works .
unto the Lord. and thY
thouehts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

FIRE&amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE

!Always &amp; ~forever
gift Sliop

9112·7075
172 North Second Ave.

518 E. Meln St. Pomeroy, OH

Middleport, Oh

992·1161
•

•I
•

�Page A&amp;

Nation,• World

The Daily Sentinel

Carriers may re-route flights
WASHINGTON (AP) -At some overcrowded airports,
flights routinely are delayed ar peak travel times. Other airpores, though, have plenty of clear runways.
Under pressure from lawmakers, the airline industry has
agreed to see if it can reroute some flights away from busier
airports.
An official of the airlines' trade association told the House
Appropriations transportation subcommittee Thursday that
he would talk about shifting flights with his members.
"Whether that can be done through landing fees or other
incentives is worth exploring," said Edward Merlis, senior
vice president for the Air Transport Association.

Eledions offer 2002 warm-up
WASHINGTON (AP) - The two major political parties
get a great opportunity co test their campaign muscle later
this year in closely Wiltched ·governors' races in Ne-w Jt•rsey
and Virginia-·- races that will be a warm-up for a busy election hneup in 2002.
Democrats have gubc.:rnacorial caudidates in both states
who look strong on papt'r and fil cc no primary opposition,
giving the party hopes of a two-state sweep. Repubhcans, of
course, have other ideas.
"Democrats .1re in perfe ct position ,'' boa sted Terry McAuliffe, the national Dem,ocratic cllJirman. "We think we'Jl win
two; there's Ii.o question we 'II win at least one. Thi s will b~ :1
huge launchpad for us in 2002 and then 200 4."
The national Rcpubli c m chairman, Jun Giltnorc-, the outgoing Vi.r ginia governor, isn't ready to accept McAuliffe's
VIeW.

Senate OKs bankruptcy bill
W~SHINGTON (AP) -

Friday. March II, 200.1
a..m.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Color matters. After months of wrangling with
Army brass in the Pentagon, the elite
Rangers have won approval to switch
the color of their berets from black to
tan.
Col. P.K. Keen, commander of the
75th Ranger Regiment at Fort Benning,
Ga.,saidThursday that the Army's senior
leaders approved the Rangers' request to
make the change.
Normally a fashion fuss inside the
Army would not draw much outside
attention. But this is no ordinary fuss .
The Rangers raised a ruckus when
Army chief of statf Gen . Eric Shinseki
announced in OCtober that the black
beret the Rangers wear proudly as an
exclusive _badge of honor would bccom~
stamlard-issue headgear for everyone
from Army cooks and clerks to colonels
and generals.
"The Ran·gers considered it a slap in
the face, a cheapening of their hard-won
right .to wear an exc1usive J"lat. They

managed to stir interest in their cause on
Capitol Hill and even at the White
House. On Thursday they declared victory, although their initial efforts had
been aimed, unsuccessfully. at retaining
the black beret instead of switching colors.
· "The Ranger tan beret will represent
for the Ranger of the 21st century what
the black beret represented- a unit that
leads the way in our conventional and
special operations forces," Keen said.
The Army's decision to approve the
Ranger color change appeared to settle
the major element of the controversy.
However, the deputy defense secretary,
Paul Wolfowitz, is reviewing whether the
Army erred in contracting with China
an~ other foreign manuf.1 cturers to sup ply the black berets.
For years, the black beret has been the
exclusiv~ headgear of the ·Rangers, a
small, elite force with a glory-covered
history. Currendy, only three Army units
are authori zed to wear bt·ret s~ Airborne

Handyman convicted of slayings
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 34-year-old handyman has
been convicted of strangling two women, including .1n actress
who provided the voice of Norman Bates' mother in the
classic Alfred. Hitchcock film "Psycho."
Kenneth Dean Hunt was found guilty Thursday of two
counts of first-degree murder. He could receive the death
penalty at his sentencing, set for Monday.
Hunt avoided suspicion in the 1988 killing of actress Myra
Davis for 10 years. Authorities originally thought his 1998
victim, Jean Orloff, 60, died of a heart mack.
It wasn't unci] Orloff's family was preparing to have her
body cremated that it was discovered she had been strangled.

Combs jurors review testimony

lOOfo of citizens disabled

units wear maroon berets, Special Forces
wear green (and are known famously as
the Green Berets) and Rangers wear
black.
In their announcement Thursday
evening, the 75th Ranger Regiment said
the Army had approved 1ts request to
change its beret color "to maintain rhe
distinctiveness of the unit and reflect the
legacy of inore than two centuries of
Ranger history."
"After studying several options, · the
Rangers decided on the Ranger tan
beret," the announcement said. It sa id
Keen sent :1 memorandum co Shinseki
on Morch 9, requesting the change from
black to tan.
Shinseki approved it Thursday.
"The decision to adopt the Ranger
tan beret is based upon maintajning a
distinctive beret for our Rangers as the
Army rran s1t1ons to the black beret,"
Keen said. He said the Rangers support
the Army's decision to make the black
beret the standard headgear.

\"t'lllhh ol ( ,od
Liberty A..,.bl, of GOO
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pa&amp;IOI': Neil Tennant
Sunday Service!-. 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Burlingham - 742-7«l6
Plllltm: John Swanson
S.unday School- 10:00 a.m.
Momi11g Service 11:00 a.m.
Evening Service. 6:00p.m.
Wcdnesd,ay Service-7:30p.m.

Hope laptlot Clourcb (Sou !hem)
~70 Gram St., MkldJepon
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday_Service - 7 p.m.

First Sou•hem Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Services. 7:00p.m.

nnt Baptist Cburth

"

Pattor: Mark MorroW
6th and Palmer Sc., Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:1.5 a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wedneiday Service-7:00p.m.

Radne Flnl BapU.t
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School- 9;30 a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Silnr Run Bapllrt

,,

..
'

/,
,·,

Disease spurs slaughter order
LONDON (AP) - Britain's livestock farmers braced on
Friday for a broadened slaughter that could see up to 1 million animals destroyed because of foot-and-mouth disease.
The National farmers' Union has backed the Agriculture
Ministry's new prevention measure, which calls for healthy
sheep and pigs to bo destroyed around three areas where the
disease has been detected.

R11tlallll First Baptist Churcb
Sunday School - 9~30 a.m.
Worship ~ i0:4.5 a.m.

Pome.my Flrsl Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Saudis storm hijacked plane

sub
commander

Pastor: Steven K. LiUie
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worspip- !I a.m., 7:00p.m.
' Wednesday Scrvices- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Union Baptisl
Pastor : Joe N, Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SerYice~ • 6:30p.m.

.. ,.

Hlllllde Boptbt Chlll'&lt;h
St. Rt. l43justoffR1.1 .
Pulor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

52511. 2nd St. Mlddlepon
Pastor: Junea E. Keesee
Won.hlp- IO•.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p .m.

Failla Baptllt Churtb
Railroad St, Muon
Sunday Sch...ol ~ 10 Lm.
Wonhip • J I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp;-.7 p.m.
•

March 29, 2001

Report: tax returns vulnerable

Golf protest spurs resignation

•

:1llatlp m:rtbune
~otnt ~leasant laegtster

~alltpolt~

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Forest RUI B1,u.t
Putor: Arius Hun

Middleport Church or Christ
'lh and Main
Pastor: AI tUrtson
Youth Minister: Bill Fraticr
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1S, !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

· Rudaod Fne Wllllaptlol
Salem St.
Pasror: Rev. Paul Taylor
·Sundly School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Dorothy Jones

Wedneld.oy 7 p.m.

Owner &amp;.. Stylist
1Syears

( atlwlit
Sacred- Catllollc Clour&lt;h

FomtRu•

Rose of Sharon Holine!15 Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: R~v. Dewey King
Sunday sc.:hool- 9:30 a.m.

Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip- I 0 a.m.

Thpptn Plain Church or Cltrht
lnstrum.:ntaJ
Womhip Service - 9,a.m.
, Cnmlnunion- 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youth• .5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wed~ay 7 pm

Sunday wonlhip •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Pearl Ch1pel
Su11day School- 9a.m.
Wonhip- I 0 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible HoHIJISII Chun:b
7~ Pearl St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wonihip- 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Rutland Churth or Christ .
Sunda}' School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

., '

Faith FuU Gutpel Churth

Long Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday " rellowship service 7 p.m.

Chun:h ol' Chrllt
Jntcrsc:ctioo 7 antl124 W
Eyangelis1: Dennis Saraent
Sunday Bible Study· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. ancl6:30 p.m.
Wedneaday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

( 'hri,tian I nion

RejolclnK Lire Church
.500 N. 200 Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritu~&gt; lawten!.:e Foreman

Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Serv.tces- 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabtrn11cle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Womhip • 7 p.m.
Wednc5day Service_- 7 p.~.
New Life Vitlory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road. Gallipol is, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services • I 0 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wroncsday · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Churt"h of tht Living Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity ·

Pnstor: Jesse Morris
Ass1. Pa•nors: Jim Morris
. Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

New Lime Rd.. Rutland
Pastor: Rev.' Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

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

Harriaoo'Ville Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:l0 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Middleport Communlly Chun:h
.575 Pearl St, Middleport '
Pastor: Sam A11derson
Su{lday School I 0 a.m.
EvcniiiJ • 7~30 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.
Faith VaHey tabernacle Cbun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evenin&amp; 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.
SyratUM Mission
1411 Bridaeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thorripson.Putot
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenina - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m;

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m. ·
Wedneld.oy • 7 p.m.

HueJ Commlllllty Chun:b
OffRt 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
. Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Coolvtlle United Methodlat hrflll
Pa.slor:.Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp;: Fifth St.
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Wonhlp - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

St. Paul Lutlltran Churtb
Comer S ycamorc &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Stivenvlllr Community Chun:b
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m ,
Thursday · 7:00p.m.

SnoW\'IUe
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

JladM
PastOr: Brian Hartnell
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- ll a.m.
Wednelday 7 p.m.

Our S11'VIour Lutlleran Church
Walnul and Henry Sis., Raven1wood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Ruuell
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

C11lvaty Bib~ Church
Pomeroy Pik~. Co. Rd:
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sdtool- 9:30 &lt;a.m.
Worship IU:JO a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi~e · 7:30p. m.

The Bellt•en• Fellowship Ministry

Mornlna Statr
P.astor: Dewaync Stutler
Sunday School~ II a,m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

•

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Frida)'. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip-10:15 a.m.

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd5.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dew.YIICI Stutler
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed~ 7:00p.m .

Dy~::~vllle

Com111unlty Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Mont Chapel Church
Sunday ~chool - 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

f'airview Bible Chun-h
Letart. W.Va. R.I. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School -- ~ : 30 a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
W~dn~~Y Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
t'aith Fellowship Crusade fur Chi"LU

Han-at Out~•ch Millistrla
4 7439 R~ibel Rd., Chesler
PastUlli: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

C•~SuKon

Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Wonhip • 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday SerVice . 7 p m.

.r

Rutlud Church lbe Naurene
Pastor; Rev. Samuel W. Bll!i)'e

A1h Stm:t Church
Ash St., Middlepon
Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday School • I0:00a.m.
Sunday Service- 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Salem Center

SL Jobn Lutheran Church

While's Chii)R:I Weslcy•n
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip RHJenuur
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Other ( ' hurl'he~

Eoot Lelart
Pucor: Brian Hukneu

D&lt;Xter Clourdl of Cbrllt
Pastor: Nathan Robinson
Sunday school 9:30a.m:
Norman WiU, superintendent
Sunday won,hlp - 10:30 a.m.

Fret"dom Gospd Mflsion
Bald Knob •.on Co. Rd . ll
Pastor: Re\'. Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wot1ihip- 7 p.m.

Cltnkr Oaureb of tiJto Naurme
Paslor; RcY, Herbert Gn1t~
Sunday School· 9 :30 ll.m.
Worship · II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

RuU.nd

The Chun:h ol JaWJ
Chrisl of'l.atter-Day s.JniB
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood JI :0.5-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homcmakina meeting, lstThu,ra. -7 p.m.

ReednDie Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship SerYice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy Cburcll or tM NaZII"flle
Pastor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunda}' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Reorpnbed Chun:h •f Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints
Portland.-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneiday Services - 7:00p.m.

Won;htp Service 10:30 a.m
NCJ Sunrlay or Wcdnc'iday Nighl Scnlices

Abundant Grart R.F. J.
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday iiervice, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and6 p.m.
Wed~sday Service· 7:00p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SerYites. 7 p.m.

Kinasbury Ro.d
Pa~lor: Robert IJancc
Sunday School · 9 :30a.m

Sunday School . 9:30am
Wunhip - 10 30 a.m . 6 p m
Wedrtesday Service&lt;.; _ 7 (I m

Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School . 9:1.5 a.m.
Won~ttip- I 0 a.m.
Youth Fellowship. Sunday- 6 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Fret Methodist Cburth

Hldt.ory Hills Churth of Chrilt
Evangelist Mike Moore

C1ritlM lnkrdenominaltoftal Churdt

Pa~mr Mike Adkins

Pomeroy
· Pas1or: Rod Brower
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10.:35 a.m.

HyJtll Run Holluas Cllurdl
Rev. Mark Micb.ael
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10;45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study IIJ1d Youth - 7 p.m.

BnMirord Church of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minl5ter. Doug Shamblin
Youth Minisrer: Bill Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship-8 :00a. m., 10;30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.

s,.._._ Churth of lht Nazarent

Agape Llrt Center
"Full-Gospel Church"
· Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time~ Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedntsday 7 pm

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Clmrth
In mile off Rt. 325
Pastor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Bndbury Churth or ChrUt
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:30 a.m.

Sun. Wor'ilup 10:10 v.rn .. 6 p m
Wcdne!&gt;d&lt;ty SrmL"c - 7 p.m.

Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School-10:00 a,m,
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Seroice • 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· II :00 a.m.

SumJ;:,) Sl.:hool · 9 a.m.

Wedntsda) ServiCe§. 7 p m.

Portland First Church ot the N11u~ .

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 • .m.
10
Worship-lla.m.

Calvary Pilxrim Chllpe:l
Harrisonville Road
Pastor. Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

~~.~m~.----~~_;~~~:_~:!~~:

Worship. 10:45 11 .m.• 7 p m

Sunday SctKJOI- 9:l0 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedlle$day Services- 7 p.m.

Mlnersovllle

God '1 Templt of Pr.ist
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomemy. Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nile!! 7:00 pm
New church. No Sunday ·service c~&gt;~ab li s b.cd .
S11lem Community Church
Lieving Ro11d. West Columbia. W.Va.
Pastor: Oydc Ferrell
Sunday Schooi 9:30am
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

l't·n t l'ros t a I
Pt:nteeosbll Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School- I 0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

'

'

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.tn.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m.

l'resll\

tnian

Syracu5e Flnt United P~1byterlan
Pastor: R~v. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.ni.
Worship . I I a.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Worship · 9a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4.5 u.m.
Middleport Pm&gt;byterian
Sunday S~::hool · 9 11.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Bedlel Chinch
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
WedneMiay Services- 10 a.m.

l nited \ll'lhodbt
Graham Ualttd Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (hi&amp;. 2nd Sun),
· 7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

ML Morllh Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School- 9:4~ a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

UnUtd Fallh Churth

Rt . 7 on Pomeroy By-Pats
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
SundD}' School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

'\,J/&lt;Irl'IH'
Mldtllepor1 Church or the Nazarene
Paslor: A.lle11 Midcap

Chester
Plll!tor: Jane Beattie

Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Paator: Allen Midcap

Full Gospel Llx:hthoust
33045 Hilarid Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
SundaySchool - IOa.m.
E~ening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday -1:30 p.m.

Rtetk¥11.51! Fellowship
Church or the: NIWIR:ne
Pastor: Tmsa Waldeck

South Bethel New Testamenl
Silver Ridge
· Pastor: Robert Barber

Worship ~

Worship· 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Church of GOO ol Propbeq
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
P111t0r: P.J. Chapman

Mt. OU•n Comm•nfly Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wedneday Service . 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School- ~:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Melp Cooperalhe Parish
Northeast Cluster ·
Alfred.
Pas1or: Jane Beanie
Sunday School - 9~30 a.m.
Worship · II a.m ., 6:30p.m.

Syraaue Plrwt Churth of God
Apple and Second Su .
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evenins Services. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser.olcet- 6:30p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4~ a.m .. 7:30p.m.

Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Pastor. Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service~ - 7 p.m.

if:utblnd Cbun:h ol God
Pastor. Ron Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Folth Goopel Church
Long Bottom

Hoddngport Churth
Grand Srreet
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wedneaday·Services • 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Mtlhodlat
Off 124 behind Wilkesville

Secoodllaptlot Churdl
Ravenswood, WV
Pasror: David W. McClain
Sunday SehooiiO amMorning worship II am Evening · 7 pm

Enterprt.
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

Dan1'111e HoUaeu Churth
31057 State Route 32.5, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school • 9~30 a.m. '
Sunday wo111hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m.
Wcdtlt:sday prayer service - 1 p.m.

Zion Churth of Christ
Pomeroy, Harriso11ville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WU11ihip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

( hurl'11 ol ( ;od

Albury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:45 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Communlt} Chun:h
Pas10r. Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Snut, Rutland
Sunday Worship-! 0:00a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

BearwaUow Ridge Church ot Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~ -.6:30p.m.

A.Uqulty Baptlllt

c...n~ Cluoler

llolint·~~

Keno Church of Christ
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
· I §t and 3rd Sunday

Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m,
Wednesday S~rvice8 -1:30 p.m.

Sundly School- 9 a.m.
Wonttip • 10 a.m.
Tueidly Services - 7:JO p.m.

G""" £p1Kopol Churdo
326 E. Main St., PomeroY
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev, Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Sunday: Adult Education·
Sund.y School I 0: I 5 a.m.
Holy Eucharist I I:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist ~:00 p.m.

Worship· IOil.m., 6 p.m.
Weduesday Service&amp; - 7 p.m.

M"Mo-Boptlot
Founh &amp;. Main SL, Midd1eport
Polor: Rev. Gilbert Cmig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4~ a.m.

Woritnp · 9:30a.m.
Sundo&amp;y Sehoul - 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday or Month - 7:00p.m. service
1\lppen PW• SL Pt.MI
Putor: Jane Beattie

Pomeroy Watside Cbun:b ol Cl11ist
33226 Children "s Home Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.

Hartford Chun:h or Christ In
Chrlsdan Union
Hanford, W.Va.

.....,...

Trillity Cburch
Second &amp;. Lynn. Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Cr.tij Crossman
Woofup 10:2~ a.m.
SW'Iday ~hool'il : I' a.m.

212W. Main St.
Minis&amp;er: Neil Proodfooc
Sunday SchoQI · 9:30a.m.
Wor,hip- 10:3p a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedacsd.ay Service• • 7 p.m.

Sundby ~ebool ~ I 0:30a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m.,
Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Lone Boi:IOift
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
WUBhip • 10:30 a.m.

•

Pa.eroy CbuiTh of Clrlrltt

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

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening • fi:OO p.m.

WcJnuday Serviccl . 1 p.m.

( hun h ol ( h ri't

Old Bethel Flft Will Baptist Churrh

Suday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:00p.m.
ThUtlday Services- 7:00

Sund.ly Sdlool - 10·30 a.m

Dailey Mut· 8:30a.m.

Hemlork Grove Chrlldan Cllurdl
PastOr: Richard Nease

· n.·.28601 SL Rt. 7, Mlddlej,on

Woohip _ 11 a.m.

Sal. Con. 4:4S-5: 15p.m.; MIW· .5.30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4S..9: 1s a.m.,
Sun. Mus. 9:30a.m.

Lanpvllle Chrkdan Church
Pastor: Roben Musstr
Sunda}' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Vldo17 Baptkt lndt~Hdant

Over the last several decades, American women have
come a long way In gaining equal opportunity and
repres~ntatlon In the business world.
.Th.anks to the social reform efforts and contributions of
so many women before them, American women today have
the opportunity to pursue whatever career path or lifestyle
they choose. In recognition of the countless achievements
these women realize ln the business world and the American
family, we are offering a way to salute your favorite Woman In
Business.

Pulor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Bethlehem Baplllt Cburrh
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor: Daniel Mecca
Sunday Sc.hool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Womhip ,. 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study.· 6:00 p.m

take the
stand?

WASHINGTON (AP) - , The Bush administration
endorsed legislation Thursday to increase by $50,000, to
$250,000, maximum death benefits for families . of military
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
· personnel killed in a series of rece nt military disasters.
(AP) - He watches solemnly
The legislation would make the survivo r benefit increase as the men he commanded
- which had been scheduled to take efrect April 1 testify at a hearing that could
retroactive to Ocr. 1.
·
end his career. He has praised
That would allow the additional benefits to go to the fa~­ them for speaking truthfully,
ilies df the 17 .f.merican sailors killed in the Oct. 12 terrorist for making him proud.
bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen, said White House
Yet as a cadre of crewmen
spokesman Ari Fleischer.
from the USS Greeneville rake
Families of the five Americans who were among six killed 'the stand at a Navy court of
earlier this week in Kuwait when a Navy jet mistakenly inquiry, " rhe question of
dropped a b&lt;?mb on the wrong location would also be eligi- whether their skipper will tesble.
tify ren1ains unanswered.
· .An attorney for Cmdr.
Scott Waddle submitted an
outline to the court Thursday
WASHINGTON (AP) -Government investigators were of what Waddle might say
able to hack into the Internal Revenue Service computer about his submarine's collision
system last year and access Social Security numbers and other with a Japanese boat. But the
sensitive information from electronically filed tax returns, a decision on whether ·he testicongressional report said Jhursday.
fies hinges on a request for
"We demonstrated that unauthorized individuals, both "testimonial immunity," which
internal and external to IRS, could have gained access to would protect Waddle from
IRS' electronic filing systems and viewed and modified tax- prosecution based on what he
payer data contained in those systems during the 2000 tax fil- says.
ing season," the General Accounting Office report stated. ·
The court hasn't indicated
The investigators said they were able to gain access to tax- when it will rule on immunipayer information because the IRS had not securely config- ty; Waddles lawyer says he
ured its bperaring systems, implemented adequate password won't testify without it.
management practices or used encryption technology.
The commander is "ready
The IRS said it had no evidence that real intrusions actu- and willing to accept responsially occurred, but the GAO concluded the agency did not bility for his actions and that of
have ''adequate procedures to detect such intru.sions."
his crew," civilian attorney
Charles Gittins wrote in the
oudine. Gittins added, however, that Waddle's testimony
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) - The president of would "aid in the understandthe local NAACP chapter has resigned, saying he could not ing of the reasons for this accisupport the civil rights group's planned protest at the World- dent and serve as a preventacom Classic golf tournament here i1ext month .
tive example."
"It is clear to me that my views arc not ii1 accordance with
In general terms, the sumNAACP policy," John Ingram wrote in a letter sent to the mary said Waddle would
group's leaders Thursday.
'
address testimony alleging he
The National Association for the Advan ceme nt of Colored rushed preparations to surface
People began the boycott in January 2000 co protest 'che fly- the subma~· inc because the
ing of the Confederate flag atop rhe Statehouse dome.
ship was late gcuing back to
That flag was removed in July and a similar one was placed port. He. abo would clarify
at the Confederate Soldier ·Monument on the Capitol what sonar data he had before
grounds. The NAACP has vowed to co ntinue its protest until surfacing and explain predsely
that flag is removed.
·how he conducted a periscope
search.

•

Cburdl ol Jnut Chritt
Apottolic Faith
New Ullll Road
Sunday. 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

were to resume Friday.

MEDINA, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Saudi security forces
stormed a hijacked Russian plane Friday, freeing more than
I 00 hostages and ending a crisis that began· when armed
Chechen men cm,.;mand eered the plane after takeoff from
Istanbul. Three people were killed and several others injured,
paramedics said, while three suspects were ttportedly in custody.
A representative of the breakaway Chechen Republic identified one of the hija ckers as a former Chechen interior minister. The report could not immediately be confirmed.
Those killed we're one Turkish passenger, one hijacker "apparently the younger one" ·- and one stewardess, aides to
· Kremlin envoy Sergei Yastrzhembsky said. The paramedics
said the woman was stabbed to death while the two men
were shot.
A passenger with bloodied trousers was seen being car.ried
away from the plane. One man was handcuffed and led away
by Saudi security forces, the paramedics said.

or.._

Evening · 7:30p.m.

"

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r------ul6"l"M~u~l~=_,~.:~~..~~:me::ro:~~~~2~·'~'~"'~----------~,,·~
~y~s~,~~~
~ . ~IO~o~.m~.~~~~~~~~~~~hl~pa·9~o~~~.~.m•..-.-.-.--...~, y

Cloriol ApooiOik
VanZancll: and W11d Rd.
Putor. lamet Miller ·
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m..

Rangers declare victory in battle over berets

The Senate has voted to make it
more difficult for people to erase their debts in bankruptcy
courts and closed a loophole in present law that allows
wealthy debtors to ·shield their assets in luxury hop1es.
Thursday's 83-15 vote in favor of the most sweeping overhaul of bankruptcy laws in 20 years occurred just two weeks
after the House passed a similar bill, but one that left wealthy
homeowners in some states protected.
The measure garnered the votes of 47 Republicans and 36
Democrats in the evenly divided Senate, while 13 Democrats
and two Republicans opposed it. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald, R-111.,
voted present to avoid a conflict of interest because his family owns a bank.
NEW YORK (AP) -Jurors in the trial of hip-hop magTo speed a final package to a receptive President Bush, the
bill's supporters now want the House to either· approve the nate Sean "PuffY" Combs .spent their second day of deliberaSenate version or make changes in it and send it hack to tions rehearing the testimony of a ballistics expert.
avoid having to negotiate rhe differences between the two . Detective William Wallace had recreated the trajectories of
the bullets fired in a Times Square dance club that Combs
versions.
and ex-girlfriend Jennifer Lopez fled .after a shooting in late
1999. Three people were injured.
Combs, 31, is · charged with weapons possession and
WASHINGTON (AP) - Half the adult Americans with bribery. His protege and co-defe11dant, Jarn.aal "Shyne" Bardisabilities have jobs, and the employed typically earn less row, is charged with three counts of attempted murder for
than the average American, new Census Bureau estimates allegedly shooting three people in the club. Combs' bodyguard, Antl10ny "Wolf" Jones, faces the same charges as
show.
'
The disparity is worse among those people whose disabili- Combs.
The jurors ended deliberations Thursday at about 6:30
ties are considered "severe,'' according to the Census Bureau
p.m.,
more than eight hours after they began. They wrote a
report being released Friday.
The results show t4at more needs to be done by the feder- note to the judge saying they were "very exhausted, and any
al government and the private sector for people with disabil- further deliberations would be counterproductive." They
ities who actively seek work to become more accepted in the
workplace, said Olivia Raynor, dire ctor of th e National Arts
and Disabilities Center at rhe University of Califorma, Los
Angeles.
Overall, 20 perce nt of Americans in 1997, or 52.6 million
people, said they had disabiliti.es. Of that total, 33 million said
their disability was severe.
·

Bush backs survivor benefits

Friday, March 18, 2001

Jopl*
Pastor: Bob Randolph ·

Snl"n1h-D,n \dH·n1i'1

'

y

'

Mulbcny Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Saturday Servkes:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

l nit l'd Brl'l h rl'll
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
in Chrisl Churth
Texas Community o!TCR 82
Pastor: Roben Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 n.rn ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 1f2 miles non.h of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robcn Markley
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7·00 p.m
WednesdAy Services · 7:30 p.m
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30 p_rn _

Dotty's swle

salon

Crow's Family Restaurant

"Fftturltlg Kentucky FrltKI 264 Sooii!S...a.Un. ~Mill ;ort, OH 45760
7411-992-5141
Chicken"
ln&lt;tl. flsMr· D1rKier
228 W. Main St., Pon~erc•vl 590 lAst M Stnot • P-.r, OH 45769

•

1234 Main·Street
Anytown, OH
555-4444

-992-5432

Deadline Is March 22, 2001
For More Information, Call
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

992·2156

llatt .:funeral

Ingel's Carpet
189 N2ndAve.
Middleport, OH

992-7028
.,,

Service &amp;

Brogan·Warner

137-C N: 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH .
992-6376

214 E. Meln

INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
992·5130

•w ... 11nd vow thcK!thf1 wtth .._t,la,..•
740-9112-2844

..

Pomeroy

FUNERAL

Florist
MoW• County~ Olde11 FIDriot
East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

-

HOME

Dignity and Strvlc. Alway•
Eltabll•hed 1913

992-2121
108

Ave.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
~unv FLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BIITI'ERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
Po~OY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions
"Flowers lor all occasions'
992·2955 ·
Pomeroy

NEW HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME

.-we accept Prenead Transfers"
.

882·8200

Lundy Brown
Director

Regan
174 Layne

740-992-5444

J-R.

Jr.."Dinctar

Commit thY works .
unto the Lord. and thY
thouehts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

FIRE&amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE

!Always &amp; ~forever
gift Sliop

9112·7075
172 North Second Ave.

518 E. Meln St. Pomeroy, OH

Middleport, Oh

992·1161
•

•I
•

�Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Today's Scoreboard, Page BJ
Friday, March 16, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 81
Friday, March Hi, :ZOOI

In Beauti ul
Downtown
Middleport
The Quality Print
Shop, Inc.

1~e~
R~
,,

:New
Spring

255 Mill Street ·
Middleport, OH 45780
Custom printing &amp; offi&lt;:e supplies,

.

740-992-3345 .
Fax: 740.9924384

'

1

Bre~kf~s't · served

~nytime
Carry-Out Available
992·2518
Monday-Friday 6 am • 8 pm
Saturday 6 am • 2 pm
Closed Sundays

290 N. 2nd
Middleport
.992-3684

I

Sprin

318 North 2nd St.
Middleport, Ohio

740·992·3667
Becky Thompson Owner
Sheila McKinney
Susan J enklns
Betty VanMatre
Michelle Price

Styling for the entire family

·Ingels
Electronics, Inc.
#

Stop in and

see our
selection of
Hike Baseball

Shoes

22 36
-P

106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760

Servi~g Breakfast All Day

Mon - Sat 6am • Spm
Sunday sam · 4pm

Located in the old Ben
Franklin and former
Johnson's Variety Store.
Tip: When comparing
prices, be sure to
quantity as well as quality.
137C N. Second
Middleport

(740) 992-6376
Check our monthly

business card specials

4

Your local source for·
Awards We do our own
Screen Printing,
Engraving,
SUblimation, lettering

295 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760 ·
(740) 992-6976
Fax (740) 388·8461
Email: bflattoo@aceinier.net

190 North Second Street

ARTISTS: Sam Sowards
and Chris Neal
. Piercer: Rhonda

992-6128

''Tri States Oldest"

Appoiniment Preferred

Restaurant
Ileal /C6pt Secretin Middleport

, Hoyrs:

L___j

OAss1cCurs

Middleport
. Departme
Store
Sa"e

OFFICE
SERVICE&amp;
SUPPLY ·

jantastes
lattoo's &amp;
Qfxottc lBtettlng

bY btCKY

'Juov KAv•s

740-992·1622

f

:

Hours:

Middleport, OH

}

: 1

&amp;

195 N. Second

I

P1qH.r \\Stleci~ls
~~P,l~m~de Die,
?1' llte~n Rolls .
1 \ · ~~mu 'items
I 11 L' ~Ma·il~ble

arriving
1Jaily

Antiques

• Delicious Home Cooked Meats
• Homemade Desserts
• Fresh Ground Coffee

.,~
\

1

4

220 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
(740) 992-9115

\

/I

c'fasfiion
A TIENTION SENIORS :
Now is the time to stop in~-- -"
order your graduation
announcements and
accessories. choo~ from
dozens of styles· one
sure to catch your eye. On:lar I
your announcements now
receive a tnse gift.
Mon thru. Frl8:30 to 5:00
Sat. 9:00 to 12.00

'

The Easter and Sn·ri~u!
decorations are going
fast!
So hurry in to

(740) 992-2825
. Fax (740) 992-2459

CARPET&amp;
VINYL
FLOORING
·ON SALE!
INGELS CARPET

992-7028
175 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

New at the

nain.J
Queen

®RadioShack..
M'WciUt ii'Ofe

SALE

99

99

~00. Channel (lesktop
aclinner with weather alert,
air band. #21r.423
Ra • 139.99 SAVE 40

Tk CJ!t.;o Rt~
B~eo.
Middleport, OH

740-992-4055

,Crispy
Chicken

Salad
Only

$399

Dairy Queen
Brazier
700 N. 2nd

Middleport

740-992·3322

Mon·Sat

lOam· 5 pm

Bunnies,

Dolls .
We also carry
Ty, Gund, Russ, Mary
Meyer, Little Gem, BOSISSy
Ganz
www.ot)iorlverbears.com
All major credit cards
accepted.
Layaways welcome

MEIGS CARPET
&amp; DECORATING
CENTER

Truckload Remnant
Sale
Carpet 6 Ulnyl
Remnants
At least 50% off
"Your one-stoP dec:oratlnll
Center"
39080 Hobson Dr.
Middleport, OH

992-6173

Fisher
Acree
Funeral
Home
264 S; 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh

992-5141
590 E. Main st
Pomeroy, Oh

992-5444

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
OHSAAGirla
State Tournament
Schottenateln Center,
Columbus
State Semifinals
DIVISION I
Beavercreek (26·0) vs. Cle. E
Tech (23-2), Friday, 7 p.m.
Tol. Cent Cath. (24-2) vs. Day.
Chaminade·Julienne (24-2), Fri·
day, 9
Championship: Beavercreek·
Cle. E. Tech winner vs. Tal. Cent
Cat h.·Day. Chaminade-Julienne
winner, Saturday, 8:30
DIVISION II
Championship: Cin. McNi·
cholas (21·6) vs. Canfield (21·6),
Saturday. 2
DIVISION Ill
Championship: Sardinia East·
em Brown (26·0) vs. S. Euclid
Regina (24·3), Saturday, 11
DIVISION IV
lledford Chanel (22·3) vs.
Jackson Center (25·1 ). Friday, 2
Worthington Christian (23-3)
vs. Holgate (23·2), Friday, 4
Championship :
Bedford
Chanei·Jackson Center winner
vs. Worthington Christian-Hoi·
gate winner, Saturday. 5
Thursday's Results
DIVISION II
Canfield 54, Pemberville East·
wood 40
Cin. McNicholas 48, Gals.
.Hartley 44
DIVISION Ill
S. Euclid Regina 75, Cin.
Wyoming 54
Sardinia Eastern Brown 52,
Hamler Patrick Henry 46

.Vining, Watson
and Baker ·
named AII..Ohio
COLUMBUS Meigs
senior Amber Vining, Eastern
Junior Stacie Watson .;md
senior teammate Amber
Baker were
voted to the
2000-0 I AllOhio bas~
ketball
teams.
Vining,
the MaraudVIning
ers all-time
.-----......, leading scorer, was a
third team
Division II
All-Ohio
selection
after leading
Meigs to its
fourth
straight
appearance
in the sectional championship.
She averaged
24.8
points pt"r
game
this
season and
finished her
career with
1.351
Baker
points.
Watson was a special mention in the Division IV 'v oting, while Baker received
honorable m·ention.
Watson and Baker helped
pace the Eagles to the TVC
Hocking Division championship and a sectional tide.
Both were named to this
year's All-Southeast District
:eams.

TVC All.;, Star

Ohio fires Larry Hunter after 12 years
ATHENS (AP) - Larry Hunter's
firing as Ohio University coach came
as a big surprise to some of his players.
Hunter was dismissed Thursday
after 12 seasons with the Mid-American Conference school by Tom Boeh,
the university's athletics direcior.
Boeh said he let Huilter go despite
a winning percentage of .579 at the
school because of the team's record in
recent years and because it has not
qualified for either the NCAA tournament 0 r the NIT in the past six seasons ..
"We just looked at the trend of the
last five or six years relative to the

team's overall level of co mpetit1 veness,
postseason tournaments and 'c hampionships at the conference level and
decided there was reason to believe
new leadership was needed," Boeh
said Thursday night.
Sophomore
forward
Steve
Esterkamp said Hunter caUed ail the
players he could get in touch with and
told them of the change.
"I was very surprised," Esterkamp
said. " I didn't think or imagine this
would happen. I didn 't know what to
say to him (Hunter). This (the firing)
didn't even cross my ·mind" as a possibility after the season.
Junior center Shaun McVi cker said

the phone call he go t fi·om Hunter
took him by su rpri se.
" It was a big shock ," he said c" He
should have been given another
opportunity to e&lt;pach another year. We
were going to be good ne xt year. I'm
disappointed."
Ohio was 19-11 this season and was
eliminated in the MAC tournament
semifinals.
Late in the season. Hunter dcc1ded
to have white patches sewn over the
names on the back of his players' uniforms after the Bobcats were beaten
78-69 at home by Uowling Green.
The team responded with an easy vic-

The 13obcats were 95-79 in the six
st:asons sinct: their last postseason
appearance.

l:loeh said the dismissal was solely
his decision. He made it Wednesday
after consulting for about a week with
university President Robert Gildden
and others involved with athletics at
Ohio and other institutions.
He informed Hunter on Thursday
and soid the coach was "disappointed,
upset, professional and gracious."
A national search to replace Hunter
will begin immediately.
Boeh said he had no timetable.

tory in its next game.

Kent
runs out
Indiana

Utah State ·
tops OSU
in overtime
GREENSBORO, N.C.
(AP) - Utah State's first
NCAA tournament victory since 1970 was a year in
the making.
After leaving ashamed
following a first -round loss
last season, the 12th-seeded
Aggies beat Ohio State 7768 in overtime Thursday in
one of the biggest. opening-day upsets.
· '"The first time you go to
the tournament you are in
awe and you don't know
how to handle it," said
Tony Brown, who scored
17 points, including ~the
game-tying jumper with
I. 8 seconds to play in regulation
in
the East
Regional.
"You go there the first
year tci get over all the nervousness and exciteinenc,
then hope you get a second·
chance to go back."
The Big West Conference team was in awe of
Connecticut last year in a
75-67 loss.
"They were not content
to have lost by only eight
points to the defending
national champions and
felt like the magnitude of
the event got the best of
them;· coach Stew Morrill
said. "This whole season

Please see OSU, Bl

Please see Ohio. Bl

SWAT TEAM- Ken Johnson of Ohio State (32) blocks a shot by Utah State's Shawn Daniels
in Thursday's NCAA East Regional game. Utah State won 77-68 in overtime. (AP)

.OHSAA girls tourney in full swing
COLUMBUS (AP) - Jill Vertanen
spent part of this season playing on
Canfield's junior varsity team. Luc.ky
for the Cardinals that varsity coach
Patrick Pavlansky decided the sophomore forward deserved a promotion.
Vertanen scored 12 points on perfect
shooting and made several key baskets
' iri the fourth quarter as Canfield
reached the Division II championship
game with a 54-40 victory over Pemberville Eastwood in a state semifinal
Thursday night.
Vertanen, who hit 5-of-5 shots from
the floor and both of her free throw
attempts off the bench, hit consecutive

jumpers to give the unranked Ca rdinals
(21 -6) a 45-38 lead with 5:42 to play.
Eastwood (24-3) had just pulled
within three points for the second time
in the second half and looked to have
the momentum,
Vertanen changed that with two baskets, and she hit another to make it 4740 with 2:56 to play.
"Normally I don't like to shoot a lot,
but I was open so I just knocked down
shots," Vertaneh said.
Her clutch baskets put the Cardinals
in Saturday's state title game against
Cincinnati McNicholas, which beat
defending champion Columbus Hart-

ley 4H- 44 in Tht~rsday's other Division
II semifinal.
Earlier in the day. · Sardini a Eastern
Brown beat Ham ler Patrick Henry 5246, and South Euclid Regi11&lt;1 beat
Cincinnati Wyoming 75-54 in the
Divisiou I II semls.
McNicholas' Ashley Clark topped her
scorin g average· in the fi rst half and tinishcd with 20 points to lead the Rockets (21-6) into the state final in their
first tournament appearance.

Showing a soft touch, Clark, a second-team All- Ohio performer, scored

Please see OHSAA. Bl

SAN DIEGO (AI') Mike Davis will find out his
future as Indiana coach a lor
sooner since th e Hoosiers
we;e ' bounced fr()m the
NCAA tournament in the
first round for the second
consecutive year.
Kent State upset fourthseeded Indiana 77-73 Thursday, leaving Davis and his
players to ponder whether
he'll become the permanent
successor to Bob Knight.
"I want this job ih the worst
way;· said Davis, who took
over after Knight was fired six
months ago. "But I wanted
the guys to have . a basketball
season. They had one, they
performed well, we got a four
seed our of this deal. It was a
very good season for us."
Only twice in their hlst
seven appearances havt· the
Hoosiers (21-13) advanced to
the second round, and then
they lost thos e games.
Against Kent State, they
ble\v a 12-point second-half
lead. 13ut the players still want
Davis back next season.
"This is not the coach's
fault," freshman Jared Jeffries
said. "All the coac h can do is
give us a game plan, and it
worked. We were up by 12
points. It was up to us to execute and finish the game out,
and we didn't do that"
In Thursday's o ther games,
top-seeded Stanford routed
North Carolina- Greensboro
~9-60, St. Joseph's defeated
Georgia Tech 66-62 · and
C incinnati beat Brigham
Young 84-59 at Cox Arena on
the San Diego State campus.
Kent State, the .13th seed,
shot 47 percert against an
Indiana defense th at held
opponents to 39.2 percent
during th~ rt·gular season.
Trevor Huffman led the
Golden Flashes with 24
pmnts, including 11 of their
final 15.
" I was uptight and I told
mysdf at halftime just to go
out and play," Huflinan said. " I
knew th~re were going to be
breakdowns in the second
half. I just looked for those.''
Indiana's biggest problem

Please see Kent. Bl

Games set for

Sunday

1

McARTHUR - The top
seniors in the TI:i-Valley Conference will go head-to-head
Sunday ·in the league's annual
all-star game, which will be
b.eld ~t Vinton County High
SchooL
. The girls game begins at 3
ll.m. followed by the boys
game at 5 p.m., with the top
players from the Ohio DiviJion battling the best of the
Hocking Division .
Admission to the game is $3
per person.
~~

Upsets abound
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seeded low and lightly
regarded. Hampton, Georgia
State and Utah State rocked
· the NCAA tournam.ent.
Upsets and close calls filled
the first half of the tournament's opening round Thursday, with 15th-seeded Hampton punctuating a wild fourgame set in Boise, Idaho, in
West Regional games.
Last year, three teams seed!I .

ed I Oth or low~r won firstround games. With just half
the first round completed, five
double-digit
seeds
have
advanced to the second
round.
Hampton beat secondseeded Iowa State 58-57. No.
11 Georgia State beat sixthseeded Wisconsin 50- 49, and
1Oth-seeded
Georgetown
stopped No. 7 Arkansas 6361. Third-seeded Maryland

first.round of N
avoided an upset, holding on
for a· 83-80 win over George
Mason.
The combi ned seven-point
margin of victory in the Boise
subregional shatte red the previous record for the closest
four-game regionaL The four
games at the 1998 East
Regional .in Washington,
D.C.. were de cided · by 17
points, as was the 1986 Midwest Regional in Minneapo-

lis.
Tarvis Williams flipped in a
4-footer in the lan e with 6.9
seconds remaining as MidEastern Athletic Conference
champion Hampton stunned
Iowa State.
Jamaal Tinsley missed a
layup with I .2 1econds to go,
setting off .1 celebration as the
Pirates (25-6) and their fans
stormed the floor.
Hampton, making its first

NCAA tournament appearance, became the fourth 15th
seed to beat a No. 2 since the
tournament expanded to 16
seeds per region in 1985.
"It was a great win. I
thought our kids persevered,"
coach Steve Merfeld said.
"They took · control of the
game, but we just hung in
there and hung in there."

\~

�Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Today's Scoreboard, Page BJ
Friday, March 16, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 81
Friday, March Hi, :ZOOI

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FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
OHSAAGirla
State Tournament
Schottenateln Center,
Columbus
State Semifinals
DIVISION I
Beavercreek (26·0) vs. Cle. E
Tech (23-2), Friday, 7 p.m.
Tol. Cent Cath. (24-2) vs. Day.
Chaminade·Julienne (24-2), Fri·
day, 9
Championship: Beavercreek·
Cle. E. Tech winner vs. Tal. Cent
Cat h.·Day. Chaminade-Julienne
winner, Saturday, 8:30
DIVISION II
Championship: Cin. McNi·
cholas (21·6) vs. Canfield (21·6),
Saturday. 2
DIVISION Ill
Championship: Sardinia East·
em Brown (26·0) vs. S. Euclid
Regina (24·3), Saturday, 11
DIVISION IV
lledford Chanel (22·3) vs.
Jackson Center (25·1 ). Friday, 2
Worthington Christian (23-3)
vs. Holgate (23·2), Friday, 4
Championship :
Bedford
Chanei·Jackson Center winner
vs. Worthington Christian-Hoi·
gate winner, Saturday. 5
Thursday's Results
DIVISION II
Canfield 54, Pemberville East·
wood 40
Cin. McNicholas 48, Gals.
.Hartley 44
DIVISION Ill
S. Euclid Regina 75, Cin.
Wyoming 54
Sardinia Eastern Brown 52,
Hamler Patrick Henry 46

.Vining, Watson
and Baker ·
named AII..Ohio
COLUMBUS Meigs
senior Amber Vining, Eastern
Junior Stacie Watson .;md
senior teammate Amber
Baker were
voted to the
2000-0 I AllOhio bas~
ketball
teams.
Vining,
the MaraudVIning
ers all-time
.-----......, leading scorer, was a
third team
Division II
All-Ohio
selection
after leading
Meigs to its
fourth
straight
appearance
in the sectional championship.
She averaged
24.8
points pt"r
game
this
season and
finished her
career with
1.351
Baker
points.
Watson was a special mention in the Division IV 'v oting, while Baker received
honorable m·ention.
Watson and Baker helped
pace the Eagles to the TVC
Hocking Division championship and a sectional tide.
Both were named to this
year's All-Southeast District
:eams.

TVC All.;, Star

Ohio fires Larry Hunter after 12 years
ATHENS (AP) - Larry Hunter's
firing as Ohio University coach came
as a big surprise to some of his players.
Hunter was dismissed Thursday
after 12 seasons with the Mid-American Conference school by Tom Boeh,
the university's athletics direcior.
Boeh said he let Huilter go despite
a winning percentage of .579 at the
school because of the team's record in
recent years and because it has not
qualified for either the NCAA tournament 0 r the NIT in the past six seasons ..
"We just looked at the trend of the
last five or six years relative to the

team's overall level of co mpetit1 veness,
postseason tournaments and 'c hampionships at the conference level and
decided there was reason to believe
new leadership was needed," Boeh
said Thursday night.
Sophomore
forward
Steve
Esterkamp said Hunter caUed ail the
players he could get in touch with and
told them of the change.
"I was very surprised," Esterkamp
said. " I didn't think or imagine this
would happen. I didn 't know what to
say to him (Hunter). This (the firing)
didn't even cross my ·mind" as a possibility after the season.
Junior center Shaun McVi cker said

the phone call he go t fi·om Hunter
took him by su rpri se.
" It was a big shock ," he said c" He
should have been given another
opportunity to e&lt;pach another year. We
were going to be good ne xt year. I'm
disappointed."
Ohio was 19-11 this season and was
eliminated in the MAC tournament
semifinals.
Late in the season. Hunter dcc1ded
to have white patches sewn over the
names on the back of his players' uniforms after the Bobcats were beaten
78-69 at home by Uowling Green.
The team responded with an easy vic-

The 13obcats were 95-79 in the six
st:asons sinct: their last postseason
appearance.

l:loeh said the dismissal was solely
his decision. He made it Wednesday
after consulting for about a week with
university President Robert Gildden
and others involved with athletics at
Ohio and other institutions.
He informed Hunter on Thursday
and soid the coach was "disappointed,
upset, professional and gracious."
A national search to replace Hunter
will begin immediately.
Boeh said he had no timetable.

tory in its next game.

Kent
runs out
Indiana

Utah State ·
tops OSU
in overtime
GREENSBORO, N.C.
(AP) - Utah State's first
NCAA tournament victory since 1970 was a year in
the making.
After leaving ashamed
following a first -round loss
last season, the 12th-seeded
Aggies beat Ohio State 7768 in overtime Thursday in
one of the biggest. opening-day upsets.
· '"The first time you go to
the tournament you are in
awe and you don't know
how to handle it," said
Tony Brown, who scored
17 points, including ~the
game-tying jumper with
I. 8 seconds to play in regulation
in
the East
Regional.
"You go there the first
year tci get over all the nervousness and exciteinenc,
then hope you get a second·
chance to go back."
The Big West Conference team was in awe of
Connecticut last year in a
75-67 loss.
"They were not content
to have lost by only eight
points to the defending
national champions and
felt like the magnitude of
the event got the best of
them;· coach Stew Morrill
said. "This whole season

Please see OSU, Bl

Please see Ohio. Bl

SWAT TEAM- Ken Johnson of Ohio State (32) blocks a shot by Utah State's Shawn Daniels
in Thursday's NCAA East Regional game. Utah State won 77-68 in overtime. (AP)

.OHSAA girls tourney in full swing
COLUMBUS (AP) - Jill Vertanen
spent part of this season playing on
Canfield's junior varsity team. Luc.ky
for the Cardinals that varsity coach
Patrick Pavlansky decided the sophomore forward deserved a promotion.
Vertanen scored 12 points on perfect
shooting and made several key baskets
' iri the fourth quarter as Canfield
reached the Division II championship
game with a 54-40 victory over Pemberville Eastwood in a state semifinal
Thursday night.
Vertanen, who hit 5-of-5 shots from
the floor and both of her free throw
attempts off the bench, hit consecutive

jumpers to give the unranked Ca rdinals
(21 -6) a 45-38 lead with 5:42 to play.
Eastwood (24-3) had just pulled
within three points for the second time
in the second half and looked to have
the momentum,
Vertanen changed that with two baskets, and she hit another to make it 4740 with 2:56 to play.
"Normally I don't like to shoot a lot,
but I was open so I just knocked down
shots," Vertaneh said.
Her clutch baskets put the Cardinals
in Saturday's state title game against
Cincinnati McNicholas, which beat
defending champion Columbus Hart-

ley 4H- 44 in Tht~rsday's other Division
II semifinal.
Earlier in the day. · Sardini a Eastern
Brown beat Ham ler Patrick Henry 5246, and South Euclid Regi11&lt;1 beat
Cincinnati Wyoming 75-54 in the
Divisiou I II semls.
McNicholas' Ashley Clark topped her
scorin g average· in the fi rst half and tinishcd with 20 points to lead the Rockets (21-6) into the state final in their
first tournament appearance.

Showing a soft touch, Clark, a second-team All- Ohio performer, scored

Please see OHSAA. Bl

SAN DIEGO (AI') Mike Davis will find out his
future as Indiana coach a lor
sooner since th e Hoosiers
we;e ' bounced fr()m the
NCAA tournament in the
first round for the second
consecutive year.
Kent State upset fourthseeded Indiana 77-73 Thursday, leaving Davis and his
players to ponder whether
he'll become the permanent
successor to Bob Knight.
"I want this job ih the worst
way;· said Davis, who took
over after Knight was fired six
months ago. "But I wanted
the guys to have . a basketball
season. They had one, they
performed well, we got a four
seed our of this deal. It was a
very good season for us."
Only twice in their hlst
seven appearances havt· the
Hoosiers (21-13) advanced to
the second round, and then
they lost thos e games.
Against Kent State, they
ble\v a 12-point second-half
lead. 13ut the players still want
Davis back next season.
"This is not the coach's
fault," freshman Jared Jeffries
said. "All the coac h can do is
give us a game plan, and it
worked. We were up by 12
points. It was up to us to execute and finish the game out,
and we didn't do that"
In Thursday's o ther games,
top-seeded Stanford routed
North Carolina- Greensboro
~9-60, St. Joseph's defeated
Georgia Tech 66-62 · and
C incinnati beat Brigham
Young 84-59 at Cox Arena on
the San Diego State campus.
Kent State, the .13th seed,
shot 47 percert against an
Indiana defense th at held
opponents to 39.2 percent
during th~ rt·gular season.
Trevor Huffman led the
Golden Flashes with 24
pmnts, including 11 of their
final 15.
" I was uptight and I told
mysdf at halftime just to go
out and play," Huflinan said. " I
knew th~re were going to be
breakdowns in the second
half. I just looked for those.''
Indiana's biggest problem

Please see Kent. Bl

Games set for

Sunday

1

McARTHUR - The top
seniors in the TI:i-Valley Conference will go head-to-head
Sunday ·in the league's annual
all-star game, which will be
b.eld ~t Vinton County High
SchooL
. The girls game begins at 3
ll.m. followed by the boys
game at 5 p.m., with the top
players from the Ohio DiviJion battling the best of the
Hocking Division .
Admission to the game is $3
per person.
~~

Upsets abound
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seeded low and lightly
regarded. Hampton, Georgia
State and Utah State rocked
· the NCAA tournam.ent.
Upsets and close calls filled
the first half of the tournament's opening round Thursday, with 15th-seeded Hampton punctuating a wild fourgame set in Boise, Idaho, in
West Regional games.
Last year, three teams seed!I .

ed I Oth or low~r won firstround games. With just half
the first round completed, five
double-digit
seeds
have
advanced to the second
round.
Hampton beat secondseeded Iowa State 58-57. No.
11 Georgia State beat sixthseeded Wisconsin 50- 49, and
1Oth-seeded
Georgetown
stopped No. 7 Arkansas 6361. Third-seeded Maryland

first.round of N
avoided an upset, holding on
for a· 83-80 win over George
Mason.
The combi ned seven-point
margin of victory in the Boise
subregional shatte red the previous record for the closest
four-game regionaL The four
games at the 1998 East
Regional .in Washington,
D.C.. were de cided · by 17
points, as was the 1986 Midwest Regional in Minneapo-

lis.
Tarvis Williams flipped in a
4-footer in the lan e with 6.9
seconds remaining as MidEastern Athletic Conference
champion Hampton stunned
Iowa State.
Jamaal Tinsley missed a
layup with I .2 1econds to go,
setting off .1 celebration as the
Pirates (25-6) and their fans
stormed the floor.
Hampton, making its first

NCAA tournament appearance, became the fourth 15th
seed to beat a No. 2 since the
tournament expanded to 16
seeds per region in 1985.
"It was a great win. I
thought our kids persevered,"
coach Steve Merfeld said.
"They took · control of the
game, but we just hung in
there and hung in there."

\~

�Friday, March 16, 2001
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 16, 2001

The Trojans (22-9) led 48-19 at the half. The possession with 35.8 seconds left. The Hoyas
Creighton 69-56, Boston Coll~gc held off
Southern Utah 68-65 and Southern Califor- Cowboys (20-10) made just nine of 26 shots ran down the 35-second clock, with Burton
and missed nine of 10 free throws in the open- holding the ball until there were only a few
nia beat Oklahoma State 69-54.
seconds to play.
.
•
In Greensboro, N.C., UCLA defeated HofS- . ing 20 minutes.
He
began
his
drive
down
the
left
stde
oft~
tra 61-48, top-seeded Duke beat Monmouth
UCLA 61, Hofstra 48
The Cyclones (25-6), who came within one 95-Si! and Missouri edged Georgia 70-68.
UCLA (22-8) closed with a 24-5 run to lane and flipped up a shot almost Stmultaneo~s
game of the Final Four last season, left the
Play begins Friday in the South and Mid- snap the nation's longest Division I winning with the shot-clock horn. After about a
minute, an announcement was made that the
court in shock.
streak at 18 games.
west regions.
"It's just devastating to go out like this,"
Earl Watson scored 13 of his 15 points for basket counted.
East
Iowa State guard Kantrail Horton said.
the Bruins in the first half. Dan Gadzuric , Kevin Braswell led the ·lOth-seeded Hoyas
Kentucky 72, Holy Cross 68
Georgia State, led by former Maryland
Consecutive 3-pointers by Tayshaun Prince scored eight of his J.l points during the final (24-7) with 12 points. Joe Johnson scored 14
coach Lefty Driesell, knocked off the sixth- broke a second-half tie as Kentucky held off run and added 13 rebounds. Billy Knight led points for Arkansas (20-11).
St. Joseph's 66, Georgia Tech 62
seeded . Badgers to set up a second-round Holy Cross.
the Bruins with 17 points.
Marvin O'Connor scored 13 of hts 21
showdown w ith the Terrapins.
Rick Apodaca led the Pride (26-5) with 16
Prince scored 12 of his team's final14 points
points in the second halffor s.t. Joseph's. '
" I told my team this might be the greatest and finished with 27 points, while Keith points.
St. Joe's (26-6) saw its 18-pmnt lead dwmdle
win I've ever had," said Driesell, fired by Hogans added 17 for Kentucky (23-9). Jared
Duke 95, Monmouth 52
Maryland 15 years ago. "We came back in the Curry led Holy Cross (22-S) with I 6 points.
Jason Williams scored 20 of his 22 points in to three twice in the final 1:43. But the Yellow
second half and showed what kind of club we
the first half and Shane Ba_ttier added 21 points Jackets (17-13) came up short on two easy
Iowa 69, Creighton 56
scoring chances. Tony Akins led Tech w1th 16
have."
Reggie Evans scored 16 of his 19 points in and 10 rebounds.
Georgia State's Darryl Cooper made a four- . the seco nd half to help Iowa (23- 11) to its fifth
Duke (30-4) tied a school record with 18 3- points. ·
Stanford 89, N.C. Greensboro 60
point play and a steal co set up the game-win- straight victory.
pointers to help coach Mike Krzyzewski
Seven-footer Jason Collins scored 20 of his
ning basket in the final minute. The win wasEvans• was 13-of-15 from the foul line, improve to 51-14 in the NCAA tournament.
n't sealed until Wisconsin's Mark Vershaw including 12-of-13 in the final 10 minutes. Rahsaan Johnson had 11 points for Mon- 25 points in the first half as top-seeded Stanford built a 23-point lead.
miSsed two free throws With 3.2 seconds to Duez Henderso n added 16 points and Dean mouth (21 - 10).
Sophomore All-Ameri ca n · Casey Jacobsen
play.
Oliver had 15. Ben Walker and Livan Pyfrom
Missouri 70, Georgia 68
Kevii1 Mo rris le.d Georgia State (29-4) with scored 11 points apiece for Creighton (24-8) .
Clarence Gilbert hit a 15-foot jumper with added 14 points, giving him I ,003 for his
18 po ints. M"rk Vershaw had 19 for Wisconsin
0. 9 seconds to play as Missouri held off a furi- care~r.
Boston College 68, S. Utah 65
Stanford (29-2) won its opening game for
(18-11 ), whic h played in the Final Four last
Troy Bell scored 16 of his 18 points in the ous Georgia rally.
the
seventh sttaight year. The 29-point margin
year.
Georgia· overcam'e an 11-point deficit with
second half as Boston College outlasted 14thMaryland (22 -1 0) used Steve Blake's iace 3- seeded Southern Utah.
just over two 1ninutes to play to tie it on was the biggest for the Cardinal in the NCAA
pointer and Juan Dixon's two free throws with
Xavier Singletary added 15 points to help Rashad Wright 's 3-pointer with 22 seconds tournament. Greensboro finished 19-12.
Cincinnati 84, Brigham Young 59
4.9 seconds left to beat George Mason (18- Boston College (27-4) to its eighth straight left.
Steve Logan scored 21 points and fifth-seed1 2). Dixon and .Byron Mouton scored 22 victory.
Arthur Johnson led Missouri (20-12) with
points each for Maryland.
Jeff Monaco scored 26 points for the Thun- 15 points. Robb Dryden led Georgia (16-15) ed Cincinnati (24-9) opened the ·second half
with a 19-4 run.
In other West Regional play in San Diego, derbirds (25-6) . Southern Utah had a chance with a season-high 18 points.
It was the Bearcats' seventh · straight firstSt. Joseph's upset Georgia Tech 66-62, top- to tie it at the buzzer, but Justin Sane's 3-point
West
round win and gave coach Bob Huggins his
seeded Stanford beat North Carolina Greens- · attempt hit the front of the rim.
Georgetown 63, Arkansas 61
300t!1
victory in 12 seasons at Cincinnati.
boro 89-60 and Cincinnati beat Brigham
Georgetown's Nathaniel Burton hit a driSouthern Cal 69, Oklahoma St. 54
Young 84-59.
Sam Clancy had 22 points and 13 rebounds, ving layup at the buzzer that survived an offi- Mekeli We~ley had 25 points for BYU (24-9~.
In the East Regional in Uniondale, N.Y., and JeffTrepagnier added 17 points for South- cial's instant-replay review.
.
Kentucky edged Holy Cross 72-68, Iowa beat ern California
With the score fied at 61, Georgetown took

s Scoreboard

NCAA

fromPapBl

()

osu

beat Hofstra 61-48.
The Aggies also were
quicker and more aggressive
than Ohio State (20-11).They
forced 21 turnovers, including
has ·been about getting back. 12 steals, and committed only
here and getting another five turnovers.
chance."
Utah State also shut down
Curtis Bobb scored eight of Ken Johnson, Ohio State's
his 14 points· in overtime to shot-blocking center, in the
help the Aggies (28-5) knock second half Johnson had only
fifth-seeded Ohio State out in six points - : all on free
the first round for the first throws - and one block. after
halftime. He finished with 14
time since 1982.
"It's obviously a disappoint- points, 14 rebounds and five
ing loss for us;' Ohio State blocks.
"We n~ver felt like Ohio
coach Jim O'Brien said. "But
State
was the, better team and
you've got to give a world of
credit. to those .guys. In my always believed we could beat
mind, they were the better them," said Dimitri Jorssen,
who guarded Johnson most of
team.' '
the
day.
Bernard Rock scored 18
"I hope. this puts us on the
points to lead Utah State,
which will play UCLA in the map and gets people to go to
second round. The Bruins our web site because we .

from Page Bl

proved we can play with the Daniels came up with a steal
top teams."
and tossed it in to Bobb for a
Bobb, who was scoreless dunk 'and a 67-62 Utah State
until hitting a 3-pointer r-ith lead.
five minutes to play in the
"We got the traveling call
second half, scored · seven and I saw some heads go
straight points in overtime to down and some yelling and I
give the Aggies control. ,
just wanted them to know
He put Utah State up 62- that we could only lose the
61 with a short jumper, then gaine, they couldn't beat us,"
scored on a putback that drew Bobb said. "We had to stay
a foul. He made the free together or else Ohio State
throw, giving the Aggies a 65- could take the game."
62lead.
·
Ohio State then gave up the
Ohio State missed its next ba,ll on passes or off-balance,
attempt, but was called for risky shots.
traveling on the rebound, givThe Buckeyes got 3-pointing the Buckeyes the ball ers from Brian Brown and
•
back.
Sea;, Coimolly, but they' had
Bobb then settled down his to foul after every possession
teatn.mates, yelling, 41 Don 't and Utah State was 8-of-12
worry, we got it! We got this from the line in the 2:08 of
game!"
the game.
He proved it on the next
posseSSion, when Shawn

Ohio
fnHnPage 81
•'We'll name a new coach as
soon as possible, but that
could be in a week to 10 days
or it could go three weeks or
more, especially since so many
coaches are involved with the
NCAA tournament right
now," he said.
Hunter could not be
immediately reached. His
home telephone number is
unlisted,
and
university
spokeswoman Heather Czeczok said Hunter did not want
to talk to reporters at this
time.
He has one year remaining
on a three-year contract,
which lasts through April 30,

2002, and will be paid his
remaining $13S,826 salary.
The money will come fro'?
an
athletics
department
reserve fund.
·
Hunter had a record of
204-148 during his tenure at
Ohio. His 1993-94 team won
the MAC regular-seasqn
·championship and postseason
tournament. The .Bobcats also
won the 1994 Preseason NI_T
and advanced to the second
round of the 1995 Postseason
NIT.
Hunter's overall record as a
college coach is · 509-224.
Ohio hired him after 13 seasons at Wittenberg; whi:re ·rhe
was 305-76, won the NCAA
Division Ill title in 1976-77,
his first season, and made the
Division Ill Final Four on
three other occasions.

At Cln11o Centor
Clnclnn•l
Clemson (20·9) vs. Chatlanooga (24-6),

EAST REGIONAL
First Round
Thursday, Merch 1fii

At Nltuu Veteran• Memorttl
· Colluum
N.V.
Kentucky 72, Ho!v Cross 68
Iowa 89, Creighton 56
Boston College 68, Southern Utah 65
s. C.lllomla 69, Oklahoma State 54
At GrHnaboro Collaeum
OrMnabaro, N.C.
Ulah State 77, Ohk&gt; Slate 68, OT
UCLA 6~, Hofstra 48
Duke 95, Monmouth, N:J. 52
Mlssoun 70, Georgia 68
Second Round
Stturday, March 17
At NIUIU Vlttl'lnl Memorial Coli·.
Unlond~le,

num

.

Unlondtll, N.Y.
Bos1on College (27·4} vs. Southern Cal·
llomla (22·9), 5:30p.m.
. Kentucky (23·9) vs. Iowa (23·11), 30
m1nutes after previous game
At qreen-boro Coll~eum
Greenaboro, N.C.
Duke (30-4) vs . Missouri (20·12), 1:10

' p.m.
UCLA (22·8) vs. Utah Stale (28·5), 30
minutes alter previous game
SOUTll REGIONAL
Firat Round
Fridoy, March 1&amp;
At The Pyramid

Meml'hlt, Tenn.
Virginia (20·8) V$. Gonzaga (24-6),
12:25 p.m.
'

Oklahoma (2Ei-6) vs . Indiana State (21 .

OHSAA
from Page Bl
. most of her points inside,
dropping in layups and banking in short jumpers. The
Northern Kentucky recruit
also had I I rebounds. The 6foot senior came in averaging
16.5 points a game.
" I just had one of those
days when I couldn't miss·,"
Clark' sa id .
Hartley kept its deficit
within single digits most of
the way, tying it in early in the
fourth. But the Lady Hawks
(19-8) never were able to take
the lead, failing to covert on
offense numerous times.
The Lady Hawks made
o nly 14-of-55 (26 percent)
shots from the floor.
Mary Gruber led Hartley
.with 16 points.
Elizabeth Burrows scored
24 points, and All-Ohio performer Mi cah Harvey came
up big in the closing minutes
as Sardinia Eastern Brown

CONGRATULATIONS
Carpenters Local Union 650
109 Years in Pomeroy
March 16, 1892·2001

' ·

MIDWEST REGIONAL
Firat Round
Frld•y, Mlirch 11
A1 Unl..ral1y of DoY1on Anne
Dlyton, Ohio
Illinois (24·7) vs. Northwestern State
(19·12). 12:15 p.m.
Tennessee (22·10) vs. Cha~otto (21·
• 10}, 30 minutes after previous game
- Kansu (24·6) v1. Cal Slate NortMdgo
(22·9), 7:40 p,m.
' Syrar;uae (24-8) vs. Hawaii (17·13), 30

') rnlnutM attar prevloi,Js game

At Kemper.Arena
K.,lll Cl1y, MO.

''

Wake Forest (19-10) vs. Butler (23·7),
12:30 p.m.
·, AriZOI'II (23·7) VI. Eastern Illinois {21·
1 9) , 30 minutes after previous game
Mlsalsslppl (25-7) vs. looa (22·10), 7:55
p.m.
.
Notre Came (19-9) vs. Xa~er (21-7), 30
minutes after previous game
Second Round
Sunday, March 18
•
AI Unlv•alty or Dayton Arena
•
Dayton, Ohio
• Kansas·Cal State Northridge winner vs.
'Syracuse-Hawaii winner, 12:10 p.m. ·
: Illinois-Northwestern State winner vs.
Jennessee.Chartone winner, 30 minutes
~fter previous game
•
At Kimper Arena
:
Kan••• City, Mo•
~ Arizona-Eastern Illinois winner vs. Wake
f"orest-Butler winner, 2:20 p.m.
"' Mlssisslppl·lona winner vs. Notre
~ame-Xavler winner, 30 minutes after pre·
.
·,Ntous game

Henry C. Peery
Business Representative
1954·1979, Retired

Kent
fromPageBl

.'

was guard Tom Coverdale,
who hurt his hip divi1lg for a
ball in the first half. He later
fouled out with 4:34 remaining, leaving the Hoosiers'
offense in limbo.
"There was a five-minute
stretch were we looked like a
seventh-grade
team . We
weren't composed at all and
we mrted panicking,'' Davis
said. "If Coverdale was in, we
may not have won the game,
but we would have played
better do\vn the stretch."
Kirk Haston had 29 points
for Indiana, whose seeding
was its highest since 1993.
"Extremely disappointing
to the point of being sic ken-

.

~"'---

At Cox Arelll at Aztec Bowl

•
San Dl•lilo
• St. Joseph's 66, Georgia Tech 62
: Stanford 89, North Carolina-Greens·
.001060
, Kent State 77, Indiana 73
• Cincinnati 84, B~gham Young 59
:
A1 BSU Povtllon

....

Bolu, ldlho

•.

81turday, March 17

AI CoxArwno tiiAztoc lawl

•.
~

·

lonDiogo
Clnclnnau (24·9),

~: Konl Slate (24·9) ...
1'' :38 p.m ..

1". Slanlot&lt;l (29·2) Yl. St. Joaoph's (28-6),
~«J mlnulaa otttr previous game

~·

At IIU Pnlllon

11. •

•

1

I

lol.., lcllho

30 mlnutea attar prevloua game

iI
I

NCAA Womtn'l BIIUtboll
Tou""m.nl

I

F~doy, Mareh 11

I

EAST REGIONAL

Firat Round

At S11gomon Colltoum

Alhtnt, 01.

I .

Wtoeonaln (18·9) vs. Mill®~ (20-9),
7:07p.m.
I
Georgia (20·5) vs. Uberty (18·11), 30
mlnU1os aftar previous game
1
ld A.ynolda Collaeum
I
Rolllgh, N.C.
'
vtlanova (21-8) vs. Drake (23-6), 5 p.m.
North Carolina State (20·,0) vs.
1 Delaware (26""'), 30 minutes alter prevlou&amp;

Education about balance loss

't

I

Tips for home fail prevention

'
I

Exercises to improve balance

I game

Newest research information

J

Sl1urdoy, Morch 17
.

1

..

AI Harry A. GamfHII Pavilion
&amp;tom, Conn. .

r ' Connecticut (28·2) v1. Long Island Unl·
' varal1y (16·14), 7:05p.m.
Maryland (17·11) vs. Colorado State
(24·6), 30 mlnutas after previous game

At Tht Thoma• Auembty Ctnter

Ruetan, u.

Reasons for fails

Penn Slate ( 19·9) VI. Texaa ChrisUon
(24·7), 7:05p.m.
Louisiana Tech (28-4) vs. Georgia State
;:..;24·8), 30 minutes after previous game.

Functional balance testing

MIDEAST REGIONAL
Firat Round
Fridoy, March 11
1
,.
At Thomplon·Bollng Arena
Knoxviii._,·Tenn.
Texas (20·12) vs. St. Mary's, CaiH. (25·
1;.,6). 5'30 p.m.
I ,. Tonnesoeo (29·2) vs. Austin Paay (17·
: "'t3), 30 mlnuttllher previous game

~

,.

Loroln Cath.; Amanda Rowe , Elyrio Open
Door: Tiffany Smith, Leetonia; Tiffany
Hack, Mineral Ridge; Jessica Black,
Southington Chalker, Michelle Morrison,
Berlin Ctr. Western Reserve; Colleen
McGWre, Windham.
Honor1ble Menllon
Maricee Armentrout, Cols . Tree of LHe;
Sheena Qrlfflth, Centetturg ; Alicia Hen·
son, Cols. Acad.; Alista McDonald,
Danville; Karah Walton, Worthington Ch~s­
tlan: lynsey Lyle, Wellsville; Tintsha
Williams, Wellsville; Mary Gilloon,
Steubenville Cath. Cent. : Tabl TayiOf, New
Matamoras Frontier; Katie Reeves, Toronto; Jessica Gotschall, Malvern; Raehnelle
Cola, Bowerston Conotton Valley: Kim
Schockllng, Caldwell; Janna Johnson,
Shadyside:
Chris Halberstadt, Jackson Ctr.; Kara
Schlechty, New Madison Tri·VIIIage;
Aaechel White, Fayetteville; Kacie Size·
more, w. Alexandria Twin Val. S.; Alicia
Shoe, OeGrafl Riverside; Tyler Mcllwral1h.
Cin. Seven Hills;
Kelly Graham, New London: Emily
Gross, Norwalk St. Paul; Beth Everman,
Ma"ria Stein Marion Local; Rachel PolinsKI,
Manslleld Sl. Peter 's; Lee Woodward,
OUawa Hills; Shanna Pressler, Montpelier;
Brooke Hughes, S. Webster; Adrian
Vance, Mowrystown Whiteoak; Whitney
Lewi s, Lynchburg -C lay; Amber Baker,
Reedsville Eastern: Megan Tackett.
Franklin Furnace Green; Kerry Jean
Friend, Leesburg Fairfield;
Amy Esser: Lorain Cath.; Sarah Tolvo·
nan, Falrpon Harding; Melissa Kosta l. Cuy.
Hts.; Nlkl Csak, Cuy. Hts.; Lisa Piechowski,
Bedlord Chane!;
Laura Kister, Kidron Cent. Christian;
Angle Hill . Bristolville Br~tol; Jackie
Durham, Leelorlla; Jacey Baus, Dalton:
Kim Brunle , Sebring McKinley; Ange la
Zwick, E. Canton; Nikki Thompson.
Mogadore; Sa.ra Toth, McDonald.

1. AUJO

RACING

.I

NASCAR Winston Cup Series
The . 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup
schedule (winners in parentheses) and dri·
ver point slandlngs:

Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Michael Wallrip)
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rockingham, N.C. (Steve Park)
March 4 - UAW-DalmlerChrysler 400 ,
Las Vogn. (Jaff Go-)
March 11 -Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton, Ga. (Kevin Harvick}
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
400, Darlington. S.C.
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol,
Tenn.
Driver Sltndlngl
1. Jeff Gordon, 613. 2. Dale Jarrett, 576 .
3. Johnny Benson, 540. 4. Sterling Marlin,
53 1. 5. Michael Waltrip, 509. 6. Bill Elliott,
495 . 7. Jerry Nadeau, 478. 8. Rusty Wal·
lace, 472. 9. Ricky Rudd , 467. 10. Ken
Schrader, 461 . 11 . ·Kevin Harvick, 443. 12.
Bobby Hamilton. 436 . 13. Steve Part, 435 .
14. Tony Stewar1 , 429. 15. MiKe Skinner,
428. 16. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 426. 17
Robert Pressley, 423. 18. Terry LabOnte.
419 . 19. Elliott Sadler, 417. 20. Ricky
Craven, 413. 21. Ward Burton, 413 . 2~
Joe Nemechek, 412. 23. Jimmy Spencer,
387 . 24 . Ron Hornaday. 384. 25. MarJt;
Martin. 382 . 26. Bobby Labonte, 368. 27
Kurt Busch, 359. 28. Stacy Compton, 352.
29. Man Kenseth, 348 . 30. Bran Bodine.
339. 31. Todd Bodine. 330. 32. Dave
Blaney, 326. 33. John Andrettl, 319. 34
Mike Wallace , 303. 35. Casey Atwood,
303.36. Robby Gordon, 301.37. Buckshot
Jones . 300.38. Jeff Burton, 277. 39. Jason
LeHier, 276 . 40. Jeremy Mayfield, 273

ITRANSAC'IONS I
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON . REO SOX-Pu rchased the
contract of LHP Jorge Oe La Rosa from
Monterrey of the Me&gt;~ican League.
MINNESOTA TWINS- Agreed to terms
with INF Corey Koskie on a three-year con·
tract. Optioned RHP Danny Mota to
Edmonton of the PCL and RHP Kyle Lohse
and LHP Brad Thomas to New Britain of
the Eastern League. Assigned RHP Adam
Johnson, INF Michael Cuddyer, INF
Michael Moriarty, C Brandon Marsters and
OF Michael Restovich to their minor league
camp.

I_

OETROIT TIGERs-Assigned C Bran·
don lnge, 18 Kurt Blerek, OF Jtrmalne
Allensworth. OF Andres Torres and LHP
Matt Miller to the1r minor league camp.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Agreed to
terms with 36 Olmedo Saenz on a two·
year cpntract.
SEATTLE MARINERS-Optioned INF
Jason Grabowski, RHP Dennis Stark, AHP
Greg Wooten and LHP Mark Watson to
Tacoma of the PCL. Asslgnad OF Ramon
Moreta and OF Chad Ale&gt;eander to their
minor l~ague camp.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS- Released
RHP Sean Bergman. Assigned LHP Paul
Spo1jar1c, INF Mike Caruso and INF Andy
Sheets to their minor league camp.
TEXAS RANGERS-Assigned AHP
Brian Sikorski outright to Oklahoma ol t~
PCL. Optioned AHP Darwin Cublllan and
.28 Jason Romano to Oklahoma.
_
National League
CINCINNATI REDS-Optioned LHP
Hector Mercado and OF Brady Clark to
Louisville ol the International league .
Optioned LHP Clayton Andrews and Of
Jackson Malian to Chattanooga of ttle
Southern League. Assigned INF Bill Selby
and RHP Arnie Gooch to Louisville.
NEW YORK METS-Assigoled RHP
Pete Walker and RHP Brett Htnchlille to
their m1nor league camp.
BASKETBALL
PHILADELPHIA 76EAS-Re-signed G
Pepe Sanchez. Waived F Anthony Miller
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Placed C
Hakeem Olajuwon on the injured list. Act1·
vated F Mall Bullard from the injured list.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
' ARIZONA CARDINALS-Signed OL
Pete Kendall to a live-year contract.
CINCINNATI BENGALS- Named Rodney Holman assistant coach for strength
and conditioning.
.
CLEVELAND BROWNS- Signed TE
Mike Sellers.
DENVER BRONCOS-Signed OL
Ethan Brooks to a three -year contract
DETROIT LIONs-Matched the Miami
Dolphins tender offer to C Eric Beverly.
KANSAS CIJY CHIEF'S-Signed C
Casey Wiegmann to a slx-year.contract.

Eft
••

DIVISION II QIALS ALL.QHIO
COLUMBUS (AP) - The 21J00.2001
Associated Press OMslon II girls AII.Ohlo
high school basketball team, based on the
reeommendaUons ot a state media panel
(wRh .IICI1ool, height, grade and sco~ng
average):
DIVISION It
FIRST TEAM: Lyndsoy OoWitt, Uppar
Sandusky, 5·foot·9, senior, 29.6 points per
gai'J'le; Beth,Howe, Jackson, ~-9, sr., ~.9;
ntfanie Guthrtft, T~adlaon. 6-11,
sr., 19.4; Jessica CMmstead, Conneau1, 510, sr., 23.2; Meegan Heller, Canton Cent
Cath., 6.0, sr., 12.9; Chovonne Harris,
Cols. Mifflin, 5·10, sr., 14.0; Hannah
Kanuckel, Warsaw River VIew, 5· 7, sr.,
21 .1; Bethany Ptccolini, St. Clairsville, 6·0,
sr., 18.0. .
SECOND TEAM: Brtanna Hartman,
Pemberville Eastwood, 5·11 , sr.. 13.0;
Stacey West, Willard, 5·11, soph. , 13.9;
Erin Manin, canfield, 5·9, jr., 19.3; Ashle'l
Clark, Cin. McNicholas. 6-o. sr., 16.5; Ash·
ley Bourdeau, Petry, 6-0, sr., 21.0; Julie
Kafun, Medina Highland, 6-0, Jr., 19.8;
Sarah Hull, Greenfield McClain, 5·6, soph.,
18.2.
THIRD TEAM: Rachel Crooks, C~do, 61, sr., 16.2; Rhea DeJesus, Geneva, 5·9,
jr., 20.5; Emily Zura, Beloit W. Branch, 5·7,
sr., 19.0; Joy JOhnson, Dayton Dunbar, 6o, sr., 17.0; Lisa Wright, Springboro, 5-11,
·Jr., 15.4; Liz Howarth, Athens, 5·10, soph.,
22.7; Amber VIning, Pomeroy Melga, S.
6, or., 24.8: Mary Gruber, Cols. Hanley, 5·
7, sr., 15.7.
Pla11ers of the year. lyndsev DeWIH,
Upper Sandusky; Beth Howe, Jackson.
Coaches of the year: Barry Pfahl,
Willard; Kevin Finefrock, Canton Cent.
Cath.
Special Mention
Amelia Harrts, London; Amy -Ketcham,
Bexley; Natacha Wilson, Cols. Linden
MCKinley; Chrissy Devore, Byesville MeadoWbrook: Jessica Edle, Carrollton; Ashlee
Hammersley, warsaw River View; Ashley
Hollins, Cambridge: Abbie Sidwell.
zaneavllle Maysville; Allison Bennett,
Sp~ng. Ken1on Ridge; Sarah FoK, Kings
Mills Kings; Tara Plaugher, Lima Bath; Brl·
1nn1 Johneon, o.tllpalla Qalllai Courtney Clifford, Portsmouth; Athiey Palmer,
Clrclovlllo; Robin Miller, Chag~n FallS Ken·
aton; Jennifer Strong, Warrensville Hts.;
Melanie Hill, Olmsted Falla; Ashley Bohlnc,
Chtlle~and W. Geauga; Kaclo Scherry,
Rocky River; Candace Wilson, Akron
Hoban; Tara Rosa, Medina Buckeye; Lind·
11y Shearer, Minerva: Erin Eckroad, Canal
Fulton NW.
Honorllble Mention
Caley Federor, Cots. Hamilton Tlvp.;
Stephanie Feyes, Cola. Hanley; Angela
Glbaon, Marysville; Katie Wimer, Newark
Licking VaHey; Emma Woodw•rd. Hebron
Lakewood;
·
·
Lindsay Plccotlnl, St. ClalrsviRe; Allison
Komara, E. LIVerpool; Erin Reeder, Lisbon
Beaver Local; Jean Slt!lele, SteubenviHe;
Abbl Smith, Carrollton; Undaey Plar, .
Millersburg W. Hotmes; Yvonne Hamilton,
Cambridge; Amanda Morrtson, Philo;
Shermeca Howard, Da'lton Dunbar:
Courtney Balser, Hamilton Llnle Miami;
Julio Dodds, spring. Kenton Ridge; Cydney Overton, Hamilton Badin; Karl Finnell,
Cin. Purcell Marian; Natasha Llggens, Trotwood-Madison:
Kara Jonas, Defiance; liz Krugh, St.
Marya Memorial; Mallory QliflRh, LaKing·
ton; Rachel Carr, Willard: Alison Zemanskl,
Rossford:
·
Toni Sm.anev. Thornville Sheridan; Kl&amp;ha
Jones, Circleville; ·Tara Walker, Hillsboro;
Jordan Edwards, lfonton Rock Hill; Jennifer Coffman, Vincent Warren; Bran~y
Caldwell, Jl!.ckson; Liz Cockerill, Greeri·
field McClain;
Laura McClung, Avon Lake; Nikki
Altenweg, Perry; Jordan Cuddy, Geneva;
Molly Rollo, Cleve. Hts. Beaumont: KeHy
Mcl.iughlitl, Bay Village Bay; Alexandra
Hill. FaiiVIew Parlo:; KarHsha Coward, Warrensville Hts.; Christina Neveu, Chesterland W. Geauga;
· Julie Buckler, Canton Cent. Cath.;
Martsa Glarrana, Canton Cent. Cath.; MarIanne Krezeczowskl, Niles McKinley;
Oeandria Bethune, Akron Hoban; Krlsty
Gaudlose, Poland Seminary; Katie Kaczmarczyk, Mediria Highland; K.J. Mroskl,
Hubbard; lisa Dubinsky. Ravenna South·
east.
DIVISION IV QtRLS ALL.()HIO
COLUMBUS (AP) - Tho 2000·2001
Associated Prasa OMsk&gt;n IV gl~s AII·Ohlo
high school basketball team, based on the

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e Support for caregivers

~

•

•: Maryland (22·10) \11. Goorglo Stoia (30·
~ 4), 3:20 p.m,
,
Hampton (25-6) vo. Georgetown (24-7),

e Educational speakers

'

WEST REQIONAL
Flr1t Round
Thurtdly, March 15

Georgia State !0, Wisconsin 49
Maryland 83, Gaorge Maaon 90
~:· Georgetown 83, Ar'Kanaas 61
"'• HamptOn 58, Iowa State 57

about."
get us ready to play and to
In Saturday's second round, know how hard we're going
Stanford (29-2) plays St. to have to fight and scrap to
Joseph's (26-6) and Cincin- beat a very good St. JoseP.h's
nati (24-9) takes on Kent team."
State (24-9) in an all-Ohio
Cincinnati also has struggame.
gled in the second round, los- •
Stanford got 25 points from ing there four years in a row.
Jason Collins and built a 23c
The Bearcats are young and •
point first-half lead, then was inexperienced, with three
able to rest its starters in juniors and two sophomores
pteparatioll for the next . in the starting lineup. But
game.
they ope11ed the second half
The Cardinal has been with a 19-4 run and put away
eliminated in the second Brigham Young.
round each of the last two
"We wanted to set the
years, by Gonzaga in 1999, tempo and attack and get
·and last year as the' No. 1 seed open shots," said coach Bob
in the South when it lost to
Huggins, who earned his •
North Carolina.
300th win in 12 seasons at
"If we are not 011 top of our Cincinnati. "I thought we
game, we . are going to be played well in the se.cond
headed home," forward Ryan half."
Mendez said. ''I'm going to
do everything in my power to

0

•
:

...

•
ing," Haston said of the early
exit a year after the Hoosiers
lost by 20 points to . Pepperdine in the opening round.
Indiana took its last lead,
66-65, on a free throw by
Haston before Huffman took
over. He scored five straight
points as Kent State led 70-66
with 2:30 remaining.
Jeffries, the Big Ten freshman of the year, was called for
traveling with Indiana down
by four. Andrew Mitchell and
Huffman scored consecutive
baskets to give Kent State a
76-70 lead with 19 seconds
left.
"This was a young, inexperienced team," Kent State
coach Gary Waters said of the
Hoosiers, uand we knew our,
guards were experienced and
could go out and take it to
them, and that's all we talked

••

Adult Balance &amp;
Fall Prevention Clinic

recomrntndlltiona of a state media panel
(with school, height, grade and sco~ng
average):
6p.m.
DIVISION IV
Xlvltr (28-2} va. Louisville (19-9), 30
FIRST TEAM: Nioolo Stone, WOMing·
minutes after previous game
ton Christian, 5-foot-7, senior, ,9.0 polniS
At United Splrtt Atonl
per game; Megha~ Zom, Ja~kson Ctr., 5·8,
l.ul&gt;bock, TIXII
sr., 17.2; Amber Gooden. Bedford Chanel,
Vloglnla Tech (21-8) vs. Oenver (24-8), 5·7, sr., 15.1; Candy Myers, Leipsic, 5·7,
6:30p.m.
sr., 24.4; Heather Hill, Gibsonburg, 5·9, sr.,
TaKas Tech (23-6) vs. Pennsylvania (22· 23.5; Sarah Wayland, Franklort Adena, 5·
5), 30 minutes after prevtous game
9, sr., 19.6; Beth Sternberg, E. Canton, 5·
AI Macby Arwna
3, Jr., 20.5; Kayla Magistro, Bellaire St.
Weat Lafayette, Ind.
John, 5·8, sr., 24 .4; Ashley Holenka,
LSU (19·10) vs. Arizona Slala (20·10), Shadyside, 5·6, sr., 21 .6.
6:07p .m.
.
SECOND TEAM: Vanessa Rothman,
Purdue (26-6) vs. UC Santa Barbara Holgate, 5·1, soph .. 19.3; Lorenda Haynes,
(22-~). 30 minutes after pre~us game
Cols. Wellington, 5-1 0 , soph., 23.3; Tiffany
Tompkins, Mogadore, 5-7 . sr., 20.5; Katrina
MIOWEST REGIONAL
Spitler, Pitsburg · .Franklin-Monroe, 5·8,
Flret Round
soph., 23.9; Alana Briggs. Crooksville, 6-D,
Friday, March 16
jr., 19.0; MlcheUe Urtg , Berlin Hiland, 5· 7,
At Hlllon Coliseum
sr., 19.1.
Ames, Iowa
THIRD TEAM: Rachel Babione, Fre·
Florida State {18· 11) vs . Tulane (22·9) , mont St. Joseph, 5·10. sr., 19.5; Kathy
7 p.m.
Shelley, Tol. Maumee Valley, 5-9, sr., 22. 4;
Iowa State (25·5) vs. Howard (21-9), 30 Jessica Crook s, Independence, 5·11,
minutes after previous game
soph., 18.0; Kelty Tinney. Ash. Sts. John &amp;
Saturday, March 17
Paul, 6-0, soph., 15.0; Elin Eaton, Sebring
AI The Joyce Center
McKinley, 5·5, sr., 19.0; Cassie Francis,
South Bend, Ind.
~ussla, 5·9, jr., 17.9; Liz Rigel, Spring.
Mict11gan (1 8·11) vs. Virginia (18· 1 3), . Cath. Cent .. 5· 10, jr., 17.4; Abby Hughes,
11 :07 a.m.
S. Webster, 5·9, sr., 19.2; Arin Kress, Bel·
No1re Dame (28·2) vs . Alcorn State (21· talre St. John, 5-7, jr., 14.0.
10). 30 minutes alter previous game
Players of 1he year: Nicole Stone, Wor·
At The· Jon M. Huntsman Center
thlngton Chr!sUan; Meghan Zorn. Jackson
Sol1 Like Cl1y
Ctr.; Amber Gooden, Bedford Chane!.
Iowa {20·9) vs. Oregon (17-11), 9 p .m.
Coaches of the year: Joe Dudas, Cols.
Ulah (26·3) vs. Fairfield (25·5), 30 min· Acad.; Mike Coreno, Bedford Chane!; Tom
utes after previous game
Davis, E. Canton.
At Memorial Gymnasium
Special Mention
Nashville, Tenn.
Hillary Proper, Danville; Lindsay R'eed,
Colorado (21·8) vs. Siena (24·5 ), 7 p.m. Millord Ctr. Fairbanks; Amanda Stevens,
Vanderbilt (21·9) vs. Idaho State (25-4), Centerburg; Jonle Miller, 8er1in Hiland;
30 minutes after previoos game
Beth Stalder, Beallsville; Tana Willis, Stras·
burg-Franklin; Kara Robinson, Zanesvll!e
WEST REQIONAL
Rosecrans; Brittany Smart, Troy Christian;
First Round
Chelsea Hill, N. Lewisburg Triad; Meta
Friday, March 16
Gerding, · Ottoville:
Sarah Conley,
At The O'Connell Center
Portsmouth East; Jennifer· Cline, Franklin
Galnesvllla, Fla.
Furnace Green; Katie Hempill, Portsmouth
Washington (19-9) vs. Old Dominion Clay: Stacie Watson, Rudsvllla Ent·
(21·8), s p.m.
ern; Tana Richey, Bedlord Chane!; Rachel
Florida (23·5) vs. Holy Cross (21·8), 30 Moore, Bedford Chanel; Jennifer Matsko,
minutes after previous game
Fairport Harbor Hardin"g: Quinn Szente,
Saturday, March 17
At Cameron Indoor Sladlum
Durham, N.C.
Baylor (21·8) vs. Arkansas (19·12},
11 :07 a.m.
·
Duke {28·3) vs. Wisconsln·MIIwaukee
(19·10), 30 minute's after previous gar'ne
At The Brown Athletic Center
PIICIIaWiy, N.J.
Southwest Missouri Stale (25-5) vs.
roledo (25·5), 6:05p.m.
Rutgort (22-7) vs. Stephen F. Auslln
(26-6), 30 minutes after previous game
At Tho Lloyd Noblo Contor

· .11), 30 minutes after previo us game
Michigan State (24·4) vs. Alabama
Stale (22·8), 7:40p.m. ·
, Callfomla (20·10) vs. Fresno State (25·
6), 30 minutes after previous game
·
•·.
• At The Louisiana Superdome
NewOrleans .
:· TaKas (25-8) vs. Temple (21-12), 12:30
,p.m.
Florida (23-6) vs. Westem Kentucky
(24·6), 30 minutes after previous game
Penn State (19·11) vs. Providence (21·
9), 7:50p.m.
North Carolina (25-6) vs. Princeton (16·
• 10), 30 minutes after previous game
S.condRaund
Sundly, March 11
At The Pyramid
Mo"'''hlo, Tonn.
, . Oklahoma·lndlana State winner vs. VIr·
' glnla-Gonzaga winner, 2:15p.m.
. • Michigan State-Alabama State winner
vs. Camomia·Fresno State Yt'lnner, 30 minutes after previous game
Norman, Okla.
At The LaUIIIIna Superdomt
Oklahoma (28·5) vs. Oral Roberts (20·
New Orlan•
· Florida-Western· Kentucky winner vs. 10), 7:30 p.m.
George Washington (22·9) vs. Stanford
·.TeK&amp;s·Temple winner, 2:30p.m.
• North Carollna-Prlrlceton winner vs. {18·10).- 30 minutes after previous game
·Penn State-Providence winner, 30 minutes
' .$fter prevtous game

!

"Not careless. More than the wrong score posted for
reached the state finals by
beating
Hamler
Patrick anything, it was youth," said most of the fourth quarter.
Henry.
Patrick Henry coach Rick
With 2:47 remaining, and
The Lady Warriors (26-0) Schwiebert, whose teani con- Regina leading 64-50, play
won for the 51st time in their sists of eight sophomqres, four was halted for about 10 minlast 52 games, with the only juniors and one seniqr. "They . utes so the scoreboard, which
setback
coming
against were hustle mistakes.f
incorrectly read 62-52, could
Bluffton in last season's semis.
Sarah Burgess scpred 22 be changed.
Harvey, who scored 10 points, and Ari Moore and
Regina fans spent the time
points, had four of them on . Siedah Williams each scored chanting ''Fix the score,'' then
. consecutive layups to give the 18 for Regina (24-3) in its gave the scoreboard operator
Lady' Warriors a 42-41 lead victory
over
Cihcinnati a standing ovation when the
with 2:51 to play. She then Wyoming (22-4).
problem was fixed. ·
got the rebound on Nikki
The Royals' defense was
Worried his team would
Zgela's missed 3-pointer, and dominant as the Cowboys squander its lead, Diulus
Burrows scored "inside i:o comn1itted 25 turnovers, nine pulled his players off the floor
make it 44-41.
by point guard Monica three times during the delay.
Harvey made four straight Hayles, and shot just 22-of-63
"It was such a long delay,"
fre·e throws in the closing sec- (35 percent) from the floor. he said. "It was a pivotal situonds to give Eastern Brown a Burgess had eight steals, most ation."
six-point lead.
by intercepting ·passes.
The Division I and IV
''[ knew she'd pull it · "We
didn't
execute," semifinals are Friday at Value
through for us in the end," Wyoming coach Deb Gentile City Arena. Beavercreek. plays
Eastern
Brown
coach said. "Their trap hurt us. Cleveland East Tech and ToleRichard Kiser said.
When you rely on the over- do Central Catholic takes on
Karyn Creager and Becca head pass against a trap, that's Dayton Chaminade-Julienne
Flowers each scored 15 points not what you want. That was in the big-school division,
·
(or the Lady Patriots (21-5), . one of the keys."
while Bedford Chane! meets
who ·did not draw the wrath
The game wasn't perfect for Jackson· Center and Worof their coach despite com- Regina. Royals coach Pat thington Christian faces Holmitting 25 turnovers with no Diulus was upset with the gate in the small-school
assists.
scoreboard operator, who had match ups.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

,,

''

�Friday, March 16, 2001
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 16, 2001

The Trojans (22-9) led 48-19 at the half. The possession with 35.8 seconds left. The Hoyas
Creighton 69-56, Boston Coll~gc held off
Southern Utah 68-65 and Southern Califor- Cowboys (20-10) made just nine of 26 shots ran down the 35-second clock, with Burton
and missed nine of 10 free throws in the open- holding the ball until there were only a few
nia beat Oklahoma State 69-54.
seconds to play.
.
•
In Greensboro, N.C., UCLA defeated HofS- . ing 20 minutes.
He
began
his
drive
down
the
left
stde
oft~
tra 61-48, top-seeded Duke beat Monmouth
UCLA 61, Hofstra 48
The Cyclones (25-6), who came within one 95-Si! and Missouri edged Georgia 70-68.
UCLA (22-8) closed with a 24-5 run to lane and flipped up a shot almost Stmultaneo~s
game of the Final Four last season, left the
Play begins Friday in the South and Mid- snap the nation's longest Division I winning with the shot-clock horn. After about a
minute, an announcement was made that the
court in shock.
streak at 18 games.
west regions.
"It's just devastating to go out like this,"
Earl Watson scored 13 of his 15 points for basket counted.
East
Iowa State guard Kantrail Horton said.
the Bruins in the first half. Dan Gadzuric , Kevin Braswell led the ·lOth-seeded Hoyas
Kentucky 72, Holy Cross 68
Georgia State, led by former Maryland
Consecutive 3-pointers by Tayshaun Prince scored eight of his J.l points during the final (24-7) with 12 points. Joe Johnson scored 14
coach Lefty Driesell, knocked off the sixth- broke a second-half tie as Kentucky held off run and added 13 rebounds. Billy Knight led points for Arkansas (20-11).
St. Joseph's 66, Georgia Tech 62
seeded . Badgers to set up a second-round Holy Cross.
the Bruins with 17 points.
Marvin O'Connor scored 13 of hts 21
showdown w ith the Terrapins.
Rick Apodaca led the Pride (26-5) with 16
Prince scored 12 of his team's final14 points
points in the second halffor s.t. Joseph's. '
" I told my team this might be the greatest and finished with 27 points, while Keith points.
St. Joe's (26-6) saw its 18-pmnt lead dwmdle
win I've ever had," said Driesell, fired by Hogans added 17 for Kentucky (23-9). Jared
Duke 95, Monmouth 52
Maryland 15 years ago. "We came back in the Curry led Holy Cross (22-S) with I 6 points.
Jason Williams scored 20 of his 22 points in to three twice in the final 1:43. But the Yellow
second half and showed what kind of club we
the first half and Shane Ba_ttier added 21 points Jackets (17-13) came up short on two easy
Iowa 69, Creighton 56
scoring chances. Tony Akins led Tech w1th 16
have."
Reggie Evans scored 16 of his 19 points in and 10 rebounds.
Georgia State's Darryl Cooper made a four- . the seco nd half to help Iowa (23- 11) to its fifth
Duke (30-4) tied a school record with 18 3- points. ·
Stanford 89, N.C. Greensboro 60
point play and a steal co set up the game-win- straight victory.
pointers to help coach Mike Krzyzewski
Seven-footer Jason Collins scored 20 of his
ning basket in the final minute. The win wasEvans• was 13-of-15 from the foul line, improve to 51-14 in the NCAA tournament.
n't sealed until Wisconsin's Mark Vershaw including 12-of-13 in the final 10 minutes. Rahsaan Johnson had 11 points for Mon- 25 points in the first half as top-seeded Stanford built a 23-point lead.
miSsed two free throws With 3.2 seconds to Duez Henderso n added 16 points and Dean mouth (21 - 10).
Sophomore All-Ameri ca n · Casey Jacobsen
play.
Oliver had 15. Ben Walker and Livan Pyfrom
Missouri 70, Georgia 68
Kevii1 Mo rris le.d Georgia State (29-4) with scored 11 points apiece for Creighton (24-8) .
Clarence Gilbert hit a 15-foot jumper with added 14 points, giving him I ,003 for his
18 po ints. M"rk Vershaw had 19 for Wisconsin
0. 9 seconds to play as Missouri held off a furi- care~r.
Boston College 68, S. Utah 65
Stanford (29-2) won its opening game for
(18-11 ), whic h played in the Final Four last
Troy Bell scored 16 of his 18 points in the ous Georgia rally.
the
seventh sttaight year. The 29-point margin
year.
Georgia· overcam'e an 11-point deficit with
second half as Boston College outlasted 14thMaryland (22 -1 0) used Steve Blake's iace 3- seeded Southern Utah.
just over two 1ninutes to play to tie it on was the biggest for the Cardinal in the NCAA
pointer and Juan Dixon's two free throws with
Xavier Singletary added 15 points to help Rashad Wright 's 3-pointer with 22 seconds tournament. Greensboro finished 19-12.
Cincinnati 84, Brigham Young 59
4.9 seconds left to beat George Mason (18- Boston College (27-4) to its eighth straight left.
Steve Logan scored 21 points and fifth-seed1 2). Dixon and .Byron Mouton scored 22 victory.
Arthur Johnson led Missouri (20-12) with
points each for Maryland.
Jeff Monaco scored 26 points for the Thun- 15 points. Robb Dryden led Georgia (16-15) ed Cincinnati (24-9) opened the ·second half
with a 19-4 run.
In other West Regional play in San Diego, derbirds (25-6) . Southern Utah had a chance with a season-high 18 points.
It was the Bearcats' seventh · straight firstSt. Joseph's upset Georgia Tech 66-62, top- to tie it at the buzzer, but Justin Sane's 3-point
West
round win and gave coach Bob Huggins his
seeded Stanford beat North Carolina Greens- · attempt hit the front of the rim.
Georgetown 63, Arkansas 61
300t!1
victory in 12 seasons at Cincinnati.
boro 89-60 and Cincinnati beat Brigham
Georgetown's Nathaniel Burton hit a driSouthern Cal 69, Oklahoma St. 54
Young 84-59.
Sam Clancy had 22 points and 13 rebounds, ving layup at the buzzer that survived an offi- Mekeli We~ley had 25 points for BYU (24-9~.
In the East Regional in Uniondale, N.Y., and JeffTrepagnier added 17 points for South- cial's instant-replay review.
.
Kentucky edged Holy Cross 72-68, Iowa beat ern California
With the score fied at 61, Georgetown took

s Scoreboard

NCAA

fromPapBl

()

osu

beat Hofstra 61-48.
The Aggies also were
quicker and more aggressive
than Ohio State (20-11).They
forced 21 turnovers, including
has ·been about getting back. 12 steals, and committed only
here and getting another five turnovers.
chance."
Utah State also shut down
Curtis Bobb scored eight of Ken Johnson, Ohio State's
his 14 points· in overtime to shot-blocking center, in the
help the Aggies (28-5) knock second half Johnson had only
fifth-seeded Ohio State out in six points - : all on free
the first round for the first throws - and one block. after
halftime. He finished with 14
time since 1982.
"It's obviously a disappoint- points, 14 rebounds and five
ing loss for us;' Ohio State blocks.
"We n~ver felt like Ohio
coach Jim O'Brien said. "But
State
was the, better team and
you've got to give a world of
credit. to those .guys. In my always believed we could beat
mind, they were the better them," said Dimitri Jorssen,
who guarded Johnson most of
team.' '
the
day.
Bernard Rock scored 18
"I hope. this puts us on the
points to lead Utah State,
which will play UCLA in the map and gets people to go to
second round. The Bruins our web site because we .

from Page Bl

proved we can play with the Daniels came up with a steal
top teams."
and tossed it in to Bobb for a
Bobb, who was scoreless dunk 'and a 67-62 Utah State
until hitting a 3-pointer r-ith lead.
five minutes to play in the
"We got the traveling call
second half, scored · seven and I saw some heads go
straight points in overtime to down and some yelling and I
give the Aggies control. ,
just wanted them to know
He put Utah State up 62- that we could only lose the
61 with a short jumper, then gaine, they couldn't beat us,"
scored on a putback that drew Bobb said. "We had to stay
a foul. He made the free together or else Ohio State
throw, giving the Aggies a 65- could take the game."
62lead.
·
Ohio State then gave up the
Ohio State missed its next ba,ll on passes or off-balance,
attempt, but was called for risky shots.
traveling on the rebound, givThe Buckeyes got 3-pointing the Buckeyes the ball ers from Brian Brown and
•
back.
Sea;, Coimolly, but they' had
Bobb then settled down his to foul after every possession
teatn.mates, yelling, 41 Don 't and Utah State was 8-of-12
worry, we got it! We got this from the line in the 2:08 of
game!"
the game.
He proved it on the next
posseSSion, when Shawn

Ohio
fnHnPage 81
•'We'll name a new coach as
soon as possible, but that
could be in a week to 10 days
or it could go three weeks or
more, especially since so many
coaches are involved with the
NCAA tournament right
now," he said.
Hunter could not be
immediately reached. His
home telephone number is
unlisted,
and
university
spokeswoman Heather Czeczok said Hunter did not want
to talk to reporters at this
time.
He has one year remaining
on a three-year contract,
which lasts through April 30,

2002, and will be paid his
remaining $13S,826 salary.
The money will come fro'?
an
athletics
department
reserve fund.
·
Hunter had a record of
204-148 during his tenure at
Ohio. His 1993-94 team won
the MAC regular-seasqn
·championship and postseason
tournament. The .Bobcats also
won the 1994 Preseason NI_T
and advanced to the second
round of the 1995 Postseason
NIT.
Hunter's overall record as a
college coach is · 509-224.
Ohio hired him after 13 seasons at Wittenberg; whi:re ·rhe
was 305-76, won the NCAA
Division Ill title in 1976-77,
his first season, and made the
Division Ill Final Four on
three other occasions.

At Cln11o Centor
Clnclnn•l
Clemson (20·9) vs. Chatlanooga (24-6),

EAST REGIONAL
First Round
Thursday, Merch 1fii

At Nltuu Veteran• Memorttl
· Colluum
N.V.
Kentucky 72, Ho!v Cross 68
Iowa 89, Creighton 56
Boston College 68, Southern Utah 65
s. C.lllomla 69, Oklahoma State 54
At GrHnaboro Collaeum
OrMnabaro, N.C.
Ulah State 77, Ohk&gt; Slate 68, OT
UCLA 6~, Hofstra 48
Duke 95, Monmouth, N:J. 52
Mlssoun 70, Georgia 68
Second Round
Stturday, March 17
At NIUIU Vlttl'lnl Memorial Coli·.
Unlond~le,

num

.

Unlondtll, N.Y.
Bos1on College (27·4} vs. Southern Cal·
llomla (22·9), 5:30p.m.
. Kentucky (23·9) vs. Iowa (23·11), 30
m1nutes after previous game
At qreen-boro Coll~eum
Greenaboro, N.C.
Duke (30-4) vs . Missouri (20·12), 1:10

' p.m.
UCLA (22·8) vs. Utah Stale (28·5), 30
minutes alter previous game
SOUTll REGIONAL
Firat Round
Fridoy, March 1&amp;
At The Pyramid

Meml'hlt, Tenn.
Virginia (20·8) V$. Gonzaga (24-6),
12:25 p.m.
'

Oklahoma (2Ei-6) vs . Indiana State (21 .

OHSAA
from Page Bl
. most of her points inside,
dropping in layups and banking in short jumpers. The
Northern Kentucky recruit
also had I I rebounds. The 6foot senior came in averaging
16.5 points a game.
" I just had one of those
days when I couldn't miss·,"
Clark' sa id .
Hartley kept its deficit
within single digits most of
the way, tying it in early in the
fourth. But the Lady Hawks
(19-8) never were able to take
the lead, failing to covert on
offense numerous times.
The Lady Hawks made
o nly 14-of-55 (26 percent)
shots from the floor.
Mary Gruber led Hartley
.with 16 points.
Elizabeth Burrows scored
24 points, and All-Ohio performer Mi cah Harvey came
up big in the closing minutes
as Sardinia Eastern Brown

CONGRATULATIONS
Carpenters Local Union 650
109 Years in Pomeroy
March 16, 1892·2001

' ·

MIDWEST REGIONAL
Firat Round
Frld•y, Mlirch 11
A1 Unl..ral1y of DoY1on Anne
Dlyton, Ohio
Illinois (24·7) vs. Northwestern State
(19·12). 12:15 p.m.
Tennessee (22·10) vs. Cha~otto (21·
• 10}, 30 minutes after previous game
- Kansu (24·6) v1. Cal Slate NortMdgo
(22·9), 7:40 p,m.
' Syrar;uae (24-8) vs. Hawaii (17·13), 30

') rnlnutM attar prevloi,Js game

At Kemper.Arena
K.,lll Cl1y, MO.

''

Wake Forest (19-10) vs. Butler (23·7),
12:30 p.m.
·, AriZOI'II (23·7) VI. Eastern Illinois {21·
1 9) , 30 minutes after previous game
Mlsalsslppl (25-7) vs. looa (22·10), 7:55
p.m.
.
Notre Came (19-9) vs. Xa~er (21-7), 30
minutes after previous game
Second Round
Sunday, March 18
•
AI Unlv•alty or Dayton Arena
•
Dayton, Ohio
• Kansas·Cal State Northridge winner vs.
'Syracuse-Hawaii winner, 12:10 p.m. ·
: Illinois-Northwestern State winner vs.
Jennessee.Chartone winner, 30 minutes
~fter previous game
•
At Kimper Arena
:
Kan••• City, Mo•
~ Arizona-Eastern Illinois winner vs. Wake
f"orest-Butler winner, 2:20 p.m.
"' Mlssisslppl·lona winner vs. Notre
~ame-Xavler winner, 30 minutes after pre·
.
·,Ntous game

Henry C. Peery
Business Representative
1954·1979, Retired

Kent
fromPageBl

.'

was guard Tom Coverdale,
who hurt his hip divi1lg for a
ball in the first half. He later
fouled out with 4:34 remaining, leaving the Hoosiers'
offense in limbo.
"There was a five-minute
stretch were we looked like a
seventh-grade
team . We
weren't composed at all and
we mrted panicking,'' Davis
said. "If Coverdale was in, we
may not have won the game,
but we would have played
better do\vn the stretch."
Kirk Haston had 29 points
for Indiana, whose seeding
was its highest since 1993.
"Extremely disappointing
to the point of being sic ken-

.

~"'---

At Cox Arelll at Aztec Bowl

•
San Dl•lilo
• St. Joseph's 66, Georgia Tech 62
: Stanford 89, North Carolina-Greens·
.001060
, Kent State 77, Indiana 73
• Cincinnati 84, B~gham Young 59
:
A1 BSU Povtllon

....

Bolu, ldlho

•.

81turday, March 17

AI CoxArwno tiiAztoc lawl

•.
~

·

lonDiogo
Clnclnnau (24·9),

~: Konl Slate (24·9) ...
1'' :38 p.m ..

1". Slanlot&lt;l (29·2) Yl. St. Joaoph's (28-6),
~«J mlnulaa otttr previous game

~·

At IIU Pnlllon

11. •

•

1

I

lol.., lcllho

30 mlnutea attar prevloua game

iI
I

NCAA Womtn'l BIIUtboll
Tou""m.nl

I

F~doy, Mareh 11

I

EAST REGIONAL

Firat Round

At S11gomon Colltoum

Alhtnt, 01.

I .

Wtoeonaln (18·9) vs. Mill®~ (20-9),
7:07p.m.
I
Georgia (20·5) vs. Uberty (18·11), 30
mlnU1os aftar previous game
1
ld A.ynolda Collaeum
I
Rolllgh, N.C.
'
vtlanova (21-8) vs. Drake (23-6), 5 p.m.
North Carolina State (20·,0) vs.
1 Delaware (26""'), 30 minutes alter prevlou&amp;

Education about balance loss

't

I

Tips for home fail prevention

'
I

Exercises to improve balance

I game

Newest research information

J

Sl1urdoy, Morch 17
.

1

..

AI Harry A. GamfHII Pavilion
&amp;tom, Conn. .

r ' Connecticut (28·2) v1. Long Island Unl·
' varal1y (16·14), 7:05p.m.
Maryland (17·11) vs. Colorado State
(24·6), 30 mlnutas after previous game

At Tht Thoma• Auembty Ctnter

Ruetan, u.

Reasons for fails

Penn Slate ( 19·9) VI. Texaa ChrisUon
(24·7), 7:05p.m.
Louisiana Tech (28-4) vs. Georgia State
;:..;24·8), 30 minutes after previous game.

Functional balance testing

MIDEAST REGIONAL
Firat Round
Fridoy, March 11
1
,.
At Thomplon·Bollng Arena
Knoxviii._,·Tenn.
Texas (20·12) vs. St. Mary's, CaiH. (25·
1;.,6). 5'30 p.m.
I ,. Tonnesoeo (29·2) vs. Austin Paay (17·
: "'t3), 30 mlnuttllher previous game

~

,.

Loroln Cath.; Amanda Rowe , Elyrio Open
Door: Tiffany Smith, Leetonia; Tiffany
Hack, Mineral Ridge; Jessica Black,
Southington Chalker, Michelle Morrison,
Berlin Ctr. Western Reserve; Colleen
McGWre, Windham.
Honor1ble Menllon
Maricee Armentrout, Cols . Tree of LHe;
Sheena Qrlfflth, Centetturg ; Alicia Hen·
son, Cols. Acad.; Alista McDonald,
Danville; Karah Walton, Worthington Ch~s­
tlan: lynsey Lyle, Wellsville; Tintsha
Williams, Wellsville; Mary Gilloon,
Steubenville Cath. Cent. : Tabl TayiOf, New
Matamoras Frontier; Katie Reeves, Toronto; Jessica Gotschall, Malvern; Raehnelle
Cola, Bowerston Conotton Valley: Kim
Schockllng, Caldwell; Janna Johnson,
Shadyside:
Chris Halberstadt, Jackson Ctr.; Kara
Schlechty, New Madison Tri·VIIIage;
Aaechel White, Fayetteville; Kacie Size·
more, w. Alexandria Twin Val. S.; Alicia
Shoe, OeGrafl Riverside; Tyler Mcllwral1h.
Cin. Seven Hills;
Kelly Graham, New London: Emily
Gross, Norwalk St. Paul; Beth Everman,
Ma"ria Stein Marion Local; Rachel PolinsKI,
Manslleld Sl. Peter 's; Lee Woodward,
OUawa Hills; Shanna Pressler, Montpelier;
Brooke Hughes, S. Webster; Adrian
Vance, Mowrystown Whiteoak; Whitney
Lewi s, Lynchburg -C lay; Amber Baker,
Reedsville Eastern: Megan Tackett.
Franklin Furnace Green; Kerry Jean
Friend, Leesburg Fairfield;
Amy Esser: Lorain Cath.; Sarah Tolvo·
nan, Falrpon Harding; Melissa Kosta l. Cuy.
Hts.; Nlkl Csak, Cuy. Hts.; Lisa Piechowski,
Bedlord Chane!;
Laura Kister, Kidron Cent. Christian;
Angle Hill . Bristolville Br~tol; Jackie
Durham, Leelorlla; Jacey Baus, Dalton:
Kim Brunle , Sebring McKinley; Ange la
Zwick, E. Canton; Nikki Thompson.
Mogadore; Sa.ra Toth, McDonald.

1. AUJO

RACING

.I

NASCAR Winston Cup Series
The . 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup
schedule (winners in parentheses) and dri·
ver point slandlngs:

Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Michael Wallrip)
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rockingham, N.C. (Steve Park)
March 4 - UAW-DalmlerChrysler 400 ,
Las Vogn. (Jaff Go-)
March 11 -Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton, Ga. (Kevin Harvick}
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
400, Darlington. S.C.
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol,
Tenn.
Driver Sltndlngl
1. Jeff Gordon, 613. 2. Dale Jarrett, 576 .
3. Johnny Benson, 540. 4. Sterling Marlin,
53 1. 5. Michael Waltrip, 509. 6. Bill Elliott,
495 . 7. Jerry Nadeau, 478. 8. Rusty Wal·
lace, 472. 9. Ricky Rudd , 467. 10. Ken
Schrader, 461 . 11 . ·Kevin Harvick, 443. 12.
Bobby Hamilton. 436 . 13. Steve Part, 435 .
14. Tony Stewar1 , 429. 15. MiKe Skinner,
428. 16. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 426. 17
Robert Pressley, 423. 18. Terry LabOnte.
419 . 19. Elliott Sadler, 417. 20. Ricky
Craven, 413. 21. Ward Burton, 413 . 2~
Joe Nemechek, 412. 23. Jimmy Spencer,
387 . 24 . Ron Hornaday. 384. 25. MarJt;
Martin. 382 . 26. Bobby Labonte, 368. 27
Kurt Busch, 359. 28. Stacy Compton, 352.
29. Man Kenseth, 348 . 30. Bran Bodine.
339. 31. Todd Bodine. 330. 32. Dave
Blaney, 326. 33. John Andrettl, 319. 34
Mike Wallace , 303. 35. Casey Atwood,
303.36. Robby Gordon, 301.37. Buckshot
Jones . 300.38. Jeff Burton, 277. 39. Jason
LeHier, 276 . 40. Jeremy Mayfield, 273

ITRANSAC'IONS I
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON . REO SOX-Pu rchased the
contract of LHP Jorge Oe La Rosa from
Monterrey of the Me&gt;~ican League.
MINNESOTA TWINS- Agreed to terms
with INF Corey Koskie on a three-year con·
tract. Optioned RHP Danny Mota to
Edmonton of the PCL and RHP Kyle Lohse
and LHP Brad Thomas to New Britain of
the Eastern League. Assigned RHP Adam
Johnson, INF Michael Cuddyer, INF
Michael Moriarty, C Brandon Marsters and
OF Michael Restovich to their minor league
camp.

I_

OETROIT TIGERs-Assigned C Bran·
don lnge, 18 Kurt Blerek, OF Jtrmalne
Allensworth. OF Andres Torres and LHP
Matt Miller to the1r minor league camp.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Agreed to
terms with 36 Olmedo Saenz on a two·
year cpntract.
SEATTLE MARINERS-Optioned INF
Jason Grabowski, RHP Dennis Stark, AHP
Greg Wooten and LHP Mark Watson to
Tacoma of the PCL. Asslgnad OF Ramon
Moreta and OF Chad Ale&gt;eander to their
minor l~ague camp.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS- Released
RHP Sean Bergman. Assigned LHP Paul
Spo1jar1c, INF Mike Caruso and INF Andy
Sheets to their minor league camp.
TEXAS RANGERS-Assigned AHP
Brian Sikorski outright to Oklahoma ol t~
PCL. Optioned AHP Darwin Cublllan and
.28 Jason Romano to Oklahoma.
_
National League
CINCINNATI REDS-Optioned LHP
Hector Mercado and OF Brady Clark to
Louisville ol the International league .
Optioned LHP Clayton Andrews and Of
Jackson Malian to Chattanooga of ttle
Southern League. Assigned INF Bill Selby
and RHP Arnie Gooch to Louisville.
NEW YORK METS-Assigoled RHP
Pete Walker and RHP Brett Htnchlille to
their m1nor league camp.
BASKETBALL
PHILADELPHIA 76EAS-Re-signed G
Pepe Sanchez. Waived F Anthony Miller
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Placed C
Hakeem Olajuwon on the injured list. Act1·
vated F Mall Bullard from the injured list.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
' ARIZONA CARDINALS-Signed OL
Pete Kendall to a live-year contract.
CINCINNATI BENGALS- Named Rodney Holman assistant coach for strength
and conditioning.
.
CLEVELAND BROWNS- Signed TE
Mike Sellers.
DENVER BRONCOS-Signed OL
Ethan Brooks to a three -year contract
DETROIT LIONs-Matched the Miami
Dolphins tender offer to C Eric Beverly.
KANSAS CIJY CHIEF'S-Signed C
Casey Wiegmann to a slx-year.contract.

Eft
••

DIVISION II QIALS ALL.QHIO
COLUMBUS (AP) - The 21J00.2001
Associated Press OMslon II girls AII.Ohlo
high school basketball team, based on the
reeommendaUons ot a state media panel
(wRh .IICI1ool, height, grade and sco~ng
average):
DIVISION It
FIRST TEAM: Lyndsoy OoWitt, Uppar
Sandusky, 5·foot·9, senior, 29.6 points per
gai'J'le; Beth,Howe, Jackson, ~-9, sr., ~.9;
ntfanie Guthrtft, T~adlaon. 6-11,
sr., 19.4; Jessica CMmstead, Conneau1, 510, sr., 23.2; Meegan Heller, Canton Cent
Cath., 6.0, sr., 12.9; Chovonne Harris,
Cols. Mifflin, 5·10, sr., 14.0; Hannah
Kanuckel, Warsaw River VIew, 5· 7, sr.,
21 .1; Bethany Ptccolini, St. Clairsville, 6·0,
sr., 18.0. .
SECOND TEAM: Brtanna Hartman,
Pemberville Eastwood, 5·11 , sr.. 13.0;
Stacey West, Willard, 5·11, soph. , 13.9;
Erin Manin, canfield, 5·9, jr., 19.3; Ashle'l
Clark, Cin. McNicholas. 6-o. sr., 16.5; Ash·
ley Bourdeau, Petry, 6-0, sr., 21.0; Julie
Kafun, Medina Highland, 6-0, Jr., 19.8;
Sarah Hull, Greenfield McClain, 5·6, soph.,
18.2.
THIRD TEAM: Rachel Crooks, C~do, 61, sr., 16.2; Rhea DeJesus, Geneva, 5·9,
jr., 20.5; Emily Zura, Beloit W. Branch, 5·7,
sr., 19.0; Joy JOhnson, Dayton Dunbar, 6o, sr., 17.0; Lisa Wright, Springboro, 5-11,
·Jr., 15.4; Liz Howarth, Athens, 5·10, soph.,
22.7; Amber VIning, Pomeroy Melga, S.
6, or., 24.8: Mary Gruber, Cols. Hanley, 5·
7, sr., 15.7.
Pla11ers of the year. lyndsev DeWIH,
Upper Sandusky; Beth Howe, Jackson.
Coaches of the year: Barry Pfahl,
Willard; Kevin Finefrock, Canton Cent.
Cath.
Special Mention
Amelia Harrts, London; Amy -Ketcham,
Bexley; Natacha Wilson, Cols. Linden
MCKinley; Chrissy Devore, Byesville MeadoWbrook: Jessica Edle, Carrollton; Ashlee
Hammersley, warsaw River View; Ashley
Hollins, Cambridge: Abbie Sidwell.
zaneavllle Maysville; Allison Bennett,
Sp~ng. Ken1on Ridge; Sarah FoK, Kings
Mills Kings; Tara Plaugher, Lima Bath; Brl·
1nn1 Johneon, o.tllpalla Qalllai Courtney Clifford, Portsmouth; Athiey Palmer,
Clrclovlllo; Robin Miller, Chag~n FallS Ken·
aton; Jennifer Strong, Warrensville Hts.;
Melanie Hill, Olmsted Falla; Ashley Bohlnc,
Chtlle~and W. Geauga; Kaclo Scherry,
Rocky River; Candace Wilson, Akron
Hoban; Tara Rosa, Medina Buckeye; Lind·
11y Shearer, Minerva: Erin Eckroad, Canal
Fulton NW.
Honorllble Mention
Caley Federor, Cots. Hamilton Tlvp.;
Stephanie Feyes, Cola. Hanley; Angela
Glbaon, Marysville; Katie Wimer, Newark
Licking VaHey; Emma Woodw•rd. Hebron
Lakewood;
·
·
Lindsay Plccotlnl, St. ClalrsviRe; Allison
Komara, E. LIVerpool; Erin Reeder, Lisbon
Beaver Local; Jean Slt!lele, SteubenviHe;
Abbl Smith, Carrollton; Undaey Plar, .
Millersburg W. Hotmes; Yvonne Hamilton,
Cambridge; Amanda Morrtson, Philo;
Shermeca Howard, Da'lton Dunbar:
Courtney Balser, Hamilton Llnle Miami;
Julio Dodds, spring. Kenton Ridge; Cydney Overton, Hamilton Badin; Karl Finnell,
Cin. Purcell Marian; Natasha Llggens, Trotwood-Madison:
Kara Jonas, Defiance; liz Krugh, St.
Marya Memorial; Mallory QliflRh, LaKing·
ton; Rachel Carr, Willard: Alison Zemanskl,
Rossford:
·
Toni Sm.anev. Thornville Sheridan; Kl&amp;ha
Jones, Circleville; ·Tara Walker, Hillsboro;
Jordan Edwards, lfonton Rock Hill; Jennifer Coffman, Vincent Warren; Bran~y
Caldwell, Jl!.ckson; Liz Cockerill, Greeri·
field McClain;
Laura McClung, Avon Lake; Nikki
Altenweg, Perry; Jordan Cuddy, Geneva;
Molly Rollo, Cleve. Hts. Beaumont: KeHy
Mcl.iughlitl, Bay Village Bay; Alexandra
Hill. FaiiVIew Parlo:; KarHsha Coward, Warrensville Hts.; Christina Neveu, Chesterland W. Geauga;
· Julie Buckler, Canton Cent. Cath.;
Martsa Glarrana, Canton Cent. Cath.; MarIanne Krezeczowskl, Niles McKinley;
Oeandria Bethune, Akron Hoban; Krlsty
Gaudlose, Poland Seminary; Katie Kaczmarczyk, Mediria Highland; K.J. Mroskl,
Hubbard; lisa Dubinsky. Ravenna South·
east.
DIVISION IV QtRLS ALL.()HIO
COLUMBUS (AP) - Tho 2000·2001
Associated Prasa OMsk&gt;n IV gl~s AII·Ohlo
high school basketball team, based on the

1999. Silverado.
2000·0idsrnobile
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e Support for caregivers

~

•

•: Maryland (22·10) \11. Goorglo Stoia (30·
~ 4), 3:20 p.m,
,
Hampton (25-6) vo. Georgetown (24-7),

e Educational speakers

'

WEST REQIONAL
Flr1t Round
Thurtdly, March 15

Georgia State !0, Wisconsin 49
Maryland 83, Gaorge Maaon 90
~:· Georgetown 83, Ar'Kanaas 61
"'• HamptOn 58, Iowa State 57

about."
get us ready to play and to
In Saturday's second round, know how hard we're going
Stanford (29-2) plays St. to have to fight and scrap to
Joseph's (26-6) and Cincin- beat a very good St. JoseP.h's
nati (24-9) takes on Kent team."
State (24-9) in an all-Ohio
Cincinnati also has struggame.
gled in the second round, los- •
Stanford got 25 points from ing there four years in a row.
Jason Collins and built a 23c
The Bearcats are young and •
point first-half lead, then was inexperienced, with three
able to rest its starters in juniors and two sophomores
pteparatioll for the next . in the starting lineup. But
game.
they ope11ed the second half
The Cardinal has been with a 19-4 run and put away
eliminated in the second Brigham Young.
round each of the last two
"We wanted to set the
years, by Gonzaga in 1999, tempo and attack and get
·and last year as the' No. 1 seed open shots," said coach Bob
in the South when it lost to
Huggins, who earned his •
North Carolina.
300th win in 12 seasons at
"If we are not 011 top of our Cincinnati. "I thought we
game, we . are going to be played well in the se.cond
headed home," forward Ryan half."
Mendez said. ''I'm going to
do everything in my power to

0

•
:

...

•
ing," Haston said of the early
exit a year after the Hoosiers
lost by 20 points to . Pepperdine in the opening round.
Indiana took its last lead,
66-65, on a free throw by
Haston before Huffman took
over. He scored five straight
points as Kent State led 70-66
with 2:30 remaining.
Jeffries, the Big Ten freshman of the year, was called for
traveling with Indiana down
by four. Andrew Mitchell and
Huffman scored consecutive
baskets to give Kent State a
76-70 lead with 19 seconds
left.
"This was a young, inexperienced team," Kent State
coach Gary Waters said of the
Hoosiers, uand we knew our,
guards were experienced and
could go out and take it to
them, and that's all we talked

••

Adult Balance &amp;
Fall Prevention Clinic

recomrntndlltiona of a state media panel
(with school, height, grade and sco~ng
average):
6p.m.
DIVISION IV
Xlvltr (28-2} va. Louisville (19-9), 30
FIRST TEAM: Nioolo Stone, WOMing·
minutes after previous game
ton Christian, 5-foot-7, senior, ,9.0 polniS
At United Splrtt Atonl
per game; Megha~ Zom, Ja~kson Ctr., 5·8,
l.ul&gt;bock, TIXII
sr., 17.2; Amber Gooden. Bedford Chanel,
Vloglnla Tech (21-8) vs. Oenver (24-8), 5·7, sr., 15.1; Candy Myers, Leipsic, 5·7,
6:30p.m.
sr., 24.4; Heather Hill, Gibsonburg, 5·9, sr.,
TaKas Tech (23-6) vs. Pennsylvania (22· 23.5; Sarah Wayland, Franklort Adena, 5·
5), 30 minutes after prevtous game
9, sr., 19.6; Beth Sternberg, E. Canton, 5·
AI Macby Arwna
3, Jr., 20.5; Kayla Magistro, Bellaire St.
Weat Lafayette, Ind.
John, 5·8, sr., 24 .4; Ashley Holenka,
LSU (19·10) vs. Arizona Slala (20·10), Shadyside, 5·6, sr., 21 .6.
6:07p .m.
.
SECOND TEAM: Vanessa Rothman,
Purdue (26-6) vs. UC Santa Barbara Holgate, 5·1, soph .. 19.3; Lorenda Haynes,
(22-~). 30 minutes after pre~us game
Cols. Wellington, 5-1 0 , soph., 23.3; Tiffany
Tompkins, Mogadore, 5-7 . sr., 20.5; Katrina
MIOWEST REGIONAL
Spitler, Pitsburg · .Franklin-Monroe, 5·8,
Flret Round
soph., 23.9; Alana Briggs. Crooksville, 6-D,
Friday, March 16
jr., 19.0; MlcheUe Urtg , Berlin Hiland, 5· 7,
At Hlllon Coliseum
sr., 19.1.
Ames, Iowa
THIRD TEAM: Rachel Babione, Fre·
Florida State {18· 11) vs . Tulane (22·9) , mont St. Joseph, 5·10. sr., 19.5; Kathy
7 p.m.
Shelley, Tol. Maumee Valley, 5-9, sr., 22. 4;
Iowa State (25·5) vs. Howard (21-9), 30 Jessica Crook s, Independence, 5·11,
minutes after previous game
soph., 18.0; Kelty Tinney. Ash. Sts. John &amp;
Saturday, March 17
Paul, 6-0, soph., 15.0; Elin Eaton, Sebring
AI The Joyce Center
McKinley, 5·5, sr., 19.0; Cassie Francis,
South Bend, Ind.
~ussla, 5·9, jr., 17.9; Liz Rigel, Spring.
Mict11gan (1 8·11) vs. Virginia (18· 1 3), . Cath. Cent .. 5· 10, jr., 17.4; Abby Hughes,
11 :07 a.m.
S. Webster, 5·9, sr., 19.2; Arin Kress, Bel·
No1re Dame (28·2) vs . Alcorn State (21· talre St. John, 5-7, jr., 14.0.
10). 30 minutes alter previous game
Players of 1he year: Nicole Stone, Wor·
At The· Jon M. Huntsman Center
thlngton Chr!sUan; Meghan Zorn. Jackson
Sol1 Like Cl1y
Ctr.; Amber Gooden, Bedford Chane!.
Iowa {20·9) vs. Oregon (17-11), 9 p .m.
Coaches of the year: Joe Dudas, Cols.
Ulah (26·3) vs. Fairfield (25·5), 30 min· Acad.; Mike Coreno, Bedford Chane!; Tom
utes after previous game
Davis, E. Canton.
At Memorial Gymnasium
Special Mention
Nashville, Tenn.
Hillary Proper, Danville; Lindsay R'eed,
Colorado (21·8) vs. Siena (24·5 ), 7 p.m. Millord Ctr. Fairbanks; Amanda Stevens,
Vanderbilt (21·9) vs. Idaho State (25-4), Centerburg; Jonle Miller, 8er1in Hiland;
30 minutes after previoos game
Beth Stalder, Beallsville; Tana Willis, Stras·
burg-Franklin; Kara Robinson, Zanesvll!e
WEST REQIONAL
Rosecrans; Brittany Smart, Troy Christian;
First Round
Chelsea Hill, N. Lewisburg Triad; Meta
Friday, March 16
Gerding, · Ottoville:
Sarah Conley,
At The O'Connell Center
Portsmouth East; Jennifer· Cline, Franklin
Galnesvllla, Fla.
Furnace Green; Katie Hempill, Portsmouth
Washington (19-9) vs. Old Dominion Clay: Stacie Watson, Rudsvllla Ent·
(21·8), s p.m.
ern; Tana Richey, Bedlord Chane!; Rachel
Florida (23·5) vs. Holy Cross (21·8), 30 Moore, Bedford Chanel; Jennifer Matsko,
minutes after previous game
Fairport Harbor Hardin"g: Quinn Szente,
Saturday, March 17
At Cameron Indoor Sladlum
Durham, N.C.
Baylor (21·8) vs. Arkansas (19·12},
11 :07 a.m.
·
Duke {28·3) vs. Wisconsln·MIIwaukee
(19·10), 30 minute's after previous gar'ne
At The Brown Athletic Center
PIICIIaWiy, N.J.
Southwest Missouri Stale (25-5) vs.
roledo (25·5), 6:05p.m.
Rutgort (22-7) vs. Stephen F. Auslln
(26-6), 30 minutes after previous game
At Tho Lloyd Noblo Contor

· .11), 30 minutes after previo us game
Michigan State (24·4) vs. Alabama
Stale (22·8), 7:40p.m. ·
, Callfomla (20·10) vs. Fresno State (25·
6), 30 minutes after previous game
·
•·.
• At The Louisiana Superdome
NewOrleans .
:· TaKas (25-8) vs. Temple (21-12), 12:30
,p.m.
Florida (23-6) vs. Westem Kentucky
(24·6), 30 minutes after previous game
Penn State (19·11) vs. Providence (21·
9), 7:50p.m.
North Carolina (25-6) vs. Princeton (16·
• 10), 30 minutes after previous game
S.condRaund
Sundly, March 11
At The Pyramid
Mo"'''hlo, Tonn.
, . Oklahoma·lndlana State winner vs. VIr·
' glnla-Gonzaga winner, 2:15p.m.
. • Michigan State-Alabama State winner
vs. Camomia·Fresno State Yt'lnner, 30 minutes after previous game
Norman, Okla.
At The LaUIIIIna Superdomt
Oklahoma (28·5) vs. Oral Roberts (20·
New Orlan•
· Florida-Western· Kentucky winner vs. 10), 7:30 p.m.
George Washington (22·9) vs. Stanford
·.TeK&amp;s·Temple winner, 2:30p.m.
• North Carollna-Prlrlceton winner vs. {18·10).- 30 minutes after previous game
·Penn State-Providence winner, 30 minutes
' .$fter prevtous game

!

"Not careless. More than the wrong score posted for
reached the state finals by
beating
Hamler
Patrick anything, it was youth," said most of the fourth quarter.
Henry.
Patrick Henry coach Rick
With 2:47 remaining, and
The Lady Warriors (26-0) Schwiebert, whose teani con- Regina leading 64-50, play
won for the 51st time in their sists of eight sophomqres, four was halted for about 10 minlast 52 games, with the only juniors and one seniqr. "They . utes so the scoreboard, which
setback
coming
against were hustle mistakes.f
incorrectly read 62-52, could
Bluffton in last season's semis.
Sarah Burgess scpred 22 be changed.
Harvey, who scored 10 points, and Ari Moore and
Regina fans spent the time
points, had four of them on . Siedah Williams each scored chanting ''Fix the score,'' then
. consecutive layups to give the 18 for Regina (24-3) in its gave the scoreboard operator
Lady' Warriors a 42-41 lead victory
over
Cihcinnati a standing ovation when the
with 2:51 to play. She then Wyoming (22-4).
problem was fixed. ·
got the rebound on Nikki
The Royals' defense was
Worried his team would
Zgela's missed 3-pointer, and dominant as the Cowboys squander its lead, Diulus
Burrows scored "inside i:o comn1itted 25 turnovers, nine pulled his players off the floor
make it 44-41.
by point guard Monica three times during the delay.
Harvey made four straight Hayles, and shot just 22-of-63
"It was such a long delay,"
fre·e throws in the closing sec- (35 percent) from the floor. he said. "It was a pivotal situonds to give Eastern Brown a Burgess had eight steals, most ation."
six-point lead.
by intercepting ·passes.
The Division I and IV
''[ knew she'd pull it · "We
didn't
execute," semifinals are Friday at Value
through for us in the end," Wyoming coach Deb Gentile City Arena. Beavercreek. plays
Eastern
Brown
coach said. "Their trap hurt us. Cleveland East Tech and ToleRichard Kiser said.
When you rely on the over- do Central Catholic takes on
Karyn Creager and Becca head pass against a trap, that's Dayton Chaminade-Julienne
Flowers each scored 15 points not what you want. That was in the big-school division,
·
(or the Lady Patriots (21-5), . one of the keys."
while Bedford Chane! meets
who ·did not draw the wrath
The game wasn't perfect for Jackson· Center and Worof their coach despite com- Regina. Royals coach Pat thington Christian faces Holmitting 25 turnovers with no Diulus was upset with the gate in the small-school
assists.
scoreboard operator, who had match ups.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

,,

''

�•

Friday, March 16, 2001

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

540 Mlac:ellaneoua

From the
Backyard ...

Merchandise
SOC AL SECURITY OISAB LITY
C alm Den ed? We spec alze n
appeals and Hea ngs FREE

MERCHANDISE

Household
Goods

510
All

p,,..,,.,

Glveowoy Lost &amp; Found
Yard Saltt and Wonted
To Do Ado Mull Be Pold
lnAdvonce
mtBUNE QEAQL!NE

2

Help W•nted

110

Anno~~ncoment

oo p m

the day before
the ad It to run Sunday
Monday edition 2 00 p m
Friday
SENTINEL QEAQLINE
1 00 p m the day bolora
the ad lo to run
Sunday Mondoy edftlon
1 00 p m Friday

a.

a.

BEO!STEB Q§AQL!NE.

2 dayo btlort tha ad 11 to
run by 4 30 p m Saturday
Monday edition 4 30
Thursday
Doodllnto oubltct to
chango due to holldoyo

a.

1505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING WITH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIRED 800 748 57 8 EXT
XIO
$926 WEEKLY

Make Money

11 o

Help Wanted

$987 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng

Call lnd o;, 800-892 2987

HUD FHA Mo 1gage Relunds No

Personals

Oii'Ofce s 50
9tnk uprcy 1195
Adop on 1225
No do t youi'SI r kit!
KY

Buslne~a

Training

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?

Qlllpollo c - r Colltgt

Pu 10 wo k $25th $75/h FT
Pt FREE no 800 87 8045 ext
60 www ahomeblz com

(Careers CloM To Home)

Ca Todly1740-446 43e7
I 800 2 4 0452
Reg •90 05 274B

WORK FROM HOME
$500-$ 500 pe mo PIT
'2000 18000 pe m~ Fir
No BKPtrttnce netdecl

no p ovlded

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
n e net Uselll Wan ed

S2DOO-S50001mo
wwwe commbz net

School•
Instruction

150

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Comp ehens VI affo d

800-680 9468

2353

CALL 800 263 0503 o FREE
nto ma on Bank uptey nla n TN

Posta Jobs $48 323 00 yr Now
h ng No axpar ence paid t a n
ng g eat bene! 11 ca 7 days

art 1300

pe ence naeded Qu ck COL
ranngpogamava abe Ean
S36 000 + 111 Vee 5 STAR 1
800 448 6669 E»C pe anced d v
e s 1\o d ng Class A ca 800 9e8

abe home study leg a I a n ng
s nee 890 Free Ca a og 800
826 9228 w a PO Bolt 70 .tl49

Oa

as

Government Jobt 111
533 00 pe hou potentaal
Train ng Fu Benet ts Fo
norma on ca 1 888 874

DO
Pad
mo e
9150

Ill 3234

EARN VOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
OU CKLY bach e o 1 Maste &amp;
Oocto a e by co espondence
baud 1.1pon p o educa.t on and

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

&amp;ho t study cou ae Fo FREE In
fo ma on booklet phone CAM

HE,LPI Wo k om home Ma o
de E Commerce $522+1wHk PT

BR DGE STATE UN VERSITY
800 984 8318

180 Wanted To Do

Home Every Weekend MOf'e
NO East Coas
NO Touch

legh
75o/• D op/Hook G eat Benef
Accep ng 0 de Mode Trucks

HICUBE EXPRESS
Home Every Weekend Mo e
No Ea&amp; Coast NO Touch f e gh
75% OropiHook grea Benef Ia
Accep ng Olda MOde 1i ucks

Avon Last T me Chance To 5 a

210

Up Fee Ca (740)448-3358

Business
Opportunity

75370 NA o http www blacks o
neawcom

F ee To Good Home W 1\ Room
To Run Beaut u Wh e Ge man
Shepne d Go den Ret ever M "
2 Yea s 0 d Neute ed Mate
Fr end y lnte gent (740)24!S
51 BAtte 6pm

Two 7 month old male k ens to
gOOd hOme call740 992 6363
Two Spayed Female Dogs One
3 Yea Old B ack Span el Mix
One 2Yea OdBownlabMlC
Bo h With Houses Phone

PAUL BARKER

(740)3711--2568

Yard Sale

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ndoor and Outc:loo Sa e Ma ch
1617191h AsoTrale onBua
y Ito P kelor Sata

$40 h paten Ia

Fu
atn ng
Compu e w modem requ red
CALL NOW 1 888 565 5 97 e.~~:

642

{740)448-1687

t~ay

80

Auction
and Flea Market

(740 446 8224 Must Be 8
Years &amp; H gh School o ptoma
0 GEO Requred
Acceped Mach
9 3pm

Conal uc on Supe nrendent
Nttdtcl For Stale 01 Ohio Pro ec1
M n mum Of 10 Yea a Expe lence
n Conal uctlon And 5 y.ars n
Superv11 on Aemode ng Ancl
S a e or Oh o Con act Exper

enct A P Ul Sallry Btntllll And
Bonuats Ntgot ab a Me I R1
1ume To ABGC Inc

P 0 8011

847 Ch co ht Oh o 451101 0
Ema
To
a enOabgc com
EEOIMIFN
Auct on Sunday 202 E Man
Pomeroy 2pm t ucktoad 1111 a
new I 1m1 too 1 toy1 houat
WI 11 msc ttma

PERIENCE Ll uo Iran vou n ou
qu ck c m A COL progrom Job

p acement Tuition au 1t1nce

lVI tabla Co I 877 U8 1424
Exper tnctd 0 lvtrl ct 1 800
280 0294 AC ll21SI
Won to~ To Buy U ot~ Mob It
Homo co 74D-448 om o :104
875-51M5

EMPLOYMF NT
SE fiVIC~ ',

11 0

Help Wanted

WEEKL~I Mal ng 400
b ochu eat Sallslact on Guar

12 000

antud Poa agt &amp; Supplies p o
vl~tdl

Ruah Sol Ad~ront~
Stomped Envelope! GICO DEPT
8 BOK 438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 438 Ste l lmmtd ately

EARN $500 o $900 per week n

3 ,. Suba u as Ch d en a V

loge HS D p oma 0 GEO Mull
Be 18 Yea 1 Old E•pe ence
With P eecnoot en den Pre
ltr ed Send Reaume To Pe son
net Supe v 10 R ve VIII~ COS
805 9th Sl ee Hunllngton WV

25701 Or Fax To {304)523-2878

eye ca e needs In a p og easlve

NOT rep ac ng Long crac:ks n
W ndsh aids Free v deo 1 800
826 8523 USfCanada www g ass
mechanx com

pr vate pract ce n Athens Ex
pa ence desl ed but not neces

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK

OPTOMETR C TECHN ClAN poS ton availab e ro pe son nte
ested n ass st ng patents wllh

sary This pos tton offers benet s
ate t ng sale
commensurate
with qual flcat ons App ox mate v
35 hou 1 per week nclud ng
some evenings and Satu days
Room tor c:a etr advancement I
lnte llltd send cover letter and
rtiUmt 10 The Dolly Sen! net PO

Bo&gt;c 729 94 Pomeroy Oh ~789

Overbrook Cente now hll part
t me pas ttona ev1 able to AN 1

v

In Memory
of
Kim Dent
Kiser
7/31/68.
3/17/00

800.537 9526

Building
Supplies

550

anges Skaggs App ancea 78

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE

s

Match ng Couch And Cha 150
And La ge Wooden Rock ng
Cna r S25 Good Cond ton

CREDIT EXPERTS L CENSEO

BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
SAD CRED IT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 1 888-811 0902

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 nstant v by phone
877 EARLYPAY s ADVANCE
FREE LcM750005

{304)675-4137

TURNED DOWN ON

---------•1
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
NoFeeU ~ssWeWn
688 582 3345

1

New &amp; Used Fu nllu a
New 2 P ece lv ng oom SuIts
S399 Buy Se lade

Ca o de a s 740 385 4367

New And Used Fu n u e Sto e
Below Ho day nn Kanauga we
Sa G ave Monuments And
Vases

Reduced 199 Sunsh ne S ng e

520

ONLY

5995 00

DOWN

an~

$ 99 58 a mon h moves you n o
a New 3 bed oom 2 bath hOme

w deBa 6.~~:80
Th ee&amp;Bed
Fu
hs Washe
Drysoom
Must2

lion

3 Bed oom 2 Bath No Pets
Ins de Or Outs de (740 446

7322

540 Miscellaneous

limitation o d scrlmlnat on

Commerce S 000 $7000 PT FT
Fret nfo rna on www FocuaOn
FrttciOm com 8D0-73112334

2 P om 0 asses 1 long 1 Short
S ze
Wo n Once EKce an

Cond Uon $75 00 Fo Both 080
{304)675 2515

advertisements tor rea es ale
whictl s n vlo atlon of the
aw Our readers are hereby
Informed that a dwel ngs
advert 1ed n th s newspape
are ava abe on an equa
opportun ty bas s

DELL COMPUTERS! Even with
" ' than pe feet creel I 1 800
477 9016 Code AC11 www omc
so uliOna com

pe1Rxcom 1 800.844-1427
Four Burla Spaces Mound H
Ceme e y Owned By Ralhbu n
Farn ly Phone (740)446-3565

$25 000 0

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK

oAc es AI Dead

SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
o va r om $297 to $383 Wa k to
shop &amp; mov as Cat 7.. o 448

La ge Fa mhouse on 47 Ac as
$89000 BAces$ 35000 20
Aces S 9 500 Cay Townsh p
31AcesW hS e~~+Ban
$33 000 Tycoon Lam o Acres

SR681 5Aoes $2500 7Ao
as Wlh Pole Ba n $23 500 0 6
Aces$ 8000 Ca Rd 6Aoes
$13000 0 liAces$22000
Danv 1e 5 Wooded Acres
113 500 Au aoo 9 Ac os $85001
I Owner
Pope &lt;y
Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don Have Land? WI Do Hu y

On y 10 Lo I Loh 304 738 72116

Muon Hanging Ro ck Aold 2
Eaoh Lot

ofdollaa ohepmnlmzt ha
taxtl Wr II tmmtd Ill V WINO

592 685

WORK FORM HOME Et n
$1500 pit 015000
I II rnon hi CALL TODAY 800

www

wo kfroml'lo

Fu ntohod 2 &amp; 3 Room Aport
men11 Cttan No Pall No Smok
tng Roltroncoo &amp; Dopoa r Ro
qu tid
Utll tl Furn 1tled
{74Q)441--1818
Go lpol 1 Ar11 U75 mo ptuo
~opoou Ut 1111 ncludod Ralor
oncoo Roqu ru, {7401245-55511
Grac oua IIY ng 1 and 2 btcl oom

epa tmonto 11 Vlllogt Mano and
A vora da Apo manta n Mlddlt
pori From 1278 U41 Cat 740
9a2 1014 Equo Houo ng Opper

Avtnut Gal po 1 W11t1ert

FALLS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
f88 LOS ANGELES CAL FOR
NIA 922 0

U NEED A LOAN? Try dtb1 con
10 ldlt on Cui payment a up to
60'!1 Stmo doy opprovoll 1 877
789·8 18
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conoot Gillon to $200 ooo Badl
No C od 1 Crodll Cardo Morr
- 1 1100-335-7812 ... 3822

Ory

Ta a Townhoun •P• tmtnta
Vary Spoo ouo 2 Btd oomo a
Foo 1 CA 1 1/2 Bl!th Fully Ca
ptta~ Adut Poo &amp; Bobv Pool
Po lo Sto 1 $365/Mo No Plio
Lalit Ptuo Soou ty Dopoll Rt
qui ·~ Doya 740 441 34~
Evon nga 740 387 0502 740
448.0101

{740(448 9882

3 Bedroom
er &amp; Drye New Ca pel $4!50
month Plus $200 Oepoall No
PI 1 1 M e Up Flouts 2 At G en

wood
304 578 9991
304)675 0 27

0

Tw n R vtrTowtrs now oocepting
opptlcellono lor 1 BR
HUO att&gt;ald Ztcllfll lor-ry
and d &amp;lbltcl EOH {304)875
8879

460 Space for Rent
1997 Skyl no Sh ng ed Root Has
A Appliances 2 Bet~ oom 1
Bath Heat Pump A C UnCle

pinned Alk ng 117 900 Mus1
Settt {304)875 6878
2001 Ooub ewldt Free Setup &amp;

Dtl VI y

$31 1100

And
Appl ances
see 685-0 87

SERVICES

Livestock

(304

lnlant Car

C ean Tuck

Mon o W lh TV $45
0805

1983 Chevy bus conve ed to
seeps a stove s nk $4 soo

OBO 740 992 3470

Downtown Sscond Avenue Near
Cou thouae And C Bu ding
N Cl y Otc:o lied A C. 3 Rooms
Bu d ng B~ sell 448 2nd AVI

tv

740)448-9539

ng Doors W nd

L v ngs on a Basemen Wate
P oollng a basemen epa s
done free est ma es lie me
gua an ee 14y s on job expe

once (304)895 3887

i-11 8 www orvb comilttnnett

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

Ntw &amp; Uud Eltc!r c An~ Gu
FurniC:II For 8a I Cl Fo S I
11
n1t1 lltlon
Aval ab •
{7oJC)4.1&amp;-8308 1 6D0-281 oose
NIW AND UIID ITIU Slool
Sumo Ptpo Rtbl For Conortll
Anglo Channt F 11 Bar 8tttl
G at ng Fo Oro no D lvowavo &amp;
Wllkwayo L&amp;L Scrop Mlllll
(74C)448-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
!RS A moll ovorvono opprovad
w lh 10 downl Low monlh y po~
mentol1 &amp;OD-817 34781111 330

Hoy Fo Sa t 45

Roun~

BottO

And 250 Square Ba 11 Ca I

{740 446 0118 0
7843 AMI 8 OOpm

{740)448

Hay to Salt Round Salta coo
Bolu s ooo $20 oo Squa a
9e II $2 00 2 28 {304 552 3274
Ooyo (304)875 41120 Evtntnga

0? Jeop G and Cho o&lt;n La ado
4x4 td PW Pl. c u II e c
89 000 m too boo&lt; to S 8 300
uk ng $13 500 740 742 7200 o
740 742 2875

740

RCA 13 Inch Bad oom Co or TV
w lh Ltghrtd Romola Llko Now
1100 Cril {74C)oll5-1188

Motorcycle•

1Q98 Yahama Wo ve lne 4x4
New Vamp ra T res Jua Albu t

Ntw B lkll Powe K {740 4454025

Toppon HI Ell clonoy 8011 Goo

s..r

Hul Pump 6 A r Condit on ng
Byattma Frtt V11r Wa anty
Bonnllto Hooting &amp; Coo 1ng, 1
800 872 511e7 www orvb ooorvbtn

a

1999 2!50 Honda Fltcon 4
Whll 1
For Sa 1 $2300

"'"

{304 773 8185

IAYII IAY!I UV!I Hut
Pumpo L P 6 Nlluro Qu Fur
ntcll It You Don I Ca I Ul Wt
Bolh LOll (740)448 8308 &amp;
1 800-281.0018
Sowm 113 785 Now Super Lum
bt ma a 2000 ta gt oaptc tltt
mort option• Manufactu 1 of

sawmills edge • and skldde 1
NORWOOD NDUSTRIEB 262
Sonw Dr vt Buffalo NY 14225
FREE lnlormotlon 1 800 578
13113 EXT 200-U

1999 Honde CR2150 Excelen

Cond 1on Aok ng $3500
44 1890

8891

71 o Autos for Sele
$0 DOWN CARS POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; REP OSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEP S LOW AS 129
MO S e 9 9% FOR LIST NGS

92 Geo Metro Good work Car
$700 Ani quo HlfYard Up lght
Plano

1967 Cad lac F eetwood 75 46K
M lea B aok Good Condll on

$2&amp;0

{740)07-!5827
ALL STEEL BUILD NQS Now up
o &amp;0% oft P e engine• td wlln
pan• 40KIIOK 0 wao $18 500 now
$9 990 501100114 ••• $35 1100
now $17 990 80X125X14

wu

$51 500 now 134990 1 800 248
11840

740)

2000 Honda Fo eman 4150ES
4K4 Undl 200 M •• Parlee
Cond on S4700 Ca (740 256

TRANSPORTATION

CALL 1 800 4!i 1 0050 ax

Bench

Man

6323

n•c••
Mobllt Homo Supply 740 448

With

Home

mob e home epa and mo a Fo
f ee 9&amp;1 mae ca Che 740 992

owt Ancho • Wate Heate s
Plumb ng &amp; Eltct 01 Partl Fur
&amp; Heat Pumps Bennet a

Furnace• 011 Fu niCII , 2

Gene a

tenence Pa nl ng v ny s d ng
ea ptn ry doo s w ndows ba hs

Huge nvtnlory 0 1count Pr caa

On Vlny 8k

Uncon d ona le me gua an ee
Loca efe ences u n shed Es
ab Shed 1975 Ca 24 H s 740)
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rag
e 5Wae poo ng
C&amp;C

800-537 9528

Home
Improvements
eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

$ 0 500

RV

JET

810

675 61 56

730 Vans &amp; 4 WDs

Seat

~IIIOINTIAL HOMI OWNI~I

or Hook up 1270 mo Ptuo Dt
pool wort Pokl {740)448-4043
Ahor500c&gt;m

tng Eon $1000 $7000 month
PT1FT Call nowl 1 IN 89a 0901
wn u nbuckllfromnomt com

donora ea n $4S to $SO ror 2 o 3
hou 1 week y Cell Sea Tee 74o-

opo bntnl tn M ~~teporr call 740-

992 5231

Ono 8odroom Aporrmthl On 111

WORK FROM HOME! Qrow ng

URGENTLY NEEDED ptaoma

ant one bedroom fu n lhtd

4411-0008

lntt nttlona Company expend

HI p wan ed n adult group home
~•v aoo night oh n cott 740 992
5023

Fo

Now Tt&lt;tng App ICII ono- 38
Wtot 2 Bod oom Townhou11
Apa tmtnta
ncludtl Water
Sowago, Troon 1380 Mo 740

lntormallon

(740)441-9531

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

N ct 2 Bod room Rtttrtncr &amp;
Dopo~l No Polo {304)878 5182

flENTALS

W th
Expando Room Eve ylh ng Ready
To Go Camp ng Ron Shae s

M le5

Call Ron evans

WORK FROM HOME! El n
$500 17000 month PT FT Fu

$ FREE CASH NOW$ 1om
woalhy lomttlla untot~ ng m tono

630

AERAnON MOTORS
Repa ·~ New &amp; Aebu In S ock

Melga Co Tuppe P a ns

94 Dutchman Camper 3

1950 s &amp; 1960 s 45 33 RPM
Raco ds
OJ Sto e
S ock
Co eel ons (937)675 2930 A. e
6 OOpm

Mazada B2500 2WD 4Cyt nde
5Speed Spo t Whee s AM FM
CO T
C u se A C 25 000

2568 Equa Houolng Opportunity

$12 000

995 SC:hu
6J80 3 Bedroom
2 Bath
Sharp Home $21 500
Kanuaga Mob e Home Sa 11

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

620 Wanted to Buy

{740)441 5216 (Day) (740f446
010 {EYOn ngsf

end S27 000 Chesh e Nk:e

Profe111onal
Services

790

Ua•d lift Tuck Fo lis $25 $7.5
Pe Set 3 P H ch L ts W tl'l
Va ous Fo k Lengths $200

720 Second Avenue 1 Bed oom
Upsta s Apa tment $300 De
pos Wa er Sewe Trash f'a d

www 1na nurdreama com

em• com

on All pet med cations and sup
pie&amp; Inc ud ng Haangard lnle
capto Frontline mo e 1 FREE
SHIPPING 0 de on ne www Ez

304 697 5927

Footory Goot 32x80 $10 000 01
counl on y $1000 00 Down De
very and •etup pa d by F1ctory
-IIOD-ell1 6777

230

3765

EZPETRX COM Save up o 50%

60 Aces n Mason County C ty
Wa e Na u a Sp ng C eek
Runn ng Th ough AI eady Tim
be ed Ready Fo Sp ng Dreams
To Come
T ue
$50 000

tunltl"

Fret

NH415 D scb ne Less Than 200
Acres $ 1 ooo (304)937 3435

Each (740 379-2757

Bu d ng Lots 1 5 Ao "

Tan ng

WE FINANCE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced T anamlnlona
A
Types Access To Ove
o cooT ansm 55 on5 T an51e
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce 339

1se7

$2 0000 5AcesW hPond
$25 000 R o G ande SceniC
P IV&amp;te a Ac as w lh Pond

WOMEN S ANSWER TO VIA
ORA Ob Gyn o 11 1~ Pot1n1od
Huge comm111 ont 81 •• Fltpl
Wanted nvattmtnl Required 1
1181 2011-0288

760

Big screen TV Take on small
monthly paymenls Good c:red
II roqulrtd Phone 1 800 711COMPUTERS

Moto and

] a e 5450 (740)3711--2706

{304)675 3824

Coun V Wall AVI lblt C tltld
Land Ca I Some v lit Ae1 ty
{304)675 3030 {304)875 3431

Phyo~tan 1 Omot Nttda Full1tmo
S· Aoy Ttohn clan Pltttt Crop
Ruumo At 3008 Jockaon Avo
Po nl Ploooont WV 2se110

One Man Bass Boa

6 N Ford T ac o Has Been Re
sto ed Ga dne s 0 earn $2500

1 800'45 0500 Ext C98 7

BRUNER LAND
{'740f441 1492
Ga eCo Ke Rd 6Aces

320 Mobile Home•
lor Sale

750 Boats &amp; Molors
for Sale

Please Call for Ust ngs

800 50 1 777 ext 98 3

Ohio Owno Mull Sot Due To 11
ntiO {740)448-7473

11 333 Pogo Strttl
Mt~~ oporl Ohto Como Jon ou
wonde lu ttam ot prol111 one a
1odayl E 0 E

POSTAL JOBS to $18 35 hr
WILDLIFE JOBS o 121 80/hr In
cludll Benet • No Exper enct
NICIIII y For Appllcat on and
EKim nlo cell 800 982 7054
K208 M F 8 30.8 OOpm

AUTOS FROM $500 00
Pot ce llfl)Oun~s &amp; Repos
Toyotas Chevy's Jeeps!

REAL ESTATE

Flenta Prope ty 3 Lots N ce 3BA
Housel On Each Co ne Lot eo
V1cant Lot tn M dd e co ner or
Rand &amp; Pe ch S tel Kanagua

Find it all
in the
Classifieas!

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Merchandise

make any such preference

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK

o~oy

885 0218 o
me247 com

Sporting
Goods

Se $13 900 OBO {740)379 9236

An real estate advert s ng n
th s newspaper s subject to
the Fede a Fa r Hcus ng Act
ol1968 wh ch makes t !legal
to advertiSe any preference
mllat on or d sertm nation
based on ace co or re g on
H&gt;C famll+al status or na ona
ortg n or any Intent on to

To the Big City

How Willi Be
Remembered

V nt Sl eer Ca 740 446 7396
1686660128

www debtccs o g (Non Prof )

AT HOME Bu ld your own sue
ceuful bua neat Mall o de E

many caring ataff membtra and 1
1 bHut ful flclllly Wt lnv 11 your
to atop tnd comp 111 1n appiiCI

Fret tnlo1mo on {414)290-8800
www l'lom•bu• neaa sya

0

In Memory

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio

lonad Wllh

QOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera d v• s 1 lga a o s

F eedom Ch a an Counse ng
800 84 1 9757
ext
CC3

AT HOME Bu ld your own sue
cessful bus ness Mall D de E
Comme ce $ 000 $7000 PT FT
F ee nlo ma on www FocuaOn
Freedom com 800.736 2334

and LPN 1 Ovtrorook Con11 hoo

EARN $1200 IHOO month porU

ttc eom 1 877 338 4072

Reco~d

payments Pay one b mon h
EASY o ge sa ed F nanc al

Earn $90 000 YEARLY repa tng

ful I me Work I om home Ex
pending compan~ nndl htlp

FINALLY A LEGIT MATE HOME
BUS NESSI Btcome 1 h ghty paid
agar or med ca tranacr btr cod
• o b • In aa tt e aa 1o
wetkl F nanclng ava able mid

Fo Sale

Thompaona App ance 3407
Jackson Avarut 304 675-7388

you ba h obe &amp; sl ppe s G ea
oppor un ty o secu e your tu u e
Low nves ment 1 BOO 272 0 93
awOsomea n ngs com

Or Ylrl PAM T anapo I No IX
per ence needed 2 Weak COL
Tro ntng $34 000 y pluo Fu 1
btnolllo &amp; Pold Tro nlng Drlvoro
baaed n M ~wtol 1 BH 230
3002 Sunday 8om 4pm Monday
7om-epm 1\Jo Fn 7em &lt;4pm

Fa m Hand Needed Exp1 lence
P tit ed Hou ly Pay Vacat on &amp;
Benef A e 1 Yea Sand Re
sume To EB13 200 Man S reet
Point Pleasant wv 25!50

740-446-7795

CONSOLIOATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBT Reduce mon h y

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES
SO OR LOW DOWN TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIE S OK
CAED Tl FOR LISTING CALL

Own A Computot?
Pu1 I To World
1211- 178/hr PT FT
1 see see.43ll&amp;
wwwb-hop com

0 vtro BIQ MONEY NO EX

Appl ances
Recond oned
Waahe 1 D ye a Ranges Re r
grato 1 Up To 90 Days Gua
an aed We Se -New May ag Ap
planets F ench C ty May ag

tn d ye a and at ga ato s

OWN A COMPUTER? Put II to
work 128 178/hour Frot Dolo 1
Whllra n www 811ouccooo oom

Now ht tng lor drivers at Domino o
Pizza In Pomtrcv Stop n ra an
IPP Ice on o cat74C 118U124

Don I fel IIUOf l&gt;y h g~ ptK&lt;S I
Shop tht clan (itd '"'""'

WITHTH!:

3379

Appllca ons
619&amp; 20h

v

7th

(740)448 68 4

SO DOWN HOMESI GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT FOR L ST NGS CALL
1 8D0-338 0020 ell 981

M ss Pau a s Day Care Center

exce ent nco me Easy calms
p ocess ng Fu t an ng Home
PC equ ed Ca I Phys c an &amp;
Hea thea a Developments o
1 ee I 8D0-772 5933 8K 2070

CLAIMS PROCESSOR
P ocess cia ms f om home $20

N~hll

310 Homes for Sale

CAREER OPPORTUN TYI Earn

MOVING SALE 1 M e West Of
Aodnev On 588 F day 6th &amp;

Salu

MERCHANDISER Pa I T me
Me chand se Needed To Me
chand se Magaz nes And Data
Co lac on n Po me oy Ga lpo s
Area 1 Day per Week (Monday
$7 25 hour+ $ 29 M e Please
Ca 1 800 279 3787 voce Ma 1
box M68 8

ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money through he
rna. unt I you have nves ga ed
the ot e ng

Ohio 'llllty Pullttohtng
825THIRD AVENUE
GALUPOUS OH 46131

Lost and Found

Found Female Beag e State Ao
Uti 775 Wea ng Leathe Colla
Eng avad w h Name Lady Call

OAC Fom$2500$125000 9 •
Average a e One nou app ova
Ca F C C S oil sa 1 800 605

Clrcuiltlon Dlreclor

1740)448-7025 Al1e epm

60

INOTICEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH NG CD
recommends thai you do bus

CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Ava abe n Ou C cukatiOn
Marke ng Oepa tmen
Are you look ng o a u 11 me
post on lha o ers oppo un ty o
advancemen ? Do you en oy
wonc ng w th youtl'l? Oo you enjoy
sales? Do you enjoy be ng c ea
live? Do you ha'.le dependab e
t anspo a on? If so you cou d
be he pe son we ara looking fort
Pos lion offe s al company
bene! s nc ud ng hea 1'1 and fe
nsu ance 4 OK p6an pa d hoi
d~s and vacatiOn plan
Fo nlerv ew considera ion
send you esume wlh a br ef
cove etta tell ng us why you a e
the person we are look ng lo to

&lt;eoos

know ngly accept

FREE Ca a og 800 826 9228
w e P:O Bo»C 701449 Oa as TX

Pupp es

CONSOLIDATE BILLS LOANS

Th s newspaper: w 1not

proved A o dable comp ehen
s ve ega anng ance1890

(304)891 3255

Gal po s 752 3 d Avenue $300
Month 3 Bedroom Ba h Frame
House Gas Hea No Pets We•

1 80D-2D0-2823

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home S udy Ap

Free M xed Breed

tAV

52 0 ve

s

FINANCIAL

Giveaway

Room House

Even111gs

BOO 200 2823

40

Fou

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H CUBE EXPRESS

30 Announcements

r()u~

www b ack&amp;tone aw com

11000 $4000 wk 800 921 8538
FT www drtam2blrea com

ASSEMBLY AT HOME I Cralls
Toys Jewe y Wood Saw ng
Typ ng G eat Payt CALL 1 800
795-0380 Exl201 {24h s)

199

PlJIIl
I'UU'\\J\JtFIEEJS

140

343 DRIVERS NEEDED I No OK

005

$2500
Day (740f44
Even ng (740 258-6430

Sl ee phone (740)+48-3945

800 429-3680 ell J 365

Expa ence Raqu ad Fo FREE
nlo mat on Ca 1 800 !501 6832

1i a n

C use Runs Good

..

EARN TO $500 PER WEEK PT

hrs 1 1 800 449-4625 E• 5700

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Avo A

•d mmed ate v Home compute
needed FREE nte net 1 800
291 4683 Dep • 09

FTI Se v ce new and establ sl'led
Fuller B usn cuatome a n ocal
a ea No doo o doo tqu ad
FREE ata It IUPI)I 11 ava table

Help ng Paop e Reca ve Gove n
men Refunds F •• Details {24

Che11y Cava e Z24 V6

410 Houses for Rent

Professional
Services

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000/YR
Med ca nsu anee 811 ng Need

CONSULTATION
BENEF IT
TEAM SERV CES INC TOLL
FREE I 888 836-4052

199

C

9812

{304)875-6878
1970 Buck GS 455 Re s o Btl e

Cor S1500 {7 40)379 2424

Public Notlot

{304)875 2428

Public Notice

o1tu1111n tht VIllage ol
Raolnt Townehlp ol
Sutton County ol
Mel go and Still ol
Ohio bounded and
deaorlbod •• follow•
Lot No Forty eight
(48) In the Vllfage o
Orlhlm Station u
rtoordtd In Dt1d
Book a Page 308 lr
the Record ol tho
Melge
County
Aocordor 1 Ollloo In
the VIllage of Aeclnt
Molgo County Ohio
being 821ett wldl ond
111 !tat dtap
And
being tho 11mt
property conveyed bl
Loultt L Stowart and
William D Stewort htr
huebend to Lillian
Prollltt by dud dated
February 3 1948 and
rtcordtd In Volume
Book 158 et Page 548
ol tho Dud Recordo
ol Melgo County Ohio
SAVE AND EXCEPT
195a 0 oquare fttt 11
conveyed to Roclnt
Homo Netlonel eenk
by dud recorded In
Volume 264 Page 603
ol tht Melgt County
Dlld Aocordo
pARCEL NQ. 1
PARCEL NO 2
The
following
Situate
In
tho
dtocrl bed rul ootalt

NOTICE OF SAL!!
lly vlrtuo of an
Ordor ol Salt luutd
out ot thl Common
PI••• court ot Melgo
County OhiO In the
oau of tht Former•
Bank
81vlngo
Company Plaintiff va
Lllh R ROlf dbl
Bunehlnt Video &amp;
Tanning
II
II
Doltndlnto upon •
Judgmont lhtrtln
rtndtred being CUI
No oo-cv 123 In eeld
Court thl Bhtrlll ol
Melge County Ohio
will offer lor aale ot
the front door ol tht
Courthouu
In
Pomtroy
Mel g •
County Ohio on the
13th day ol April 200t
ot 10 00 1m
tho
following Ianda ond
tonemento locattd 11
308 Third Strllt
A•clnt OH 45771 A
comploto
legal
dllcrlptlon ol tho rttl
81111111 I I IOIIOWI
Situated In lh&lt;
VIllage ol Racine
County ol Melga end
Sllttt ol Ohio

a.

I

1986 Pont ac Trans Am $3500

What will they
say about me,
Those whom I
hold so dear
What will they
remember when
I'm no longer
here?
Will they recall
mistakes I've
made,
Battles I've never
won?
Moments of pam
I've caused
them,
Thmgs I have left
undone?
Will they censor
my human
fa1hngs,
And w1sh I'd
been noble and
strong?
W1ll they scoff at
the hopes I've
mustered,
Tbe dreams that
somehow went
wrong?
Or will they be
moved w1th
compassiOn
Directed from
heaven above?
rro temper there
judgement w1th
kindness And
soften there
memories w1th
love
But son, no
matter how I
remember you,
It will always be
with love
Just wa1tmg till
He calls me
To be with you
above.
Remembered by
family and
friends with love

and everywhere m between the
newspaper ts THE place to ftnd the
stones that are Important to you and
your commumty

You II always be m the know w1th a
newsparer suoscnpt1on We ve got the
goods to keep you tnformed
en lightened and entertamed every day
Call today for a subscnpt1on

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • 992-2155
110 Help Wanted
'

MANAGEMENT
Established local company looking to 11115
enlry-level management positions
Associates degree or management
experience Solid people skills organizational
skills ond self motivation are a must
$23-$30k to start
Benefits and 401 K plan available

I -888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Development Group/Millennium teleservlces

110 Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center currently has openlnga for LPN s
Twelve hour shifts Competitive salary baaed
on market Excellent benefltl
Contact Human Resources at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
2520 Valley Drive
pt Pleasant WV 25550
Or FAX to (304) 675·8975 AA/EOE

Public Notlct
Towne hlp of Sutton
County of Melgo and
Stitt
of
Ohio
bound • d
1 nd
ducrlbtd fllollowo
Bltuato In Bohool
Section 1 Town 2
Range 12 Sutton
Townohlp VIllage ol
Raolne Melgt County
Ohio and being all ol
Lot numbor 55 In the
Village ol Graham
Stlllon 11 recordod In
Dtad eook a Page
308 In the Aeoordo ol
tho Melgt County
Recorder 1 Olllct and
being more tully
dtlcrlbed 11 followo
Beginning at an Iron
poot In the oouthwut
property corntr end
the exlatlng taaterly
right of way line ol
Third Strtot thence
North 0•12 30 Eaot
along tho weat lint ol
uld Lot Number 55
and tho Grantore Wtll
proptrty lint an tho
exlotlng uottrly right
ol way lint of Third
Strttt 82
tell to an
Iron pin In the
northwut corntr ol
eald Lot Number 55
and the Grantor 1
north proptrty lint

a

oo

Public Notice
120 DO lttl (118 fttt
on Plat) to an Iron pin
In the norlhtut
corner of uld Lot 55
and the Grontor 1
north tnt proptrty
corner thanco South
0°12 30 Wto1 elong
tho 1111 llno of oald
Lot Number 58 and tho
Grantor 1
t o1t
property lint 82 00
ltat to an Iron pin In
the aoutheoot corntr
ol oald Lot Numbtr 55
and tho Grantor 1
eoutheut property
corntr
and
tho
txlotlng northtrly
right ol way lint of en
unnomed olloy thence
north 88'47 30 woot
along tho oouth lint ol
uld Lot Number 55
and the Grantors
oouth proporty line
end txlotlng northerly
right ol woy lint ol on
unnamed ellty 120 oo
lut (119 00 lttl en
Plat) to lht point ol
beginning contelnlng
7 440 equare lttt
Subltc1 to all legal
hlghwoyo
end
1111ment1 of record
Grontor clolmo title
by dttd of rocord ao
rtcordtd In Dt1d

Public Notice
Book 238 Peg• 801
and $43 In tho rocorde
ol the Molge County
Recorder 1 Ollie•
Ducrlptlon lor the
above tract being the
rttUitl ol I IUfVIY
modt by Alchord C
alttgow R S No
5t61
Rtltrence Dted
Volume 79 Page 787
Molgo County Ol!lclal
Rtcordo
Auditor 1
Parcel
NOI 19-00521 000 19
00522 000 ond 19
00523 000
PROPERTY
ADDRESS 308 Third
Strut Raclnt OH
4sn1
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT
$45 000 00 Tho nal
estate cannot bt 1old
1or 1111 than two

thlrdo tho opprolud

value
TEAMS OF SAL!;
10% down dey of oale
balance on delivery ol
dtad Sold tubjoct to
occrued reel oatete

tax••

Douglao W Little
Attornoy lor Plaintiff
3(9) 3(18) 3(23

'

�•

Friday, March 16, 2001

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

540 Mlac:ellaneoua

From the
Backyard ...

Merchandise
SOC AL SECURITY OISAB LITY
C alm Den ed? We spec alze n
appeals and Hea ngs FREE

MERCHANDISE

Household
Goods

510
All

p,,..,,.,

Glveowoy Lost &amp; Found
Yard Saltt and Wonted
To Do Ado Mull Be Pold
lnAdvonce
mtBUNE QEAQL!NE

2

Help W•nted

110

Anno~~ncoment

oo p m

the day before
the ad It to run Sunday
Monday edition 2 00 p m
Friday
SENTINEL QEAQLINE
1 00 p m the day bolora
the ad lo to run
Sunday Mondoy edftlon
1 00 p m Friday

a.

a.

BEO!STEB Q§AQL!NE.

2 dayo btlort tha ad 11 to
run by 4 30 p m Saturday
Monday edition 4 30
Thursday
Doodllnto oubltct to
chango due to holldoyo

a.

1505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING WITH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIRED 800 748 57 8 EXT
XIO
$926 WEEKLY

Make Money

11 o

Help Wanted

$987 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng

Call lnd o;, 800-892 2987

HUD FHA Mo 1gage Relunds No

Personals

Oii'Ofce s 50
9tnk uprcy 1195
Adop on 1225
No do t youi'SI r kit!
KY

Buslne~a

Training

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?

Qlllpollo c - r Colltgt

Pu 10 wo k $25th $75/h FT
Pt FREE no 800 87 8045 ext
60 www ahomeblz com

(Careers CloM To Home)

Ca Todly1740-446 43e7
I 800 2 4 0452
Reg •90 05 274B

WORK FROM HOME
$500-$ 500 pe mo PIT
'2000 18000 pe m~ Fir
No BKPtrttnce netdecl

no p ovlded

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
n e net Uselll Wan ed

S2DOO-S50001mo
wwwe commbz net

School•
Instruction

150

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Comp ehens VI affo d

800-680 9468

2353

CALL 800 263 0503 o FREE
nto ma on Bank uptey nla n TN

Posta Jobs $48 323 00 yr Now
h ng No axpar ence paid t a n
ng g eat bene! 11 ca 7 days

art 1300

pe ence naeded Qu ck COL
ranngpogamava abe Ean
S36 000 + 111 Vee 5 STAR 1
800 448 6669 E»C pe anced d v
e s 1\o d ng Class A ca 800 9e8

abe home study leg a I a n ng
s nee 890 Free Ca a og 800
826 9228 w a PO Bolt 70 .tl49

Oa

as

Government Jobt 111
533 00 pe hou potentaal
Train ng Fu Benet ts Fo
norma on ca 1 888 874

DO
Pad
mo e
9150

Ill 3234

EARN VOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
OU CKLY bach e o 1 Maste &amp;
Oocto a e by co espondence
baud 1.1pon p o educa.t on and

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

&amp;ho t study cou ae Fo FREE In
fo ma on booklet phone CAM

HE,LPI Wo k om home Ma o
de E Commerce $522+1wHk PT

BR DGE STATE UN VERSITY
800 984 8318

180 Wanted To Do

Home Every Weekend MOf'e
NO East Coas
NO Touch

legh
75o/• D op/Hook G eat Benef
Accep ng 0 de Mode Trucks

HICUBE EXPRESS
Home Every Weekend Mo e
No Ea&amp; Coast NO Touch f e gh
75% OropiHook grea Benef Ia
Accep ng Olda MOde 1i ucks

Avon Last T me Chance To 5 a

210

Up Fee Ca (740)448-3358

Business
Opportunity

75370 NA o http www blacks o
neawcom

F ee To Good Home W 1\ Room
To Run Beaut u Wh e Ge man
Shepne d Go den Ret ever M "
2 Yea s 0 d Neute ed Mate
Fr end y lnte gent (740)24!S
51 BAtte 6pm

Two 7 month old male k ens to
gOOd hOme call740 992 6363
Two Spayed Female Dogs One
3 Yea Old B ack Span el Mix
One 2Yea OdBownlabMlC
Bo h With Houses Phone

PAUL BARKER

(740)3711--2568

Yard Sale

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ndoor and Outc:loo Sa e Ma ch
1617191h AsoTrale onBua
y Ito P kelor Sata

$40 h paten Ia

Fu
atn ng
Compu e w modem requ red
CALL NOW 1 888 565 5 97 e.~~:

642

{740)448-1687

t~ay

80

Auction
and Flea Market

(740 446 8224 Must Be 8
Years &amp; H gh School o ptoma
0 GEO Requred
Acceped Mach
9 3pm

Conal uc on Supe nrendent
Nttdtcl For Stale 01 Ohio Pro ec1
M n mum Of 10 Yea a Expe lence
n Conal uctlon And 5 y.ars n
Superv11 on Aemode ng Ancl
S a e or Oh o Con act Exper

enct A P Ul Sallry Btntllll And
Bonuats Ntgot ab a Me I R1
1ume To ABGC Inc

P 0 8011

847 Ch co ht Oh o 451101 0
Ema
To
a enOabgc com
EEOIMIFN
Auct on Sunday 202 E Man
Pomeroy 2pm t ucktoad 1111 a
new I 1m1 too 1 toy1 houat
WI 11 msc ttma

PERIENCE Ll uo Iran vou n ou
qu ck c m A COL progrom Job

p acement Tuition au 1t1nce

lVI tabla Co I 877 U8 1424
Exper tnctd 0 lvtrl ct 1 800
280 0294 AC ll21SI
Won to~ To Buy U ot~ Mob It
Homo co 74D-448 om o :104
875-51M5

EMPLOYMF NT
SE fiVIC~ ',

11 0

Help Wanted

WEEKL~I Mal ng 400
b ochu eat Sallslact on Guar

12 000

antud Poa agt &amp; Supplies p o
vl~tdl

Ruah Sol Ad~ront~
Stomped Envelope! GICO DEPT
8 BOK 438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 438 Ste l lmmtd ately

EARN $500 o $900 per week n

3 ,. Suba u as Ch d en a V

loge HS D p oma 0 GEO Mull
Be 18 Yea 1 Old E•pe ence
With P eecnoot en den Pre
ltr ed Send Reaume To Pe son
net Supe v 10 R ve VIII~ COS
805 9th Sl ee Hunllngton WV

25701 Or Fax To {304)523-2878

eye ca e needs In a p og easlve

NOT rep ac ng Long crac:ks n
W ndsh aids Free v deo 1 800
826 8523 USfCanada www g ass
mechanx com

pr vate pract ce n Athens Ex
pa ence desl ed but not neces

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK

OPTOMETR C TECHN ClAN poS ton availab e ro pe son nte
ested n ass st ng patents wllh

sary This pos tton offers benet s
ate t ng sale
commensurate
with qual flcat ons App ox mate v
35 hou 1 per week nclud ng
some evenings and Satu days
Room tor c:a etr advancement I
lnte llltd send cover letter and
rtiUmt 10 The Dolly Sen! net PO

Bo&gt;c 729 94 Pomeroy Oh ~789

Overbrook Cente now hll part
t me pas ttona ev1 able to AN 1

v

In Memory
of
Kim Dent
Kiser
7/31/68.
3/17/00

800.537 9526

Building
Supplies

550

anges Skaggs App ancea 78

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE

s

Match ng Couch And Cha 150
And La ge Wooden Rock ng
Cna r S25 Good Cond ton

CREDIT EXPERTS L CENSEO

BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
SAD CRED IT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 1 888-811 0902

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 nstant v by phone
877 EARLYPAY s ADVANCE
FREE LcM750005

{304)675-4137

TURNED DOWN ON

---------•1
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
NoFeeU ~ssWeWn
688 582 3345

1

New &amp; Used Fu nllu a
New 2 P ece lv ng oom SuIts
S399 Buy Se lade

Ca o de a s 740 385 4367

New And Used Fu n u e Sto e
Below Ho day nn Kanauga we
Sa G ave Monuments And
Vases

Reduced 199 Sunsh ne S ng e

520

ONLY

5995 00

DOWN

an~

$ 99 58 a mon h moves you n o
a New 3 bed oom 2 bath hOme

w deBa 6.~~:80
Th ee&amp;Bed
Fu
hs Washe
Drysoom
Must2

lion

3 Bed oom 2 Bath No Pets
Ins de Or Outs de (740 446

7322

540 Miscellaneous

limitation o d scrlmlnat on

Commerce S 000 $7000 PT FT
Fret nfo rna on www FocuaOn
FrttciOm com 8D0-73112334

2 P om 0 asses 1 long 1 Short
S ze
Wo n Once EKce an

Cond Uon $75 00 Fo Both 080
{304)675 2515

advertisements tor rea es ale
whictl s n vlo atlon of the
aw Our readers are hereby
Informed that a dwel ngs
advert 1ed n th s newspape
are ava abe on an equa
opportun ty bas s

DELL COMPUTERS! Even with
" ' than pe feet creel I 1 800
477 9016 Code AC11 www omc
so uliOna com

pe1Rxcom 1 800.844-1427
Four Burla Spaces Mound H
Ceme e y Owned By Ralhbu n
Farn ly Phone (740)446-3565

$25 000 0

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK

oAc es AI Dead

SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
o va r om $297 to $383 Wa k to
shop &amp; mov as Cat 7.. o 448

La ge Fa mhouse on 47 Ac as
$89000 BAces$ 35000 20
Aces S 9 500 Cay Townsh p
31AcesW hS e~~+Ban
$33 000 Tycoon Lam o Acres

SR681 5Aoes $2500 7Ao
as Wlh Pole Ba n $23 500 0 6
Aces$ 8000 Ca Rd 6Aoes
$13000 0 liAces$22000
Danv 1e 5 Wooded Acres
113 500 Au aoo 9 Ac os $85001
I Owner
Pope &lt;y
Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don Have Land? WI Do Hu y

On y 10 Lo I Loh 304 738 72116

Muon Hanging Ro ck Aold 2
Eaoh Lot

ofdollaa ohepmnlmzt ha
taxtl Wr II tmmtd Ill V WINO

592 685

WORK FORM HOME Et n
$1500 pit 015000
I II rnon hi CALL TODAY 800

www

wo kfroml'lo

Fu ntohod 2 &amp; 3 Room Aport
men11 Cttan No Pall No Smok
tng Roltroncoo &amp; Dopoa r Ro
qu tid
Utll tl Furn 1tled
{74Q)441--1818
Go lpol 1 Ar11 U75 mo ptuo
~opoou Ut 1111 ncludod Ralor
oncoo Roqu ru, {7401245-55511
Grac oua IIY ng 1 and 2 btcl oom

epa tmonto 11 Vlllogt Mano and
A vora da Apo manta n Mlddlt
pori From 1278 U41 Cat 740
9a2 1014 Equo Houo ng Opper

Avtnut Gal po 1 W11t1ert

FALLS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
f88 LOS ANGELES CAL FOR
NIA 922 0

U NEED A LOAN? Try dtb1 con
10 ldlt on Cui payment a up to
60'!1 Stmo doy opprovoll 1 877
789·8 18
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conoot Gillon to $200 ooo Badl
No C od 1 Crodll Cardo Morr
- 1 1100-335-7812 ... 3822

Ory

Ta a Townhoun •P• tmtnta
Vary Spoo ouo 2 Btd oomo a
Foo 1 CA 1 1/2 Bl!th Fully Ca
ptta~ Adut Poo &amp; Bobv Pool
Po lo Sto 1 $365/Mo No Plio
Lalit Ptuo Soou ty Dopoll Rt
qui ·~ Doya 740 441 34~
Evon nga 740 387 0502 740
448.0101

{740(448 9882

3 Bedroom
er &amp; Drye New Ca pel $4!50
month Plus $200 Oepoall No
PI 1 1 M e Up Flouts 2 At G en

wood
304 578 9991
304)675 0 27

0

Tw n R vtrTowtrs now oocepting
opptlcellono lor 1 BR
HUO att&gt;ald Ztcllfll lor-ry
and d &amp;lbltcl EOH {304)875
8879

460 Space for Rent
1997 Skyl no Sh ng ed Root Has
A Appliances 2 Bet~ oom 1
Bath Heat Pump A C UnCle

pinned Alk ng 117 900 Mus1
Settt {304)875 6878
2001 Ooub ewldt Free Setup &amp;

Dtl VI y

$31 1100

And
Appl ances
see 685-0 87

SERVICES

Livestock

(304

lnlant Car

C ean Tuck

Mon o W lh TV $45
0805

1983 Chevy bus conve ed to
seeps a stove s nk $4 soo

OBO 740 992 3470

Downtown Sscond Avenue Near
Cou thouae And C Bu ding
N Cl y Otc:o lied A C. 3 Rooms
Bu d ng B~ sell 448 2nd AVI

tv

740)448-9539

ng Doors W nd

L v ngs on a Basemen Wate
P oollng a basemen epa s
done free est ma es lie me
gua an ee 14y s on job expe

once (304)895 3887

i-11 8 www orvb comilttnnett

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

Ntw &amp; Uud Eltc!r c An~ Gu
FurniC:II For 8a I Cl Fo S I
11
n1t1 lltlon
Aval ab •
{7oJC)4.1&amp;-8308 1 6D0-281 oose
NIW AND UIID ITIU Slool
Sumo Ptpo Rtbl For Conortll
Anglo Channt F 11 Bar 8tttl
G at ng Fo Oro no D lvowavo &amp;
Wllkwayo L&amp;L Scrop Mlllll
(74C)448-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
!RS A moll ovorvono opprovad
w lh 10 downl Low monlh y po~
mentol1 &amp;OD-817 34781111 330

Hoy Fo Sa t 45

Roun~

BottO

And 250 Square Ba 11 Ca I

{740 446 0118 0
7843 AMI 8 OOpm

{740)448

Hay to Salt Round Salta coo
Bolu s ooo $20 oo Squa a
9e II $2 00 2 28 {304 552 3274
Ooyo (304)875 41120 Evtntnga

0? Jeop G and Cho o&lt;n La ado
4x4 td PW Pl. c u II e c
89 000 m too boo&lt; to S 8 300
uk ng $13 500 740 742 7200 o
740 742 2875

740

RCA 13 Inch Bad oom Co or TV
w lh Ltghrtd Romola Llko Now
1100 Cril {74C)oll5-1188

Motorcycle•

1Q98 Yahama Wo ve lne 4x4
New Vamp ra T res Jua Albu t

Ntw B lkll Powe K {740 4454025

Toppon HI Ell clonoy 8011 Goo

s..r

Hul Pump 6 A r Condit on ng
Byattma Frtt V11r Wa anty
Bonnllto Hooting &amp; Coo 1ng, 1
800 872 511e7 www orvb ooorvbtn

a

1999 2!50 Honda Fltcon 4
Whll 1
For Sa 1 $2300

"'"

{304 773 8185

IAYII IAY!I UV!I Hut
Pumpo L P 6 Nlluro Qu Fur
ntcll It You Don I Ca I Ul Wt
Bolh LOll (740)448 8308 &amp;
1 800-281.0018
Sowm 113 785 Now Super Lum
bt ma a 2000 ta gt oaptc tltt
mort option• Manufactu 1 of

sawmills edge • and skldde 1
NORWOOD NDUSTRIEB 262
Sonw Dr vt Buffalo NY 14225
FREE lnlormotlon 1 800 578
13113 EXT 200-U

1999 Honde CR2150 Excelen

Cond 1on Aok ng $3500
44 1890

8891

71 o Autos for Sele
$0 DOWN CARS POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; REP OSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEP S LOW AS 129
MO S e 9 9% FOR LIST NGS

92 Geo Metro Good work Car
$700 Ani quo HlfYard Up lght
Plano

1967 Cad lac F eetwood 75 46K
M lea B aok Good Condll on

$2&amp;0

{740)07-!5827
ALL STEEL BUILD NQS Now up
o &amp;0% oft P e engine• td wlln
pan• 40KIIOK 0 wao $18 500 now
$9 990 501100114 ••• $35 1100
now $17 990 80X125X14

wu

$51 500 now 134990 1 800 248
11840

740)

2000 Honda Fo eman 4150ES
4K4 Undl 200 M •• Parlee
Cond on S4700 Ca (740 256

TRANSPORTATION

CALL 1 800 4!i 1 0050 ax

Bench

Man

6323

n•c••
Mobllt Homo Supply 740 448

With

Home

mob e home epa and mo a Fo
f ee 9&amp;1 mae ca Che 740 992

owt Ancho • Wate Heate s
Plumb ng &amp; Eltct 01 Partl Fur
&amp; Heat Pumps Bennet a

Furnace• 011 Fu niCII , 2

Gene a

tenence Pa nl ng v ny s d ng
ea ptn ry doo s w ndows ba hs

Huge nvtnlory 0 1count Pr caa

On Vlny 8k

Uncon d ona le me gua an ee
Loca efe ences u n shed Es
ab Shed 1975 Ca 24 H s 740)
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rag
e 5Wae poo ng
C&amp;C

800-537 9528

Home
Improvements
eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

$ 0 500

RV

JET

810

675 61 56

730 Vans &amp; 4 WDs

Seat

~IIIOINTIAL HOMI OWNI~I

or Hook up 1270 mo Ptuo Dt
pool wort Pokl {740)448-4043
Ahor500c&gt;m

tng Eon $1000 $7000 month
PT1FT Call nowl 1 IN 89a 0901
wn u nbuckllfromnomt com

donora ea n $4S to $SO ror 2 o 3
hou 1 week y Cell Sea Tee 74o-

opo bntnl tn M ~~teporr call 740-

992 5231

Ono 8odroom Aporrmthl On 111

WORK FROM HOME! Qrow ng

URGENTLY NEEDED ptaoma

ant one bedroom fu n lhtd

4411-0008

lntt nttlona Company expend

HI p wan ed n adult group home
~•v aoo night oh n cott 740 992
5023

Fo

Now Tt&lt;tng App ICII ono- 38
Wtot 2 Bod oom Townhou11
Apa tmtnta
ncludtl Water
Sowago, Troon 1380 Mo 740

lntormallon

(740)441-9531

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

N ct 2 Bod room Rtttrtncr &amp;
Dopo~l No Polo {304)878 5182

flENTALS

W th
Expando Room Eve ylh ng Ready
To Go Camp ng Ron Shae s

M le5

Call Ron evans

WORK FROM HOME! El n
$500 17000 month PT FT Fu

$ FREE CASH NOW$ 1om
woalhy lomttlla untot~ ng m tono

630

AERAnON MOTORS
Repa ·~ New &amp; Aebu In S ock

Melga Co Tuppe P a ns

94 Dutchman Camper 3

1950 s &amp; 1960 s 45 33 RPM
Raco ds
OJ Sto e
S ock
Co eel ons (937)675 2930 A. e
6 OOpm

Mazada B2500 2WD 4Cyt nde
5Speed Spo t Whee s AM FM
CO T
C u se A C 25 000

2568 Equa Houolng Opportunity

$12 000

995 SC:hu
6J80 3 Bedroom
2 Bath
Sharp Home $21 500
Kanuaga Mob e Home Sa 11

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

620 Wanted to Buy

{740)441 5216 (Day) (740f446
010 {EYOn ngsf

end S27 000 Chesh e Nk:e

Profe111onal
Services

790

Ua•d lift Tuck Fo lis $25 $7.5
Pe Set 3 P H ch L ts W tl'l
Va ous Fo k Lengths $200

720 Second Avenue 1 Bed oom
Upsta s Apa tment $300 De
pos Wa er Sewe Trash f'a d

www 1na nurdreama com

em• com

on All pet med cations and sup
pie&amp; Inc ud ng Haangard lnle
capto Frontline mo e 1 FREE
SHIPPING 0 de on ne www Ez

304 697 5927

Footory Goot 32x80 $10 000 01
counl on y $1000 00 Down De
very and •etup pa d by F1ctory
-IIOD-ell1 6777

230

3765

EZPETRX COM Save up o 50%

60 Aces n Mason County C ty
Wa e Na u a Sp ng C eek
Runn ng Th ough AI eady Tim
be ed Ready Fo Sp ng Dreams
To Come
T ue
$50 000

tunltl"

Fret

NH415 D scb ne Less Than 200
Acres $ 1 ooo (304)937 3435

Each (740 379-2757

Bu d ng Lots 1 5 Ao "

Tan ng

WE FINANCE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced T anamlnlona
A
Types Access To Ove
o cooT ansm 55 on5 T an51e
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce 339

1se7

$2 0000 5AcesW hPond
$25 000 R o G ande SceniC
P IV&amp;te a Ac as w lh Pond

WOMEN S ANSWER TO VIA
ORA Ob Gyn o 11 1~ Pot1n1od
Huge comm111 ont 81 •• Fltpl
Wanted nvattmtnl Required 1
1181 2011-0288

760

Big screen TV Take on small
monthly paymenls Good c:red
II roqulrtd Phone 1 800 711COMPUTERS

Moto and

] a e 5450 (740)3711--2706

{304)675 3824

Coun V Wall AVI lblt C tltld
Land Ca I Some v lit Ae1 ty
{304)675 3030 {304)875 3431

Phyo~tan 1 Omot Nttda Full1tmo
S· Aoy Ttohn clan Pltttt Crop
Ruumo At 3008 Jockaon Avo
Po nl Ploooont WV 2se110

One Man Bass Boa

6 N Ford T ac o Has Been Re
sto ed Ga dne s 0 earn $2500

1 800'45 0500 Ext C98 7

BRUNER LAND
{'740f441 1492
Ga eCo Ke Rd 6Aces

320 Mobile Home•
lor Sale

750 Boats &amp; Molors
for Sale

Please Call for Ust ngs

800 50 1 777 ext 98 3

Ohio Owno Mull Sot Due To 11
ntiO {740)448-7473

11 333 Pogo Strttl
Mt~~ oporl Ohto Como Jon ou
wonde lu ttam ot prol111 one a
1odayl E 0 E

POSTAL JOBS to $18 35 hr
WILDLIFE JOBS o 121 80/hr In
cludll Benet • No Exper enct
NICIIII y For Appllcat on and
EKim nlo cell 800 982 7054
K208 M F 8 30.8 OOpm

AUTOS FROM $500 00
Pot ce llfl)Oun~s &amp; Repos
Toyotas Chevy's Jeeps!

REAL ESTATE

Flenta Prope ty 3 Lots N ce 3BA
Housel On Each Co ne Lot eo
V1cant Lot tn M dd e co ner or
Rand &amp; Pe ch S tel Kanagua

Find it all
in the
Classifieas!

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Merchandise

make any such preference

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK

o~oy

885 0218 o
me247 com

Sporting
Goods

Se $13 900 OBO {740)379 9236

An real estate advert s ng n
th s newspaper s subject to
the Fede a Fa r Hcus ng Act
ol1968 wh ch makes t !legal
to advertiSe any preference
mllat on or d sertm nation
based on ace co or re g on
H&gt;C famll+al status or na ona
ortg n or any Intent on to

To the Big City

How Willi Be
Remembered

V nt Sl eer Ca 740 446 7396
1686660128

www debtccs o g (Non Prof )

AT HOME Bu ld your own sue
ceuful bua neat Mall o de E

many caring ataff membtra and 1
1 bHut ful flclllly Wt lnv 11 your
to atop tnd comp 111 1n appiiCI

Fret tnlo1mo on {414)290-8800
www l'lom•bu• neaa sya

0

In Memory

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio

lonad Wllh

QOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera d v• s 1 lga a o s

F eedom Ch a an Counse ng
800 84 1 9757
ext
CC3

AT HOME Bu ld your own sue
cessful bus ness Mall D de E
Comme ce $ 000 $7000 PT FT
F ee nlo ma on www FocuaOn
Freedom com 800.736 2334

and LPN 1 Ovtrorook Con11 hoo

EARN $1200 IHOO month porU

ttc eom 1 877 338 4072

Reco~d

payments Pay one b mon h
EASY o ge sa ed F nanc al

Earn $90 000 YEARLY repa tng

ful I me Work I om home Ex
pending compan~ nndl htlp

FINALLY A LEGIT MATE HOME
BUS NESSI Btcome 1 h ghty paid
agar or med ca tranacr btr cod
• o b • In aa tt e aa 1o
wetkl F nanclng ava able mid

Fo Sale

Thompaona App ance 3407
Jackson Avarut 304 675-7388

you ba h obe &amp; sl ppe s G ea
oppor un ty o secu e your tu u e
Low nves ment 1 BOO 272 0 93
awOsomea n ngs com

Or Ylrl PAM T anapo I No IX
per ence needed 2 Weak COL
Tro ntng $34 000 y pluo Fu 1
btnolllo &amp; Pold Tro nlng Drlvoro
baaed n M ~wtol 1 BH 230
3002 Sunday 8om 4pm Monday
7om-epm 1\Jo Fn 7em &lt;4pm

Fa m Hand Needed Exp1 lence
P tit ed Hou ly Pay Vacat on &amp;
Benef A e 1 Yea Sand Re
sume To EB13 200 Man S reet
Point Pleasant wv 25!50

740-446-7795

CONSOLIOATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBT Reduce mon h y

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES
SO OR LOW DOWN TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIE S OK
CAED Tl FOR LISTING CALL

Own A Computot?
Pu1 I To World
1211- 178/hr PT FT
1 see see.43ll&amp;
wwwb-hop com

0 vtro BIQ MONEY NO EX

Appl ances
Recond oned
Waahe 1 D ye a Ranges Re r
grato 1 Up To 90 Days Gua
an aed We Se -New May ag Ap
planets F ench C ty May ag

tn d ye a and at ga ato s

OWN A COMPUTER? Put II to
work 128 178/hour Frot Dolo 1
Whllra n www 811ouccooo oom

Now ht tng lor drivers at Domino o
Pizza In Pomtrcv Stop n ra an
IPP Ice on o cat74C 118U124

Don I fel IIUOf l&gt;y h g~ ptK&lt;S I
Shop tht clan (itd '"'""'

WITHTH!:

3379

Appllca ons
619&amp; 20h

v

7th

(740)448 68 4

SO DOWN HOMESI GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT FOR L ST NGS CALL
1 8D0-338 0020 ell 981

M ss Pau a s Day Care Center

exce ent nco me Easy calms
p ocess ng Fu t an ng Home
PC equ ed Ca I Phys c an &amp;
Hea thea a Developments o
1 ee I 8D0-772 5933 8K 2070

CLAIMS PROCESSOR
P ocess cia ms f om home $20

N~hll

310 Homes for Sale

CAREER OPPORTUN TYI Earn

MOVING SALE 1 M e West Of
Aodnev On 588 F day 6th &amp;

Salu

MERCHANDISER Pa I T me
Me chand se Needed To Me
chand se Magaz nes And Data
Co lac on n Po me oy Ga lpo s
Area 1 Day per Week (Monday
$7 25 hour+ $ 29 M e Please
Ca 1 800 279 3787 voce Ma 1
box M68 8

ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money through he
rna. unt I you have nves ga ed
the ot e ng

Ohio 'llllty Pullttohtng
825THIRD AVENUE
GALUPOUS OH 46131

Lost and Found

Found Female Beag e State Ao
Uti 775 Wea ng Leathe Colla
Eng avad w h Name Lady Call

OAC Fom$2500$125000 9 •
Average a e One nou app ova
Ca F C C S oil sa 1 800 605

Clrcuiltlon Dlreclor

1740)448-7025 Al1e epm

60

INOTICEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH NG CD
recommends thai you do bus

CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Ava abe n Ou C cukatiOn
Marke ng Oepa tmen
Are you look ng o a u 11 me
post on lha o ers oppo un ty o
advancemen ? Do you en oy
wonc ng w th youtl'l? Oo you enjoy
sales? Do you enjoy be ng c ea
live? Do you ha'.le dependab e
t anspo a on? If so you cou d
be he pe son we ara looking fort
Pos lion offe s al company
bene! s nc ud ng hea 1'1 and fe
nsu ance 4 OK p6an pa d hoi
d~s and vacatiOn plan
Fo nlerv ew considera ion
send you esume wlh a br ef
cove etta tell ng us why you a e
the person we are look ng lo to

&lt;eoos

know ngly accept

FREE Ca a og 800 826 9228
w e P:O Bo»C 701449 Oa as TX

Pupp es

CONSOLIDATE BILLS LOANS

Th s newspaper: w 1not

proved A o dable comp ehen
s ve ega anng ance1890

(304)891 3255

Gal po s 752 3 d Avenue $300
Month 3 Bedroom Ba h Frame
House Gas Hea No Pets We•

1 80D-2D0-2823

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home S udy Ap

Free M xed Breed

tAV

52 0 ve

s

FINANCIAL

Giveaway

Room House

Even111gs

BOO 200 2823

40

Fou

TX 75370 NA 0 hlp

H CUBE EXPRESS

30 Announcements

r()u~

www b ack&amp;tone aw com

11000 $4000 wk 800 921 8538
FT www drtam2blrea com

ASSEMBLY AT HOME I Cralls
Toys Jewe y Wood Saw ng
Typ ng G eat Payt CALL 1 800
795-0380 Exl201 {24h s)

199

PlJIIl
I'UU'\\J\JtFIEEJS

140

343 DRIVERS NEEDED I No OK

005

$2500
Day (740f44
Even ng (740 258-6430

Sl ee phone (740)+48-3945

800 429-3680 ell J 365

Expa ence Raqu ad Fo FREE
nlo mat on Ca 1 800 !501 6832

1i a n

C use Runs Good

..

EARN TO $500 PER WEEK PT

hrs 1 1 800 449-4625 E• 5700

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Avo A

•d mmed ate v Home compute
needed FREE nte net 1 800
291 4683 Dep • 09

FTI Se v ce new and establ sl'led
Fuller B usn cuatome a n ocal
a ea No doo o doo tqu ad
FREE ata It IUPI)I 11 ava table

Help ng Paop e Reca ve Gove n
men Refunds F •• Details {24

Che11y Cava e Z24 V6

410 Houses for Rent

Professional
Services

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000/YR
Med ca nsu anee 811 ng Need

CONSULTATION
BENEF IT
TEAM SERV CES INC TOLL
FREE I 888 836-4052

199

C

9812

{304)875-6878
1970 Buck GS 455 Re s o Btl e

Cor S1500 {7 40)379 2424

Public Notlot

{304)875 2428

Public Notice

o1tu1111n tht VIllage ol
Raolnt Townehlp ol
Sutton County ol
Mel go and Still ol
Ohio bounded and
deaorlbod •• follow•
Lot No Forty eight
(48) In the Vllfage o
Orlhlm Station u
rtoordtd In Dt1d
Book a Page 308 lr
the Record ol tho
Melge
County
Aocordor 1 Ollloo In
the VIllage of Aeclnt
Molgo County Ohio
being 821ett wldl ond
111 !tat dtap
And
being tho 11mt
property conveyed bl
Loultt L Stowart and
William D Stewort htr
huebend to Lillian
Prollltt by dud dated
February 3 1948 and
rtcordtd In Volume
Book 158 et Page 548
ol tho Dud Recordo
ol Melgo County Ohio
SAVE AND EXCEPT
195a 0 oquare fttt 11
conveyed to Roclnt
Homo Netlonel eenk
by dud recorded In
Volume 264 Page 603
ol tht Melgt County
Dlld Aocordo
pARCEL NQ. 1
PARCEL NO 2
The
following
Situate
In
tho
dtocrl bed rul ootalt

NOTICE OF SAL!!
lly vlrtuo of an
Ordor ol Salt luutd
out ot thl Common
PI••• court ot Melgo
County OhiO In the
oau of tht Former•
Bank
81vlngo
Company Plaintiff va
Lllh R ROlf dbl
Bunehlnt Video &amp;
Tanning
II
II
Doltndlnto upon •
Judgmont lhtrtln
rtndtred being CUI
No oo-cv 123 In eeld
Court thl Bhtrlll ol
Melge County Ohio
will offer lor aale ot
the front door ol tht
Courthouu
In
Pomtroy
Mel g •
County Ohio on the
13th day ol April 200t
ot 10 00 1m
tho
following Ianda ond
tonemento locattd 11
308 Third Strllt
A•clnt OH 45771 A
comploto
legal
dllcrlptlon ol tho rttl
81111111 I I IOIIOWI
Situated In lh&lt;
VIllage ol Racine
County ol Melga end
Sllttt ol Ohio

a.

I

1986 Pont ac Trans Am $3500

What will they
say about me,
Those whom I
hold so dear
What will they
remember when
I'm no longer
here?
Will they recall
mistakes I've
made,
Battles I've never
won?
Moments of pam
I've caused
them,
Thmgs I have left
undone?
Will they censor
my human
fa1hngs,
And w1sh I'd
been noble and
strong?
W1ll they scoff at
the hopes I've
mustered,
Tbe dreams that
somehow went
wrong?
Or will they be
moved w1th
compassiOn
Directed from
heaven above?
rro temper there
judgement w1th
kindness And
soften there
memories w1th
love
But son, no
matter how I
remember you,
It will always be
with love
Just wa1tmg till
He calls me
To be with you
above.
Remembered by
family and
friends with love

and everywhere m between the
newspaper ts THE place to ftnd the
stones that are Important to you and
your commumty

You II always be m the know w1th a
newsparer suoscnpt1on We ve got the
goods to keep you tnformed
en lightened and entertamed every day
Call today for a subscnpt1on

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • 992-2155
110 Help Wanted
'

MANAGEMENT
Established local company looking to 11115
enlry-level management positions
Associates degree or management
experience Solid people skills organizational
skills ond self motivation are a must
$23-$30k to start
Benefits and 401 K plan available

I -888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Development Group/Millennium teleservlces

110 Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center currently has openlnga for LPN s
Twelve hour shifts Competitive salary baaed
on market Excellent benefltl
Contact Human Resources at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
2520 Valley Drive
pt Pleasant WV 25550
Or FAX to (304) 675·8975 AA/EOE

Public Notlct
Towne hlp of Sutton
County of Melgo and
Stitt
of
Ohio
bound • d
1 nd
ducrlbtd fllollowo
Bltuato In Bohool
Section 1 Town 2
Range 12 Sutton
Townohlp VIllage ol
Raolne Melgt County
Ohio and being all ol
Lot numbor 55 In the
Village ol Graham
Stlllon 11 recordod In
Dtad eook a Page
308 In the Aeoordo ol
tho Melgt County
Recorder 1 Olllct and
being more tully
dtlcrlbed 11 followo
Beginning at an Iron
poot In the oouthwut
property corntr end
the exlatlng taaterly
right of way line ol
Third Strtot thence
North 0•12 30 Eaot
along tho weat lint ol
uld Lot Number 55
and tho Grantore Wtll
proptrty lint an tho
exlotlng uottrly right
ol way lint of Third
Strttt 82
tell to an
Iron pin In the
northwut corntr ol
eald Lot Number 55
and the Grantor 1
north proptrty lint

a

oo

Public Notice
120 DO lttl (118 fttt
on Plat) to an Iron pin
In the norlhtut
corner of uld Lot 55
and the Grontor 1
north tnt proptrty
corner thanco South
0°12 30 Wto1 elong
tho 1111 llno of oald
Lot Number 58 and tho
Grantor 1
t o1t
property lint 82 00
ltat to an Iron pin In
the aoutheoot corntr
ol oald Lot Numbtr 55
and tho Grantor 1
eoutheut property
corntr
and
tho
txlotlng northtrly
right ol way lint of en
unnomed olloy thence
north 88'47 30 woot
along tho oouth lint ol
uld Lot Number 55
and the Grantors
oouth proporty line
end txlotlng northerly
right ol woy lint ol on
unnamed ellty 120 oo
lut (119 00 lttl en
Plat) to lht point ol
beginning contelnlng
7 440 equare lttt
Subltc1 to all legal
hlghwoyo
end
1111ment1 of record
Grontor clolmo title
by dttd of rocord ao
rtcordtd In Dt1d

Public Notice
Book 238 Peg• 801
and $43 In tho rocorde
ol the Molge County
Recorder 1 Ollie•
Ducrlptlon lor the
above tract being the
rttUitl ol I IUfVIY
modt by Alchord C
alttgow R S No
5t61
Rtltrence Dted
Volume 79 Page 787
Molgo County Ol!lclal
Rtcordo
Auditor 1
Parcel
NOI 19-00521 000 19
00522 000 ond 19
00523 000
PROPERTY
ADDRESS 308 Third
Strut Raclnt OH
4sn1
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT
$45 000 00 Tho nal
estate cannot bt 1old
1or 1111 than two

thlrdo tho opprolud

value
TEAMS OF SAL!;
10% down dey of oale
balance on delivery ol
dtad Sold tubjoct to
occrued reel oatete

tax••

Douglao W Little
Attornoy lor Plaintiff
3(9) 3(18) 3(23

'

�Friday, March 16, 2001

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

-~rlday, March 16, 2001

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

P/1

Truckine

COIITUOOIS, INC.
Alldne, Ohio ~771
740-~948

CONCIElF/BLOCKIBRKK
• Footon, Wolls, Sttpl •
Ji'lot Work,
itepla«mtnts, • Walks
and Drlvn • StencU
Cftte Fne E&amp;tlm1tes
Serving Ohio ond W. V.

WVI03t712

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Hornet
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH

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

Trucks· Tnctor Trailel'lHouses - Mobile Homes
-Decks ·DrivewaysEquipment Cleaned &amp;
Degreased

Lionel, MTH, K-Line,
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; N Guage
Estes Rockets ·

Jelf Stethem

(140) 985-4ll8
Email :

. 741J.992·1671

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box t89
Middleport. OhiO 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home~

IJJ

M o..tAUTY IJfl: COMfWO'"

DIPIYIAI
PUtS

Public Notice

All Makos 'li-aetor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Public Notice

Dealers
111011 St Rt 7 South

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• Room Alldlttono &amp;

Good iimes
Miss Mamies Anne Oakley
"Karaoke Fri &amp; Sat
March 16 &amp; 17th 9 pm -1 am
Designated driver available

Romodollng
•NowQo._
• El-1..1&amp; Plumbing .
• Roofing a Outtm ·
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Ptotlo lnd Poroh Dlckl
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
. 992·6215

You're Invited to
Lady Remington's
Spring Jewelry Une Party
Refreshments, Games,
· and Gifts
Monday, March 19
7 pm
American Legion Hall, Post 128

WICK'S

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

1-888·521·0916

Every Spring Tune-Up ·
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

~qui

Lawn and

ta. !II' .!,1$IIIUIMt1o II

GRAVELY TRACTOR

ELITE MECHANIC.\L CONTR.\CTORS

tztt.YJ"
/J}I Hard1bStopA.1m.ra~

1-JGU75-71Z4
1-800-ZS~
Residenlilll Conunerdol ·New Construction
Sal&lt;s Senice Installation
Speciolirina In Shoot Metal Ductwork
'Trane' Soltl lc Senlce For
.
Gallio, Muon, and Melp Couatleo
L~ ond Insured
WV 005176

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

FREE ESTIMATES

'

We Can Maire Your

Dream4. Reallryl
740·742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

Howardl.
Wrltesel

L&amp;L Tire Barn

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Frtt Eltlmtttt

7 40·992·5344

949-1405
591-5011

44087 Wlpple Road
HOUAS:

Mon·Frl

Sltt-1

- "

37 DttJH8IIId
38 Allow
41 Ea11 wind
deity

42 GIOII
111gtta
43 Safety agcy.
44 Aqulllc bird
45 Not up yet
47 El-, Texal
48 Vogetable

...,

.

URNPIKE

LINCOLN

Mercury.
SPECIAL FINANCE DEPARTMilNI'
.

J &amp; L SANITATION

Call Us First Or We Both l.olel

L.ocally.owned and operated by

Ask For Mike Hindle

JACK &amp; UNDA PRQVENCE .

39563 Sumner Road ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

119or

Customers For Over 22 lf:ars!"

ISSHlnd

• DEPENDABLE

Middleport

• STEADY

• PROVEN

740-985-4212
Now Renting
A·JMINI·STORAGE
992·6396 .
992·2272

.P...•JW

i~~~!~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::...~
~fFRIDAY
MARCH 161
;:~s::!~h~~!~it~~
diamonds
club .

420 W. Main St. ·
Pomeroy, OH 45769

,,•

•
•• •
••

l

.101011

Full service aula center

.~ .

Cellular
· Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5419

..

•"

•,,,,
•••.,,
•

..
•
..
•
•"

••

A
V

E

s

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

,--1I
I'

FORI

I' I
II II II II

SCRAM.tm ANSWERS
Spiral- Glwst - Began·

Hi~tus ·PATIENTS..

had purchased a bump,er st1cker lhat read Tre e
surgeons wear safety belts to avoid A fallmg· out w1th
their PATIENTS
1

'Your -.--~-'Birthday·

(ticrolllrom Pizzi Hut)

(7 40)992·1

one

•••
••
l

Marathon Service Center

and

••
•'•

.,,••r,

1

wins and West disthough,
the are
finesse
cards. , You
still

-•

"Serving Hundreds of Sarisfied

J&amp;L

•'
•''•
••'
••

YRS T

f,3..-,..-.,,.;.;.....,.l::-4
~-=~·~-~~-=~-=~·
r

I

1j \~- ;

..
'
•'

I1-rl....;;,.;llrTI_,.,.;;....,,,2
I T "-1'1--iI
I1--n,s-'. -TI--""TI-1~',

we're ge'tting closer.
When you lead a
trump from the dumR0 V S I
my and East follows
.,,,..&amp;
An elderly colleague wears a
low, finesse your jack! ~-'-·__,___..__...___....,
belt and suspenders. He is a real
If it loses, the hearts
example of a·· - - ---- -.
must be 2-1. You can
MI
0 p
win West's minor-suit ~7,.....;rl...:...,r,;:.....;l_;;.-.~=-..
Q Complete tho chuckle quoted
return, draw the last . . - . L .
by lilling In the .missing woods
L......L--IL-...1-....L--'--' you develop from step No.3 below.
trump, and play a
spade. .to guarantee A PRINT NUMBfRfO
your contract. Here, ~LETTERS

SEE? OLIR TEACHER 15 OVER THERE SITTING
IN 1-!ER CAR WATCHING OUR GAME .. I THINK
MA't'8E SllE'S ~ONEL'I' ANP HAS NOWHERE
TO 60 AFTER SCi-1001....
.

l/271mop;

. "We Can Help'll'

i

31 "Guarding

""'

PEANUTS

Pomeroy

Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

304 882·2220

.

F

and

New Hom,a, Room
Addilions,' Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

•· .

dl81rlct
Actro..
Cotoa

lf

can do. But what if
East has the trio? Now

•ln~eWIIl

Constr11cllon

C.ll Chuck

55

....'-·-·-·-·-'·--~~

'

.
•I.IJa&amp;llll
.• Ellhlnl Wall • Tnnlllllllll FIIIJI'I

74(1.742-8015 or
1-an-353-1022
Sunset Home

tubet,&amp; pert.

..

•1111111111111111,... ........

FI'H Eltlmatea

(3) 15,2001
11c

.'•..

.

Patios, Sldlwalka.
25 Y8811 txplllence

Old l'lltllot, old l'lllllo

set.

~

Quality Drtvtways,

WANTED

lldor

Michel Foucault, a
tPfeld .
49 Malt deer
French philosopher,
50 Lacquered
not the pendulum man,
metalware
52 Lincoln'•
wrote, "The judges of
nickname
normality are present
54 BankBARNEY
·everywhere. We are in
stltement
ebbr.
the
society
of
the
UNK SNUFFY-- WHAT
I GAVE HER ON€ OF
HOW 'BOUT .
teacher-judge, the docARE YOU GOIN' TO GIT
THEM USTUAR
A HUG?
tor-judge, the educaAUNT l.OWEEZY FER
tor-judge, the 'social
HER BIRFDA~ ? I
••
worker' -judge."
•
Four weeks ago, I
••
commented that I like
deals in which the
'•
"normal" approach is
'
wrong. Here is anoth"
er, which I was shown
by Ron Klinger, the
FRANK &amp; EARNEST .
bridgeAustralian
writer-teacher-player~ POI'I'T y/ AI'IT TO UPStT YOU, BUT
judge!
Ttlt~' S 60MfTti1Nti ;t T~INt:
How would you
'
plan
the play in four
. • . YOU S~OUI.P
hearts? West leads the
~....-.-,...1
club king. You duck in
the dummy, hoping he
might become allergic
CELEBRITY CIPHER
to the suit, but irritatby Luis Campos
·
ingly he continues
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptogram
a
are
created
from
quotations
by
lame
us
with the . club jack.
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.
Today's clue: T oquals K
: ~==~~~==~~~--------~~~ What now?
You
seem
to
start
'HXX
YVVK
HIRVEW
JVET
: THE BORN LOSER
with II easy tricks:
one · spade, seven
RS Z F
' BC.
J H F.
COJLONI
WHGZ
RSZ
hearts, two diamonds
: b?::/' FU~I-N\ I~ Tf.\(li:E
VM
R S Z EZ
W R HM K
DOWA
and one club. You can
:
50ME.TI\It¥:&gt;W~
expect a 2-1 trump
c ZZ R H M K
'N['rf.\ TI-\Eio\ ~-'-"/I
A J V
V J M
RSZPE
split; after all, it has a
•
••
78 percent probability .
REORS.'RSZ
A z'X X
'•
And that useful heart
two gives you an entry
DHGZW
JVVKW
to tbe pummv ,once
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Withoullreedom, .no art; art lives ~nly
you have driven out
on the reatralntoit 1mpo11a on lfaelf, and d1os of all others. Albert Camus
their spade ace. Could
••
anything !Je easier?
WOII
••'
=;;;;;;;:;;=~::==J Well, there's the
; ,......,.--==-: ~
rul), of course. There is
"•J
~~s~~ii:!l
one potential moth in O Rear.ranga . le"•r• of the
;r
the moistener: a 3-0 · lour Kromblod words below to form four llmplo -d1 .
,_
heart break. Then you
·'•
rnight have to' lose a
Mu L B E J
•
trick in each suit. If
-1
West has all three,
_ _ _ .
_
•'
there's nothing you L--L.........J--'-......L-"--'
•

..

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

992-2772

PaM

p_.

...

youR

l)oubltHunQ
Replacement
Windows
Welded Frame &amp;
Salh0-101 UnHtd
Inches
$199.00 lnstalltd

EAM

BY PHILLIP ALDI'R

..

740-992-7599

(740) 992·3203

Theall!

,,~. ~~~

Add.ltiiliss • ~~oon..,

or

53

Ambu-

..,.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public Notice

111..U

I•
hu

On the barbie

l r.;:::::~m~::~ W:.~ r:~-€

CGMMIICIAI. and I!!IDOOW

Public Notice

...

'IAKJifll
t A K 2

P...
Pu.

dllftcuH

.

Windows • Room

949-4900 .

• If t I

"

'we.t

want.·
Heat obbr.

Harriman
17 Actrlll
58 Open
Connon
57 Did 1
18 Dacha·
carpentl'f
hund'o doc
chore
1t nuue
20 Dlllrielln 58 Moo or
12 Qrovtl
Germany
Lorry, a.g.
rldgea
21 Fable wrltor
19 Compoll
23 "Wo'reDOWN
pt.
-INiht
1 Tongu•- 21 Lorge
wturd"
orterlo1
(aJ&gt;HCh·
27 Unltorm
22 "The Prince
feu)
omomont
ond the-"
2 Singe&lt;
32 OPEC
23 "How
AnlllVIIHI
clumay of
3 High
33 Officii!
me"
plateau
proclam•
24
Ignite
4
Recllnad
tlon
· 25 Fly quickly
5 "Groph"
34 Publllh
26 Decade
358-..ne llnllh
numbera
6 Gtll
thing a
28
Luau
7
Extremely
3SGoona
otrlngl
crul11(2
a ~~~Clear 211 Endure
wds.)
30 Ancient
3g Rocky
DIIY"
Hallan
8 Fallflowera
MolinIIIn
tamlly
10 Locale
poll&lt;

9 QUI
• QJ 4

Openin&amp; lead: • K

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes :vin1l
Sldlog • New Garqes
·• Replotement

RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS
Effective March 18th we will be
closed on Sundays. All other
hours remain the same

.....

•KQJU

1'1
49

BISSELL

CHICKEN &amp; RIB BB&lt;!ll
Sunday, March 18th
11 am

tiOIIl

'""'

Mon~Frl

8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888

•AUII

• J I 71

Bring In your repair work
we'll get you going for
spring

992-2975

A&amp;D Aulo Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

·-

18

Vulnenlb&amp;e: BGtb
Dealer: Soulh

and

(7:~; ;·~~~~~0 ..,.

Wut

740-985-4180

HAULING
Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • Fill Dirt
.
*Mulch
~
0

....

• A14

After 6pm

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

EXCAVATING

• s.

• 7 I I

48

13 Conceive 47 Station
14 AccUitDma 51 Llnl ono
15 LIN
miiP

. . 1....1

• K QU
J

ltoYI MIIS!Igt

74().985-3831

42 SM got1

7ttaple
~!T.d

Interior
FREE ESnMATES
Belor1 6 p.m.

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

ICOfl1

1 ActrNa

"To/u the pain out
ofpainli"!- Los'""
do it for you ..

35537 St At. 7 North Pomtroy, Ohio 45789

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Advertise
in this space
for $100 per ·
month

LINDA'S
PAINTING

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AO. SERVICE
H Ahead In III'VIct"
-11.6" Pro!HILMstoG/!IItle F...! $6.25/1 00
·21" Hunttr~ Pridt Dog Feat! $6.75/SO
·12" Wtlltm pride !.so t.l $5.60/50
Sl .00 off Coupon makt~n~xt ptKtbase $4.60/Sb
iDyll Crumbles sus
T.M. Sah Blocks $4.7 5/50 lb.

40 Exprno

(CCI

Saturday, March _i7, 2001
Improved conditions where
you can express your ideas and ·
resourcefulness will be brought
into the fray in the year ahead. It'll
help you realize a few hopeund .
expectations.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Proiect wannth and friendliness
and you'll auract those .
tvDoes'li•fP':iJ'•pleto you. You don't
anything special-· just
Trying to patch up a ·
romance? The AstraMatchmaker can help you
what.to do to make the
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10156.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Play everything down the middle
today. Pushing too hard in either
direction could get you off track,
and instead or reeling good about
things, you'll wonder what went
wrong.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
The opportunity to di~cu~~ a mutter that i~ very importanl to you
might pre~ent il~lf today. Don't

beat around the bush: be right up
front about everything.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Even if yo~ don't learn about it
today. someone is looking out for
your interests at this time . It will
have something to do with what
You cap share wit~ another.

attitnde you display today will
prove to be an example others
want to emulate. Don 't be sur·
prised if everybody wants to be

with you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Should you find yourself a bit
restless t'!,day, get out and find
someplace where you can unobtrusively stroll and observe lhe
beauty that's all around us . It'll be
inspiring to you .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Events in which your com·

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
instend ·of trying to &lt;teer things
your way today, let destiny carve
i" own course for you. If you do,
this will tum out to be a very
pleasant day for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You mercial involvements are conneed some type of activity today cerned favor you today, be they
that stimulates you hoth mentally work related or simply going
and physically. It doesn't have to shopping . Try to spend some time
be anything strenuous or extraor- on mt~terinl acquisition.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jun .
dinary, just healthy and invigo19)
Working together is alw.,ys
rating .
acceptable:
however. today you
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
might be able to realize better
One of your greatest talents is gains
operating solo, where you
being able to effectively manage can develop
some personal sucothers in ways they'll not feel
cesses
.
manipulated. You'll effectively
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
use this talent today, because If you 're not in the mood to go out
your intentions will be construc- on the town today, don'l feet
tive.
into doing so. Much can
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The pushed
be
gained
from introspective
self:assured, calm and peaceful
hours in a quiet place .
\

'&lt;

�Friday, March 16, 2001

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

-~rlday, March 16, 2001

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

P/1

Truckine

COIITUOOIS, INC.
Alldne, Ohio ~771
740-~948

CONCIElF/BLOCKIBRKK
• Footon, Wolls, Sttpl •
Ji'lot Work,
itepla«mtnts, • Walks
and Drlvn • StencU
Cftte Fne E&amp;tlm1tes
Serving Ohio ond W. V.

WVI03t712

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Hornet
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH

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

Trucks· Tnctor Trailel'lHouses - Mobile Homes
-Decks ·DrivewaysEquipment Cleaned &amp;
Degreased

Lionel, MTH, K-Line,
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; N Guage
Estes Rockets ·

Jelf Stethem

(140) 985-4ll8
Email :

. 741J.992·1671

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box t89
Middleport. OhiO 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home~

IJJ

M o..tAUTY IJfl: COMfWO'"

DIPIYIAI
PUtS

Public Notice

All Makos 'li-aetor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Public Notice

Dealers
111011 St Rt 7 South

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• Room Alldlttono &amp;

Good iimes
Miss Mamies Anne Oakley
"Karaoke Fri &amp; Sat
March 16 &amp; 17th 9 pm -1 am
Designated driver available

Romodollng
•NowQo._
• El-1..1&amp; Plumbing .
• Roofing a Outtm ·
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Ptotlo lnd Poroh Dlckl
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
. 992·6215

You're Invited to
Lady Remington's
Spring Jewelry Une Party
Refreshments, Games,
· and Gifts
Monday, March 19
7 pm
American Legion Hall, Post 128

WICK'S

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

1-888·521·0916

Every Spring Tune-Up ·
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

~qui

Lawn and

ta. !II' .!,1$IIIUIMt1o II

GRAVELY TRACTOR

ELITE MECHANIC.\L CONTR.\CTORS

tztt.YJ"
/J}I Hard1bStopA.1m.ra~

1-JGU75-71Z4
1-800-ZS~
Residenlilll Conunerdol ·New Construction
Sal&lt;s Senice Installation
Speciolirina In Shoot Metal Ductwork
'Trane' Soltl lc Senlce For
.
Gallio, Muon, and Melp Couatleo
L~ ond Insured
WV 005176

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

FREE ESTIMATES

'

We Can Maire Your

Dream4. Reallryl
740·742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

Howardl.
Wrltesel

L&amp;L Tire Barn

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Frtt Eltlmtttt

7 40·992·5344

949-1405
591-5011

44087 Wlpple Road
HOUAS:

Mon·Frl

Sltt-1

- "

37 DttJH8IIId
38 Allow
41 Ea11 wind
deity

42 GIOII
111gtta
43 Safety agcy.
44 Aqulllc bird
45 Not up yet
47 El-, Texal
48 Vogetable

...,

.

URNPIKE

LINCOLN

Mercury.
SPECIAL FINANCE DEPARTMilNI'
.

J &amp; L SANITATION

Call Us First Or We Both l.olel

L.ocally.owned and operated by

Ask For Mike Hindle

JACK &amp; UNDA PRQVENCE .

39563 Sumner Road ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

119or

Customers For Over 22 lf:ars!"

ISSHlnd

• DEPENDABLE

Middleport

• STEADY

• PROVEN

740-985-4212
Now Renting
A·JMINI·STORAGE
992·6396 .
992·2272

.P...•JW

i~~~!~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::...~
~fFRIDAY
MARCH 161
;:~s::!~h~~!~it~~
diamonds
club .

420 W. Main St. ·
Pomeroy, OH 45769

,,•

•
•• •
••

l

.101011

Full service aula center

.~ .

Cellular
· Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5419

..

•"

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•

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s

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

,--1I
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FORI

I' I
II II II II

SCRAM.tm ANSWERS
Spiral- Glwst - Began·

Hi~tus ·PATIENTS..

had purchased a bump,er st1cker lhat read Tre e
surgeons wear safety belts to avoid A fallmg· out w1th
their PATIENTS
1

'Your -.--~-'Birthday·

(ticrolllrom Pizzi Hut)

(7 40)992·1

one

•••
••
l

Marathon Service Center

and

••
•'•

.,,••r,

1

wins and West disthough,
the are
finesse
cards. , You
still

-•

"Serving Hundreds of Sarisfied

J&amp;L

•'
•''•
••'
••

YRS T

f,3..-,..-.,,.;.;.....,.l::-4
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I1-rl....;;,.;llrTI_,.,.;;....,,,2
I T "-1'1--iI
I1--n,s-'. -TI--""TI-1~',

we're ge'tting closer.
When you lead a
trump from the dumR0 V S I
my and East follows
.,,,..&amp;
An elderly colleague wears a
low, finesse your jack! ~-'-·__,___..__...___....,
belt and suspenders. He is a real
If it loses, the hearts
example of a·· - - ---- -.
must be 2-1. You can
MI
0 p
win West's minor-suit ~7,.....;rl...:...,r,;:.....;l_;;.-.~=-..
Q Complete tho chuckle quoted
return, draw the last . . - . L .
by lilling In the .missing woods
L......L--IL-...1-....L--'--' you develop from step No.3 below.
trump, and play a
spade. .to guarantee A PRINT NUMBfRfO
your contract. Here, ~LETTERS

SEE? OLIR TEACHER 15 OVER THERE SITTING
IN 1-!ER CAR WATCHING OUR GAME .. I THINK
MA't'8E SllE'S ~ONEL'I' ANP HAS NOWHERE
TO 60 AFTER SCi-1001....
.

l/271mop;

. "We Can Help'll'

i

31 "Guarding

""'

PEANUTS

Pomeroy

Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

304 882·2220

.

F

and

New Hom,a, Room
Addilions,' Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

•· .

dl81rlct
Actro..
Cotoa

lf

can do. But what if
East has the trio? Now

•ln~eWIIl

Constr11cllon

C.ll Chuck

55

....'-·-·-·-·-'·--~~

'

.
•I.IJa&amp;llll
.• Ellhlnl Wall • Tnnlllllllll FIIIJI'I

74(1.742-8015 or
1-an-353-1022
Sunset Home

tubet,&amp; pert.

..

•1111111111111111,... ........

FI'H Eltlmatea

(3) 15,2001
11c

.'•..

.

Patios, Sldlwalka.
25 Y8811 txplllence

Old l'lltllot, old l'lllllo

set.

~

Quality Drtvtways,

WANTED

lldor

Michel Foucault, a
tPfeld .
49 Malt deer
French philosopher,
50 Lacquered
not the pendulum man,
metalware
52 Lincoln'•
wrote, "The judges of
nickname
normality are present
54 BankBARNEY
·everywhere. We are in
stltement
ebbr.
the
society
of
the
UNK SNUFFY-- WHAT
I GAVE HER ON€ OF
HOW 'BOUT .
teacher-judge, the docARE YOU GOIN' TO GIT
THEM USTUAR
A HUG?
tor-judge, the educaAUNT l.OWEEZY FER
tor-judge, the 'social
HER BIRFDA~ ? I
••
worker' -judge."
•
Four weeks ago, I
••
commented that I like
deals in which the
'•
"normal" approach is
'
wrong. Here is anoth"
er, which I was shown
by Ron Klinger, the
FRANK &amp; EARNEST .
bridgeAustralian
writer-teacher-player~ POI'I'T y/ AI'IT TO UPStT YOU, BUT
judge!
Ttlt~' S 60MfTti1Nti ;t T~INt:
How would you
'
plan
the play in four
. • . YOU S~OUI.P
hearts? West leads the
~....-.-,...1
club king. You duck in
the dummy, hoping he
might become allergic
CELEBRITY CIPHER
to the suit, but irritatby Luis Campos
·
ingly he continues
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptogram
a
are
created
from
quotations
by
lame
us
with the . club jack.
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.
Today's clue: T oquals K
: ~==~~~==~~~--------~~~ What now?
You
seem
to
start
'HXX
YVVK
HIRVEW
JVET
: THE BORN LOSER
with II easy tricks:
one · spade, seven
RS Z F
' BC.
J H F.
COJLONI
WHGZ
RSZ
hearts, two diamonds
: b?::/' FU~I-N\ I~ Tf.\(li:E
VM
R S Z EZ
W R HM K
DOWA
and one club. You can
:
50ME.TI\It¥:&gt;W~
expect a 2-1 trump
c ZZ R H M K
'N['rf.\ TI-\Eio\ ~-'-"/I
A J V
V J M
RSZPE
split; after all, it has a
•
••
78 percent probability .
REORS.'RSZ
A z'X X
'•
And that useful heart
two gives you an entry
DHGZW
JVVKW
to tbe pummv ,once
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Withoullreedom, .no art; art lives ~nly
you have driven out
on the reatralntoit 1mpo11a on lfaelf, and d1os of all others. Albert Camus
their spade ace. Could
••
anything !Je easier?
WOII
••'
=;;;;;;;:;;=~::==J Well, there's the
; ,......,.--==-: ~
rul), of course. There is
"•J
~~s~~ii:!l
one potential moth in O Rear.ranga . le"•r• of the
;r
the moistener: a 3-0 · lour Kromblod words below to form four llmplo -d1 .
,_
heart break. Then you
·'•
rnight have to' lose a
Mu L B E J
•
trick in each suit. If
-1
West has all three,
_ _ _ .
_
•'
there's nothing you L--L.........J--'-......L-"--'
•

..

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

992-2772

PaM

p_.

...

youR

l)oubltHunQ
Replacement
Windows
Welded Frame &amp;
Salh0-101 UnHtd
Inches
$199.00 lnstalltd

EAM

BY PHILLIP ALDI'R

..

740-992-7599

(740) 992·3203

Theall!

,,~. ~~~

Add.ltiiliss • ~~oon..,

or

53

Ambu-

..,.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public Notice

111..U

I•
hu

On the barbie

l r.;:::::~m~::~ W:.~ r:~-€

CGMMIICIAI. and I!!IDOOW

Public Notice

...

'IAKJifll
t A K 2

P...
Pu.

dllftcuH

.

Windows • Room

949-4900 .

• If t I

"

'we.t

want.·
Heat obbr.

Harriman
17 Actrlll
58 Open
Connon
57 Did 1
18 Dacha·
carpentl'f
hund'o doc
chore
1t nuue
20 Dlllrielln 58 Moo or
12 Qrovtl
Germany
Lorry, a.g.
rldgea
21 Fable wrltor
19 Compoll
23 "Wo'reDOWN
pt.
-INiht
1 Tongu•- 21 Lorge
wturd"
orterlo1
(aJ&gt;HCh·
27 Unltorm
22 "The Prince
feu)
omomont
ond the-"
2 Singe&lt;
32 OPEC
23 "How
AnlllVIIHI
clumay of
3 High
33 Officii!
me"
plateau
proclam•
24
Ignite
4
Recllnad
tlon
· 25 Fly quickly
5 "Groph"
34 Publllh
26 Decade
358-..ne llnllh
numbera
6 Gtll
thing a
28
Luau
7
Extremely
3SGoona
otrlngl
crul11(2
a ~~~Clear 211 Endure
wds.)
30 Ancient
3g Rocky
DIIY"
Hallan
8 Fallflowera
MolinIIIn
tamlly
10 Locale
poll&lt;

9 QUI
• QJ 4

Openin&amp; lead: • K

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes :vin1l
Sldlog • New Garqes
·• Replotement

RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS
Effective March 18th we will be
closed on Sundays. All other
hours remain the same

.....

•KQJU

1'1
49

BISSELL

CHICKEN &amp; RIB BB&lt;!ll
Sunday, March 18th
11 am

tiOIIl

'""'

Mon~Frl

8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888

•AUII

• J I 71

Bring In your repair work
we'll get you going for
spring

992-2975

A&amp;D Aulo Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

·-

18

Vulnenlb&amp;e: BGtb
Dealer: Soulh

and

(7:~; ;·~~~~~0 ..,.

Wut

740-985-4180

HAULING
Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • Fill Dirt
.
*Mulch
~
0

....

• A14

After 6pm

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

EXCAVATING

• s.

• 7 I I

48

13 Conceive 47 Station
14 AccUitDma 51 Llnl ono
15 LIN
miiP

. . 1....1

• K QU
J

ltoYI MIIS!Igt

74().985-3831

42 SM got1

7ttaple
~!T.d

Interior
FREE ESnMATES
Belor1 6 p.m.

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

ICOfl1

1 ActrNa

"To/u the pain out
ofpainli"!- Los'""
do it for you ..

35537 St At. 7 North Pomtroy, Ohio 45789

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Advertise
in this space
for $100 per ·
month

LINDA'S
PAINTING

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AO. SERVICE
H Ahead In III'VIct"
-11.6" Pro!HILMstoG/!IItle F...! $6.25/1 00
·21" Hunttr~ Pridt Dog Feat! $6.75/SO
·12" Wtlltm pride !.so t.l $5.60/50
Sl .00 off Coupon makt~n~xt ptKtbase $4.60/Sb
iDyll Crumbles sus
T.M. Sah Blocks $4.7 5/50 lb.

40 Exprno

(CCI

Saturday, March _i7, 2001
Improved conditions where
you can express your ideas and ·
resourcefulness will be brought
into the fray in the year ahead. It'll
help you realize a few hopeund .
expectations.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Proiect wannth and friendliness
and you'll auract those .
tvDoes'li•fP':iJ'•pleto you. You don't
anything special-· just
Trying to patch up a ·
romance? The AstraMatchmaker can help you
what.to do to make the
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10156.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Play everything down the middle
today. Pushing too hard in either
direction could get you off track,
and instead or reeling good about
things, you'll wonder what went
wrong.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
The opportunity to di~cu~~ a mutter that i~ very importanl to you
might pre~ent il~lf today. Don't

beat around the bush: be right up
front about everything.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Even if yo~ don't learn about it
today. someone is looking out for
your interests at this time . It will
have something to do with what
You cap share wit~ another.

attitnde you display today will
prove to be an example others
want to emulate. Don 't be sur·
prised if everybody wants to be

with you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Should you find yourself a bit
restless t'!,day, get out and find
someplace where you can unobtrusively stroll and observe lhe
beauty that's all around us . It'll be
inspiring to you .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Events in which your com·

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
instend ·of trying to &lt;teer things
your way today, let destiny carve
i" own course for you. If you do,
this will tum out to be a very
pleasant day for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You mercial involvements are conneed some type of activity today cerned favor you today, be they
that stimulates you hoth mentally work related or simply going
and physically. It doesn't have to shopping . Try to spend some time
be anything strenuous or extraor- on mt~terinl acquisition.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jun .
dinary, just healthy and invigo19)
Working together is alw.,ys
rating .
acceptable:
however. today you
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
might be able to realize better
One of your greatest talents is gains
operating solo, where you
being able to effectively manage can develop
some personal sucothers in ways they'll not feel
cesses
.
manipulated. You'll effectively
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
use this talent today, because If you 're not in the mood to go out
your intentions will be construc- on the town today, don'l feet
tive.
into doing so. Much can
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The pushed
be
gained
from introspective
self:assured, calm and peaceful
hours in a quiet place .
\

'&lt;

�I

•
•
Page88
R
III:I~•~C~•~I~I~----------------~F~rl~d·~~~M~·~Kh~'·~·-lo__o,
._•_!___

RIO REDMEN ON THE RUN - SPECIAL SECTION INSIDE MDAY!

TEMPO

_Th
__e_D_a_i_ly__s_e_n_tin
__e_I__________________
FRIDAY

••

Reedsville United Methodist

POMEROY- Fun, food and fellowship at God's NET, 6 to 10:30
p.m. Nutritional meals, video
games, pool, other activities.

APPLE GROVE - Songlest at
Millstone Church, 7 p.m.. featuring
The New City Singers and Glo"'·
land Believers.

Church, featuring Marty Short. Pas·
tor John Frank invites public. ·
MIDDLEPORT- 'Well Glo"i."
Hymn Sing, Ash Street Church, 6
p.m. Public invited. Free will offer·
ing.

POINT PLEASANT - The Hayman Quartet will sing at the Church
COOLVILLE- Revival begins at
White's Chapel Wesleyan Church, · of Christ In Christian Union, 206
7 p.m ... t 0:30a.m. Sunday service. Main Street, 7 p.m.
Evangelist Roger Parsons.

POINT PLEASANT- Sharon
· Eplin of Gallipolis will be singing at
will preach at Evergreen Communi- Church of God of Prophecy, 22nd
Street, 7 p.m.
ty Church, 7 p.m.. Springfield
EVERGREEN -Bob Thompson

Townhouse.

POINT PLEASANT- The Chdst-

GALLIPOLIS- Bell Chapel will be
having a songfest, featuring Faith

Believers and the Harbers ..

206 Main Street, 9:30 a.m.

SATURDAY

GALLIPOLIS - Ter"' Call will
preach at Bell Chapel, 11 a.m.

HARTFORD - Gospel sing af

Church of Christ in Christian Union
in Hartford, 7 p.m. Six groups to
perform and love offering will bene-

fit 2001 Bend Area Gospel Jubilee.
CROWN CITY - Edna Chapel will
feature the preaching of Bill Green
at 7 p.m. Everyone welcome .

BIDWELL- Michael Spina will be
guest preacher at Garden Of My
Heart Tabernacle, Fairview Road,
off 554, approx 3 mi. west of Bidwell

••
•

EUREKA- Songfest at Eureka
Church of God, south of the Gal·
lipolis Locks and Dam, 7 p.m. , featuring L.T. PrQston and Sons,
Foundation Ministry from Pla,in Cify,
One Faith, Singers for Christ, True
Gospel and other local singers.

'

lan UniOfl Quartet will sing at the
Church of Christ in Christian Union,

POINT PLEASANT- Bert Flora
will be preaching at Pleasant Valley
Community Church, 7 p.m.

SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Preaching service,
Freewill Baptist Church, 210 Addi·
son Pike, with Rick Barcus preach·

ing, 7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS- L.T. Preston and
Foundation will sing at Debbie
Drive Chapel during the 11 a.m.
service.

CROWN CITY - Brother Darrell
Wooten will preach al Good Hope
United Baptist Church, 6 p.m.
·GALLIPOLIS - Gospel sing at .
David's Chapel Church, Neighborhood Road , 2 p.m.. featuring
Singers for Christ and Queen Duet.

MIDDLEPORT- Bobby O'Connor
and tO-foot model ol Noah 's Art&lt;,
10 a.m., Hobson Christian Fellow'
ship Church.

BULAVILLE- Bulaville Christian
Church will have Sunday school at
9 a.m., morning worship at10:30
a.m., and evening worship at 6:30
p.m.

CROWNCITY - Liberty Chapel

Protestants reach turning point on gays
BY RICHARD N. OsruNG
IV' RELIGION WRITER

NEW YORK - It's possible that some
day U.S. mainline Protestants will look
back upon mid-March of200las a turning point in their seemingly insoluble dispute over homosexual behavior.
At a striccly guarded secret conclave last
week near Hendersonville, N.C., 34 top
world leaders of Anglican Christianity
agreed to utter no complaint and take no
steps to block increasing tolerance in
America', Episcopal Church. That
appeared to remo\•e the last obstacle to
U.S. dioceses that ordain actively gay clergy and allow blessing rituals for same-sex
couples.
Then on Wednesday, liberals in the Presbyterian Church (U.S. A.) won a parallel
triumph , defeating a ban on s:-~ me-sex

blessmgs. They will now work to repeal a

Church service at 7 p.m., featuring
Conner Family singing and special

four-y~n-uld

preching serivce.

homosexual clergy and lay officers at the

BIDWELL- Bobby Gordon will be

nationwide church assembly in June.
For the moment, at least, uneasy com-

guest speaker at Countryside Baptist Chapel, 845 Skidmore Road.
Sunday School is 9:30 a.m. and
worship is 10:45 a.m. For more
Information, call 446-1742 .

POl NT PLEASANT - Kids Bible
Club, Wesleyan Holiness Church,
2300 Lincoln Ave .. every Monday,
6:30 - 8 p.m. for ages 6 to t 2.
For information call Debbie Alexander at 675-5454 or Debbie
Peachey at 675-1187.
POINT PLEASANT- Michael
Spina. evangelist, will be preaching

"Flame Fellowship" at F.ort Randolph Community Building, Main
St.., across fr'om .Towers at the
Point.

TUESDAY

POMEROY- Terrific Tuesday at
God's NET, 3 to 5:30 p.m. Free
meal, games and crafts for youth.

WEDNESDAY
POINT PLEASANT- Wednesday
night Bible clu_bs for preschool up
through 12th grade, 7 to 8:15p.m.
at Gospel Lighthouse Church, Neal
Road. Lessons, refreshments and
special craft night once a month.

REEDSVILLE - NMheast Cluster For Information call 675-7229 or
hymn sing,.Sunday, 7 p.m.
. 675·6620.

prohibition on ~crively

traditional teaching against same-sex relations. While the Episcopal church takes
that formal stand, it lets dioceses do what
they wish. Presbyterian conservatives won .
a 1997 ban on actively homosexual· clergy,
but· now liberals have gained the right to
bless same-sex couples.
Last May, the United Methodist Church
decisively reaffirmed bans on both rituals
and clergy, although dissenters plan to
continue same-sex ceremonies.
Can this inherently unstable situation
persist'
These three closely related denominations, with 14.3 million members and
54,215 local congregations among them, ·
have struggled with this quandary for a
quarter-century.
Elsewhere in U.S. Protestantism, the
United C hurch of Christ has long followed an open policy on homosexual
practice. Most other denominations are
opposed.
While the Anglican leaders handled the
dilemma at their North Carolina gathering with closed talks, arched eyebrows and

delegaies have engaged in public debate.
Last year's Presbyterian assembly passed
the ban on rituals and sent it to 173
regional legislatures, or presbyteries, for
ratification. By Wednesday, 87 had voted
no, killing the measure.
Conservatives needed the measure t~
ovetturn a ruling from the Presbytenans
highest church court. T hat ruling allows
clergy to perform same-sex union services
so long as they are not confused with marriag10.
.
. ·
A survey by the denomination shows 57
perceiu of members at large and 61 percent of lay elders support a law against
clergy giving same-sex blessings, but only
50 percent· of pastors.
The Rev. Laird Stuart, a San Francisco "
pastor and co-leader of the victorious
Covenant Network, says the voting on
same-sex rituals has significance for the .
separate issue of actively gay office-holdcrs, currencly banned.
The vote, he says, indicates that a change
to let presbyteries and congregations
reconsider that matter "would be very

promises have been reached: Both denominati ons snll officially uphold Christia nity's ambiguous cmnmuniq ues, Presbyterian attractive."

Aquatic exercise
program

Vc~llc·y

Economy
survey
starts
this week

1.25

5

tmts

Gt~llipoli-.

Puhli .. hing Cu.

RELIGION IN THE NEWS
Mormons to distribute spuds

Indian PM orders investigation

BLACKFOOT, Idaho (AP) - The Church of Jesus Christ of
NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Prime Minister Atal Bibari VajLatter-day Saints says it will help Idaho potato growers distrib- payee ordered an investigation to determine if a copy of the Musute 16 million pounds of surplus tubers to needy people in the lim sacred book, the Quran, was burned by people protesting the
United States and abroad.
destruction of Buddha starues in Afghanistan.
The church will use its packing facilities near Idaho Falls to
Reports of the burning during a March 5 demonslr.ltion outreceive, wash and sort potatoes donated by Potato Management side United Nations headquarters have caused riots.
Co. growers.
"If any such incident has occurred, the government condemns
Church members also will .purchase dehydrated potatoes for it," ~d Pramod Mabajan,Vajpayee's parliamentary alfaio minister.
use worldwide.
. He then criticized those who had mentioned the incident, saying
"This is a joint effort by potato growers from Idaho and the that discussion of such events "caused tension in various pam of
Church o f Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to place this bur- the country."
densome supply of potatoes in the hands of those whose lives
Vajpayee ordered a report on . the alleged incident. He was
would be extremely blessed by the receipt of the mere esse n- responding to G.M. Banatwala, a member of a Muslirq party, who
tials of life," said Joseph Wirthlin, Area Director ofWelfire Sere accused the government of not taking any action against the cuivices for the church.
prits. He accused members of two Hindu nationalists groups.
Volunteers will sort, wash and pack "4.5 million pounds of
The groups have staged anti-Muslim protests before. Banatwala
potatoes to be shipped to food banks and homeless shelters said they burned the Quran as they protested outside the U.N.
throughout the United States. The 'remaining 12 million offices against the destruction of the Buddha starues in
pounds will be processed at five de)lydracion facilities in eastern Mghanistan by that nation's leaders, the Taliban, a fundamentalist
Idaho to be stored for humanitarian efforts.
Islamic movement.

'

• Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • Mar&lt;:h 18, 2001

EA~TERN EAGLE~ FLYTO FINAL 4!

nM~ENTINEL STAFF
POMEROY- A survey
aimed developing economic
developmental strategies for
Pomeroy's residents and
. businesses begin.&lt; this week.
The survey, starting Tuesday. is a coUaborative effort
by the Focus on the Future
of Pomeroy Committee and
the Corporation of Ohio
Appalachian Development.
COAD is an Athens-based
non-profit
organization
serving
rural,
moscly
AppaJachian, counties· in
~astern and southern Ohio.
It is composed of 17 Community Action Agencies that
serve a 30 county area.
The FFPC consists of a
group of interested citizens
and business people who
live and work in Meigs
County.
The committee's goal is to
work towards ·
·

Brand New 2001
Buick Century Sedan

~3,750* ~7,950*
• Automatic, Air Cond.
• Power Sunroof
• CD Sys.W~ix Speakers

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Remote Keyleaa Entry
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

· Biand New 2001
pontiac Montana 4 Door

'21,750*

· Brand New 2001

Brand New 2001 Chevy

Chevy S.Serles Pickup

Silverado Ext.Cab 4Dr. Pickup

~1,

BY KEVIN KELLY

nME5-SENTINEL STAFF
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia and
Meigs counti es posted marginal growth in population in
the 2000 Census, data released
by the state Friday revealed.
Gallipolis lost population, as
did four of Gallia's five vii!ages, and only two ·of Meigs'
five villages picked up residents in the count, officials

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• Sl'(led Wheela

• 3400 V-6, Keyless Entry
. • Power Wlridows &amp; Lock's
• ntt &amp; Cruise

Here's a regional look at
how cities and villages
fared in the 2000 Census.
Pop. %1osa

Amesville
Chesapeak.e
Coolville
Proctorville
Rutland
Gallipolis

ir~~~~oy

164
842

528
620
401
4.180
1,966

-26.4
-21.5
-20.4
-19.0
-14.5

·13.5
-13.0
·12.1

11 ,211
Cheshire
221
-11.6
Buchtel
574
·10.3
Coal Grove
2,027 -10.0
-9 .4
452
Murray City
·6.6
279
Hanging Rock
Rio Grande
915
-8.0
said.
Oak Hill
-8.0
1,685
-7 .6
411
The Census puts Gallir.olis' Crown City
2,525
-7.3
popii!a"tiop at . 4,'180 .. . 'well · . Middleport
328
·5.2
below the 5,000 needed to Athalia
14,515
Marietta
-3.4
maintain city status, The count Belpre
6,660
·2.0
was 13.5 perc ent below the Glouster
1,972
·1 .4
-1.4
545
1990 Census, despite a inten- Coalton
·0.7
871
sive campaign last year to pro- Hamden
vide the Census with an accu- - - - - - - - - - - -

•

rate count.

The survey will ask questions about shopping inreresiS, health and professional
services, preferences for various community. development ideas and civic projects, and ideas that . could
help the community take
advantage_ of the expected
changes within the region,
ruunely the Athens-Darwin
project, . the RaveiJIWood
Connector project, and the
development of a new riverfront marina.
"We are very excited
about this effurt to involve
the entire community in
plans to improve business in
Pomeroy;' said Musser. "We
are hopeful that the survey
will. provide enough input

*

Census losses
Name

survey.

Brand New 2001 Pontiac
Sunfire Sun &amp; Sound

CENSUS 2000

Gallipolis falls
to 4, 180; dty
status in peril

and community life in the
Pomeroy area.
John Musser, Pomeroy
councilman and chairman
of the FFPC, said the committee recently worked with
COAD staff to develop the

Weekend At

Vol. 16, No. 5

Ciallia, Meigs
population
upsr

,c~~=ta1n
improve !~:::~,~··

'

. I

Salon expands
offerings

•

unba
Ohio

D1
Tanning:

NCAA toumament:
The Big Dance
continues

BY TONY M. LE4ctt

MONDAY
POMEROY - Musical Monday at
God's NET, 3 to 5:30p.m. Free
meal , games and guitar lesson for
youth .

Wellness:

EY

81

SPORIS

The Eastern Eagles won
a thriller Friday night in
Columbus to aovance
to the state semifinals.
The Eagles topped
Worthington Christian
79-71 in overtime.
Details, Sports 81

Bryan Long photos

,..... 11M Slimy. ~

Both Gallia and M eigs posted an increase of0.37 percent.
Gallia picked up I 15 residents
from I 990 for ·a total of
31,069 in 2000, while Meigs
added 85 people for a count
o£23,072.
Gallia's population was
30,954 in I 990, and 30,098 10
years earlier. Meigs had 22,987
residents in the 1990 Census,
down from 1980's total of
23,641.
The 1990 Census also put
Gallipolis at below 5,000, and
a local recount recognized by
the Ohio secretary of state's
office allowed city status to be
maintained.
A recount of the 2000 total
is likely, City Commissioner
Celestin e Skinner said Saturday.
"If these figures are correct,
there will definit ely be a
recount, and probably right

Census gains
Here's a regional look at
how cities and . villages
fared in the 2000 Census.
Pop. %gain

Name

375
Zaleski
Frank. Furnace 1,537
1,888
McArthur
5,230
Nelsonville
324
Vinton
1,067
Chauncey
879
Syracuse
134
Centerville
746
Racine
Albany
808
6,164
Jackson
6,078
Wellston
21,342
Athens

27.6
26.8

22.5
14.6
10 6
8.9
6.3

4.7
2.3

1.6
0.7
0.5
0.4

away," she said.
The city may ask volunteers
who canvassed Gallipolis last
year with Census information

Please He Census, AI

Census 2000

Mol'ning!

Ohio population change ,nge
Percent change in pcpulation by county, 1990 to 2000.

BY CIWUNE J4nn!JcH
2000 Chevy Cnaller
Coupe Or Sedan

950*
'

• Automatic .
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Casaeue

2000 Chevy
Malibu Sedan

2000 Oldtmoblle
·Alero GL Sedan

2000 Pontiac
Grand Am .SE Sedan

-~1,950* ~2,450* ~3;
• ~utomatlc, Air Cond.
• Power Windows I Locks
• Tilt, Cruise, CD System

• Automatic, Air Cond.
• Power Windows &amp;,Locka
• Tilt, Cruise, CD System

2000 Buick Century .

*

. • Automatic, Air Conditioning
.• Power Wind., Locka·I • Tilt I Cnllaa, CD System

Custom Sedan

2000 Chevy Blazer
LS4Door4x4

~3,750*

qa,B5D*

• Power Drlv!lt''a Slat
• Power Wlndowa I Locka
• Tilt &amp; Crulaa

• Ta•es, Tags, Til~ Fees e~ra. Rebatelnduded n sale price of new vel)lde istad o11ere applicable. "On apfliOYOd cre&lt;il. On selected models. Not r8lflOil!ibte for typogfa!lhlcalenors. Pilals Good
r.tardl141h Throofjll r.tarcl\16111.

...

CHIVIOLif

WI'UN1111U·

• Power Windows I Lockl
• CD Syat1111, Till I CruiH
• Aluminum Wheels

nMESSENTlNB. STAFF

an

A Hannan High tan cheers
his 'team during W.Va.
state 'tourney action. ·

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\VIII VIrginia's f1 Chewy, Pontile, Bulclc, Oldl, Andlllttm VII Deller.

RlJTLANl) -When Elizabeth Smith WliS
selected fur rnernbenhip in WhQ's Who Among
American High School S\u£1enm, she had no idea
that it would result in
invitation to attend the
Presidential Classroom program in Washington.
And even when the invitation. came - one of
500 sent to selected students
the country the M~ High School senior, while excited,
doubted that she "-'luid be making a trip ro the
nation\ Capitol anytime SOQn.
The trip would be costly. Her fiuni1y could
help. but more money would be needed. The
ruition was $95(), the IIigbt was $200, and there WliS
the matter ofspending money while she WliS there.
Anxious that she be able to attend, her parents,
Everett and Sherry Smith,.contributed what they
could, Smi!hs co-wotkm at the M~ Mines
pitclled in, as did Feeney-Bennett Post of the
American Legion of Middleport. And Elizabeth

IN
PI
Cl-1

=

WliS oft" (1) Washington.

.

She was one of three students in Ohio partici-

pacing in the program, which
included attending educational seminars, visiting places of
historical significance, and
viewing the national legislative

proce.s at work.
The 400 students
attending

stayed at the
GeorgetoWn UniVersity Conterence Center, four ·to a
room, and wore badges when
the~dvent out giving them access to most public
buil~ and officials.
U.S. Rep.-Thl Strickland introduced Elizabeth
tn Sen. John McCain, Mike DeWine,Joe Lieberman, GeorgeVoinovich and Ted Kennedy. She met
Hillary Clinton, Alan Greenspan and Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott.
·
While at the White House she tl!ked to Fim
Lady Laura Bush, who personally showed her the
Oval Office, Lincoln~ bedroom, t:""n the presi-

PIMM ... .Capilli. AI

•••
Jelferaon
County

••

-ll% 10 -5% -5% 10 0% .
SOURCE: u.s. C«&lt;IUIBurHU

0
O%to5%

5%10 t5%

15%1030% 30%1064%

.

.

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