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81

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Whlrs ·lnslde

Cia

t l(s

mission approves transfen
SM!Jfs

oJfire receives

$20,000 boost
IIY'IIuotiJ.Ria

~lclt

· of 1M: Mtr:itts 100M and fifth

p!OS'AI1l, ~~1M: ptocb-

IJvestDck repolt
GA.LLIPOLIS - United
Produccn Inc. market n:port
6om Gallipolis fur ~i:s c;on- .
dueled onWednesday.
Feeder C.ttle-Lowv
275-415# St. $90-$105 H£
$83-$92, 42&gt;525# St. 18&gt;
$94 Hf. $75-$82 550-625#
St. $78-$84 Hf. $70-$77 650725# St. $72-$80 H£ S6&gt;
$72; 750-850# St. $68-$76
·H£ $60-$65.
Fed Cattle
Steen - Choice, $67-$72;
Select, $62-$66; Holsteins,
$55-$62.
Heifers - Choice, $65$71; Select, $60-$63,
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $40$43; Medium/Lean $37-$41;

.

are ~ &lt;)II llw- liM ~nd

nutioo ud ~dilL'~ lhi!d Th&amp;l.l)'$ of ~ month
lOr dlildhood. immUllintion~ lroln I 10 7 p.n1,
IOr&lt;~modti~,

Delthl

'

~y ,!(

Coonty Heahh Dqwtnmw:\ \'.ad. IIIOI'Ith lroln ,_,, .un,
lmmunW..tioo t\etioo Pb.n &lt;Uid I~ p.m, E~li~ dmia

About I minion Ameriaon
~vsamllb..COM
dlildml undtr:r lhl' ~ or l
POM£ROY - The Meigs telllllin unprotrtte&lt;l ~ainst
· County
oommimonm childhood diStr:~ ~;IU$'e
~ppro~ 12(),000 in fund\
!hey ~ oot in\nlunil.tr:d, Sim
~ fOr lhe Mtigs COIUI- Aid,
ty shmtr during lhldr. regular Looal rerords itliliu~ th~t
~~ on Thu..Wy lll\er- 67 ~t of Mcig:~ County\
Shirley Blankenship, 48
noon.
)'UUflgSW\1 #C up-t&gt;:&gt;-da~ on
Howaid Peck. 53
The tnnsrers; requested by imnmnintions b)) •s-e two.
Samuel TUcker Jr.. 72
. Sheritr R.alph Tru$$ell, include However, lhe Ohio Ot-~rt­
Martha Hesson. 51
$5,000 11om the lin.: itern fur ment of Helllth sets ~ goal of
Timothy Honacher
employee 'lalarics fur oontr~ct 90 pen:ein,
Vema Rose, 91
~pain, g.u and oil, tontr4tt
Inez Harper-Spurlock, 77 . . service IU1d medial expenses Infant! ~nd tuddlen need 18
va~-cin~tions to protrtt them
Dc' ,._I AJ
tOr prisonen.
~g.Unst d~ngerous illnast.-s,
Commissioner Mick Dav- including diphtheria, ~tmus,
enport presided at lhe meeting pertussis, polio. Hep&lt;ttitis 8,
in the ~bstnt\' of JdfThorn- Haemophilus
lnllucntae,'
ton, who remains hospillllited m~ingitis, blood infi:&lt;::tions,
in Huntington, W Va,
ear
infuctlons,
mc&lt;tslcs,
In olher business, the com- mumps, rubella and chickenmissioners signed ~ proclama- ~tion declaring April 14-20 The department offi:rs sevNational lnfimt lmmunintion eral \valk-in inununintion
Week in Meigs County.
dinics each month, Day clinics
Courtney Sin1 and Nancy are conducted on the second,
Hiah: 60s, low: 50s
. ......... A2

llunlaza IIIia It at•

Commissioner.\ &lt;tOO ~IN ~
prudlm.uion d~ri~

May l

National 1:&gt;-ty of l~&lt;l}~r in
Md~ County, N&lt;~tion.tl O.ty
uf Pr-ayer ommitttt Cluitman Urenda ll.tmlun, l'.tlli:lt.al
Ch~irm~n AI Hartsml an,l
ronm1it~ m,•mber Gl.atl~
Cmnh~ tlis.:ussd plam ror
th&lt;' l't'lmty-witlc c\~nt. whkh
will indutlc a pr.t}~t ser\•kc at
the Meigs County Courthouse, .tnd a W\.'t'k-lm~g Uiblclt'ading mat.athon.
In otlocr busim:~, the ~'tlm·
missionen:
• Approwd ~ romr~n ror
(hild (al'l' s.:rvit~ fur the
Department o( Job dlltl f,unl ly Servkcs through Rio
Gnnnlc Child Dcwlnpment
Center/ Kids Fint;
• Appro"'-&gt;d payment o( bills
in the amolli1t o($,31 .3, 154,69.
Also present were Commissioner jim Shce~ and Clerk
Glorin Kloes,
· ·

Library Building
.
'

Crews were pouring concrete
WedneSday at the site of the ·

~~~~~·~··~··
'~clltltn
et the Mel&amp;• CountY Dl1trlct

l'OM lm.DY -

~ffort to l'l:plcnlsh Sll!!l!itoj.l

blood wpplks, the Amcrkau
Red Cross' Uloodmobilc
wilt be ~~ the Mci~ Senior

Center u11 WednesdAy to
CtJlt ect blood donations.
"A three-day Inventor y
level is ueeded at all times in
nl't1er to ttdequutdy 1111 hospi tal nrdcrs," Stli d C hery l
Gerl!dy, Npokcspersun fur
the n .ud Cross. ''Untortu·
n~tdy, blood drive cnllcc·
tioll! fell below .mtkipntcd
amount! in March, resultinl!
in inventory dropping below
optimum levels for most
blood types,"
"l'or the pnst several days,
we've had n 1- 1/2 Jay's sup·
ply of 0 negative, B negative
and A negative, Supply of A
positive has also been below

W.VA.
Dai!Y s: 2-9·8
Dalty 4: 8·1 ·7·2
C.lli 25: 5·6-8·16-21·25

Index

1

Calendar
Classifieds .
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

A4
B5·7

Sports
Weather

81·5
· A2

sa

A4
M
A3
A3

0 :1003 Ohio Villot' Mlllllllll Co.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

"v

'•

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304-675-43 .0

The ll. eJ Cross is the
"'''Jot pti:lviJt•r for blood
und blood · cotttponcnts at
••rra hospitals . A readily •vailable supply of blood must be
on ha.nd at all times for
cmcrgencit·s and pla1111ed
medical procedures requiriug bluud transfusions.
Th be a blood donor, indivlduals must be dt least 17
years of a~e. weigh 105
pounds or mlJrc, be in good
gcn ert~l health , anJ not have
dotlllted blood within the
p:ht 5li d~ys. Dunurs can
give blood when taking
most n1 edicatiom, it1cludlng
itmtlin nnd high blood pres•
mre 'medications, if their
medical condition is stable.
The blood111oblle will be
nt the cemet frolu 1-6 p.m .

ODOT opens bids for U.S. 35 work
CHILLICOTHE - Bids
for the project to conltruct
the final leg of the U.S. 35
corridor in Ron County
were opened today by the
Ohio Department of Transportation's Office of Contracts and an apparent low
bidder was announced.
According to ODOT Districe 9 Deputy Director John
P. Hagen, the Kokosing Consrruction
Company
of

Columbu1 was the ~pparent
low bidder for the project to
construct the remainder of
the 4-lane highwiy from
Chillicothe to Richmond
Dale.
The R.oss-35 project will
replace the existing 9.4-mile,
two-lane section of U.S. 35
between Chillicothe and
Richmond Dale with a
divided, limited access fourbne highway.

What Can

th~

This is

la!t step of :t
proje(t which
will complete the ~ntin: corridor, making the route a
four-lane highway from Day·
ton to Gallipolis: currently.
contractor. are working on
ODOT Dimict 6'1 portion
of the .corridor to co111pletc
the project in F~yo:ttc Counmulti -phas~

ty.

The project· i1 expected io
be complete in June of 2004.

He~plce

COml AND CONVIRIATION - A large number of people
turned out for Friday's ·coffee, Commerce and Con¥ersatlon,' a new weekly networking program recently lrnplemented by the Melfi• Couoty Chami:Jer of Commerce . The
poPtJiar program 11 geared toward the e~change of community ldeae over coffee and refreshments every Friday mornIng, 8-9 a.m., In I Ide the cha.mber office. (Submitted)

Do for You?·

Hospice provides emotional, medical and spiritual support for people who
are terminally ill. Their goal is to improve o potienrs quality of life by
making them comfortable in th.ir home, as well as focusing on
symptom and pain management of the terminal illne~t. Hospice helps .
(amiliet cope with the core of their ill family member, and acts os an
Odvocote during their time of need. Please coli Holzer Hospice if you
would like more information about the services they provide.

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
'

~ddcd.

Bu~t 5: 3·17·21·34·36

•

.

tlit

Pick s nlpt: 9-0-o
Pick 4 nljht: 0·9+6

211dllll- .. ,....

~

Itt

llll10lltlt,11 she

OHIO
Pick s: 7-o·7
Pick 4: 6·1·8; 1

,

At Pleasc;tnt Valley Hospital
we treat you like family...
because that's what you are.

.,

t~e 11eee1MtV

FROM STAI't' Rffi)AT$

Public Library In Pomeroy,
t.ou Mor1an Builders of
Sandyville, W.va., Ia the lenera! contractor for the helf·
million dollar expansion project. The addition Ia belnl
paid for throiJih the llbrery
board's bulldlnl fUnd, end
will house eddltlonel reeding
areas, a children's area, and
a computer laboratory. Exist·
lnlllbrery apace will be uaed
for stacks, a olroutatlon desk
end additional office space
for library ldmlnlatretlon. The
project Ia expected to be
completed In September.
(Brien J. Reed~

Thin/Light $30-$35; Bulls

•

·Blood drive set
for
next
week
.
.....

547-$56
.
Call the office at 446-9696.

,.,

PROCLAMATION - Courtney Sim ~nt:l Nancy 13rodel1ck of the
Meigs County Hei11tli Di!Pl!rtment, standing, discussed the
Immunization services offered by the department as Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mlck Dilvenport declared National
lnfllnt Immunization Week In Meigs County Apnl 14-20. {Biian
J. Reed~

•
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"

111 • •• C••••r• ......,.,.. • .. ••••• cuu•r• ••2·74•a
,
•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discove1' the Holzel' Difference
www .bolzer.org

.,

�The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
~Aprtl13

Friday. Aplll d~ 2002

.•

ConViction leaves uncertain future for .Traficant

•

CLEVELAND (AP) U.S. Rep.
James A. TraficaAt (aces an uncertain
future both politically and personally
following his conviction on racketeering, bribery and fraud cha~.
The nine-term Democrat was •round
guilty Thursd:ly of all I 0 federal charges
he faced, including taking kickbacks
fium staff and bribes and gifts from businessmen he was lobbying for. The jury
also ordered him to furfeil $96,000 in
ill-gotten gains fium a .pattern of racketeering activity spanning more than a
decade.
The charges carry a maximum penalty of 63 years in jail , though under federal sentencing guidelines, he is likely to
·g et a much lighter sentence. Most legal
· analysts expect Traficant to get a sen-

.1Cokurb .. lltiM· I

__

renee offewer than 20 questioned by reporters outside the
h gh 't ·
courthouse.
~ars, t ou I IS up "I still have some rights as an Amer~to the judge to calcu- can" Traficant said. "I've never been .a
late the gravity of his
•
.
.
..
quitter. I'm not gomg to quit now.
crimes.
But the congressman has not yet forHe also could face mally declared his candida.cy for re-el~~­
an additional S2 mil- tion. He. missed the deadhne for JOlnang
lion in fines for the the Democratic primary in the neWly
non-racketeering
dtawn l7th congressional district that
"I still have charges ·in the indict- includes his home base ofYdungstown,
and said he plans to run as an indeperisome rights as ment.
Traficant said Thurs.
·
·
an American. day he will not resign, · dent.
He has until May 6 to 61e papers makI've never been despite a call · by ing him a candidate.
.
:
· a quitter. I'm House Democratic He could still · return to Washington
notsoingto Leader Richard A. while awaiting sentencing, b~t House
· quit now:' · Gephardt for him to rulel require that anyo.n e conv1c~ed ?f.a
do sa. He insulted felony refrain from vottng on legtslatton.
Jemea A. Tl'altcllnt Gephardt while being

d 0 You make the kids come back?,..How do you restore ttre.
confidence of parents and teachers .
. .
The operators of the charter school filed a .1100 ~Tulhon
federal lawsuit Tuesday charging the schools closmg on
·
CINCINNATI (AP) - Small groups of black protesters Monday 'by the state was racially motivated.
School and state officials met Wednesday, but most of the
and white counter-protesters jeered each other Th11rsday in
the shadow of a memorial to slain police officers, where the discussion focused on the International Preparatory School
BY n1E ASSOCIATED PRESS
cloudy with a chance of show- first group was criticizing what they .said is police brutalit.y. in Cleveland. Habibah Rahman, superintendent of Day~on
The protest came a day after Cincinnati Police Ch1ef Urban Academy, and two associates comprise the govermng.
More showers and thunder- ers. Lows in the mid 50s.
Thomas Streicher Jr. told City Council members that lead- board for both schools.
storms are expected Saturday Chance ofrain 50 percent.
ers should unite and move forward . . Cincinnati has been
as a · frontal system works its
Extended forecast:
way across · the region, the
Sunday... Cloudy with a tense since three nights of rioting in April 2001 after a white
National Weather Service said. chance of showers and thun- police officer fatally shot an unarmed black man who fled
DAYTON (AP) - Some Union Township residents •. tire.d
.
.
.
,
Temperatures will be slight- derstorms. Highs in the lower police.
Police officers ringed the group, across the street from of snide remarks about their street address, have convmcetl
ly cooler on Saturday, with 70s. Chance of rain 50 perCincinnati police headquarters, to monitor the protests.
county commissioners to change the name of Gay Road to
highs mostly in the 60s.
cent.
and
Cecil
Thomas,
a
black
retired
Cincinnati
police
officer
Green Apple Road.
,
Sunday
night...Mostly
Lows tonight will be in the
executive director of the city Human Relations Commis"The repercussions of Jiving on a road called 'Gay are n&lt;?t
50s.
cloudy with a chance of show- sion, said the small group isn't representative of Cincinnati's
pleasant," wrote Sharon Mckinney, 48, one of 19 res1den~s
The rain is expected to ers. Lows in the mid 50s.
black community.
who
signed a petition. "The snide re,mark~ and thoughtle~~
linger in the area on Sunday Chance of rain 40 percent.
comments about one's address bemg GAY are mtolerable: ·
morning.
Monday.. .A chance
of
She and other residents said they were not making a stateSunset tonight will be at showers during the day, otherment against homosexuality. But gay rig~ts a~tivists said t~e
8:07, and sunrise on Saturday wise partly cloudy. Highs in - CINCINNATI (A~) :-!he. amicable settiement ~fa U.S. residents' problem with the street name IS telhng.
is at 6:57 a.m.
the upper 70s.
JustiCe Department mvestJgatJOn of the Cmcm?at1 Poh~e
"Here are nongay people who can't even take the harass;;
Weather forecast:
,. .. Tuesday.. . Partly
cloudy. . Department is being hailed as a landmark r~s.olutlon far d1f~ meat of living on a street called Gay, ~uch less bemg gay,
Tonight... Mostly
cloudy Lows in the lower 50s and ferent from confrontational ones in other c1t1es.
.
said Jim McCarthy of Dayton. "Wouldn tIt be nace tfthe ~
U.S. Attorney General John Ashc~oft. planned to meet ~1th and lesbian community could simply petition to have themwith scattered showers. Lows highs in the upper 705 .
in the mid 50s. South winds
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. the City Council and attend a ugmn~ ceremony Fnday, selves named the 'green apple community' and we could
around 10 mph. Chance of Lows in the lower 50s and indicative of a new appro~ch by the Justtce Department.
eliminate the harassment, intimidation and' hatred that we
rain 50 percent.
h'gh
.10 h
The investigation was requested by Mayor Charhe Luken experience on a daily basis."
705
1
T~ ~ e u:pe~ · 1 d a year ago after the fatal police shooting of an unarme.d black
Saturday... Showers likely.
Highs in the upper 60s. South- . . urs ahy... art yf he ou y man led to the city's worst riots in decades. The settlement
· ds
d tO mph with a c ance o s owers.
.
d .
r
·
·
west Wm aroun
·
.
h 1
d accepts Justice Department recommen at1ons 10r 1mprovmg
50
L?ws .m t e .ower
s an police operations.
.
· COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) -The son of a weal,thy AlabaChance of rain 70 percent.
Saturday
night...Partly h1ghs m the nud 70s.
The changes will tijrhten policies governing use of force, rna businessman who had been missing since last week
enhance training and improve recordkeeping. The agreement drowned along the bank of the Ohio River, according to the
also coimnits Cincinnati to create an independent agency to Kenton Counry coroner's office.
.
.
investigate citizen complaints of police brutality.
· Friends and family members identified the body of 26year-old Lon Robert Dowdle, of Alexander City, Ala., on
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Kroger Co. said Thursday it
Wednesday after finding him about a mile from the Holid~y
has agreed to buy 17 supermarkets and two vacant pieces of
Inn he was staying at, according to Covington police.
land, mostly in the Houston area, from Albemon 's Inc.
CINCiNNATI (~P) - A successful business executive
Dowdle's body was found lying face down in mudc{y
Sixteen of the stores are in the Houston area and the 17th
who started his own software company is the "Black Wig waters along the river, which runs behind the hotel in CovIs In Sulphur, La. They all include pharmaties. All. of the
Bandit" whose disguise always incl,uded .a black wig when he ington, Assistant Police' Chief Jim Liles said.
'
stores wlll become part of Kroser's Southwest Division,
held up a string of banks, federalmvesllgators say. .
·
On Thursday, Kenton County Coroner David Suetholz
which operates 190 stores in Texas and Louisiana.
William M. Gregory, 56, pleaded innocent Thursday in ruled Dowdle's cause of death as an accidental drowning. ·
Financial terms weren't disclosed. The deal is subject to
U.S. District Court to 'a 19-count indictment charging him
regulatory review and should close within 45 days, Kroger
with stealing nearly $'1 00,000 from eight suburban banks
officials said from the company's headquarters in Cincinnati.
from Sept. 28 to Feb. 20.
Kroger operates 86 stores in the Houston metropolitan
Gregory Is free on $200,000 bond. The case is expected to
COLUMBUS (AP) - Forme.r Gov. Richard Celeste says
area, company spokesman Gary Rhodes said.
. .
go to trial in May.
·
.
the only regret he has about commuting the death sentenc~s
· His younger brother, Michael R. Gregory, 47, of Fatrfield, of seven killers is that he waited until the last days of hts
pleaded guilty Thursday to one count of robbery and other administration to do it.
charges stemming from a 10-hour standoff during which he
Celeste, speaking Thursday at a death-penalty symposium
FORT GAY, W.Va. (AP) -An Ohio man ,found dead in a
fired at federal agents serving a . search warrant at his apart- at the Capital Universiry Law School, said the lith hour
creek apparently fell to his death from a railroad bridge
ment. ·
commutations gave the impression that his action was hasty
above the small stream, the sheriff said.
and ill-considerc:d.
·
.
"There doesn't seem to be any foul play," in the death of
Celeste
granted
the
commutations
just
two
days
before
h;e
Benny Thompson, 59, of Otway, Ohio, said Dave Penningleft office in January !991 without any .input from the AduJt
ton, Wayne County sheriff.
DAYTON'
(AP)
It
is
unlikely
the
Dayton
Urban
AcadParple Authority.
.
The body, found Thursday, was sent to the state medical
emy
will
reopen
even
if
it
persuad~s
a
judge.
to
block
the
The former governor commuted the death senten.ces of six
· examiner's office for an autopsy.
.
state order that closed it, the schools lawyer satd.
inmates to life in prison without parole. He commuted the
The sheriff said Thompson's hat was found on the bridge,
"From a pragmatic standpoint, it's going to be difficult to sentence of a seventh inmate to life with no restriction on
leading investigators to conclude that he had fallen from the
recover," attorney James A. Gret;ne Ill said Thursday. "How parole eligibility.

...

Protesters Jeer at memorial

Weekend gets showery start

Remarks prompt name change .

Ashcroft to attend signing

Death .ruled accidental

Krocer buys Albertson's stores

Ex-execu~lve

pleads Innocent

Celeste still backs decision

Ohioan found In creek

Charter school closes

Backen
quickens
COLUMBUS (AP) - Sup~
porters of a bill that would
allow most Ohioans to carry
hidden guns said Thursday
they hope a court ruUng that
caUs the state's law uncomtitutiona! wiD help the legislation's
chance of passage in the Senate.
The ht Ohio District Court
of Appeals ruled Wednesday
that Ohio's decades-old ban
on
carrying
concealed
weapons violates the state constltution's guarantee that peopie can arm themselves for ~If
defense,
Ohio Attorney General
betty Montgomery asked the
Ohio Supreme Court for an
immediate deby of the ruling
to hear an appeal, but the court
did not rule on the matter
Thunday.
The appeals court ruling
come th!1'e weeks after the
. Ohio HOUJe overwhelmingly

decision
l's passage

passed a bill that would allow upholds the appeals court rulOhioans who pass a ba~k- ing, the state could . wind up
ground check and take a train- with no restrictions against
ing course to buy permits to carrying hidden guns, said Sen.
carry concealed guns. The bill . Jim Jordan, an Urbana Repubis now in the Senate but is lican and one of the bill's key ·
. awaiting assignment to a com- supporters. He said that could
mittee.
tilt some senators who haven't
Senate President Richard taken a position toward 'pas- .
Finan has promised. hearings sage.
on the biD. The Senate cur"Some people who are not
rently is on spring break and quite as fired up wiD say, 'You
committee meetingJ are to know what? May~&gt;F we need
resume Tuesday.
to pass something \)lith a trainShould the Senate pass the ing requirement and some
bill in its current form, Gov. background checks as a better
Bob Tafi has said he will veto it way to do it,' "Jordan said.
because it remains opposed by · Sen. Michael Shoemaker, a
at least three major l'aw Bourneville Democl'2t who
enforcement groups - the also supports the bill, said
Fr:.ternal Order of Police, the whatever the cd'un rules, the
State Highway Patrol and the . law needs to be changed.
Ohio Association of Chie&amp; of Under the current law, violaPolice.
tots can escape punishment if
Backers · hope the court they can prove th.it they need
·decision buO)J' their cause. If to carry a concealed weapon
the Ohio Supreme C~urt for protection.

..

Prtdliy, AIHII12, 2002

PapA2

•

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

•

Obituaries

•

.

•

Shirley D. Blankinship

· at Holzer'Medical Center.
Born Jan. 2, 1930, in Cheshire, he was the
son of the late Samuel W. Sr. and Viola Garren
Thcker, and was a retired rail road worker.
He was ~ preceded in death by two
brothers, Charles William Edwards and
Roscoe W. Edwards.
·
He is survived' by his wife, Violet H . Thcker;
two daughters, Sonya Evans and Tonya Sizemore, all of Columbus; three sisters, Vinida
Randolph and Hilda Jarrell, both of New
Haven, W.Va., and Henrietta Stephenson of
Mansfield; seven. grandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at
Zerkle Cemetery, Letart, W.Va. Officiating will
bct Rev. Larry Luckeydoo. There will be no
visitation. Arrangements are by FoglesongTucker Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.

Martha Jane Hesson

Howard'lholnaS Peck

U~~e ~s

nmothy Ralph Honacher

Samuel w. Tucker Jr.

sa study

1s commiSSion b1ase

J.m.

The Daily Sentiriel

Plan sale

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r.
'·

Scholarship

t

• Aetna
• Anthem
• OU Employees
• Central Benefits
• Ohio Health

~ottery opp.onen~

. EMS ftlns

LOCAL STOCKS.

,.

• Medicare

Rev. Charles Isaac and Bertie Jane PauleyHarper.
During World War II, she was employed
with the Sylvan ia Plant in Huntington. She
joined matrimony with the late Voyd Cesco
Spurlock in ~ 945, until his passing in 1974.
She again joined matrimony in 1996 with surviving, husband Boyd Thomas Spurlock .
Mrs. Spurlock was admired throughout the
community for her kindness , courage and
strength. She will forever be remembered as a.
devoted wife and "loving" mother of thirteen .
She is survived by her husband, Boyd Spurlock; seven sons, Ronald and Rollin Spurlock
of Coolville, Daniel and ,Carolyn Spurlock of
Reedsville, David and Debbie Spurlock of
Reedsville, Gary and Debbie Spurlock offuppers Plains, Voyd Jr. and Becky Spurlock of
Shade, Rodney and Deborah Spurlo.ck of .
Richmond , Virginia, and Don and Katrina
Spurlock of Tuppers Plains ; five daughters,
Barbara and Roger Bissell of Tuppers Plains,
Kay and Marvin Lanham of B~lpre, Kathy and
John . Walker of Reedsville, ~arol and Fred
Dodge o0/incent, and Pam and Mark Boyd of
Tuppers Plains.
Also surviving are a cousin, "like a sister:'
Ginny Gallo of Huntington; three stepchildren ,Voyd T.Jr. and Arlene Spurlock of Berlin
Heights, Elizabeth Spurlock of C ambridge,
Patsy and Edward Kee ofCharleston ,WestVirginia; 17 grandchildren, 20 stepgrandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren, and 36 step-greatgrandchildren; and numerous nie ces and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents,
her husband,Voyd Spurtock; a son, "CL" Spurlock; a granddaughter, Brandy Ann Spurlock ; a
sister, Edith Harper; and an infant brother,
Hubert Harper.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday, April
14, 2002, at the White Funeral Home. Friends
may call at the funeral home Saturday, April
13, 2002, from 6-8 p.m. Burial will be in
Meigs Memory Gardens.

,

,.,.

Network Providers For

,,_ 18
~c. 1
BELPRE -Verna E. Rose, 91, formerly of
Belpre, died April 10, 2002, at the Rock
Springs Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
She was born in Wood County, West Virginia, on December 2, 1910, and was the
daughter of the late Charles Wesley and Elsie
Buckley.
· She was a member of the. Porterfield Baptist
Church, where she' was a member t&gt;f the Willing Workers Sunday School Class. She was also
a member of the Belpre Senior Citizens.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, James Lawrence Rose
Sr.; 13 brothers and sisters; and one grandson.
She is survived by her daughter, Annabel
VanMeter of Belpre; two sons,James Lawrence
Rose Jr., of Stafford Springs, Colorado, And
Thomas J. Rose of Cherry Creek, New York;
five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews ..
Services will be held on Saturday, April 13,
2002, at 3 p.m. at the Leavitt Funeral Home in
Belpre. Officiating will be Pastor Mark Eaton.
Burial will follow at the Reedsville Cemetery in Reedsville.
Friends may visit on Saturday, April 13,
' 2002, from II a.m. until time of the service.
Memorials may be made to the Porterfield
Baptist Church in memory ofVerna Rose.
The family would like to thank all of the
caregivers .a t the Rock Springs Rehabilitation
Center for the loving care given to theit
mother while she was a resident there.

lnezVada
Harper.spurlock

,..

No Appointment Necessary·
7 Days A Week • 9:00am - 9:00pm

E. Rose

•

. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Shirley D.
Myers Blankenship, 48, Huntington, died
:Wednesday. Apri110, 2002, in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington.
• Born Jan. 28, 1954, in Mason County, W.Va.,
'&lt;laughter of the late Herbert E. and Marcella
Neal Myers, she was a homemaker.
· .. Surviying are two sons, David Allen Taylor
of Huntington, and Shawn Allen Taylor of
'Pomeroy; a daughter, Angela Lee (Travis)
·Tbivener of Gallipolis; five grandchildren; and
•
three brothers, Herbie (Mary) Myers and
Larry (Kimberly) Myers, both of Henderson,
W.Va., and Eric (Mary) Myers of Apple Grove,
W.Va.
: She was also preceded in death by a sister,
Cathy Lee Myers; a brother, Terry Brenten
· 'M-yers Sr.; and a granddaughter, Mika Faith
Carter.
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday in Deal
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., with
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Martha Jane
.Stanley L. Williamson officiating. Burial will Hesson, 51, Point Pleasant, died Thursday,
be in Beale Chapel Ce·metery, Apple Grove. April 11, 2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,F'riends may call at the funeral home from 6-8
Born July 22, 1950,in Mason County, W.Va. ,
.tonight.
she was the daughter of Clara Mae Hall and
the late James C. Hall; Sr., and was a hair dresser and owner of Janie's Beauty Shop in Point
.53 Pleasant, W.Va.
·
CHESHIRE - Howard T homas Pe c k• •
She was also a long-time treasurer of the
. C.· heshire, died Wednesdav, Ap
· ril I 0, 2002, at
1
'
American Legion Auxiliary, Mason County,
' Holzer Medical Center.
2
Born Sept. 20,1948 in logan,W.Va.M,haeril:-vas .
also preceded in death by a son,
yn James Robert Byus.
·
the son of the late Russell and
McNeely Peck.
·
Besides her mother, she is survived by her
; He was also preceded in death by a sister, husband, Jim Hesson of Point Pleasant; a son
·Dreama Gail Varian; and a brother, Timothy
•, Dcwaync Peck.
and daughter-in-law,
Richard and
·
f
·Thomas
PI
He is survived by two sister; and brothers- Deb,ra Byus Jr., o Pomt easant; a stepson,
TUPPERS PLAINS - Inez Vada Harperin-law Belinda K. and Gary Porter of Point John Hesson of Massachusetts; a stepdaughter,
'p!easa~t,W.Va., and Sheila L. and Troy Peters of Sherry Hesson of Jamestown, Pa.; two broth- Spurlock, 77, offuppers Plains, died at her res' ,Mansfield; three brothers and two sisters-in- ers and sisters-in-law, Greg and Regina Hall, idence, Thursday, April 11 , 2002, following an
·
.law, William Randall and Becky Peck of and J.C. and Kathy Hall, aU of Point Pleasant; extended illness.
. Born September 4, 1924, in Huntington,
Shade, Gary R. and Gail Peck of Gahanna, and and three grandchildren.
West
Virginia, she was the daughter of the late
.I,amie R . Peck of Cincinnati; and several nieces
. Services will be at 2 p.m . Sunday in Deal
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va. Officiatand nephews.
·
Services . will be 1 · p.m. Saturday at ing will be Minister Paul Chapman. Burial will
..
,.
Foglesong- Thc~er Funeral Home, Mason, follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point
,tN,Va. Officiating will be Pastor Greg Collins. Pleasant. Friends may visit on Saturday from 6: Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
iin Cheshire.
·
, Friends may visit on Saturday from 11 a.m.
until time of service.
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. -Timothy Ralph
Daniel Honacher, 15 months, Raven'swood,
'
died Thursday, April 11, 2002, at his residence.
COLUMBUS (AP)
\WDDLEPORT - . Samuel W. Thcker Jr.,
feelings of most Ohioans, members, is confident the
Arrangements will be announced by White
·
Church
groups
opposed
to
72 ·Middleport,
died Thursday, April' .11, 2002, Funeral Home, Coolville.
who have voted in favor of a committee's recommenda'
,,
an expansion . of state-spon- state lottery and cluritable tions will be fair, a spokesman
sored gambling said Thursday gambling but who oppose said.
that a committee to ·study casmos.
"The governor expects the
gambling's impact in Ohio is
Mottley acknowledged the · committee will make some
biased toward lottery sup- strong feelings of lottery sincere and ·relevant recomPOMEROY - Units of
porters.
1
'AEP-47.90
Fed«aa Mogul- .78
Premier- 9.70
opponents and encouraged mendations," Joe Andrews
· Meigs Emergency Services
An:h Coal- 22.98
use-22.39
.
Rockwell - 19.70
Lawmakers
created
the
task
them to come before the said.
answered three calls for assisAkzo-42.53
Gannelt-79.10
Rocky Bool8 - 8.45
force
last
year
as
part
of
a
committee.
AmTech/880- 33.75 Genenll Ellclrlc- 33.75 AD Shell- 52.88
tance on Thursday. Units
A final report is due June
.
compromise
budget
package
GKNLY-4.110
Alhland Inc. - 44.43
s.a.. -53.24
"We want testimony on 30.
responded as follows:
,._T&amp;T-13.27
Hlllly Davldlon-52.85 Shoney'a - .36
CBN'I'RAL DISPATCH dealing with a S!.S billion both sides of the issue," said.
"Bink On• - 41 .28
Kin.lrt - 1.33
w.I·Mart- 80.17
7:14
a.m.,
Mulberry state deficit . .
Kroger- 22.48
Mottley, a tax lawyer and lobBt.l-15.81
w.ndy'a-37.18
Part
of
that
package
Bob E'illll - 30.87
Landi End - .48.46
WOIIhlngllln '"" 16.88
Avenue, Lisa Hagey, Holzer
byist.
Llll.- 18.88
Dally II10Ck I8PQIII .,.
BorgWamer - 83.02
included raising $41 inillion
Medical
Center;
The task force's vice chairNSC-23.&lt;10
Chefl1llqn - 3.20
1ht 4
cloalng
12:10 p.m., County Road arintially by letting Ohio join man is Rep. Larry Flowers, a
Chanr*1u Shopl- 8.08 01k HI Fit •dll-31.18 quoiN lhe pr8VIoul
OVB-24
,CHy HOlding- 17,&lt;10
dey'l ~. pro- 7 A, Savannah Stone, O'Ble- a multistate lottery. The same Columbus-area Republican
BBT-37.33
vided by 8mllh Partne,.
Col-24.41
package required the task
who is opposed to the multiD0-15.51
PeQpiM - 28.33
at Advnl Inc. ol Gal· ness Memorial Hospital.
force to study gambling's
SYRACUSE .
Pepelco- 51.88
llpolle.
:DuPont- 48.90
state lottery.
7:52 p.m., Ohio 124, motor impact.
"I think it will be a fai~.
Ohio announced in Februvehicle
accident,
Tracie
open process;· he said.
•
Riggenbach, refused treatment. ary that it would join the Big
Republican Gov. Bob Taft,
Game. The newly expanded
Big Game - to be renamed who appointed three of its
Mega Millions - will sell its
RACINE - God's Cloth- first tickets May 15 and coning Pa~h in Racine is hold- duct the first drawing that
Correction Polley
ing a bag 'sale through April includes Ohio on May 17.
Our 11111111 oooam In lllltorltt II
'
19. A bag of dothing can be
The committee's member111 bll aoourate. HlJOU kOOw or an
lflllr' In a 81Dry, olll . . llftJIIOOm
purchased for S1. The shop is ship lac~ bahpce, focus and
•• (740) 11112·2J,58.
open Thesday through Friday credibility, said the .Rev. John
• fium 11 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Edgar
of the
United
~O.,.biiMia
llllln number II 11112·2158.
Methodist Church. The
,.j • ll1t
Department .....lloi .....:
church has sued over the
El1i. 12
multistate game, arguing tlut
.,. G•ltl'IIIIII8111JIF
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Ohio's constitution prohibits .
•
El1i. 13
name of Brandon Bartee. was joining a multistate lottery.
omitted fium the AlB honor
or
El1i. 14
"This is such a flawed com•
roll
at
Eastern
.
Elementary
mittee I wish it could go
. Od••~.cu
•''
School for the third grading away," Ed~r said. "Basically, it
l,.
Exl.3
period. He is an eighth .gader. is a farce."
,.,.
Clla.llllon
Exl.4
Task
force · membeu
inc:lude
.
the
bhio Lottery
Cl il"ledAM
Exl.5
Commission's director, Dennis Kennedy, and Donee
1:
RACINE Southern Graves, the commission's vice
;:
High School students wishing chairman.
'·I
Its chairman is former state
to apply for a RACO schol,.,.,.
arship do not have to reside in Rep. Donald Mottley, a sup. " .' , t . ·,~. the 45771 zip c~ area to porter of Ohio's join_ing a
.
..,
•• •
qualily, according to Jelmifer multistate game. He u1d the ·
!
•
&gt;; · Hoback.
committee represents the
~

..

Urgent. Care!

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

atterla

'·

r'L--------------------1
.......
.

•

·• Medical Mutual
At

......

~

iT.

~

Dr.·Eric Hasemeier
Medical Director
•

510 W. Union Street
Athens, Ohio

ePaiWiiiiCan

(740) 594-7979

• Bo•=verSerfkel
• Pllflu Daly .N una

•k;;•rtSuvku

• redlliy sumac

. .
. . . 21111 ... - . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

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Pi.EA~T

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•

•

�_Th_eo_an_ySe_n_tin_ei________,;B;;;;;;;:;;;..y

the Belld

MIDDLEPORT· POMEROY
ROTARY ·c LUB
INVITES YOU T.O THE

'

DEAR ABBY: My husband and
I have been together for 10 years and
happily married for six. We live in a
small town and have been restoring
a 100-year-old Victorian home since .
our marriage; we've put • lot of our
heart and soul into this house. We
have' terrific neighbon, and it is a
beoutiful neighborhood.We chose to
live in this small town because my
husband was previously married ond
has three children who live here
with their mother. At the time, we
thought it w9uld be a good idea so
he could remain close . to the children. We get along well with them,
see them often, and can attend their
school and sporting activities,
·The problem: My husband's ex has
started parking three doors up the
street ond walks, jogs, bikes and
skates around our house.When l say
uaround," I mean we live on a cor-

•

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
n~r

with an alley in th~ back, so it is
LITERALLY "around" the house.
We feel like we're being circled by a
vulture watching our every move.
My husb~nd says he feels that she's
invading our privacy, especially
when it's his visitation with the kids.
In the summer, this happcm 01i a
daily basis - sometimes twice n day.
My husband ~skcd her to find
another way to go, but she says she's
not doing anything wrong and
refuses.
·

We have thought of moving, but
this 1~ a small town and we are afraid
she would follow us. My husband
grew up in this town and his parents,
grandparents, brothers and sisters live
here. Short of leaving al.l of our hard
work, our beautiful home, our good
neighbors, our relatives and most
impomnt, the children, what can we
do?- VULTURE'S PREY
DEAR PREY: You're not being
circled ·by a vultu rc. You're being
haunted by the Ghost of Marriage
Past. Obviously the poor woman has
not moved on with her life and is
preoccupied with youn. She would
benefit from counseling. Since she
p••rsists in making her ,presence felt
in spite of being asked not to, your.
·next move should be to consult a
lawyer ~nd have a chat with your
local police department. A restrain.ing order may be able to achieve

wh~t a polite request cou!k not.

DEAR ABBY: Your advice to
"Fed Up in Pittsbur,gh" was right
on. It was the letter about the freel&lt;?ading brother-in-law who woul~­
n't move Ollt of his relatives' game
room.
1\Yenty yean ago, I too moved in
with my brother and his family after ·
my divO[I:e. My brother assured me I
could stay until I got back on my
feet. I spent six weeks living there becoming more and more withdrawn in the process, Every night I'd
come home from work and aU I'd do
is play with their kids.
Then one ,weekend niy brother
left town on business, When I came
home , that first ·night after 'he was
gone, my sister-in-law met me at the
door with the words, "I ~ant you to
.move out." I assured her I would, as www.DearAbby.co111 or PO. Box
soon as I got an apartment, She said, 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Meigs Notebook
ute to their dedication, talents
and abilities.
He is the grandson of Kenneth and Shirley Sinclair and
SHADE- Nathan Brickles Naomi "Polly"' Brickles, all of
of Shade has been recognized Shade, and the late Floyd
by the United States Achieve- Brickles,
ment Academy as a National ·
Leadership and Service Award
winner.
Drickles is
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
the son of Asbury United Methodist
Dalf · and Women m~t recently at the
Angie
church for their April meetBrickles,
·
mg.
and attends
President Mary Lisle opened
Meigs High the meeting, with all reading
School. His "The Purpose" in unison.
name will
Ruth Crouch gave prayer,
Brickle•
appear m and Jean Stout gave devotions,
the USAA "Another Day Has Begun"
Official Yearbook, which is and "Let Me L1vc, Lord."
published annually.
Stout gave .the secretary's
The USAA National Lead- report, and 25 sick calls were
e;ship and Servi~e Award proc reported.
v1des studen~ With m~ny b~n- · A freewill offering was
efits and serv1ces and 11 a tnb- - taken, and the birthdays of

Honored by
academy

UMWmeets

was ' given by Jo Ann
Ritchie at a recent meeting
of Chester Council 323 at
the hall.
Helen Wolf presided at
the meeting. Members
recited pledges to the
American and Christian
flags and read Psalm 150,
The Lord's Prayer was
repeated in unison and the
first uanza of "The StarSpangled Banner" was
sung.
The illnesses of Scottie
Smith, Alta Ballard, Jean
Welsh and Opal Eichinger
were reported,
The flag bearers escorted
Doris Grueser to the altar.
Grueser was presented
flowers .and a card in honor
of the 50th wedding
anniversary of her and her
CHESTER - A report husband, Bill .
on the Daughters of AmerErma Cleland . read an
ica rally held in Cincinnati Easter poem.

Dol A meets

Community Calendar 11
publlahld ila 1 frM 11rvlce
to non·proflt group1 wi1hlng
to 1nnounca mlltlnga and
apeolll 111enta. The 0111ndar
Ia not dlllgnld to promote
11111 or funct-ral11ra of eny
type. Hem• are printed only
•• apaca permha end can·
not be a.u• rentMd to bt
printed a apeclftc number of
daya.
FRIDAY

LONQ BOTTOM - Hymn
alng, · Fallh Full Qoapel
Church, 7 p.m. Friday. Fea·
lured elngera, Peace Makere.
Relreahmentl.
SATURDAY

BURLINGHAM - Surfing·
ham ~m Woodmen meet·
lng, 8:30 p.m. Saturday with
potluck maal at 6:30 p.m.
Melge EMS to provide a
111eaker. Public Invited. ,!or
lhe potluck the camp wtl provide, meat, bread, ~rage
. and table aervlet. Public lnvlt·
ed.

PRIIENT FUNDI - Members
of the Tri-Ciub of Meigs and
Athens counties recently presented the Carleton School
Ear1y Intervention program with
a check for $1,400 for matel1als and equipment The Tri-CIUb
represents the Meigs County·
Bikers Association, Athens
HOG and All Alders Club, and Is
a no~oflt orjanlza!Jon nllsl~ ,
money for JVoups and lndMduals In the area. The Ear1y Inter·
ventlon Program W81 chosen
because It t1«ves children w1th
developmental delays or deve~
opmental dlaabllltles, birth
through
2, and their fBfTII.
. nee. Sandy Cobb, Ear1y Inter·
ventJon Specialist at C8lteton
School. acoepted the conttfbu.
tlon from Bob RitteJbeck, TtlClub president (Submitted)

LOS ANGELES (AP)MGM has agreed to allow
New ~ine Cinenu to parody
its James Bond film
·"Goldfinger" in the title of
the new "Austin Powers"
sequel.
In January, MGM succenfully petitioned the Motion
Picture Atsodation of America to ban the suggestive
name of the sununer 'iomedy
"AUJtin Powers in Goldmember," uying it infringed
on the tide of iu 1964 Bond
thriller.
lJoth studios reached an
agroementThunday to aUow

Adults • 13 and up s4
Children· 6 to 12 $2°0

RACINE
Relurn
'
Jonathan
Melge Ch1pter,
OAR, 10 a.m. at the R1clne
Library. Jim OliPhant, lfllaker.

Pancakes • Sausage
Coffee * Milk * Orange Juice
Under age 6 eat free

SYRACUSE - Hymn ling
with Family Heritage, Syra·
cuae Mlaslon church, Bridgeman Street. Saturday, 6 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Hick·
ory Hllll Church of Chrlet near
Tupper• Plaint "Super Satur·
day," "The Pr(!dlgal Son" Sat·
urday, with flilllratlon Ill II
a.m., and the program ending
at 1. Lunch Ia provided.

Sponsored By
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary For Benefit of
Meigs County Service Projects

SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT - Siuegrue
Dlaclpl81 frll concert 111 1111
Heath United Mllhodlll
Church, 349 S. Third Ave..
Sunday night, 6:30p.m. Publlo
lnvlted; love offering aoctpted.

Meigs County Senior
Citizen Center
Mulberry Heights Road,
Pome_
roy, Ohio

MONDAY

vvc.uu1K9 TKV'itatioKS
~ Caalso. C.wj,t'
..,

and many

other
gemstones!

!JiiluiM."CCI • -liOtwHr-ot(Jalllq,...

R~tary

The QuaUty Print Shop, lne.255 MID

Mld4lalort. Olllo

992-3341

s.u..u

-

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE FINE BUSINESSES
•

lene Triplett
,
Meigs Co1nty Eagl1eer

Valley Lu•ller &amp; Supply
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pealud II N!_ 'r'edl ~ zr W'-1 lie NfleW fill
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to the
C.wty C•••'ldDD!ll, Cow•l Mlf,
ow. ......
the aonaal....,a rr 1lourl of I:JO A.M. to 4-..lf P.M. 'Sri " C1Je I ••. 1Jne
. .,. qlleltloas • to dJJs 11011ce, t11ey . ., qMJtM JfM n ml Mrfp
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·~ttaa:

NOTICE TO THE PUBLI.C

!~= claJM••

.

The -.,;at • .,. !WI: -dlf'ntll

I

Featuring
UniQue designs
with
Turquoise
Amber
Moonstone
+Blue
Chalcedony
+Lapis

TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM
MEMBERS &amp;AT THE DOOR

Proceeds to Support
Meigs Comtty Services projects

MJ.H~ ·

the tide.

Part of the deal stipubted
that "any futu~ tides that
m,ay \&gt;e comtrued a. parodies
of James Bond rides will ~
subject to MGM't approval,"
according to. a joint ttate; •
ment from the m~dios.

'

to 11 a.m. proceeda to go lor a
mlaillon• project.

Wednesday, April 17th .
thru Saturday April 20th
9:00am- .

'

.SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 2002
AT MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
SERVING FROM 7:00 A.M. TO II
A.M•

POMEROY - Pomeroy
ALFRED - Alfred United Chapter 186, Order Ill lhl
Methodlet Church breaklut, eut.m Star, Monday, 7:30
Saturday, IIMng from 8 a.m p.m.

*

MGM,.New
Line reach
agreement

ROTARY
BRE

MEIGS CALENDAR

Ann Snu vagc and Marie
Houdashclt were observed.
New business was discussed. ·
Crouch had the program,
"Woman Courageous Seekers
of Shalom," the story ·of typical women at the cross of
Jesus, and the story of the Resurrection by three courageous
women: Mary, Mother of
Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and
Mary, Mother ofJames.
Lisle, Stout, Freda Wilson
and Courch were readers.
Elma Louks read the scripture
of another woman, Mary of
Bethany..
Crouch led prayer, and
played a tape by Andy Gritlith.
The Lord's Prayer was repeated in unison.

»fark

"No, I mean RIGHT NOW.'
. I immediately packed a few things
and went to stay with a friend, The
next day, r started looking for a place
of my own, and two days later l had
an apartment. All my · brother has
ever known is that I moved out that
weekend. I never told him why.
What my sister-in-law did was the
best thing that could h~ve happened
to 'me; we are good friends to this
day. Please tell "Fed Up" that maybe
the brother-in-law needs a "kick
start" like I did. - GRATEFUL
IN SASKATCHEWAN
DEAR GRATEFUL: A kick 'in
the posterior can sometimes be a
boost in the tight direction.
(Par11ine · Pl1illips and htr daughter
jeamre Phillips 'share . the pseudonym
Abigail 11m Burm. Write Dtar Abby at

IYUCIJI.
9t2..5JJ

.......r erl••ra•ce
9t26617

,• . . . , . .

1

..
•

�AI.

The Daily ~tinel

aan

............
,, • ..._,1....
---~~~­

••ri 'Q._, .....

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

.,.,,. ....... ~ , '

Ollodott..... a.ta•

.

The Daily Se~tinel

....

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.... IIIII
.. MIIM.

!"

'TIIil lllllflmr.J t.tflfflJHI IN 1111 flilluiUf M'-'w MH tlw tMitiUtu
,-,~ltli/Hf ('.;. \ I~~ .. HIIIH utJtHW/u llftllr4.

· m \\U•••s..

s.w.lo!&gt; ~ . \ll,l h,.,
~lll!.lilUI., ,~ ...
~Sti\+.'Oi ·l l'l\\,

~

NATIONAL VIEW

Grass roots

.....,. ...,... O..rtlo l!iloitllotwo,
$liJ Olooi St.. M~
' Sllllill:l*"""" • il&lt;.!!io,""

.~

(Microcredit' loans making
headway in winning 3rd World

• •••

·-

.._l'lnt .....
s~

safe landmJ.
In' 1981, the &amp;pace &amp;huUie Columbia bla,tc:d off from Cape
Canaveral on lt$ flnt tett flight.
.
In 198!1, Sen. JalleOam ol'Utah became the fit8t unator to
fly in ~ WI the ~unit Dl~&lt;Wery lifted off.
· In 1989, radical activist Abbie Hoffman was foond dead at
hi~ home in New H~, Pa., at age !12.

•

•

"""'"' l'm1 s......

••m

Putur: u. Llln1•t o~ ~cy""t

Si:""'" ·9&lt;.ltlo.m,
1\\ftll(p · ~~ IS ' ·"'" Vl'IS om a 7&lt;00 p.111.
~ :S.r~h.~• • l :OO I''"·
S..nd11

Egyptian clerics solidt martyrs to ·spread terror~. reach
While the he11dlines wrup themselves
around Ariel Sharon and his refusal to
oblige what one might call J&gt;resldent
Bush's "unhelpful" request to wlthdrnw
from the West Bnnk, they Ignore n fur
more deleterious atT!'Ont to the presl·
dent's authority. After ull, Sharon Is
attempting to demollsh the Pale~tlnlnn
terror network, save Israel ond uphold
the Bush Doctrine: what's going on In
Arab nations, however, despite "Bush's
stuted requirements, is outright incite·
ment.
Last week, Bush denounced the
grotesque Iraqi practice of paying out u
smnll fortune- $2S,OOO -to the fam·
ilies of what enemies of civilization cull
"successful" suicide bombefll, and pronounced Iraq guilty of "soliciting mur·
der of the wofllt klnd." Secretory 6f
State Colin Powell, during his rounds
on the Sunday talk shows, grudgingly
admitted that Saudi Arubia, another
state paymaster for clvillan·klller kin,
was an accessory to this same klnd of
crime. But money Isn't everything. It
tums out that suicide bombers, assured
that their lovc:d ones will be rolling in
dough by Palestinian standards, may
now tum for religious approval to the
government clerics of .Egypt.
That's because the top imam of AI·
Azhar University, the Cairo Islamic
center constitutionally afllliatc:d with
the Egyptian government, has nnatiy
seen the spiritual llght. Where Sheikh
Muhammad SayyedTantawi was once
rductant w sanction the targeting of
cfvilians in suicide bombings, he now
concludes that such bombings "against
any Israeli" do indeed bave the hlamlc

1'11111 ..pilot Cb..t.
Pt.!l.ur: Mutt Murrow

Make that two hiiuckers. Egypt's new
mufti, Sheikh Dr. Ahmud AI-Tllyyeb. is
ulso out there plugging suicide bombIngs. According to u MEMRI truuslution of the mufti's recent remarks, AI·
Tuyyeb hns detennlnc:d thut ''the solu·
. tlon to the lsruell terror (sic) lies in u
proliferation of Fldul,'! or mrutyrdom
(suicide ntlllcks). Such uttucks, the
mufti continued, should "strike horror
Into the beans of the enemies of Alluh.
The
Islamic countries, ·peoples nnd
COLUMNIST
rulers alike, must support these mnnyr·
dom attacks." Needfess to say, such
murderous preaching fails to mesh with
stamp of approval.
·
According to u report ttanslatc:d by what Bush hud In mind last week when
the Middle East Media Reseiii'Ch lnstl· he called on Arab governments to "st~
tute (http://www.memrl.org), Sheikh Inciting violence In state-owned media '
Tnntuwi recently "demanded that the and "telllng suicide bombers they ure
Palestinian people, of all factions, inten· mnnyrs."
slfy the manyrdom operations against The American media, ·having asked
about the timing of the
the Zionist enemy1 and describea the mnny questions
1
president
s
decision
to send Powell to
martyrdom operauons as the hlgheMt
form of Jihad operations." He fUrther the Middle East, would do well to won·
stated, the report continued, "that the der about the timing of the decision by
young people executing them have sold Egypt's government clerics to sanction
Allan the most precious thing of all." suicide attacks. Why now? Maybe
All of which is marrow·chllllng stuff. because they see that suicide attacks, far
The government cleric went on to from isolating the Palestinians, are
emphasize that "every manyrdom opc:r- unexpectedly (and Indirectly) bringing
atl~n against any Israeli, Including chll· U.S. pressure to bear on the lsruellgov·
dren, women, and teen·agers, is a legit• emment. Meanwhile, what Is Egyptinn
imate act IICcordlng 10 (Islamic) rell- President Hosni Mubaruk prepared to
glous Jaw, and nn Islamic command· do about the hate·speak coming from
ment, until the people of Palestine the government mo8que? Powell will
regain their lnnd and cause the cruel be meeting with Mubarak this week.
hraeli aggression to retreat.'' Only one Let's just hope he asks. ·
(Dla,W West Is a columnist and ed/to·
of two things is possible: Either lslam
doesn't mean "peace" exactly, or anoth- rial writer for The Washington 11mes.
er hljac:ker just climbed On board the She can be contacted via dwest@ wash·
ingtontlmeuom.)
rellgJon.
·

!&lt;h an&lt;ll'lll.,., ill., Mltldloj\(111
Sundo)llkh&lt;Ktl · v:lh.m.
~lp • tO: I~"'"'" l :OO p,to,
llt'ed!lllllll s.... tL.., 7:oo P·"'·
'

11~11111&lt;1m

......,t

"''"'" lll•k kulo
Sunollly Sehi!OI · 9:30 o.ou.
Wurshlp • 10t40 l ,m,, '?100 p.m.
Wedn111dor ilorvl••• • 1100 P·'"·

Diana
West ·

llll ..r bn 111(11111
Putml Juht1 Swllniii;n
Sunlliy Sollool · IOo.otl.
lll&gt;rshlp • llo.m.,l100 p.1n.
Wednool11 ~orvlm· 7:00p.m.
IIIL Unkln ltplill
Pu1ur 1lltvld Wl!llhin

Suoooy Sehoo1•9:4! ' ·"'·
tiVIftilll • MO p.m.
Wttlne.Uor !ervleu . 8:!11p.m.
••,.lthm l1pllll Chu"'h
Ortlt Hend, Ruuta 124, MIIMllne, OH
Puwr 1lltnlol M1&lt;11

•unday Sohi!OI • VI!O 1.111.
lundiy Wonhlp • 101!0 '·'"·
-•doy llblo Study • 0100 p,m,

0141htlltl Pl'll Will 11'1111 Chu"'h
liiiOIII, AI, l, Mlddllp!ll'l
lundiy Selill(ll· lO ;,m,
Bvt~~ln1· '100 p.m.

'111llrldl~

htvillll• 7100

HIIIIIMhfllitChllNII ' ·

II, It, 10 )UII ull AI. 1
PllkH'tlt.•v. lim~• I , Au111, lr.
l•'*r Unlftod 111¥111
WOrthip • l01!0 ;.m., op.m.
_odi, lotvloto •7p.m.

Vlftorr l•ptllt lnd.,.n411t .
'l! N, lnd It, Mllkllopott
Pukltl lo- B, K11•
Wonhlp • IOo.m., 7 p.m.
Wodneodi~ l1tvlo11 , 7 p.m.

Jollh loJHIII ChoNII
Mtlli\Jid ll,, M11un
lunlliy lollool • 101.111.
Wonfllp • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wfdftfldoy lo111ie11 ·1 p.m.

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

II\Jhillp • II o.m., l :OO II·••·
"""'"'~lly :S.tvl\.~ , l&lt;OO p,ho,

l!lllll'Cilufth "'t'lll'kl
1\Joo~tru~; Hllrl""'vllht Rd. \RI. t&lt;l~l

'

"""""R.,..,W.U..
·I

Su..t.y S&lt;'llool • ~; lo o.1o.
lll&gt;rshlp • 10:311 ' ''"" 1&lt;00 p.lll.
Wl&lt;l"'ot.y ~.,.1,.., p.ot,
~

Coonmunloo • 10 •.m.
ilunollly ;;,...,., • 10: lhm,
Yblllh· S:30 iJ111 Suu.l')l
Dlhl• Sillily 11\!diltod')l 7 pill

,,_..h!Jd

Doottr C~ul'llh of Cbrlol
Pl111urt Nalhtn llohlttann
·- · _ .....luntlll tuhool 91!0 o.m.
· Numwn Wlll, IUpotrlnlllllltnl
'•nday WOJJhlp • IUi!O l.m,

t'llUI'Ih tt Chrlll
ln.....,lk&gt;tl hnd llol W
8vonaallo11 Da!Niil lor11M1
·~rldoy 81blt lludf • 91:111 . ....
W1111i11p1 IO:!O o.m. ond ~130 p.m.
Wadntltlor Blbt. ltudy • 1 p.m.

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

J# don't know what heaven~ like, but God is there
.

I

:1ft

ttfloppilJI .,.,

roo ., fa.t dial "'tlw .,..

.

George
Plagenz
COUJMNJST
time

80011

dulls~&lt; ·and ht JOft on to

some hi&amp;her form of activity.

_= .

People uo alto d100ie w loaf in
heavm, said Ford. But thote who do'are
liken"
tbe_penon
...... who JOelhito Pari•
..~&amp;I in the
• "'"' ,u.-.n
t In f ~~ room
nJ noihinJ.
ore lonJ he rulim
whai he II nliHina.. ~he i1, in one of
the mmt f~a citiet In the world.
and he is pwinJ up the ~J?Ciiencc.
When that dawnf on him, .he It out a(
~......,
~~.~
1114 ~1- i '---·
.. ~ '""' ntW 11mV11 n ~Eavm
who • fiat wau to do tiiJChing tiSIIIIJy
~Jft hit mind, l&amp;f.l fml. When he
ditcOvm what Ibm
. it to • and do.
Wlw they kun when lbey set to heat'·
en. MY• Pont. it daat !he nm world II a
81'~ p!M\, fuD of t'lf.OroiiS Mit v.W
ai:Ut'lt)'.

~~~~ lllotllllllptiM
Pounh AMlln 11., Mlddilpott ·
PllW/1Rfl', Ollllin C1111, Jr. ·
SulKily lkhilol • 111:111 .. m. ·
Wonhlp · 10:4! a.m.

I .till · •

..

. • •

Wi1U we tcc ow loved met apm •n
Jx:avm? Emmet Pm~, one al the~
widely-read of the metapbyJtcal
um. ~ ... we will.
"Whaeva' il'ln ~~~~ been • ttroiiJ
emotiOnal tmk ......, there 'II._

Me..,...

1M

_u.,
··-

WI

'

""'a

meeting w~en we pass over." .
Jesus spoke of renewing human relatlonshipA in the kingdom Of heaven. He
al!iO ~ted that heaven is not devoid of
many of the pleasures we knew on
earth ...., like e~t~na and drinking with
our friends. Whm He was eating the
Lut Suppe.r with His ditciplesz He said,
"I will not drink hen.cet'orth Or the fruit
of the vine until I drink it new with you
in my Father's kingdom."
(By contrut, an old Oennan drinkinJ
song says, '1n heaven there is no betf.
That's why we drink it here.'')
·
Our dajfy work in heaven will be w.
isf'ying beyond measure, say tilt my..
tK:s. ''No one shall work for~ lnd
no one thall work. for fame. But eaeh
for, ...
'""' ,.~
....._, ..." ...,
·-'d "''
...._~"1.
u• Wununa
....pilot
With ~ IIIJight,
Maybe the most honest wwer Moll
Wood can five her COI'relpc:llldent ~
Vera-Ellen i ex~ "in her new
reti~' it to tell her about the dOcloj
talldnJ ID a teJ'mjnaJJy ill patient of hiJ!
"DOC," lll)'tlbe. man. "You'~e a reli~
1iowJ ........-... un..~ · 'II '--t.l
llke1" r-·~...
WI ,.,.ven P!
The phyJJcian paJIW a moment
uld, '114, do you hear that ~
ooc.ide your door? That'• my dog. 1
brouJht trim alorta with me. He WIIICI ·
to come in. He'J nner been In~- Jk
has no idta what thiJ room is lib. Jk
know• only ooe thl~ it Hi
knows I'm in hen:.
1 don't k1J0111
what heaven is like. I
only one
lhin(tabout it: Clod is there."
•
(
.. 1&gt;/fo
~Af
•
orae"' ruigmt "'a unllltlllllt/nr
Newlfklper &amp;h!rprlu AIIOCiatiott..J
•
•

",,.

A.l,hiHIII

lllftllly lkholll · 9130 a.m.
Wcoolllp ' IO'Ahm.
Iunday H.,liln1 · 0:00p.m.
Plllll': M111o McComla

..-r... w•hldll
lalom lit.
I'IIMOO 11... PIOI 1'1yklt
Slltldly llt1!oot • IU l.m,
s..o~., l p.m.

•

tft~Mtmdsr lfrvlut •'

p.m.

..... loplloi CllltniJ .

..,,..,.OMJd.wv

, _ Dll!'ld w.t,kCioltl

PJII(II:Jim HUPtl

lundty lklwHtl • II o.m,
Worolllp. P1!0 o.m., 7::111 p.m.
W'"'""ltlo' SIIVI'" , ?1:111 p.m.

( ttltl'" "' ( .. .d
M I . - CIHt1th otllotl
Milt Hill lid., lltellll

Plli«JJ: ,..,.. t.MIMil•kl
S.llllay S.h&lt;JOI · t:41 a.m.
6YfiiiHI • 6 p.m.
w•~t~oy S.IVI&lt;ft • 7 p.m.
l•tiiN Cll•nll Ill 0..

w.....,.,

llt•-1'1,.. ClloMI otllotl

~~tYkl:l lifllt: SU"d~~ iU::tU 8.111.

.....

~utt~a)' ~choot

bVJninl • l 1JO p.m.
Widn•oJ•I 8ofVIco . l 1iO ~ ·lh
,11111 Volift fillil'llllilt ChUI'I'h

llll&lt;kinll"'~

• 9 a,m,

'1\JI'I'h Chu"'h
t'd, kd, 6J

~""""'
• u;Ju •·""
w li&lt;hwl
hi Ill ~J

8unday Kllh"ui • IJ!Ml a,rfl,

W"""lr . llJ:JO • m., 7 p.m.
'l'hurol.oy lhlt&gt;l&lt;oo • 7 p.!H.

'

c_...,.,
NooiM•o

' \ , / , 110 ' 111

Parlth
Clu!!lltl

MIUieJi&lt;irl t'ltufl!h .r lilt l'fi..VQII#I .. ,~. Mldc•p

Alrrt&lt;l

PtMoo l1tt111 Ouult
Sunlliy lkhool · ~: !U ' ·"'·
W&lt;~~•hfp • II a.lll., 11:;10 p.m.

8Unllil Sthool - ~:30 . ....
Wut!Hip - jO,JO 1.m.•li:JO p.m.
Wfi.JtMvil)' 811n&lt;ltt!~ - 1 rt,m,

(......,,

~"''"' AI~" Mlili!•li
11..&amp;1'1111 ~illoloohlp

pj!Jltlfl Jim• ffettlltt

thutch uf /lie NO/Attnt
Pr~ur1 1'erc111 W111dttik
8uttdlty ~'ilool - y,JO Mt

Wonhlp . II 1.m.
luodoy lkhool • IU o.m.
'l'ht!fldoj;
7 p.l!l.

"'"1&lt;...

~tl''""" Mlflllloft

Hrh.IJ.,Hiori St,; 8yrauuse

'

I

~uwr: ~kll!r

Muben Cmw
Sunday SehOOI · 10 a,m,
Wunl11p • II t .tn.

Sutiday Sehoul • I} a.m.
Wut11hip · lll11.m.

suntlly ~chool · lu o.ni.
B"nlhl · 6 p.m.
Wedm1•llay tler"lce - 1 p.m.
H111l c ... munill Chu,.h
OIU1.124
Va~tut J

,....

' '"In 1.111

Middleport ~l'ethflll'lllh

N.II!Y, Ml~l! tl11ltHJtllttt1,1:ttJim

t\tnlltl) . l\

UdM!I Han

•-m.·

lliiOtlll• CummuHill Chu,.h
~um.fay ~chuol - iJ1j(J a.m.
Wot~tt!t' • I0:30 Utt.j 1 t'.th.

ChoJth

(j"lld Sl""
Suud•Y !ciUMII - 10 ' ·"'·
, WutNhip . lls"fil'.
Wt~lll11!!1duy !httvlct8 - tii:UH,

MI. Oil., Unllod Melllodlil
brf 124 n.hlftd Wllk.,vllle
P"ltll&lt;Kov. KiljJII Spl""

I~ II

.

lloi'I'IOIIHYlllo P"'btt•l'l•n Cllul'l'll
\\\!"'hlp · h.m.
SLin~ay !lchnul · tJ:4~ a.m.

8u•U.r 8ch•.,l - 9:iU
W•rohlp - IO:JO a.!tl., l:jiJ p.m.

Wu~hlp - 10 """
Wekl~ieMII~ ~t!f\'lef• • IU IUti.

tlrohom Ullilld Mttlltt!ll&lt;t
Will• hlp • 9::111 ,,m, (ill l 21ti18UH),
7:!0 p.m. i3hl.t. o1h Sun,
Wodlllol.oy $orvkt • l :!O p.m.

Mtlp

y ,,m
,

..lholthul'l'h
1\owoohlp Ru., 46!C

Sundoy Sohool • 914! a.m.
w,..hlp • II a.m;

l'tt

B•U•' Mun MOll!
P"turt KIY, Mmmett M1WMJn
Sundoy b"nlnl l ~. m,
1'hut11d'l S&lt;tVICI ·• j p.tn.

!'""" .7 p.m.

Sl. Rl. 124. Radne
Po1tor: W!lll1t11 Hoback
~llhdlly ~d htx~l - 10 I. Itt.
B\lfJtlnJ • 7 p.tn.
WedheMill)' S~rvlcu · 7 p.m.

·

.,i.tOr! lhtH AIUI.raol1
SUi\d1y SbbooiiO ' '""'

• II 11,m,

Wtl~hlp '

Wednt&amp;day ~ervlee 1 pm

Middleport ComtOunll' t'llu,.h
m llftrl ~~ .. Mllkll•i10•

PaRit1rr lltlitl Hltkhllll

Thooloy

e

SIJtkliiJ I!VI!hillllll~tYicl! 6 pm

SUtidoy • 9130 ,,lfl, ihd 1 p,:ft.
Wed_i1e1dlly • 1 p.m.

. 11111 Ltllrt

tool viii• tllu~h
Milft l Plnll Sl,
!undo~ SuhtK1i • I 0 a.m.

81, Poul Ludio11n Chur.h
C11rt11r lly~:KHitll'l A 8tc!tJntl8t,, Jl6ml!lroy

Pa~tut: Clyde ~etttll
Sut;day SChn"l Y:1U em

21!0 p.lh,
llortl•un•llle Communlly thu"'h

Cool•lllo Unllod Mi!lllodloll'o~oh

Suntll' Sohool • WIOIJ ' ·I•·
Wurtlllp · lla,m.

8111etn Community CIUit'th

Ucvlna Moad, West Columbia, W.Va.

~aMtdtl thetuH buth1Ut1

PM!Iilll'l Hl!llt!H KIIHI!I

1crvtce

8undll~

WidlllidMy 7 ~· Ill·

Walnut u.nd Henl')l81~" MIYt!ft1Wtmd 1
,W,Vi,
'
PiiiOII l:lnld ku.HII

~erviCI!I : thut~ ; N!h~ll1 :00 pm

Mornln1llllr
Pill"rllltWi~ftl 81u1lfi
8undi~ School • II o.m.
'11\t~hlp . 10 .....

Wunhl~

Morti"

Nc\\l~.:hureh No Suhday
eatabli ~~d .

Ntw Llhtt RIJ,, MUUiil\d
Vliihlt: RI!Y. Mittpfllt J. itublhMn\
.!lmh:!e1t Wednt1day, 11.1t1 p.m.

...,..

Our ~••lour Lut~tlln l..llol'l!h

'ervt..:e, 7fl.tt~o

1'ht bollmK' roll•••hlp Mini"''

l'i!mrl Man Hlrliftlli
8UHdOj S;huul • 10 a,nl/

' WUIJhlp • 9100 .....
lulllioy lchtMJI • 1011)0 ' '"''

J~se

God'• ·t~l\lpl• urP'"I"
3166!1 McQuire Rd. Pom&gt;eroy, Ohlu
~a,lnr: Wttyne llalt.'tllm

M.actue, bhln
llfwllylle ~hutli!r
Sullll•~ 8'hool •.91!0 o.m.
II\Jithlp .- IIJ14h.lll,
Olblo 81Ud1 W;;J, ' '00 ~ . ftl.

II. Jolin Lllllotl'lln Clourtlo
Pl .. Om"

.,RI!tor:

Lutt1 Butlom
l'RIIIW: Sh~Ye Reed
Sunday !h:htMII · l:l:lO 11 ,(11.
Wor.klp . ~i jO a.m. &amp;hd 1 Jl.m.
Werlne!ldu~ - 1 ~. nt.
t:tlday - fellowship rrerYicl! 7 p.m.

I0 n,m,

·

Sei"Vkes: Sttlunlay 2:00 p.nt

~.1:i! Full tJ,.pel thoJ&lt;h

luHday !&lt;hlllol • 10 o.m,
Wurtlll~ . ~ •·••·
Wednt!day • 7 ~. 111.

I 1111,.., , ,11

S•"lor
htJ38 1 At1Uqll!ty

PA~tnr 1\m.~"~' O~tVls

W~d~~~

Hill Slaten

full &lt;ioopel Ch~t\!h of tht Ll•lna

Nml,,!t.Y sttvlci!,.IO iUfl,

r.~tuft

beroo..oliiNieo 9·10: IS o.m.
Htll1ltl111llinl1...1lnl, I11 111u11, • 7 p.m.

Ne~ Llrt V1l'htQ Center
:\77j deorg~ f'l'l"t!k HtMuJ. Olllliplllla. OH

Abundonl tlni!t 11.r.1.
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tHftun 1'1bem•rle Churth .
t1Ubln 1 W.Va.
S~~rlay S1.·huol ~ 10 a.m.
Worship . 7 p.m.
Wcdnc!U.Iay .~etVIct • 7 p.m

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811111&lt;ot . 7 p.m,

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Rejolrina L~ t'hordl
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l'i~ll,)f: Mike Fore~nan
Pa~IOf: Emcritu! Uwrence Foreman
Wm~hlp - IO:lXl '""
\\\.&gt;d"t~Jay Sthlcl!" . 7 p.ltl,
~00

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MJ SL'I.'Oild Ave. Mason
711-lllll

Wl!dne~dAy Mci'Yil'el ·

!f'"ndlly - 7:00 p.\tl.

SUI1d11y Scrvkcs - 10 lUll. 1: 7 p.m.
Wtdncsd11y . 1 p.tn. &amp; Y1ltlth 1 p.m.

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lunlli' lkllool • 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • II ~om.

l'tt)lh.lh: R..!v. Mary dild liarold Co"k
SlindR~ Scrvh.:e!: 10 a.tu. &amp;. 1111.nt
wron~~Lhty Setvktll " 1 ~ .ht

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Blhlllludr, Wlllo•doy, ~1 10 p.m.

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Sunday Scrvk-es . IO:&lt;kl a.m. &amp; 1:00 p.m.

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w.dn11doy lorvlo01 • l p.m.

SundRy ~ervk-t - h:irl11.m.

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Wtdneoloy S•rvlm · liOO p. m~

A!!h St., Mt(~Ue~Mt - Pttsrutt Ulentt 'Rowe
Sulldij s.h,.,l - 10:00 o.m.

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Sunday Seni« - ~: JO p.lll.

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WEST,S VIEW

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1\Wu;t'&lt;k~ "'"""'..,.. "-" - l p.m.

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tlnt Mol• S1.
Sur&lt;lly Sl'llool · li:~ o.m.

Holly Wood (come on, that can't be
her real name), who writelJ a &amp;yndicated
column about movies and movie stm,
got a letter the other day from a reader
In 1989, fomw m•(fdleweisfl! bmin1 chamoioo Sugar Ray
who asked, ~1lJ Vera-Ellen, from 'White
Robimon died in Culver City, Call(., ata,e 6.,.
Chri&amp;t1118$,'
still alive and workinar•
Tm yem ago: After five yean in the making, Euro Di~
Holly Wood replied, "Vera-Ellen died
neyland, a lhime park ~~ $4 billm, opened in Marnein
1981. Whethei' aht is working at her
U.VaJJec, france, amid comrovmy as Fmx:h intellectuats
CWTent residence i~ beyond my abillty
btn~f'ti~Md the invlbion of Amirican pop culture.
· ·
to answer."
F'we years a,o: Undaunted by a Cldle of ~pl05ive. found
There are !Oil1c: seers and mystics
on hit travel route, Pope John Paul U plunged into a peace
who
wouldn't be so reti""' in their
mi~ioo to Sarajevo, wadln&amp; into crowd$ and declaring, ·
·
mpoii5C!t.
They claim to have bfen in
"Never apin war."
communication with thole on the
One ytat ~0: The 24 crew membm g( a vs. IJ'Y plane
"other
side."
·
amvcd in tfliwaii after being held for II day1 in China,
Anhut Ford, for tullll'le, a Dltciplts
Cindnnad Mayor Charla LUken drclared • ;we of emer·
£If
Oaist clcrJyman wflen he wu on
I"'CY amid the wont oucbreak of racial violmu in the city
earth, pve an eyewi~nas acwunt of
.;""the af1errnalh of the~ ofManin Lucher Klng
heaven in a terief of spirit CMIIJI1IItica..
Jr. in 1968. Tbe Philies!ine militlry mcucd V.S. hostqe lef·
lion~ with journalist RUlher Mbnt·
frey SclrillinJ front Matlim rdleh who had tbrafeilcd w
~ller'y. He telb what a day in heavm
btfltaf him..
Today't Birdldayt: ~Ann Miller it 79. Coun·~ like.
W1llt will we do in heaven7 We wiD
lry' ~:rter It 71, Aart»Jane Wnhm g 76. Opmt
do
.m. we like, sayt ford, ThOle who
fll~Ja' .
C*IJe It tiJ. Mw CJwte:t Napi« i.t 66.
hat'e lived a malerialistic, money-oft.
Jazz ~ ffabie tbncodi i.t 62. Act« fUnk Bank
· ("'ave It w.Sat'd') it (l(t Rodii lin~Ct Jdai Kay (SfepClfUd life on anJJ can go 011 lllllklns
deals and f!l&amp;inl money in their new
PmwoiN it jl, Actor Ed O'NeiD it !16. Actor 0.. UUria II
taidence. But When they mdiu lhlt
~!1. Talk tbow lw Dmd l..eaerman it 55. Aullior Scott
TIWW it ,3, •
David~ it 52 Act« Ao6y o.ia
money maket no 6ift'erence on tbe
it 46. ecu..y
OiD it 4!1. At:lm.t Saulrine DouoCber pt.Je - lhlt you an have ~
,s. it 4,.Rod~ nMidan Will SeifC!!i (£dlo. dte Blmy- you w•tne~dy by lhillkioJ it and that
Jfii!IIJ it44. Ko4 tintP AttAJe:ulit (Evlldea? it40. a.~ Joob up ro you for ~
money -tbey alually Jive up jhi.t way
try '
Dcrrl Docf4 it 31. filii
'
A J Ray (lndiof spmdimr: t&amp;ir cime.
31. fipeaer Ebine~~ 3~ tinpr
• N~ Hmlm (J II) it 32. ~ , idJola. Blro!!~mdonldnn
Ford
tJie 1101')' o( a m.1 JteWiy
llrivtd in heaven Who decidet to 10
("Bcdfy tJw V••~ Slartt"J 1.t 31. AareM
Dober,
ay a 11. Adte. aa~re 1Min it n.
fiMriDJ.·He Wlln he had llrouP •
fl~ pole what - pool! - he (IIJiit
nou,11t fl6 T~"£Acmaa tl1ldb will be fleithet 1111e nor
one In hit how'Jdf, He u.a and p&amp;JIIf in a

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S•ndo.y School - 9:lO o.m.
~lnhip- 7 p.m.

-•Ys.Mct• -7p.m.

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• Houston (Texas) Chronicle. 1111 fight ill$ terrorism 111

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Friday, April 12, the I02nd day of 2002. There are
263 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 12, 1861, the American Civil War began as Confederate forces fired on Pon Sumter in South Carolina.
· On this date:
In 1606, England adopted a&amp; its flaa the original versiot1 of
the Union Jack.
In 1862, Union volunteers Jed by James J. Andrews stole n
Confederate' train near Marietta, Ga., but were .later caught,
(This episode inspired the Buster Keaton comedy "The &lt;fen·
eral.") .
·
.
In 1934, "Tender b the Night,'' by P. Scott Fitzgerald, wa.~
first published.
In 194!1, Pre5ident Franklin Delano Roosevelt died of a
cerebral hemorrbage in Wann Springs, Ga., at age 63;'he was
succeeded by Vice President Harry S. Truman.
In 19!1!1, the Salk vaccine against polio was declared safe
and effeaive.
In 1961, Soviet cmmonaut Yuri Oagarin became the f'init
man 10 fly in •pace, orbiting the earth once before making a

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TODAY IN HISTORY

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,1'111€111 hites: Perhaps the most desitable IUd prosperous
nations· like the United Stutes cun provide the people o(
Third World nations is aid thut helps lilt them out of .
poveny.
On~.! such ef'fon with u truck record of success hus been
various fonns of "microcredit," making small loans of u
few hundred dollars or so to people in Third World coun·
tries tn establish small community or neighborhood,
grass-roots enterprises.
Over the last more than u dc.:cude, it's really been the
U.S. Congress that has led the way in support for microenterprisc and mandated the "focusing on the very poor with
this very effective tool," says Joanne Carter with Results,
· a grass-roots advoc!ICy group with branches in the United
States (including in Houston) and five other nations.
Since 2000, she notes, lawmakers have .approved $155
million for such microcredit projects ....
U.S. Rep. Tim Roemer, 0-Jnd., explained that there is
value in "looking at ways w prevent terrorism in address·
ing some of .the concerns of the world that grow from
poverty and inequity and people surviving on less than a
$1 a day."

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1ehuul - 10 a.m.

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it.-., CtlttlttHinlly Jr.411 Wlckhllm Ru

7 p.m.

FollM O"'twl thu,.h
l.Atttg f:tulluttl

Pastor: Kobert Sander~
Sunday !Jchunl - II:JO l ,tn.

8oi1Uoy8chool - Y..lO o.m.
Wutohlp , 10: 4~ o.m.. 7,30 p.m.
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hettltiJ . 1 p.m.
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1 p.m.
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on 8ta1.e Kuutl! j 24
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Wed~sdty Yt,uth 9ti1'ke - 7:JO fl.ltl.

hM g.,.po~ Lilhl'"'JJ04' Hll•nd K&lt;hld,
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Home
Since 1858
t Fifth Strut
COolville. Ohio

an.i

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137.C N. 2nd Ave.

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

My orace It sutrldent for
thH; for my Jtr•nottt II
modt perfect In

. .nffn'f
~lrt &amp; 61frtp

f

WHkniH

11 Cor. 12:0

--

I
'

.

�•

•

••

The Daily Sentinel

Frlcbly. April 12, 2003

Jobless claims drop~
but technical fluke
clouds layoffs picture
WASHINGTON (A I') Fewer Americans filed new
claims for unemploynll'llt
. insurance last week, but the
layoffi picture continues to be
clouded by a technical fluke
that was a big factor in the
prior weck s surge 1n daims.
The Labor Departlllent
reported Thursday tlut nL'W
claims for jobless benefits
dropped. b¥ a sc:tson:1lly
adjusted 55,000 to 43H.OOO,
for the work week en&lt;lipg
April 6.
Even with the dedinc, a
government analyst said, th,·
claims number comintll'd to
be inflated because of the
fluke: Laid-off workers seL·king tu take· advantage of a fed eral l'Xtension for bl'ndlts
were required to sublllit new
. claims ..
Congress recently passed
legislation si~;~nc d imo law by
President Bush that provided a
13- week extension of jobless
bcnctits.
The nation's biggest rctailc"
posted solid sales gains in
March, although an expl'ded
bnmt from the Easter holiday
was nmtcd by unseaso nably
cnol we:tther and shoppers'
continued
reluctann·. to
splur!lc.
The fact th at consumers are
still buying is a good siw1 that
they will continue to hdp
along the recovery.
Consumers were more cautioliS in past recessions. Given
continued stro ng spending
through this downturn, economist• have been concerned
that consumers would have
less pent- up demand, making
for a less than sizzling recovery. l:lut consumers arc spendIng, manuf.1cturers are starting
to booMt production a11d the
recovery is gaining momcn nun.
On WJll Street, mixed tirstquarter earnings at General
Electric weighed on stocks.
The Dow Jones industrial
average wa• off 84 points and
the Na•daq index ·was down
21 polna in morning trading.
In the jobless claims repprt,
applications two week• allo
shot up by 79,000 to 49.'\,000,
according to revised figures.
That was an even bigger jump
than initially reported.
Because of the refiling
requirement, the
weekly
claims figures could be volatile
in the next few week•.
The more stable four-week
. moving average of new
1

claims, which smoothcs out
'wct·k-to-wcek fluctuations,
also rose last week to 433,750,
tht• highest . level sin ce early
Dcrcmbcr.
Because of the new law, pri vate eco nomists predicted that
the number of laid-off workers continuing to draw benefits would be higher in the
weeks ahead as unemployed
people received benefit cxtensiotls.

The number continuing to
receive unemployment bL'I1Cfitl rose. to 3.H milhon for the
work week ending March 30.
That was the high~st level
since March 19, 1983.
Given th~ distortions , econ omists UJtHillued to be opti-

mistic that the jobs marketbattered by the recession that
bc~an in March 2001 andjoltt•d by the Sept. 11 · terror
attacks- was getting bc.tter.
companies added jobs
in March for the tirst time -in
e ight months, fresh evidence
that the t•conumy is on the
road to recovery.
last WCL'k, the1government
repurteJ that payrolls grew by
5~,0011 durin~ the month, a
welcome sign after companies
had slashed hundreds of thou sands of positions as they tried
to cope with the slump.
Even with the improvement', job growth in March
wasn't strong enough to pre-

u.s.

vent a.. ·rise in the nation's

unemployment rate , which
rose to 5. 7 percent.
Citin~ mounting sigm that
the economy ·is . staging a
comeback,
the
Federal
Reserve opted to hold shortterm interest rates steady in
January and in March . The
Fed cut rates 11 times last year
in aq effort to rescue the
economy from the grip of a
recession.
lconomists said tl:le timing
of when the Fed will begin to
raise rates will linked in large
p:trt to how the employment
situation shapes up. Some
economim believe the Fed
could move to boost rates as
early as June or August. Others
said it could come later.
The Labor Department
reported that the price of
goods Imported into the
United States in March soared
1.1 percent. A big part of the
increase stemmed from a 15.7
percent jump in the price of
imported petroleum produm,
including crude oil, the largest
increase in nearly three years.

•

Despite aackd
feels
struiJie to keep.pace with
grow~ng tax evas1on problem.
nl realize now there is a
price to be pa_id for
being an American. It's
called filling out a tax
.form, makmg sure it's .
right and senaing it in."

WASHINGTON (AP) - Three tax
evaders who told their stories to the
Senate represent otily the tip of an iceberg of tax cheating that costs the gov,ernment as much as S70 billion annually, officials estimate.
The General A(co unting Office, Congres~· investigative ann,. found that for
the 2000 tax year the Internal l~evenue
Servicl· so f.1r has detected about ~5 billion in improper tax avoidance by Daniel Bullock, who Ia nrvlng an 18·month
740,000 · individuals. GAO estimated, aentence at a faderal prlaon In Atwater, .Calli.
however, that another $20 billion to $40
billi.o n had not been identified.
"I realize now there is a price to be paid
Sen. Max Baucus, IJ-Mont., chairman
for bein" an American," said Bullock,
of the Senate Finance Committee, cited
"
an unoffidal estimate of some $70 bil- who is serving an 18-month sentence at a
lion in losses each year at a h caring on federal prison in Atwater, Calif. "It's called
tax evasion Thursday. IRS Com mission - filling out a tax form, making sure it's
er Charles Rossotti said the secretive right and sending it in." .
ld
natllre of tax evasion makes co ncrete . Like tens of thousand&lt; of other wou estimates Jifficult but conceded it was in . be taxpayers, Bullock bought i~Jto. a
the "tens of billions" of dollars annually. . schcn~c. that pronmcd he could dtstrtb"Wc:ve gut a prob.lem," sa id Baucus, ute lm mcome to a trust account locatwhu ·pointed out that th~ vast majority cd in an offshore tax haven, deduct the
from his U.S. taxes and then
o f in d ivi dua I titxpaycrs wi II do tI1eir d uty · amount
..
back from the account as
by MoJJday's income t~x filing deadline. receiVe money
dl
bl ~ . .. 'fi,
"Evcryohe should help pull the wagon. a S~lppose Y nontaxa . e oretgn gt L
... OthcrwisL', we'll rea ch the point
Sch!mcs such as thts are prohferatmg
·
h
h
·
h ld
where honest taxpayers will feel like on t h c Internet, t roug scmmars e
chumps."
by legitimate-sounding promoters and
·
even at lome of America's leading law
But although the IRS and Justtce
firms investment banks ~nd accounting
Department have mounted an aggressive firms:
·
campaign to crack down on tax evasion,
. they arc barely scratching the surface.
These schemes take many forms, from
1
· " tax re,un
&lt; ds
b
Dlniel Bullock , a California orthopec ogus " savery
reparation
die surgeon, and the other tax evaders. marketed to blacks to claims that the
described for the committee. how. their income tax is .unconstitutional to comskepticism abottt the . IRS and questions plex, multilayered foreign · trusts that
about the legitimacy of the tax code enable high-incom e people to hide
enabled them to 'be swept up easily in assets.
enticing schemes to avoid taxes - and
One scheme that is beginning to
how far they fell once caught.
unravel involves credit cards issued by

'

offihore banks that are used by people to
live very well while hiding their income .
behind foreign secrecy laws. The I R.S ~
gaining access to these credit card
records through court summonses and
checking them against tax returns.
"Combating these promoted tax
schemes is our highest compliance priority," Rossotti said. "Our top .priority is
the promoters.:·
S f: h .
I'
· 'd 104 tax
• 0 ar t ts year, 'ossa ttl sat • '
scheme promoters have been audited, 26
. have been convicted of criminal charges
and 70 more arc under active investiga•
'd
cion . Perhaps the best weapons, he sat ,
arc publicity about tax evasion scams and
a less gullible - or greedy - taxpaying
public.
.
•
Another of the convicted tax evaders,
Rob, rt Spears of Traverse City, Mich.,
· urged people to check . things out on
their own.
"Having done that, you will not prpceed
- bc. caLise · y~~. u wt'll fi 11 ci that not one ·
of these gurus can show you a sin g1 e cas~
f th .
n nts .. Spears
won on any o
e1r argtu e ,
· told the Finance Committee.
w·1th corporate tax s11e1tcrs a1so
ch
·
on ~
·
B
d S
Ch 1 G 1
nse, aucus an
en. I ar ~s rass ~Y·
R - lowa, on Thursday a so ec. am_e t e
rf 1 1
k
d
most powc u awma ers ~o mtro uce
legislation that would remove the tax
advantages for U.S. companies that rdo-

.

cate headquarters to Bermuda.
Such prominent companies as lngersoli-Rand and Stanley Tool Works are
among those that have or will move for
what they say arc competit.ive reasons.
They also admit, however, that their U.S.
taX butden will be cut by millions of
dollars a year.

,,..,

about I but assumes he is alive.
There have been no indications of bin Laden's whereabouts si nce December, when
he . apparently was In eastern
Afghanistan.
"I have not see n evidence
that bin laden is dead, so I
must believe he is still alive,"
he said.
Of the most senior people
in bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network, the only one
known to ha~e been killed is
Mohammed Atef, the Egyptian who was military commander of al-Qaida. H e was
killed in an aintrike.
Abu Zubaydah; a top terrori.sm plotter and recruiter
of ai-Qaida operatives, was
wounded when he was captured by Pakin:~ni forces last
month. He is under U.S. control at an undisc.lmed location.
Also remaining at large,
despite U.S. and Afghan
efforts to find him, is Mullah
Mohammed Omar, leader of
the depo•ed Taliban militia
.!h:lt ran Afghanistan and gave
haven to the al- Qaida leader'hip.

llls;i~: .

.

The Daily Sentinel

-

tiibe keeps winning, Page B2
Diamond Roundup, Page BJ
.OVP Track Honor Roll, Page B5

PapB1
Ftldtly. Apltl1i. 2102

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Raiders ransack Marauders, 14-4,·in six innings
BY BuTcH COOPER
BCOOPEROMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Marshalrs
Crocker nameCI
to Nagursklllst
CHARLOTTE, N.C. The Charlotte Touchdown
Club and the Football Writers
Association
of America
have
annotll1ced ·
the
2002
watch list of
candidates
the
for
Bronko
·
Nagurski
Trophy,
awarded
annually to the nation's top
defensive college player.
Marshall senior safety Chris
Crocker was one of 64 players
&amp;om across the nation listed on
the initial watch list for 2002.
Crocker (Chesapeake, Va., Deep
Creek HS) finished as the
· Hetd's thitd leading tackler in
2001 with 88 total stops. He
had five tackles for loss and led
the squad with I 0 pass break ·
ups.
The BOO-member Football
Writers Association of America
selects the Bronko Nagurski
Trophy watch list · candidates,
identifies the players of the
week and · names . the trophy
winner.
'J'he 2001 recipient was Roy
Williams, a junior defensive
back from the University of
Oklahoma.

CHESI;iiRE
Many
· times last year, the River Valley baseball team played in its
share of 1 0-run mercy rule
games.
Unfortunately
for
the
Raiders, they were on the losing end.
·
On Thursday, though, the
River Valley squad got to feel
what it was like to .be on the
other end of one of those
games as the Raiders defeated
Mei~. 14-4. .

"I don't think River Valley scored himself to make it a 7- ''Just hopefully. wt· can build &lt;md they did."
has ever won any mercy-rule 4 ~me.
.
on it."
This isn't tht• first time this
games, but it's ~ good galne:• · J~ey Graham had a double
But, instead of a blast, rhe year the M:tr:llldt·rs have had
said . River Valley head coach and Dustin Gibbs, D.J. Rose, game ended in a whimper as their oppont•nts down with
Jim Bowles. ·
Chris Jackson and Jamie Meigs, on a Watd shot to the· two outs late.
The Raiders (2-6) only led Thevenir also had base hits in ·shortstop, committed an error
"We've done that more
by one going into the bottom the sixth for the Raiders.
on the throw to first with two than once," said Thomas.
of the sixth inning when their
Graham, Gibbs, Rose and . outs. This allowed Hollan - "We've had two outs and just
Jackson each finished with baugh, his second run of the couldn't · pick up the win.
bats started to come alive.
·charlie Hollanbaugh and two hits, while jimmy Smith inning, and Thevenir t.o St'Ore . We've played spotty all year.
Jessie Ward each singled to set went 3-for-3 for the Maraud- to make it a 10-run game.
We'll fix it and gL't. better as
up what would become a en (1-6), while Kyle Hannan
"I thought River Valley the we go."
nine-run inning.
Was 2-for-3; Jake Smith fin- really came on strong there in
Jackson picked up the win
the end," said Meigs bead for the· Raiders, allowing
Hollanbaugh scored on a ished 2-for-4 with a double.
Blake Marcum single, and.
:'This could be a good win coach Dan Thomas. "We didthen, with two oua, ·ward for our boys," said Bowles. n't deserve to win this one · PIHH IH Rlllden,l:l

named
Raider
mentor·
BY DAN POLCYN
DPOLCYNIII&gt;MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

fourth) and the wind was blowing in,"
Boone said. "He has the makings of a
real special player. Sometimes it just
takes l while to mature, but, he's awfully dangerous."
Haynes couldn't help himself following Jason LaRue's leadoff single in the
fifth, as LaRue was forced at second on
the pitcher's failed sacrifice bunt
attempt. But Darry Larkin followed
with a double, sending Haynes to third,
and Encarnacion's two-run single made
it 3-2.
&lt; ,,,
..
Young had homered the innin11
before. his second, to briefly put the
Pirates ahead 2- I - only ,the 1ccond
homer off the Reds in 49 innings.
·

GALLIPOLIS- The wait
is oyer, and the Internet
rumors arc true.
Gregg Dee! was named the
new head f()otball coach at
River Valley
at a special
m•·eting of
the
Gallia
County
Local School
Board
on
Thursday.
The board
'--._...___. hired Dee!
DMI
by a 4-0 vote
with board
member Mel Career abstain-.
ing. The hiring comes· after
coach Larry Carter resigned
following his fourth season as
the mentor of the Raiden.
Carter's teams finished 11-40.
Dccl is no stranger to the
RV program, having served as
an assistant coach under
Carter during the 2001 foot ball season.
''I'm just really excited,"
Deel said on Thursday. "I look
forward w the challenge, with
the change ofleagues and that
type of thing.
·
"It's been 11 or 12 years
since I have been a head
coach, and I'm just really
looking forward to being in
that position again ."
The Raiders will be leavilltf
the SEOAL to join the Ohio
Valley Conference next fall .
Unlike tlte previous three
Raider coaches, Dcel will
enjoy the luxury of being
allowed to pick his own staff
for next year, as the board - by
a 4-1 vote - accepted the resignations of assistant coaches
JD. Bradbury, Jared M cClelland, and Matt Hu ck.
Howeve r, Decl expects ·to
retain several member1 of that
staff. ·

PIHN- Wln1. Bl

PIHn- DHI,a:a

onDL

sore elbow
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Cincinnati Reds have placed
catcher Kelly Stimiett on the
15-day disabled list with a sore
right elbow. The move was
retroactive to April 6.
Stinnett had surgery on that
elbow in September to remove
bone chips and to repair a compressed ulnar nerve.
.
· Catcher Corky Miller was
recalled Thursday from Class
Triple-A Louisville to fill Stinnett's spot on the roster.

Ben1alsslp
LBSpelnnan
• CINCINNATI (AP) - .The
Cincinnati Bengals signed linebacker Annegis Spearman to a
one-year contract Thursday:
Spearman is a thitd-year player, but spent all last year on the
inju~-reserve list with a tom
muscle in his chest. .

.

: Toledo~

plans to b.Wfer
TOLEDO (AP) -

Terry

Reynold~. a point ·guaRi who
itu100 60 of 61 g.uries 31 Thledo
the past: 1.\ro !eaSOI15, said he w.mtS
to a'ansfer to another tchool.
Reynolds, a 5-fuot-9 sophomore, told 1\ockds coach Sl:m ·
Joplin he wants to play in an uptempo olfense imte&lt;ld of a half.

court game. .

Last 5ea'iOI1, Reynolds - second on the temt in tcOring (14.1
points per game). steals (1.7 per
!1fU1ie) .and tree throw shooting
(T7 percent). He was named

Mid-American
Confemtce
fi:eshman of the year 1\\0 sea!OI1I

.,..

.

Joplin said he h1s

·-·

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

--

nat

decided

. ~he will t:de&lt;I!C Reynolds
from his scholarship. .
Reynolds can't alk to other
~ coaches about taatiilbringwuilhisschobnhipis
n L •o:d He also ~ rwd to
pay ror his own schoOOng next
ifjoplin doen't let him gn
year
n-......u. .
.Whether or not ~7·~ 15
released, he tnUllt sit out a year
Under NCAA rules. .
Reynolds said he \WUid like to
trart5ler to a school do5er to his
Nashvilk,Tcm., home.. •·

I

I

DeeI

Stinnett

.

U.S. war commander
says the search for bin
Laclen could take years
WASHINGTON (AI') The search for terrorist leader
Osama bin Laden could take
years, the command.e r of the
war in Afghanistan says.
Whil e stating emphatically
that he believes bin Laden
eventually will be fou11d,
Gen. Tommy Franks said even
the most sophisticated and
powerful weapons cou ld not
ensure a quick success in the
man hum.
"That's not what militaries
do," he said Thursday in a
question-and-answer session
with international reporters.
"Even the very best law
enforcement capabilities .. .
will · find that sometimes it
takes years ~o find a single
person," Franks said.
Revitwi11g progreu on the
military frol1t, Fra11ks said
Afghani~tan remains a dal1gerous place for U.S. and
coalltion troop5, and he saw
rio quick elid to the tribal
tivalri~ that make the country unstable and inscwre.
"The lfictions will continue," he said.
Frank, taid he · does not
know bin Laden 's where -

•

•

IN.THERE- Pirates catcher Jason Kendall waits for the late throw from left field a, Cincinnati's Barry Larkin slides home
to score In the fifth Inning Thursday. (AP)

Cincinnati wins again
him sixth all but once previously. He
also dropped Adam Dunn to' fifth after
batting him fourth in an 8-5 victory
Wednesday.
"Usually before this, I hit No. 3, 4 or.
5, but I'm new here and whatever they
feel is best for me; I have no problem
with it," said Encarnacion, traded by
Detroit in· December. "I'm just confi.dent right now. I'm happy. and . that
makes it easier 10 play. Everything is a
lot better for me over here."
Encarnacion, batting .316, responded
with a long solo homer to right to lead
otT the fourth and a two-run single in
inning~ .
the fifth, both off Jimmy Anderson (1Boone, who started 131 different 1), who had won four of five dating to
lineups last season, was at it again, shift- last season. ·
. ing Encarnacion to second after batting
"He hit that ball ·a long way (iri the
PITTSBURGH (AP} -. Don't like
the Cincirmati Reds' lineup? Don't
worry, manager Bob Boone is bound to
change it soon.
juan Encarnacion,
moved up in the order
as Boone again juggled
his lineup, homered
and drove in all three Reds rum in a 32 victory T -hursday nigjlt over the Piwburgh Pirates.
.
Jinuny Haynes (1-1) bounced back
from a rough opening start to limit the
Pirates to six hiu, including Kevin
Young's two-run homer, over 6 1-3

Reds

Indians

eighth straight. Eagles
beat
SG.
.
84
•

CLEVELAND (.\P) - Matt lawton took
great joy .in helping Cleveland sweep the Minnesota 1Wiiu.
·
"There's no. team I'd rather beat than those
guys:• the former Twin aid after Cleveland beat
the Minnesota 8-4 on Thunday
to continue the Indians' bett start
.
in .36 yean with iu 6nt fourgame sweep of the 1Wins since 1994. ·
lawton tnade two sensational catches in right
field and Omar'Vizquel hit a three-run homer as
Cleveland won its eighth straight to improve to 91 - its best start since opening I 0--0 in 1966.
"'Thc~'s a ditferent guy getting. it done every
game and that is a real good sign," Vizquel said.
"Good defense, good pitching and some dutch
hitting is a pretty tough formula to beat:'

•
be
1in

The Twim held a 20-minute meeting to try and
necoup.
·
"We talked about how we can't let this seri"'
carry over;· fint-year manager Ron Gardenhire
said. "'l;hey just whupped m, but we won't go into
any HOle:'
·
G.udenhire .and reliever Jack Cressend were not
around, however, for the final out. l:loth were
ejected in the fifth ·inning after Crnsend hit
Ricky Gutierrez in the len thigh with a pitch.
Gutierrez dropped his bat, t.Ook a couple steps
tow2rd the mound and glared at Cre.send. (&gt;layers
from both dugouts and bullpem ran onto the
field, but there was no further incident.
"I'm nor happy, but abo not surprised," Gutier-

,.......... [ ,12

FROM STAfF REPORTS

TUPPERS I'L.tiNS - Eastern's Ryan Smith
pitched a four-inning one- hitter to lcaJ the Eagles
to a 17- I baseball win over South Calha nn Thunday.
Ea•tern plated eight runs in the first inning and
six in the second.
.
.
.
.
Eagle Charlie Young ripped three -hits. Chm
Lyons notched two hits - one a double - . for Ea"ern . ~
Ben Holter htt a triple for the eagles. Jimmie Putnam and Smiih al&lt;o had hits for Eastern.
Jake Workman had the ,Only Rebel hit , a fourthinning double. Workman later •wred the only SG
run on an error.
1~1 &lt;tarter l3r.mdon Caldwell ~ three lllllliJS'.
giving out HI w.alks and six hill. )U!t fM: of the t'Uil$ he
rui'I'Cild&lt;.-n:d we earned, as the Rt.-beb committed fM:

erron.

The Rdx:t. ,.;u play holt ro Iron ron !lt.Joe on Friday.

i

�..
•

'
Friday, Aprtl11,1001

www.mvdllltvMntlntl.com

Half-century later, Kings atop NBA again
, SACRAMENTO. Calif.
(AP) -The Sacranlfllto Kinss•
history stretchl!s &amp;C!OU the
country and back to th~ NBA\
founding yean, but the onetime
Rochester
Royals haven'
been the regular-season champions for 50 ~an.
Chris Webber; Peja Stojakovic and C&lt;\ICh Rick Adelman chan~ all that.
Webber &amp; Co. have overcome a. half-century. of mediocrity and failure by one of basketball's most unremarkable .
franchises. After 34 losing .seasons and no championships in
the past 49,yean, the Kings are
atop the NBA at 59-19.
With a 118~116 victory over
Golden State on Wednesday ·
night, Sacramento WOl) its 1Oth
straight game and clinched at
least a tie for the league's best
regulu-season record. The franchise hadn't claimed that distinction since 1952, when it
was based in Rochester, N.V,
The Kings can sew up homecourt adv:mtage throughout the
playoffS with a victory over the
Clippen at Staples Center on
Friday night.
"We've worked har'i! all season for this," Srojakovic' said,
"We have ·a lot of easy wins, so
POINT MAN - .·
1uard Mike Bibby, left, Ia fouled IOinl to the beaket. Bibby's steady PIIY
it's good to get a tough one."
hes
helped
the
Klnla
become
one of the NBA'a top teems thla season. (AP file)
Too many easy wins have
never been a problem for this
franchise before. Until Webber, their existence. Led by Arnie Jerry Lucas and a high-flying Sacramento buslneumen In
1985 and moved to Northern
Srojakovic and Adelman led the IUsen, Bob Davies and Bobby rruard from the Univenity of California,
where fans quiclcly
Wanzer,
the
fledgling Cincinnati named Oscar
Kin~ on their four-year run of
thrilling basketball and ever- Rochester Royals were a top Robertson, the Royals had live developed an Impressive loyalty
team in the Basketball Associa- straight winning Jeasons in the to their lovable losen. Sacraincre:~.,ing success, they were
watched some of che ·
known much more for their tion of America, where they 1960s, including the previous memo
NBA\
wont
teama through 13
franchise
record
of
55
victories
wandering feet than winning . began play in 1948.
consecurlve losing seasons.
In their tint season in the in 1964. ·
ways.
..
Tiny
Archibald,
the
spectAcuIt 1111 changed in 1999, when
Put it this way: Through · all future NBA, the Royals had a
the incarnations, including as 13-game winning streak against lar point guard; was the team~ Petrie anembled Adelman,
opponents such as the Provi- marquee attraction u It moved Webber, Vlade Divac, Sto~he Clncinnati · Royals and
dence
Steamrollen and the St. west to become the Kansas jakovic, Scot Pollard and rookle
Kansas City-Omaha Kings, the
franchise has 1, 977 victories Louis Bomben. A year later, City-Omaha Kings in 1972, Jason Williams In one amazing
Rochester won 23 straight before settling excluaively in offseason that's led to four
and 2,256 losses.
This season, the Kings have home games - a mark Web- Kansas City· in 1975. The straight playofF appearances.
It\ difficult for the current
set franchise records for victo- ber's Kings still haven't change didn't help. and the
franchise's hard-core losing Klnss to weigh In on the &amp;an. ries, home victories and road matched.
historic achievements
victories. With four wim in l'he franchile won its only began:The Kings had eight los- chile's
because
their team . bean no
Ing
seasons
In
the
tint
nlnf
NBA
championship
in
1951,
their final 6ve games, they'll
resemblance to the Klnp teams
finish with the highest winning winning a thrilling seven-game yean ofthe 1970s.
Otis
Dlrcl!ong
and
rookie
that
were the NBA\ perennial
final
againsr
the
New
York
percentage in franchise history.
acmation Phil Ford led the afterthoughts. Decades of bad
"It's a tribute to the team that Knickerbocken.
(president of basketball opera- The Royals came back atrong Kings to a 48-34 record in basketbllll are as foreign to t.he
tions) Geoff Petrie has put in 1952,leading the NBA with 1978-79 - lind the franchise~ current Kings at, well,
\ogether;• Adelman said, "You a 41-25 record during the reg- firat division title since Rochester or Cincinnati or
don't turn things around ular season. They had two more Rochester. ·Pretty much the Kansas City.
"We've heard about the
overnight. We've done this over winning aeaaons, but several same roster went 40-42 in
1981,
but
advanced
to
the
team!
chat were here before us,
mediocre years followed the
the coune offour yean."
• · The Kings haven't enjoyed team 'in its move to Cincinnati Western Conference finals with but that's aU history .to us;•
playoff upsets of Portland and Doug C~riscie said, "We're trysuch success in a four-year peri- in 1957.
Helped
by
the
territorial
Phoenix.
ing to go down as the beat team
od since the tint four yean of
draft selections of Ohio Stare's The Kin~ were purchased by this franchiae hill ever had."

NBA

WiIns
fnHn Pace 81

·

aggre11ive, so I've got to be
aggrellive:' Pirate• manager
Lloyd McClendon said. "I'm
trying. to make something
happen there, get runne11 on
tint and third w.ith one out.
But if it doesn't work you
look like an idiot, so you can
write that I look like an
idiot."
The crowd of 12,795 was
easily the lliratel' smallest in
84 games at PNC Park, and
followed con~ecutive crowds
of 36,000-plus in their tim
two home games. Lut year's
smallelt turnout was 17,293
agairilt Milwaukee on Sept. 4,
NOTES: The Red! won for
the second 1traight night to
deny the Piratel three consecurive serie1 wins for the tir,t
time since August 1999. Pitllburgh began the sewn by
winning two of .three &amp;om
the Mets and two 1traight
"L.
llUm t he cu.,.,
... Encar~
cion misted a c~ for a big
RBI night by ICriking out
with the bases loaded against
Mike Feum in the ninth. 2B

"I'm upset because Kevin
hit that homer to put u1
ahead, and I've got to put up
a zero the next inning,"
Ande11on said. "But I got
some pitches up and gave the'
runs right back."
Haynes lalted only 2 1-3
innings in an 8-7 loti Friday
to Montreal, allowing four
·earned runs and six hill in his
18th lots in 26 decisions.
Going in.to the game, he waJ
1-4 with a 5.75 career ERA
against the Piratel, only to
hold them to six hits while
striking out six.
The Pirates were limited to
two runs or fewer for the fifth
time in ·eight games,· even
though they are 5-3·
"We've jutt got to get• that
be
intentity back, and we 0
6ne;• Pokey Reese laid, "We
jult need to get three or four
hill in an iMing and get our
confidence back."
Cabe White followed Reese then prevented two
Haynes with 1 1-3 KoreleN runs with a 'backhanded stop
inninp before Danny Graves, of Sean Cuey's pounder that
who 6lew two ofhit fine four he turned into a force out. '"
tave chances, sot the Snal four The Red! didn't have a 1tolen
oull for hit third aave and the baH one ni&amp;ht after goin1 6tOOdl of hit career.The Rtdf' for-6 on ltealactempll. Pirates
bullpen tw allowed one hit in C )111011 Kendall th- out
7 2-3 innings, YOUIIJ'I one- Aamn Boone in the eighth."'
ouc tingle in the ninth.
Young is 8-for-20 (.400) with
Piraut manager Lloyd two homm apmt Haynes.
McClendon then had Youna ... Kmiallscruck ouc for the
running
a 1-1 pitch, but Snt time in 30 ~ in the
Abraham Nunn c:ouldn 't fifih.ln his previoul at-bat, he
nuke contaa and Young w:u ltopptd a 0-for-20 11reak
thrown out ea.ily at' second. with a double.... ~ Brady
Sec:ond · baseman Cookie Clark threw the ball mto the
Dawkins booted Nunn'1 . IWidl after car.:hing Reese~
apparent
game-ending game-ending 6y ball, so
grounder, but Reese died out. 'Graves didn't get it as a sou"1 ask my pbym to be venir.

on

•

t

DeeI
fnMIPaceBI
Unlike the previous three
Raider ·coache1, Deel will
enjoy the luxury of being
allowed to pick hi1 own staff
for next year, as the board - by
a 4-1 vote - accepted the mignations of 1111i1tant coachetj.D.
Dradbury, Jared McClelland,
and Matt Huck,
However, Dcel expecu to
retain teveral members of that
staff.
"The fim thing I want to do
is meet with them;• said Deel.
"Obviously, one position ia
created (by Dee!\ promotion),
I want to meet with them and
go over what expectations I
have of the program and what

Raiden

... ,... •.

three earned rum ofT of eight
hiu and three walkt in six
innlnp of work: He also
struck out 1ix.
Melp' starlfl' Buzzy Fackler, who pitched 4 2/3
innlnp, sufertd the lou.
"They didn't have much in
the w.ty of pitchina." said
Bowles. "I'm not aoing to aet
elated wilh that!'
Melat seored llnt in he Jecoad inning on a tinale by Jake
·Smith dlvln~ in Josh Napper.
After the Raidm took the
lead in their half of the ~ec­
ond on RBI tingles by Graham and Oibbt scoring Raysean Allen and Graham, Meip
tied it back up in the third as
Fackler scored on an error.
The Marauder• then took
f

expectations I have of them
and then let them decide, AI
well a~ myaelf.
"I have talked to some of
them, and I think they are as
excited as I am about trying ro
get this thing going;• he added,
Dee!, a graduate of the former.North GliUJa High school,
wa1 head coach at North Gallla for four year• before the
school wa1 closed afier the
1991-92 school yeu for the
con~olidation of the four GaUia
County high schools, He posted a 22-17 record in chose Ieason•.
After the consolidation, Deel
served at uslttant head coach
under Mike Chancey at Meip
High School until 1999.
Dee! began coaching footbaU a1 an aHiltant at North
Gallia in 1985.
the lead as Dave McClure and
Jake Smith both came acro1s
the piau.
,
River Valley took the lead
for good when Rose connected on a two-run lin!Pe to
rlahc cenrerlleld, drivlna In
Ward and Marcum.
"We've had a rocky start,
bur our kldt won't quit on
ua,'' said Thoma~. "We . have
the ~ent and they're wl~­
nm. Thi1 iJ not a 1-6 team.
Both tquadl return to play
in their re~peedvtleaf\lct Friday as River VaUey plays hose
to Marietta in SEOAL action,
while Melif encerulns Welltton In the TVC.

Ind..ns
l-

jlequt Jonts hit Colon\
third pitth otT the
o(
tht ~~ ond deck in riahc .
L 2• .... 11
t'ietd ror his ruurth hl'lmtr.
Cltvtllnd eamt ria~
rt!l said. "That's ba,tMll."
back to take ~ 2- t lead in
Both dubs had been the bottom hiliF ofr Kyl~
warned in the top of'the Lohse (0-2). lawton an_t(
fifth when the 'I\vins• AJ.
Pieraynski was hit in tht Vitquel both walked, took
b~ck by Bartolo Colon's ofr on ln 0-1 eount and
rauball.
srort!d on Ellis Burks' dou-.
"We haw to tl'kt Clrt! or ble.
.
business, do what we h~vt
Thr\1 Hunter led off' tht
t,o do;' Gllide~hire sa!d· . 'fWins' seeond with his se~ l
• They rt! thr_owma hard m. ond homer, tying it at 2. •• 1
we art! gomg to thtow · "Dmolo was spotty, b~ j
harder ln. Yuu undu- the two bonum he gavt up' ,
stand?"
1
h ~ OK., '
Colon (3·0) allowed four wert 10 0 • so t u •
' ':
runs and se'lt!n hits In 5 1- lndiam manager Charlie_:
3 lnnin~. ·
.Manuel said. "He didn't •,
"Ev.nybody . thinks . I have his best ftstball, b11t !
tried to . hit him, but they fought through it and ~ l
are wron11," Colon said. "I the win."
had no reason to hit him. I
Clewhmd then used the
h11d 11 big leAd."
long ball to 110 ahelld 8-2.
With two runners on
Jim Thome hit a two-run
b!lse in . ~he fifth, LawtOI'I shot 424 feet into the
m•de a dtvlng, backhand~d
,.
·
grab of Aline drive hit into StAnds II\ right•CI!I\II!r tO
the right-center gap by 1\lAke li 4-2 in the third. ·
David Orti1. With a runner
Vitquel's
three-run
on second In the sixth, · hon1er came In a four-run
Lawton m11de . a diving fourth that in eluded '1\vlns
catch toward the line on ·a shormop Cristlan Ou1..:
drive by Denny Hockhll!• man's third error in tWO: .
.
,:
":t'he firs~. catch was gantes.
r.retty cough, Lawton said.
Doug Mlcntklewin had
'I felt we had to keep them
RBI s'nl!le
in the fifth
1
from scoring and I!Ainlns an
mon1entun 1 so · 1 decided and llobby Kielty an RBI·
to go for It'. Good thlnl! I double In the sixth for
caught It,
MinnesotA .

r.,.dt

page 83

The Daily Sentinel

12.2002

AROUND THE
Johnson wins, D-backS
................
r
stay perfect when .
........
Senes
co-MVPs
start
~s
&amp;:.;
.'
a

---- • ....
-..........._-· "'
w
5
5
5

Now 'ibltt

•v THE ASSOOIATtD PRESS

The Colorado P..oekies had
RQndy Johnson in real trouble.
'TWo run~ haml!, no outs 'nd
'
the bal8 still
loo.dtll ln the
lint innina ~t
Coors Field.
The Arizona Dill·
mondbacks
even
had
Miguel
'Batist4
warming up
Johnaon
in
the
bullpen.
''We
became concerned," ·Aritona manager Bob Brenly
!aid,
Not Cor long. johnson struck
o~t Benny Agbayanl and Jose
Ortiz and retired Gary 13enn'ett 011 a grounder to es(ape
th,at jam, 11nd the Arizona aGe
tl\en breezl!d in an B-4 vletory
Thursday nil!ht. .
' ''I'm not gulng to kid anybody," Johnson ·said. "If 1 don't
hiWil iln over~owerinll fastbilll
and slider, I am as Yulnemble as
anybody out then!. I minit~lized the damase in the first
inlting,As the game went on, I
llll my spots better."
:lohnson shut out the Rockitt on two hits ov.lr the next
sllf innings before leaving. The
fobur-tlme Cy Young winner
bli'cilme the first NL piteher to
~r., three gantes this season.
I trh~ Dlamondb:ieks ilre 5-0
1~: IJIImes started by Johnson
.1pt\ Curt SchiUing. When the
~rid Series eo-MVPs do not
*ch, Arizona is 0-5. Schilling
It: scheduled to smrt FridAy
nl;ht agMnst Colorado's Mike
tlampton.
l Damian Miller homered
t+llce, !lhgled and drove In
tl)l.ar runs for the lJiamondbjll:kl. Junior Spivey added a
s~ttgle, double and baseslo~ded triple, and Luis Gon:Uhomered.
The Rockies had their
chance at the 11m.
leadoff man Ju~n Pierre was
hit by a piteh and Juan Uribe
followed with a ctiple, Larry
~lker and Thdd Zelle walked
to~ load the baset, and 'Ibdd
Hilton reached on 1hortstop
'IISny Womack's error, scoring
al#)ther 1'\\n.
t&gt;fter that, Johnson was
aiQloat unhltttble. .
!'All the great pitchers, you
W9nt to try to get to them
early," . Rockies manager
BYddy BeU said, "We had a
n~ bil! chance there.You don't
'wine to let thote opporrunicieJ
gil past'you.
:Ole'• uncanny how JIUYI like
thlt - Johnson, (Nolan)
RJ'IIn, all of them - jlut Iettie
dqwn and find a way. And that
I!L1Y Is. pretty doggone flOOd,"
hi£ said.

NL

PU I

CARniNALS

6, BU'WBRS 5

St. Louis completed a threeat Busch Stadium,
beating Milwaukee each day
by the Arue 6-5 'score. .
·
Tino Mutinea, Mtting only
.138, drew a base!•loaded Walk
in the ~ighth inning that
forced hom@ tht so-ahead
run.
Aeeordina ro the Elias
Sporn Bul'9u, this was the
tio·u tltne l te~m btat ~nother
dub by the ~~me score three
d:~ys in a row liflee the
Dodsen downed Mon~ 3·
2 on MAy 14-16, 1990. Over-.
~II. it\ happened 1t time~~ in
ntlljor leai!Ue history.
·
'BRAvils 6, PI:UWil!i 2
Than Glavine shut l'lut
l&gt;hUadelphia for seven innings
md Atlanta split a rour-game
series at Veterans Stadium.
Glavltle (lllllt up three hits
and loWilred his ERA to 0.89.
He~ 2·0 this se.uon, and has
won seve11 straight deelsion!
going b~ek ro l~Ht )'l'ar.

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t-(l), 8:0li p.m.
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Oakland (Hudson t.OI al Anaheim (Onlz
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·
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(P.MonlnN t .0), t:05 p.m.
Konua ctty (May 1&gt;01 at C-iltnd
(D&lt;eoe2.0~ 1:06p.m.
Baltimore ( rickocn l ·tloo Ch~go While
SoK (RIIchlo O·t ), 2:05 p.m.
Toronto (PIOI&lt;opoc 1). t I at 'lltmpa Bay
(Siutlzo 0.1 ), 6:15 p.m.
DeiiOit (WHvto O·t) at Minnesota (Millon
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Seante (Abl&gt;on 0.01 ao
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"(J.: 't

Orioles clobber Devil Rays; Jay rock Yankees
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BLUE JAYS 11, 'VANKili!S 3

BALTIMORE ·
Roger Clemens struggled
Geronimo Gil and Mike Bor- on short rest as a fill-in for
dick homered in a 12-run Orlando Hernandez, allowing
sixth inning as six runs in five innings as
· the
Orioles New York lost at SkyDome.
ended a sixHernandez missed his start
. game .
losing with a sore neck. Clemens (1streak, as they beat Tampa Bay 2), originally scheduled to
15-6,
start Friday in Boston, offered
Held to only six runs dur- to pitch on three days' rest.
ing its six-game skid, BaltiVernon Wells hit a threemore ended the drought in run homer for the Blue Jays,
record fashion. The Orioles who won the final two games
set team marks for runs (12) to spilt the four-gan1e series.
and hits (11) in a single . RANGERS 7, ATHLBTICS 0
inning.
·
Doug Davis (2-0) pitched a
The .O.rioles' II hits .,.were two-hitter for his first career
more .~han· th~y had . ih any shutout and .ro.okie Kevin
game this year and five more Mench hit his first homer and
than they produced in any . had four RBis for host Texas.
game during their slide,
Mench replaced Juan Gon-

AL

MAIWN! 7' liXPOS 5

Jllllan Thvarez did · the job
with his arm, bat and le811 to
lead Florida over Montreal.
'Thvarez pitched 5 2·3 innings
for the victory, stopping the
Marlins' three-game losing
streak.
'Illvarez also had a rwo-our,
two-strike bunt lingle in the
fourth. inning. He flopped
headtlnt into !lrst bUt! with the
hit that tied the IJIIme: ' '
The smllllest home crowd in
team history, only 4,666, turned
out In Florida. A day earlier, the
Marllni d~w jUst 5,422.

zalez, the two-time AL MVP
who went on the 15-day disabled list because of a torn
muscle in his right hand.
Mench hit a two-run
homer in the second off Mark
Mulder (2c I) to put the
Rangers ahead to stay. Mulder
left after four innings because
of tightness in his left fore·arm.
RoYALS

8, REo Sox 5

Chuck Knoblauch hit a goahead double, as Kansas City
scored four runs in the ninth
to win at Boston.
The Royals overcame
deficits of 4-1 and 5-4 and
beat Ugueth Urbina (0-2).
Jason Grimsley (1 -0) got
the win despite allowing
Johnny Damon's RBI triple

that put the ·p ed Sox ahead
5-4 in the eighth.
MARINERS

8, ANGELS 4

Mike· Cameron hit a tworun homer and Jeff Cirillo
had a three-run double as
Seattle completed · its first
four-game sweep ever at Anaheim.
The victory could be costly, howewr. Seattle DH Edgar
Martinez ptolled his left hamstring while running out a
grounder in the ninth and
had 'to be helped off the field.
He will have an MRI test in
the next couple of days to
determine whether he will go
on the disabled list.
Freddy Garcia (1-2) won
his sixth straight decision over
the Angels in seven starts.

NL LEADERS
•AniNO-Gonzalez,
Chicago,
.487; Barrett, Monlroel, .4&amp;4: 118118,
Plttlburgh, .408; Alfonzo, Now York,
.408;
Zollo,
Colorado,
.400:
Ai'lamloaz, PIHibutgh, .383; &amp;ond1,
San Francleco, .391 ,
IIUNII-Bondl, San FranclaQo, 10;
U~be. OoiOiadO. 8: Pu(OII, St Louie,
8: Bergeron, Montreal, 9; Shaflfe~.
Atlanta, 8; Barkman, Houlton, 8 ;
\lldro, Montreal, 8: A.Jonll, Allantl,
8; Edmonda, 91. Loul1, 8; Piazza,
New Vol1&lt;, 8.
'
1111-BatrreH, Montreal, 13: Bondi,
San Franolooo, 12; Barkman, Houa·
ton, It; Zelle, Colorado, tO; Pu(ola,
St. Loula, 9: Hldalao. Houaton, 9:

\ICluerrero, Montoaal, 9.
•
HIT8-U~be . CoiOfado. 14: Gonza·
lez, Chloogo, 14: Baroatt, Monlfaal,
t3 : Altonzo, New York, 13; Bautltta,
.Mzono, 13; 11118 fled with 12.
DOUILII-8plvay, Arizona,
MAnderoon, Philadelphia, 5; TWalk·
11, ClnciMatl,
11 are tied with 4.
TIIIPLI!II-Urlba, Colorado, 3;
ABrown, Plttlburgh, 2; 24 are lied
with I.
HOMI! IIUNII-Bonda, San Francisco, 5; Berkman, ttoualon, 4; ~arran.
Montreal, 4: SSou, Chicago, 4: 15
are !lad with 3.
ITOLI!N IA81!8-Patteraon, Chlca·
ao, 8: ASanchez, Milwaukee, 3: TIY•

e:

a:

lor, Cincinnati, 3; Dl1obarts, Loa
Angelea, 3; LCaatlllo, Florida, 3; I D
are lied with 2.
PrtCHIIIO (2 Daoletone)-12 are
fled with 1.000.
ITIIIKIOUTI-RJolln10n, Arlzona,
29; Schilling, Arlzona, 26; Wood,
Chicago, 20; Duckworth, Phlladel·
phla, t9: Burnell, Flotlda, 17: Aslaclo,
New York, 16; Glavlne, Allanta , 15.
SAVE8-MIW1illams, Pittsburgh, 4:
Gagne, Los Angeles , 3; Greveo,
Cincinnati, 3; Hoffman, San .Diego,
3: Mila, Philadelphia , 3: JJimenoz,
COlorado, 2; Benitez, Now York, 2;
Lloyd, Montreal, 2; Nan, San Francis·

co. 2.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
CO·ED FLAG FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT
Point PIHNnt, WV

s.turay, M•y 11, 2002

ONioWAY TICKIT OUTTA HIRI - The Cubs' Sammy Sosa
hltl a aolo home run 11111nat tha Naw York Meta In the eighth
1nn1n1 Thurtday. (AP)

(,.,II., ._.:' II flttlfQ Apt/1.11, IHI)

• Ordn•nce tlelda
• R1ln or ahlne

• 111m•• be..n lit 8 •.m.
• Double ellmln.tlon

• tao entry fee per team

W11n11 wlnttr-Holtummer??l Don't give ycur hard earned
dcllb lo Iht utllitiel. A111W Lennox HP2e HIM Pump can cUI
vour LP. 011, Elecll1c .lumtct or older Hell Pump heating
monllh'y bllllllletllly In lillll 50% oil your cooling billt
laOIIRelllyl (Stop In the ofllct If you w1nt to ... the flguree and
'!Jik to rtlllllt rtltrtneH.)

• Mu1t be 18 ye•re or older

r--------------------------,
I •
I

NllmeoftMm: - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - -

1

Tiki tht reblll oor~~~~~~:fmi.IIII.Jl!Lilal
montl!l
now...don't PlY 'till fill.
1 Enjoy t1

-

sar·
MITI 3, CUH Z
,:.a.rmando Benlcez retired

~catch .

(liN 0.1) It Pl-..gh

g

~ric Clasne pitched around

~my SOIA on a crazy popup
'11th a runner on thlrd bue to
e~d New York'• win ac
W.rlaley Pield.
:::Meu reliever Scott Strickl~d made the play o£ the
pe, catching plnch-.hiuer
~.rio Encunac:ion '1 Une dtlve
alid turnin&amp; It Into a double
~ that nnlahed the eighth.
l:ln the ninth, the Men
cjlcided to pitch to·Sota, who
l)ld homered an inning earlitr.
1)lc Cubs tluger lifted a high
hat ~eemed co gtt lose in
sun, and lhorutop R.ey
nez ra11 acrou the dia~nd and tumbled as he made

) 11 flolidl (-ell

t.O), 7:06p.m.
. hod- ~ il-01 ot Pltllodol-

• DoDOIII.I .f · GIANTI 3

Bfrry Bondi ln. the ~nth to
pNserve L()J Anselet victory
ac~Pacitic Bell Park.
:'The Dodgen rook the lead
i~ the eighth on consecutive
hime runs
by Mark
Cliud!ielanek and pinch-hitter
Hl~m Bocachlca.
.
· ln che Glana' ninth, Gagne
h¢entionally walked Bond• ·
'Wtth a runner on third and
o9e out. Gagne then struck
o'J t Jeff Kent and retired R.eglliJ Sanden on a fly ball for a

I

DIAMOND

f · Hau11011 (MIIiltr O.t) at St. L.outa (Moirla z. Chicago .

1.
OOT CAUGHT-· TWine pitcher Jaok Cree send welka off the .
field after belnl ejected for throwlnl et Cleveland bett~i
Ricky Gutierrez In the fifth lnnlnl Thuraday. (AP)
. ,

•

(A*II3411)

1

t

NIIIM of Ollptllln: - - - - - - - - - - - - -

:

aAd*~= --------------------~------

1
1

•

1
1

• lll1pt.one: (

I
I
I

Pieale flU-out fonn, detach and mail with team roster (8mtn &amp; 8 women maximum) and
cnuy p;~ymenr. All chccb mwt be made-out ro the 'l'leuant Valley Wcllnels ~mer.•

CltJ: -------

..... ____
:

eZip: - - -

) - - - - - tl-m.U:

111111 ........ VIIIJWIIIIIJI Cllllll, Mil:~ PIIC ,...il1b&amp;JUIIIl, '
2UOVIIIrllllwi,PIIIItPiraa slyWV21110 .
,
~

1

L------~-------~-~--------~~
•

David Whitt 8ervlclel wtlcom•• 111 cu1tomert
of ttt. two Lt.,no• dltltrt ttt•t hlw a.one out
of buelnttt. Wt oan handle 111 mlnliflcturer
w•rraf11Y cl•lml. 21 YNre of contlnuon IWird
winning Hf'YIH, Wt lrt thtllrtHt dt11tr
Hrvlnt Ollila CountY.
atoeaidrUntatG-W.-ColilcDwm10118

_ _ _ ....._ _ _ _ _____JI.!.,;.__ _ _ _

'

~_.;__

PLEASANT VALLEY WELLNESS CENTER
304-675-7222

IJ-·-- --·- -

I
I

I

�,I

, . a 4 • The Deily Sentinel

I
Frldly, Aprll12, 2002

www..mydllly..ntlnel.com

.'

GOLF

Miam"i

·Farewell to the King, and to low scores at Augusta extends
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP)- l~ti all bid faR....:ll to the
King. savor the sight of'' Arnie\ Anny•• trekking around
Augusta Nition31 one ):1St time.
Then, its time to get serious.
Arnold Palmer will say good-~ to the M:~~ters on
Friday, then step :~~ide and let the next generation or
two.duke it out. Just look at the big nam6 lingering at
the top of the leaderboard after the first round.
Tiger Woods is there, of course, pointing tow:1rd .a second straight championship. llui the 6rst-d1y honors
went to the suddenly reviL'llized Davis low Ill, who
opened with a mistake-free 67.
·
Sergio G:ucia, Phil Mickelson, Retief Goosen, .Ernie
.EJs,Vij~ Singh,Jose Maria Olazabal, Nick Price,Justin
leonard, Greg Norman - they're all in contention,
too.
And don't forget the redesigned Augusta National
cou~, ":'hich sent a message that the days of shooting
111 the rrud-60s could be over. It played about as easy as
possible Thursday. when clouds lingered. after heavy
showers moved through earlier in the week.
·
If the rain stays away this wt~kcnd, the greem will get
faster and everything else a little more treacherous on a
layout that was lengthened by almost 300 yards.
"The course was playing softer, so it was e:ISier to
att.1ck the greens. The wind was blowing very little,"
Garcia said. "Even so, just look at those scores, ~is
field is an unbelievable field . It shows the course is JUSt
playing tough ."
Only 21 of the 89 players broke par. The average score
wns 74.118- a stroke higher than last year's fint round.
"It's not the same thing to hit 7-irons to these greens
as it is to hit wedges," Garcia said. "It makes you think a
lot more. It makes you a little more COILICI'V'Jtive."
The 72-ycar-old Palmer ca11 let it all. hang out. He
equaled his worst round ever at Augusta with an 89,
then matter-of-facdy announced that Friday's roundhis !47th at the Mastel'S - will be his last in a major
tournament.
"E nou gh 1s. enou gl1,"I1e sru'd.
Palmer's farewell figures to be more emotional than
his e1tit !Tom the U.S. Open at Oakmont in 1994 and
!Tom the British Open at St. Andrews in 1995.
Augusta National is where "Arnie's Army" wiLl created, and where television first captured Palmer's swashbuckling style and made the game appealing to the
masses.
''I'm not any different than most people," Palmer said.
"I like Ill think there's always a couple more good
rounds in my body, and maybe there are. Bur I haven't
shown up here:'
Palmer finished with a par on the 465-yard 18th, but
even that wa&amp; a sign that his g;ame was no-match for this
golf course,- a driver off the tee, a 3-wood some 40
yards short of the green and a pitch to 8 feet.
"I just think it's time,'' P3lmer said. "My golf has been

•

NO MORE - Arnold Palmer &amp;lves a thumbs up to
the Masters &amp;allery gathered at the 18th green
after ftnlshlrig his first round at the 2002 Masters,
Thursday at the Au&amp;usta Natlonal Golf Club. Palmer
announced this wlll .be his final Masters. (AP)

ed to catch errant drives.
"It was a new ballgame today," David Duval said after
a 74.
·
Garcia birdied three straight holes to, tie Love for the
lead, but missed a J...foot par putt on the 18th hole for
a 68. Still, it wns El Nino's best round at Augusta. ·
Mickelson didn ~ take long to stir up some excitement
in his quest to win his first major. He missed two putts
from 3 feet, but also pitched in from 160 feet on the
11th hole fur an unlikely biidie. He 6nished at 69, as did
Goosen, the U.S. Open champion. He had seven birdies
to oilier a double--bogey when he hit into Rae's Creek
on the par-3 12th.
Ireland's Padraig Harrington birdied six of the 6r:st 12
holes and had 184 yards for his second shot on the parS 13th when he I&gt;Ulled his shot into a creek. He had
three bogeys over his final six holes for a 69.
Woods, the defending champion, hit into the Georgia pines rwice and into the gallery once but still
scratched out 70. He was only three strokes back after
matching his best start at the Masters.
"The way the golf course is playing, 70 is a lot better
score than it would have been last year,'' he said. "Even
par or better today is going to be a good round.''
Woods, trying to become only the third player to
repeat as Masten champion, looked as if he might be in ·
great shape when he birdied three straight holes early
pretty lousy of late, and it doesn't w:~rrant being here ·
playing." .
Even if Palmer wanted to keep going, Augusta
National likely would haw balked.Alre~dy, the club sent
letters to three former champio ns - Doug Ford, Gay
Drewer and Dilly Casper - recommending they stop
playing this year. All complied, bm not without some
hurt feelings.
"I don't want to get a letter.'' Palmer quipped.
Even under the most benign conditions Augusta has
to offer, the best anyone could muster in the fint round
was Love's S- under score, which gave him a one-stroke
lead over Gan;1a and Angel Cabrera.
TypicaUy a f.1st starter 011 the PGA Tour, low h:IS not
finished higher than 16th this year and missed dte cut in
his la.1t two tournament~.
"AU I had to do was eliminate the silly mistakes.''love
said. "I'm not shocked the way I played tod1y. I'm
shocked the way I played the last two week.1."
Othen tiptoed around a course where nine of the
hole5 were lengthened, bunkers were stretched, tees
where shifted to sharpen dogleg;, and trees were plant-

on:

He g;aw them ~I back ..:.. hitting over the green 0 n
Nos. 6 and I0 and sending his tee shQt into the trees at
14, one of the nine holes lengthened at Augusta.
"I juNt wanted to shoot even par or better,'' Wood1
said. "It's not one of those golf courses where you can
just turn it on. You've got to keep plugging."
Mootora Qrldod lcoreo

Thurldlv
AIAuguttl N1Mort1l Qolr Club
Augutti,GI.
PUJ'II:TIA
VtrdiOI: 7,2'1G; Ptw: 72
Pll'llllo&lt;oncl
(o.. molour)
Cavlo Lovo Ill 33·3&gt;4
- 87
Sergio Qarola 3&lt;1·3&gt;4
- 88
Angel Cobrora 3&lt;1·3&lt;1
- 88
Rotltl Oocton 38·33
- 89
Pod. Halllnglon 31·38
- 89
Pnll Mloktloon :M-35
- 89
Tiger WOOCit 34-38
- 70
JM Oluabal 35-35
- 70
MA Jlmtnez 38·3&lt;1
- 70
Emil Elt . 37·33
- 70
SOolt Vlllplonk 33·37
- 70
Jto.Pomevlk 37-33
- 70
Chrto DIMtroo 37-33
- 70
Nlok Ptloo
3!-38
- 70
Jutlln Leonard 38-:Jol
- 70
Vlify Singh
38-38
- 70

Dorren Clarlco 35·35
- 70
38·35
- 71
35·38
- 71
38·33 . - 71
38·35
- 71
- 72 .
Jorry Ktlly 35•37
Ptul McGinley 38-3&gt;4
- 72
Mlko Wolr 38·33
- 72 .
Jtll Slumon 38-37
- 73
Frtnk Lloklllor 38-35
- 73
Rooy S.bb.m\137·38
- 73
MtH Kuchar 37·38 · - 73
Toti111ZIWII 40-33
- 73
Robert Nlonby 38-37
- 73
Sonlly L)ltl 40.33
- 73
Frod Coupllo 40-33
- 73
T Ptm~t.Jr. 3&lt;1·38
-73
Jim Fuoyk
38·37
- 73
Larry MIZI
38•37
- 73
Crofg Slfdlor 37•311. - 73
Dovlil Torno 35-38
- 73
Bolo Eotoo
40-33
- 73
111m Longer 3340 . - 73
Srod Fuon
Tom Walton
Acllm Scott
Orag Nom,.n

coach's
contract
OXFORD (AP) -

Mi. ~mi . University has

extended men's basketball coach Charlie Coles'
contract by two yean, tci
the 2005-06 se~son, athletic director Joel M~turi
said Thursday.
"Charlie is the rype of .
quality person every
institution wants guidins
their program, and I'm .
thrilled he will continue
to lead ours," Maturi
said. ·
"It is a privilege to be
a part of the program 1
played in, and to continue coaching quality student-athletes,"
said
Coles, a 1965 Miami
graduate.
Coles, 60, had signed a
five-year deal in 1999
that ended with the
2003-04 season.
His teams are 107-78 •
in his six years, ranking ;
him third at the school
in victories. With a
career record of 199-,162
over a combined 12
years at Miami and at
Central Michigan University, Coles leads all
active Mid-American
Conference coaches in
MAC career wins and .
wins within the confer- ;
ence (116).
:
As a Miami player, :
Coles was twice selected ·
for the all-conference ·
team. He was inducted
into the school's athletic
hall offame in 1990.

.Prldly, Aprll12, 2002

The Dally Sentlnol • P•g• B 5

wviw.mydlllynntlnol.com

.....

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PP, 118·0:
B111nnan.~, J • :22·88 : 2· J01h Chrla Nlda, rubb,
llnemtnt(e),towlt:
lhllll
thtlllll
re1ldeno1
ol
thenoe
eouth
70
RV, 104·10; .9.
00111101
Tht following Alii luohanln II 112· llld defendant• '"• . dlllllll, Will 211.1
'I I
Perry, uA, :23.0; 3. Allan Joah Miller, RV, 93·0: 10. Mark . !IIIII
IIIUIIId In lht
other lhln herein Ill 'fill IO lhl pl1oe of
Brown, RV, :23.1; 4. Ty Slm· Sabolaky, H. 89•11 .
2138
Counly ol Melge, In
·
forth, unknown, tnd beginning,
mlona," GA, :23.8; 5. Tom Long lump _ 1. Conger, J,
lhiiiiiiOIOhrolnd
Olnnot
with oonlllnlng
12/100
Boll, GA, :24·79 : 8· Bailey, · 20·1; 2. Clarke Saunde11, GA,
)n lhl Vlll1111 of (4)10
Me ' 1112
' ' 2002
IIIIOnlbll dlllgtnCI
1011.
VC, :24.9; 7. Dualln Lewl1, t9-~ 5 3 M 111 J 1a105
Po1111roy,
n
d
bl
IIOerlalned;
end
EXCEPT
I hI
1
sa • ··2""· 3·• 8· Berney, vc• 4. ""·
; . u na, ' .,.. . :
bound 1 d
n
d
thll
thlo
0111
11
one
following
!rom
the
Erron Brennen, J, 18·10.25;
1
:25.34; 9. Brian Bamea, SG, • tJ D h k P" 17_,.
dleorlbtd •• lollowe:
ollholl mentioned In ebove de eo rlbed
'25 4· 10 Ballna OH 25 73
"· .. ea u • r, ..,; 6.
The Dally Sentinel
A place ot ground
Beollon 2703.14 premleu eold to
· ' ·
'
': · · Bellna, OH, 16·8: 7. Drew
Filly
lftl
wide
out
of
1ndlor
3101.01
ol
the
Reymond
El11l1tetn
3· oo-mtter
1
hurdiH • Hanaon, RV, 18·2: 8. Darek
the louthwlll oomlt'
RevlnCI Code of Ohio by d11d dlled
Conger, J, :42 ·59: 2· Bose, T., Burger, RV, 14·4; 9. Joah
ot Lot No. 12 In tilt
end pureuentto OhiO Februtry 24, 1131
:44.4; 3. Herrold, WE, :44.8; 4. W&amp;ITIIIey, RV, 12•8.25 .
Pltl of Dllleburg, Now
Rule ol Civil beginning 11 · lht
Pat Hill VC, :45. 7e; 5. Nlok High Jump _ 1. Mulllna, J, 8•
Lot
No.
210
In
Procedure U(A).
eouthwtll comer oh
Fl100, GA, :4e.B5; e. Walle111, 3 2 D J F
RV 8
Po1111roy.
Ohio,
which
Public
Notice
lot formerly owned '--='-------------'"OH ·47 04· 7 Oebome VC
: · · · razee, . ·P: 3.
11 bounded ud
SHAPIRO. FELTY,
by Rtnl El1111111n
'3l.
e
'
H'
•
0
C
'
'
Dustin
Lewis,
SG,
5·
8;
4.
Nate
50
diiOIIbtd
11
fOIIowt:
NOTICI:
II
hlllby
L.L.P.
.
.
lhl
llml being lhl
~~ ~~!~ t'. :~i:n Hall, vc, 5·8: 5. Pete Saul\·
Help Wanted
leglnnlng
on
the
given
thai
on
BemenUII
8.
Joetph
northweet
oorn11 ol
Brown Av ·•3 1· 2 Callihan de11, RV, 5·4; e. Tom Bose,
W111
elde
ol
11ld
Lot
811unt
y,
April
(0070124)
Lot
No.
113;
thence
1
' ' 3.'" Ryan
· ' · Hudeon.' GA,
No . (210) two 13,2002, 11 10:00 Alldmeylor Pl1lnllll
north Tl d,,... and
J, :53.88;
R'l 55·2:8 7.Sl Michael Barker,
GA, :54.08; 4. Cody Caldwell; •""-~ ITIII • J, 5·0.
llundrtd . end ninety 1.m., a public 1111 100 Well St. Clair
30' Will 0 lui;
Velerans Memorial Skilled Nursing
GA, :55.07; 5. Avery, VC, -:--.,,..., re IY - 1. Gallla
11 Iouth elde of the will be held 11 211 Avenut,lllcond
thence north 20 Cenler has immediate opening for the
:57.18; 8. Refill, VC, :58.28; 7. ..cademy :46.1; 2. VInton
etone eldlwllk on 1111 w11t lloond llrHI, PlcOr
dtlgrHI 1nd 30' w111
North 1ld1 ol Front , p 01111roy, Ohio, The Cllv111nd, OH 44113 140.8 1111 to the following :
Duelln Barker, PP, :58.9; 8. County :47.34; 3. Eastern
llreel; llllnce North Parmere lenk and ~11) 121·1530
· north lint of whet
Waller~. OH, :59.23; 9. Taylor, :48.5: 4. River Valley :48.8: 5.
with
the
Will
oldl
of
llvlngl
COI)Iptny,
II
211)
821•7141-fll
Wll formerly Rlnl
J, 1:01.2: 1o. Brian Barnes. · Mllga :49.1; 6. Point Pleuanl
OF
11ld Lot No. 2t0 to 11mng tor o11h the
HAPFI!LTOLOGI.C EIHIIIIIn'e
lot;
DIRECTOR
NURSINGSG. 1:01.2.
.
:49.8; 7. Welleton :50.2; 8. Oak
70 Responsible for 24-ho.ur administration of
the
fece
ol
the
rooke
tollowlng
oolllllflll:
OM
thence
north
ICJO.meler run - 1.. Daniel Hill :51.55; 9. Ohio Valley
or llulf; 11111\oe 111t
1110
D0 DQ 1
dea1111 1nd 30' 1111
Roush, GA, 2:12.6; 2. Charley Chriallan :55.6.
(10) 1111 with the IHAOOW
SWORN
TO 123 flit to the nursing services for the facilily. Takes
Nibert, RV, 2:12.5; 3. Chrle 8CJO.meler relay - 1. River
rock• 1nd p1111111 113XP48DeLN17tlll 11!1'0111 Ml, end northl~ll corner ot responslbilily for the condition and care
Miller, PP, 2:17.0; 4. Heath V-'llay 1:38.61; 2. Melge
with . l'ront ltr111;
The Ftrmlrl link 1ub1crlbld In m~ wh1l
formerly
.
• 1 1 g1ven
to the residenls. Must have Oht'o
,.Ina 11w11
..1.•-1
Patrick. GA. 2:28.8; 5. Jell 1:42.2 . .
thence Iouth to the 1 n d
lev 1n 111 preeenoe thle121
- n• " :
Iouth elde of 1111 comptny, Pomeroy, d1yot ·.
thenot eouth I RN license, previous DON/Asst. DON
Payton, GA, 2:27.0; 8. MeNal· 1800omtler relay- 1. Gallla
elone eldiWIIk lilly Ohio, . rtllrYII thl February, 2002.
d::I'HI
·
r
d d t ""C
·
-~ end
to 11130' Will
ly, VC, 2:28.2; 7. Brodie Gill, Academy 3:37.4; 2. River Val·
1 ,-·
1 P1101 expenence pre.errc an .... , experience
flit of the pl101 of right to bid 11 thll
RV, 2:43.9; 8. Beaver, OVC, ley 3:43.7; 3. VInton County
blglnnlng; lllence eall,endtowlthdrlw MtriLandlno
of
beginning, amusl.
"
2:152.7.
3:57.0; 4. Point Ple·aeant
Wnt
wllh
.
11ld
lht
lbove
collltlrll
Nollry
.Publlc,
Stall
oontelnlng
20/100
1~00-m~ter run - 1. Chris 4:05.8; 5. Oak Hill 4:08.76.
lldlwllk to thl piece prior to 1111. Further, of Ohio
10re moll or leu.
It lntere8ted, pleaHe ronlllcl
Miller, PP, 4:se.o: 2. Ryan 3ZOO.meter relay - 1. Gallla
olblglnnlng.
The Flfmlll link My Commlulon
Aleo 1 former
Hudeon, GA. 4:57.6; 3. Nate Academy 9:05.0; 2. Jacgqn
LD01IIcllll481111 In d
IIV 1n Ill expllll 1G-2H4
greniH II to hiVI Human Re8ourceR at 740·992·2104,
Emmert,VC, 5:12.3; 4. Zloh 9:24.52; 3. VInton Counly
Mlln 111111, Pomeroy, Company rellrVII
fru end undleputed Monday through Friday, 9 am • 4 11m
OH 41TH.
lhl rklht ID rtjlot eny . CITIIANK N.A. AI
Ull elong the north
Reynold•, VC, 5:12.4; 5. Chrl1 9:42.0; 4. Wellaton 9:48.5; 5.
Apprellll velue: or lliDktuubmllted.
TAUITEI!
.II de of Whit Wll
Rouah, RV, 5:21.7; e. Jolh Point Pleaeenl 9:50.0; 6. Oak
S30,ooo.oo
Th•
ebove
......
tormertr
Rtnl
Perry, GA, 5:34.4; 7. Aldrich, J, Hill 9:57.01; 7. River Valley
1
0%
Celh
dlpolll
deeor)bed
colltlllll
AQNI!I
QAIL
!IHiellln
I
lot
Of I .
15:35.02; e. Dualln Lucaa, RV, 9:59.0; I. Melge 10:47.0.
or
cerllllld
check
will
be
eold
•
•
OHLINGER
ekl
right·of-way
11
now
11 11
15:58.01; 9. Jon Mollohan, RV, (The OVP Honor Ro/116 com·
required
on
dey
of
Whirl
II",
with
no
AQNI!I
OHLINGI!R'I
)OOIIId
to
Petoock
.-8:07.1.
p/lld with h.tp from Ed Ssyre,
llle, bllenot due 11...,..Hd or lmpllld · UNKNOWN HI!IRI,
IIIIIIR1·
D d
:llJOO.mlltr run - 1. Chrla boY' tf8ok end n.ld C08Ch et
upon oonllrmatlon ol ~ ~.
CIII!DITOIII,
e erenot I I •
Miller, PP, 11 :07.0; 2. CMe River Valley High School)
1111. OHd lo liiUI
p or
f u rt h 11
DIVIIIU,
Voluml 214, Plfl
upon p1yment of lnlormlllon, or lor 10
LIGATEII,
H1, Melge Countv
1111. Thl1 ltnd(l) or eppolnlmtnt to
ADMINIITRATORI, Died R100rd••
•
IXICUTORI ANO
Audltort Ptrcel
ttnemtnl(l) 01nnol lneproot oolltteral,
AIIIQNI II 11.
No.1H12H
be told lor 1111 tllln prior to 11 11 dill
two•lhlrde ol the. oonllol lhtlll
LIQAL NOTICI
In Memory
1ppr1l11d YllUI. ·IUChlntn II 112•
Only
2lM.
WE OFFER
Agntl
0111
lUll dUI IOd
Ohlinger lkl Agnee
In Loving Mtnwry
• Colurnllua W~gMin
p1y1ble ··• ·ot the (4) to, 11,12,2002
•
Ohllnt~~r'e Unknown
dill
ol
....
111111
be
~
-OIIIo
Rllil
G.
Clrt:/1
•
BY lHE AS!IOCI4TED PRESS
sasion, They McGrady drove p1ld from the
He111, Credltore,
2111120 • 41JV87
, The New jeney Ne11 were the lane, but Martin &amp;W:ttted hi&amp; prOCiedl ollhe .....
Devl-t, Leg11111,
• 30 rHkllnlt to 1 nurte reuo
Public Notice
She
has
cro11ed
the
Admlnlltrlloll,
pleased to play overtime to~- shot off the backboard. Darren
• A tNm of drd'n'td and
L111 M. Mlchllll,
lxtoutor•
1nd
shlnlna river
the. r cement Amutrong came up with the Attorney tor Plelntlff, THI! ITATE OF OHIO A11lgn1 1 wfiOH 1111
I• watkins now on a
COUNTY OF
· ••
their hold on 1oose baD, but his IS-footer lh1plro l l'llty, 100·
pi- ollllldlnCI ..
·~p&gt;lden tlteel
CUYAHOGA
Will 11. Cltlr Ave.,
Will I I WhOII
:
the Eaitern rinuned out at the buzzer.
IN THI! COUIIT 01'
In our home liO • ad
Second
Floor,
prtllnt piiGI Of
Wt OIWI'IIMf!l -tile
:COnference.
McGrady made hi&amp; we for Cllvel1nd, OH 44113, . COMMON PLIAI
follawllll poolllon oval-:
retldenot
.,,
and lonely
MEIGS
COUNTY,
, rulltlmt J.ll 111111
(211)
121•1130
unknown,
wUI
t1k1
: Por the Dallas Maverick., an the award with 39 j,oints, 16
There now ita
OHIO
nolle•
thll
on
eXIr.l five minura just: delayed assisll and seven reboundt.
vacant seat.
Rllph 1!. Trv-11,
J1nuarr 16, ·2002,
the co~pletion of one their
lk.W 104, KNicxs 101,
Doualu Cir&lt;'le
lherlfl at lltlgl CAll NO. 02..CV.iJo6 CITIIANK N.A. AI
County
TRUITII
flied
Ill
Linda,
Sue &amp;
.wont collaplet IMI'.
1)1on Chandler's dunk with
AFFIDAVIT
FOil
Complllnl
In
CIH
: ~Martin had 26 poinll, 1:39 mnaining in overtime, and (4) I, 12, 11, 2002
II!RVICI! IV
No. 02..CV.006 In lhl
PUBLICATION
A seai011-high seven aais11 and a two fi'ee th!OWI by fellow rookCourt of Common
PURSUANT TO OHIO Pl111 of llelge
:game-taYing bkx:k in Ollel'lime, ie Eddy Curry with 12 secondt
Public Notice
FIULI 01' CIVIL
County, Urry I;
:as the Nell beat the Orlando left provided the winning m.arPFIOCIDUIIIU(A) lplnCir,
II elg 1
NOTICI: 11 lltrebV
County
Clerk
:Magic 101:-99Thunday night to gin for Chicago.
of
glvtn lhlt on
. CITIIANK N.A.
Courtl, P.O. 1011111,
:miuce
their
nurnbei: to Chandler led the Built' ·-·April It,
.UTIIUITII
100 llconcl It rill,
clinch the
EaJtmagic
to one.
_,., laturdiV,
2002, altO:OO 1.m., I
Plllntlll
P~, OH 417tt,
. "It w.u probably one of our double-digit scorm with 16 publlo 111e will be
-king fOriCIOIUrl
AQNU QAIL
·bipl wins of the year," taid pojn!l. He also had a Clll'l!«-high held 11 211 Will
1nd llllglng IIIII lhl
second 111111,
OHUHOIII
Delendlnll, Agnta
:Keith Van Horn, who had 19 1S rebounds.
P-roy, Ohio, Tilt
akiAQNU
Gall Ohllngtr eke
~~~ and 14 rebounds. "You
Kurt TboiiUI had 26 pointl ~armtre l1nk 1nt1
OHUNGIII'I
Agnll Ollllngtr'l
UNICHOWN
Unknown Holrt,
..can't .Jt for a belr.er scenario, and 17 reboundf for the host llvlllfll Companr, II
Hllltl, Clti!DITOfW, Clldllore,
lctr
calli
tilt
M, into the playolli at a high Knicb.
I
1111 oollllllrel:
oev•u.
Uti
PORD
CveL''
(;przmps 102,
CONTOUR
J"~o.... la~oulor• 1nd
The p~-bound MaYmckl
'I'IwL BIAZJ!U 99
,,~KztsJrr
IXI!CUTOIII AHD
A11lgn1 htwl or
held a 20-point lead 0'11!1' the
Pau Gala! ICOI'I!d 23 poinll, 14,487 MILII AUTO,
AUIONIIt II.
claim
to heve en
O.flnillntl
;vacation-bound
Hoult-On and Antonill'otlil made a pair of Alii, ,., ,., CIIUIII,
lllllrlll In tilt r111
o11111 tt ..orlbed
;Rockets at home. It -n't &gt;point:en in the final 2:16 a1 AM·FM CAIIIT'R,
:enough, and chey lolt98-9S.
Memphis held on to beat visit,----- .~-•• ll1ltead of ftli
....
the
lranl:hile
. Pordand.
.,-...
utg
1eC«d with their 55th llia.ory. . Potdand, led by Ra&amp;heedW31the MaYmcb enduted their lace~ 22 pointl, haJ IOIIt "three
lixl:h-wont c:ollapiC' and tell into IIDight and six of eight
·
..a tie wid! San Antonio for the
L\Dit 96, '];.tKXNPt 83
Fkxibk Scheduling
lead in the Midwest Division.
Sluquille O'Nea!ICOI'I!d 13 of
: The Man let a 47-27le:ld late hil32 poinlJ in the third qwrr.er
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit healthcare
:in the I«&lt;OId quarter IUm into a and Kobe Br)wlt added 28 ,.;
facility, currently hat open posltione for Aeglitered
M-point de6cit cady in the the 1.DI Angeles l.aken beat
Nu,._ and Licensed Pracllcal NurNS" Appllcantt mutt
fourth. They - up 85-82 in Minnetota.
have a current WV license.
,the
minute. of resuiaOon Kmn 0ameu had 18 points
Excellent lllary, holldaye, holpltalizatlon, dental, IHe
;but newr led ~· Stew Na.h .and 16 rebountok, and W.illy
lneurance, vacation, long-term disability and retirement.
~ Mld!aa Fililcy, who ~ Su:etbiak and Anthony Peeler
It le the policy and practice of Pleatant Valley Holpltal to
:25 poinl1, mitled chances to lie added 16 -mn __ _._ "'- the
'• the doJiniii«&lt;OIdd
conduct bacllgroond lnvestlgatlont before a candidate It
;at)ion Kidd lied •
hiah Ttmbelwolva.
hired.
~ 16 rebounds a
13 .
jAZZ 97, SUNt 96
Join oor family of proleuionals to be the reeource tor
•
to "'
John Stodaon went 8-for..S
convnunity health service neede.
~ ~ t&lt;MII . . . . for New 6om the 6tld. ICOI'I!d 18 poinlJ
·~ Wlllllftl of four offiw.
and banded out 11--. • Ucah
For morBinformat/on:
: Martin made that the
.
.
....r-•_.,·,.....·-~-··""- .
snapped a ~ losmg
"~-~ ...... a YJCtDry. . Jtteak.
I'SeOICint Volley Hospital
Hit final aMill: ICC up the Karl MaiDne icomt 26 and
;pme-winninJ lhol, al he found
C/0 Human Reaourcea

OVP 'n-eck A .Field

Ho.N·oa Do~.~

PUBLIC
-NOTICES

1:

r)

Ch I C\k U·t ·t h'
Classt'ft'edsl

·!
l.

992·2155

:!.

.--------------~~

~OVertime Is pod to .the

IliON,..,_

;Nets, not to the Mavs . ·

··-•Uld--1&lt;...... - .......,.

;NBA

or

Brand New 2002
Pontiac Grand
Prix GT Coupe
• Onlllr
• Aluminum Whllle$

• CD lly118m

• KeyiiN Entty

• P - Wlnclowl
•P-Loou

.......

'.:I=:J

Brand New 2002
Chevy Silverado
Extended Cab
4 Door 4x4
• Vltrlle v.. p • Auloi!YIIC

DIY!-.
:-,.,.;;...,.,

__ ..... _,

II!.

.....

.,_....

• Alr COnditioning . ,

.,...,
.,_u.

•AMIFMtweo
• T1ll "-~1111

•CO~

1
I
I
I
I
I

I

w

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

'*':m

'

~~

...............
&lt;Z'IOiclemOI:IIIe.

I

I

lUdmd Jel!ftw drivins bald Donydl Manhall20 ~the Jazz,
:down the rijlu ba.eline for 1 who - a pnc behind smde
.:tewne 1ayin with 3().3 ICOOI1dt for the No. 7 Wesrmt Confer"' SO
.
ma pU,olfberdt.

. o.; the MaP:~ ensuing pol•

---L-~-----------------------L------------------------~·--~

I
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'

Matbury and Shawn Marion
•scored 24 JPiece for the Swu.

I
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$2,000

Sign·on Bonus
Full·nme RNs &amp; LPNs

I

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---------~ ·..1

2520VGU.vDr1vo

PolntPIHionl, WV25550
(304) 675-4340
AAIEOE

---- - ---

�e•Tt1e DIIIIV Sentinel

..... I

•

'

' r.

Friday, April 12, 2002

www.mydlllyHntlnel.com

2002

--

CLASSIFI

t•

I '1. .

~~ It&amp;~

I

-..y

Grand Mar- 1993 KIWiattkt IOieo MoGood Kldt Blka,
Good, Looke Good. t700. New
Engine,
t700.
' (740)448-0610
,;(7,;;-40::.l44;,;,.:,1.0:.;1=:27~---

' 11113

•quia wllh ~ opllort, Rurll torcyclt,

I

r-o

, _ U-n

Cor, 1997 Honda - · Llka
e-.
.
4 door, ~ - ·
Aaklng
t2400.
'opllort, IIMulllul l:tua ott, (7-40)441-G368- 4pm

1\egtster (304)

Sentinel(740) 992·2156
Or FIX To (740) IHI2·21 57

Monday th ru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

DIIJ~

Jn •COiumn: J:OO p.m .

MonCIJY·,rldl'f tor ln••rtlon
Ntllt 01¥'1 Ptptr

Jn-cotu"'n: 1:00 p.m.
Plptr

I \ 11'1 II\ \II \I

\'\'\! 11 \.C I \ II "'- 1"

.r:

' IH \ 141 "

~~ ~~ho

Moonlight E10orto. Full
sarvkle malt and llmala II·
corll and danooro. Prompt
and Proltltklnaland COnll·
denllal. Wt 1110 CIO Birth·
day, Prlvale and Baertelor
epm·
Bam.
Parllti.
(740)3118· 1799.
.
Why wall? Start moallng
Ohio olngltl tonlgl'\1, callt~l
lrH 1·800·7811·2823 "'
1621 .

i..

.
ANNillJN&lt;.D1EM'

I

Do you want to
a $500 slan·on I
bonus?

Mary Kay lndtpandenl Concall

. (7-40)948·3021 lor pooduelo
(off•rlng 10% off on all
produCit lor the monlh ol

We are paying 1
llpr~ll:.:,l·--:---::--::-- 1554)() slgn on honus
eaH DolortN '"' •II ._... .• to lndMduals
L.urn at yoor own PM• wllh
prlvf!e lnaono, vary aHord·
with previous
abla, JaY Clark'o Kenpc: K•·
telemarketlnn
rtlt, 1740)742-2MII
"
experience who ·
VAIUI S.o\U:
are lnteretted In
workln11 for a
profe8111onal
telemarketln11
company.
7

I

t

t-

4 Famttv, Frklly, 9-4, 81WII·Marl &amp; Churctt,
Stby, lloye, AduH Ciotftft,
Eqrc!M, Furniture. mort.

Earn Up 10 $9,25
per hour with
nperlen«. We·
have weekly bonus
nc1 benefltl

Big Yard Salt, Thuraday,

Frfdtty, Saturday, IHo 18&amp;
-111lde Dr., lv:t- form
· ~Poet Otllot on Ito.
Larue Yard Solo, 411 &amp;ya·

•

mor• StrHI, Mlddleporl,
OH. Friday' SaiUrlfaV.

•

G

•

Driver Noedod. lllled ""''
ol Aavonowood, W\1, Mtlll
be 23 wllh Flat bed .. peri·
IIIICt and cood driving ro·
coro, (7.-40)109·01 98.
;,;,;;;.:;:.~_;,;.,~;,..,.77"
FULL·TIMEPOtmONI
AVAII.AILE
Compotltlvo Salary and
...,p1lon&lt;lllr1nge blntlll
' package.

~

eH~ Ir

Ir ~s~ Ir ~~ I

-an

t:::.

r

-ttov.

Co. Ltd

An::t'::dttil
JlatriOII 011McCturt'l fi-IHrtnt ,_
hiring 1113 locotlctrtl, 1.. Of
patt-llmo, plctJ up appilcalion at location i bring baclo
DetWftO
0:30am
&amp;
to:ooam. r.1onc1ey trtru Sot·
urdllt'.

11111

1-100-214-0462,
'
Ata-12748.
1 yr.O"'.,;,'

a'"'*="
._._ '

1• ~ ~·~
~
178 OOO, ~

WANJ10Jl

To Do

'

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lbu
JIOII8.wt

b':~740 ;·.~ ~

•

llaapl.-yTharaplet. F.Tlma Polltlon. Ohio Llunet&lt;l ARTI CAT, Monday·
Fllday,
t :OOtm::.::===:..::..;:.;..,--.,MOpm. ~ w~
8ftunlly- ~ ~=
~-c~
"'"nee.
~•-t:
Bow·
Plka. e1111e.
A~petaon- man's ~•• 10 Pint
~ d - 2 Fantllv, t.ollld od tor local lawn
St., GajjJpottl, OH 4683t .
.;::,...l;om. 27
(740)44e-7243
11 AI pony. 740-1192. 11311
32&amp; S ,
.
•.
'
AVOHI All...,_, To 8w Of Sltoilld haVe 111ectr1o
Saluray Only, s.~~. ~Spearulo&lt;~- - . c.tt(740)44t.fllt3.,
Or- Torr- Trtlltr e75-142t.
·
lind , _ !Cr. 11101 CanCtotttlng, Toya, Moe. • F.- 1lntt or Part
lid, Galljoollo, 0H

r•

oc··~~ ~oW!!!'

A. MIIIH Lawn - · 742-o1to7.

:!tOUicloot
lid~ Eqtlpo 3 - · 1r1 Middltlt on,
lllpal&lt; · " ; ~ caD Tom Andfraon alltt

car•...,..

and-,.
1\1' , ... Mlka (740)446-71104.

_,_
. llpm, 1740)092-......
3
_ , _ Aoa'abla 1r1 , _ - lll'.hotno
OllptltuarCflllng

11•~.
,.,..c~tana

..-..
-~
::=::'T:::"':..,...ant
boumtrtl, ' central .,;
•
• ~ ~ lor $311.000 Ilk-

4-

new

=

I

IIU!iiM!ll8

ANI BvluliNGil

Gracloul living. I lnd 2
, l&gt;edrooou apartmtnta at VM·
!ega Manor and . . _
In Middle- Apottmanta In Mklcltopoft.
1.- From $278-$348. cal 740~Equll Holrllng
'

::=-

erer-.

~-

a.

llr.-

~~·PH, :~=-:=
D-·

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;;;:;;Jih -

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I.Jie._,

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=•"=""
I::::...=..__,.. ...........,,,

".:.~to.Jz::;
200 ••~ Cltt.
mloo. ...... :zm 211!180. PIMNindollo - · ::'.~.::_-

Jaller-lttlo.f'111 ... f.?

AucnoN

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IHIJ·~tlt4j

A lot. - ' "

age
011Mfp1o~
rii;IMng.
,_fin~.

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1rf0 tOt

tt &amp; , _ . 11oci11
cnpollllfl).
AI'-"W

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fiOin.

"' lll*od.

-

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OUI

-and-4Nfr'"
:= •• .

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Dl&amp;moldl,

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and

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·

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Oin&amp;h.NIIY

t-1101'.,"A"·':' • ..: ...
~

2001

. -.00 - .. 740-1435171
:

;

•

148.Folr:00:
'

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,:

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......,;;:,..anddartt• ~...,..,_____

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Aalrl;tiiOt~

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htl•a Nd

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.

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..,aile

tid

tm EL Cemlno. aao •
lottd • OWt, aua
;~
"""' t
SJ .. 7ID Hallr ,
Carll, lOt
$
........
(7o40)3e7·
02llf
••
1

~- (UOJIIIA71

-·

1811 Hortt1e Citric. 1211(. ~

Good
Cot lllr~--:-·
• S12100 ' ·
:.;.11,;..4011""-::•~Nt='.;..'
;

c1 8 1 1 - , . _ ,.,_.
,..... ~ . . ..._ •

•

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~1-lpA

NICIIIO.-Aawtt•r
1...,
'"'",.,,
....
eu r ,. ~-Coollca.lt.IDDOIIO;'
' - E 'r
£lOot' 1 - . rMiJtr .,
110 ..... IUIIJII.
Ol*t

t1
-.a.110 _ . - • go -IZII.OO
coal&gt;. V'-1....., Coni. m-1

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-tot-

1101.

1111
OliO; cal 741i41l4141.,_ v

~

WJUIL

~

,

-and·~ F·-~• ~ ~{4!.11d-Stlf _!.1 lmCoii . . MO,U.tll••

-

Ka

~·-• • - .
,"":'- - - Holldlly 1M. . . - 11ft Pe•t. • 0110. (7.q44HI71
91 W. ... . , _ $200. ~J17H730
•
ol!lfll 1111 1•1au t - . - •

__.and__

c:-· ~Jf]t: r•'., ~.- r;,.to;.:':'i~:r ... 11- ~=-J~~·

'

=

betlefill that Include
&amp; Nt, Ootid - .
Heallh 1118Ur&amp;nl:8,
Dulch o-, 1.2000. 1995 -401K,llle Insurance
Chevy \lor&gt;, 1 1ton, 15 - · Good Cooodlllo n,
C011ijl811d.. wages
~andNl, • n~•

:

$4600. (740)378-

and-"""'-lor
..,......-·adv81M*INIRL H you

would like to join our
1111111 a..,. lUI---

cell. ...... rod, 5 ap., air, . .
cnAte. 11.7115.00. f!Mof·

Jearn apply in

•

penf011

between 9:008-4:
or you can can
1111111 Ford Ettp~oNr, 2 ctr,
Stacey Duncan sf
lflllil&lt;. ve, .... - ·
740-667·3156
t~~wp. 11,415.00. - - ARCADIA Nt,IRSING
CENTER
,_ u; Filly ~
East Main Street
.... ..__
- co,
· Cooft.
.....
~.
Ceo- CoaMIIII, Ohio"'
- - . - . ...... ....
740-667-3156

- -7-·34110

--7--

, el-4,1100.
(74CJI2.45- . ;· 71.0001711

~~~~

o.o.:
\

-v~

=:o.ooo.oo.

New Homel
Glraget
Complete

Cellular

Replacemenll. • Walks
and Drives • StenCil

Jet'( Warner Ins.
Authorized Agent

&amp;Mora

Estimares

"UU

!:;;;;:;;::;;;::;;;:::;~
BUILDERS Ilk.

992-5479

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing. Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free Estimates

740.742·3411

c:an Rlieve I debtor of financial obllgadona and
lrrlllge I fair diJir'budon of ISseiS among
c:nxliton. A penon soina throuJh bankruptcy
may main certain property, known u
"emnpr' property, for his or her pcnonal u~e.
This may include a car, a houae, cjothes, and
household &amp;OQda. You..should di~t any
que~dona resardlna bankruptcy io an anorney
before proceedlna. For information reaardlna
Bankruptcy comact
WWWa SafnDek, AUoi'Def
(740) 592-5025
Atb1111

TFN

Hocl-1 IC llnpp.
ilo\ I ~'I

Local 843·5264
~~~:~;:.Supplement; Life Insurance;
II
and Final Expelllles; Cancer &amp;
Retirement,
&amp; 401K Rollovers;
Ml\lor Medical

iiJ
,.,.......

WERRY'S
WmLEONES

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stuii!P Srlndlng
• Bucket Truck

_...7.-

- I t $ 5 II

2111-ftiM.

EQUIPIIEIIT

rtbbill.
Seed I'OtatOOI
. '
Onion Sets
Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds ·
Fe~ilizer Specifically Designed for Garden Crops

New Penilizcr Buggies
buniea have been panem 1ested to meet
Agro~my Association Standards

or email@
~Ochgattbi.AIIIm

ftft~~~~~
J~! ~?!~!~~;~~~ . ~

A.
ii\ilj

·&amp;

!Iiiii

t:r r: _,

"Specializing In Log Homes

&amp; Rubber Roofs"
,N:\
1
Garages, Pole Building•, Concrete
J'
Roofs &amp;. Siding
Commercial &amp;. Residential
~

IJ11

!Il!!J Ill,.!!] II.!J IJII_I;

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

.

tona,llm!Wd
ares, call for
detalll. Cell:

(740) 591-2173
Orlelv.name

•SJ'z4

llld numbw

EOE

RESIDENTIAL&amp;:
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
Hi-Emciency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

m~.itm l:m::::....:.

fiJ!I'

f.l!II 1111:

fuef\1 Dlnd8y
6 Sllldl!l
lllenOpntJI
hrtglllr* dirt
6:31
...... u, llle
l'lllll hp

Dellv•racl &amp;
Spraad $15.00 ·
per ton, 8 to 10

•' •"

(NO ljUNDAY c,.....

740-992-5232

Wl"'l.

Pl+etlhe

CMrlll• !'a' !II

YOUR COIICRfT£
COIDfaiOII, UC

IWJLINCaad
IICAVATINC

(740) 742:1015

...................".

sQriVII•IInd •Toproll
oflll Dirt ollulcll

•ffft$" IY..rl'oitW....,rotlol
• fnc l!lflllol.....,_.,l
• lim 10 Yn~r 01111pa
r:
WttmtiiiJ O• Solo&lt;t M -

t"JlF.E

Dilcrlllalor
l Lost27lb.

1'.\,'llll.o\11':5 •IIIH;F. 1•-lorJ
• lluk tl ...........• Prim T• Fk AI l•dpD

(740) 992·347
AB Video
6 Tanning
Frr.r: f s lunalr:s

74M82·7038

11 • r.'

. r r

1~0 1)1)/

. MAHLEYS
G&amp;R
Sanitation . SELF STORAGE

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

IIJ,IIIIii4S7"

Wleedlst.

-..rt,OII
ora1r &amp;ll'lli'J
a.-c.. ...... . (7a)t!Z-11M
992-3174
9!2-a35

•s..nc:~~ You

Con c.unt Ott"

....

I

TFN

Pllllell!lfllles
111160 2171

LIMESTONE

II'UU

\till:

(740) 992-.ml7
Owner&amp;. Opera1or, John Deon

JIAI:oo.I/A~-.~­

·-y

.........

RESTAURANT

35537 S~ R~ 1 North • Pomeroy, OH 45'710
4-H feed for lambs, hoss, steero, chicken• and

T;lf"' '.h8 PAIN
:u· : t Pr iNTING'

---ar-_.-.""!11

I

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

......
aClllill ••.,
Cai,.,C:.. .........

;--

COitiMERCtAtJ

Tree Service

Now accepting
children
• Day, evening,

liXJII,

-..

.. Heatl111 &amp; Cooling
U.HR.
Llbor Wllllt\ly.
SERVICE
HEAnNG
PLUMBING .
''One Price.
COOUNG
EUCTIUCAL
Anytime.
AEFAIGEAATIOH All the Time."
APPLIANCiil :

JOlES'

• D-lacement
Windows • Roofina
CCIIIIT' .. II5IDIIIUL

BERBAUFE

Bryant Equip.
IOYr. Pn l

AE81DENTJAL

in32days.

1111ttlfflr0. . .. -

HENDRIX

F11t Eail1111111

740-992·1671 .

j~ I'

(7Mt) 117:3311

(IOOJISW110

\ l id dlt'IIOI I. ( lliio t :'7hll

Siding • New Garages

aoaa

1~

East State Street Phone (740)S93-6671
Athens, Ohio
Wtllrvk:e
AU MIMI
I Modlll

\~t'lll

FREE

L··· ,_,,

-ut!W\

B4NKRUM'CY

New Homes • Vinyl

Crill
AO.DOO
,_
...
tor -S21,DOO.
dire
. . . . . . .7...742-

............
....... =
,..,cr•••
,.....,_
...
_
,__
,_..
....
.... ....

FREE ESTIMATES!

1.---BISSELL

·

. . -.

ziJO

Siding, Deckl, Kitchen•, Drywall

Stop &amp; C:on1pa1rtl

740-

""'
21.DOO
Crill
1311.000
,_
...
tor -121.000.
due
...... 140-142· ·

New 'Homes, Room Addltlona,
· G1raga1, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofs,

Crele
F~

Bry1nRMv..

Remodeling

:11100 Dodge 15 p

von.

Sunset Home
Construction

992.;e975

1M &amp;..h:lc*l Na'a '"·
-· T.V, .,....,.,

,...,,Cod , ., ...

m""'
and-·-·

=~

(7.

•

=.

w~:f.!:\"~

Coolville, OH
740 ££7 A'!£3

·and -

. 0.,....
"'"'- ..r....,,.....,.,
t ,.. .P 1111t .......,
·
··
,
_,_,_
21Airlc:o.d);-.ll&amp;- . . . , _ , 71 VN li., ltiO _ _ _ _ ort
HIIIM 1 r 1wn 2 1:1111.. •tu , , ...., &amp; T,.,. (7~,_
jHWI,
Ctl (740)2111121111- ......
No ... , ,._... -~ 1--lplt&gt;.
In
P'-• ·••-..-.-~
·

""funtlol&gt;rd.......,-.
Mooon,....

I!"' llf~

=\

TIIOII: :·:

and

r~

:ta ,1~. 7

.W

and ......,

r

are available on
aftamoon and

aoaa

.

... -

7

LPN'S

ARCADIANURSINol

$4800.
_.......,
·A/C,
-· · . part-time,.....~CENTER
17~

,

'lbrlland

ln-.
:r~ ~u:.

r ATTENTION

Crulee,-

CltlcUno &gt;

r

1-740-949-2115

care available ·

Nl'rl

Dealers
JOOOSt· Rt· 7So'"
..•h

.....

onty 94t ettcltl ·

andweskencl

Help W•m.d

-::;;;;~;,;:;;;;;;;:;;:;:;

•

pd

Business Services
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factoly Authorized
Case-IH Parts

305

1

::;..(7~78

......

Bad...,_andtooll&gt;oL

1ext0-. t10WmO. 740- &amp;132or(304':1s:n::r'e.. Good 4-H lnd FFA
M-2te7.
nlngl.
PiaL ......
flit.
Largo ,.,... ......... ,.. ... Spocltl: 114 2110 ,., Cr-1111. (740)a- '
I l l S . . . . - on At Pati2UJIIP'w100;1' 2110
·
WT. Coootly - · · PSI 1311.00 Pw tOO; All
•
Cen - 1ext0 tUO.OO • Coottpl I I Atllnga
Jhy 1:
,...,:J04.178..413e
G&amp;\11

lot

OUI)', 4114, 6

17-40)3117-oeto, (740)3311:!362.
1111 Slho.- 112 Ton, 8ft

Alklng!

'

Dl!dul

.,...,
ttw•rl"'"· ~
..._ 38,11H r-. 125.000.

~!!. --""ane•
~:
.
r-•r ';

~~~·

1

seeoo.

2 ......,_..... ACJHA ~wg~oo ;

2 , _ Old -

~

j

'""'·mo.

'=="''=--""'"'"""''"""''"""'-------.....li,_,.J

1

•

S2no._one Bay.

-Wino .,.,_.

1991 Font~, LOw
-· &amp;
'oltlrp,
,13,200.00
740-812· A 'Meltlal Dl' OOIIIIYNirdal
3253 or 7olll-742·201111
wiring, Of , .
=:""7-=~-'7.
-u.:.-lofac.
1ti1HI Jeep Wl&amp;nglot with · Electrical,
Hlnl top, 4 cyl., ""'·
W\10000011, 30Ul'B-t78tl.
(740)44 1.()010

- ..
Attor
llpm.,
(7-40)441·1013
i
13 HNd o1 111ec1o ..._ ~
Hotltlo. Wtloho Approoo ..
600 Ill. cal (74o~l2 '

..,_,

Painting, Wtrl lid·
lng, carpentry, doorl, wln- · botha, mob11o homo
rapelr and moro. For lfN
- C I I I Chtl, 740-1112·
6323
·

r

~;

. ~. ~~."""· r:t'""'l- =.~~

a...,..... 7«Um_,

• •

Ii

•'*

1311UIII- , _ , . - -

:::.tor l'ttr

Equipment . '::""

Ex-

Pley&lt;';t n 2 7 -

0...•1 t~

.-,~rto~WM-&amp;rtt,

(»&gt;I~
lo:n•

'

11:1 Lumina. Air,

New TirH,
S1200 080. cal (7-40)44e3200 -llpm
'

·

I.IVI'JIJCJCK

C&amp;CClenoraiHomo-

t

'

t

Racine, Ohio 4Snl

992·2155

==-..,.,.,--,.,.,-

S2300.30U75-4014

0

P/1

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Dally

:"~.• ~rnenl

11:1 Chevy L\tmlna CIUioolllr

1 yr. old Nuorana Dottkav &lt;
$400 0110.,
Conaldar 1i
F

s-de&lt;/

u...-a. ~

z_,

--lot

.

--fur·

many moro,

- · I.Qcka,

::.•up, :':%""::: =·OI1ttlnil e,.~.:;..C::;

I

-r

=
r

::*:. :::::- 2 op. Old -

I

Wll..,_,.__

=•=

to_,

1ovina htrta J
Apartttttn1t. ~ 7~48 •
. . 15C)j!. pleoo. 7~ 3858
Wall&lt;
S.W... Trull,
30111 Mnual Banllty Pia ,
1311M!o., 7404410001.
H1W Nf1J U1UJ l'fla - · Frldlty Apt It, 2lJOt, ,
Single -oom ~ · - _ , ., ~=7:30pm. ,..._ Co Fotlr- ~
Gro..,.Hioor, Pold,
=-$27~
No For Ddlnt, DfflWart &amp; f11 barrowo I glfta, t
(7-40~3. ( 7 = VoWtm&amp;yl. La!. 8crllp Met· ~~goo ~~tn~or•
~.
· 111 0pon Morldar· T.-sr. (Ga7)fe4.23118 LIRlr Lor· ·
·
_ . . . _ &amp; Frldlt!r• ....,. 11c1c ' ,-;., (137)7111- •
Twlnfllva&lt;IT.......... 4:30pm. Cloalld "llturollfr 1ng l!llpllcllc&gt;ll lor
satuJdtlr 6
(740)448-7300
4-H a.. Llrtlllllor - ·
· (7-40JM2-823e
1., Hod S t - 1 - . .
,
!k . . . - o.to 1'on:1t Swing w1tlt S:GIJI1m,
,
td.l)lld
$80. p;~;;;;;a;;u-;;
, . . . , _ &amp; Clll11itn $311. Allll!l f'lllltt*to - . 2 Y'" ,
- .(304)1175-t504
.,101oond-lodano, l
1300. (7-40)367·7221
,

7

r

tfo ot1
C.. t117 f11tn. ~

---teoOI*
""*'
=.
~1'1: ,. ~ .::.~.to40)44H(Ito4. :..: ~.:.;.::, .
•

7

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

CcJtr....,. - .

M:T'.&amp;Colrt ....., 1111ocOlltl.......,a.lrfd• 11/J.
"'14f!!:!llt~1~2.~~==':"'""
~

Taking AIIIIIICI- II - ., Aclion, - ·

(740J37fo
Tlllllng ttpploa Jlor 1.,...

2 lA, All ~ lo/C,
. . OoiOII- ~'~~rat A11111r1G. No
nrto'e.,... o - . . . . ·..._ 1ot,
IIICITICm
J ~ ~-. 2 11.11 - . - . Atll• r;
......,,
eeoc, LIW - ONo 48701 ,._. OHIO VAU.£Y PI a 'IH I)Ord*. OotM ......, ......, - . . . _ In Gaf.
toe I 'J; In &lt;1•1*" .... I ·e Atwr If, ...,. CO
-. . . . .· tlxiO, A4.DOO
. or lpo:lt. (7~20W 01
...... ..,. , _ -• . 2t1J112
._
·'
"'WI-ll ... I llrl ... (7~1«11
- l : y Apt It, 200211&gt;:
l'ifll 110 Ito. t1 I
fiJilllllf lng- loon. On-'""'
FACTt. 46 0... ....... Prr1 , _ PC ., - . ..., 1'1f11-.
&amp;d lor, tt Old lMI :lbr. T -. DIM.
ao•t:te
46831 " ' Mlk&amp;
......,, .._........,..,.,.,_ HOmtPwt.MoMn;Nalldto At ~. $2-40. ·

_ol_,..and- ....
Gold-·

Co1nL , _

-

f'UMJ'

1

Unoondlllonll 111t11me guar·
1111 Pontiac &amp;rnblnl, 121IK antH. Local
lookt ;ood, runt good, ntllttd. Elleblllhod 11175.
$250 down 1100 mo. no cal 24 Hra. (740) 4411-

I''

=

-Raclngc-·-·

.

- -

""'WfttU ' - . _ , lrl-'11'"~ $300 +
2 lldioom 1 ..., Fill..-. ....... (740JIIt2-

I .

~ka

MlrtliiiW'I 0U , _
O.,.Marteg. 1-1111.
01 ta
-!age - • -~ ~ 1 - . 28A.
Coont4
o Nt Coo M •
Tclp to ._.., Cl 4no Room. 2 Car a.ag., 2 Nt, ....,, llll•tuo&gt;:or. b. 1tta
Unit.
len4oo, PI I • . . . . . . . . . . . •
1jjL "rtltwl poelt., $200. Atf--'OU. UJ,OOO, (11 12.1100.
=-·=-~··:a: Piltoe. (7~
·(7~:::-t'f:'*'
11. (740)441-711N
'--•
..,_..lblll
For -...: AI a Maw
f~OI('T
•~2~ loorft
-for , . . . . . . and~-.
.
~
JIIIR.a~~~Uo
(740)1112.- Applo
WI!WrLIMt c... Gallpt&gt;
:=.no pata,
· a407enIt Area. 1'ttrN 0\111 lrflll 1. . 1 - .
- . (304)1175-r.l.
Lall.(7~7tn
Ill&amp;
-lriT.
~ 11M •pudo
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INIIN: Olr... ·We do al ....... on ., Dr., ND.IJIID. (7411J44t·
tor - d ....... c. .....j. o..s
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to aw
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l.clt. No 0..,.,. Uo1nH "
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·COHTRAOOIS, INC.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-841-2217

Chec
Class

1683
rio-. lrH eallmate,
71 Corvatte Coupe, t-top, .:.(304....:.tn_3-::-115=50=~-14,000 miiN, Auto, 12$0
IAIIMENT
nrm.(740137o-2282
WATI!APROOI'INO '

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Momlng Sl8r ROIICI • CR 30 • AICine, Ohio

Hill's Self
Storage
2000 r.utang CorMrtlt:lo,
.
c~ Pltyar,
All IYPH ot muonry brlclt,
mlln. tt5,800. (7-40)441· blodc &amp; atone 20 yro. fXPI'

I

Wide Assortment of Herbs, Annualll,
Perennials In 4' pota lor

Pomeroy,OH
(740) 992·5908

949-1405

lndopoudont Herllolllt IliaWAM!D
trllutor, Call For Product Or
.,_
i
Opportunity. (740)441 -11182
TO.,..,
•
JET
:
AERATION MOTORS
Garry L . w Atpotrad, New &amp; ~In • · ~·
Block. Call Ron Evene, 1·
PI' po&lt;Jnd. (7
l

a..

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

:::"~~~':&amp;~.,.,.,.,no

connected 10 or reoponalble lor this
bingo event

----.,.--::-:=

r -

Hou111:
Mon-Sat 1().4
217 E. 2nd St •

• Footen, Walla, Sleps •
F111 Work,

I

Aocepllno ot&gt;PIIcatlonl -. 800-637~.
THE MAPLES~ 100 MtmorJ.
II Orlva Eat! .• ~.:2.:'.: L.onaebt•.llt' lltllrod
.33 lv:tao I Lot In l'ut1or. AUt lnd ~
~ - 8atow Bently PrlcH.
Eklcllttci,
On811t. (7-40,.......7t4
OftILOII
""•- ~-ott oompul·
combo + Handle
2 - · 33478 8allt!r "'"' ad' ~ lo your In' NS.. 1111111 Ad., oft Ohio 12.4, 1/2 milo _,., Fot urtlw dotallo, llounly Combo $85. , 8ak~· ~ call (740) 092·?022. EHO : . ~. ~
exctllnl building ollt, IJ!AIITlFUL ·
APART• mmoge. (304)675-5115
(~
MIHTI AT IIUDGD PAt- Merlo Jelt11 and lhortt
eo •-• HMideriOf 1 Wll Cll AT JACK- II- 38_
St OO nd .$2 00•
'
• TATII,62Wttlwood0rlva
·-·
·
I
·
011 lour lana clly tram S21171D 11383. wa1o ID · 01 F""*- Oil Bum=~•a
OHtr. thop
' . . -. cal 740-(7~-l,r:'""""·
4441-2588.
Equal Houtlng
· ~,_,
ApprOII. 112 acre land, ()pportuntly.
Mutqvorna·Muta&lt; .43fiC.
IIII«,J;,~ IIUIIdlng
.
lllltery _ _ , . l.aM1
&amp;bam..,
fllclge.at -larue21oodr'"""""' ·, _ Uttcl.
tloo city woll&lt; t1a1rw apartmonl, CIA, yard, $200 080 (7...,.,.......,...
30U7542&amp;1
f325.00 I mMit + depOtlt.
• _,.., · · -

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and

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·

-,'

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats '1.10
. 1fl' Hanging Baskels '1.80

CONCRETf/BlOOVBRICK

• The Longabergar Company or any ol
It's aalea repoeaentallvos are In no

I

•

!IM't - " " - - . . . _ " " . . _

740-985-3848

al Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Friday, April 19th 6 pm-1 0 pm
Sat. 9 am- 5 pm

$2881=
.

• lng.$311,fi00. 304-8112•m2
., 30• 112·3782.
. .
homolltlt.
Mowre, 'tiP 1 ltio ladloa. - (740)44e4117G.
I.e! tor Sale2 1/t
Ex....-.,d, rtltt.,_, Fot- or INN tlllh option ~~
buy. 4 -1100·~ •
_
•_
_ ~ ..•
f'
anop,
OH 740- a,r- Vlllaga It , _ ao- ....... Cttt 1102 11 lillY· kltcht&gt;n, I 112 betht, Pootor
orae ~
W.Z.:MU
cop11ng rHtMttH (due br tfrnt, -omo •ge
F.A.N.G. ,......,.. llr, $I3,11H!, Coli . (]
Clltltt Strvloe Alrpr- ~tor pool~ a - g e t - Bawmll.
~"':'.Iorge..!."": 46141tom I-S or (7~
lt3 £1m Scrott, , _ ., M - tor 1M PICt&lt;i
JOii
pete.
- - " " "· ·
::: 11-1:1·13, 8 AM • 7. lneur~ omc., FtA
rour .,. opp1y1ng tor, .It*
. 9012
uHCIIIomo.
I*~~ .,. ld 0&lt; diGp oil II Cie&lt;1rl Of. HOuUIIIIPiftg A&gt;MIIltt - l o r . . 2
·
~ ~~ . flea,
VIIIOe Hoi,
or_,.,. , _ ,. __. ,... a.,,""'• '!!::. ~~~ 127, .~ M 1 11L....
PO 1IOii - ·
011. .,. - · .......... ~ ..., sae,liiiO' 304-e?B'1e. ~· ~
'
· - -· - _ , ...... ... _ flouD
milo lloo Lim&amp; lid, """ and prdnrio'lll ...,. Taking IIUII "OrO tor 1 propttly, _.,...j, _
-florttond,, OHIIronl-,., lt1d lltiWde, ....... pettlina--. •
COl -For-lnHOrllord, ~
............
..., ........ 740-7-4W'Ite
-•10 ...,, tn proo. eo ..., _., 304-t1115-32t7 ..... .,.. wv.
ator.
t
car
~~;;;:;;;·
ID Nf'i• A;;V h II oon be pidtod .....
gat&amp;g~~.t21.000 no land 1 .a -1100011 Fot..Mldtflopoi~-O(a llh ... lttd - · riiW...,.. upaU37_Str_MJd.
31111112GZ4 Cll -Ftotne1H~M&gt; ~
lonjJ y- a. .. gor.- al• dlpott
~- br 4 .._C..
- 6 pm.
Doom 30 YOMI at f K
Flalt~!,'.!•·_!t!!a~ flee dJotiH Md priiWidlng p.m.MAptl18.
CootNtiiOdolir I' 11111,.,
ForUitlngi,800-J10.
l.clii&lt;- •~ ,_...•'ootiliil-- lliPP'fll 10 Ill&amp;
lnaurt&lt;l.r IF l.ltncl PIIIIIIIOI aae.t17011
cal "" • """ al ... r • • ~· To ...
II •• _ . ....... Llrld ~OtpiOtl
'
Jlt2.-4068.
1-!"'lfoendbewn ...... lilbY- .._C..
"""' 1 - · (7441)441- Fwntonod, VOIY Nloa, No
L.~--o--LrJIAIMI'O-iiiiiia'•~ &amp;I P'!'lciord. p .... b • 1111
llflln 1111'- 01 ,.,.,. Loo1tlng lor qually ~ 3Dll3
- . . -.
.
,
_
.." . - . - - Der/Nigiii/Atl lllghl. lilaed caluo. Loo1tlng"" eltlppr - (740)311 8371 .
. (304)17M770
3 - CGUot a- 10
' ""'"
~ coo- .... P1r1 .... ..,.
Cttfo1t LIM1 C.. 140- _ ,, ieOG eq ft. 2 1/2 ~ &amp; Oowt- CJa1.
: : : : : : - ulol' ~ . , _ lrl P~· 11121, - . .,. ...... ~tt:Je
•
Dllllt. a ... ltpollo. Alii · - ' 0.
mora.
~.,. ~ Md
-lfloge6 tUit 1111. cal
1I1m
poee.(7~1151
laiiAd. H
An;Orltlbr-IOIG011112-ot110pbyi00W• ...,.._Ill
...
-- •
. - riO tit&amp; Nit 1L. l'bi!IO"r· Aok tor Honw- ,.,
10
IIIII. 2 112-""""'" M I Lllge oiiOOII,- .._

=r
iiirv;:;szii::"1- - -or.
·-·- .

lofm. St . pethoutpet
(304)67541011

For Tickets
Call740·367·7371
Split the Pot •
Dobbers • $1.00

'

o

That's Uel

Serving Ohio and W.V,
wv M031712

Hou.:

=.ol=

f~el eeoi: .ft. e, 740-

Guiding Hand School

buc:kat,;

'* I

1141

6:00p.m. ·
Middleport American Legion
Mill St. • Middleport, OH
$~0.00 for 20 Games
· Held by the

I

r

r:::. own:.

~&amp;~~
fltlulneto:

.e

Gt
=

U-1 ~WI
1·
"" n

Thursday, April 18th,

I

Qwlllt;y, Mlrlety, Low ~'rices

the Rest'

Longabergere
Basket Bingo .

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I'

";;''«
·.:so·

I

r

I ·888-682·:1345

ba-.

···--Gooos·--· r ·..

r

Tiiii,.D DOWN ON

·

Shol·:

· """"'""' .
1
0181.
'
~~
: Unf rnllhed 2 BR Qulel La- .,
~98 2 A~~~m~h 1:
....,,,.w•-•••
1 u
•
u
•
Calloway Big Berino Iron• Lw-illliiiiiiiiiiiii..-1
Aa rlgoralor, VInyl Siding, oallon, Aolarenooa Ao· 3-S (O lr ,1
Grips ,
Shlilalo Root, Triple Pana qulrod. (740)2&amp;e·81 78
Gra~hllo
~CIIHI) Roland JC 120 Gullar Amp,
WlndOwt and dooro. Pluoh
.la
A11eg Fltll
(304"'76- 2 12' Speakaro. $350. Neg.
carpal, oak cablnoto &amp;
'1'1U1'1'111FN111
,..
(304)874-5132 or (304)67&amp;008
moro. (740)441·1575
FOR Roo'
713:1Evanlnga.
. :
:w.27 1994 Fairmont Oou·
Aomlnglon Model700, 7mm Slrl lnotrumont SalOl &amp;.
biiWI&lt;i. 2BA 2 81th Mull 1 and 2 bedroom lljJarl· Mag. 8x2&lt;1x-40 acopa, Exco!· Str~ Atpalr on moat
mova. ' (7-40)2se:e 12e, manto, turnllhod and untur· lent Condition, $500. Ma~ln tiring lrlotrumantt. Porta &amp;
(740)26e-15117
nllhod, aacurlly datloalt r• 30·30, t250. (7-40)3f18.88113 Accotaorlto
""Ill-."
qulrod, no pale, 740-092·
(740)245-811111
8- prlcad under 2218.
.
t2600, 111 Nikki, 868-460AHnQuEs
I I II , I ., I I '1' 1 II "'
,\ I I \ I ..., I I 11 h
3968.
1 Bedroom Upatalra Apart· · - - - - - - '
ment, 720 .Sacond A'*'"'·
.
Country hOmto, n1o&lt;1 1011. 011 Sttttt Partctng. Wlllf, Buy or Hit Rlvo~na Anti·
localld on Rt 33 batween Sewer,
Trlolt
Paid. quoe, 1124 Eoot Main on
-oy/Atlleno. Call 740- S300/mo 1300 datloalt Dar SA 12.4 E. Pomttroy, 740092-21e71or detallo.
.. ~40144 i·521 e.
Evtnlng 992·2528. Aull Moore, · - ·
•• • ••·•t 01
·
·
'
Jutt goHing otarled? 1ot - ~ ·
·
(Tractor)Farmall A Hand
tlma. hontobuyaroo7 No oredo 15 Court Slrtot Very n~ Sua'o Stltctlblto on tile "T' Uft, NOW Tlrtt Slralgltt, with
h7 Call (740)44e-3670 lor aperlmtnt, 2 BA, . 1 112 In Mlddltt)Ort. Dolle, giiiO- Cultlvaw. t1.800., Tore·.
mort lnlormatlon
· Btlh, Now Gil Furnace, - · · - n monttll, 11111 milt TeC Backhoe 1~ ,
A/C St&gt;ociout KitChen 011 more. (740)092-02811
330hro. Exoellonl oltape.
2002 14 - · Ohly striat Parking. Ovarl;,ol&lt;l
110,1100. , ikllh Hog btMd
t799 down &amp; only tt&amp;e.IIO Pari! and Rlvar. No Peta,
M!IOJJ.ANF.OVS Grader Blade. m. N~ :
par month, call Korona, N1HI/mo. pluo utiiMioo, doMEIIatANDR
$360. (304)1175-3124
7-40·3115-11948.
ooalt and roforonceo. l,ea..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii...,
New Ooublowldo on 1·S (7-40~028
. ~w~ D .., , "~ ~ Ford 5030 T - . 82 H.P., '
..,11 (7-40......3384
•
~ ....,.... ~ 485 10111 hro.. 4 nvd .. large.
.
,_.....
.
2 -oorn IIJ1., dop. &amp; ref.
or 0111tr Anlmalt, wtlghlld tlroo, flDergllll
No Crtdlll Bad Credlll 111 required, S300.00 111011th, -,•140~ 2:,!"1-· C"""P'f, 731D Ford End'
Tl""' Hom• buyoro/ FAS 304-n:l-5801
rate. 740, ••••7lot&lt;lor wllh 611.
Lo 11 0ovt1 rMnf FHA
-o..w-..t
an
rn
2nd Floor Spacioul 3 Bad- For Sale: Aiding l.aM1 Mow- ..,......_ .. ,_r rolned .on. '
Loano Avalleblo. Call room Unturntlhod' A art· or, Llka. New.. $5!0. Call Kopl ~. $18,000 FlAM.,
(7-40)44e-32t8.
mont '1n Vlc10rton
On (7-40)268-1102 oak lor Jr.
(304)1175-2902
'
Went 1
noma? Own City Pari!. HVAC. Oft Strotl FrH Goa Fwnacto and Nr Ma- Ferguaon 362, 66
yourownltnd1WtdoiCeN Parklng. t42&amp;/mo. Piututl~ CGnd- Ettlmelll. Clll · hp, 717 hr., llko now;.
~33841or your- Hloo. Socurltv and Kay De- (7-40)44S-G30S or ,_.00, ttS.800,(740)085-3643
,
todlrl T - Ina wet· pool! Roqufred. No Pfll.
,
,
coma
Att.ronou
fl*!ulred. 281-110118." ro&lt;t dqnl call TlmelorFIOIIStodlngP. . r
(7-40)448 4•26
ua"" bo1lt looal
turaand Hay F-.
.
we
hevo - - l i l y to
•
liTV Broodcall - . 12•
ulled hOmto lor undlr ~ 181 Avo., t BR, Grubbl Plllno· Tuning &amp; Volt, High OUIIHy, Fltlr moat '
t2 000 0111 1..,.,.637,3238
12ea don!- Ropelro. P,...t? Nood ATilt a215
,
tor' 1n1o:
. ego
. (7-40)8tltl..j531 , 1\.oted? cal Tho Plllno Dr. .lm'o' Farrn Equlpmenl Inc.~
(304
531 .
7~525
(740)448-2.484
,

IIOCIAL IICUIIITY 1111?
"

~

j
lor Trallor Park , 7-40·441 •

(7-40)388-030t

Pol groomer, cerlltltd bY
Columbuo City SOhoolo, 2
yro. prol-onal nparl·
anoa, Undo Wade, Rutland,
(7-40)742,80 t8
No F

r

PocketKnlvu
" Collectlblea
"A Cut Above

- · (740)448.0103
BoATS" MoroRs
.11194 Mtroury Topaz, 2 .._ _FORiiiiiii8.w!iii-,_1.
door, white, 70,000 mllu.
aulD, air, AMIFM .,.._, 11172 Glooamullr18ft Aun$210t1,21HI7';!JO.;.. ~~ Mo- 11:ou1 with 115HP Moroury
==--=-~·~.:.:~:.:_-=- Outboard Motor. $2100.
11M Oldll Cut1ua Cltrll· (7-40)245-8166
SL, 4 dOOI, 3' 1 VI, ell op- :-;199::'-1':':W':'oi':'IC-ra':'ft':'26-1-12-h-.-,12·
tiona. ntW tlrH, one ,OWI"'ef, C bl Sl
0 S
very
line
oondlllon, • n,
HPI . tova,
$4,Hti.OO. 304-"173-5188, 5( 1~~·)~] tngint, 285HP,
7- - ·08110, (740)367·
740-092-G710
;,;;:..~:::;.:.::___ _ _ . 7272.
IH7 Cavoller CS Coupe, -~:-'""!!!'--!!"-"
IXCIIIanl oondltlon, now .
Aum PAKI'S &amp;
llrtt, . 68,000
mllea,
Ao +w ;am ,
t7,000.00. 7411-092·31181

11194 16x80, 3 BR, 2 &amp;alh, Buulllul River Vlow Ideal UHCI Mevtag wun.r and Holl Blue Heeler, Hilt
Slovt, Dl!hwaahlr, Relrlg- For 1 Or 2 Poople, Aeftran· Dryer. St5o. (7-40)441 ·1785 tie Pupo, 130 taoh. •
oralor, On 1.a acre lot coo, Qeoost, No Pelt, Foe"-~
(740)379·283e

-..ITran.. rlptlonlllAll--~
Roquoomonll: ~·"'""
cgt•l=o~:
In 11111 IIO!Oiptpor lo
olvo ~of modioli
..,......., , . - •
ttrmlnology, M~rO!Oit
Mlnlmu" ago 23yro. old, ,.,.. Houolng Act of 1NI
Wold, and ebllity 10 lype
Mutt htve Experience. - - "llltgal..,
135-140 Nne por hour.
Cltln MVP. Lleve Nama &amp;
"on•
Numblr for ,.-urn Clll.
r
,.,.,.._ , llmltlllon
ot
(304..70.4006
C
Cotrllpandt- ,..
-mlriotlan
~~~~~~ URGENTLY
NEEDED· - . - · rollgton, dllla
Compllllerlll",.. pl$8011m1 dono,._k ~n.I!O ID
tamlllltttiUI Of national
knowlodgeolmadlcllllrml·
par- ·~ • or 3 O&lt;lfln,orlnyfnllntlonto
no1ogy lnterpar10t1111 aklllo ltouro woakly. Call Blo Llltr
tltiU onr ...h
.
capo"' of Interacting Wil~ Plaama Sarvlet, 7~·502· ,.,.,._, llmltllian"'
Pltyl~lano,lawyero,pe·
8851 .
dll&lt;rlmlnatlon."
lilnll. lnauro.,.carrto&lt;•·
Would~· llka ID- Mono
p Medical
ltnCI
rtor
..par
dtr·Fr....,. LDoally owned,
profaned,
1111 growing oompany Ia
_,ng 10 hire PIT lttlp. InQrjyqoaJHitdOiflpiiCintl
CIMdualmutC ·De trttrgollc,
apoly to: Holzer Cllrllc; willing 10 101m, Nil mollVIt·
Humari AOIItlont Doper!·
ad, trutt
de!IB orl·
ment, 90 Jackoon Pika, Gal· tnled. t.tuat I -·
llprlllt, OH 46831·1682, tax tatlon. 11 lnt•rutod, clli
lo (740)4ole-6632. Equal
Qu.oiiiL -leaning,
OllPOrtuniiY Empk&gt;ytl.
(7-IOt:~N-1131
Land ._!Dt&gt;•lapo
Bnr
Anlhonv Lind Co., Ltd., 1
'hAINING
Aunt! 101 Dtvtio11mont Co.
..parlortce In: Rae! Contr!ICit, Negoilfllong,

e.:

,...

compultr UM FuU·IIme Includeo bonellll Bachtlor'a
degree preferred. Ub,.ry
Cllrll· ohock booko I.Vout,
anower ltlophOna, ohalvo
bookt. 20-24 hrt/WHk lVI·
nlnge and - -· Cu•
IOdlan· gonarol Oltlnlng, 20
hro/week noxlblt !Chedult.
·
Tile Vllllge of VInton Ia Ilk·
lngappllclilonltorlheperl·
limo PDIIIIOn of melntt·
nanct omployat. Appllot·
llono may De OOIIIntd bY
contacting lht Vlllage Cltri&lt;
al (740)318-0578

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' IIOVIHO tALl. Running
Af w.alo. E""'Y11*19 Mull
ao.
Knlok KrtiCks, TVt,
VCR
Com nd Bow
T~. OHion
llnllon. (740)448-2t03
..tufder 4/13102. Utile
g~rtt, bQrt. rntnll, ladiH
CIOihlntl. Uftlt ty1&lt;ft tojl,
tiC. 21::12 11 A17N Ju11 pUI
lttltt•ortllft. H .

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011~1 11

Domlno'l now la~ng llflpll·
catklna lor oalo drlvort, Gal·
llpollo and
loca·
tlono only. Apply In peraon.

prevlouH
telemarketing
e1perlence?

Mike eanh Day ovary doyl
Donate to· AeUae !nduslrlet/
81orH In Alhlnt and Alb!·
ny. HIOI).837 •71100
www.rauttlnduotriH.org

r

6

Dental Hyglenltl Wa. nled: TMI!Ilfl Cenf1k!•JI•.dlllred Growing iklolnaaa Nttdl
...,king a prole•· lor ~all2002 at Graco Aced· Hllpl Work lrOf!! nome.
olonal whO lllnllrHied In a omy cnrltdan SchOol In AI· ·Mall-orderiE·Commo,-.,. Up
lullllmtt position ol a rapidly "bany, Ohlj&gt;. 11 you art quail· lo t652+ PT. 11IJOO.
growing dental practloo. In- !ltd 11111 align With our mit· 14000/wHk FT. Froo book·
dlvklual mull be dependa· olon calllht aottoc&gt; olllct 11 let
1·800·428.01 18.
bla and novo oxparltnca In 740·898·5433
Monday www.Nawl'ulur.CU.com
100 WORK!AI NUDED 1011 liHue managemont. II · lhroogh Friday 8:00a.m. 1o
·
Aaaomllll craHo, wood
you are lnlorttlod In oonlrl· 3,00 p.m.
Slorl Your Buolnoll To·
ltemo. Malorlal provided. bullng IO tho lOIII Clrt ol
day... Prime Sltcpplng Can·
To 1480+ wk.
pellenll and rocol\llng ox· Tile Molaa Coun!Y Dlolrlcl ttr Speca Avallabla At AI·
FrH lnlormallonpkg. 24Hr. ctllent
componoollon Public Library Ia hiring lor lord!tblt RII~~Vallty
101 ·
1-1101 ·42tl-4760
pleaoe call (740)441 ·0123 llle IOIIOWing poolllona. Ed· Plaza, Ctll 7
ot Hnd rooumo 10: 230 Ur.. UCIIIon Strvloet Coordir11·
par Al\ler Road, Galllpolo, :·PIC::.,~.:,ez;:.~:
OH 4&amp;e31
1ori.r.'1ra1n ttaff &amp; ~·bllo on

Do you have

-

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11"

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-or

C· 1 8Hr Carry Oul parmn
'lor salt. Cllelltr Townehlp,
MtiQI Counly, oend lttttrt
ol rnltrlll to: Tho Dally
Bantlnol, PO Bole 728•20,
Pomoooy, Ohio 4&amp;789.

tultanl,

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, _ _ _ _ __..~.
,
t250.00 A DAY/BARTEND·
lNG . Training Provldii&lt;J. 1·
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18

·

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads • No Tickets/Purebred
Animals Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
To: Ohio \/alley Publlohlng, 825 Third Ave,nu•
· Gallipolis, OH 45631

Includes Free Yar.d Sale SlgniS •
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Ovtar 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

Word Ads

one owner, neW Ul'll,
t5,1oo.oo. 304-n:l-511111, 111118 KIWiattkt 1550,
740-11112-1710
teo hOuri. -tap. Wind- ~7"'=-:--:--· lliltld, Hitch, Dump Bad,
~
, m c~oovy Cotllca, v.e. llka - · t46oo. (7-40)37o~
GoodRUI'II
- Qood,
· TlrH.
2788
lilah MIIOI,
Call ::-:--'::-:-:-~­
,(7.40)441-9957•
Har!or D - Sportalor
::7.-:-7~;:.;...=~= 8e3, Black, 7800 mlln,
1994 Grand-Am GT, $34115. 'StOOO, In axtru, tuna
1990 'Baratta GT, 81995 . .::UP:;,;t:.:.7"',200:.:.;_.304-;:_:..:57;;11-:..:2::383::..._
11194 Buick Century, 4 Door, :-;
$2485. .,11118 Noon Sport, 2 Ylmeha YZ eo, Good ConDoor, 137115. 18 olhtr canr, dltfon, Alldng $580 OBO.
lruakJ, vane 1r1 . - . COOK 1740)245-6934

675-1333 .

Or Fax To (304) 875-5234

MACK'S

...

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(740) 992-1536
I

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(~.Ohio) .

&amp;
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EXCAVATION

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Frtdlly, April 12, 2.002

· www.mydallytentlnel.com
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APRIL 121

I'

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1

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Deaths

BY MIWIIIA RUIIILL

MRUSSELLIIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Co!.!nty coltlmissioners spent
1-i, hours· in .executive session Friday looking at
prospective locations for a
new jail facility that may
soon be a reality.
The county owns more
than 120 acres off Shawnee
Lane, in Springfield Township, that officials said is being
seriously considered for the

Weather

Oo11 't bL' r~.·ha: t,IIH ,tu I I ~C

'yuu r

; ,,~,.,,uitY

J11ul 'rcMourcc:-

fuluc~' ill t!tc )'l'.lr':!lu:a'l. hc r.l nw they cnuld bt.: rauk~·J
.1n1u n ~ th~: UiuK~·~ t ~n11 tnbu ·

tun tv your

~uc,·c.·t~t .

What

you cuvh1011. you f.',lll pro . .
tiU~L'.

AI~II :S (M,or&lt;h 21 -April 1'1)
. . An Mf.111KC111L'IIt that tu rn~d

out well flJr f"ll onn b4.·forc
111i~ht r&lt;j•hc•oc lo..,lf •IJolin . lt'o
nQthin~

imponAm llmt )'itu dn

1Jiffcreutly th.111 y~.m ,Jjd du:
tint t.ntl~. ·r ryi1.1J( tn p.ad1 up
.1 lJmkrm t• ' ltli111 Cd ilu.• 1\t.·
· tHt (;r,lph M.1t~hm.tkcr t.tn
1u:IJ' yttu umlcr•t11ml \•1!1;1( tu
~lu w ut:tkc tht r~l;uinn~hir

work. M.ul $2.75 lu Match·

Jlit~kcf'1

,1 •., thi~ new,papcr.

1'.(1. IJoK 17:\H, M1irray IIIII
Sutwn. New York, NY
111156,
'f'IIU1W~

(1\f'rol 20-M.Jy

. 211) •• ~mnd&lt; wuld play a
l,ttJ(C.' mlr 111 ym1r afT.1it1 dut
WC(•kt.•u41 Jf1 ,1 rerfuJ when
yttu c.t' II ~,.ouiJ be ''XCrtnlcly
hu ky rm

mlc

another.

10

tlnu,'r wm drtv..n any Jnvifa ...
cum,.
(:EMINI (May 21 ·June 211)
-- It \vnn'r nl oltlt"r 1fyu_.u luvc

•

l" ildjmt tv ildflintr; t:undi-

lirm•. Thinlot~ will work 6Ut in
ynur f:~vm rrr:trdlt•!S u( Which
w.1y the Willi. blowt~ .
CI\N~ : EI\.

(Jo111e 21 -July

22) · .... I ry tu "il··''utc IW IIIt'
lhtw fn :1 nrw irncr~~u d1:1t h:u
rcu.: c11tly ( .111tur~'l your f:uu:y.

The &lt;Kp•ricncc co ul~ produce some &amp;!lt:citinlll r:amifica ..
tionJ for ynu in utiH:r w:~ys.
LEO (July 23· 1\u¥. 22) ••
Uoe your im.oKiuauon. ~nd

vioualize the IYF"' elf end reoulll you de1ir• b&lt;!f&lt;•r• you 11"1
iuto anything. Wlut you en·
vision Ol oo•blo, ... ~ you can
come out a winner.
VIIWO (lluK. 23-Scpr. 22)
•• Your 1uturol ability tu abIOrb ""I cmlosu• ntw in(or.:lt131ion if brtttr th11u mual.
L&lt;"•k fur wnyo to utili!&lt; doll

gof1 to yo11r Adv•no•~•·
1.11!1\.A (St•pt . 23·0&lt;1 . 23) •

'mild mcarr thruulCh your
l~ou~L·, btlddy or 11 1canu11ntc
.... nuycmc with whom you

Datalls,Al

Reservations
for chamber
banquet open
until.' Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - Gallin
County Chamber of Com·
mcrcc's annual dinner. set f'or
Thursday, April tll at 7 p,m.
at the University of ltio
Grande 's Student Ceoiter
Annex,
features
Dan
Kochenspart~er, , haz3rdous
materials specialist for Ohio
Task Force One.
The chamber has extend··
ed the- deadline to obtain
tickers for the dinner to
April 16.
Kochensparger is a member of one of 28 . urban
search and rescue teams
working under the auspices
of the Federal Emergency
Management
Agency
(FEMA).
He was deployed to the
World Trade Center collapse
and worked with fellow res•
cuers for 10 d~ys at Ground
Zero.
·
In recognition of his participation in che recovery
effort at the World Trade
Center site., he was chosen as
a torchbearer for the
Olympic Torch Relay of the
2002 Salt Lake City Winter
Olympics.
"Dan Kochensparger has a
tremendous
PowerPo.lnt
presentation titled 'When
The Towers fell; that is
described as spine tingling,"
said Chamber of Commerce
pre!ldent John Pelletier•.
The price is $25 per person. Tickets can be ordered
by calling the . chamber
office at 740-446-0596.

share a muw~l

hu~re~t.
SACITTAitiU~ (Nov.

23-

proJ .. c
miKht be your ticket to
IJ.c. 21) ., A w&lt;&gt;rk

· a~hievinM 11 mlnund11J bonu•
o( "'"'" kiud. When you uu- •
J~.•rtakc a Job. t.lo your bi.'~t 1 ,

whc,;du:r you're working for 1
yutonclf or ~nlllher .
•
Ct\1'1\ICOI\.N (Dec. 22·
jan. 1~) •• Elth•r you ur ~
friend miMht be the purveyor
of jiOOd new1, but neither of
YCIU '""Y reall20 thi• until you ·
with

Cf'1Ch Olh~Jr.

-- 1fyou'v&lt;(&lt;llllemplotcJ Jl&lt;l·

logo out lOoking (or tlu:rn.

SCOill'IO (Ocr. 24-Nuv.
22) •• Portultou• d••elopmcnt:~

Ga ., proposed the jail project
to the commissioners last
week and returned ro answer
any questions they may have
had.

lv MAJtK HALI.IIUIIN
MHALLBURN@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
POINT PlEASANT, WVa. - One of
Point Pleasant's most familiar faces is gone.
George A. "AI" Biggs, 77, the longtime
Point Pleasant postmaster, passed away Sat•
urday, April 6, 2002.
Biggs was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson, in 1968, and may have
been the last active postmaster appointed
. by a U.S. president. While the Postal Servic~ is researching that history, Biggs' wife,
Judy, and the people who worked for him,
are trying to cope with his sudden loss.
' "He was wonderful," Judy remembered.
"He cared about the community and the
post office and people. He was a people
person. He did a lot of stuff around here.
l;le got the housing project, he was on the
Board of Pleasant VaUey Hospital and was.
president for 13 years."
"AI Biggs defined the term 'public servant,"' said John Blankenship of Point
Pleasant. "He gave so much · time to Point
Pleasant. The man was everywhere. But he
didn't do it to get his name in the paper. In
fact, he would hate this article. But the man
was a giver, and he gave from his heart. Not

C2
Dl-7
insert
CI .
A4
A5
A2·3
Bt-6
A2

2002 Ohio Val1oy Publlthln1 Co.

AI Bla•
because he had to. Decause he· wanted to.
lt's so tragic that he's gone. We've lost a real
Saint."

"AI was easygoing. He was a sweet person.l've never met anybody like him," Judy
said. "I probably never will again. I've
known a lot of people. Nobody will ever
come close."
The Biggs were married 25 ·years on
March 12. "It seems like yesterday we were
married. I can't believe it ended so quick,"
judy said.
Together' they raised four children in a
blended family, Judy's daughter, and Al's
two sons and their sister.
One of the things AI and Judy loved to
do was travel. Together they have logged
thousands of miles, s·eeing most of Ameri-

PltaM ... Bigi,A!I .

BY ToNY M. LEACH
are usually positioned near
TLEACH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM watersheds, report data 24
POMEROY
The hours a day to computers in
installation . of adJitional Columbus and are used by
advanced weather warning the NWS as a prediction
equipment
throughout tool for flood and flash flood
. Meigs County will help watches and warnings. Local
keep officials informed of governments are also able to
any possible high water dan- . access th e data through spegcr.
cial computer systems conTclcconununicacions .
nected to the gauges.
technicians from. · the Ohio
"These additional gauge•
Emergency Management will allow us to continue
Agency have recently ·com- monitoring accurate rainfall
plctcd installing three State levels so we can keep abreast
of ~hio Rain/Snow Moni- of any high water threats
to~mg System (STORMS) within the county;' said
~am momtormg gauges; ~n.t, -Syer. "Our agency truly
m. Spiller (Lebanon Town- appreciates the efforts put
sh•p), one 0 ~ Pomeroy (Sut- forth bv the various townton Townshtp) and the other h'
·
d h M ·
in ·salem Cenc'er (Salem s op truste~s an 1 e etgs
1'
h )
County
comm1ssooners,
oww~sh ISpT.ORMS I
.
who hdped with the place-'
11
gauges m
. gauges, as
. ment of t he ram
b at h Ch ester an d C oIurnb1a
d
b
he N acoon
. al
.
h
fi 1 h
suggeste
y
t
1iowns hIp, t ese ma .t ree W h S . ,
. II acoons
.
b rmg
. the toeaI
eat er erv1ce. .
msta
number of rain gauges in
Bye~ added he w11l attend
a spectal trammg semmar m
the county 10 five.
Th.e STORMS is an auto- May to acquatm htmself
mated rain gauge system with the ~ophtsttcated softthat, according to Bob Eyer, w?re reqUJred to operate the
director of ihe Meigs Coun- ram gauges.
ty Emergency Management
The STORMS program
Agency, monitors an area's was started m 199~ and has
snow and rainfall for paten- grown 10 be the th1rd largest
tial flooding while transmit- system m the country. Pnor
ting current, real-time pre- 10 the STORMS program,
cipitation data to . the State Cmcmnatt was the only City
Emergency
Operations in Ohio to have a flood
Center, Ohio Department warning system.
of Natural ·Resources
Ohio now has 279
(ODNR), the National STORMS gauges installed
Weather Service (NWS), in 53 counties. Of · these
and county emergency gauges, 255 are maintained .
management. agenctes.
by Ohi() EMA communicaThe rain gauges, which tions personnel.

Wise·plans to attend ·Highlander Alloys plant opening
DHERMESOMYCAILYREGISTER.COM
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Gov. Bob Wile will conduct a
. ribbon cutting ceremony on
Moncby at Wahama · Junior
Senior High School to herald
the opening of the Highlander Alloys LLC plant in
New Haven.
·
Highlander bought the plant
from the American AUoys .late
lalt year, have renovated the
f.:acilicy and reopened it.
"The governor is very proud

of the new facility and it shows both headquartered in Israel. of work force and long-term
Highlander, a global' com- incentives through the state.
the resiliency of the people in
Although dealing on an
Mason County," said Jodi pany that owns two man· Omear, deputy press secretary ganese mines in Africa, plans international level, and not
to Wise. "They have neyer lost to !roduce ferro, manganese . directly with the lucal econofaith and it~l wonderful eco- an · · silicon manganese in my, Highlander believes its
presence will make an impact.
Mason County.
nomic development:'
"Our industry is not tied to
It currently has three furHighlander is a privatelyowhed, limited partnership naces at the plant, but is con- . local consumerism or those
and is an affiliate of Ubex, a sidering installing more fur- kinds of things. we're dealing
naces, if it is feasible, and with 'a national and internaventure capital group.
The company has two pri- depending on engineers tional levels in a very specific
mary investment . groups determination if they have the product so we don't have to
behind it, led by Dr. Boris space, the power contract cater to the local market, nor
Bannai and Eli Reifman, under negotiation, availability do they need to cater' to us,"

Help?

Taking care c&gt;f a loved one, or need personal care for yourself?
Ooes housework have you down? Feeling overwhelmed? Let us·
helpl A professional, private-duty home care agency, we offer
personal care, homemaking and respite services in your home.

Holzer lxtra Care

tlng iuvulYl:O in a new o~ud it1 ..
tcrettlns entrrpri.te, thb cuul.d
be ohc day to take a hml look
at. it. You could ••• thiniJI
11ow that yuu d1dn't b&lt;!forr.

(740) 446-9560
or toll free (800) 920·886~
........,
J

-· ---·

said Leighton Wolfe, project
manager f'or Highlander. "But
overall, the more steel, the
better the economy, the more
steel, the better we do; that's
how we impact on 'the loc:U
level."
"The public is invited to
come out and attend," said
Charlie Burd, with the
Mason County Economic
Development Authority. "It's
a big event for the economic
development of Mason
County."

•

Need

coui&amp;J occur thruugh
pAttncnhlp &lt;itu•tion&lt;. Th1&lt;

Commissioner Skip Meadows, Bob Condee and County Administrator Karen
Sprague, has been formed to
look over 'a revised proposal
and report back to commissioners Monday.
"The purpose of the committee is to crunch the numbers and make sure that
nothing has been left out,
including cost tncreases,

STORMS coming
to Meigs County

servant

·

""«&lt;an1y In way• you might
envl•ion. Thou!" 1113Y lupptn
to yuu hllttAd uf you h•vlnll

project.
Perry Sanders, chief operations officer of Integrated
Correctional Services International, based in Athmta,

true public

IIQUAI\IUS Oan. 20· Feb.
19) •• You've Ju•t cuteml a
two-~•y cycle where pruCocable poutbilirics uc n1orr
prrvalc:ut d1an usu;1l. · Find
w•y• to put tl111 good luck
chor&lt;to to work for you .
PISCES (Frb. 20·Mor&lt;h 211)

d.oy (or you, b11t not

Q

• 150-bed minimum/medium ucurlty federal facility
• To be built with federal funds bY Integrated Correction·
al Servlcealntematlonal, Atlanta, Ga.
• No expense Incurred by loc~l government ·
• 120 acres off Shawnee Lane baing ~onaldared as slla

Sanders said the county
would be responsible for
procuring the land and
accessing utilities to the
property: His company would
be responsible for building
the jail and getting the contract fron\ the federal governmellt to huu~e 100 minimum
to medium security federal
prisoners in the 150-bed
facility.
A committee, made up of
Sheriff David L. Martin,

Point
. postmaster
hailed·as

!iUrt lo rx~;han~e information

• Tim muld be •n t'&gt;p«i&gt;lly
h~&lt;ky

•

• lldiDIII - ~ ,....

Celebrations
Classlfieds
Comics ·
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obltuariei
Resion
Sports
Weather

Gallla County Jail PJOPGYI

.AI Biggs: 1924-2002

High: 70s, Low: 50s

Index

e

CiaIlia ·ail

Dewane Casey .
Christina Elliott
Inez Harper·Spurlock
Timothy Honacher
Phyllis Horn
Elizabeth Montgomery
James Persinger
Louis Smith
·
Bernice Wallace
Details, As

8\' DAN HIIIMII
Solllrd•y. 1\l'lil I.J, 2illll

sJ.25

.. '"""'

I

f-·

IT UINED,

Area 4-H groups
in action, A3

.....

":::=====*"".J

WE MET
A NICE

Perry, Wiseman
set records, B1

llllldHtt

the heart ace. South
SURA EO
'ontinucd with a· low ~. -,r:i~~~n~~~.:.;...;l-·.:,.I~
diamoud. West rose . . . .
with the a~c ami 11avc
his partucr n diamond
O MB I L
ruff. The spade &lt;IUccn -r:-.;:..:.,.;-.;..~[,
9
w:u covered by the
king aud .1cc, and East ::==:::::=~::!
trumped another dia.
y T U 1 I~1
mond. Aller the spade .
"
Smart coed: "You flunked the
ja~k and a spade to
history examl" Not so smart coed:
South's 10, t.lcclarcr
· · ... "I know. Butailthequestlonswer~
drew trumps nttd
E L 0 E N Ei~ 8 ~~u t~h}~~~.thathappenedbefore
·
claimed his cotttra~t.
1
0
Comoltlt
tka ck"ckle ~uottd
At the other table,
. . . . ._
by filling In oke mlnln9 woraa
West did double otiC
you aevelop lrom Jlap No. 3 bilow.
dub. North rcPRINT . NU~~.mc LeTTERS IN
I' I'_ I~ j
spondcd ·one heart, ~::;,:;TH;E;:SE;;S;;:y'U~AR;E~S;;:;;;;;;;;:=;=~=:;I~~~=
- ~=~
East competed with
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTUS
I I
one spade, and thetc
TO em ANSWER
lwa!i
the matter rested.
5CRAM·LETS ANSWEIIS
South cashed the
Weekly • Joint • Catch - Polite • TICKET
heart ace and d11b ace
"I
know
what a careful driver lsi' announced our teen·
before leading a diaaged daughter. "It's one who has just seen the driver
mond. East wott with
aflead of him get a TICKET!"
·
dummy's nee and
crosmtffed home.

PEANUTS

DeveiGping talent
at Vinton, C1

•

I

~OLLOW~ . l:'M ... I'l'\.

INSIDE

...,·

-

BIG NATE

·SPORtS

IIIMiftd

First, what would
at.
you do with th,tt
14 Fellow
2 Rote lor
West h.mc.l ;o(tcr South
31 lrlcMII of
Mldonnt
11011
~ ProtPtOt
tl~ab .and opens one
Shelk't
~ Puckalw
n Thuma""' 4 TIICI
tor IIDtcl 15 Ctrltl
dub?
.
lobby
H lmp!Ht
411 IIOIOgy
1 Mldtummer 17 RICI wlnt SS Glrden tool
. During the sixth
H _.,
118 Will bird
IODlo
I LL.D.
&lt;1~.1! pl.ayed by l'ight
...... (hyph.) 57 ,.,..
41 "Pretty
holdtr
ptychotogy
W01111n"
7 Arm bonaa 30 OgiH
of my stmlcnts, there
allr
I
Spttd
·
31
Fonclng
topic
. w.ts ltots of debatable:
wupon
!II Lu1u
tkalw
billtlinf\, .nod the cam- ·
IINmrntl
Hilden
38 Sht, on "'o · ..-.-""11'1!""'1
tr:tl'ts Wl'r~ ont spade
uud tWo rlub~!
West should lt3v~
doubkd. His hand
was play;ablc in three
suits. Trtll', if p.crtucr
hids ou~ sp.tdc nml it
is a 4-:1 lit, diamonds
might have bucu bcittl'f, but · nothiug
works all the time.
When West ovcr&lt;':tl!.•ll ·ouc dianmnd, I
think North shouhl
have r~spondcd ott~
lwart. Dcspit~ the
weak suit and pour
distribution, he had
six wmkiug points; he
shlluld h:tV&lt;' told partncr . th,tt he wam't
CELEBRITY CIPHER
liHhtittg the war sinby l.ula Campoa
Ctltllltt~ Clpntr cryptogram• oro crulod lrom quollllont by tamout
gldt:ltldl·illy.
.
pooj&gt;lo, pool and prt~tnl . Etch lllltr In lnt cipher otandoloranol~r.
Now,
if East
Today'• clut: 0 equall w
'ouldu 't bcnr to pnss,
NZF
'PLZFSEVZA
nne heart was preferable to one spade,
EWFR
WVTF
DVCPFZMIH ••• L
lllilkin!J it easier to
find a lit itl either maVIE
RFE
.W N 8 F C' E · M VI C P
jor. South should
'have p.mcd over one
L'X
DWNE
UCVD
PVC' E
L
sp:~dc. Nt•vcr rebid in
PVLCK.'
· n five -cnrd suit unless
you have nothin11 .
WVTULCA
NCEWVCR
better m tlo, anti opPREVIOUS SOLUTION - '.1 tit down to wrltt t lyric, 1nd when
posite a passed JartI gat up I'm utually aboul thr11 poundt lighter.' - Alan Jay
ucr, South ha ·no
Ltmtr
re:uon to act again.
Fina lly, West should
hnve raised to two
spades,
but he cau- O Rtarranot ltlltro ol
l
tiously passed.
lour acrambltd worda
After winniug with law •• form tour almplt wor·dl-1

l-IE'S ONLY GOT
--....;F_OUR
CA.~t)~
1
T'GO !"!'

TEMPO'

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IN DUll'
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...........

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MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

•.

.,

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