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                  <text>The Dail
. y Sentinel

Nation ·• WOrl

Govec ilots bllck Bush stance

Page B8
WeclnesdiiJ, Febn~•ry 21, 2001

Editorial: Save GDC!,

Thursday

U.S. beats Mexico,

March 1. 2001

Clinton to let ex-aiaes testify in House

WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's governors b&gt;cked the
Bush administration's school accountability plans, asked for
freedom to expand Medicaid covera~ by offering trimmed
benefits to some new enrollees and kept dis&gt;greements about
the president's tax cuts in the background.
They wrapped up their winter meeting Tuesday after an
upbeat meeting with P~sident Bush and a tax cut warning
from Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle.
They renewed their usual request for the federal government .
to cover any costs required by federal rules, singling out the
high costs of programs like special education, an area where the
federal government contributes less than origin:illy promised.
The governors avoided taking a position on the president's
S1.6 trillion tax cut, which caused a constant backstairs debate
at the meeting, breaking along party lines.

BY DE8
ASSOCIATED

RIECHMANN
~RESS

WRITER

WASHINGTON To convince
Congress he has nothing to hlde, former
President Clinton says three of his closest ex-aides are free to tell a House
comntittee whatever they wish about
the clemencies he granted in his last
hours in the White House.
Clinton has waived his claim to executive privilege, which could have kept
his former aides from telling lawmakers
everything they know about the pardon
of billionaire Marc Rich, who has lived
in Switzerland since just before he was ·
indicted in 1983 on charges of tax evasion, fraud and making illegal oil deals.
But while Clinton decided Tuesday to
let his aides testify freely, Rich declined

Chainnan: Shuffle spy catchen
WASHINGTON (AP) Sununohing the nation's top
intelligence and law enforcement officials to explain a grave spy
scandal, the Senate Intelligence Committee chairman is suggesting that U.S. spy catchers be rotated out of their jobs every
few years.
Sen. Richard Shelby, R-AJa., said he'uvorried th&gt;t compbcency ntigh.t have played a· role in the case of Robert Philip
Hanssen. The FBI counterintelligence agent was charged with
espionage for allegedly handing Russia information on the
nation's most secret programs for IS years.
FBI Director Louis Frech, CIA Director George Tenet and
Attorney General John Ashcroft were testifYing Wednesday at a
private committee meeting 10 days after Hanssen's arrest.
Federal prosecutors released new details Tuesday of Hanssen's
activities, including a letter dated the day of his arrest in which
Hanssen warned his alleged Russian hancllers that "something
has aroused the sleeping tiger."
·

to be a witness before the House Government Reform Committee, which is
trying to deterp1ine whether money
played a role in the presidential pardons
of R ich and others.
Rich also refused to release his lawyers
from attorney-client privilege. If he did,
his lawyer said it could be later argued in
crintinal or civil proceedings that the
privilege no longer exists. The Rich pardon is the subject of a criminal investigation by U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White.
"Mr. Rich has asked me to inform the
committee that he must continue to rely
on the advice of his lawyers and, therefore, is unable to comply with the committee's requests at this timet his attorney, Laurence Urgenson, said in a letter
to the committee.

of their anticipated refund. But the financial institutions can
charge fees or interest.
U.S. District Judge Raymond Jackson in · Norfolk accused
H&amp;R Block of deliberately and maliciously using deceptive
advertising to draw customers in the Hampton Roads area just
as .a competing tax preparation service, was lcnmching its business there.
··
"We feel that this is a victory not only for Liberty Tax Service, but also for taxpayers who didn't fully understand the
terms of this loan product because they weren't properly disclosed," said Lenny Holt, Liberty's chief operating officer.

Greenspan speaks; people listen

Schools to offer choice

WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan, whose words can move markets, seems to be enjoying even more power during these uncertain economic times.
Even on days when he doesn't ~peale, the markets can move in
a big wayon mere speculation about what he ntight say.
That was the case on Monday as investors' hopes that the Fed
might be preparing another surprise cut in interest rates gave
the Dow Jones industrial average its biggest point gain since
·Jan. 3 when the Fed did cut rates be\Ween regularly scheduled
meetings.
All that was in anticipation of testimony Greenspan was
scheduled to give before the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday, where he'll deliver the Fed's latest economic outlook. r
Two weeks ago';- Greenspan painted a cautiously optimistic
view of the economy's short-term p.rospects when he gave his
twice-a-year economic outlook report to the Senate Banking
Committee.

NEW YORK (AP) - Parents of students in the city's bilingual education program will get to choose how quickly their
children face English immersion under a plan approved by the
New York City Board of Education.
.
The ~ew polic~ ends the automatic assignmenr of ·c hildren
who fail an English competency exam to the bilingual program, in which enrollees are taught core subjects, such a~ math
and science, in their native tongue.
·
Parents will be allowed to choose from four programs for
their children: the bilingual education program; English as a
second language, )n which core subjects are taught in English; a
new program that would provide after-school and weekend
instruction to move students ' rapiclly into an English langu~ge
program; or a dual language program.
The board's unanimous approval Tuesday of Schools Chancell?r. Harold 0. Levy's $7 5 million proposal follows years of
cnttcam that parents had little say on whether to place their
children in bilingual classes.
.

Court .hea.rs salary case
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court took these
·
·
actions Tuesday:.
• Heard arguments in a 1980s labor dispute ovet baseball
salaries in which the justices will decide how taxes should be
paid on back wages. The case arose from the 1994 cash settlement won by the major league players' union for collusion
among 26 baseball teams to stop the steep escalation of salaries
for free agent players.
• Ruled that a Maryland court should have heard a legal fight
between defense contractor Lockheed Martin .Corp. and a
smaller rival, even though the lawsuit had already been thrown
out of court in California. The unanimous ruling revives claims
made by Semtek In'ternational Inc. that were first raised in a
California state court in I 997 and traveled through five other
·
courts before coming to the Supreme Court.

candy-tossing teen beaten
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - A teen-ager who was throwinll':ca!ldY ~t paosing ·Cars was beaten unconscious by _three p1en,
police said.
·
An~! "Shaggy" Rodriguez, 14, and a friend were walking
ho":Je frat~ an after-school pr:ogram Monday when they began
·
tossmg Skittles at passmg veh1cles, police said.
The men punched Rodriguez in the face until he fell, then
stomped and kicked him in the head, police said.
Ro*iguez's friend ran for help, and when he returned,
Rodriguez was on a street corner unconscious.

elay plans monitoring
· NEW YORK (AP) - eBay has begun monitoring items for
sale on its site for poosible copyright infringement, a move in
response to pressure from software makers and intellectual
property interests.
The new p~gram has removed about 12 listings per day for
software, mov1es, musiC and other copyright content since it
be~n in December, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
.
.
The software industry's antipiracy trade .gwup and manufacturers of copyrighted products, such as Microsoft Corp, pushed
.
.1
for the chan~.
"We recognize they have some issues and so we wanted to do
everything we could," eBay lawyer Jay Monahan said.

Youth .faces wiretap charge
NAVARRE, Fla. (AP) - A high school student has been
charge~ With vi~lating Florida's 'wiretapping Jaw after tape
recording a chtm1stry class lecture.
Asher Zaslaw, 17, ,pleaded not gUilty to the third-degree
felony In juvenile court Tuesday. She faces a variety of penalties,
including community service and probation.
Zaslaw said she record~d the October lecture at Navnrro
High School because she was having difficulty in the elm and
wanted to maintain good grades.
She was asked about the tape by school administrators and
told the action was against school policy. Zaslaw, who said she
was unaware of the rule, was never disciplined.
'

JIICige hits Block with penalty
RICHM&lt;;JND, Va. (AP) - A federal judge barred H&amp;R
Block, the nation's largest income tax preparer, from using mis- ·
leading phrases to advertise its "Rapid Refund" loan program
and ordered to pay more than SSOO,OOO to ;m upstart rival.
Block has been sued before over its advertising for "Rapid
" Refund," in which tax filers rcrcil.te bank loans for the amount

The Washington Post, in Wednesday's
editions, said an e-mail suggests a Justice
Department official told Rich's pardon
attorney, Jack Quinn, to take his pardon
request directly to the White House.
According to the e-mail, Quinn told
associates in November 2000 that Eric
Holder,, then-deputy attorney ~neral,
advised him to "go straight to" the
White House · to seek clemency for
Rich. The mes.&lt;age also said: "timing is
good. we shd (should) get in soon."
Holder told the newspaper that he
strongly disagreed with Quinn's e-mail
message. He testified to Congress that he
wished he had asked more questions
about the Rich case, and would have
been opposed to it if he had obtained
more informatfon at the time.

Froz:en toddler rescued
EAU CLAIRE, Wis. (AP) -A 2-year-old boy was hospitalized in critical condition Tuesday after being found unconscious
and not breathing outside his home in frigid cold, authorities
sat'd.
·.•
Les Hynek wandered outside hi' home on a dairy farm eariy
Thesday and his father found hi in about three hours later . in
Sitow about 50 feet .from the house, sheriff's Sgt. John Volger
sajp. Temperatures were about zero.
. ')'he boy was taken to St. Marys Hospital and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., where spokesman John Murphy confirmed the boy's condition. ·
Volger said Les and two brothers had been with their father
in a barn until about 2:30a.m. while milking chores were done.

At least 13 die in crash
LONDON (AP) - A high-speed passenger train collided
wilh an oncoming freight train in northern England at daybreak Wednesday, killing at least 13 people and injuring !)lOre
th~t! 70.
:
British Transport Police confirmed the casualties as rescue
workers struggled hours later to free passengers trapped in the
mangled wreckage.
·
Preliminary reports indicated a Land Rover pulling a tl'ailer
veered off a highway onto the tracks, derailing the Londonbo~nd passenger train and causing it to smash into the freight
tram.
"It's like a scene from a bomb explosion. Thd c~rna~ is
app~ing," said Nigel Metcalfe, spokesman for North Yorkshire
An1bulance Service. He said rescuers reported hearing .mobile
phones ringing inside the cars.
·
'· •

Tech stocks
plunge on
consumer
numbers
NEW YORK (1\P) - A
report showing consumer
confidence at a more than
four-year low sent the Nasdaq composite index to its
weakest finish in 26 momhs
Tuesday.
Analysts
said
investors were·. -growing
increasingly anxious about
the economy and the Federal Reserve's ability to
reverse its decline.
The selloff reflected Wall
Street's disappointment that
the Fed did not cut interest
ratesThesday- a move that
would have been an extraordinary step, coming three
weeks before the central
bank's next meeting.
"I think the expectation
was building that we would
get an intra-meeting cut,
but when nothing happened today, the market sold
off," said Jon Brorson, director of equities at Northern
Thust. "People are waiting
for a catalyst, like a Fed rate
cut, before jumping back in
and buying tech stocks."
The Nasdaq closed down
100.68 at 2,207.82,its worst
finish since Dec. 31, ·1998,
when the technologyfocused gauge closed at
2,192.69.
The Dow Jones industrial
average fell
5.65
to
10,636.88, keeping most of
the 200-point gaih it racked
up Monday on speculation
that an interest rate cut was
inuuinent.
The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index dropped 9.71 to
1,257.94.
Tech stocks remained
under pressure Tuesday as
inwstors ptmished stocks
thc'Y feared would perform
.poorly in a weal( economy.
Some of the biggest
loscrs:JDS Uniphase, which
tumbled $4.81 to $27.81,
and Cisco Syste111S, which
fell S2.06 to $24.J

$5 0

Name•---------------.------------Address___________________________
~..... City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .---.

entine

Melp County's

1.8% R. .l.lariO mlllhl 11

......, ..... &amp;an•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 156

50 Cents

Meigs High renovation bids open March 14
BY CHARl£NE HOEfliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAff

POMEROY - · Bids for the renoVl!tion of Meigs_High School, the first
pl,lase in the Meigs Local School Distrjct's $33 million building project, Will
be opened March 14 and the contracts
awarded March 27.
·Jeff Engram of Quandrel, the district's construction management firm,
gave Meigs Local school board members a project update Wednesday. par-

ticularly as it relates to Meigs High's
renovation.
He said 34 prospective bidders on
the project toured the building Tuesday and obtained bidding packages.
The group included six general con~
tractors. Engram said several other bidout
ding pac~ are expected to
yet. Both Superintendent William
Bucldey and Mark Rhonemus, treasurer, !trended Tuesday's meeting.
Bucldey said the actual work on the

lio

to be the first priority. ,
Engram displayed the site logistics
plan which showed areas behind the
school to be designated as contractor's
space and the area where the modular
units will be placed for use as classroolllS while the construction is under
way.
He also gave an update on the elementary school to be constructed
high school building is expected to get
along Ohio 124 near Rutland, adding
under way May 21, With new roofing the architectural plans are in the fin-

During the meeting the board
approved the bid package
and sitework construction
documents and authorized
advertising for bids on that
phase of the elementary
school construction.

IJlOVIng
quickly
on tax cut

WASHINGTON (AP)
..:.. Eager to act, House
Republicans are moving
with extraordinary speed
to advance the income tax
cuts at the heart of President Bush's economic program, overriding vehement
Democratic protests as they
go.
' "We believe that the
p~esident's plan is not oilly
dght but responsible," Rep.
Bill Thomas, chairman of
the House Ways and Means
Gomdlittee,&gt;· said Wednesday as he announced · the
panel ,would convene
Tliursday to give. its
approval, A vote in the full
House would follow ,by a
week.
· "We
are
spending
money We don't have. And
Etemocrats will not · be·
P.arty to it," Democratic
leader Dick Gephard!
countered liS key lawmakets )~bored ·to complete
work on a less costly alternative they said was more
prudent for the economy.
• • Thomas unveiled a bill
that sweetened the rate
cuts proposed by Bush on
Thesday night in his
~tionally televised speech.
The California lawmaker
sitd the GOP measure
woul4 accelerate a cut in
tlle lowest tax rate ahead of
llush •s· timetable, and make
it,te!roactive to Jan. 1.
1
Jie put the cost of the .
measure at $960 billion
o\rer the next decade, about
$65 billion more than the
equivalent portion of
Bush's plan. Thomas said
. other elements of the presiqent'i recommended cuts,
including repeal of the
estate tax, would be acted
on later in the year.

Pluse-~lp.Al

Allege public
records
violations
•
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Bird's eye view
iddleport Mayor Sandy Iannarelli had
a clear view of Midlfieport's rooftops
Tuesday, from · high atop the village's
ladder fire truck. Iannarelli, pictured
With Fire Department mentber Jay
Buskirk,. was inspecting what is left of the roof of the
former Mark V building at the corner of North Second
Avenue and Mill Street. The building, now abandoned,
is owned by Bennett Roush of Appalachian Wood Products, but has collapsed due to a deteriorating roof.
Iarmarelli, with Councilmen Roger Manley and Bob
Pooler and Police Chief Bruce SWift,'spoke with Roush ·
about the possibility of restoring, or at least repairing, the
historic building tp prevent further damage. The build- .
ing has been deemed a safety hazard, and condemned by
the village. Roush said he is secuting financing for a renovation of the building, which he hopes to divide into
retail spaces. Constructed in the mid-19th century, the
building originally housed Coe's Dry Goods, and, on the
second floor, Coe's Opera House. The building's historical significance has prompted Iannarelli and com.niunity members ~o consider a full restoration, possibly as a
centerpiece for a downtown revitalization program.

. ---

-·

--·

WELLSTON - The South Central Ohio
District Council of Carpenters has filed suit
with the Ohio Supreme Court against the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste District
and its director.
~The suii· ·alleges the district failed to provide
public records in a timely manner, after the
Carpenters union sought to review records p.e rtaining to a dock project at the district's recycling facility to determine whether the job was
large enough to warrant the payment of the
prevailing wage. ·
"The suit, seeking to a Writ of Mandamus,
alleges · that the request by the Carpenters to
view public records was received with refusals,
harassment, cursing, and, ultimately th e intervention oflaw enforcement officers to interfere
with the lawful right o( the union to inspect
public records," the union said in a W~dnesday
news release.
"The suit alleges that at one point, the district's director, Lance Wilson, had Wellston
Police Chief Mark Jacobs assure Carpenters
representatives that· it would be 'years' before
they received the requested records, and
ordered the representatives off of public property."

David Mills, who is a plaintiff in the case
along With the union, said Wilson's actions are
"outrageous.''
"Citizens of our state have the right to review
public records free from intimidation," Mills
said. "One has to wonder if the Solid Waste District has something to hide.
"The suit requests that the Supreme Court .
order Wilson and the Solid Waste District to
make ;ill public records available, to charge only
the actual cost of making copies, to stop telling
citizens that they need a lawyer in order to
make a public records request, and to pay the
union's attorney's fees."
Mills and the union are represented by the

Brian J. Reed photos

Pl...e IH Suit. AJ

~I repair man drives to his

COMPLETE
MOilLE

•' REPAIR. 'l'erry Beechler
'of Terry's Com, ,. pltte Mobile
.·Rep•lr Service
. ·. pre11er'es to
work on a
··· . '
. ot'llln sew
Wednesday
..morning Inside
.his ·White panel
: .truck he uses
. as a mobile
"111palr station.
Unlike conven. tiona! repair
shops, Beechler performs
enalne repairs
on site, which
: ·he said saves
· ' the customer
• both time and
• : money. (Tony
~,
M.-Leach
photo)
j

ishing stage. He said that next week
the site preparation packages will be
ready to go to bid. Groundbreaking
was tentatively set. for sometime during the first week of May.
During the meeting the board
·approved the bid package and sitework
construction documents and authorized advertising for bids on that phase
of the elementary school construction.
As for the ntidclle school to be erect-

Carpenters
file suit
aJainst
d1strid

GOP•

.

flnt-1 dllll on Nit IIW Vllllcllllllllct
Just chlell out some otlhlll I,. •1111:

A4
B1

\

BY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY

' . will travel.
m;ench,

Have

Terry B-eechler, owner and
operator of Terry's . Complete
Mobile Repair Service in
Pomeroy, is a local small
engine repairman who spe"
cializes in assisting those•who
are mechanically inept with
yard work equipment.
How~ver, unlike conventional repair shops, Beechler
prefers to drive his workshop
to the customer.
Beechler's interest in sm:ill
engine repair began more than
12 years ago while living in
florida. A neighbor of Beechler, who · happened to be a·
small engine specialist, often
let Beechler tinker with ·sever-

••

~

•.

in the business, followed by
the death of his partner,
Beechler decided to pack up
his belongings and move back
to the place where he had
grown up .
"Basic:illy, I just wanted to
come back home to Meigs
County;' Beechler said. ·~It has
a rtice atmosphere and is filled
with' such frienclly people."
· In 1998, Beechler set up
shop in the back of his pickup and' began tooling around
the communi.ty looking for
customers.
"Most of the business I had
in Florida dealt with commercial trade contractors," he said.
"Since there wasn't too many
commercial contractors in the

What first began as
a part-time hobby
turned into a full-time
profession as Beechler
discovered he had a
knack for repairing
small engines.

al assorted motors that were
lying around in his garage.
What first began as a parttime hobby turned into a full'
time profe!Sion as Beechler
discovered he had a knack for
repairing ' small engines. After
completing the necessary
classes· to become certified,
Beechler and a friend started
their own mobile repair business.
After several successful years .
.j

I

'

. Today's

Sentinel
lSidiDIII- 11,....

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Pidc 3: 1-11-4; Pidc 4: 9-3-3-5
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l&lt;ido!r. 1-5-~

W.VA.
Daily 3: 4-6-8 Daily 4: 7+ 1-1
0 2001 Ohio Valley 11 ublishing Co, ·

PI- 1H Rep~lr, .U

•

,.

�PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

P&amp;G eyes brand sell-off
CINCINNATI (AP)- The Procter &amp; Gatllble Co. is looking at more ways to streamline operations, and that might mean
selling marginal brands and forming more joint ventures, a
company executive said.
Lost week, P&amp;G and Coca-Cola Co. formed a new, indepen-.
dent snack-food company that will sell P&amp;G brands including
Pringles chips and Sunny Delight juice drink.
"We may at some point look at those models on other· businesses as well;' Clayton C. Daley, P&amp;G's chief financial officer,
said Tuesday at a consumer-products conference in New York.
The goal is to free P&amp;G's resources to focus on the biggest of
its 300 brands. Industry watchers have speculated that P&amp;G will
continue to pare its struggling food and beverage business to
relieve some of the drag on earnings.

•

Packo's considers expansion
TOLEDO (AP) - Tony Packo may be taking his famous
Hungarian hot dogs and chili sauce outside ofToledo for the
first time.
The restaurant made famous by cross-dressing Cpl. Max
Klinger on TV's "M-A-S-H" is working on a deal to open an
outlet in Dundee, Mich.
Pa cku 's already ships its hot dog sauce, spicy picll.les and chili
aGross the country.

But for yc.m, the family- operated business has r&lt;sisted outside
offers to c·xpand. Instead, it has slowly built four restaurants in
Toledo and its suburbs.
Th~ restaurant's owners said Wednesday they hope to complete :1 deal within the next few weeks co build a new store in
south east Michigan near Cabela's - an outdoors superstore

that draws thousands of people on weekends.

Delphi cuts 227 jobs

1bunch1y, March 1,1001

COLUMBUS (AP) Minority
House Democrats and public employees
have found an unlikely ally - a Republican- in their fight to get private contractors out of the state prison business.
Rep. John Willamowski, whose
northwest Ohio district includes three
prisons, said he's not opposed to having
private companies run some state services -just not prisons.
"There's just certain things I don't
think you ought to privatize. I wouldn't
want to privatize a local police force. I
wouldn't want you to privatize the local
courts," Willamowski, of Lima, said
Wednesday. "The state ought to run its
own prisons."

Ohio . has two state prisons run by
private companies: a I ,380-bed medium-security prisop in Conneaut and a
550-bed prison in Grafton designed for
felony drunken-driving offenders. A
third
privately run
prison, in
Youngstown,· ho uses federal prisoners
and is not under the supervision of the
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction.
Detnocrats and unions have opposed

' privatization of prisons since the Legi;lature fir-St began debating the idea about
10 years ago. Under current law, the
Conneaut and Grafton prisons must be
run privately and contractors must do it
for 5 percent below what the state calculates it would spend to run them.
Willamowski has introduced a bill

that would- bar private companies from
running any prison.
The state chose not to renew the
contraci of CiviGenics, the Marlboro,
Mass.-based company running the
North Coast Correctional Treatment
Facility in Grafton. The prison changed
wardens five times in 18 months, ms
fined for not mai,-,taining minimum
staffing levels and has had numerous
other problems, the prisons department
said.
The department hopes to have a new
contractor in place in May. CiviGenics'
contract runs out on June 30.
Democrats see Willamowsk.i's bill as a
chance to get the attention of majority
Republican leadership on the issue. The
bill was introduced with seven co-sponsc;ns, six of them Democrats.
"When they found a Republican to
do it, 1 knew they were going to jump
on that . They're smart enough and
diplomatic enough to know that a
Republican is going to have to carry
that," said Sen. Robert Hagan, a
Youngstown Oetnocrat and constant
critic of privately run prisons.
However, that may not be enough to
carry the bill through. Williamowski
introduced siritilar legislation in the last
session that didn't make it past two comntittee hearing;. Speaker Larry Householder, a Republican from Glenford,
referred the new bill to the State Government Committee.

New breathing aid unveiled

um-security one.

Union spokesman PeterWray said the
union's plan would be less costly t~an ·
hiring a pr.ivate contr.actor.

"It's beyond us why somebody would
oppose allowing the department to ;,ttn
the facility on the cheapest basis possible;• he said. "What's the point of priyatization if not that?'.'

Seuate President· Richard Finan; , a
Cincinnati Republican, said some state
services can save the state money. He's

waiting for the House to act befe,e
assessing the bill's chances in the Senate.
"I still believe in privatizing prisons at
a cer.tain level," Finan said. "We want ~~~e
lowest and best bidder and we want
competitive bidding and that's the way
."
you get tt.
•' ·

&lt;Ients.

Gliateda.losses deepen

CLEVELAND (AP) - Biotechnology company Gliat~ch
Inc., hurt by the recall of its surgical gel, reported WednesdaY, 'its
fourth-quarter loss ms twice as big as the year-ago period and
that its trading activities were under investigation. .
The gel is the company's only U.S. product and is used, .to
prevent scarring and adhesions after back surgery. In January,
Gliatech voluntarily recalled the gel in the United States and
overseas due to. a separate recall of a raw material used in the
item.
The Cleveland-based company said Wednesday the Nrtioital
Association of Securities Dealers was reviewing trading activity
of its stock that occurred before an August announcement that
Guilforii Pharmaceuticals Inc. of Baltimore had called off a
planned acquisition of GHatech. .
.
.
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - ·A strike by Comair pilots would be
Gliatech s:ild in a news release that .it was cooperating with
felt quickly at Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International the NASD. A message seeking further comment was left with
LIMA (AP) -A man was sentenced Wednesday co life with- Airport, where the regional carrier operates more daily flights company spokesman Adam Griclley.
out parole for planning a firebombing to try to get back stolen than any other airline.
·
drugs. A woman and four children died in the fast-moving
Comair's 323 daily flights
house fire.
.
there dwarf the' 182 of' runnerSamuel Williams could have been set;tenced to death. Judge up Delta Air Lines, which owns
Richard Warren of Allen Count)' Common Pleas Court accept- Comair and also faces the posed the penalty recommended by a jury. Jurors deliberated for sibility of a pilot strike. Togcthabout six hours over two days.
er the companies ·account for
"I was kind of disappointed," said Diane Jones, a sister of one · 90 percent of the Cincinnati
of the victims. "I wanted him to get the death penalty.~
airport's daily flights.
Comair · pilots could go on
Williams, 24, of Lima, was found guilty Feb. 13 of complicity to comntit aggravated murder.
strike as soon as March 26 if
they reject the latest contract
offer, which management says
would make those· pilots the
TIFFIN (AP) -A woman accused of participating in rob- best~paid among regional airberies of pizza delivery drivers and pizza shops has pleaded hnes. Ptlots of Adanta-based
.
, Delta could walk out as soon as
innocent.
K.1therine Cullen, 20, pleaded innocent to four felony April 1. President Bush .could
charges Tuesday in Seneca ·County Common Pleas Court.
·step tn to block etther stnke.
She and David Myers, 29, are accused in a string of six robThe ai_rport .could ask its
beries. .
other maJor a~rhnes to operate
Cullen is charged with complicity to aggravaied robbery with additional flights to serve pasa firearm, complicity to attempted aggravated robbery with a s~ngers· if C~matr or Qelta
firearm, and two counts of possession of criminal tools.
pilots strtke, atrport spokesman
Ted Bushelman said Wednesday.
Those 10 :iirlines include TWA,
US Airways, United, American,
DAYTON (AP) - Discovery of an underground vat of Continental and Northwest.
chemical residue possibly a century old is going to make a
downtown contruction project more costly than expected.
City officials say it could cost at least $500,000 to remove the
buried coal tar from the site of the new Relizon headquarters.
· The city ha~ agreed to pay for the cleanup. It already had
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
• donated the land, which the city bought last year for $5.5 milCleveland public schools, in
lion. The city is also putting up S1 · million for construction.
need of math and science
An environmental study was completed before the city
teachers, are headed to India.
bought the land. But test borings found no evidence of contaThree delegates irom the dismination, according to Norm Essman, Dayton's acting director
trict, including one teacher, will
of economic development:
leave March 11 for a 12-day
recruiting trip to be paid for by
a New York company that
matches teacher candidates in
TOLEDO (AP) -JohnS. Andrews, a former Ohio RepubIndia with school districts in
lic.n Pnty cha irman who also served on an advisory committhe United States.
tee for Gerald Ford's presidential campaign in 1976, has died .
Cleveland recruiters will
· He was 8 1.
travel with school officials from
Andrews, a Toledo native, died of compHcatiom from diabetes Newark, N.J.; DeKalb County,
Su1]day at his home in Adamstown, Md., his wife, Ann, said.
Ga.; New York City, Baltimore,
Andrews won election as chairman of the Ohio Republican San Francisco and Philadelphia.
Party in I 965. The next year, the GOP won every statewide
The group will travel to four
office in Ohio. ·
cities in India for in.tetviews
After lt•aving the state chairmanship in 1973, Andrews was with job candid,1tes who pay
director of national aff.1irs for Toledo-based Owens-Illinois Inc.
for help in getting an American
placemem.
Carol Hauser, the Cleveland
schools' cxecmive director for .
42123 SR 7, Box 250 • Tupper Plalna, OH 45783
MONROE (AP) - The businessman who bought Ameri- human resources and adminiscana Amusement Park last year said Wednesday that he does not tration, said that of the 1,200
expec,t to open the park until 2002.
candidates imervicwed last year
Jerry Couch said planned improvements at the 68-acre attrac- in Cleveland, only 45 were cer- ,.a.ll.l......
Frl
Sat 9-4
tion, an amusement park since the 1920s, likely will take too tified in math or science. The
long for Ame1·icana to open for any part of the 2001 season.
district has about 77,006 stuTl1e park, located about 25 miles north of Cincinnati, hasn't
'
L..-.....r-

wilt impact alrpol't

Bombing mastermind gets IHe

'rip;;;

Robbery suspect enters plea

LIVING

Bonanzal

Worker$ unearth coal tar

Teacher search
goes to India

.•

Ex·GOP chairman dies

Park won't open this year

l

Quality Furniture·Plus, Inc.

(740) '667·7388 • 1·800·200·4005

•.

'

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Foreclosure
filed

Arthur Beegle

RACINE -Arthur Harold "Buzz" Beegle, 59, of Racine,
.• ~ed unexpectedly on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2001, in Columbus.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher-Acree
~ ~·un,eral Home in Pomeroy and will be announced upon completion.

··.- - - - - - - - - - - -

Meigs

...

from Page AI

~~ .authorized

advertising for

Dinner planned

):lids on that phase of the elef

;mcntary ~chool construe-

:. non .
As for the middle school
to be erected near the high
... s~hool, Engram saip th.ere
" will be little site work there
'this summer. He said the

, s~ftball field, whi ch is a part
, ''?.f that site, will be available
'for use.
' The
superintendent

including

construction

funds, of the district;
• accepted the Ohio Rea,ds
Grant
Supplemem
of
S14,000 to be used for
stipends to the volunteer
coo rdinators at each of the

reporte'd on a conversation

with Doug Little of the
' Meigs County Library Board
'··of Trustees regarding locat. it1g a library in RL!tland,
·· preferably on land adpcent
· to the new school.
' . Another possible . site pro. .posed by Buckley is the lot
1 now occupied by the ele.. mentary school which is
slated for demolition. The
Rutland fire Department
will use part of the lot, but
Buckley said it is large

seven elementary schools;
• accepted the resignation

of David Williams as a bus
driver;

•
hired
Catherine
Grosvenor-Hart and Gloria
VanReetl\ as tutors for
health . handicapped students
at $15 an hour;
• approved
numerous
enough . to accommodate
changes and additions to
two buildings.
board
policies, available for
The primary concern of
" ~oard members about locat- viewing in the superinten. ing a library on the con- dent's office;
• hired Herbert Redman
L 'struction
sit~ was whether
" the building would comple- and Jacqueline Wolfe as subment the new school. Board stitute . teachers fon ' the
'''members decided that was a remainder of the school year.
Attending the meeting
,: , matter for further discussion.
~ . . A proposal from Rutland besides Buckley and Rhone• regarding annexation to the mus were board members,
village was also discussed. Scott Walton, Wayne David,
:, :rhe superintendent said Norman Humphreys, Roger
. ,_Mayor Dick Fetty had Abbott and John Hood,
approached
him
about president.

•. '

•t
Ul
5 .

"·
"

··

'.

from Page A1

' •
;Columbus law· fitm of
! E!unter, Carnahan and Shoub.

.••-

f!l

'

h

•

Wilson, when c.ontacted
Thursday morning, ~aid he
was qnaware the ~tit had
been filed, and withh1;1d comment until he had an opportunity to review tl;'~ complaiMt.

:i:

LOCAL STO'CK I
~ch Coal - 23~
A1czo -48~
.
oAmTech/SBC - 471,

A~hland Inc . -

General Electric- 46:1
' Harley Davidson

38,,

,o.'r&amp;T-23
Bank One- 35),
S)lb Evans- 20
:BorgWarner- 431.
Champion - 2"1.
Charming Shops - Gl.
City Hokllng- gy,
Fodera! Mogul- 3),
IJSB- 23),
(Oannett- 66Y.
•'

43/,

Krnart -

e ~.

.

Kroger - ,24 ~~
Lands End - 23).
ltd. - 17),
Oak Hill Financial
14\
OVB-25
BBT- 36).
Peoples -17
Premier - 6'11
Rockwell-46
Rocky Boots - 4'/o

Licenses issued

Meigs

, , Our main concern In aU stgries Is
i
to be accurate. If you know of an

AD Shell- 58,
Sears-41
SllOney's - 1
Wai-Ma~ .:... SO
Wendy's.:.. 24'·

Worthington -

POMEROY -An action
for divorce has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Elizabeth
Parsley, Middleport, against
Clinton Parsley, Loga(l,
W..Va .
A d.issolution action has
been gran~ed to Beverly S.
Roush and Michael L.
Roush.

Bousters·to
meet
ROCKSPRINGS -The
next meeting of the Meigs
Band .Boosters will be held
Oil March 5 at 6:30p.m., in
the band room dt Meigs

Daily stock repor1s are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the preVious

day's transactions, prcivlded by Smith Pa~­
ners at Advest
Gallipolis.

The main number is 992-2156.
Oepar1ment e&gt;ttentions are:

1

Published avery ahemoon. Monday
111 Cou~ 51.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-clas&amp;· '
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohto Newspaper Association.

Qenoralllt.lnoger

Ext. 12

New•

·ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other services
Advtrtlolng

Ext. 3

Clrculotlon

Ext. 4

Clottlfled Ade

Ext, 5

To send e-mail
dallysenlinel@yahoo.com

Sl.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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By oarrilr or motor route
OnoWOik
$2
One month
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Ono yur
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Subscribers not de&amp;lrtng ld pay thta
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carrier service Is available .

· M•ll subsalntlon

ln ..de Melge co{ri\v · ·
13 Weeks
$27.30

26 waekt
52 Woeks

i

$53.82
$105.56

Ratti outtlde M..gs' County
13 Weeks ·
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Dorothy Gloeckner

Trustees to
mest

POMEROY - Dorothy Mae Gloeckner, 80. Pomeroy,
died on Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center 111
Gallipolis.
She was born on April 14, 1920 in Pomeroy. daughter of
the late Charles P. and Frances Meier Gloeckner. She wa&lt; a

SYR'A CUSE. - The Sutton Township Trustees will

Fish Fry
planned
M-'}RIETTA - Marier"
American Legion will hold
a round and square daqc c
and fish fry at 6 p.m. on Fri-

Reuair

$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

from f..geA1

immediate area, I decided to
work for the everyday person."
His first year started out
slow, mainly because he didn't
advertise, but it improved
~fter people began hearing
about him through word of
mouth. The increased business
and added revenue allowed
.him to purchase a panel
''·iruck, which he converted
'nto. a mobile work station.
. '·"Most individuals' around
· .~~ area are noc used to having a mobile repair service. A·
niajority oi local repair shops
are stationary and usually ·
-charge a hefty sum for pick"
up and delivery."
Beechler said mJny people
purchase a lawn tractor at a

large retail
,...

sto r~

· at1d then

rctircd ' busine s ~ owner and a homemaker. She was a lifctiml:!'

member of Soc red Heart Catholic Church and memb er of
the Council of Catholic Women .
Monday at 7 :30 p.m .. at
Surviving are a son .ond daughter-in-law, C harles "Sonny"
Syracuse Village Hall.
and Melody Gloeckner, a granddaughter. Elizabeth Ann
Gloec kner, and a great granddaughter, Rochelle Lynn
Gloeckner, all of Pomeroy; a sister, lillian Rich, Morgantown, W.Va .; an :1unc, Lorena Beegl,e, Pomeroy; and several
meces and nephews .
• In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
RACINE - The regular her sisters, Mary Louise Reed and Emma R&gt;dford, and a
meeting of the Racine brother, Joe Gloeckner.
Chapter 134 , Order of EastServices will be held at 10 a.m. on Friday, March 2, 2001
ern Star Will be held Mon- at Sacred Heart Caholi c Church, with Rev. Fr. Walter Hemz
day &lt;It 7 :30p.m. Mo ck initi - officiating. Burial will fol1ow in Sacred Heart CL•metery.
&lt;ltion will be held and offiFriends may call on Thursday, March I, 2001 from 7 to 9
cers art' urged to :tttt.•nd . p.m . at Fishcr-Acn:c Funt!ral Home in 'Pomt.'roy.
Rcfn.: shmencs will be served
A• \~ lgil servict' will De conducted at 8:30 a.m .
fo11owing th~ meeting.
meet in regular session on

Plan lodge
meeting

Road to close
LANGSVILLE Meigs
County Road I 0 from
Langsville to Dexter Will be
closed for ;1bout two weeks,
to allow for the repair of a ·

l:iridge. The detour is Ohio
124 to County Road. I at
Salem Center, then to
County Road 4, Bowles
Road.

Vigil planned
RACINE - A 24-hour
prayer vigil will be held at
Racine United Methodist
Church .on ·f riday at 6 p.m.
through Saturday at 6 p.m.
All are fnvited to attend.
'

Tickets on sale

Harlan Wehrung
POMEROY- Harlan HenryWehrung, 86, Pomerov, died
at his residence on Wednesday, feb. 28, 200 I.
He was born on Aug. 31, 1914 in Pomeroy, son .of the bte
Harry and Barbara Rapp Wehrung. He was a veteran of the
U.S. Navy. He was a member of Masonic Lodge 363 of Middleport for more than 50 years, and a member ofYork Rite
Bodie s of Mcig; County. He retired from the Philip Sporn
Plant in New Haven, W.Va.
·
.
Surviving are his wife of 60 years, Aileen Grace Rea
Wehrung, Pomeroy; a son and daughter-in-law. Harlan Craig
and Texanna J. Wehrung. and a daughter .and ·san-in-law,
Judith Rea and Jim Sisson, all of Pomeroy; four grandchildren, Jeffery Harlan Wehrung. Amy Marie Wallace, Debbie
Evans and Tom Werry; and four great-grandchildren, Harlan·
Wehrung,Jonathan Wehrung,J.T. Evans, and Jordan Evans.
Services will be held ' at 11:30 a. m. on Saturday, March 3,
2001 at fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Rev.
Mark Morrow officiating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pom eroy.
friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 6 to
9 p.m. Masonic services will be held at 8:30 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospic~.
Meigs County Unit, 115 E. Mem'?rial Drive, Pomeroy.

TUPPERS PlAINS Eastern boys' basketball
team members are se lling
qistrict tournament tickets

at the school. The teJm asks
tickets
be
purchased
through
teJm
members
because the team takes a

p~r~entagc ~f t~c" sales.
Gre~n

T-shirts are also on

sale for rhc gam~.
o

Legion
RACINE

t

0

meet

VALLEY WEATHER

Skies partly cloudy Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The National Weather Service ..says te,mperatures will
rcnuin ncar or below normal
for the next "~veral days.

Co ndi tions should remain
R:1 Cln c gc ner.all y dry through the

Aml!rican Legion Post 602 \\'el'h' ud .
Sun set to nighr will be :1.t
\vilJ meet on Thursday ,lt
(,:JO. A Jrawing :md Jllc.d (,; 23. Sunnse Friday will be
will· be at 7:117 a.m.
\Vill fnll~w the mee ting.

OES plans
meeting

to attt!'ud.

9~,

Poetma•tw: Send aeklrtss correc. tion&amp; to' The ·oany Sentinel, 111 Court .

News Departments

Comn1on

Divorce,
dissolution ·
filed

1,.

through Friday.

· · error In a story. call the newsroom

:' at (740) 992·2156.

p.m . "Swinging Country"
will perform. J.B . Wilson
will call fi gures .

csted ~and pnrents are urg~d

(USPS 21 3-Hit)
Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.

Correction Polley

County

Ple11 Cou rt to Donald Jay
Haning, 23, and Christy
Alecna Riley, 18, both of
Long Bottom; David Alan
Stanley, 32, Ravenswood,
W.Va., and Kristi Lynn Riddle, 32, Mineral Wells, W.Va.;·
and to Daniel LeRoy
Henry, 26, and Andrea
Marie McDonald, 24, both
of Langsville.

The Daily Sentinel
·· Reader Services

day, with music start.ing at 8

POMEROY - Marriage
liceJ}Ses b av~ bel!n issued in

High School. Plai1S for
upcotning Spring activities
will be discussed. /1,11 intn-

•' '

'A:EP -47:1

POMEROY- An action
for foreclosure has been
filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas . Court by
LaSalle
National Bank.
Orangeburg, N .Y., agaihst
Donnie
R.
Hoffman,
Pomeroy, and othcys, alleging default on a note and

annexation so village sewer
lines could be extended
across the property to serve mortgage agreemem in the
residences north of the ne\v amount of $62,900 and
school. No action was taken, · interest.
but it was decided to invite
the mayor to come to a
board meeting for further .
RACINE
Racine
· discussion.
American Legion will luve
In other business the
,a public ham and turkey
board:
dinner at the hall Sunday
• approved the revised per- with serving to begin at 11
manent appropriations for . a.m. c;ost for the dinner is
the 2000-2001 fiscJl year id • $5.
the amount of S23,922 ,722,
which includes Jll funds ,

n

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

•

"We've had a number of member~ in
our (Republican) caucus talk favorably
about that. It's going to have fair· hooring;. We'll listen to Jhe debate and ~~e
where it goes," Householder said.
·
The bill has the support of the Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association,
whose members work in Ohio's staterun prisons:
Last week the union proposed that
the state combine administrative, health
care and other servkes at the Grafton
priS&lt;m with an adjacent 1,400-bed staterun prison. The prisons department s~id
it would not make sense to combine· a
minimum-security prison with a me~i-

Ex-counselor faces accusation

'

r.
., .

Republican adds support to Democrats

WARREN (AP) - Workers at a Delphi Packard Electric
Systems division who lacked job protection in their union contract are being perm;mently laid off effective March 5.
Delphi spokesman Jim Houck said the 227 workers were
informed of the layoffi Mo~&lt;day and Tuesday.
Only workers hired after May 14, 1997 are affected because
oflanguage in the company's current agreement with Local 717 operated since the 1999 season. Couch bought it May 2000.
He said he has n~ plans to dismantle, sell or liquidate it.
of the International Union of Electronic W6rkers-Cqmmunications Workers of America.
About 5,200 other hourly workers were hired prior to that
date and are protected by lifetime job and income security
CLEVELAND (AP) -Researchers on Tuesday showed off a
agreements.
new device that ms surgically implanted into a spinal-cord
injury victim to allow him to talk easier and breathe without a
bulky ventilator. ,
Doctors at University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a civil complaint against the former president University developed the procedure, which they described as
being less riskY and less expensive than previous surgical
ofS.G. Donahue &amp; Co.
It accuses him of bilking investors out of$6 million and using implants. The procedure is funded by University Hospitals, the
much of the money to buy a Florida condo and land, and for Veterans Administration, U.S. Surgical Corp: and a three-year,
$300,000 grant from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
other personal expenses.
·
Medical experts described the device as a breakthrough for
The complaint was filed late Monday against Stephen G.
people
are on a ventilator after suffering spinal cord injuries.
Donahue, who resigned as president of his financial-services
companies Thursday. No criminal charges have been filed.
Donahue's attorney, Don Mendelsohn, declined comment.
~bike

. 'I

• . Thursday, March 1, 2001

MID.DLEPOR.T- Evangeli ne C lu pter 172. Order
of Eastern Sta r, will nh.'Ct on
Thursday ·at 7 p.m. at the

Middleport ·' lasonic Temple.

chance Of light rain aud snow
early, then a chanct' of light
snow. Low in rh~ ln id JOs ;Hid

high m the upper -lOs.
Monday... Mustly cloudy
with a cl1an ce of li gh t snow.
Low 27 to 31 and high ncar
40.
Tuesday... Pmly cloudy.
Low in the upper 20s and
high in the mid -lOs.

Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy.
Low in the upper 20s. Light
north wind.

Fnday... Parcly cloudy. High
in the lower 50s. Northeast
wind arOLmd Ill mph .

friday

mgbt. .. l'.1rtly
cloudy. Low in the luwt'r 30s.

Extended forecast:
Satu rday.. . Partly cloudy.
have it delivered to their High in the lnw~..·r 50s.
Sunday... Partl y cloudy. A
home. However, once the
tractor be comes non-operational, they quickly, realize
they have no way of trans-·
porting it to a repair shop.
, "This is were I fit into the
picture. In one convenient
trip. J ca n travel to the customer's home, repair the

engine and. be back on the
road in no time flat. '
" It saves them both time
and money."
Beechler also repairs lawn
mowers, chain saws, string
trimmers, garden tillers , and a

host of two-cycle engine\. He
is licensed in both Ohio and
West Virginia and ca n se rvice
most na·me brands, including

Kohler, Honda, Robin, Murray, Briggs and C raftsman.
Beechler's mobile repair

IIIIIIIICII

6:45, 9:50

111

service is open 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, and can be ·

ildalldlt

reachod by calling 1-866299-4-l-l:i.

~~Drm~.llsie .

WASHER
Frost Free
14 Cu. Ft.
Adjustable Shelves

43~

lp11ooul)llodPI,Iie~

IIIPDT.

r&lt;1

7: ,9:40

At L AGES . ALL TIMES $4.00

�PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

P&amp;G eyes brand sell-off
CINCINNATI (AP)- The Procter &amp; Gatllble Co. is looking at more ways to streamline operations, and that might mean
selling marginal brands and forming more joint ventures, a
company executive said.
Lost week, P&amp;G and Coca-Cola Co. formed a new, indepen-.
dent snack-food company that will sell P&amp;G brands including
Pringles chips and Sunny Delight juice drink.
"We may at some point look at those models on other· businesses as well;' Clayton C. Daley, P&amp;G's chief financial officer,
said Tuesday at a consumer-products conference in New York.
The goal is to free P&amp;G's resources to focus on the biggest of
its 300 brands. Industry watchers have speculated that P&amp;G will
continue to pare its struggling food and beverage business to
relieve some of the drag on earnings.

•

Packo's considers expansion
TOLEDO (AP) - Tony Packo may be taking his famous
Hungarian hot dogs and chili sauce outside ofToledo for the
first time.
The restaurant made famous by cross-dressing Cpl. Max
Klinger on TV's "M-A-S-H" is working on a deal to open an
outlet in Dundee, Mich.
Pa cku 's already ships its hot dog sauce, spicy picll.les and chili
aGross the country.

But for yc.m, the family- operated business has r&lt;sisted outside
offers to c·xpand. Instead, it has slowly built four restaurants in
Toledo and its suburbs.
Th~ restaurant's owners said Wednesday they hope to complete :1 deal within the next few weeks co build a new store in
south east Michigan near Cabela's - an outdoors superstore

that draws thousands of people on weekends.

Delphi cuts 227 jobs

1bunch1y, March 1,1001

COLUMBUS (AP) Minority
House Democrats and public employees
have found an unlikely ally - a Republican- in their fight to get private contractors out of the state prison business.
Rep. John Willamowski, whose
northwest Ohio district includes three
prisons, said he's not opposed to having
private companies run some state services -just not prisons.
"There's just certain things I don't
think you ought to privatize. I wouldn't
want to privatize a local police force. I
wouldn't want you to privatize the local
courts," Willamowski, of Lima, said
Wednesday. "The state ought to run its
own prisons."

Ohio . has two state prisons run by
private companies: a I ,380-bed medium-security prisop in Conneaut and a
550-bed prison in Grafton designed for
felony drunken-driving offenders. A
third
privately run
prison, in
Youngstown,· ho uses federal prisoners
and is not under the supervision of the
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction.
Detnocrats and unions have opposed

' privatization of prisons since the Legi;lature fir-St began debating the idea about
10 years ago. Under current law, the
Conneaut and Grafton prisons must be
run privately and contractors must do it
for 5 percent below what the state calculates it would spend to run them.
Willamowski has introduced a bill

that would- bar private companies from
running any prison.
The state chose not to renew the
contraci of CiviGenics, the Marlboro,
Mass.-based company running the
North Coast Correctional Treatment
Facility in Grafton. The prison changed
wardens five times in 18 months, ms
fined for not mai,-,taining minimum
staffing levels and has had numerous
other problems, the prisons department
said.
The department hopes to have a new
contractor in place in May. CiviGenics'
contract runs out on June 30.
Democrats see Willamowsk.i's bill as a
chance to get the attention of majority
Republican leadership on the issue. The
bill was introduced with seven co-sponsc;ns, six of them Democrats.
"When they found a Republican to
do it, 1 knew they were going to jump
on that . They're smart enough and
diplomatic enough to know that a
Republican is going to have to carry
that," said Sen. Robert Hagan, a
Youngstown Oetnocrat and constant
critic of privately run prisons.
However, that may not be enough to
carry the bill through. Williamowski
introduced siritilar legislation in the last
session that didn't make it past two comntittee hearing;. Speaker Larry Householder, a Republican from Glenford,
referred the new bill to the State Government Committee.

New breathing aid unveiled

um-security one.

Union spokesman PeterWray said the
union's plan would be less costly t~an ·
hiring a pr.ivate contr.actor.

"It's beyond us why somebody would
oppose allowing the department to ;,ttn
the facility on the cheapest basis possible;• he said. "What's the point of priyatization if not that?'.'

Seuate President· Richard Finan; , a
Cincinnati Republican, said some state
services can save the state money. He's

waiting for the House to act befe,e
assessing the bill's chances in the Senate.
"I still believe in privatizing prisons at
a cer.tain level," Finan said. "We want ~~~e
lowest and best bidder and we want
competitive bidding and that's the way
."
you get tt.
•' ·

&lt;Ients.

Gliateda.losses deepen

CLEVELAND (AP) - Biotechnology company Gliat~ch
Inc., hurt by the recall of its surgical gel, reported WednesdaY, 'its
fourth-quarter loss ms twice as big as the year-ago period and
that its trading activities were under investigation. .
The gel is the company's only U.S. product and is used, .to
prevent scarring and adhesions after back surgery. In January,
Gliatech voluntarily recalled the gel in the United States and
overseas due to. a separate recall of a raw material used in the
item.
The Cleveland-based company said Wednesday the Nrtioital
Association of Securities Dealers was reviewing trading activity
of its stock that occurred before an August announcement that
Guilforii Pharmaceuticals Inc. of Baltimore had called off a
planned acquisition of GHatech. .
.
.
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - ·A strike by Comair pilots would be
Gliatech s:ild in a news release that .it was cooperating with
felt quickly at Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International the NASD. A message seeking further comment was left with
LIMA (AP) -A man was sentenced Wednesday co life with- Airport, where the regional carrier operates more daily flights company spokesman Adam Griclley.
out parole for planning a firebombing to try to get back stolen than any other airline.
·
drugs. A woman and four children died in the fast-moving
Comair's 323 daily flights
house fire.
.
there dwarf the' 182 of' runnerSamuel Williams could have been set;tenced to death. Judge up Delta Air Lines, which owns
Richard Warren of Allen Count)' Common Pleas Court accept- Comair and also faces the posed the penalty recommended by a jury. Jurors deliberated for sibility of a pilot strike. Togcthabout six hours over two days.
er the companies ·account for
"I was kind of disappointed," said Diane Jones, a sister of one · 90 percent of the Cincinnati
of the victims. "I wanted him to get the death penalty.~
airport's daily flights.
Comair · pilots could go on
Williams, 24, of Lima, was found guilty Feb. 13 of complicity to comntit aggravated murder.
strike as soon as March 26 if
they reject the latest contract
offer, which management says
would make those· pilots the
TIFFIN (AP) -A woman accused of participating in rob- best~paid among regional airberies of pizza delivery drivers and pizza shops has pleaded hnes. Ptlots of Adanta-based
.
, Delta could walk out as soon as
innocent.
K.1therine Cullen, 20, pleaded innocent to four felony April 1. President Bush .could
charges Tuesday in Seneca ·County Common Pleas Court.
·step tn to block etther stnke.
She and David Myers, 29, are accused in a string of six robThe ai_rport .could ask its
beries. .
other maJor a~rhnes to operate
Cullen is charged with complicity to aggravaied robbery with additional flights to serve pasa firearm, complicity to attempted aggravated robbery with a s~ngers· if C~matr or Qelta
firearm, and two counts of possession of criminal tools.
pilots strtke, atrport spokesman
Ted Bushelman said Wednesday.
Those 10 :iirlines include TWA,
US Airways, United, American,
DAYTON (AP) - Discovery of an underground vat of Continental and Northwest.
chemical residue possibly a century old is going to make a
downtown contruction project more costly than expected.
City officials say it could cost at least $500,000 to remove the
buried coal tar from the site of the new Relizon headquarters.
· The city ha~ agreed to pay for the cleanup. It already had
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
• donated the land, which the city bought last year for $5.5 milCleveland public schools, in
lion. The city is also putting up S1 · million for construction.
need of math and science
An environmental study was completed before the city
teachers, are headed to India.
bought the land. But test borings found no evidence of contaThree delegates irom the dismination, according to Norm Essman, Dayton's acting director
trict, including one teacher, will
of economic development:
leave March 11 for a 12-day
recruiting trip to be paid for by
a New York company that
matches teacher candidates in
TOLEDO (AP) -JohnS. Andrews, a former Ohio RepubIndia with school districts in
lic.n Pnty cha irman who also served on an advisory committhe United States.
tee for Gerald Ford's presidential campaign in 1976, has died .
Cleveland recruiters will
· He was 8 1.
travel with school officials from
Andrews, a Toledo native, died of compHcatiom from diabetes Newark, N.J.; DeKalb County,
Su1]day at his home in Adamstown, Md., his wife, Ann, said.
Ga.; New York City, Baltimore,
Andrews won election as chairman of the Ohio Republican San Francisco and Philadelphia.
Party in I 965. The next year, the GOP won every statewide
The group will travel to four
office in Ohio. ·
cities in India for in.tetviews
After lt•aving the state chairmanship in 1973, Andrews was with job candid,1tes who pay
director of national aff.1irs for Toledo-based Owens-Illinois Inc.
for help in getting an American
placemem.
Carol Hauser, the Cleveland
schools' cxecmive director for .
42123 SR 7, Box 250 • Tupper Plalna, OH 45783
MONROE (AP) - The businessman who bought Ameri- human resources and adminiscana Amusement Park last year said Wednesday that he does not tration, said that of the 1,200
expec,t to open the park until 2002.
candidates imervicwed last year
Jerry Couch said planned improvements at the 68-acre attrac- in Cleveland, only 45 were cer- ,.a.ll.l......
Frl
Sat 9-4
tion, an amusement park since the 1920s, likely will take too tified in math or science. The
long for Ame1·icana to open for any part of the 2001 season.
district has about 77,006 stuTl1e park, located about 25 miles north of Cincinnati, hasn't
'
L..-.....r-

wilt impact alrpol't

Bombing mastermind gets IHe

'rip;;;

Robbery suspect enters plea

LIVING

Bonanzal

Worker$ unearth coal tar

Teacher search
goes to India

.•

Ex·GOP chairman dies

Park won't open this year

l

Quality Furniture·Plus, Inc.

(740) '667·7388 • 1·800·200·4005

•.

'

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Foreclosure
filed

Arthur Beegle

RACINE -Arthur Harold "Buzz" Beegle, 59, of Racine,
.• ~ed unexpectedly on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2001, in Columbus.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher-Acree
~ ~·un,eral Home in Pomeroy and will be announced upon completion.

··.- - - - - - - - - - - -

Meigs

...

from Page AI

~~ .authorized

advertising for

Dinner planned

):lids on that phase of the elef

;mcntary ~chool construe-

:. non .
As for the middle school
to be erected near the high
... s~hool, Engram saip th.ere
" will be little site work there
'this summer. He said the

, s~ftball field, whi ch is a part
, ''?.f that site, will be available
'for use.
' The
superintendent

including

construction

funds, of the district;
• accepted the Ohio Rea,ds
Grant
Supplemem
of
S14,000 to be used for
stipends to the volunteer
coo rdinators at each of the

reporte'd on a conversation

with Doug Little of the
' Meigs County Library Board
'··of Trustees regarding locat. it1g a library in RL!tland,
·· preferably on land adpcent
· to the new school.
' . Another possible . site pro. .posed by Buckley is the lot
1 now occupied by the ele.. mentary school which is
slated for demolition. The
Rutland fire Department
will use part of the lot, but
Buckley said it is large

seven elementary schools;
• accepted the resignation

of David Williams as a bus
driver;

•
hired
Catherine
Grosvenor-Hart and Gloria
VanReetl\ as tutors for
health . handicapped students
at $15 an hour;
• approved
numerous
enough . to accommodate
changes and additions to
two buildings.
board
policies, available for
The primary concern of
" ~oard members about locat- viewing in the superinten. ing a library on the con- dent's office;
• hired Herbert Redman
L 'struction
sit~ was whether
" the building would comple- and Jacqueline Wolfe as subment the new school. Board stitute . teachers fon ' the
'''members decided that was a remainder of the school year.
Attending the meeting
,: , matter for further discussion.
~ . . A proposal from Rutland besides Buckley and Rhone• regarding annexation to the mus were board members,
village was also discussed. Scott Walton, Wayne David,
:, :rhe superintendent said Norman Humphreys, Roger
. ,_Mayor Dick Fetty had Abbott and John Hood,
approached
him
about president.

•. '

•t
Ul
5 .

"·
"

··

'.

from Page A1

' •
;Columbus law· fitm of
! E!unter, Carnahan and Shoub.

.••-

f!l

'

h

•

Wilson, when c.ontacted
Thursday morning, ~aid he
was qnaware the ~tit had
been filed, and withh1;1d comment until he had an opportunity to review tl;'~ complaiMt.

:i:

LOCAL STO'CK I
~ch Coal - 23~
A1czo -48~
.
oAmTech/SBC - 471,

A~hland Inc . -

General Electric- 46:1
' Harley Davidson

38,,

,o.'r&amp;T-23
Bank One- 35),
S)lb Evans- 20
:BorgWarner- 431.
Champion - 2"1.
Charming Shops - Gl.
City Hokllng- gy,
Fodera! Mogul- 3),
IJSB- 23),
(Oannett- 66Y.
•'

43/,

Krnart -

e ~.

.

Kroger - ,24 ~~
Lands End - 23).
ltd. - 17),
Oak Hill Financial
14\
OVB-25
BBT- 36).
Peoples -17
Premier - 6'11
Rockwell-46
Rocky Boots - 4'/o

Licenses issued

Meigs

, , Our main concern In aU stgries Is
i
to be accurate. If you know of an

AD Shell- 58,
Sears-41
SllOney's - 1
Wai-Ma~ .:... SO
Wendy's.:.. 24'·

Worthington -

POMEROY -An action
for divorce has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Elizabeth
Parsley, Middleport, against
Clinton Parsley, Loga(l,
W..Va .
A d.issolution action has
been gran~ed to Beverly S.
Roush and Michael L.
Roush.

Bousters·to
meet
ROCKSPRINGS -The
next meeting of the Meigs
Band .Boosters will be held
Oil March 5 at 6:30p.m., in
the band room dt Meigs

Daily stock repor1s are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the preVious

day's transactions, prcivlded by Smith Pa~­
ners at Advest
Gallipolis.

The main number is 992-2156.
Oepar1ment e&gt;ttentions are:

1

Published avery ahemoon. Monday
111 Cou~ 51.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-clas&amp;· '
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohto Newspaper Association.

Qenoralllt.lnoger

Ext. 12

New•

·ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other services
Advtrtlolng

Ext. 3

Clrculotlon

Ext. 4

Clottlfled Ade

Ext, 5

To send e-mail
dallysenlinel@yahoo.com

Sl.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription ·rates

By oarrilr or motor route
OnoWOik
$2
One month
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Ono yur
$104
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Subscribers not de&amp;lrtng ld pay thta
carrier may remn In adv,nc:(!l direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Cradh will be given
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mail permitted In ~m~as where ht.~me
carrier service Is available .

· M•ll subsalntlon

ln ..de Melge co{ri\v · ·
13 Weeks
$27.30

26 waekt
52 Woeks

i

$53.82
$105.56

Ratti outtlde M..gs' County
13 Weeks ·
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Dorothy Gloeckner

Trustees to
mest

POMEROY - Dorothy Mae Gloeckner, 80. Pomeroy,
died on Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center 111
Gallipolis.
She was born on April 14, 1920 in Pomeroy. daughter of
the late Charles P. and Frances Meier Gloeckner. She wa&lt; a

SYR'A CUSE. - The Sutton Township Trustees will

Fish Fry
planned
M-'}RIETTA - Marier"
American Legion will hold
a round and square daqc c
and fish fry at 6 p.m. on Fri-

Reuair

$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

from f..geA1

immediate area, I decided to
work for the everyday person."
His first year started out
slow, mainly because he didn't
advertise, but it improved
~fter people began hearing
about him through word of
mouth. The increased business
and added revenue allowed
.him to purchase a panel
''·iruck, which he converted
'nto. a mobile work station.
. '·"Most individuals' around
· .~~ area are noc used to having a mobile repair service. A·
niajority oi local repair shops
are stationary and usually ·
-charge a hefty sum for pick"
up and delivery."
Beechler said mJny people
purchase a lawn tractor at a

large retail
,...

sto r~

· at1d then

rctircd ' busine s ~ owner and a homemaker. She was a lifctiml:!'

member of Soc red Heart Catholic Church and memb er of
the Council of Catholic Women .
Monday at 7 :30 p.m .. at
Surviving are a son .ond daughter-in-law, C harles "Sonny"
Syracuse Village Hall.
and Melody Gloeckner, a granddaughter. Elizabeth Ann
Gloec kner, and a great granddaughter, Rochelle Lynn
Gloeckner, all of Pomeroy; a sister, lillian Rich, Morgantown, W.Va .; an :1unc, Lorena Beegl,e, Pomeroy; and several
meces and nephews .
• In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
RACINE - The regular her sisters, Mary Louise Reed and Emma R&gt;dford, and a
meeting of the Racine brother, Joe Gloeckner.
Chapter 134 , Order of EastServices will be held at 10 a.m. on Friday, March 2, 2001
ern Star Will be held Mon- at Sacred Heart Caholi c Church, with Rev. Fr. Walter Hemz
day &lt;It 7 :30p.m. Mo ck initi - officiating. Burial will fol1ow in Sacred Heart CL•metery.
&lt;ltion will be held and offiFriends may call on Thursday, March I, 2001 from 7 to 9
cers art' urged to :tttt.•nd . p.m . at Fishcr-Acn:c Funt!ral Home in 'Pomt.'roy.
Rcfn.: shmencs will be served
A• \~ lgil servict' will De conducted at 8:30 a.m .
fo11owing th~ meeting.
meet in regular session on

Plan lodge
meeting

Road to close
LANGSVILLE Meigs
County Road I 0 from
Langsville to Dexter Will be
closed for ;1bout two weeks,
to allow for the repair of a ·

l:iridge. The detour is Ohio
124 to County Road. I at
Salem Center, then to
County Road 4, Bowles
Road.

Vigil planned
RACINE - A 24-hour
prayer vigil will be held at
Racine United Methodist
Church .on ·f riday at 6 p.m.
through Saturday at 6 p.m.
All are fnvited to attend.
'

Tickets on sale

Harlan Wehrung
POMEROY- Harlan HenryWehrung, 86, Pomerov, died
at his residence on Wednesday, feb. 28, 200 I.
He was born on Aug. 31, 1914 in Pomeroy, son .of the bte
Harry and Barbara Rapp Wehrung. He was a veteran of the
U.S. Navy. He was a member of Masonic Lodge 363 of Middleport for more than 50 years, and a member ofYork Rite
Bodie s of Mcig; County. He retired from the Philip Sporn
Plant in New Haven, W.Va.
·
.
Surviving are his wife of 60 years, Aileen Grace Rea
Wehrung, Pomeroy; a son and daughter-in-law. Harlan Craig
and Texanna J. Wehrung. and a daughter .and ·san-in-law,
Judith Rea and Jim Sisson, all of Pomeroy; four grandchildren, Jeffery Harlan Wehrung. Amy Marie Wallace, Debbie
Evans and Tom Werry; and four great-grandchildren, Harlan·
Wehrung,Jonathan Wehrung,J.T. Evans, and Jordan Evans.
Services will be held ' at 11:30 a. m. on Saturday, March 3,
2001 at fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Rev.
Mark Morrow officiating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pom eroy.
friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 6 to
9 p.m. Masonic services will be held at 8:30 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospic~.
Meigs County Unit, 115 E. Mem'?rial Drive, Pomeroy.

TUPPERS PlAINS Eastern boys' basketball
team members are se lling
qistrict tournament tickets

at the school. The teJm asks
tickets
be
purchased
through
teJm
members
because the team takes a

p~r~entagc ~f t~c" sales.
Gre~n

T-shirts are also on

sale for rhc gam~.
o

Legion
RACINE

t

0

meet

VALLEY WEATHER

Skies partly cloudy Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The National Weather Service ..says te,mperatures will
rcnuin ncar or below normal
for the next "~veral days.

Co ndi tions should remain
R:1 Cln c gc ner.all y dry through the

Aml!rican Legion Post 602 \\'el'h' ud .
Sun set to nighr will be :1.t
\vilJ meet on Thursday ,lt
(,:JO. A Jrawing :md Jllc.d (,; 23. Sunnse Friday will be
will· be at 7:117 a.m.
\Vill fnll~w the mee ting.

OES plans
meeting

to attt!'ud.

9~,

Poetma•tw: Send aeklrtss correc. tion&amp; to' The ·oany Sentinel, 111 Court .

News Departments

Comn1on

Divorce,
dissolution ·
filed

1,.

through Friday.

· · error In a story. call the newsroom

:' at (740) 992·2156.

p.m . "Swinging Country"
will perform. J.B . Wilson
will call fi gures .

csted ~and pnrents are urg~d

(USPS 21 3-Hit)
Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.

Correction Polley

County

Ple11 Cou rt to Donald Jay
Haning, 23, and Christy
Alecna Riley, 18, both of
Long Bottom; David Alan
Stanley, 32, Ravenswood,
W.Va., and Kristi Lynn Riddle, 32, Mineral Wells, W.Va.;·
and to Daniel LeRoy
Henry, 26, and Andrea
Marie McDonald, 24, both
of Langsville.

The Daily Sentinel
·· Reader Services

day, with music start.ing at 8

POMEROY - Marriage
liceJ}Ses b av~ bel!n issued in

High School. Plai1S for
upcotning Spring activities
will be discussed. /1,11 intn-

•' '

'A:EP -47:1

POMEROY- An action
for foreclosure has been
filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas . Court by
LaSalle
National Bank.
Orangeburg, N .Y., agaihst
Donnie
R.
Hoffman,
Pomeroy, and othcys, alleging default on a note and

annexation so village sewer
lines could be extended
across the property to serve mortgage agreemem in the
residences north of the ne\v amount of $62,900 and
school. No action was taken, · interest.
but it was decided to invite
the mayor to come to a
board meeting for further .
RACINE
Racine
· discussion.
American Legion will luve
In other business the
,a public ham and turkey
board:
dinner at the hall Sunday
• approved the revised per- with serving to begin at 11
manent appropriations for . a.m. c;ost for the dinner is
the 2000-2001 fiscJl year id • $5.
the amount of S23,922 ,722,
which includes Jll funds ,

n

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

•

"We've had a number of member~ in
our (Republican) caucus talk favorably
about that. It's going to have fair· hooring;. We'll listen to Jhe debate and ~~e
where it goes," Householder said.
·
The bill has the support of the Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association,
whose members work in Ohio's staterun prisons:
Last week the union proposed that
the state combine administrative, health
care and other servkes at the Grafton
priS&lt;m with an adjacent 1,400-bed staterun prison. The prisons department s~id
it would not make sense to combine· a
minimum-security prison with a me~i-

Ex-counselor faces accusation

'

r.
., .

Republican adds support to Democrats

WARREN (AP) - Workers at a Delphi Packard Electric
Systems division who lacked job protection in their union contract are being perm;mently laid off effective March 5.
Delphi spokesman Jim Houck said the 227 workers were
informed of the layoffi Mo~&lt;day and Tuesday.
Only workers hired after May 14, 1997 are affected because
oflanguage in the company's current agreement with Local 717 operated since the 1999 season. Couch bought it May 2000.
He said he has n~ plans to dismantle, sell or liquidate it.
of the International Union of Electronic W6rkers-Cqmmunications Workers of America.
About 5,200 other hourly workers were hired prior to that
date and are protected by lifetime job and income security
CLEVELAND (AP) -Researchers on Tuesday showed off a
agreements.
new device that ms surgically implanted into a spinal-cord
injury victim to allow him to talk easier and breathe without a
bulky ventilator. ,
Doctors at University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a civil complaint against the former president University developed the procedure, which they described as
being less riskY and less expensive than previous surgical
ofS.G. Donahue &amp; Co.
It accuses him of bilking investors out of$6 million and using implants. The procedure is funded by University Hospitals, the
much of the money to buy a Florida condo and land, and for Veterans Administration, U.S. Surgical Corp: and a three-year,
$300,000 grant from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
other personal expenses.
·
Medical experts described the device as a breakthrough for
The complaint was filed late Monday against Stephen G.
people
are on a ventilator after suffering spinal cord injuries.
Donahue, who resigned as president of his financial-services
companies Thursday. No criminal charges have been filed.
Donahue's attorney, Don Mendelsohn, declined comment.
~bike

. 'I

• . Thursday, March 1, 2001

MID.DLEPOR.T- Evangeli ne C lu pter 172. Order
of Eastern Sta r, will nh.'Ct on
Thursday ·at 7 p.m. at the

Middleport ·' lasonic Temple.

chance Of light rain aud snow
early, then a chanct' of light
snow. Low in rh~ ln id JOs ;Hid

high m the upper -lOs.
Monday... Mustly cloudy
with a cl1an ce of li gh t snow.
Low 27 to 31 and high ncar
40.
Tuesday... Pmly cloudy.
Low in the upper 20s and
high in the mid -lOs.

Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy.
Low in the upper 20s. Light
north wind.

Fnday... Parcly cloudy. High
in the lower 50s. Northeast
wind arOLmd Ill mph .

friday

mgbt. .. l'.1rtly
cloudy. Low in the luwt'r 30s.

Extended forecast:
Satu rday.. . Partly cloudy.
have it delivered to their High in the lnw~..·r 50s.
Sunday... Partl y cloudy. A
home. However, once the
tractor be comes non-operational, they quickly, realize
they have no way of trans-·
porting it to a repair shop.
, "This is were I fit into the
picture. In one convenient
trip. J ca n travel to the customer's home, repair the

engine and. be back on the
road in no time flat. '
" It saves them both time
and money."
Beechler also repairs lawn
mowers, chain saws, string
trimmers, garden tillers , and a

host of two-cycle engine\. He
is licensed in both Ohio and
West Virginia and ca n se rvice
most na·me brands, including

Kohler, Honda, Robin, Murray, Briggs and C raftsman.
Beechler's mobile repair

IIIIIIIICII

6:45, 9:50

111

service is open 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, and can be ·

ildalldlt

reachod by calling 1-866299-4-l-l:i.

~~Drm~.llsie .

WASHER
Frost Free
14 Cu. Ft.
Adjustable Shelves

43~

lp11ooul)llodPI,Iie~

IIIPDT.

r&lt;1

7: ,9:40

At L AGES . ALL TIMES $4.00

�.

Opinion

'he Daily Sentinel

PageA4

'lhurscYy. Mllrch 1. 2001

Dear Ann Landers: My
boyfriend and I have been together
for almost rwo years. "Sherman" is
charming, witty, sexy and intelligent. However, we seem to have
differenr ideas about entertaining.
When I had my own place, I
often had dinner parties for 15 or
20 people. The apartment I live in
with Sherman is too small for large
gatherings. Also, there is no dining
room to speak of, so we must eat in
the kitchen. Because of the space
limitations,! haven't had any dinner

•

'£stt168sMtl i111.948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
Gent1111l· Manager

R. Shawn Lewle
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

l.Antn to th~ tditDr" tltw wdcomt. TlltJ rhottUI M flu lhll" JOO wnb. A.U ltllfrt llt'f rU}H:t
to ttlitinr GJUi m•m be $iflltd ctttl inc!liM tuldrtrr 11111i uUphtHit 11JUilblr. N9 liMit,.,., Wlun Ifill
IH lllbUJhrd. IAtttn should ht irr. good 1M~, alldrusinr imtu, not fJU'OIIlllill...
·

parties since I moved in.

Tht opinion' ¥X1"1kfi in lht column HWw,. th4 tolllfftltu ofth• Ohkl Y.U.,PdiUIWtf
Co. 'r «litorlttl board, unlnr olht,..,.,;.~, nnml

. Sherman does not like unexpected visitors, and rarely has people
over. I ?ave several friends, and
want them to feel welcome in my

OUR VIEW

home. However, Sherman is very

unpleasant when guests drop in. He
refuses to socialize, and stays in the
be~room

Save GDC!

•••

Here's how you can help:
• Ohio League for the Mentally Retarded, P.O..Box 3324,
Zanesville, Ohio 43702, phone 740-450-0306 or 450-4542314, e-maillinklady@cyberzane.net.
• Gov. Taft, 77 High St., 30th Floor, Columbus, Ohio 432156117, phone 614-466-3555, fax 614-466-9354.
• Kenneth Ritchey, director, Ohio MR/DD, 1810 Sullivant
Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43223-1239, phone 614-644-7342, fax
614-752-8551.
• Dr. Michael Dey, director, GDC, 2500 Ohio Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, phone 446-1642, fax 740-446-1341.
.
• State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, 10899 Cropp St.,
,Bourneville, Ohio 45657, phone 740-626-2749.
• U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, P.O. Box 580, Lucasville, Ohio •
45648, phone 740-353-5171.
.
• State Rep.John Carey,401 S.AtkansasAve.,Wellston,Ohio
45692, phone 740-384-6604.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

'

Thday is Thursday, March 1, the 60th day of2001. There .are 305
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Forty years ago, on March 1, 1%1, President Kennedy established
the Peace Corps.
On this date:
In 1781 , the Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation.
,
In 1790, Congress authorized the 6rst U.S. Ceruius.
In 1845, President 'JYler signed .a congressional resolution to
annex the Republic ofTeJCJS.
In 1864, Rebecca Lee became the first black woman to receive
an American medical degree, from Boston's New England Female
1
Medical College.
.
In I H67. Nebraska became the 37th state.
In 1872, Congress authorized creation ofYellowstone NationaL
Park.
In 1932, the'infant son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh was kidnapped from the f.1mily home near Hopewell, NJ. Remains identified as those of the baby were found the following May.
In 1954, Puerto Rican nationali•ts opened fire from the gallery
of the U.S. House of Representatives, wounding five congressmen.
In 1981, Irish Republican Army member Bobby Sands began a
hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland. He died 65
days later.
Ten years ago: President Bush said "we've kicked the Vietnam
syndrome once and for all" following the allied victory in the Gulf
War. The U.S. embassy in Kuwait officially reopened. Edwin H.
Land, inventor of polarizing filters and Polaroid instant photography, died in Cambridge, Mass., at age 81.
Five years ago: President Clinton slapped economic sanctions on
Colombia, concluding authorities had not fully cooperated with
rl1e U.S. war on drug.. The Food and Drug Administration
approved a powerful new AIDS drug, saying ritonavir could pro-.
long the lives of severely ill patients, at least slighdy.
· One year ago: Candidates in both major parties turned their
focu.• to Super Tuesday, a day aJierTexas Gov. George W. B~h won
primaries in Virginia, North Dakota and Washington state.

watching teltivision until

lonely.
I say he is being unreasonable.
He says I'm being selfish. We are
having too many disagreements
· over this, and it is hurting our rela-

Ann
Landers

tionship. I need some adVice. -

they leave. I can live with that, but
then he becomes angry with me for
"taking away his evenings."
Sherman wants me to stop having people in the house. I have
. agreed not to have any more dinner
parties, and think that is enough of
a compromise, but I shouldn 't have

Beyond Irritation in Toronto
Dear Toronto: I have a h~&amp;nch
there are deeper problems in the
relationship than the one you
describe. Your words "isolated and
lonely" were the red flags . Sherman
sounds extremely antisocial and
controlling. You two must get some .
counseling and put the real issues
on the table. And the sooner the
better.
Dear Ann Landers: Last year,
my husba1~d and I found our dream

to go to a restaurant l'Very ume I
want td entertain :1 friend . I realize

hou Se. Everything was wonderful
until my mother- in-law decided to

ADVICE

Shernun likes to rdax after a hard · buy the house next door. l knew
day at work, but I feel ISOlated and this was goi 11g co be a serious prob-

Where will we be .30 years from now?

regularly scheduled column.)
I imagine folks·in Las Vegas laughed 60
yean ago when a hand(ul of dn~amen
began expn~ssing their vision. The same
goes for Bransonites. And people mutt
have · howled when one man and his
mouie began planning a world-clw
entertainment complex in Buena Vls!:a.
Why? Some people simply can't think
outsi~e of the box. But all those laughs
have turned to wonderment now. The
same thing could happen here - if we
want it to.
Where do you go for big-time entertainment?
To the south, there's Huntington about m hour from Pomeroy, and not
much to do if yo'l 4on't like up-andcoming bands performing live music. To
the east, there's Charleston - about an
hour from Point Pleasant, and again, not
much to do if you don't like up-andcoming bands.
To the north, there's Athens - about
an. hour from Gallipolis, but there's not
too much to do there aside from Ohio
University's . tine offerings. As for the
west, there's Cincinnati, a place with

.Shawn
Lewis
MY VIEW
much to do, bui it's two houn away,
We shouldn't have to drive an hour to
have an. entertaining evening, but we do
because we want - nay, crave - things
to do.
By the wne token, ·If thi;'ii-county
region had big-time entertainment
offerings, folks from ,Cincinnati,
Charleston, Huntington and Athens
would come here.
·
Imagine this lineup:
• An outdoor amphitheater capable of
seating 7,000 un!ier its half-roof and
another 10,000 on its hillside. Such
venues are quite popular and draw the
biggest names in music. Speaking from
experience, people do drive two houn
or more to see The Rolling Stones,
Garth Brooks, Liza Minnelli, etc.
• A ~or theme park that could compete with or, better yet, peacefully coexist with Paramount's Kings lsbnd. No
offense to Huntington's Camden Park,
but folks in southeast Ohio and all of
West Virginia have to drive the better
part of a day to get good, exciting family entertainment.
,
• A major. river rafting/boating putlet
that both rent~ vessels! to tourists and
offered guided tours dOwn to majestic
Ohio' River. The Ohio is such a wonderful asset, but for some reason, the cricounty region hasn't done a good job
tapping its potential. Point Pleasant's
Riverfront Park will certainly help and

.'

'HARDBALL'

Stanley·Kramer.showed us ·right.and .wrong .
BY CHRII MATTH~

WASHINGTON - I love daring
students who visit this capital each
spring co stand and confess a personal
cause they know to be unpopular with
the ·rest of their class. It's my rough test
to sort the wheat from the chaff.
Hollywood producer Stanley Kramer
spent a lifetime standing ·up for such
causes. His death at 87 this week
reminds us that, fortunately for this
country, leadership is not a quality
restricted to politicians.
I recall sitting decades ago in a South
African movie theater for a showing of
"Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." The
subject matter was interracial marriage.
Would a white father agree to the mar·
riage ofhis daughter to a black man?
' For the audience, the question cut to
the core of their ~aily existence. While
the action was set in San Francisco, the
issue of racial separation was at the bean
of South African politics and to the soul
of everyone in that theater. In two years
in the Peace Corps, I never heard an
audience so quiet, so rapt in attention to
the message coming from the screen. It
was as though the people around me black and white, but especially those of

..

mixed race- had their hearts riding on segregated lunch counters, Kramer made
the outcome.
"The Detimt Ones" about a pair of
At the movie) climax, the white escaped convicts - a white guy and a
f~ther, played by Spencer Tracy, finally black guy - who were chained togethgives his somber but 'loving blessing. er. With that single plot device, he conSuddenly, in a theater where you could fronted bqch northern prejudice - .
hear a pin drop, I' heard someone in the white people's discomfort with closeness
roY.: ahead of me whisper words 1 will - and southern prejudice '- white
never forget: "He sounds like a Judge." folks' discomfort with equality.
.
This was the power of Stanley Kramer.
With '1udgment at Nuremberg," the
Across boundaries of race, class, age and movie maker took on the Cold War
country, his films grabbed our attention; mindset that we shouid "move on" from
their messages pounded into our con-· the Nazi evil of the '40s, husbanding all
sciences. What would we do in such cir- · our outrage for the Communist menace
curmtances? Could we summon the of the 1960s. His hero, the American
stuff that heroe.s are made- of? ·
jurist played ·here again by Spencer
!IJ an Amencan who grew up with 'Il:acy, condemns the aristocratic GetKramer's films, l know their power.
man judge who collaborated in Nazi
When so rmny World War II survivors . injustice t;lther than jeopardize his posiwere enjoying the Gl Bill, he made "The tion. The worst people, he rulei, are not ·
Men," about the guys in wheekhain still the fickle masses, but th.e men of convicmarooned at the veterans hospital.
· tion who could have challenged Hider
When red-baiting Sen. Joe McCarthy but didn't.!
went after war hero George Marshall,
"He so~nds like a judge."
and no one - not even Gen. Dwight
That's not a bad epitaph for a filmEisenhower - went to his aid, Kramer maker who knew and never stopped
made a picture - "liigb Noon" - showing·us the difference betWeen right
about a noble sheriff in the same fix. and wrong.
People got the message.
(Chris Matthew is host of "Harrlba/11'
A decade before Congress outlawed CNBC and MSNBC cable channels.)

on

,,

..

•

destroy my reputa-

tion. Please g1ve me some advice.

Mortified in the Mipwest
Dear Midwest: Your mother-

became extremely belligerent, and
my husband and I had to ask her to in-law is more than "meddlesome,"
leave. The next day, she phoned she sounds mentally ill, as well as
everyone in the family, and said we alcoholic. This must be obvious to
kicked her out of our house and others, or soon will be. But sick or
caused her to have a terrible .well, remember she is your hus~
band's mother. This woman needs
migraine headache.
.
This woman is not on speaking help. Please try your level best to
terms with the wives of her rwo see that she gets it.
Dear Readers: I read this in the
other sons, and has not spoken to
her sister in 10 years. I'm sure you Prairie Rambler. It made me smile:
Rudyard Kipling once received
can see a pattern here. My question
an
unusual letter from a studem at
is. what should n1y husband and I
do? We don't want to move because Oxford University. Gossip had it
we love this house, but his mother is that Kipling received a shilling a
driving me up the wall . My hus- word for wharever he wrote. The
band says I should ignore her, but student e nclo se d a shill1ng and
that is easier sJ..id tln.n done. I eire
what people think about mo. and
my meddlesome m othe r-in-law is

SYRACUSE - SyraC\Jse Vii·
· laga Council, 7 p.m.

crown.

R.

came over drunk one evening,

~

to

requestt:d, &lt;I PI.t:asc send us one of

your words." Kipling's prompt reply
was, "Tha nks."

SALEtvl

CENTER

-

Star

Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878, regular session , Saturday,

potluck supper al6:30 p.m. followed
by meeting at 7:30 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS -

Tuppers

Plains , Chester and Reedsville

baseball and sofiball second
signups 9 a.m . until noon, at Eastem
Elemenlary School.

RACINE - Racine American
Laglon Post 602, 6:30 p.m. Draw·
lng and meal lo lollow.

will be a crown jewel in the region's
• A historic bus tour of the tri-county
region highlighting the natural and
martmade wonders of Gallia, Mason and
Meigs counties. We may be used to seeing them, but folks from other parts
would pay good money for a bit of heritage tourism.
• A large family-oriented campground/ convention center that brought
in big-time entertainment on the week- ·
ends and offered hunting, fishing, boating, etc. The facility could host an annual gospel musjc or bluegrass festival that
draWl performers from across the nation.
• A string of championship golf coorses, perhaps dubbed the Nicholas Trail in
honor of the Golden Bear. The couljei
could host an annual PGA or LPGA
event, maybe even the Jl.yder Cup.
These are just a few possibilities. Coopie these things with existing attractions
and festivals and, voila, we're a budding
entertainment complex.
We have one of ·the main resour&lt;:es
needed to pull off such lofty plans: land.
We also haw, or are getting, another
main resource: roa:ds. !IJ for the. big
resource - money - there are some
major playen in ·the tri-county region
who could inake these drearm realities.
The economic spinoff ofbecoming an
entertainment mecca is huge. In a
decade, tri-county residents could have
more restaurants than currently imaginable, more hotels, more stores; why, an
outlet mall or major shopping mall
would even be within the region's grasp.
And who would benefit the most
from all this development? Our children,
of course, in the form of new schools
md increased learning opportunities.
. It only takes a spark to get a tire going.
Here's a match - if you want it.
.
· (R. Shawtt Lewis" is managing erlitor of
Ohio 11&amp;/lty Publishing Co.)

determined

THURSDAY
ties.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Tuberculosis Board, Thursday, 7
RACINE - 24·hour prayer vigil,
p.m. at the office.
Friday 6 p.m. to. Salurday 6 p.m.,
Racine Uniled Melhodlsl Church.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Public invited.
Chapler t 72. Or&lt;ler of Easlern Star.
'
7 p.m., Middleport Masonic Lodge.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Har·
RACINE - Racine Grange, 7 risonville Lodge 411, Saturday, 7:30
p.m. Thursday al lhe hall. Baking p.m. , Masonic Temple, stated meet·
contest to be held.
lng, work degree, and refreshments .

THIRTY SO MET HI N G

Ninety years ago, Lake Buena Vista
was a hole-in-the-wall town mired in
Florida marshland.
Sixty years ago, Las Vegas was a truck
stop in the Nevada desert on the way to
Los Angeles, Calif.
Thirty years ago, Branson was a greasespot in the Misso~;~ri prairie.
Today, these cities are thriving entertainment capitals that draw millions of
tourists from inside·and outside the continental United States. In fact, Las Vegu
is the nation's fastest-growing city.
Thirty years from now, the wne could
be said about the tri-county region, OK,
OK, 1 know some of you just spilled
your coffee because you're laughing so
hard. (Legal disclaimer: Coffit Is hot/ Pltast
don't Slit tht newspaper if you burned )lOUrself during your chucltltjlt. Now batlt to o11r

lem, but we couldn't do anything
about it. After three months, she

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
Vacca addresses club

Tri-county residents must
rally .to preserve their foture
Today is a big day for Gallia County. Today is an even bigger
day for the tri-coLmty reg~on.
Today is the day we must stand up and make our voices
heard. We must show our unwavering support for th.e employees of the Gallipolis Development Center.
GDC, founded as the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics in 1890,
is one of Gallia's largest employers, with more than 500 staff
serving around 250 clients. But Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation/Developmental Disabilities, which operates GDC,
has mandated a streamlining of staff and services at developmental centers around the state. MR/DD is also targeted for
cutbacks in the biennial budget submitted to the Legislature
last month by Gov. Bob Taft.
Gallia County commissioners and the Gallipolis City Com• mission have issued a joint proclamation declaring today as
"Support GDC Day," as a busload ofGDC employees and local
officials travel to Columbus to rally at the Statehouse.
The cri-county region has had enough cuts; so many in fact
that space prohibits listing them here.
We can''t afford any more losses. We don't want any more
losses. We don't need any more losses.
We understand Taft's desire to save money and free up funding for other programs, but the loss of hundreds of jobs in an
already economically distressed region is too high a price to
pay.
What does Taft have to replace the GDC positions with?
There has to be a better way.
·
Tri-county residents, don't let today pass without standing up
for the GDC and its workers.

Page AS

-

The ·Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

..,

TUPPERS PLAINS -:-Tuppers
Plains VFW, regular auxiliary moot·
lng, 7 p.m., at ltlo hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Paranl·
teacher canferlncaaln ltlo Eutem
Local Schaal Dllltrlcf ara reached·
uled Jar Thursday from 41a 7 p.m.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Slate Senalar
Mlk~ Shoemaker canducta office.
haure at Rutland Civic Center,
· council ahambtrl, 12 noon to t
p.m. .

SALEM CENTER - Molga
County Pomona Grange regultr
melting 7:30 p.m. at Star Grange
flail. The Flflh Degree will be
exemplified far lneptctlon. Star
·Cl range to hoel.
·
POMEROY - Fun, Food .and
Fellawehlp, God'l NET. 8 to 10:30
p.m. Dinner and gem. roam actlvl·

Spring Is

Hlmost Here!
The Purp\e Tur+\e
Stop By.And See Our New
Selection Of Spring Children's .
Clothes! Sizes NB-6X
lnelde The Lafayette Mill,
Qlllllpc)lll, Ohio (Next To Btrnllillnt'll

~··:

Your wardrobe isn't the
only thingyou can accessorize.
Birth announced
community.
Members attending, in addition to those pre' vious\y mentioned,' were Margaret. Grossnickle,
Grace Weber, Frances Reed, Margaret Cafl, thorn, J•net Connolly, Marlene Putman and '
Maxine Whitehead.

Grange plins banquet

RAC!i'!E - Gteg
and
Patty Taylor
.announce the birth of a
daughter,
Kaitlyn
Nicole, born on Dec.
11 at the Holzer Medical Center. ·
The infant weighed
seven pounds and three
6unces.

Paten1al gr~ndparSALEM CENTER - The Mei~ County
ents are Fenton and
Grange Banquet was announced for April 27 at Kaltlyn Nicole
Jeannie Taylor. Mater', 7 p.in. during the regular meeting of Star Grange
d
n~1 gran parents are
#778
.
·
Pa
Dy
.
d
d th
.
Janet Duffy and the lace Pat Duffy. Mr. and Mrs.
Master tty
er con ucte
e meenng - ..,
••Y1or 'have anot her daugh ter, Breanna.
and welcome d Luc ille M acornber as a member
transferring from another Grange. The charter
was draped in memory of H•rold Saultz.
.
Carl Morris, legislative director, reported on
· Seltite Bill141, concerninB regulatory authority

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

,• COLLEGE
Namect to
presidents list
RACiNE Samantha
· Lavender of Racine was
named to the President's List at
· Mountain State College in
' Parkersburg, WVa. She is a
• medical assisting student.
Students named co the Pres'' ident's List must earn a grade
· point average of3.5 or above.

lnduded on
dean's list
SYRACUSE-Jay P. McK. elvey of Syracuse and Christopher Lee Randolph haw been
named to the Dean's List at
Miami University in Oxford.
. The honor recognizes
. achievement of a scholastic
average of3.5 co 4.0 on at least
12 hours of acadentic ~rk for
credit.

'

~
·In Respl;m'se To A Great Outpouring
Of CoiiWlunity Requests
'1fl'tee ?t~tu11-~t ~tJ.•e
Is Making A R~gis~er Book Available For
Fans To Come In &amp; Sign, Honoring

DALE EARNHARDT
The Register Will Be Forwarded To
The Dale Earnhardt Family.

Outfit your new phone for saFer, hands-Free conversations,
and we'll give you two ways to get fr~e cellular accessories.
Simply buy and activate a setect cellular phone, along with a hands-free Jabra' EarSer (shown above), and
yoli'll receive a'25 RadioShack gift card! Plus, )llu'll get a110 mail-rebate from Jabra' You can use the card
now and the rebate later, or combine tile two once )llur rebate arrives. Either way, it's atotal of '35 you can
spend on accessories for)llur new phooe. So come to RadioShack, where safety and savings are always in style:

$25 Gifi~ioSh.c~
c..d.
' $1 Q Mail-inlabfil.
~om

AIIHIUUII IITIHU

'
tRequires purchase of both acellular ptume and Jabra• EarSet'" oo lite same ticket. Gift Card ma~ nol be applied to initial phone or Jabra•
r purehase. Not 'Y!Iid on prepaid phones, uperades or PCS phones. Ste state for details. !Allow 8 to 10 weeks for rebate delivery. Giff Card
ond'Jabra oilers good th~ugh l/31101. HeadS!! use olio d&lt;mne may be regulaled by slate 01 lacallaws.

Come In &amp; Sign The Register
Wed., Feb. 28 • Thurs., Mar. 1 • fri., Mar. 2
From 9 a.m. to 5:00p.m.
Sat.;Mar. 3 from 9:00a.m. to Noon

r&lt;bale

Y, US. Cellular

®~~~~~~~:
~1sit

~

us at www.RadioShat~.com

�.

Opinion

'he Daily Sentinel

PageA4

'lhurscYy. Mllrch 1. 2001

Dear Ann Landers: My
boyfriend and I have been together
for almost rwo years. "Sherman" is
charming, witty, sexy and intelligent. However, we seem to have
differenr ideas about entertaining.
When I had my own place, I
often had dinner parties for 15 or
20 people. The apartment I live in
with Sherman is too small for large
gatherings. Also, there is no dining
room to speak of, so we must eat in
the kitchen. Because of the space
limitations,! haven't had any dinner

•

'£stt168sMtl i111.948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
Gent1111l· Manager

R. Shawn Lewle
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

l.Antn to th~ tditDr" tltw wdcomt. TlltJ rhottUI M flu lhll" JOO wnb. A.U ltllfrt llt'f rU}H:t
to ttlitinr GJUi m•m be $iflltd ctttl inc!liM tuldrtrr 11111i uUphtHit 11JUilblr. N9 liMit,.,., Wlun Ifill
IH lllbUJhrd. IAtttn should ht irr. good 1M~, alldrusinr imtu, not fJU'OIIlllill...
·

parties since I moved in.

Tht opinion' ¥X1"1kfi in lht column HWw,. th4 tolllfftltu ofth• Ohkl Y.U.,PdiUIWtf
Co. 'r «litorlttl board, unlnr olht,..,.,;.~, nnml

. Sherman does not like unexpected visitors, and rarely has people
over. I ?ave several friends, and
want them to feel welcome in my

OUR VIEW

home. However, Sherman is very

unpleasant when guests drop in. He
refuses to socialize, and stays in the
be~room

Save GDC!

•••

Here's how you can help:
• Ohio League for the Mentally Retarded, P.O..Box 3324,
Zanesville, Ohio 43702, phone 740-450-0306 or 450-4542314, e-maillinklady@cyberzane.net.
• Gov. Taft, 77 High St., 30th Floor, Columbus, Ohio 432156117, phone 614-466-3555, fax 614-466-9354.
• Kenneth Ritchey, director, Ohio MR/DD, 1810 Sullivant
Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43223-1239, phone 614-644-7342, fax
614-752-8551.
• Dr. Michael Dey, director, GDC, 2500 Ohio Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, phone 446-1642, fax 740-446-1341.
.
• State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, 10899 Cropp St.,
,Bourneville, Ohio 45657, phone 740-626-2749.
• U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, P.O. Box 580, Lucasville, Ohio •
45648, phone 740-353-5171.
.
• State Rep.John Carey,401 S.AtkansasAve.,Wellston,Ohio
45692, phone 740-384-6604.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

'

Thday is Thursday, March 1, the 60th day of2001. There .are 305
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Forty years ago, on March 1, 1%1, President Kennedy established
the Peace Corps.
On this date:
In 1781 , the Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation.
,
In 1790, Congress authorized the 6rst U.S. Ceruius.
In 1845, President 'JYler signed .a congressional resolution to
annex the Republic ofTeJCJS.
In 1864, Rebecca Lee became the first black woman to receive
an American medical degree, from Boston's New England Female
1
Medical College.
.
In I H67. Nebraska became the 37th state.
In 1872, Congress authorized creation ofYellowstone NationaL
Park.
In 1932, the'infant son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh was kidnapped from the f.1mily home near Hopewell, NJ. Remains identified as those of the baby were found the following May.
In 1954, Puerto Rican nationali•ts opened fire from the gallery
of the U.S. House of Representatives, wounding five congressmen.
In 1981, Irish Republican Army member Bobby Sands began a
hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland. He died 65
days later.
Ten years ago: President Bush said "we've kicked the Vietnam
syndrome once and for all" following the allied victory in the Gulf
War. The U.S. embassy in Kuwait officially reopened. Edwin H.
Land, inventor of polarizing filters and Polaroid instant photography, died in Cambridge, Mass., at age 81.
Five years ago: President Clinton slapped economic sanctions on
Colombia, concluding authorities had not fully cooperated with
rl1e U.S. war on drug.. The Food and Drug Administration
approved a powerful new AIDS drug, saying ritonavir could pro-.
long the lives of severely ill patients, at least slighdy.
· One year ago: Candidates in both major parties turned their
focu.• to Super Tuesday, a day aJierTexas Gov. George W. B~h won
primaries in Virginia, North Dakota and Washington state.

watching teltivision until

lonely.
I say he is being unreasonable.
He says I'm being selfish. We are
having too many disagreements
· over this, and it is hurting our rela-

Ann
Landers

tionship. I need some adVice. -

they leave. I can live with that, but
then he becomes angry with me for
"taking away his evenings."
Sherman wants me to stop having people in the house. I have
. agreed not to have any more dinner
parties, and think that is enough of
a compromise, but I shouldn 't have

Beyond Irritation in Toronto
Dear Toronto: I have a h~&amp;nch
there are deeper problems in the
relationship than the one you
describe. Your words "isolated and
lonely" were the red flags . Sherman
sounds extremely antisocial and
controlling. You two must get some .
counseling and put the real issues
on the table. And the sooner the
better.
Dear Ann Landers: Last year,
my husba1~d and I found our dream

to go to a restaurant l'Very ume I
want td entertain :1 friend . I realize

hou Se. Everything was wonderful
until my mother- in-law decided to

ADVICE

Shernun likes to rdax after a hard · buy the house next door. l knew
day at work, but I feel ISOlated and this was goi 11g co be a serious prob-

Where will we be .30 years from now?

regularly scheduled column.)
I imagine folks·in Las Vegas laughed 60
yean ago when a hand(ul of dn~amen
began expn~ssing their vision. The same
goes for Bransonites. And people mutt
have · howled when one man and his
mouie began planning a world-clw
entertainment complex in Buena Vls!:a.
Why? Some people simply can't think
outsi~e of the box. But all those laughs
have turned to wonderment now. The
same thing could happen here - if we
want it to.
Where do you go for big-time entertainment?
To the south, there's Huntington about m hour from Pomeroy, and not
much to do if yo'l 4on't like up-andcoming bands performing live music. To
the east, there's Charleston - about an
hour from Point Pleasant, and again, not
much to do if you don't like up-andcoming bands.
To the north, there's Athens - about
an. hour from Gallipolis, but there's not
too much to do there aside from Ohio
University's . tine offerings. As for the
west, there's Cincinnati, a place with

.Shawn
Lewis
MY VIEW
much to do, bui it's two houn away,
We shouldn't have to drive an hour to
have an. entertaining evening, but we do
because we want - nay, crave - things
to do.
By the wne token, ·If thi;'ii-county
region had big-time entertainment
offerings, folks from ,Cincinnati,
Charleston, Huntington and Athens
would come here.
·
Imagine this lineup:
• An outdoor amphitheater capable of
seating 7,000 un!ier its half-roof and
another 10,000 on its hillside. Such
venues are quite popular and draw the
biggest names in music. Speaking from
experience, people do drive two houn
or more to see The Rolling Stones,
Garth Brooks, Liza Minnelli, etc.
• A ~or theme park that could compete with or, better yet, peacefully coexist with Paramount's Kings lsbnd. No
offense to Huntington's Camden Park,
but folks in southeast Ohio and all of
West Virginia have to drive the better
part of a day to get good, exciting family entertainment.
,
• A major. river rafting/boating putlet
that both rent~ vessels! to tourists and
offered guided tours dOwn to majestic
Ohio' River. The Ohio is such a wonderful asset, but for some reason, the cricounty region hasn't done a good job
tapping its potential. Point Pleasant's
Riverfront Park will certainly help and

.'

'HARDBALL'

Stanley·Kramer.showed us ·right.and .wrong .
BY CHRII MATTH~

WASHINGTON - I love daring
students who visit this capital each
spring co stand and confess a personal
cause they know to be unpopular with
the ·rest of their class. It's my rough test
to sort the wheat from the chaff.
Hollywood producer Stanley Kramer
spent a lifetime standing ·up for such
causes. His death at 87 this week
reminds us that, fortunately for this
country, leadership is not a quality
restricted to politicians.
I recall sitting decades ago in a South
African movie theater for a showing of
"Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." The
subject matter was interracial marriage.
Would a white father agree to the mar·
riage ofhis daughter to a black man?
' For the audience, the question cut to
the core of their ~aily existence. While
the action was set in San Francisco, the
issue of racial separation was at the bean
of South African politics and to the soul
of everyone in that theater. In two years
in the Peace Corps, I never heard an
audience so quiet, so rapt in attention to
the message coming from the screen. It
was as though the people around me black and white, but especially those of

..

mixed race- had their hearts riding on segregated lunch counters, Kramer made
the outcome.
"The Detimt Ones" about a pair of
At the movie) climax, the white escaped convicts - a white guy and a
f~ther, played by Spencer Tracy, finally black guy - who were chained togethgives his somber but 'loving blessing. er. With that single plot device, he conSuddenly, in a theater where you could fronted bqch northern prejudice - .
hear a pin drop, I' heard someone in the white people's discomfort with closeness
roY.: ahead of me whisper words 1 will - and southern prejudice '- white
never forget: "He sounds like a Judge." folks' discomfort with equality.
.
This was the power of Stanley Kramer.
With '1udgment at Nuremberg," the
Across boundaries of race, class, age and movie maker took on the Cold War
country, his films grabbed our attention; mindset that we shouid "move on" from
their messages pounded into our con-· the Nazi evil of the '40s, husbanding all
sciences. What would we do in such cir- · our outrage for the Communist menace
curmtances? Could we summon the of the 1960s. His hero, the American
stuff that heroe.s are made- of? ·
jurist played ·here again by Spencer
!IJ an Amencan who grew up with 'Il:acy, condemns the aristocratic GetKramer's films, l know their power.
man judge who collaborated in Nazi
When so rmny World War II survivors . injustice t;lther than jeopardize his posiwere enjoying the Gl Bill, he made "The tion. The worst people, he rulei, are not ·
Men," about the guys in wheekhain still the fickle masses, but th.e men of convicmarooned at the veterans hospital.
· tion who could have challenged Hider
When red-baiting Sen. Joe McCarthy but didn't.!
went after war hero George Marshall,
"He so~nds like a judge."
and no one - not even Gen. Dwight
That's not a bad epitaph for a filmEisenhower - went to his aid, Kramer maker who knew and never stopped
made a picture - "liigb Noon" - showing·us the difference betWeen right
about a noble sheriff in the same fix. and wrong.
People got the message.
(Chris Matthew is host of "Harrlba/11'
A decade before Congress outlawed CNBC and MSNBC cable channels.)

on

,,

..

•

destroy my reputa-

tion. Please g1ve me some advice.

Mortified in the Mipwest
Dear Midwest: Your mother-

became extremely belligerent, and
my husband and I had to ask her to in-law is more than "meddlesome,"
leave. The next day, she phoned she sounds mentally ill, as well as
everyone in the family, and said we alcoholic. This must be obvious to
kicked her out of our house and others, or soon will be. But sick or
caused her to have a terrible .well, remember she is your hus~
band's mother. This woman needs
migraine headache.
.
This woman is not on speaking help. Please try your level best to
terms with the wives of her rwo see that she gets it.
Dear Readers: I read this in the
other sons, and has not spoken to
her sister in 10 years. I'm sure you Prairie Rambler. It made me smile:
Rudyard Kipling once received
can see a pattern here. My question
an
unusual letter from a studem at
is. what should n1y husband and I
do? We don't want to move because Oxford University. Gossip had it
we love this house, but his mother is that Kipling received a shilling a
driving me up the wall . My hus- word for wharever he wrote. The
band says I should ignore her, but student e nclo se d a shill1ng and
that is easier sJ..id tln.n done. I eire
what people think about mo. and
my meddlesome m othe r-in-law is

SYRACUSE - SyraC\Jse Vii·
· laga Council, 7 p.m.

crown.

R.

came over drunk one evening,

~

to

requestt:d, &lt;I PI.t:asc send us one of

your words." Kipling's prompt reply
was, "Tha nks."

SALEtvl

CENTER

-

Star

Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878, regular session , Saturday,

potluck supper al6:30 p.m. followed
by meeting at 7:30 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS -

Tuppers

Plains , Chester and Reedsville

baseball and sofiball second
signups 9 a.m . until noon, at Eastem
Elemenlary School.

RACINE - Racine American
Laglon Post 602, 6:30 p.m. Draw·
lng and meal lo lollow.

will be a crown jewel in the region's
• A historic bus tour of the tri-county
region highlighting the natural and
martmade wonders of Gallia, Mason and
Meigs counties. We may be used to seeing them, but folks from other parts
would pay good money for a bit of heritage tourism.
• A large family-oriented campground/ convention center that brought
in big-time entertainment on the week- ·
ends and offered hunting, fishing, boating, etc. The facility could host an annual gospel musjc or bluegrass festival that
draWl performers from across the nation.
• A string of championship golf coorses, perhaps dubbed the Nicholas Trail in
honor of the Golden Bear. The couljei
could host an annual PGA or LPGA
event, maybe even the Jl.yder Cup.
These are just a few possibilities. Coopie these things with existing attractions
and festivals and, voila, we're a budding
entertainment complex.
We have one of ·the main resour&lt;:es
needed to pull off such lofty plans: land.
We also haw, or are getting, another
main resource: roa:ds. !IJ for the. big
resource - money - there are some
major playen in ·the tri-county region
who could inake these drearm realities.
The economic spinoff ofbecoming an
entertainment mecca is huge. In a
decade, tri-county residents could have
more restaurants than currently imaginable, more hotels, more stores; why, an
outlet mall or major shopping mall
would even be within the region's grasp.
And who would benefit the most
from all this development? Our children,
of course, in the form of new schools
md increased learning opportunities.
. It only takes a spark to get a tire going.
Here's a match - if you want it.
.
· (R. Shawtt Lewis" is managing erlitor of
Ohio 11&amp;/lty Publishing Co.)

determined

THURSDAY
ties.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Tuberculosis Board, Thursday, 7
RACINE - 24·hour prayer vigil,
p.m. at the office.
Friday 6 p.m. to. Salurday 6 p.m.,
Racine Uniled Melhodlsl Church.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Public invited.
Chapler t 72. Or&lt;ler of Easlern Star.
'
7 p.m., Middleport Masonic Lodge.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Har·
RACINE - Racine Grange, 7 risonville Lodge 411, Saturday, 7:30
p.m. Thursday al lhe hall. Baking p.m. , Masonic Temple, stated meet·
contest to be held.
lng, work degree, and refreshments .

THIRTY SO MET HI N G

Ninety years ago, Lake Buena Vista
was a hole-in-the-wall town mired in
Florida marshland.
Sixty years ago, Las Vegas was a truck
stop in the Nevada desert on the way to
Los Angeles, Calif.
Thirty years ago, Branson was a greasespot in the Misso~;~ri prairie.
Today, these cities are thriving entertainment capitals that draw millions of
tourists from inside·and outside the continental United States. In fact, Las Vegu
is the nation's fastest-growing city.
Thirty years from now, the wne could
be said about the tri-county region, OK,
OK, 1 know some of you just spilled
your coffee because you're laughing so
hard. (Legal disclaimer: Coffit Is hot/ Pltast
don't Slit tht newspaper if you burned )lOUrself during your chucltltjlt. Now batlt to o11r

lem, but we couldn't do anything
about it. After three months, she

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
Vacca addresses club

Tri-county residents must
rally .to preserve their foture
Today is a big day for Gallia County. Today is an even bigger
day for the tri-coLmty reg~on.
Today is the day we must stand up and make our voices
heard. We must show our unwavering support for th.e employees of the Gallipolis Development Center.
GDC, founded as the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics in 1890,
is one of Gallia's largest employers, with more than 500 staff
serving around 250 clients. But Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation/Developmental Disabilities, which operates GDC,
has mandated a streamlining of staff and services at developmental centers around the state. MR/DD is also targeted for
cutbacks in the biennial budget submitted to the Legislature
last month by Gov. Bob Taft.
Gallia County commissioners and the Gallipolis City Com• mission have issued a joint proclamation declaring today as
"Support GDC Day," as a busload ofGDC employees and local
officials travel to Columbus to rally at the Statehouse.
The cri-county region has had enough cuts; so many in fact
that space prohibits listing them here.
We can''t afford any more losses. We don't want any more
losses. We don't need any more losses.
We understand Taft's desire to save money and free up funding for other programs, but the loss of hundreds of jobs in an
already economically distressed region is too high a price to
pay.
What does Taft have to replace the GDC positions with?
There has to be a better way.
·
Tri-county residents, don't let today pass without standing up
for the GDC and its workers.

Page AS

-

The ·Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

..,

TUPPERS PLAINS -:-Tuppers
Plains VFW, regular auxiliary moot·
lng, 7 p.m., at ltlo hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Paranl·
teacher canferlncaaln ltlo Eutem
Local Schaal Dllltrlcf ara reached·
uled Jar Thursday from 41a 7 p.m.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Slate Senalar
Mlk~ Shoemaker canducta office.
haure at Rutland Civic Center,
· council ahambtrl, 12 noon to t
p.m. .

SALEM CENTER - Molga
County Pomona Grange regultr
melting 7:30 p.m. at Star Grange
flail. The Flflh Degree will be
exemplified far lneptctlon. Star
·Cl range to hoel.
·
POMEROY - Fun, Food .and
Fellawehlp, God'l NET. 8 to 10:30
p.m. Dinner and gem. roam actlvl·

Spring Is

Hlmost Here!
The Purp\e Tur+\e
Stop By.And See Our New
Selection Of Spring Children's .
Clothes! Sizes NB-6X
lnelde The Lafayette Mill,
Qlllllpc)lll, Ohio (Next To Btrnllillnt'll

~··:

Your wardrobe isn't the
only thingyou can accessorize.
Birth announced
community.
Members attending, in addition to those pre' vious\y mentioned,' were Margaret. Grossnickle,
Grace Weber, Frances Reed, Margaret Cafl, thorn, J•net Connolly, Marlene Putman and '
Maxine Whitehead.

Grange plins banquet

RAC!i'!E - Gteg
and
Patty Taylor
.announce the birth of a
daughter,
Kaitlyn
Nicole, born on Dec.
11 at the Holzer Medical Center. ·
The infant weighed
seven pounds and three
6unces.

Paten1al gr~ndparSALEM CENTER - The Mei~ County
ents are Fenton and
Grange Banquet was announced for April 27 at Kaltlyn Nicole
Jeannie Taylor. Mater', 7 p.in. during the regular meeting of Star Grange
d
n~1 gran parents are
#778
.
·
Pa
Dy
.
d
d th
.
Janet Duffy and the lace Pat Duffy. Mr. and Mrs.
Master tty
er con ucte
e meenng - ..,
••Y1or 'have anot her daugh ter, Breanna.
and welcome d Luc ille M acornber as a member
transferring from another Grange. The charter
was draped in memory of H•rold Saultz.
.
Carl Morris, legislative director, reported on
· Seltite Bill141, concerninB regulatory authority

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

,• COLLEGE
Namect to
presidents list
RACiNE Samantha
· Lavender of Racine was
named to the President's List at
· Mountain State College in
' Parkersburg, WVa. She is a
• medical assisting student.
Students named co the Pres'' ident's List must earn a grade
· point average of3.5 or above.

lnduded on
dean's list
SYRACUSE-Jay P. McK. elvey of Syracuse and Christopher Lee Randolph haw been
named to the Dean's List at
Miami University in Oxford.
. The honor recognizes
. achievement of a scholastic
average of3.5 co 4.0 on at least
12 hours of acadentic ~rk for
credit.

'

~
·In Respl;m'se To A Great Outpouring
Of CoiiWlunity Requests
'1fl'tee ?t~tu11-~t ~tJ.•e
Is Making A R~gis~er Book Available For
Fans To Come In &amp; Sign, Honoring

DALE EARNHARDT
The Register Will Be Forwarded To
The Dale Earnhardt Family.

Outfit your new phone for saFer, hands-Free conversations,
and we'll give you two ways to get fr~e cellular accessories.
Simply buy and activate a setect cellular phone, along with a hands-free Jabra' EarSer (shown above), and
yoli'll receive a'25 RadioShack gift card! Plus, )llu'll get a110 mail-rebate from Jabra' You can use the card
now and the rebate later, or combine tile two once )llur rebate arrives. Either way, it's atotal of '35 you can
spend on accessories for)llur new phooe. So come to RadioShack, where safety and savings are always in style:

$25 Gifi~ioSh.c~
c..d.
' $1 Q Mail-inlabfil.
~om

AIIHIUUII IITIHU

'
tRequires purchase of both acellular ptume and Jabra• EarSet'" oo lite same ticket. Gift Card ma~ nol be applied to initial phone or Jabra•
r purehase. Not 'Y!Iid on prepaid phones, uperades or PCS phones. Ste state for details. !Allow 8 to 10 weeks for rebate delivery. Giff Card
ond'Jabra oilers good th~ugh l/31101. HeadS!! use olio d&lt;mne may be regulaled by slate 01 lacallaws.

Come In &amp; Sign The Register
Wed., Feb. 28 • Thurs., Mar. 1 • fri., Mar. 2
From 9 a.m. to 5:00p.m.
Sat.;Mar. 3 from 9:00a.m. to Noon

r&lt;bale

Y, US. Cellular

®~~~~~~~:
~1sit

~

us at www.RadioShat~.com

�Page A

•

••'

6 • The Daily Sentinel

SOCIETY . NEWS .

&gt;

••

Thursday, March 1, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

S.A.R. celebrates
Washington's birthday
POMEROY- A commentary on George Washington in
recognition of his birthday was given by James Lochary,
president. at a recent meting of Ewings Chapters, Sons of the
American Revolution, held at the Meigt Museum.
Referencing recently published information, Lochary
noted Washington's great principles and his disinterest in
partisan politics, along with the first president's unforgiveness toward deserters during the American Revolution.
The program presented by Keith Ashley was on D~hn
Witherspoon, Presbyterian minister and president of Pri eton University. The talk pointed out that the British sa
Witherspoon as second only to George Washington in
bringing America's independence.
Ashley noted that Witherspoon served in Continenti!
Congress, was asigner of the Declaration of Independence,
and served as a member of the New Jersey legislature to
approve the U S. Constitution. He const~ntly pointed out
the need of fi scal responsibility of the tJ. S. government to
prevent . devahiation of U. S. currency and repudiation to
honor U S. debts.
Ashley also pointed out tll&lt;lt he is the fa th er of"Americ:mis.m", which showed the new cou mry as different from its
English heritage.
'
Plans were discussed for this yl!;-tr's participation in Veteran 's Day parades for Po meroy. Athc·ns,and Gallipolis. A nominating committee was also s~o.·t up :ts was :1 chairm:m of this
year's community citizen ;twards progmm for May.
An invitation from Nabby Lee Ames Chapter D.A.R. for
a J une 16 event were read. Betty Sue Kauff gave a verbal
invitation to the 1OOth anniversary luncheo n of Col. Charles
Lewis Chapter D.A.R. on June 2. A request for the marking
of two Revolutionary soldier' s graves near Macksburg was
reported and will be pursued.

Alpha Omicron ·
meets in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - Alpha Omicron Chap ter, Delta Kappa
Gamma, met at Holiday Inn in Gallipolis on Feb. 24. Table
favors we re ca ndies, pens, scar stickers, and angel decorations.
Members of the hostess committee present were C hairman
Cindy Johnson, Rosalie Story, Sandr.. Walker and Nellie Parker.
President Pam Toon led the business meeting. Secretary
· Nellie Parker and Treasurer Debra Hammond read their
reports, which were approved.Thanks from Serenity Hou se for
Christmas gifts was . read. Transfer of sc holarship fu l'ds from
Margaret Boyd was approved. Legislative chairman Viola Getdes read changes made in school legislation. Kindergarten students must be five years old by Aug. I and school volunteers
,
screened, both subject to local school approval.
January and February birthdays were announced. Members
shared stories of their "first crush." Announcement was made
of convention on April 27, 28 and 29 at Cincinnati. Get well
cards were signed for Fern Grimm, Martha Greenaway and
Dorothy Woodard.
·
The personal growth committee, made up of Chairq1an
Gay Perrin, Rosalie Story and Rebecca Zurcher, presented a
program o n Elderhostel, which sponsors trips to many different locations and attractions. Perrin explained some of the
experiences offered and showed ·a film. Those participating
must be 55 and can be accompanied by a younger person.
The -next meeting, a combined meeting, will be hosted by .
Betx Alpha, and will include Delta Epsilon and Beta Tau on
March 10 at the University of Rio Gran de's srudent annex.
The program begins at 10 a.m.
Meigs Courity members attendlng were P;unda Crow, Lee
Lee, Nellie Parker, Rosalie Story, Sa ndra Walker, Becky
Zurcher, and Gay Perrin.

GARDENING

Mountain herbs
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP). they do outside.
-They were growing and
- Give them a clip.
gathering herbs in the Seedlingt need a few weeks
App alachians of Weste rn to get established, but then
North Carolina probably start . c utting them back.
behfore thhe 19th cent~rlyk, Even if you want to leave
fl
h 1
ch
w en t e mountam 10
. .. 'ld fi . ..
owers on t e p ants 10r t e
11 d 11
1
ca Ne
h~ e ra ung: d · bees, cut most back for
ow t 1s cottage m us.
. ·
try is big industry, general- bushier, shapher, plants·.
ing $40 million or so every
- Know what you grow.
year for consumers newly Check out books and referinterested in plants that can ences about herbs a~d their
flavor, scent or maybe even uses . Start with a basic refheal. I
erence tliat gives scientific
Alan Salmon is a veteran names and general informaherb grower who now tion .
advises customers at .his
- Grower beware. Some ·
retail nursery, the Wildwood herbs can harmful if used
Herbal Flower Farm, in the incorrec tly. Always check
valley
just
north
of with your doctor before
Ashev ille.
trying herbs for medicinal
For example: " If you are
use. And it's important to
a card- holding ·Cilantro
know
which pa rt of the
. lover, you need to so,w seeds
every two weeks . "Sbw an d plant has medi cinal benefits
cover them lightly in a pot (flower, ieaves or root).
or in your ga rden in a sunny · - Seaso nin g. Plant for all
spot, and wa ter infrequent- seasons, and if you're in a
colder area, try h ardier
ly."
.
Limit the chemical fertil- herbs su ch as lavender, rose izers, he advises, because mary, thymt&gt; and sage.
these can adversely affect
- Keep a jou rna!. M ake a
flavor. And watch for late reco rd of new spr ing plant. spri'ng freezes . ,
ings and their car('. Draw
Other tips about herbs garden layout~ sn you' ll
from Salmon and other kn~w whcr\2' w look for thegrowing expe rts:
perennials to come up again
- Start early. Sow indoors
and avoid plaming someduring those weeks before
early-mo rning frosts are thing else on top of the
owr. You sho uld be able to establish ed plant . Pnste seed
count on th·e heads of packets and instrl!Ctions
seedlin gs to be· up and ready --into your journal.
for planting outdoors. Keep
Diversify. • Choose
in n1ind som e herbs don't plants for texture, leaf and
germinate as wdl indoors as flower colot. sce nt :~nd taste.

be

Thursday, March 1, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-

•

~~Live

from Fur Peace Ranch" set to air

ATHENS - Join Ohio University
Public Radio, the FM radio network, on
March 4 at 8 p.m. for the premiere of a
new concert series. 'Live From the Fur
Peace Ran&gt;h' bringt ro the airwaves a
series of concerts taped in an intimate
performance setting at Jorma ,Kaukonen's
Fur Peace Ranch in Pomeroy.
Kaukonen was a founding member of
the '60s rock band 'Jeff~rson Airplane'
and, while still with that group, cofounded 'Hot Tuna' with Airplane bass
guitarist Jack Casady. He has· performed
with many of the rock luminaries of the
'60s and '70s, from Janis Joplin and Jimi
Hendrix to Bob Dylan and Jerry Garcia.
With Hot Tuna and as a solo artist,Jorma
has been able to showcase his love for
acoustic music, especially blues in the
style of the Reverend Gary Davis.
Conceived in 1989 by Jorn)a and ·
Vanessa K.1ukonen, The Fur Peace Ran ch
is nestled in the rolling foothills of southc-ast Ohio, and serves as a seasonal instructional facility, year round restaurant. conce rt hall, and conference center. Instruction is offered by Jonna and visiting
musicians on guitar and other .instruments. The con cert h:1ll is :1 perfornuncc
space with outstanding acoustics where
audiences can share a cruly in rlmate
nu1s~cal event.
The radio series 'Live From the Fu r
Peace Ranch' presents a healthy sa mpling
of those concerts. The first program features John Hartford, known for his
appearances on the 'Glen Campbell
Good Time Hou r' in the '60s, wr iting the
classic, "Gentle On My Mind," his Grammy Award winning album "MarkTwang,"
in 1976, and his on-going infatuation
with steamboats and old-tim e fiddle
tunes . His band for this show include d
Mike Compton, former mandolin player
with the N ashville Bluegrass Band.
Also broadcast ih March o n the 18th at

• April 1 - Jorma Kaukonen. The
ranch boss ·gets his turn on stage.
• April 15 - Peter Rowan. A singersongwriter with some serious bluegrass
roots. A one-time member of Bill Monroe's Bluegrass Boys, he played guitar and
sang lead in that band and co-wrote the
classic, ~'Walls ofTime," with Monroe. He
has performed with many other artists in
other styles, prompting Monroe to cautionhim to not get so far out on the limb
lest he fall off. From bluegrass to Native
Anierican vocalizations, a performance
not to be missed.
• April 29 -John Hammond. From
coffeehouses to concert halls, festivals and
beyond, Joh n Hammond has spent more
than thirty five years entertaining blues,
folk, and rock audiences aro und the
Jorma Kaukonen
world, performing intense solo-acoustic
8 p.m. is a 'Guitar Summit' feat uring blues. A Grammy.Award winner who also
Kaukonen, Chris Smither and Robert enjoyed successive WC. Handy awards in
Jones. Smither's smooth, lyriCal guitar 1994, 1995 and 1996, Hammond h~
style encompasses elements of folk blues . shared the stage and or recorded Wit
·
. I d'
M u dd y
t:o untry and rock, and he plays in a' fluid,' many o f t.Il~ m~sters,
lllC u mg
busy style that is as breathtakin~;&gt; as it is Waters, Wdl~e D1xon, John Lee Hooker,
effortless. His expressive vocals demand and Howhn Wolf
.
attention . Smither's albums span from the
• May 13 _-G. E. Sm1th. Best known
'60s to the present, and he is best known ?s the gmtanst for Hall and Oates Ill the
for other artists, recordings of his songs, 80s and as the leader of the Saturday
including Bonnie Raitt's versions of, N1gh t L1ve Band, Snuth IS found here
"Love Me Like a Man," and, "I Feel the with a blistering set of electric blues.
Same," and John Mayall's roc9rding of,
• May 27 - Jorma Kaukonen and
"Mail Order M ystics."
Jack Casady. The duo from the Jefferson
Robert Jones is a native of Detroit with Airplane and Hot Tuna pare the sound
roots ·in Alabama and Mississippi. His bock to bass and guitar.
background includes over 15 years of ·' June 10 - Roy Book Binder. Like
experience as a blues performer, histori- Janna, very influenced by the Reverend
an, radio-broadcaster and educator. He is Gary Davis, tempered with a big dose of
also an ordained Baptist minister who PinkAnderson.An excellent guitarist and
feels that blues has a lot to offe r in terms singer, and an outstanding story teller.
of spiritual content. Jones is an extrao rdi• June .24- 'Guitar Summit Part 2.'
nary instrumentalist, playing guitar, slide More from the concert featuring Chris
guitar, harmonica, mandolin, fiddle , quills Smith er, Robert Jones , and Jorma
and banj o in a variety of rc;~;&gt;ional styles.
Kaukonen, plus additional programs from
·Other performances set to air are: ,
Fu·r' Peace will air in the future.

Roughing it no longer part of hunting and fishing for many
J.

· THE
LOUI~IANA
MARSH, La. (AP) -Outside,
a frigid wind is whipping the
tall grasses that spring up out of
the Gulf of Mexico waters.
the slap
Oth.er than the ''"nd,
'•
of waves, occasional screech of
a gull and muted roar of a giant
generator are the only sounds.
The 5,000-square foot fl oating resort standing amid the
low islands of the marsh doesn't even rock in the chop, it's
too big, too solid- an oasis of
luxury in the wild world of
duck hunting and fi shing.
" If we get a really big blow
you 'can n otice the chandelier
over the table move a little bit,"
said Joe Parsons, captain of tho
lodge, as h e prepared a lunch of
j ambalaya and oysters on the
halfshell. "Other than that, it's
easy to forget you 're Out in the
middle of the marsh."
The living room of the
Beau Rivage Sportsman's
Lodge features a big-screen
television and entertainment
center. Upstairs are six large,
well-appointed rooms with
full-size baths ··comparable to
those of the resort on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, about 35
miles aw•y. Decks offer space to
relax ' and enjoy the view or
. eyen drop a fishing line. .
Dinner is a three-course
meal that may include the
guests' catch of the day or

"Historically, whet! you went lutltting or fishing,
you weren't living ill the laJI of luxury. But
I.
I
I
d .
dll; h , d ,
t nngs 1ave c lange SlliCt my gra·;, ,at er s .ay.

Keys, the rest of the year.
G uests h ave th e1r
· c h oiCe
· of
arriving either. by boat or
'game, and be complemented _only minimal shelter.
pi
.
·
'"
'"
-''h
ane.
. is do;;e. lrol-n
"" 1
by a variety of wines. A fuU oar' · "People ave more . leisure
Duck hunting
is also provided.
money to ~pend and they are
"I used to go out years ago sp~nding it ~n more · comfort comfortable boats that transand camp in tents, sleep o n the when they go hunting and form into du ck blinds. Fishing
ground, and come home fishing," said Grant Willbanks, is done from flatbo~ts. All trips
thinkin g l'd had a great time," president of Ducks-Unlimited's are accompan ied by guides,
said Charles Boone, 72, of Louisian~ chapter. "The days of who also clean and either cook
Pigeon Ford,Tenn. , who stayed ,d rafty camps and pr imitive
·
·
· 1y over . or pack the catch for transat the Iodge on a fishing
tnp.
con dit1·ons are certam
"These days I know better. I for commercial camps."
portation.
like to fish, I don't like to rough
l'eople expect more cpmAnother option is to trans-·
it."
fort in thdr everyday lives. port the game or fish back to
. And Boono is apparendy T hey aJ.&gt;o want comfort in the hotel w here a chef in one
among a growing ·group of th eir recreational activities, said of the 10 restaurants can prehunters and fishermen who Tom Prickett, chief of the
c- D .
pare it and serve it.
Ii ke tIJe sport, b ut not t h e aus- Louisiana w·ildl i.e
ivi~Oil ,
terc conditions that were tradi'' It'~ purely a matter of ceo''We get both men and
tiona~y a part of it.
nomict,imd time," Prickett said. women at the lodl(e," ·said Bo
"Historically, when .you '"If sl!riJeone's going hunting Hamilton, who. is in charge of
wenf hunting or fishing, you or fishing three or four days a both the lodge and the resort's
\Wren't living in the lap oflux- year, they usually aren't ·going marina. "But sontetimes the
ury," said Catherine Simpson to h:i\lc their own camp. But if
with the Louisiana Wildlife and they'•&amp;; paying to go out, they husband comes to the lodge
Fisheries office. "But things are going to want more than and the wife stays at the hotel
have changed since my grand- · just the bare minimum.''
to shop and go to the spa,
father's. day."
The Beau Rivage lodge maybe. Then he might want to
Just as styles of camping and represents the top of the line in take his catch · back for them
o ther outdoor activities have public hunting and fi shing
both to en;oy.''
added comfort, hunting an d facilities.
'
fishing camps have become
The lodge, built on a barge,
Duck hunting costs $450
more than the ramshackle is towed to the Louisiana per person for an overriight .
buildingt that once provided M arsh for duck season, to stay, fishing $600 per person. .

· The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
guidelines for submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided .they are In focus
and have gobd contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
please include a print along with the negative.
· • Black·and-photogrliphs are accepted, provided they are In
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however, please Include a print along with the negative.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are in focus
and have good contrast. ·
·
· • Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa~
let size and no larger than 8 x 10.
•

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

:COUPON I
I .

.

.

: u, To ss.oo OF.F :

: : 4ny Pres,c ription :
I

I

Limit 1 ,Per Cu•tomer Per Prescription

1 ' Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND- DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES. DOCKERS

1

"··---~-h-

The Senior Nutrition Program meal Is served at 12:00 dally.

5

evening meal is intended to
provide a nutritional meal at a
reasonable cost. Dollars
generated will be used to
support the existing lunch and
home delivered meal program.

TUESDAY

THURSDAY
8

6
Hearty Beef Stew
Flaky Buttermilk Biscuit
Sweet Senior Slaw
Ruby Jell-0 Jubi.I ee

Delicious Tur11ey Roll
with Savory Stufljng
Creamy Mashed Potatoes
Saasoned Green Beans
Buttered Roll
Earth Quake Cake

Mon-Frt 8 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sat 8:00 a.m. to 8 :00 p.m,
Sun 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

~.

'·

"

Beef Vegetable Soup
Peanut Butter Sandwich
Crackels
Whne or Brown Bread
Tropical FN~

15
Maatloaf
Hot Baked Potato
Broccoli Cheese Casserole
Flaky Croissant
Luck of the Irish Dessert

Piclded Beets
Rocky Road Pudding
Whne Of Brown Bread
Tangelo

Liver and Onions

Mashed Potatoes
C)'tlamed Com
Whrte or Brown Bread
Oranges and Grapelru~

Mashed Potatoes and Gravy

Buttered Peas
WMe or Brown Bread
Orange

Green Beans
WMe or Brown Bread
Blushing Pears

11

15

Crisp Baked Chicken
Baked Sweet Potaloes

27
Ham lj. Scalloped Potatoes
Tossed Salad
Orange Juice
Whrte Of Brown Bread
Banana Graham Pudding

Johnny Marzetti
Perfection Salad
Apple Juice
White or Brown Bread
Angel Food Cake

or Brown Bread

Banana
23
Baked Fish
Cheese Palalaes
Mixed Vegetables
Whrte or Brown Bread
Pineapple Tidb~ s

Ham Loaf.
Creamed Potatoes
Spinach
Whrte or Brown Bread
Grapes. Cake

29

21
Amish Vinegar Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
Skillet Green Beans
Wh~e or Brown Bread
Apple

Lima Beans
Wh~e

22

21

20
Baked Chicken
Mallhod Potatoes
Mixad Vegetables
Whrte or Brown Bread
Frozen Ambrosia

28

Roast Beef

Over Rice

, Boiled Ham Dinner
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Irish Potatoes
Buttered Italian Vegetables
Paddy's Cabbage &amp; Carrots
Ga~ic Bread
Pineapple Juice
Applesauce
Emerald Isle Pudding

Scalloped Chicken

Baked Pork Chap
Augratin Potatoes
Peas with Mushrooms
Whrte or Brown Bread
Purple Plums

Chicken a Ia King

14

13

Sloppy Joe Sandwich
Cheese Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
WhHe or Brow,n Bread
Pineapple

30
Macaroni and Cheese
Broccoli

Stewed Tamataes
WMe or Brawli Bread
Banana

. 22
Amish Vinegar Chicken ·
Seasoned Potatoes
Callfomla Blend Vegetables
Golden Roll

Italian Spaghetti ·
Soft Bread Sticks
Crispy Tossed Sa led
Dutch Apple Pie

TRIPS

Peach Crtep

29

27
Alaskan Pollock Fish &amp;
Shrimp
Seasoned Potato Wedges
Steamed Mixed Vegetables
Flaky Croissant
StrawbEirry Shortcake

Beef Pepper Steak over
Staamed Rice
Orange Glazed Carrots
Old Fashion BlscuH
Pumpkin Delight

6-'

TUESDAY, MARCH
Blood Presaure Checks 4:15 •
. 4:45
THURSDAY, MARCH 8· Rita and Junior will play music
at 5:30 • 6:30

The following trips for 2001
have been planned by the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.
Trip to COS! in Columbus for
the exhibition "Secrets of
Aging" and tour of the AnthonyThomas Candy Company on
Thursday, April 19 at a cosl of
$45.00.
.
Trip· lo Zanesville on
Thursday, June 7 at a cost of
$45.00 includes the NatioMI
Road -Zane Grey Museum,
Putnam Mansion, buffet
Iimcheon and tour of the Schultz.
Mansion and Grounds, and
shopping at Zanesville Pottery
and China, White Pillars
Christmas House and Colonial
Cottage.
Betty Brent, Sales Promotion
Agent from Park Tours, will be
at the Center on Tuesday, March
13 at 1:00 to talk about several
one, tw·o and three day trips
offered by Park Tours. Betty will
show video clips of several
destinations being considered
for trips by lhe center. If al least
fifteen persons are Interested in
a Park Tour, trip arrangement•
will be made for pickup In
Meigs County.
For funher Information about
trips contact Allee Wamsley at
992-2161.

A big thank you goes to
Don Poole with the Tuppers
PlaJn~.Chester Water
District for donating bottled
water to the Fitness Center
lit the Meigs Senior Center•
Don Is pictured delivering
the water.

Ballroom Dance classes
Haven 'I you always wanted to
get on the dance floor and show
everyone what a smooth dancer
you are? Gerald Powell will
teach beginning ballroom
dancing classes at the Center on
the following dates from 7:00

Dr. Arnold Penix, M.D. Ia pictured during a speaking
engagement at the· Melge Senior Center. Dr. Penix Ia
one of the new orthopedic physlclana lit Holzer Mecncal
Center.

AARP 55 ALIVE
Driver·safety program
'

Learn lhe fun art of compillns:
a pholo album/scrapbook. You
can create a family heirloom, or
a visual memory of a special
evenl or trip. When: Thutliday,
March 15, 2001 from 1:00pm •
4 pm or 6:00 pm • 9:00 pm.
Paula Pickens will teach the
early class and Jeannie Taylor
will inslruct the .late.ctas;;.
Cost:. $10.~0 wh1~h mcludes
profe~s1onal mstrucuon and. all
matenals lo complele the fmt
page of your album/scrapbook.
Bring 8-10 photographs to
start your album/scrapbook.
Registration deadline is March
8. Call Patty Pickens at 9922161 to register.
.Albums/scrapbooks can be as
s1mple or as _ei~borate as y~u
want. If there 1s mterest, ~.e will
coniinue with additiOnal
t'nstructl'on or slart a scrapbook

Support
groups
.
The Arthritis Supporr Group
meets on the third Friday of
each month from 10:00 a.m.
until 11:30 a.m. Meetings are
scheduled for March 16 &amp; April
20 in the conference room at the
Meigs Senior Center.

• IS

OCia

ecun'ty

DiabeteS
SUPPO.rt grOUP

Join us for our first " Senior
· Prom" at the Meigs Senior
Center on April 24. The Center
will be decorated from top to
bottom for this occasion, so get
out your fancy dress and shoes
or your suit and tie . Gerald
Powell will be lhe emcee for the
daytime event, so be sure to
come and dance with your
'"date" from 10:30 a.m. - noon.
The Prom will continue into the
. evening from 5:30 p.m. · 7:00
p.m. afler the Evening Meal.
Come join us for dinner and an
evening of dancing and fun .

Activity
schedule
The Me igs Multipurpose
Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
until 4 :30 p.m. Regu larly
scheduled activities held
through out the week inc lude
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo,
cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at 1:00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per sess ion attended.
The Knitting Circle meets on
Wednesday from 10-:00 a.m.
until noon.
Older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you ca n enjoy the
regular meal. A Ia carte items are
ind ivid ua ll y priced. The
suggested donation for lh e noon
·
meal is $1.50. .

The Arthritis Support Group is
made possible through funds
costs
from the Ohio Department of
the suggelled donation
Health and Ohio Umversity.
The annual Easter Dinner will
faramealis$1 .50
The Caring and Sharing be served at noon on Thursday,
Support Group will meet the April 12. Bring a friend a.nd
Gue&amp;t fee for persons
fourth Thursday of each month enjoy the day at the Senwr
at the Meigs County Senior . Center.
Center at 1:00 p.m. The meeting
d t
M h 22 &amp; A .126 ·
a ~s ar~ arc .
pn . ·
Juhe R1ce, Phys~eal Therap.1st
f
\1
M
1
ro~
~terans
emona
Hosp1lal, w1ll be the presenter at
lhe March meeting. Julie 's topic
will be "Benefits of Massage..:
For the April 26 meeting a tour
·we Care For You Like Family•
of Wyngate of Gallipolis is
Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds • Power Wheel Chair
scheduled, Wyngatc is an
Portable
Oxygen
• Wheel Chairs ·Scooter
assisted living facility.
NebuliZers
• Patient Lifts
• Bedside Commodes
Transportation will be provided
CPAP!BIPAP
•
Lift
Chairs
• Bath/Safety Items
by the Center at a charge ?f
$2.00 per person . Vans w11l
leave the Center at. 10:_DO a.m.
We.
be_ bad; m t1me for
senwrs to nde the vans home.
Lunch will be provided. Please
call Patty Pickens at 992·2161 if
you are interested in going.
iLo.calllyOperared By: Mary Ann Bowman, Lewis Bowman,
Dan Bowman, Keith Blanken.•hip

d'

The 55 ALIVE Driver safety spots on a parking lot?
Program that was developed
The fee for the B·,hour
by AARP will be held on course is 410.00. Make
Tuesday
April 17 and check or money order
Wednesday, April 18, from payable to AARP. Certlfica~es
10:00 a.m .• 2:30p.m, each wil be given upon completion
day at the Senior Canter,
of the course. Some
The Defensive Driving ·insurance companies offer
C
Ill h I
·
t
t
sons
·
Refresher· ourse w
e P dlscoun s
o
per
answer these common ,compllllling the 55 ALIVE
·
Course. Check with yo,ur club. Why not create an album
q.uestr'ons:
E t 'ft?
• Why dO drivers aged 55 Insurance company.
. 10 give as an as erg'
and over have mora
To enroll or for further
accidl!nts par mile than Information, call Allee
Wamsley,
55
ALIVE
drivers age 30 to 54?
• . How should you handle Volunteer Instructor, at 992right-of-way situations, the 2161.
·
:,
number one problem area for
l A representative from the
! Athens Social Security Office is
drivers aged 55 and over?
• How does the aging
at the Meigs Multipurpose
process, such as vision
Senior Center to assist persons
problems, hearing loss, .
with Social Security problems
slower reaction times, affect
and to provide information. The
your driving ability?
Nancy Stevens; from Holzer elates are March 14 &amp; 28 and
• How .can you best Medical Center, is the facilitator April 11 &amp; 25 from 10:00 a.m .•
respond to adverse driving for the Diabetes Suppon Group. fl:OO a.m.
conditjons, suah as rain, lea They will meet in the
and dark of night?
·
Conference Room on 'March 15
• Whal are the safety rules &amp; April 1 at 10:30 a.m. Special
for making a left turn, when music by Meigs High School
are you expected to yield the students is scheduled for the
· April 12 meeting. All .ages are
right of way, etc?
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT S ,PPL.IES and BRACES
• Where are the danger welcome.
HOME OXYGEN and

S

pm • 8:00pm ·June 7, 14, 28,
July ~. &amp; 12. The cost is $50.00
for · the S-week class and is
limited to 10 couples. You must
register by May 28th by calling
Patty Pickens · at .992-2161.
Leather shoes arc · required for
lhe class.

Senior Prom

Photo albums
and scrapbooks

Easter Inner

oo:"'

tz:•: r.x11 i• •~~' *itd 1gr111M Iii •

,

PRESCRIPTION PHONE 992·2995 1
E. Main • Pomeroy, OH
Weeknights 'Till 9 •
Service

Middleport
·- ···-

12

'

8

7

Ham Salad
Potato Soup
Carrot Penny Salad
Grapes

Beef lind Noodles
Brocx:cli Salad
Peaches
White Of Brown Bread

Chicken Patty
Hash Browned Potatoes
Creamed Tamatoes
WMe or Brown Bread
Fru~ Cocktail

19

13
Succulent Pork Chop
Chaasy Scalloped Potatoes
Leaping Spinach
Golden Combread
German Chocolate Cake

I

THE .MEDICAL-SHOPPE

Kenneth
llough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.

n. Shoe Place
__., ______

.

L----!'E~I!!~~-~--.J

992·5627

Evening Dinners
The Senior Nutrition Program
evening meal will be served on
Tuesday and Thursday with
serving from 4:45 to 5:30p.m. A
suggested donation for the
eveni ng meal is $4.00. The

MARCH 2001

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM MENU

C.lherlne Slmpaon
Louisiana Wildlife and Flaherleo

We want your photos!

219 N. Blcond

C hi\ndeleur Island, a fedeta!
bird sanctuary that offers fishing comparable to the Florida

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

~'~
'O'J!~ea..., Inc.

RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT

WI! HONOR

SALIS &amp; RINTAU
fill IILMit'f

446·2206

212 lAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH

.

992·3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

'

1410 hckMR Pike
hlllpella, Ollie 45611
416
'"""'''"
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.,

Fre:e: De:live:ry and Training • We: Bill All Insurance:
• Sales &amp; lte:ntals • Same: Day Service: • 24 Hour
Emergency Service:
70 Pine: St.

740 -446 -7283
1-800 -458 -6844
Oh

•

�Page A

•

••'

6 • The Daily Sentinel

SOCIETY . NEWS .

&gt;

••

Thursday, March 1, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

S.A.R. celebrates
Washington's birthday
POMEROY- A commentary on George Washington in
recognition of his birthday was given by James Lochary,
president. at a recent meting of Ewings Chapters, Sons of the
American Revolution, held at the Meigt Museum.
Referencing recently published information, Lochary
noted Washington's great principles and his disinterest in
partisan politics, along with the first president's unforgiveness toward deserters during the American Revolution.
The program presented by Keith Ashley was on D~hn
Witherspoon, Presbyterian minister and president of Pri eton University. The talk pointed out that the British sa
Witherspoon as second only to George Washington in
bringing America's independence.
Ashley noted that Witherspoon served in Continenti!
Congress, was asigner of the Declaration of Independence,
and served as a member of the New Jersey legislature to
approve the U S. Constitution. He const~ntly pointed out
the need of fi scal responsibility of the tJ. S. government to
prevent . devahiation of U. S. currency and repudiation to
honor U S. debts.
Ashley also pointed out tll&lt;lt he is the fa th er of"Americ:mis.m", which showed the new cou mry as different from its
English heritage.
'
Plans were discussed for this yl!;-tr's participation in Veteran 's Day parades for Po meroy. Athc·ns,and Gallipolis. A nominating committee was also s~o.·t up :ts was :1 chairm:m of this
year's community citizen ;twards progmm for May.
An invitation from Nabby Lee Ames Chapter D.A.R. for
a J une 16 event were read. Betty Sue Kauff gave a verbal
invitation to the 1OOth anniversary luncheo n of Col. Charles
Lewis Chapter D.A.R. on June 2. A request for the marking
of two Revolutionary soldier' s graves near Macksburg was
reported and will be pursued.

Alpha Omicron ·
meets in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - Alpha Omicron Chap ter, Delta Kappa
Gamma, met at Holiday Inn in Gallipolis on Feb. 24. Table
favors we re ca ndies, pens, scar stickers, and angel decorations.
Members of the hostess committee present were C hairman
Cindy Johnson, Rosalie Story, Sandr.. Walker and Nellie Parker.
President Pam Toon led the business meeting. Secretary
· Nellie Parker and Treasurer Debra Hammond read their
reports, which were approved.Thanks from Serenity Hou se for
Christmas gifts was . read. Transfer of sc holarship fu l'ds from
Margaret Boyd was approved. Legislative chairman Viola Getdes read changes made in school legislation. Kindergarten students must be five years old by Aug. I and school volunteers
,
screened, both subject to local school approval.
January and February birthdays were announced. Members
shared stories of their "first crush." Announcement was made
of convention on April 27, 28 and 29 at Cincinnati. Get well
cards were signed for Fern Grimm, Martha Greenaway and
Dorothy Woodard.
·
The personal growth committee, made up of Chairq1an
Gay Perrin, Rosalie Story and Rebecca Zurcher, presented a
program o n Elderhostel, which sponsors trips to many different locations and attractions. Perrin explained some of the
experiences offered and showed ·a film. Those participating
must be 55 and can be accompanied by a younger person.
The -next meeting, a combined meeting, will be hosted by .
Betx Alpha, and will include Delta Epsilon and Beta Tau on
March 10 at the University of Rio Gran de's srudent annex.
The program begins at 10 a.m.
Meigs Courity members attendlng were P;unda Crow, Lee
Lee, Nellie Parker, Rosalie Story, Sa ndra Walker, Becky
Zurcher, and Gay Perrin.

GARDENING

Mountain herbs
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP). they do outside.
-They were growing and
- Give them a clip.
gathering herbs in the Seedlingt need a few weeks
App alachians of Weste rn to get established, but then
North Carolina probably start . c utting them back.
behfore thhe 19th cent~rlyk, Even if you want to leave
fl
h 1
ch
w en t e mountam 10
. .. 'ld fi . ..
owers on t e p ants 10r t e
11 d 11
1
ca Ne
h~ e ra ung: d · bees, cut most back for
ow t 1s cottage m us.
. ·
try is big industry, general- bushier, shapher, plants·.
ing $40 million or so every
- Know what you grow.
year for consumers newly Check out books and referinterested in plants that can ences about herbs a~d their
flavor, scent or maybe even uses . Start with a basic refheal. I
erence tliat gives scientific
Alan Salmon is a veteran names and general informaherb grower who now tion .
advises customers at .his
- Grower beware. Some ·
retail nursery, the Wildwood herbs can harmful if used
Herbal Flower Farm, in the incorrec tly. Always check
valley
just
north
of with your doctor before
Ashev ille.
trying herbs for medicinal
For example: " If you are
use. And it's important to
a card- holding ·Cilantro
know
which pa rt of the
. lover, you need to so,w seeds
every two weeks . "Sbw an d plant has medi cinal benefits
cover them lightly in a pot (flower, ieaves or root).
or in your ga rden in a sunny · - Seaso nin g. Plant for all
spot, and wa ter infrequent- seasons, and if you're in a
colder area, try h ardier
ly."
.
Limit the chemical fertil- herbs su ch as lavender, rose izers, he advises, because mary, thymt&gt; and sage.
these can adversely affect
- Keep a jou rna!. M ake a
flavor. And watch for late reco rd of new spr ing plant. spri'ng freezes . ,
ings and their car('. Draw
Other tips about herbs garden layout~ sn you' ll
from Salmon and other kn~w whcr\2' w look for thegrowing expe rts:
perennials to come up again
- Start early. Sow indoors
and avoid plaming someduring those weeks before
early-mo rning frosts are thing else on top of the
owr. You sho uld be able to establish ed plant . Pnste seed
count on th·e heads of packets and instrl!Ctions
seedlin gs to be· up and ready --into your journal.
for planting outdoors. Keep
Diversify. • Choose
in n1ind som e herbs don't plants for texture, leaf and
germinate as wdl indoors as flower colot. sce nt :~nd taste.

be

Thursday, March 1, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-

•

~~Live

from Fur Peace Ranch" set to air

ATHENS - Join Ohio University
Public Radio, the FM radio network, on
March 4 at 8 p.m. for the premiere of a
new concert series. 'Live From the Fur
Peace Ran&gt;h' bringt ro the airwaves a
series of concerts taped in an intimate
performance setting at Jorma ,Kaukonen's
Fur Peace Ranch in Pomeroy.
Kaukonen was a founding member of
the '60s rock band 'Jeff~rson Airplane'
and, while still with that group, cofounded 'Hot Tuna' with Airplane bass
guitarist Jack Casady. He has· performed
with many of the rock luminaries of the
'60s and '70s, from Janis Joplin and Jimi
Hendrix to Bob Dylan and Jerry Garcia.
With Hot Tuna and as a solo artist,Jorma
has been able to showcase his love for
acoustic music, especially blues in the
style of the Reverend Gary Davis.
Conceived in 1989 by Jorn)a and ·
Vanessa K.1ukonen, The Fur Peace Ran ch
is nestled in the rolling foothills of southc-ast Ohio, and serves as a seasonal instructional facility, year round restaurant. conce rt hall, and conference center. Instruction is offered by Jonna and visiting
musicians on guitar and other .instruments. The con cert h:1ll is :1 perfornuncc
space with outstanding acoustics where
audiences can share a cruly in rlmate
nu1s~cal event.
The radio series 'Live From the Fu r
Peace Ranch' presents a healthy sa mpling
of those concerts. The first program features John Hartford, known for his
appearances on the 'Glen Campbell
Good Time Hou r' in the '60s, wr iting the
classic, "Gentle On My Mind," his Grammy Award winning album "MarkTwang,"
in 1976, and his on-going infatuation
with steamboats and old-tim e fiddle
tunes . His band for this show include d
Mike Compton, former mandolin player
with the N ashville Bluegrass Band.
Also broadcast ih March o n the 18th at

• April 1 - Jorma Kaukonen. The
ranch boss ·gets his turn on stage.
• April 15 - Peter Rowan. A singersongwriter with some serious bluegrass
roots. A one-time member of Bill Monroe's Bluegrass Boys, he played guitar and
sang lead in that band and co-wrote the
classic, ~'Walls ofTime," with Monroe. He
has performed with many other artists in
other styles, prompting Monroe to cautionhim to not get so far out on the limb
lest he fall off. From bluegrass to Native
Anierican vocalizations, a performance
not to be missed.
• April 29 -John Hammond. From
coffeehouses to concert halls, festivals and
beyond, Joh n Hammond has spent more
than thirty five years entertaining blues,
folk, and rock audiences aro und the
Jorma Kaukonen
world, performing intense solo-acoustic
8 p.m. is a 'Guitar Summit' feat uring blues. A Grammy.Award winner who also
Kaukonen, Chris Smither and Robert enjoyed successive WC. Handy awards in
Jones. Smither's smooth, lyriCal guitar 1994, 1995 and 1996, Hammond h~
style encompasses elements of folk blues . shared the stage and or recorded Wit
·
. I d'
M u dd y
t:o untry and rock, and he plays in a' fluid,' many o f t.Il~ m~sters,
lllC u mg
busy style that is as breathtakin~;&gt; as it is Waters, Wdl~e D1xon, John Lee Hooker,
effortless. His expressive vocals demand and Howhn Wolf
.
attention . Smither's albums span from the
• May 13 _-G. E. Sm1th. Best known
'60s to the present, and he is best known ?s the gmtanst for Hall and Oates Ill the
for other artists, recordings of his songs, 80s and as the leader of the Saturday
including Bonnie Raitt's versions of, N1gh t L1ve Band, Snuth IS found here
"Love Me Like a Man," and, "I Feel the with a blistering set of electric blues.
Same," and John Mayall's roc9rding of,
• May 27 - Jorma Kaukonen and
"Mail Order M ystics."
Jack Casady. The duo from the Jefferson
Robert Jones is a native of Detroit with Airplane and Hot Tuna pare the sound
roots ·in Alabama and Mississippi. His bock to bass and guitar.
background includes over 15 years of ·' June 10 - Roy Book Binder. Like
experience as a blues performer, histori- Janna, very influenced by the Reverend
an, radio-broadcaster and educator. He is Gary Davis, tempered with a big dose of
also an ordained Baptist minister who PinkAnderson.An excellent guitarist and
feels that blues has a lot to offe r in terms singer, and an outstanding story teller.
of spiritual content. Jones is an extrao rdi• June .24- 'Guitar Summit Part 2.'
nary instrumentalist, playing guitar, slide More from the concert featuring Chris
guitar, harmonica, mandolin, fiddle , quills Smith er, Robert Jones , and Jorma
and banj o in a variety of rc;~;&gt;ional styles.
Kaukonen, plus additional programs from
·Other performances set to air are: ,
Fu·r' Peace will air in the future.

Roughing it no longer part of hunting and fishing for many
J.

· THE
LOUI~IANA
MARSH, La. (AP) -Outside,
a frigid wind is whipping the
tall grasses that spring up out of
the Gulf of Mexico waters.
the slap
Oth.er than the ''"nd,
'•
of waves, occasional screech of
a gull and muted roar of a giant
generator are the only sounds.
The 5,000-square foot fl oating resort standing amid the
low islands of the marsh doesn't even rock in the chop, it's
too big, too solid- an oasis of
luxury in the wild world of
duck hunting and fi shing.
" If we get a really big blow
you 'can n otice the chandelier
over the table move a little bit,"
said Joe Parsons, captain of tho
lodge, as h e prepared a lunch of
j ambalaya and oysters on the
halfshell. "Other than that, it's
easy to forget you 're Out in the
middle of the marsh."
The living room of the
Beau Rivage Sportsman's
Lodge features a big-screen
television and entertainment
center. Upstairs are six large,
well-appointed rooms with
full-size baths ··comparable to
those of the resort on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, about 35
miles aw•y. Decks offer space to
relax ' and enjoy the view or
. eyen drop a fishing line. .
Dinner is a three-course
meal that may include the
guests' catch of the day or

"Historically, whet! you went lutltting or fishing,
you weren't living ill the laJI of luxury. But
I.
I
I
d .
dll; h , d ,
t nngs 1ave c lange SlliCt my gra·;, ,at er s .ay.

Keys, the rest of the year.
G uests h ave th e1r
· c h oiCe
· of
arriving either. by boat or
'game, and be complemented _only minimal shelter.
pi
.
·
'"
'"
-''h
ane.
. is do;;e. lrol-n
"" 1
by a variety of wines. A fuU oar' · "People ave more . leisure
Duck hunting
is also provided.
money to ~pend and they are
"I used to go out years ago sp~nding it ~n more · comfort comfortable boats that transand camp in tents, sleep o n the when they go hunting and form into du ck blinds. Fishing
ground, and come home fishing," said Grant Willbanks, is done from flatbo~ts. All trips
thinkin g l'd had a great time," president of Ducks-Unlimited's are accompan ied by guides,
said Charles Boone, 72, of Louisian~ chapter. "The days of who also clean and either cook
Pigeon Ford,Tenn. , who stayed ,d rafty camps and pr imitive
·
·
· 1y over . or pack the catch for transat the Iodge on a fishing
tnp.
con dit1·ons are certam
"These days I know better. I for commercial camps."
portation.
like to fish, I don't like to rough
l'eople expect more cpmAnother option is to trans-·
it."
fort in thdr everyday lives. port the game or fish back to
. And Boono is apparendy T hey aJ.&gt;o want comfort in the hotel w here a chef in one
among a growing ·group of th eir recreational activities, said of the 10 restaurants can prehunters and fishermen who Tom Prickett, chief of the
c- D .
pare it and serve it.
Ii ke tIJe sport, b ut not t h e aus- Louisiana w·ildl i.e
ivi~Oil ,
terc conditions that were tradi'' It'~ purely a matter of ceo''We get both men and
tiona~y a part of it.
nomict,imd time," Prickett said. women at the lodl(e," ·said Bo
"Historically, when .you '"If sl!riJeone's going hunting Hamilton, who. is in charge of
wenf hunting or fishing, you or fishing three or four days a both the lodge and the resort's
\Wren't living in the lap oflux- year, they usually aren't ·going marina. "But sontetimes the
ury," said Catherine Simpson to h:i\lc their own camp. But if
with the Louisiana Wildlife and they'•&amp;; paying to go out, they husband comes to the lodge
Fisheries office. "But things are going to want more than and the wife stays at the hotel
have changed since my grand- · just the bare minimum.''
to shop and go to the spa,
father's. day."
The Beau Rivage lodge maybe. Then he might want to
Just as styles of camping and represents the top of the line in take his catch · back for them
o ther outdoor activities have public hunting and fi shing
both to en;oy.''
added comfort, hunting an d facilities.
'
fishing camps have become
The lodge, built on a barge,
Duck hunting costs $450
more than the ramshackle is towed to the Louisiana per person for an overriight .
buildingt that once provided M arsh for duck season, to stay, fishing $600 per person. .

· The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
guidelines for submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided .they are In focus
and have gobd contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
please include a print along with the negative.
· • Black·and-photogrliphs are accepted, provided they are In
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however, please Include a print along with the negative.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are in focus
and have good contrast. ·
·
· • Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa~
let size and no larger than 8 x 10.
•

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

:COUPON I
I .

.

.

: u, To ss.oo OF.F :

: : 4ny Pres,c ription :
I

I

Limit 1 ,Per Cu•tomer Per Prescription

1 ' Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND- DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES. DOCKERS

1

"··---~-h-

The Senior Nutrition Program meal Is served at 12:00 dally.

5

evening meal is intended to
provide a nutritional meal at a
reasonable cost. Dollars
generated will be used to
support the existing lunch and
home delivered meal program.

TUESDAY

THURSDAY
8

6
Hearty Beef Stew
Flaky Buttermilk Biscuit
Sweet Senior Slaw
Ruby Jell-0 Jubi.I ee

Delicious Tur11ey Roll
with Savory Stufljng
Creamy Mashed Potatoes
Saasoned Green Beans
Buttered Roll
Earth Quake Cake

Mon-Frt 8 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sat 8:00 a.m. to 8 :00 p.m,
Sun 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

~.

'·

"

Beef Vegetable Soup
Peanut Butter Sandwich
Crackels
Whne or Brown Bread
Tropical FN~

15
Maatloaf
Hot Baked Potato
Broccoli Cheese Casserole
Flaky Croissant
Luck of the Irish Dessert

Piclded Beets
Rocky Road Pudding
Whne Of Brown Bread
Tangelo

Liver and Onions

Mashed Potatoes
C)'tlamed Com
Whrte or Brown Bread
Oranges and Grapelru~

Mashed Potatoes and Gravy

Buttered Peas
WMe or Brown Bread
Orange

Green Beans
WMe or Brown Bread
Blushing Pears

11

15

Crisp Baked Chicken
Baked Sweet Potaloes

27
Ham lj. Scalloped Potatoes
Tossed Salad
Orange Juice
Whrte Of Brown Bread
Banana Graham Pudding

Johnny Marzetti
Perfection Salad
Apple Juice
White or Brown Bread
Angel Food Cake

or Brown Bread

Banana
23
Baked Fish
Cheese Palalaes
Mixed Vegetables
Whrte or Brown Bread
Pineapple Tidb~ s

Ham Loaf.
Creamed Potatoes
Spinach
Whrte or Brown Bread
Grapes. Cake

29

21
Amish Vinegar Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
Skillet Green Beans
Wh~e or Brown Bread
Apple

Lima Beans
Wh~e

22

21

20
Baked Chicken
Mallhod Potatoes
Mixad Vegetables
Whrte or Brown Bread
Frozen Ambrosia

28

Roast Beef

Over Rice

, Boiled Ham Dinner
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Irish Potatoes
Buttered Italian Vegetables
Paddy's Cabbage &amp; Carrots
Ga~ic Bread
Pineapple Juice
Applesauce
Emerald Isle Pudding

Scalloped Chicken

Baked Pork Chap
Augratin Potatoes
Peas with Mushrooms
Whrte or Brown Bread
Purple Plums

Chicken a Ia King

14

13

Sloppy Joe Sandwich
Cheese Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
WhHe or Brow,n Bread
Pineapple

30
Macaroni and Cheese
Broccoli

Stewed Tamataes
WMe or Brawli Bread
Banana

. 22
Amish Vinegar Chicken ·
Seasoned Potatoes
Callfomla Blend Vegetables
Golden Roll

Italian Spaghetti ·
Soft Bread Sticks
Crispy Tossed Sa led
Dutch Apple Pie

TRIPS

Peach Crtep

29

27
Alaskan Pollock Fish &amp;
Shrimp
Seasoned Potato Wedges
Steamed Mixed Vegetables
Flaky Croissant
StrawbEirry Shortcake

Beef Pepper Steak over
Staamed Rice
Orange Glazed Carrots
Old Fashion BlscuH
Pumpkin Delight

6-'

TUESDAY, MARCH
Blood Presaure Checks 4:15 •
. 4:45
THURSDAY, MARCH 8· Rita and Junior will play music
at 5:30 • 6:30

The following trips for 2001
have been planned by the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.
Trip to COS! in Columbus for
the exhibition "Secrets of
Aging" and tour of the AnthonyThomas Candy Company on
Thursday, April 19 at a cosl of
$45.00.
.
Trip· lo Zanesville on
Thursday, June 7 at a cost of
$45.00 includes the NatioMI
Road -Zane Grey Museum,
Putnam Mansion, buffet
Iimcheon and tour of the Schultz.
Mansion and Grounds, and
shopping at Zanesville Pottery
and China, White Pillars
Christmas House and Colonial
Cottage.
Betty Brent, Sales Promotion
Agent from Park Tours, will be
at the Center on Tuesday, March
13 at 1:00 to talk about several
one, tw·o and three day trips
offered by Park Tours. Betty will
show video clips of several
destinations being considered
for trips by lhe center. If al least
fifteen persons are Interested in
a Park Tour, trip arrangement•
will be made for pickup In
Meigs County.
For funher Information about
trips contact Allee Wamsley at
992-2161.

A big thank you goes to
Don Poole with the Tuppers
PlaJn~.Chester Water
District for donating bottled
water to the Fitness Center
lit the Meigs Senior Center•
Don Is pictured delivering
the water.

Ballroom Dance classes
Haven 'I you always wanted to
get on the dance floor and show
everyone what a smooth dancer
you are? Gerald Powell will
teach beginning ballroom
dancing classes at the Center on
the following dates from 7:00

Dr. Arnold Penix, M.D. Ia pictured during a speaking
engagement at the· Melge Senior Center. Dr. Penix Ia
one of the new orthopedic physlclana lit Holzer Mecncal
Center.

AARP 55 ALIVE
Driver·safety program
'

Learn lhe fun art of compillns:
a pholo album/scrapbook. You
can create a family heirloom, or
a visual memory of a special
evenl or trip. When: Thutliday,
March 15, 2001 from 1:00pm •
4 pm or 6:00 pm • 9:00 pm.
Paula Pickens will teach the
early class and Jeannie Taylor
will inslruct the .late.ctas;;.
Cost:. $10.~0 wh1~h mcludes
profe~s1onal mstrucuon and. all
matenals lo complele the fmt
page of your album/scrapbook.
Bring 8-10 photographs to
start your album/scrapbook.
Registration deadline is March
8. Call Patty Pickens at 9922161 to register.
.Albums/scrapbooks can be as
s1mple or as _ei~borate as y~u
want. If there 1s mterest, ~.e will
coniinue with additiOnal
t'nstructl'on or slart a scrapbook

Support
groups
.
The Arthritis Supporr Group
meets on the third Friday of
each month from 10:00 a.m.
until 11:30 a.m. Meetings are
scheduled for March 16 &amp; April
20 in the conference room at the
Meigs Senior Center.

• IS

OCia

ecun'ty

DiabeteS
SUPPO.rt grOUP

Join us for our first " Senior
· Prom" at the Meigs Senior
Center on April 24. The Center
will be decorated from top to
bottom for this occasion, so get
out your fancy dress and shoes
or your suit and tie . Gerald
Powell will be lhe emcee for the
daytime event, so be sure to
come and dance with your
'"date" from 10:30 a.m. - noon.
The Prom will continue into the
. evening from 5:30 p.m. · 7:00
p.m. afler the Evening Meal.
Come join us for dinner and an
evening of dancing and fun .

Activity
schedule
The Me igs Multipurpose
Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
until 4 :30 p.m. Regu larly
scheduled activities held
through out the week inc lude
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo,
cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at 1:00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per sess ion attended.
The Knitting Circle meets on
Wednesday from 10-:00 a.m.
until noon.
Older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you ca n enjoy the
regular meal. A Ia carte items are
ind ivid ua ll y priced. The
suggested donation for lh e noon
·
meal is $1.50. .

The Arthritis Support Group is
made possible through funds
costs
from the Ohio Department of
the suggelled donation
Health and Ohio Umversity.
The annual Easter Dinner will
faramealis$1 .50
The Caring and Sharing be served at noon on Thursday,
Support Group will meet the April 12. Bring a friend a.nd
Gue&amp;t fee for persons
fourth Thursday of each month enjoy the day at the Senwr
at the Meigs County Senior . Center.
Center at 1:00 p.m. The meeting
d t
M h 22 &amp; A .126 ·
a ~s ar~ arc .
pn . ·
Juhe R1ce, Phys~eal Therap.1st
f
\1
M
1
ro~
~terans
emona
Hosp1lal, w1ll be the presenter at
lhe March meeting. Julie 's topic
will be "Benefits of Massage..:
For the April 26 meeting a tour
·we Care For You Like Family•
of Wyngate of Gallipolis is
Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds • Power Wheel Chair
scheduled, Wyngatc is an
Portable
Oxygen
• Wheel Chairs ·Scooter
assisted living facility.
NebuliZers
• Patient Lifts
• Bedside Commodes
Transportation will be provided
CPAP!BIPAP
•
Lift
Chairs
• Bath/Safety Items
by the Center at a charge ?f
$2.00 per person . Vans w11l
leave the Center at. 10:_DO a.m.
We.
be_ bad; m t1me for
senwrs to nde the vans home.
Lunch will be provided. Please
call Patty Pickens at 992·2161 if
you are interested in going.
iLo.calllyOperared By: Mary Ann Bowman, Lewis Bowman,
Dan Bowman, Keith Blanken.•hip

d'

The 55 ALIVE Driver safety spots on a parking lot?
Program that was developed
The fee for the B·,hour
by AARP will be held on course is 410.00. Make
Tuesday
April 17 and check or money order
Wednesday, April 18, from payable to AARP. Certlfica~es
10:00 a.m .• 2:30p.m, each wil be given upon completion
day at the Senior Canter,
of the course. Some
The Defensive Driving ·insurance companies offer
C
Ill h I
·
t
t
sons
·
Refresher· ourse w
e P dlscoun s
o
per
answer these common ,compllllling the 55 ALIVE
·
Course. Check with yo,ur club. Why not create an album
q.uestr'ons:
E t 'ft?
• Why dO drivers aged 55 Insurance company.
. 10 give as an as erg'
and over have mora
To enroll or for further
accidl!nts par mile than Information, call Allee
Wamsley,
55
ALIVE
drivers age 30 to 54?
• . How should you handle Volunteer Instructor, at 992right-of-way situations, the 2161.
·
:,
number one problem area for
l A representative from the
! Athens Social Security Office is
drivers aged 55 and over?
• How does the aging
at the Meigs Multipurpose
process, such as vision
Senior Center to assist persons
problems, hearing loss, .
with Social Security problems
slower reaction times, affect
and to provide information. The
your driving ability?
Nancy Stevens; from Holzer elates are March 14 &amp; 28 and
• How .can you best Medical Center, is the facilitator April 11 &amp; 25 from 10:00 a.m .•
respond to adverse driving for the Diabetes Suppon Group. fl:OO a.m.
conditjons, suah as rain, lea They will meet in the
and dark of night?
·
Conference Room on 'March 15
• Whal are the safety rules &amp; April 1 at 10:30 a.m. Special
for making a left turn, when music by Meigs High School
are you expected to yield the students is scheduled for the
· April 12 meeting. All .ages are
right of way, etc?
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT S ,PPL.IES and BRACES
• Where are the danger welcome.
HOME OXYGEN and

S

pm • 8:00pm ·June 7, 14, 28,
July ~. &amp; 12. The cost is $50.00
for · the S-week class and is
limited to 10 couples. You must
register by May 28th by calling
Patty Pickens · at .992-2161.
Leather shoes arc · required for
lhe class.

Senior Prom

Photo albums
and scrapbooks

Easter Inner

oo:"'

tz:•: r.x11 i• •~~' *itd 1gr111M Iii •

,

PRESCRIPTION PHONE 992·2995 1
E. Main • Pomeroy, OH
Weeknights 'Till 9 •
Service

Middleport
·- ···-

12

'

8

7

Ham Salad
Potato Soup
Carrot Penny Salad
Grapes

Beef lind Noodles
Brocx:cli Salad
Peaches
White Of Brown Bread

Chicken Patty
Hash Browned Potatoes
Creamed Tamatoes
WMe or Brown Bread
Fru~ Cocktail

19

13
Succulent Pork Chop
Chaasy Scalloped Potatoes
Leaping Spinach
Golden Combread
German Chocolate Cake

I

THE .MEDICAL-SHOPPE

Kenneth
llough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.

n. Shoe Place
__., ______

.

L----!'E~I!!~~-~--.J

992·5627

Evening Dinners
The Senior Nutrition Program
evening meal will be served on
Tuesday and Thursday with
serving from 4:45 to 5:30p.m. A
suggested donation for the
eveni ng meal is $4.00. The

MARCH 2001

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM MENU

C.lherlne Slmpaon
Louisiana Wildlife and Flaherleo

We want your photos!

219 N. Blcond

C hi\ndeleur Island, a fedeta!
bird sanctuary that offers fishing comparable to the Florida

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

~'~
'O'J!~ea..., Inc.

RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT

WI! HONOR

SALIS &amp; RINTAU
fill IILMit'f

446·2206

212 lAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH

.

992·3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

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�The Daily Sentinel

GOP broldens appeal to blacks
WASHINGTON (AP) - GOP national chairman Jim
Gilmore told a brgely Republican audience of blacks Wednesday that efforts to broaden the party's appeal to minorities will
take "a St&lt;&gt;dy and Jong-ttrm opproach."
The Republican Party has invested a lot of effort in the past
year reaching out to black voters, but has little to show for it,
the Virginia governor told a crowd of several hundred gathered
for a celebration of Black History Month.
,
President Bush made a concentrated effort to reach out to
black voters during his campaign, but got ·only 9 percent of the
black vote in the presidential election, compared with Democrat AI Gore's 90 percent. Bush's share was smaUer than GOP
nominee Bob Dole's in 1996 and about the same as the 10 percent Bush's father got in 1992 in a three-way race.
The disputed election results in Florida intensified hard feel·
ings about Republicans in the black community.

Academy disputes Corps study
WASHINGTON (AP) - A scientific panel says it has found
flaws throughout an Army Corps of Engineers study of
whether $1 biUion should be spent on a huge river constru ction project.
The National Academy of Sciences report, issued Wednesday,
is thl! latest in a string of major studies to critici-Ze th~ corps'
process of deciding if the cost oflengthening barge locks on the
upper Mississippi and Illinois rivers would be justified by the
econ01uic rewards.
The report strongly urged the corps to consider the l)lllchless-expensive option of improved scheduling of barges that
want to pass through the system's 29 locks and dams.
''There were major problems at nearly every step," panel chair
Lester Lave, a Carnegie MeDon economics professor, said of the
corps study. "The flaws are not subtle ones."

Court ruling favors lawyers
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court took these
actions Wednesday:
• Ruled 5-4 that Congress cannot bar lawyers funded by· the
federal Legal Services Corp. from representing poor clients in
chaUenging welfare lows. The restriction violates the Constitution 's 1 First Amendment free speech protection, the court said.
• Dealt a setback to the term limits movement, ruling that
states cannot use election baUots to brand congressional candidates as opponents. The justices unanimously threw out Missouri's labeling provision, sayirtg it put targeted candidates at a
disadvantage and "attempts to dictate electoral outcomes."
• Heard arguments on whether a New York public school
must let a Christian youth group use its building for after school
meetin~ that include Bible , St\ldy, prayer, son~ and games.
School officials banned the meetings, saying they amounted to
religious worship, but the youth group said the school violated
its free speech rights.

Page AI

•World

Thursday, Mllrch 1. 2001

Earthquake hits Northwest, but buildings hold up
SEATTLE (AP) - from the doorway
of the downrown Sheraton Hotel, valet
Mark Stanton watched glass-and-steel
skyscrapers swaying and flexing in ways
he never thought pc.,sible under the
power of the region's strongest earthquake in a half-cenrury.
"I watched this whole hotel shimmy,"
Stanton said. "I didn't know glass could
flex like that."
The 6.8- magnitude earthquake, centered about 35 miles southwest of Seattle, was felt Wednesday as far away as
southern Oregon and Canada.
Though bricks .&gt;nd shattered glass
tumbled into the streets, all but a few of
the roughly 250 injuries were minor and
most of the Northwest's buildings survived structurally unscathed. ·

"We're just really, reaDy lucky," Gov.
Gary Locke said after surveying the
region by helicopter.
· Locke estimated da;nages would
exceed S1 billion and declared a state of
emergency, but he said the million of
dollars of i1ives'tments the state and cities
put into stabilizing buildings and bridges
apparently paid olf.
·M ost buildings constructed in Seattle
since the mid-1970s were built to a uniform code designed to withstand strong
earthquakes.
.
The Space Needle, where more than
two dozen people rode out Wednesday's
quake from about 600 feet above the
city, was built to handle a 9.1-magnitude
quake. Twenty minutes after the shaking
stopped, the elevators and structure were

Don11eU Walker, 30, fell through the transparent ceiling of an
indoor courtyard at the base of the IDS Center on Tuesday,
landing by a fountain near a restaurant.
. About 50 people were ill the courtyard of restaurants and
stores, One ,Voman ~uffered cuts and scratches .
W.1lker walked quickly into the ·offices of Hunter K~ith
Industries Inc., past an employee and into an empty office on
the skyscraperr's top floor, police spokeswoman Cyndi Montgomery said. People in the office said they did not know the

declared safe.
"It was like a rolling ship in the
ocean," said Daryl Stevens, who was on
the Space Needle's observation deck.
The tower's facilities director, Rick Harris, declared it "the best ride in town."
"The code worked, but it wasn't tested to the fuU extent;' said BiD Steele, .a
seismology lab coordinator at the University ofWashington.
Vikram Prakash, an associate professor
at · the university's architecture depatt•
ment, s~id the devastation from January's
7. 9-magnitude quake in India was partly due to contractors skimping on materials. Nearly 20,000 people died in that
earthquake and entire cities were leveled.

m.an and did not believe he \vas an employee there.

Stuck motorist sought help
GREAT HECK, England (AP) -With a high-speeq passenger train bearing down on his L:ind Rover stuck on the train
tracks, the frantic motorist c.Ued an emergency number frorn
his cell phone nearby, but it was too late. "The train's coming!"
he shouted -just before it hit.

Inside:
Big East to oust Temple, Page B2
Spring Training roundup, Page B6
':!Oday ~ Scoreboard, Page B8

Suspect: bombing a 'mistake'
NEW YORK (AP) -A suspect in the deadly bombing of
the U.S. embassy in ~nya told the FBI that it .was a "big nus. take" because the bomb was improperly placed in a truck,
killing too many civilians, an FBI agent testified Wednesday.
The agent, John Anticev, told a jury in federal court in Manhattan that Mohamed Sadeek Odeh said during an interrogation that he did not know about the Aug. 7, 1998, blast in ·
Nairobi before it happened,
"He thought it was a blunder," Anticev recaUed Odeh saying.
"He didn'tlike that so many civilians were kiUed."
The agent said Odeh told him the bomb vehicle should have
been backed into the embassy rather than striking it h,e ad-on so
the .blast would not have been .directed toward other buildings
and scores of civilians.

Toddler critical, but 'better'
EAU CLAIRE,Wis. (AP) -A 2-year-old boy found !}ring in
a snowbank and not breathing had been outside in subzero cold
for up to four hours, authorities said.
Les Hynek remained in critical condition Wednesday at the
Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Mi11n.
"He's better. He's awake. I wasn't too late when I found him,"
the boy's father Mark Hynek said. "I just' keep on praying for .
him and hoping for the best."
Elsewhere, a 13-month-old girl whose body was partiaUy
frozen and whose heart had stopped during a night outside in
the cold at Edmonton,Alberta, was playful and talking and had
been moved out of intensive care, hospital officials said.

Duo denies role In shootln1
NEW YORK (AP) -1Wo rappers linked to a shootout outside a Greenwich ViUage radio station broke their silence
Wednesday, saying they were not involved.
"We're very sorty this situation occurred," Capone-N-Noreaga said in brief a statement released by their publicist. "(We)
had nothing to do with the shooting."
K.iaiu "Capone" HoOey and Victor "Noreaga" Santiago added
they "are cooperating fully with the police, and hope that whoever is responsible for this is brought to justice."
Capon~-N-Noreaga previously refused to comment about
the alleged clash between their entourage and that of rapper Lil'
Kim. Earlier this week, Lil' Kim's manager said her client knew
nothing of the incident.

. Man leaps from skysaaper
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A mart broke a window on the
51 sr floor of Minnesota's tallest building and leaped to his
death.

Page 81
lhuncl.y. Mllrch 1. 2001

ThuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Butch
Cooper

Fleury enters
subStance
.+'buse program

THE BUTCHMEISTER

Get "Ventura
out of the
XFL booth!

· NEW YORK (AP) T.heo Fleury, the New York
Rangers' leading scorer, has
v6luntarily entered an inp~tient substance-abuse program and wiD be sidelined
indefinitely. ,
Under terms of the substance-abuse and behavioralh~alth program run by the
NHL and the players' association, the 32-year-old Fleury
Will continue to receive his
fUll salary and benefits. He
\viii not have · a penalty
i"mposed as long as he complies with the prescribed
treatment and aftercare pro-

gram.

··Fleury leads the Rangers
with 30 goals and 7 4 points in·
his second · season after comirig to
York as a free

tllew

3gent. ,"

·.

: Justice sued In
·•·palimony suit
,.
.LOS ANGELES (AP) New York Yank~es outfielder
Oavid Justice ~ sued for $5
iipllion in a palimony suit
filed by his son's mother, who
i'aid she and the infant were
bi:dered out of the Cincinn'a:ti
home they shared for two
y~ars.
..

Bill extends protection
WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmers filing · for bankruptcy
would continue to receive special protection so they would not
have to sell olf their equipment under a bill passed Wednesday
by the House.
Under other bankruptcy la.,.;s, debtors can be fon:ed tO' 'seU
off ·assets before they can · reorganize their debts. Rep. Nick
Smith, the biD's sponsor, said if farmers have to liquidate their
equipment, they have no way to earn a living and puU out of
debt.
"Chapter 11 and Chapter B don't acconunodate the needs
of a family farmer," said Smith, a Republican who owns a
2,000-acre farm near Addison, Mich.
' ·
The bill would extend Chapter 12 of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code for an additional It months beyond its expiration on July
I, 2000. Chapter 12 was originally enacted as a temporary measure in 1986, but ha.s been extended four times.

The Daily Sentinel

Kafefl'llkcW, ..

·Rafter upset ·-

. .flbal Open ,

DUBA,I, Uirited Arab Emirates (Ai&gt;) - . )'egevny :J.&lt;afel.
nikov and Patrick Rafter were
upset by unseeded players in
the second round of $1 million Dubai ,Open. ·
Thomas Johansson beat the
third-seeded Kafelnikov 7-6,
7-5, and Andrei Medvedev
downed the fifth-seeded
Rafter 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-1. He
next plays top-seeded Marat
Safin, who scored a 7-5, 7-6
(5) victory over Julien Bouiter.
Jopanss.o n next meets Max
Mirnyi,'
who . defeated
Vladimir, ·Voltchkov. Second,seeded Magnus Norman
defeated Andre Pavel. fie will
play seventh-seeded Juan Carl-os Ferrero, who beat Jiri
Novak.
Sixth-seeded
Dominik Hrbaty eliminated
Bchdati' Olihrach.

·' ••

~o.

.

4 Tar Heels
deteat
N.C.
.

State 76-63

Tony .sanneh .(22) of the United States controls the ball during the American's 2-0 vicStadium In Clumbus Wednesday. (AP)

u.s~ bla
~~('

COLU~US, Ohio (AP) substitutes, cqwbined on the first
A flag-waving,_L'U-S-A" chanting
Mter ·the l,fpited SJ:tt~-beat Mexico· goal Wedpeij:lay• in the United . crowd of 24,6'24 i in the 29'~pegree
in a World' Cup qujillfiet' for the fint · States' ·2kO CONCACAF qualifying chiD of Columbus also did what
time in 20 years,
coach Bruce game .victory. Wolff then set up vet- they could to ensure a home field
Arena didn't wal11 to read too much eran Earnie Stewart for the clincher advantage in the opener of the final
into we. win.
.
with three minutes remaining.
round of qualifYing.
"You ' can'~: make ,.more out of
"We obviously faced a lot of
"It was a great atmosphere, everytoday thim what it really is ... we are adversity having to make a couple of t&gt;ne on the bench felt it, a real
simply happy we were able to pro- changes," Arena said. "I am real . homefield advantage," defender Jeff
teet our home rurf," he said. "It is a proud of the way our team puUed Agoos said. "I think this is a big step·
long haul and it is going to be a real together at halftime and did the job for (American) soccer in general."
battle the next' nine games."
in the second half to get the yictoThe win was the Americans'
But after losing two veteran play- ry."
· third straight over Mexico, a first in
ers to early injuries, Arena got an
After losing forward Brian the rivalry. The United States won
idea of how his team responds when McBride and midfielder Claudio both meetiA~ with its archrlval in
things aren't going theft way when Reyna to injury, the Americans 2000, blanking Mexico 3-0 ancl
two youngsters steppecl in to turn showed some rare depth in Wolff, then 2-0.
the game atpund:
who turned 24 on Sunday, and
Josh Wolff and Clint Mathis, both Mathis, also 24.
PluH ... U.S~ 82

US.

VanH

.,
I

Jesse Ventura.
The name alone conjures up many
things.
Controversy, intolerance and even
respect.
When it comes to his XFL broadcasts,
·it conjures up another word .... terrible.
The Body has done it aU from being
· a Navy Seal, pro wrestler and later
wrestling broadcaster, to actor and. oh,
yeah, current Minnesota governor.
But he should stay as far away from
the XFL broadcast booth as he can, even
though he was a football broadcaster in
Tampa Bay in the pall. from what I've
heard from reliable sources, he wasn't
that bad.
This time it's a different story.
I started watching the XFL this season
from day one, wanting to give this
upstart footbaU league a chance. I love
my football and can't get enough of it.
Besides, it's either more footbaU or the
NBA and I'd rather pull my finger nails
out than watch the NBA.
That's another story for another day,
though. Back to the XFL.
The footbaU itself is not aU that great,
but I used to cover the Charleston
Rockets semi-pro football team, so I've
seen worse. A lot worse as a matter of
fact.
NBC sports coverage as always .... to
use a wrestling expression from the
great tag team duo of Edge and Christian.... "wreaks of heinosity."
TNN and UPN do a much better job
in their XFL broadcasts.
Even good ole J.R., aka Jim Ross, a
part of the J.R.-King Monday n~ght
wrestling announcing duo, isn't that
bad.
Jesse Ventura, his XFL broadcast colleague, though, should be taken off the
air as soon as possible.
Please, please, please, please!!!
While J.R. seems to be attempting to
actually broadcast the game and looks to
r

.,

PIMse- Cooper, 82

paces Herd over Bowling Green

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) said.
J.R. VanHoose had one.!;!!"' pn his
MarshaU (17-8, 11-6 Mid-Amerimind Wednesday night ' to :· beat · CaJ,l Conference) beat Bowling Green
Bowling Green for the firslllme in liis ' for the first time in six games dating
Marshall career.
' :'it
to February. 1998.
"I wasn't concerne~ a~~ what I
hi addition to his offense, VanHoose
was gomg to do tomght, ~Hoose and others held Bowhng Green ceosaid. "I just wanted to help •-the team ter Len MateJa to six points, 10 under
play good defense. I'm glad I was able his average.
to help."
"Coach just told us if we could shut
The junior taUied his eigh\h,Straight doym the post, we'd be aU right
double-double with 19 pain\~ and 10 against these guys,"VanHoose said.
The teams combined for 33
rebounds to lead Marsh.U to a 63-55
victory.
.
·
' :.
_ ~urnovers. MarshaU shot 40 peJ:Cent
"There's no doubt in + n d . from the floor and Bqwling Green
where J.R. rates within this 'l'l!nfer' ·'
·
ence:' Marsh.U coach Greg White
P1HH 1H Herd. 82

Redhawks hold off Ohio
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Alex
Shorts scored 20 points in limited
pla~ng time, .and Jason Grunkeme er made four free throws in the
fina eight seconds to help Miami,
Oh o, hold off Ohio 76- 72
Wednesday night.
Doug Davis. had 16 points, julius
Johnson 15 and Grunkemeyer 12
for Miami (14-14, 10-7 MAC).
Brandon Hunter scored 21,Anthony Jones 17 and Jon Sanderson 11

CHAPEL HILL, . N.C.
(AP) - Joseph Fort,e scored
27 points and Matt Doherty
became .the first coach to win
&lt;ilr share an ACC reslllar-season tide in his firs.t s~0 n "'!
No. 4 North CaroUna beat
~orth
Carol.jna
.76-63. ·
\Vednesday night.
· • Th~ Tar Heels (23"4, 13-2)
captured the No. I seed in
next week's ACC tOurnament
in Atlaqta with , the win,
s4ooting 57 perce~t:
: •. Duke Icould tie North
CarI
,
o1ina ·irl the league standings
with a victory at the Smith
Center on Sunday, but North
BY DI\N POLCYN
OVP SPoRTS STAFF
Carolina . would win the tieRIPLEY - Wirt County erased a 10l?Teaker because of its season
poin~
fourth quarter deficit to defeat
.Weep of Maryland.
, .
Wahama, 45-42 Wednesday in sectional tourForte had 19 poirtts. in. !"e
Qament action.
oecond half, while · Ronald
Eric Jlailey's four free throws in . the final
CUrry added a career-high 14 ..
:20 turhed a :42-41 deficit into a Tiger win.
as the tar Heels have now
The
first two came in response to Wahama's
won or sh;m:d 23 ACC r;guJeremy Hudnall, who nailed both ends to
lar-season crowns in . the
give the White Falcons their last lead.
league's 48 years.
The second two came after Waharna turned
. · Brenc;lan Haywood of the
the ball over with :13 remaining and was
Tar' Heels became the ninth
forced
:to j&gt;ul.
·
player in AC C hi!tory. to
Wahama did. have one last chance, gaining
crack the l 00-block mark m a .
CIUSriD- WBham'a•s Jeremy Hudnall120) drives to the bas- possession after Baileys' final fre.e throws, but
lingle season with his three
Ryan Roush's desperation trey with two
.ket Wednesday lh sectional play. (Dan Polcyn photo)
· ~ections in the first half.

for Ohio (17-10, 12-6).
Miami led 29-17 at halftime and
by double digits most of the second
half until Ohio raUied from being
11 down with 3:51 to play.
A 3- pointer by Hunter cut the
lead to two with nine seconds left,
but Grunkemeyer was fouled
immediately and ma,le both free
throws. A layup by Jones again cut

Please -

Ohio, 82

Wirt County rallies in fourth

to defeat Wahama 45-42 ·

------ -----..:-._ - -- ------ _... -- ---..

),

---··-' '

Tigers in his face fell short and scaled the
Wire victory.
Wirt outscored the Falcons 20-7 in the
final' frame. Five Tigers scored as Wahama
missed six free throws in the final frame.
"We missed a few going down the stretch," ·
said Wahama coach Lewis Hall. "It hurt us."
Wahama hit just 10-of-20 free throws on
the night.
·
Baileys and Adam Nicolais each scored
seven in the final Tiger run. Baileys led Tiger
scorers with 16 on the night. •
Hall commented on the difference in the
game. "Intensity by Wirt County. They did a
good job," he said. "When they got it down

PleaH •• Wahama, 82
.,

... ..

�The Daily Sentinel

GOP broldens appeal to blacks
WASHINGTON (AP) - GOP national chairman Jim
Gilmore told a brgely Republican audience of blacks Wednesday that efforts to broaden the party's appeal to minorities will
take "a St&lt;&gt;dy and Jong-ttrm opproach."
The Republican Party has invested a lot of effort in the past
year reaching out to black voters, but has little to show for it,
the Virginia governor told a crowd of several hundred gathered
for a celebration of Black History Month.
,
President Bush made a concentrated effort to reach out to
black voters during his campaign, but got ·only 9 percent of the
black vote in the presidential election, compared with Democrat AI Gore's 90 percent. Bush's share was smaUer than GOP
nominee Bob Dole's in 1996 and about the same as the 10 percent Bush's father got in 1992 in a three-way race.
The disputed election results in Florida intensified hard feel·
ings about Republicans in the black community.

Academy disputes Corps study
WASHINGTON (AP) - A scientific panel says it has found
flaws throughout an Army Corps of Engineers study of
whether $1 biUion should be spent on a huge river constru ction project.
The National Academy of Sciences report, issued Wednesday,
is thl! latest in a string of major studies to critici-Ze th~ corps'
process of deciding if the cost oflengthening barge locks on the
upper Mississippi and Illinois rivers would be justified by the
econ01uic rewards.
The report strongly urged the corps to consider the l)lllchless-expensive option of improved scheduling of barges that
want to pass through the system's 29 locks and dams.
''There were major problems at nearly every step," panel chair
Lester Lave, a Carnegie MeDon economics professor, said of the
corps study. "The flaws are not subtle ones."

Court ruling favors lawyers
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court took these
actions Wednesday:
• Ruled 5-4 that Congress cannot bar lawyers funded by· the
federal Legal Services Corp. from representing poor clients in
chaUenging welfare lows. The restriction violates the Constitution 's 1 First Amendment free speech protection, the court said.
• Dealt a setback to the term limits movement, ruling that
states cannot use election baUots to brand congressional candidates as opponents. The justices unanimously threw out Missouri's labeling provision, sayirtg it put targeted candidates at a
disadvantage and "attempts to dictate electoral outcomes."
• Heard arguments on whether a New York public school
must let a Christian youth group use its building for after school
meetin~ that include Bible , St\ldy, prayer, son~ and games.
School officials banned the meetings, saying they amounted to
religious worship, but the youth group said the school violated
its free speech rights.

Page AI

•World

Thursday, Mllrch 1. 2001

Earthquake hits Northwest, but buildings hold up
SEATTLE (AP) - from the doorway
of the downrown Sheraton Hotel, valet
Mark Stanton watched glass-and-steel
skyscrapers swaying and flexing in ways
he never thought pc.,sible under the
power of the region's strongest earthquake in a half-cenrury.
"I watched this whole hotel shimmy,"
Stanton said. "I didn't know glass could
flex like that."
The 6.8- magnitude earthquake, centered about 35 miles southwest of Seattle, was felt Wednesday as far away as
southern Oregon and Canada.
Though bricks .&gt;nd shattered glass
tumbled into the streets, all but a few of
the roughly 250 injuries were minor and
most of the Northwest's buildings survived structurally unscathed. ·

"We're just really, reaDy lucky," Gov.
Gary Locke said after surveying the
region by helicopter.
· Locke estimated da;nages would
exceed S1 billion and declared a state of
emergency, but he said the million of
dollars of i1ives'tments the state and cities
put into stabilizing buildings and bridges
apparently paid olf.
·M ost buildings constructed in Seattle
since the mid-1970s were built to a uniform code designed to withstand strong
earthquakes.
.
The Space Needle, where more than
two dozen people rode out Wednesday's
quake from about 600 feet above the
city, was built to handle a 9.1-magnitude
quake. Twenty minutes after the shaking
stopped, the elevators and structure were

Don11eU Walker, 30, fell through the transparent ceiling of an
indoor courtyard at the base of the IDS Center on Tuesday,
landing by a fountain near a restaurant.
. About 50 people were ill the courtyard of restaurants and
stores, One ,Voman ~uffered cuts and scratches .
W.1lker walked quickly into the ·offices of Hunter K~ith
Industries Inc., past an employee and into an empty office on
the skyscraperr's top floor, police spokeswoman Cyndi Montgomery said. People in the office said they did not know the

declared safe.
"It was like a rolling ship in the
ocean," said Daryl Stevens, who was on
the Space Needle's observation deck.
The tower's facilities director, Rick Harris, declared it "the best ride in town."
"The code worked, but it wasn't tested to the fuU extent;' said BiD Steele, .a
seismology lab coordinator at the University ofWashington.
Vikram Prakash, an associate professor
at · the university's architecture depatt•
ment, s~id the devastation from January's
7. 9-magnitude quake in India was partly due to contractors skimping on materials. Nearly 20,000 people died in that
earthquake and entire cities were leveled.

m.an and did not believe he \vas an employee there.

Stuck motorist sought help
GREAT HECK, England (AP) -With a high-speeq passenger train bearing down on his L:ind Rover stuck on the train
tracks, the frantic motorist c.Ued an emergency number frorn
his cell phone nearby, but it was too late. "The train's coming!"
he shouted -just before it hit.

Inside:
Big East to oust Temple, Page B2
Spring Training roundup, Page B6
':!Oday ~ Scoreboard, Page B8

Suspect: bombing a 'mistake'
NEW YORK (AP) -A suspect in the deadly bombing of
the U.S. embassy in ~nya told the FBI that it .was a "big nus. take" because the bomb was improperly placed in a truck,
killing too many civilians, an FBI agent testified Wednesday.
The agent, John Anticev, told a jury in federal court in Manhattan that Mohamed Sadeek Odeh said during an interrogation that he did not know about the Aug. 7, 1998, blast in ·
Nairobi before it happened,
"He thought it was a blunder," Anticev recaUed Odeh saying.
"He didn'tlike that so many civilians were kiUed."
The agent said Odeh told him the bomb vehicle should have
been backed into the embassy rather than striking it h,e ad-on so
the .blast would not have been .directed toward other buildings
and scores of civilians.

Toddler critical, but 'better'
EAU CLAIRE,Wis. (AP) -A 2-year-old boy found !}ring in
a snowbank and not breathing had been outside in subzero cold
for up to four hours, authorities said.
Les Hynek remained in critical condition Wednesday at the
Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Mi11n.
"He's better. He's awake. I wasn't too late when I found him,"
the boy's father Mark Hynek said. "I just' keep on praying for .
him and hoping for the best."
Elsewhere, a 13-month-old girl whose body was partiaUy
frozen and whose heart had stopped during a night outside in
the cold at Edmonton,Alberta, was playful and talking and had
been moved out of intensive care, hospital officials said.

Duo denies role In shootln1
NEW YORK (AP) -1Wo rappers linked to a shootout outside a Greenwich ViUage radio station broke their silence
Wednesday, saying they were not involved.
"We're very sorty this situation occurred," Capone-N-Noreaga said in brief a statement released by their publicist. "(We)
had nothing to do with the shooting."
K.iaiu "Capone" HoOey and Victor "Noreaga" Santiago added
they "are cooperating fully with the police, and hope that whoever is responsible for this is brought to justice."
Capon~-N-Noreaga previously refused to comment about
the alleged clash between their entourage and that of rapper Lil'
Kim. Earlier this week, Lil' Kim's manager said her client knew
nothing of the incident.

. Man leaps from skysaaper
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A mart broke a window on the
51 sr floor of Minnesota's tallest building and leaped to his
death.

Page 81
lhuncl.y. Mllrch 1. 2001

ThuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Butch
Cooper

Fleury enters
subStance
.+'buse program

THE BUTCHMEISTER

Get "Ventura
out of the
XFL booth!

· NEW YORK (AP) T.heo Fleury, the New York
Rangers' leading scorer, has
v6luntarily entered an inp~tient substance-abuse program and wiD be sidelined
indefinitely. ,
Under terms of the substance-abuse and behavioralh~alth program run by the
NHL and the players' association, the 32-year-old Fleury
Will continue to receive his
fUll salary and benefits. He
\viii not have · a penalty
i"mposed as long as he complies with the prescribed
treatment and aftercare pro-

gram.

··Fleury leads the Rangers
with 30 goals and 7 4 points in·
his second · season after comirig to
York as a free

tllew

3gent. ,"

·.

: Justice sued In
·•·palimony suit
,.
.LOS ANGELES (AP) New York Yank~es outfielder
Oavid Justice ~ sued for $5
iipllion in a palimony suit
filed by his son's mother, who
i'aid she and the infant were
bi:dered out of the Cincinn'a:ti
home they shared for two
y~ars.
..

Bill extends protection
WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmers filing · for bankruptcy
would continue to receive special protection so they would not
have to sell olf their equipment under a bill passed Wednesday
by the House.
Under other bankruptcy la.,.;s, debtors can be fon:ed tO' 'seU
off ·assets before they can · reorganize their debts. Rep. Nick
Smith, the biD's sponsor, said if farmers have to liquidate their
equipment, they have no way to earn a living and puU out of
debt.
"Chapter 11 and Chapter B don't acconunodate the needs
of a family farmer," said Smith, a Republican who owns a
2,000-acre farm near Addison, Mich.
' ·
The bill would extend Chapter 12 of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code for an additional It months beyond its expiration on July
I, 2000. Chapter 12 was originally enacted as a temporary measure in 1986, but ha.s been extended four times.

The Daily Sentinel

Kafefl'llkcW, ..

·Rafter upset ·-

. .flbal Open ,

DUBA,I, Uirited Arab Emirates (Ai&gt;) - . )'egevny :J.&lt;afel.
nikov and Patrick Rafter were
upset by unseeded players in
the second round of $1 million Dubai ,Open. ·
Thomas Johansson beat the
third-seeded Kafelnikov 7-6,
7-5, and Andrei Medvedev
downed the fifth-seeded
Rafter 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-1. He
next plays top-seeded Marat
Safin, who scored a 7-5, 7-6
(5) victory over Julien Bouiter.
Jopanss.o n next meets Max
Mirnyi,'
who . defeated
Vladimir, ·Voltchkov. Second,seeded Magnus Norman
defeated Andre Pavel. fie will
play seventh-seeded Juan Carl-os Ferrero, who beat Jiri
Novak.
Sixth-seeded
Dominik Hrbaty eliminated
Bchdati' Olihrach.

·' ••

~o.

.

4 Tar Heels
deteat
N.C.
.

State 76-63

Tony .sanneh .(22) of the United States controls the ball during the American's 2-0 vicStadium In Clumbus Wednesday. (AP)

u.s~ bla
~~('

COLU~US, Ohio (AP) substitutes, cqwbined on the first
A flag-waving,_L'U-S-A" chanting
Mter ·the l,fpited SJ:tt~-beat Mexico· goal Wedpeij:lay• in the United . crowd of 24,6'24 i in the 29'~pegree
in a World' Cup qujillfiet' for the fint · States' ·2kO CONCACAF qualifying chiD of Columbus also did what
time in 20 years,
coach Bruce game .victory. Wolff then set up vet- they could to ensure a home field
Arena didn't wal11 to read too much eran Earnie Stewart for the clincher advantage in the opener of the final
into we. win.
.
with three minutes remaining.
round of qualifYing.
"You ' can'~: make ,.more out of
"We obviously faced a lot of
"It was a great atmosphere, everytoday thim what it really is ... we are adversity having to make a couple of t&gt;ne on the bench felt it, a real
simply happy we were able to pro- changes," Arena said. "I am real . homefield advantage," defender Jeff
teet our home rurf," he said. "It is a proud of the way our team puUed Agoos said. "I think this is a big step·
long haul and it is going to be a real together at halftime and did the job for (American) soccer in general."
battle the next' nine games."
in the second half to get the yictoThe win was the Americans'
But after losing two veteran play- ry."
· third straight over Mexico, a first in
ers to early injuries, Arena got an
After losing forward Brian the rivalry. The United States won
idea of how his team responds when McBride and midfielder Claudio both meetiA~ with its archrlval in
things aren't going theft way when Reyna to injury, the Americans 2000, blanking Mexico 3-0 ancl
two youngsters steppecl in to turn showed some rare depth in Wolff, then 2-0.
the game atpund:
who turned 24 on Sunday, and
Josh Wolff and Clint Mathis, both Mathis, also 24.
PluH ... U.S~ 82

US.

VanH

.,
I

Jesse Ventura.
The name alone conjures up many
things.
Controversy, intolerance and even
respect.
When it comes to his XFL broadcasts,
·it conjures up another word .... terrible.
The Body has done it aU from being
· a Navy Seal, pro wrestler and later
wrestling broadcaster, to actor and. oh,
yeah, current Minnesota governor.
But he should stay as far away from
the XFL broadcast booth as he can, even
though he was a football broadcaster in
Tampa Bay in the pall. from what I've
heard from reliable sources, he wasn't
that bad.
This time it's a different story.
I started watching the XFL this season
from day one, wanting to give this
upstart footbaU league a chance. I love
my football and can't get enough of it.
Besides, it's either more footbaU or the
NBA and I'd rather pull my finger nails
out than watch the NBA.
That's another story for another day,
though. Back to the XFL.
The footbaU itself is not aU that great,
but I used to cover the Charleston
Rockets semi-pro football team, so I've
seen worse. A lot worse as a matter of
fact.
NBC sports coverage as always .... to
use a wrestling expression from the
great tag team duo of Edge and Christian.... "wreaks of heinosity."
TNN and UPN do a much better job
in their XFL broadcasts.
Even good ole J.R., aka Jim Ross, a
part of the J.R.-King Monday n~ght
wrestling announcing duo, isn't that
bad.
Jesse Ventura, his XFL broadcast colleague, though, should be taken off the
air as soon as possible.
Please, please, please, please!!!
While J.R. seems to be attempting to
actually broadcast the game and looks to
r

.,

PIMse- Cooper, 82

paces Herd over Bowling Green

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) said.
J.R. VanHoose had one.!;!!"' pn his
MarshaU (17-8, 11-6 Mid-Amerimind Wednesday night ' to :· beat · CaJ,l Conference) beat Bowling Green
Bowling Green for the firslllme in liis ' for the first time in six games dating
Marshall career.
' :'it
to February. 1998.
"I wasn't concerne~ a~~ what I
hi addition to his offense, VanHoose
was gomg to do tomght, ~Hoose and others held Bowhng Green ceosaid. "I just wanted to help •-the team ter Len MateJa to six points, 10 under
play good defense. I'm glad I was able his average.
to help."
"Coach just told us if we could shut
The junior taUied his eigh\h,Straight doym the post, we'd be aU right
double-double with 19 pain\~ and 10 against these guys,"VanHoose said.
The teams combined for 33
rebounds to lead Marsh.U to a 63-55
victory.
.
·
' :.
_ ~urnovers. MarshaU shot 40 peJ:Cent
"There's no doubt in + n d . from the floor and Bqwling Green
where J.R. rates within this 'l'l!nfer' ·'
·
ence:' Marsh.U coach Greg White
P1HH 1H Herd. 82

Redhawks hold off Ohio
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Alex
Shorts scored 20 points in limited
pla~ng time, .and Jason Grunkeme er made four free throws in the
fina eight seconds to help Miami,
Oh o, hold off Ohio 76- 72
Wednesday night.
Doug Davis. had 16 points, julius
Johnson 15 and Grunkemeyer 12
for Miami (14-14, 10-7 MAC).
Brandon Hunter scored 21,Anthony Jones 17 and Jon Sanderson 11

CHAPEL HILL, . N.C.
(AP) - Joseph Fort,e scored
27 points and Matt Doherty
became .the first coach to win
&lt;ilr share an ACC reslllar-season tide in his firs.t s~0 n "'!
No. 4 North CaroUna beat
~orth
Carol.jna
.76-63. ·
\Vednesday night.
· • Th~ Tar Heels (23"4, 13-2)
captured the No. I seed in
next week's ACC tOurnament
in Atlaqta with , the win,
s4ooting 57 perce~t:
: •. Duke Icould tie North
CarI
,
o1ina ·irl the league standings
with a victory at the Smith
Center on Sunday, but North
BY DI\N POLCYN
OVP SPoRTS STAFF
Carolina . would win the tieRIPLEY - Wirt County erased a 10l?Teaker because of its season
poin~
fourth quarter deficit to defeat
.Weep of Maryland.
, .
Wahama, 45-42 Wednesday in sectional tourForte had 19 poirtts. in. !"e
Qament action.
oecond half, while · Ronald
Eric Jlailey's four free throws in . the final
CUrry added a career-high 14 ..
:20 turhed a :42-41 deficit into a Tiger win.
as the tar Heels have now
The
first two came in response to Wahama's
won or sh;m:d 23 ACC r;guJeremy Hudnall, who nailed both ends to
lar-season crowns in . the
give the White Falcons their last lead.
league's 48 years.
The second two came after Waharna turned
. · Brenc;lan Haywood of the
the ball over with :13 remaining and was
Tar' Heels became the ninth
forced
:to j&gt;ul.
·
player in AC C hi!tory. to
Wahama did. have one last chance, gaining
crack the l 00-block mark m a .
CIUSriD- WBham'a•s Jeremy Hudnall120) drives to the bas- possession after Baileys' final fre.e throws, but
lingle season with his three
Ryan Roush's desperation trey with two
.ket Wednesday lh sectional play. (Dan Polcyn photo)
· ~ections in the first half.

for Ohio (17-10, 12-6).
Miami led 29-17 at halftime and
by double digits most of the second
half until Ohio raUied from being
11 down with 3:51 to play.
A 3- pointer by Hunter cut the
lead to two with nine seconds left,
but Grunkemeyer was fouled
immediately and ma,le both free
throws. A layup by Jones again cut

Please -

Ohio, 82

Wirt County rallies in fourth

to defeat Wahama 45-42 ·

------ -----..:-._ - -- ------ _... -- ---..

),

---··-' '

Tigers in his face fell short and scaled the
Wire victory.
Wirt outscored the Falcons 20-7 in the
final' frame. Five Tigers scored as Wahama
missed six free throws in the final frame.
"We missed a few going down the stretch," ·
said Wahama coach Lewis Hall. "It hurt us."
Wahama hit just 10-of-20 free throws on
the night.
·
Baileys and Adam Nicolais each scored
seven in the final Tiger run. Baileys led Tiger
scorers with 16 on the night. •
Hall commented on the difference in the
game. "Intensity by Wirt County. They did a
good job," he said. "When they got it down

PleaH •• Wahama, 82
.,

... ..

�•

I.

..

Thursday, March 1, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

..

'

~ Thuraday,

-

March 1, 2001

-•

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

•

•

~------------..;r; li'-~------------...-

Temple to be ousted from Big ~st Conference
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Temple football team hasn't had a
winning season since 1990 and still
has no stadium to call home.
Now, the Owls might not have a
conft!rence, either, after being
informed the school is no longer
wanted in the Big East.
"They have not, since 1996, fulfilled our criteria for membership,"
sen1or
associate
commissiOner
Thomas P. McElroy said Wednesday
night during Boston College's basketball gal'le against St. John's.
"Our presidenrs have ,}nformed

Temple that since they have not been
in compliance, they are going to discontinue their affiliation with the
confere nce. The decision'J been
made.
Now they just have to discuss the
parameters on how they will separate."
McElroy said it has not been determined when Temple will leave the
Big East, but it could be before the
2001 football season. The Owls are a
successful member of the Adantic-1 0
in basketball and aU other sports.
· Big East schools are expected to

meet conference requiren1enu on
issues such as non-conference scheduling and attenc:h!nce. In return, the
conference .::!ividcs revenue from
television and bowl games played by
Big East teams.
The school's Board of Trustees
planndl a meeting Thursday to discuss the future of the football program, a Temple offici~ls said on condition of anonymity.
·
.
The initial report of the Big East's
decision to oust 'Temple appeared on
The Boston Globe's Web site.
Temple, the lone football-only

school in the conference, has been a
perennial doormat, compiling a 9-58
record in the conference since it
joined the Big East in 1991. The
Owls haven't been to a bowl game or
had a winning record since 1990.
Last year, they went 1-6 to finish seventh in the eight-team league and 47 overall.
Still, Terpple has made efforts to
overhaul its program. In December
1997, the school hired coach Bobby
Wallace in 1997 from North Alabama, where 'h e won three cOnference
champiopshi~s in 10 years.

NFL
I

In

Cooper
from Page 81

I

even be prepared, Ventura
acts as if he just got off the
plane.
.
Heck, he probably did just
get off the plane. He is still the
governor of Minnesota, so his
presence throughout the
· week is probably required
elsewhere.
With that being said, football broadcasters usually take
days to prepare and tesearch
that weekend's game. Even
h1gh school radio broadcasters
have to do son1c pregame
work.
With Ventura, though, it
seems as if he docs none of
this. If he does, then what's his

excuse?
During the couple of games
• I've seen him broadcast, he's
done nothing but bad mouth
everyone else.
He says how much better
the XFL is than the NFL.
First off, l don't think so.
Don't begin to compete
with the NFL, because they'll
run you over.

Maybe it's Vince McMahon'i idea. Perhaps McMa-

Herd
from Page 81
shot 41 percent.
"[ think our biggest problem tonight was &lt;&gt;\)r poor
shooting and that was due in
part to Marshall's strong
defense," said Bowling Green
coach Dan Dakich.- "Van-

who were with (~eOrge Seifert
when he won a ' Super Bowl
with. the 49ers in 1995.
They . cut cornerback , Eric
Davis, fullback William Floyd
and linebacker Lee Woodall.
The mows were not unexpected for the salary-cap
strapped Panthers, who also
released offensive lineman
James De~ter. Carolina needed
to trim $11 million to get
under the $67.4 million cap
by Friday's deaclline.
Several mote prominent
players could be released on
Thursday. Even teams under
the salary cap were looking for
ways to trim the payroll to get
mote flexibility.
"There are only so many
slices to the pie," Miami Dolphins coach Dave Wannstedt
said. "We're going to lose a
couple of key guys. There's no
way aro~nd that."
·

hon, who is the founder of
the XFL and owner of the
World Wrestling Federation,
\vanted to stan a rivalry.
While McMahon has done
a super job with the WWF,
this would be suicide and he
knows it.
This is why l don't think it's
Vince's idea. I think it's just
Jesse running his momh, try-

ing to seem

hardc~re.

Anvhow, Ventura
also,
throughout the game, trashes
other media outlets (newspapers, ·tdevision, etc ... ) that
have publicly criticized the
X FL.
Whether you like it or not,
Jesse, you need media support
if the XFL is going to survive.
Making a critical sportS\I(riter
or sportscaster more criti'cal is
probably not a good idea.
I, on the other hand, don't
have a problem with the XtlL
which I've stated before, just
loud-mouthed sportscasters
who don 't actually cover the
game.
Anyhow. ...
Also during his broadcasts,
if there is a pretty decent hit
on the field, Ventura says
something to the fact that it
wasn't a hard hit. He actually
criticizes the players on the

The Kansas City Chiefs,
who ended last season almost
$30 million over the cap,
announced . Grbac
will
become a free agent. .
Negotiations had produced
one offer from Steiner of a
five-year contract averaging $8
million a year, including a $20
million signing bonus, the
Chiefs said. The quarterback's
contract called for a $10 million bonus if he was still on
the roster Friday.
"We have been informed by
Elvis Grbac's agent, Jim Steiner, that ElVis wants to pursue
the free agent market and
would prefer to play somewhere else," ChiefS president
Carl Peterson said in a statement
The Chiefs also released
two-time Pro Bowl cornerback James Hasty ~nd fourtime Pro Bowl defei)Sive tack-

fromPip81
to seven points, they found som~ n~w
lif~. They overplayed us tht• whole ballg;tmc; that's what you sec in the tournament. Mo&gt;t of the time you se~ a lowscoring ballgante. At the end the)' l{&lt;lt it
when they had to have it."
W.thamn established control of the
scming early, as Hudnall and Roush each
hit a tr&lt;'Y and scored five poi1m ill the
opening frnme .Thc Fakom held il 12-7
kad after the firn frame and 1~-14 at th~

· te Chester McGlockton, making them both free agents .
Six-time Pro Bowl defensive
lineman John Randle expected to be released by the Minnesota Vikings because he
wouldn't agree to restructure
. his contract.
The Chargers began reshaping the NFL's worst team of
· 2000 by waiving Leaf, who
had been in constant trouble
during his three seasons.
Leaf was the second pick in
the 1998 draft, taken right
after Peyton Manning, but
played poorly and became a
distraction with his boorish
behavior.
Leaf missed all of the 1999
season with a shoulder injury
and won the starting job last
summer, but · was. benched
after throwing five interceptions and one touchdown in
the first two games.

FORT MYERS, Fla .
(AP) - Nomar Garciaparra will miss at least two
weeks of spring training
because of an injured
right wrist, the first setback in a season of great
hope for the Boston Red
Sox.
The two-time defending AL batting champion
hopes to be ready for
opening day. But if rest

u.s.

fromPipB1

Mexico played well for 45
miiulte5. But Mathis'long ball
in the second minute of the
second half was misplayed by
the defense.
Wolff ran onto it before
goalkeeper Jorge Campos
could get to it, and he easily
slipped around Campos to
deposit the ball into an
unguarded net.
"I wasn't sure if he was able
to get to it, he might have
••
hesitated a bit," Wolff said of
field. ·
learned.
Campos. "I was able to touch
That goes back t!. Ventura
This is coming from some- the ban· and pop it in."
trying to be "hardcote."
one who's supposed to be in a
With the Mexicans, ranked
Then there was the New position of respeci such as 12th in the world to the
York-New Jersey game over governor.
Americans' 16th, pressing for
the weekend whete he critiImagine Ohio governor 'the tie, goalie Brad Friedel
cized Hitmen head coach · Bob Taft or West Virginia gov- made several superb saves. His
Rusty Tillman for kicking a ernor Bob Wise in the same best came when he dived to
19-yard field in the first quar- boat. When I think abuut· stop Francisco Palencia's bulter.
it .... nah.
.
let in the 69th minute.
That wasn't so bad if it
I'm one of the ·gtiys who
As the Americans attemptwould have stopped at that. It thought it was a good thing ed to run down the clock in
was the attentjon Ventura ·Ventura was elected governor the dying minutes, Wolff, of
brought upon himself after · as a third-party candidate and the MLS Chicago Fire, dribthe fact that was unaccept- would've probably voted for bled toward the right corner.
him if he ran for president . Then he turned quickly along
able.
It got so bad that Vemura With our other two main the end line, beating rhe
left the press box and tried to choices, he would've looked defeme and Campos before
interview Tillinan himself in like a good pick, even though placing a perfect pass on
order to stir up some contro- I don't agree \Vith hin1 on Stewart's foot for the second
versy, which is a no no.Ventu- · many of the issues.
goal.
ra tried to provoke Tillman,
I'm sorry, this is turning
"Wolff was terrific,". Arena
but the Hitmen's coach didit't into a political editorial. My sa,id. "He really pulled it off at
want to speak with Ventura bad.
Where was L. .. oh, yeah.
and left the field. The Hitmen, by the way, won 13-0. .
But now, I doubt I would
Then Ventura showed how even vote for him. as high
macho he was and said Till- school class president ~ince ~
man was just afrai~fhim. .
he's shown me how much he
from Pip 81
. Big, tough guy.
wants everything centered
No Jesse, you were just around himself.
the lead to two with three
annoying Tillman because
I think CBS chief executive J seconds to go, and again
You ·don't knO\v . J·ack squat Leslie Moonves stated it best. Grunkemeyer hi·t both free
about being a football broad"I hope he's a better gover- throws after the foul.
caster. If you did at one time, nor than he is an announcer,"
Ohio had won three
"'
then it's evident you've for- Moonves said.
straight, and Miami had lost
you
· Indeed.
· h
gotten . everything
two stra~g t. '

Ohio

Hoose's size up front is a real 8) trimmed the lead to three
met for Marshall. He was on tWo Keith McLeod free
very active and athletic under throws with 1:42 remaining.
the boards tonight." ·
But Slay, who finished with
Marshall took the lead for 15 points, sank four free
good, 44-43, on a Tamar Slay throws · as Marshall finished
3-pointer with 9:28 remain- · the game on .an 8-0 run.
ing.
"I just had
keep shootTeammate Joda Burgess ing and just try to get to the
scored five of the game's next line," Slay said. "If you miss
nine points to push the lead your shots, you've just got to
to 51-45 with 6:45left.
keep trying, keep your head
Bowling Green (13-13, 9- up and just hang in there."

Wahama

..

: ===-·-- -· : -: ·: ·:. "': ':-,: ".

·;

Boston's Garciaparra injured

Quarterbacks testing free agency
market, Norton, Jr. released by 49er's
Quarterbacks Ryan Leaf,
Doug Flutie and Elvis Grbac
became free agents and thre·e ..
rime 6uper Bowl champion
Ken Norton Jr. was released
Wednesday as NFL teams
.sliced their payrolls as a salary
cap deadline approached.
More players will be
released as teams get down to
the $67.4 million salary cap
before free .agency begins Friday.
"We are preparing for free
agency and the draft and this
allows . these players to catch
on with another team,"
Chargers general manager
John Buder said, after getting
rid of Leaf and four others.
other salary-driven
moves, the Pittsburgh Steelers
released center Dermontti
Dawson and . the Carolina
Panthets released three players

I

The school completed wqrk on. a
$7 million football practice facility
last summer, and attendance at hot$.e
games has improved.
:
Turnout was up from an average;t&gt;f
4,045 in 1995 to 18,612 last seasQn
- the lowest in the Big East.
::
Temple, meanwhile, would ~~
confirm the Big East's decision. Last
month at ·a league meeting, tfte
Owls' status was discussed.
::
"We have no results from tliat
meeting passed to Temple;' 6W)s
associate athletic director Scott Cathcart said Wednesday night.
:'

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I·

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ro

half.
The early lead came despite Wire's
dominance of the boards. Wirt out
rebounded W.1hama 28-20 on the ni11ht.
W.1hama pulled out to a I 0-point lead
~t the end of tlw .third. Thr~c treys (two
by Hudn~ll. one by Roush) helped the,
Fnlcons pull aheod.
Wirt took it's first lead since the op~n­
inll score on Nicolnis' trey with 2:45
remaining in the fourth.
Hudnalll~d all scorer!, hitting fi1r 17 in
his final appearnnce ol a White Fokou.
Ryai1 Roush finished with 14.
Nicolai, added scovcn for the Ti1,~n.
IJnnid Kycr and Do1)a4! Shepphard ci!dt 4

•·

:the end of the game. It's no)t .
.

that we had to get him in t~e
game, but we thought Jos~'s
speed would be a factor allid
he was able t:tibehind t~e
~

defense.!!

A shoving ma ch broke qllt
in the U.S. e d momedts
later, with even Campos cotfi.lng all the way downfield ~o
join the melee. But nothi(l.g
developed from it, .and Me'!ico · went off meekly with its
fifth loss in the last six int~-

nationals.

Tri-County

•

~·unfortunately, we did~'t
come away with the result we
wanted, " Mexico coach
Enrique Meza said, "but: I
know the players worked haN
and they put in a tremendo]ls

effort." ·

·

.

~

~

·

McBride, the United Stat~s'
most dangerous forwatd, hJltt
his right eye in an early coll,iston.
to
He was replaced in tile
15th minute- by Wolff, wlio
subsequendy dre.w a yellw
card.
!
Playmaker Reyna begSn
limping in the 26th minu1e
?nd was replaced by Cl(!lt
Mathis in the 43rd. Re)'!la
barely touched the ball wh~e
on the field and left •vith: a
groin injury.
•
Six teams are in the rourlllrobin regional final, with the
top three advancing to tbe
2002 World Cup m Sot¢h
Korea and Japan. '
;

·In the next month,
your advertisit:J.g
representative will
be co1:1tacting you
·about being a part of
the biggest, best and
most anticipated
issue of the year..,,.

-

'

"'
•
call~d

Fifty-two fouls were
in the game between the t\.lo
,longtime rivals. The 45 agai~t
Miami was a ·Season high. : .
A double technical f~l
was as~essed against Sho~s
and Hunter after ·' a verool
confrontation seven minu"s
into the game. Shorts pla~d
just 12 minutes in the fi~t
half and 11 in the · seco~d
~
because offoul trouble.

"..
McLeod finished with 20.
points to lead Bowling Green.
The first half was marred
by poor shooting and sloppy
ball ha11dling by both teams,
who combined for just seven
points through the first ei~ht
minutes.
,
Trailing 19~14, Ma~sh~ll
scored 11 · straight poih~ sil' by Slay- to go ahead 2519 just before halftime.

added six.
Wednesday's contest wos the final· time
that four Wahama seniors (Hudnall, John
Smith, Eddie McKinney, and Nathan
Connolly) donned the ~d and white .'
"We had a great group of 1cnioro, n real
hard-working bunch," said Hi!ll. "They
worked all year and play '' hard as they
can. I like these kids and yuu con 't fault

them."

doesn't fix the problem,
he didn't
rule out
surgery.
.
The frmtrating thing
for the All-Star shortstop
is the puzzling nature o(
the injury.
He and team physician
Dr. Bill Morgan traced it
back to Sept. 25, 1999,
when Baltimore's AI
Reyes hit Garciaparra on
ihe wrist with a pitch.

'

The 2000-01 · Falcom fini.1h the !ea!On

5-17.
Witt (8-14) advances to the lectionnl
tina! where they will take on fiwm~:d
Parkersburg Catholk &lt;In Friday.

j

·'

Tri-County.

Tri-County

PARKS &amp; RECREATION/
AGRICULTURE

II

lllbiiiS IIIIDn lrOII ·~

.oraanlzltliaallaaa••

Members of the Pleasant valley Hospital
Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education
Program Will be Conducting a general public
organizational meeting to assess Interest In a
diabetes SUpport group.

~

·~•
~

3
I

•

I

'~

••'
~
••
•••
••
•

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

1-&lt;Bt

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:

••

..••

"1

il"ii"Qll

~·.

~

(304) 675-4340, Ext. .2004

~-F~"·t~~q

::

'••'

Pleasant Valley OUtpatient
Diabetes Self·Management
Education Plqp'am

1aue!&amp;l r

'

i.

I.
I
I

,.,

j ,IWitiJia

CSL

;:
~'Wil·M!\.~~

~1.1.\~)!Jitt:'PWW.ifM~

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. . .,!I~M!i-"i~,"'t,~~
~

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675-1333

•

••

•

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/j ,

,,

••
.

�•

I.

..

Thursday, March 1, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

..

'

~ Thuraday,

-

March 1, 2001

-•

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

•

•

~------------..;r; li'-~------------...-

Temple to be ousted from Big ~st Conference
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Temple football team hasn't had a
winning season since 1990 and still
has no stadium to call home.
Now, the Owls might not have a
conft!rence, either, after being
informed the school is no longer
wanted in the Big East.
"They have not, since 1996, fulfilled our criteria for membership,"
sen1or
associate
commissiOner
Thomas P. McElroy said Wednesday
night during Boston College's basketball gal'le against St. John's.
"Our presidenrs have ,}nformed

Temple that since they have not been
in compliance, they are going to discontinue their affiliation with the
confere nce. The decision'J been
made.
Now they just have to discuss the
parameters on how they will separate."
McElroy said it has not been determined when Temple will leave the
Big East, but it could be before the
2001 football season. The Owls are a
successful member of the Adantic-1 0
in basketball and aU other sports.
· Big East schools are expected to

meet conference requiren1enu on
issues such as non-conference scheduling and attenc:h!nce. In return, the
conference .::!ividcs revenue from
television and bowl games played by
Big East teams.
The school's Board of Trustees
planndl a meeting Thursday to discuss the future of the football program, a Temple offici~ls said on condition of anonymity.
·
.
The initial report of the Big East's
decision to oust 'Temple appeared on
The Boston Globe's Web site.
Temple, the lone football-only

school in the conference, has been a
perennial doormat, compiling a 9-58
record in the conference since it
joined the Big East in 1991. The
Owls haven't been to a bowl game or
had a winning record since 1990.
Last year, they went 1-6 to finish seventh in the eight-team league and 47 overall.
Still, Terpple has made efforts to
overhaul its program. In December
1997, the school hired coach Bobby
Wallace in 1997 from North Alabama, where 'h e won three cOnference
champiopshi~s in 10 years.

NFL
I

In

Cooper
from Page 81

I

even be prepared, Ventura
acts as if he just got off the
plane.
.
Heck, he probably did just
get off the plane. He is still the
governor of Minnesota, so his
presence throughout the
· week is probably required
elsewhere.
With that being said, football broadcasters usually take
days to prepare and tesearch
that weekend's game. Even
h1gh school radio broadcasters
have to do son1c pregame
work.
With Ventura, though, it
seems as if he docs none of
this. If he does, then what's his

excuse?
During the couple of games
• I've seen him broadcast, he's
done nothing but bad mouth
everyone else.
He says how much better
the XFL is than the NFL.
First off, l don't think so.
Don't begin to compete
with the NFL, because they'll
run you over.

Maybe it's Vince McMahon'i idea. Perhaps McMa-

Herd
from Page 81
shot 41 percent.
"[ think our biggest problem tonight was &lt;&gt;\)r poor
shooting and that was due in
part to Marshall's strong
defense," said Bowling Green
coach Dan Dakich.- "Van-

who were with (~eOrge Seifert
when he won a ' Super Bowl
with. the 49ers in 1995.
They . cut cornerback , Eric
Davis, fullback William Floyd
and linebacker Lee Woodall.
The mows were not unexpected for the salary-cap
strapped Panthers, who also
released offensive lineman
James De~ter. Carolina needed
to trim $11 million to get
under the $67.4 million cap
by Friday's deaclline.
Several mote prominent
players could be released on
Thursday. Even teams under
the salary cap were looking for
ways to trim the payroll to get
mote flexibility.
"There are only so many
slices to the pie," Miami Dolphins coach Dave Wannstedt
said. "We're going to lose a
couple of key guys. There's no
way aro~nd that."
·

hon, who is the founder of
the XFL and owner of the
World Wrestling Federation,
\vanted to stan a rivalry.
While McMahon has done
a super job with the WWF,
this would be suicide and he
knows it.
This is why l don't think it's
Vince's idea. I think it's just
Jesse running his momh, try-

ing to seem

hardc~re.

Anvhow, Ventura
also,
throughout the game, trashes
other media outlets (newspapers, ·tdevision, etc ... ) that
have publicly criticized the
X FL.
Whether you like it or not,
Jesse, you need media support
if the XFL is going to survive.
Making a critical sportS\I(riter
or sportscaster more criti'cal is
probably not a good idea.
I, on the other hand, don't
have a problem with the XtlL
which I've stated before, just
loud-mouthed sportscasters
who don 't actually cover the
game.
Anyhow. ...
Also during his broadcasts,
if there is a pretty decent hit
on the field, Ventura says
something to the fact that it
wasn't a hard hit. He actually
criticizes the players on the

The Kansas City Chiefs,
who ended last season almost
$30 million over the cap,
announced . Grbac
will
become a free agent. .
Negotiations had produced
one offer from Steiner of a
five-year contract averaging $8
million a year, including a $20
million signing bonus, the
Chiefs said. The quarterback's
contract called for a $10 million bonus if he was still on
the roster Friday.
"We have been informed by
Elvis Grbac's agent, Jim Steiner, that ElVis wants to pursue
the free agent market and
would prefer to play somewhere else," ChiefS president
Carl Peterson said in a statement
The Chiefs also released
two-time Pro Bowl cornerback James Hasty ~nd fourtime Pro Bowl defei)Sive tack-

fromPip81
to seven points, they found som~ n~w
lif~. They overplayed us tht• whole ballg;tmc; that's what you sec in the tournament. Mo&gt;t of the time you se~ a lowscoring ballgante. At the end the)' l{&lt;lt it
when they had to have it."
W.thamn established control of the
scming early, as Hudnall and Roush each
hit a tr&lt;'Y and scored five poi1m ill the
opening frnme .Thc Fakom held il 12-7
kad after the firn frame and 1~-14 at th~

· te Chester McGlockton, making them both free agents .
Six-time Pro Bowl defensive
lineman John Randle expected to be released by the Minnesota Vikings because he
wouldn't agree to restructure
. his contract.
The Chargers began reshaping the NFL's worst team of
· 2000 by waiving Leaf, who
had been in constant trouble
during his three seasons.
Leaf was the second pick in
the 1998 draft, taken right
after Peyton Manning, but
played poorly and became a
distraction with his boorish
behavior.
Leaf missed all of the 1999
season with a shoulder injury
and won the starting job last
summer, but · was. benched
after throwing five interceptions and one touchdown in
the first two games.

FORT MYERS, Fla .
(AP) - Nomar Garciaparra will miss at least two
weeks of spring training
because of an injured
right wrist, the first setback in a season of great
hope for the Boston Red
Sox.
The two-time defending AL batting champion
hopes to be ready for
opening day. But if rest

u.s.

fromPipB1

Mexico played well for 45
miiulte5. But Mathis'long ball
in the second minute of the
second half was misplayed by
the defense.
Wolff ran onto it before
goalkeeper Jorge Campos
could get to it, and he easily
slipped around Campos to
deposit the ball into an
unguarded net.
"I wasn't sure if he was able
to get to it, he might have
••
hesitated a bit," Wolff said of
field. ·
learned.
Campos. "I was able to touch
That goes back t!. Ventura
This is coming from some- the ban· and pop it in."
trying to be "hardcote."
one who's supposed to be in a
With the Mexicans, ranked
Then there was the New position of respeci such as 12th in the world to the
York-New Jersey game over governor.
Americans' 16th, pressing for
the weekend whete he critiImagine Ohio governor 'the tie, goalie Brad Friedel
cized Hitmen head coach · Bob Taft or West Virginia gov- made several superb saves. His
Rusty Tillman for kicking a ernor Bob Wise in the same best came when he dived to
19-yard field in the first quar- boat. When I think abuut· stop Francisco Palencia's bulter.
it .... nah.
.
let in the 69th minute.
That wasn't so bad if it
I'm one of the ·gtiys who
As the Americans attemptwould have stopped at that. It thought it was a good thing ed to run down the clock in
was the attentjon Ventura ·Ventura was elected governor the dying minutes, Wolff, of
brought upon himself after · as a third-party candidate and the MLS Chicago Fire, dribthe fact that was unaccept- would've probably voted for bled toward the right corner.
him if he ran for president . Then he turned quickly along
able.
It got so bad that Vemura With our other two main the end line, beating rhe
left the press box and tried to choices, he would've looked defeme and Campos before
interview Tillinan himself in like a good pick, even though placing a perfect pass on
order to stir up some contro- I don't agree \Vith hin1 on Stewart's foot for the second
versy, which is a no no.Ventu- · many of the issues.
goal.
ra tried to provoke Tillman,
I'm sorry, this is turning
"Wolff was terrific,". Arena
but the Hitmen's coach didit't into a political editorial. My sa,id. "He really pulled it off at
want to speak with Ventura bad.
Where was L. .. oh, yeah.
and left the field. The Hitmen, by the way, won 13-0. .
But now, I doubt I would
Then Ventura showed how even vote for him. as high
macho he was and said Till- school class president ~ince ~
man was just afrai~fhim. .
he's shown me how much he
from Pip 81
. Big, tough guy.
wants everything centered
No Jesse, you were just around himself.
the lead to two with three
annoying Tillman because
I think CBS chief executive J seconds to go, and again
You ·don't knO\v . J·ack squat Leslie Moonves stated it best. Grunkemeyer hi·t both free
about being a football broad"I hope he's a better gover- throws after the foul.
caster. If you did at one time, nor than he is an announcer,"
Ohio had won three
"'
then it's evident you've for- Moonves said.
straight, and Miami had lost
you
· Indeed.
· h
gotten . everything
two stra~g t. '

Ohio

Hoose's size up front is a real 8) trimmed the lead to three
met for Marshall. He was on tWo Keith McLeod free
very active and athletic under throws with 1:42 remaining.
the boards tonight." ·
But Slay, who finished with
Marshall took the lead for 15 points, sank four free
good, 44-43, on a Tamar Slay throws · as Marshall finished
3-pointer with 9:28 remain- · the game on .an 8-0 run.
ing.
"I just had
keep shootTeammate Joda Burgess ing and just try to get to the
scored five of the game's next line," Slay said. "If you miss
nine points to push the lead your shots, you've just got to
to 51-45 with 6:45left.
keep trying, keep your head
Bowling Green (13-13, 9- up and just hang in there."

Wahama

..

: ===-·-- -· : -: ·: ·:. "': ':-,: ".

·;

Boston's Garciaparra injured

Quarterbacks testing free agency
market, Norton, Jr. released by 49er's
Quarterbacks Ryan Leaf,
Doug Flutie and Elvis Grbac
became free agents and thre·e ..
rime 6uper Bowl champion
Ken Norton Jr. was released
Wednesday as NFL teams
.sliced their payrolls as a salary
cap deadline approached.
More players will be
released as teams get down to
the $67.4 million salary cap
before free .agency begins Friday.
"We are preparing for free
agency and the draft and this
allows . these players to catch
on with another team,"
Chargers general manager
John Buder said, after getting
rid of Leaf and four others.
other salary-driven
moves, the Pittsburgh Steelers
released center Dermontti
Dawson and . the Carolina
Panthets released three players

I

The school completed wqrk on. a
$7 million football practice facility
last summer, and attendance at hot$.e
games has improved.
:
Turnout was up from an average;t&gt;f
4,045 in 1995 to 18,612 last seasQn
- the lowest in the Big East.
::
Temple, meanwhile, would ~~
confirm the Big East's decision. Last
month at ·a league meeting, tfte
Owls' status was discussed.
::
"We have no results from tliat
meeting passed to Temple;' 6W)s
associate athletic director Scott Cathcart said Wednesday night.
:'

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I·

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ro

half.
The early lead came despite Wire's
dominance of the boards. Wirt out
rebounded W.1hama 28-20 on the ni11ht.
W.1hama pulled out to a I 0-point lead
~t the end of tlw .third. Thr~c treys (two
by Hudn~ll. one by Roush) helped the,
Fnlcons pull aheod.
Wirt took it's first lead since the op~n­
inll score on Nicolnis' trey with 2:45
remaining in the fourth.
Hudnalll~d all scorer!, hitting fi1r 17 in
his final appearnnce ol a White Fokou.
Ryai1 Roush finished with 14.
Nicolai, added scovcn for the Ti1,~n.
IJnnid Kycr and Do1)a4! Shepphard ci!dt 4

•·

:the end of the game. It's no)t .
.

that we had to get him in t~e
game, but we thought Jos~'s
speed would be a factor allid
he was able t:tibehind t~e
~

defense.!!

A shoving ma ch broke qllt
in the U.S. e d momedts
later, with even Campos cotfi.lng all the way downfield ~o
join the melee. But nothi(l.g
developed from it, .and Me'!ico · went off meekly with its
fifth loss in the last six int~-

nationals.

Tri-County

•

~·unfortunately, we did~'t
come away with the result we
wanted, " Mexico coach
Enrique Meza said, "but: I
know the players worked haN
and they put in a tremendo]ls

effort." ·

·

.

~

~

·

McBride, the United Stat~s'
most dangerous forwatd, hJltt
his right eye in an early coll,iston.
to
He was replaced in tile
15th minute- by Wolff, wlio
subsequendy dre.w a yellw
card.
!
Playmaker Reyna begSn
limping in the 26th minu1e
?nd was replaced by Cl(!lt
Mathis in the 43rd. Re)'!la
barely touched the ball wh~e
on the field and left •vith: a
groin injury.
•
Six teams are in the rourlllrobin regional final, with the
top three advancing to tbe
2002 World Cup m Sot¢h
Korea and Japan. '
;

·In the next month,
your advertisit:J.g
representative will
be co1:1tacting you
·about being a part of
the biggest, best and
most anticipated
issue of the year..,,.

-

'

"'
•
call~d

Fifty-two fouls were
in the game between the t\.lo
,longtime rivals. The 45 agai~t
Miami was a ·Season high. : .
A double technical f~l
was as~essed against Sho~s
and Hunter after ·' a verool
confrontation seven minu"s
into the game. Shorts pla~d
just 12 minutes in the fi~t
half and 11 in the · seco~d
~
because offoul trouble.

"..
McLeod finished with 20.
points to lead Bowling Green.
The first half was marred
by poor shooting and sloppy
ball ha11dling by both teams,
who combined for just seven
points through the first ei~ht
minutes.
,
Trailing 19~14, Ma~sh~ll
scored 11 · straight poih~ sil' by Slay- to go ahead 2519 just before halftime.

added six.
Wednesday's contest wos the final· time
that four Wahama seniors (Hudnall, John
Smith, Eddie McKinney, and Nathan
Connolly) donned the ~d and white .'
"We had a great group of 1cnioro, n real
hard-working bunch," said Hi!ll. "They
worked all year and play '' hard as they
can. I like these kids and yuu con 't fault

them."

doesn't fix the problem,
he didn't
rule out
surgery.
.
The frmtrating thing
for the All-Star shortstop
is the puzzling nature o(
the injury.
He and team physician
Dr. Bill Morgan traced it
back to Sept. 25, 1999,
when Baltimore's AI
Reyes hit Garciaparra on
ihe wrist with a pitch.

'

The 2000-01 · Falcom fini.1h the !ea!On

5-17.
Witt (8-14) advances to the lectionnl
tina! where they will take on fiwm~:d
Parkersburg Catholk &lt;In Friday.

j

·'

Tri-County.

Tri-County

PARKS &amp; RECREATION/
AGRICULTURE

II

lllbiiiS IIIIDn lrOII ·~

.oraanlzltliaallaaa••

Members of the Pleasant valley Hospital
Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education
Program Will be Conducting a general public
organizational meeting to assess Interest In a
diabetes SUpport group.

~

·~•
~

3
I

•

I

'~

••'
~
••
•••
••
•

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

1-&lt;Bt

~

:

••

..••

"1

il"ii"Qll

~·.

~

(304) 675-4340, Ext. .2004

~-F~"·t~~q

::

'••'

Pleasant Valley OUtpatient
Diabetes Self·Management
Education Plqp'am

1aue!&amp;l r

'

i.

I.
I
I

,.,

j ,IWitiJia

CSL

;:
~'Wil·M!\.~~

~1.1.\~)!Jitt:'PWW.ifM~

.....

. . .,!I~M!i-"i~,"'t,~~
~

''
I

u

II

rr'Y

'

nuwratlttiii~K·

1 l!i~Ho

~~~ti!iNif

._-)W"SiliU~"TtW•"&amp;Qil

I

'
'

t;·w)=··

I

offt ·$lea

r (
)

I
l

1

''

ant~ i\t\Jt

675-1333

•

••

•

I
•I

/j ,

,,

••
.

�Page

B 4 • Tha

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

Thuraday,

llen:h 1, 2001

••
•
•

:•
•

•••

••

~

Loot &amp; Found Yard Soloo,
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references required call 740 992
9197 ask for Dense

easement &amp;a e Saturday March
3 9 00 3 00 New ttema COfl'll'uler
dtaK apartment washer Panaao
nlc p Inter I Qm Racine ltlt onto

CR 2B Buhan Rd 5 mllao leh

CAREER OPPORTUNITVI Earn
excellent noome Eaay calms
p ocessing Full Ira ntng Home
PC requ red Call Physician 1
Healthcare Developments loll
free 1 800 772 5933 elt 2070
CLAIMS PROCESSOR Process
eta ma !rom nome 520..$40/hr potential Full train ng Ccmpur.r w/
modem re~utred CALL NOW 1

BIB 585-5197oxl &amp;42
Oancero
5915

Top Oollor 1304)070

Oo vou want High Wtg11 Same
Cay Pay And To Make Your Own

Schodulo1 Coli Tayloro B1olllng
0 (740).41 3305 For An Ap
polntment Monday Thuraday
9em 4pm We Are Now Hiring
State Teettd Nurtlng Altlatanta

onto Gatnar Rd laaf ho~•e

~PNI&amp;

Moving salt Mach 2 &amp; 3 t9!!
Front St Middleport

Drlvara wanted tKptrllnca pre
farred drug screen requ red cell

Tupplrt Pili na St Pau U M
Church banment 1111 March
2nd 9am 7t:Jm March 3rd Oam
2pm C othlng booke hou11hoid
and m sc Items.

Orlvort FRANKLIN OOLLIOE
NOW TRAININGIII NO EX PERl
ENCE •38k tst 'f81r •flu I bentfltl
•Modlcol •401K •14 doy CpL

li't Plaaeant
&amp; VIcinity
Mason Couf')ty Special 0 ymplc1
Yard Sate March 2 3 Fori Ran
do ph TerraCI Commvn tv Ctnltr

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Angla a Flea Market Indoor/out
door March 2nd 3rd 4th loca
lion 333 Meehan c Street or cal

741).742 1408

AUCTION Eve y Saturday 6pm
T ucM oads Of New &amp; Uaea llem&amp;
From Seve at State s Sell ng To
The Public &amp; Oaa era One Piece
Oozena &amp; Case Lot&amp; Gary
Bowen Auctlonttr Proctorville
Ohio F ea Market Juat Acron
Hunt ington WV 3111 Street

B&lt;ldgo (740JBB6 2266
R ck Pearson Auction Company
lui t me auctioneer oomdlete
auction
untlce
llce.~aed
11166 Ohio &amp; Weal VIrgin a 30ol
773 5765 Or 304 773 5447
A veratde Aucllon earn Salt
Every Saturday Night at ep m
Aucllonee r Ra ymond Johnson

(740)256-6989

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Do tar US s lver
Gold Coins P oolsets Damends
Gold A ngs
U S Currency
M T S Con ShOp 151 Second
Avenue Gall polls 740 446 2842

Actlan Ageney

GIRLS EARN $90+/hOur anytime

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

0.111• Molgo Community

24 peop e needed to lost 10 20
lbs lhla month all natural 00%
guaranteed 1-888 369 2629

AVON! A I A east To Buy or Sell
Sh rtey Spea s 304 675-1429

Garage Sa e Ram S eel Or
Sh ne March 3rd And 4th Every
th ng Must Go 3626 State Acute
141 Gall po s

Oop~~mon1

Equal Opportunl1y Emp1oyar

STOLEN Older 8 ack Mae And
Young Fema e Chaco ate La
brado s From leta t WV A ea
Rew ard (304)634 086 5 $1000
Reward For The First tnlo matton
Resu tlng In Convict on Of
Thieves

Ant que/ Moving Sale Kay Bet:z
Has Moved She Is Sell ng All
Fu mture And Ant qu es House
ho d Goods Lawn And Gard en
Ma ch 2 3 4 Inside Sale At 1552
M U Creek 1 Mile Past Golf
Course Sam 4pm

By Tho Unltod S11toa

Pu It to WO kl $25/hr $751hr FT/
PT FREE nlo 800 871 80ol.5 ext
60 www lahOmeblz com

(7401446-4393

70

To Apply Vlilt Our One Stop AI
322 Second Avenue In Gat lpolla
Or call (740).W8 1018

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?

LOs! Pet Large BrOW!'I Dog
White on Chest B dwe Eve
green A ea
Pease ca I
l os ch ld s pet Pome oy a ea
So d bacK m n atu e schnauzer
~ery fr end y red col ar If found
contact Brent or Tamm Zerk e
740 992 5151 or 740 992 2136

Milt WIA Eligibility Roqulro
mon11

01 labor Th ough The Ohio
Department Ot Job 1 Family
Servlcea And The Qallla County
Department 01 Job 1 Family
Slf'VIctt

APPLICATION AND EXAM IN
Giveaway

High School Student• College
Students And Out 01 School
Voutn Are Encouraged To Apply
Work Schedules For Sludtnla
Employed Will 81 ArrtnQtd Ar
ound Their School Schedule Ap
ptlcanta Mull Be Galli&amp; County
Rea denta AQta 14 2t And

$987 85 WEEKLY I Proceutng
HUO/FHA Mortgaie Refunds No
E11per ence Aequ red For FAEE
tnformallon Calli 800 501 6832
ext 1300

FORMATION

40

Job Tllll
Ba.. lOCI!iOn
Worker
Weathtrlzat on
Chuhlre
Ofll ct Aulatant
ChUhlre
Offici A11 1111nt
Gallpolli

hfs I t 800 449 ota25 E.t 5700

Qual y cto h ng 'and household
1 ems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday thru Saturday
900530

YEP Worktrl WI! Bt PI d $8 25
Per nour For Up To 32 Houra Per
weak And May At ctiY t Worlc
Rtlattd TraininG The Following
Foaltlont '"' Curren11y Avllllabto

Workforce lnvtatmlnt Act Serv
lctl Gallla County Art Funded

$2000 $5000/mo
New To You Th tt Shoppe
9 Wes St mson A hens
740 592 1842

Galhl Melga Community Action
.Agtncy It .Acceptlno Appllca
11on1 Foe Temporary Employtts
For The Yovt~ Employment Pro
ject Appllctnts Selected To Par
tic pate Will Work AI Aoency
Stes And other Location&amp; In Gal
lla County

RNI EOE

on your computerll Adult Internet
v deo chat nttp /I cam a voyeur
but com 1 BBH57 994o&amp; toll tree
Gonrnment Job1 $11 00
$33 00 per hour potential Paid
Training/Full Benellt1 For more
Information call call t 888 874

quolllltd Coli 1 Ill 841 1501
bporltnotd drlvtrt coli 100
858-~53

Drlvora ONLINE APPLICA
TIONS Find tho bolt drolng jObl

or ltart 1 ~lgh paying aarear now
Our placament prolasslanala will

mako londlng your job my 171
893 20158 www hookup com/drtv

...

COL

tral~ng

(lreot pay e:M 000/

yr year plua full btntlll &amp; paid
!raining Driver a baud In Mid

wtl1 1 877 230 1002 Sundoy
8am 4pm Monday ?tm &amp;pm
1\J&amp;-F I 7am 4pm

EARN S21 000 TO 110 000/yr
Medical Insurance BlUing NHd
td lmmtdllttlyl Home computer
nttdld FREE lntarntt 1 800

291 48830tptl 109
EKpertendd Automotive Counter
Sales Pertcn S•nd Reaumea To
PC24 2oo Main
Potnt
Peasant WV 2~!550

s'r"'

Full Charg~Bokktaper Neldld
For Prole o AI OffiCI Back
ground tn
mpullr zed Ac
countlnQ7'PayroH Preparation And
Reltled Flet~rna Anpond To Ball

J R27 200 Main Str11t Po ln1
Pleaaant WY 215550

GROW NG BUSINESS NEEDS

HELP I 1 Work from home/ mall
oreder/E Commerce S522+1Wtlk

PT I 1000 $4000/wk FT 800 921

8538 www aream2blrH com

Help wanted In adult group hOme
day and n gnt thlfl cal 740 992

0023

350

WantaciTo Do

(740)25e-1227

At Pleuon1 Volloy Hoopl111 2520
Valley Drive Point Pleaaant WI/
25550 Or Fu To (304)875 1971
AMOE

Mounts Tree Service Th1 Tr11
Proftsltonal•
Bucket Truck
Service Top Trim Rtmoval
Stump Grinding Fl'll Estlmatll
Fully lnaured Workers Comp

Poste l Job a 148 323 00 yr Now
hiring No e~eperlenc•pe td trtlning great bentfltl etll 7 daya
800-428-:lHO Old J-311

Bldwlll Ohio Coli &amp; $avo 1 800
838 9S88 (740)311 9648 Owner
Rick Movnl

.30

AN 1 Start
00 LPN Slart
U2 00 CllOOII ~r lloUl'l &amp; 1.0eanona Hoepttal NUillnQ Home
Correctional cunje ,;nd Privati
Duly (All PoaiUona Aequlra t
Yllr minimum E~tperilnce) Local
Interview• Available Contact
L1oo At ( 814J!~~~3D8 Po11on1

Cora Modlcltl

SECURITY
1880 HR
Tht Wackenhut Corp 11 Recruit
lng For Sovorll Polltk&gt;nl Mull
Have (l E o Or H S lllplomo
Pilau API&gt;~ A1 Jomoo M Gavin
"-r P1ont Sllto Rout1 1 Or Cot!
Capl Evano At (740)825-3010
EOE Mlf/HN

I

Ouallly house clunlnos The
Be•t BoMtd Prolaulonal RtH
able call even ing• (740)258-

1131 or 1 811 7B1

Slcllted Nurtlng FJCIIIty lllklng
an LPN or RN tor part time potl·
lion We have an excellent Bur
'Wf hlatory ancs 1 YI'Y tlllblt staff
Thlt 11 an excellent opportunity
fOr the r gtn candldlll tar ptrton
al and prortaalonal growtt1 Sub
mil rnume 10 R~'kltpringt Alha
bllltatlon Center 38759 Flock
sprlnga Road Pomeroy Oh o
45760 attn Carol Greening, RN
Director of Nuralng. EQUAL OP

PORTUNrrY EMPLOYER
Spring 11 Just around tnt eorntr
Spring lnto action with Tandem
Tranaporl Corp OTR reg iDnal

omoll

(740)448 Otlt or 339 0910 11
~0 Anawer LIM MtUigt

Will Repair Automoblllt Fa~rm
Tractora And EQuipmenl In My
Garage Low11t Ratti t.n Town

Coli (740)44 Hlt 99

FINANCIAL

210

Butlneae
Opportunity

$1 000

WEEKLY

POSSIBLE

FROM Home Fret web 1111 No
experience required Details
www wsll)mlt wllworkalhOme

S3000 Wotk lyl MAILING 400
brochurta AT HOMEI Guar
antud Fret Supplies 1 800

283-3180 ext 0388 (24 hr&amp;)
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re oo mmancta tnat you do bual
ness with people you know and
NOT 10 send money through the
ma ll unt I you have lnv11tlg1111d

Home Health Aldll The Gallla
County Council On Agtno (Senior
Reaource Center) It Currently
Accepting Appl cations For Pari
Time And/ 0 Full Time (30 35
Hours) Home Health A tie Must
Have Own Transportal on And
W ling To Travel In Gatlla
County Job Description And Ap
p tcatlona Available At The Sen
lor Resource Center 1187 Stale
Route 160 From 7 OOam unlll

STAY HOMI/WORK ONLIN!
UOO STOOO/mon1h PT/FT Com

llahed Vending Routt Will sell by
3112 Under $9K min imum Invest
ment raqutred EKctllenl Monthly
Prollt Potent at Finance Avail

3 OOpm Monday Through FrldOV
The Potlllon 11 lmmtdllltfy
Available An Equal Opportunity/
A"lrmatMt Action Employtr
tmmedlale Opening For A N Fu"
time Position In A Phyalclane Of
Ice Competitive Salary And benems Send Resume To CLA 520
clo Gallipol s Dally Tr bunt 825
Third Avenue Gallipolis

45831
lmiJleclla,tely aeeldng child care In
our home for Infant twin g1rl1 Ap
plicant mual have exptrlence/
relerenc11
Pomeroy area
Schedule will vary/ oueranteed 2
days oH For more in!Ormallonl In
tarview can 7ol0-192 1386
Janitorial Help Needed $1$ so
$7 !50 per hour dependent upon
exp•rlence Benefits atter 90
days Send Reaume 10 CLA 515

c/o Galllpoll1 Dolly Trlbuno 8~5
Third Avo Gaii&gt;OIIo OIU5831
LAWN CREW SUPERVISOR
MARCH OCTOBER

Flexible schedule dependinG
upon lawn care needs E~tperl
ance with operation care and r•
pa.lr ot var ous mowing tqulpment
Vatkt drivers lcense fl g" acMot
diploma or OED Ab lily to super
viae a mowing craw Ekptrttnct
working In the field 01 develop
mental dlaaDMitltl helpful S8 oo$7 2!5/hr depending upon experience Submit r11um1 or appllca
tton by March 1 2001 to Mtlga
lndu1trl1t BoK 307 S~racu11

The Alhtnt Meigs Educat ional
Service Center It ateklng quill
fl1d cancHdalll for the potltion of
Treeaurer Appncanta mual pos
aeu 1 Treuurer a llatnae
IJSUid by 1hl OhiO Oop1 ol edu
cation or tvldtnct that auc:h II
oen .. can bl obttlntd Expert
enct In sChOOl dlatrtct university
ot governmtnlll accounting dl·
tired E•perjence aa 1 chief rtacal
pfllcer preferred Appllcanta must

oloo have 1ho obll ty 1o lla bondld
and to provide their own tranapor
tatlon Sul:Jmll letter of Interest ,.
sume 3 references and copy oJ
current license to Jonn Constan
io Superintendent &amp;07 Richland
Avenue Suitt 108 Athena OhiO
45701 Application deadline Ia

April S 2001 ThO AMESC II and
Equal Opportunity Employer/Pro
vidor
URGENTLY NEEDED plaoma
Cjc)nort earn S3S to 145 for 2 or 3
hours wllkly Call Sera Tee 740

592 H51
Someona To Help Carpet Layer
Dtpendable honest And Will ng
To Work Waga Depends On Ex

parlanco Call (740)388 891!2
Wanted Llctnatd Practical
Nuru lor 1 community home tor
people with mental relardatlon In
Bidwell Current LPN Llctnll

OOPNES or NAPNES valid drlv
lr'l lletnn end lhrtt y11r1 good
driving ;equlrtd H®ra 11m 3pm

Ptoul Soncl Rooumo To ~0 B"
1223 Gollpollt Ohio 48831
NEEDED 31 lliOIIIo to !ott 30 !be
by Aprll111hl1llrond now 1u11
po11nlldl lloo1 23 lbo In 1 mon1hl
aoo &amp;70 9821 or www bollm4
lfecom
OWN A COMPUTEA1 Put 1110
work 121 178/hour Froo Oelollo
Will Train www tl tluootll com
OWn ACompulor?
Put HTo WOrlll
Jill 171!11tr I'TII'T
1..11.... 4311
www b-htlllloom
PARENTI ORIAMI &amp;loy Homo
lorn Monll)' 811 vour own ltouro
Training
Provldod
VIlli
www holnt'lo11111do-

aaakt people Training Provided.

able/ GoOd Credit -188BJ 270
21eeABSOLUTE GOLD MINEII SO
downtl Candy VENDING route
Net&amp; $ol8 000+ FREE Info Toll
Free 1 877 494 8695

Hum1n Rtaourctt ClptrtrT\Int

2500 Ohio Avenuo
GoNipollo OH 45e3t
Phone No (740)44fi-t642
F" No (740)448-13o41
TOO (740)448-~958

attached garege, Central heat
end air 6 exttr1or walls Thermo
spare doora end window• 1 114.
acrea property Approx 1~ mite&amp;
aoutb ot Gallipolis ofl SA 141
$72 000 (740)379-21187

FORECLOSED OOVT HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO 6 &amp; BANK~UPTCIESI OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTING! CALL 1
Half Acre 3 Bedroom Houae 1
Bedroom Apartment Beneath
Two Pole Barns Close To Town

WI allo ollor

-lltnol1io
•1'1~ Holldlyll

Vlolllonl

0111 Uo Today ,or 1vt ln11Niow1
1-07•lltlllll 811
WORK 'ROM HOMI
Ill~ 171 OOihr

I'TII'T
MltiiD*
1-IIMIII

140

lualntn
Training

180

828 8523 US/Canada www gla51
mechanixcom

320 Mobile Homaa

Cllh lor rema ining payment• on

tint Sttlltmtnltl Immediate

Ouo1tll11 'NobOdy lllall our pr1C
II • National Co111r1ct Buytrt

(100) 480 0731 OX1 101 WWW no
llol"'aacontracrbuylrs com

IIID

Ott your M8 oqulvoloncy d plomo
w th our lilY home atud)' courM
1100502te31ld 310

180 Wanted To Do
Gtorgea Portable Sawmill don t
t'laul vour loot to ltte mUijuat call

:m..75-1H7

Aeterenct

For Sa lt Rtcondlt oned wash
dryera and refrigerators
Thompeona App liance 3407

lrJ

ChiCk

Jac~oon

(740)448-9313 call ootwoon 5
and Spm for Marcn 3rd appoint

Waahera dryera refrigerators
ranges Sllaggs Appllanc11 76

Galllpollo 750 3rd Avo 1110

VIne Street Call 740 446 7398.
t 886 818.0128

Month 1 SA 1 Batt'! Frame
Houll Gal Htll No Pttl WH
konclll Nlghll (740~14

Kenmore WP~ytag Waahera
$85 each Lst
odtl Frldgaalre
Dryer S75 Oth
Oryera sao
HCh Ail whitt (740)446-9066

Galllpollo 752 3rd Avonuo 1375
Mon111 3 Sldroom 1 So1h From•
HoUle Gil Hltt No Pet&amp; WH
klncll N1ghll (740)441-1114

Mollohan Carpets &amp; Furn ture
New 2 plect Livlngroom Su te
$299 Recliner $199 Sale On
Carpet In Stock 200 Clark Ctlapel

Newly Carpeted 2 Bedroom un
turn!ehld Home With Gereo•
Gatllpollt "rea Dtpos t And All

Road Porter Ohio (740)31B.0173

oronoo No Pots (740)441-6114

Main Street Furniture

(304)675 1422

(3041736 7295
~enter•

Nteded

304 738-7295
Small 1 Bedroom 1410 Ltwla
Street Point Pleaaant $2!0/mo

t4x70 With 24 Fool Expando
$325/month + Oepoait &amp; Refer
ence In Thl Camp Conley Area

1988 12xl55 Butftfy excellent
condition pleaae call 740 247
4700 11 interested

dillon Mako OHtr (7401448--4809
Atk Fordtm

1g9e 1~x70 3 Bodroom 2 Balh
Clay1on Legond VInyl Siding
$20 000 (304)675-1121
2001 14 Wide Free Setup &amp;
Delivery Maytag Appii&amp;I10II
Included Only $17 aoo AI
FleetwoOd 1 U.585.Q187

Br1nd new O&amp;kwood hOme thrtl
bedroom two bath tnch.Jdta ahtd
OIOIId In porch Tiki over PlY
menta 13!53/mo Muat be moved
Mu1t ..ll 74G-885-4 1 12 anytime

440

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp; fur
nlahtd and unfurn ahtd security
dtpoalt required no pete 740

(740)245-5747

1 Bedroom Furnlahed Apartment
Central Heat &amp; Air Conditioning
Carpet Ttuoughout Off Street
Parking Quiet &amp; Clo11 To Gro
eery Store AduUa Only

530

1124 Eoot Main on SR 124 E Pontoroy 740 g92 2526 or 740.11112
1539

1 Bedroom Near HOlzer EcMOmlcal Gaa halting W/C Hookup
l27SJ 00 Plua Ulitltlta Lease De

CABH NOWI lrom
wtlltl1!/ lamiHoo uniOICIII!&lt;I mllono
Ol dDiflrl to htlp minimize lhllr
t1111 Wrlle lmmedlatiiV Wind

IIIII 3010 WILSHIRE BLVO
Ill LOS ANOHS CALI~OA
NIAtoo10
COIIIOLIDATI YOUR WAY
OUT 0~ DIITI Roduco mon1hly
payment• Pey ona bUIImonth

IAIV IO Oil lllrltd Plnonclol
~rotdom Chrlollon Counoollng
100 U1 1717
t&lt;l
CC3
www.dlbtool oro (Non Prollt)
CAIDIT PROILIMI? CALL THE
OAEDIT EXPERT&amp; LICINIIDI
IONDED CDAIIECTIAEMOVI
lAO CREDIT BANKAU PTCV
LAWSUITS JUDOMENTS AAA
"ATINO 1 11..111-DIOa

540

1 a,droom Upstalrt Apartm1nt
Cloat To Wal Mart Utlllllll In
eluded 1375/mo Plus D•poall
720 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upttalra Aptrtment $300 tOI
poalt Water Sewer Trath Paid

(740)«1-&amp;218 (Day) (700)441·
otot (Evonlngo)

31 o

Llnt11od Or No Crodll? Oovorn
mon1 look Flnonoo Only AI Oek
wood In larbourovlllo WV 304
738-340t
Lot mod:1l claaranc• a1ve up to

II 115 with ony homo ohock uo
out woro dllllng Colo o Mobllo
tiomot Ul 80 I ..LAlhOnt Oh
MUll 1oin 1exec
MillO a Plymon11 I MMinl

1..DO-It1 ..777

Now 14 ft wldo 14DI down only
•1n par moo ooll now 1 IDO·
111-1777
Ntw 11 II wltlt e4tt por mon
only taro por moo coli now 1
IDHtl ..m

Now F l - 1"'70 I11Ht00
3 lodroom a loth 1 177 777
4170
Now
Flootwood
lidO
111 tiD oo 3111droom a 11111 1
anm4170
Ullllty IIIII GoUing Mo11 01 Your
PIYOhtokl Coli (740)448·3013
For~r Now Homo Today
Farm• lor Stla

Perm HOUII BeauUiully

~lmold

Pond In ground Pool Slvarll

173 000 3 Sod room t

11~

Both

1740)311-1151
1774 Cholt""t By Owrwr BuiM In
1H7 3 lldroom Tax Abalement

Till 2013 IU 500 00 (7401441·

291~

I

~r rent

one bldroam turnlahld

Sawmill 13 795 New Super Lum
bermate 2000 arger capacities
more options Manufacturer of
uwmllla edgera and sk elders

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive Buffalo NV 14225
FREE Information 1 aoo 578

13133 EXT 200 U

Small ch cktn egos 20e a dozen
or case $6 Gary M1chaet 740

985 3135B
SOCIAL SECURITY OtSABIUTY
CONSULTATION Benell1 Team

Waterline Special

lpttrtmen1 In MlfiCIItporl 011 740.

'urnlihod I I J Aoom Aparl
monll Olean No Pt11 No 1mo11
lng Aoloronon a Duooll I'll•
U111111oo Purnlohod
qulrod
[140)446-1111
Golllo Monor Aporlmonlo Now
AOCIIP11ng Applloollortl ~or 1 Ill
HUO lubiiOiled Aplrlmtnll POl
lldorly And HondiOIIICII&lt;I IQull
Houolna Opportu~lty (740)441•

-

Groolouo living 1 and I bldtOOm
IPI""'Inll It Ylllogo Manor 10~
"lvorold• Aporlmon\o In Mltldlo
po~ ~rom 111'3 13:11 0111 740
Ha &amp;Oe.; IQUII Houolng Oppor
tunKIH.

Modern 1 lodroom Aparlmanl
,..,.,. (740~310
Nor11t Third Middleport 0111 llldroom lur~llltld 1111~mont a ono
ooaroom unlutnlohld oparlmonl
dtpoall A reter~no11 no p1t1

740-111.0118

Now Toklng AppiiCIIIOril· U
W11t 2 Bedroom TownhOUII

:::=

Aporlmonto lnoludoo Wottr
Troah 1350/Mo 740

Ono llldroom oportmonl a ' bod
room moollo homo no Pill 740
Ha-5851
Ont ltd room Apartment On 111

340

poJit Wotor Poltl
Allor! DOpm

Bualnaa1 and
Building•

for ule located In Point P't11ttnt

Good No lghborhood Aoduood
Ill 000 (304)175 till

350

Lota

&amp; Acre1111a

Avonuo Golllpollo Woahlrl Dry
tr Hook up S:Z7CIImo Plua 01

1740~04'

Twin RIVIr"lbMrl now IOOtll)ting
opotlclllont lor 1 IR
HUD tuboldllld lf)t lor oldlr1y
lncl dlllblod EOH 1304)175
HN

No
LOOk ing TO Buy A NtW Home? Upo1olrt Aporlmtnt 3 Roomo
Qolllpollo
Don t H1111 Lind? we pout Hurry Ptto Walor Pold
V~ nlty (740)311-1 tOO
Only t 0 L.o11 l.lff 304 738-7215

•

3/4 200 PSI

200 PSI

(740)367-7623
2000 Black Ch.,vy Extreme
Loaded Low Ml eage 4 000

Miles (304)875
(304)B75 7016

o

~Jt4

74 Monte Carte 350 Motor Good

Condition $2200 090 (740)4469611

97 Ford Escort Auto 4 Doo r
$4500 1740)245-9443

CARS $29/MONTH
POUNDS &amp; REPO
CHEVY 24 MOS 0
LISTINGS! CAU
8717 .,, c 9B14

POLICE IM
Sl HONDA
t9 9% POR
t 800 941

CIJllass Clera $1200 1982 Mer
cury Lynx SW S450 1986 Mer
cu y Cougar $1400 1994 Mer
cu y Topaz $1800 1989 Pontiac
Grand Am $1 109 t990 Old&amp; Cut
ass Clera $1200 1986 Old&amp; Oel
ta 88 $900 1993 Mercury Topaz
$1600 Call Montfay Thru Friday

OOYERNMENT POITAI. JOB81 UP TO
$36 7&lt;18/YR HtRINO FOR 2001 CALL
FOR APPUCATION EXAMINATION
IN110RMATION FEDERAL HIRE.fULL
BEN EATS 42 000 RETtRINO IN 2001
t IIOQ..I1tlo0712 OPEN 24 HOURS
WNW OOVERNMENTPOSTAUOB ORO

t994 Dodge Dakota 4x4 Extend
ad Cab 3 Inch Lift L.oaded New
Pa nt
Wheels And Tires

5121

1998 Ford Explorer 2 Door Sport
5 Speed 63 OO()rlMIIes $ t 1 BOO
(740)379-2787

A LOAN? Coneolkie.ta
110 APPt1CATION

(740)446-000S

Ext 1154

www hllp-poy-l&gt;ilo oom

$8 990 40K60x12 Was $16 400 1'-:~-::----::-----­

Now $10 971 50K100x 16 Was

$27!i90NowS19990 60x200, 16
Was S5e 760 Now $42 990
1 6QO.A06 5126
560 Pate lor Sale

4 lox Terrier Puppies 11 weeka
old Had first IJhots $50 each
Monroe Yoder 1147 Bumene Ad
Patriot Ott t milt off Patriot Rd

AKC Black Fomala Lab 12 wks

1999 Ford F 150 Supercab 2WO

VB 4 door bad cap 10000
mlas very nice 740-992 2679
89 F 150 XLT Lar at P U Load
ad Hogh Milas Body EKCallenl
Shape Must See To Appreciate
52000 (740)446-6'141
93 Chevy s 10 Standa d looks
Good Runs Good Must See To
Apprec ate $4000 {740)245

1'-'95:.;9.;.5_ _ _ _ _ _ __

old Had shott &amp;f'd wormed call
(740)44&amp;-4759
AKC German Shepherd Puppies
Solid Whitt And Silveri Sables
E11cellent
Temperment And
Structure (740)245-5408

94 GMC Extended Cab 2 Wheel
Drive Loaded 305 Aulo Over
drive Short Bed $8895 92 Sil
verado Short Bed V6 Auto
Overdrive Loaded $6600 Days
(740)245 coso
Evemngs

AKC Sho111e puppies Trls Bluo

1:7::3=::0~:-:va"n:.;s=-:&amp;-4-:-.-:-W~D~I-­

Merlll vet checked ctlamp1on
~=1~;; cute &amp; adorable 740

570

(740)8B2 751 2

1~~-::-..,..,,.---,---­

1

TVI

1989 Ford Conversion van
VCR rear a r back seat folds Into

llad 1owlng packago 73 100 orlgl

110

DIRECTV lroo lno1ollallon taoo
Clllllllck 101).1113-11140

Alllt Chllmero C Form Tloctor
a Oper
.... &amp;licit 11700 010 (30&lt;1)671
3824

rod Ford Exp loror Eddlo
Bautr Edition 112 000 mllu ntw
tlrta excellent cond ition $5500

Whlll Orlvo Edd o Bouor H 000
mltoo Good Condition (30.)733
4235

Narrow Front lnd Auna

uoo

Cht~ S 10 ~000 •x4 Ex1ondod
Cob ~ol'1or 3rd Door LS Pock
age COl Canouo Fully Loodod
11 000 MIIU $21 000 Cot!
g40)441-17aO Plouo Luvo

...,.

740

Llvaatook

IZPITIIX COM &amp;ovo up 10 IO'I'o
on ALL pol modlcollono and ou.,.
plloo Including Mll~gord lnll~
coptor FronUino morolll ~REE
IHIPPINO Ordor onllnl www El
pltllxoom t IOO.IIo44-14J7

5 Yoor Old ApptiOOII QuiiUng
Good Troll Horll 5 Ytlr Old PI
olonno Gull11ng 3 V.or Old Mort
Holl ~oint 4 Hall Arll&gt;lon Brown!
Whl11 (740)311-a:IH

, _ ''" Silo (740)3811217(740)381-1214

loyd leel Cattll F'trtormanct
~1111&lt;1

lull 8110 10 Anguo 10
Pollod Horolord Mondoy Morch
llh I 30pm At Tho Now Ook

PLOAIOA MARCO ISLAND En
lor 1ho Tropical Porodlll of Cave Ltvutook Aucllon AA
btiCihll and rtilllll lan Beach Hlghwoy Moyavlllo K~ For Mort
lront oondoa or homea For r1nt1 lnlorme11on Con1101 Chorllo Boyd
aa111 Century 21 11t Southern (1011)713-14 t I
Trull
1 &amp;00 215 9417
or
wwwcatmeroo.oom
Palomino 111111on
llog AOHA1111
FAEE OIAECTV SYSTEM lnOiud 1n MH World Chlmplon lm
lng prolo1110n lnotollo11on Call/ prolllvo B~Uno NIN WH1tm
doltllt Over 2a1 c~onnolo Local Pltaaur. Halllr BanH Stand
nttworka 1valltbll 881 57&amp; lrt9 Slud Foe $250 13041&amp;15
1100
1440
FREE Ortn1 Money I. Allorno11VI
Fod•rol Funding! Educotlon 840
Hay &amp; Grain
10001 round llaloo o1 hoy lor oalo
740892-7418

(740)oWa-nl7

Probllmo? Hold 1\rnld? Coli Tho
Hay tor till tquart b1l11 $1 25
Plano Or 740-448-41!26
1 milt on R1 ~ N :m 175-431!9
lndoponctont 111r1111111 Olo1rlbutor
Hay For Salt 4l5 Round Ba tes
~nd 2!0 SQuirt Btu Call

4110 Foreman 4x4 Eloc1rlc Bhll14
whoolor 1300 mlltl Excollonl
Ooncll1km S-4800 1 ~ Ll1or 0~101
Engine S3PO Floor 0 1111 "!luck
Toppor lor o OOd(lo yllrt 77 92 1
.,_.,Old S200 17'01448-21147

750

1989 Sy1von 8111 Boa1 17 Foot

ea

Aluminum Wltn
Horaepower
Evln Audt Motor wor)la Well tn
River Or ltkea For Bau" Qr

Cropp o (740) 388-8318

780

Campara &amp;
Motor Home•

1990 Wtnntbaoo Motor Home

Low Mlleago 31 000 MIll Sol1
Contalnetl 81•-'P• 6 Exce lent

COn dillon I 14 800 (740)UI·
82118
i1

SUlVICES

810

Hom a
Improvement•
IIAS!MENT
WATERPROOFINO

448 0870 1 eoo 267 0576 Aog

(740)448-9115

I

Home
lmprovament1

C&amp;C Oentral Home Main
ltnence Paint ng vtnyl lldlng
carpentry doora w ndowt bat~l
mobtlt home rtpair and more For

lru oa11ma1o call Chet 740 992
8323
Livlngaton 1 Baaement Water
Proofing 111 baaemenl repalra
done lrta lltlmattl tlletlmt
guarantt• 1•vra on Job expert
Superior Home Malnltnanct And

Plu1J1D ng WI Do All Rapalro On

H~

Haul

810

onco (304}BD5 3887

Unco nell! ona fet me guarantee
Lo cal referencta furnished Es
tablltthld t975 Cal 24 Hra (7.0)

You

Classlfledsl

Bolltl &amp; Motol'll
for Sale

(7~014•6-0tt 1 or (740)4487143 Alltr a OOpm

For Solo l.lrge Round Sola•

Trade
In the

Motorcyclaa

tt84 Hortllo 200 Four "!ilK 1800
740 1141 3011 cal ohor 3pm

Frat I Second cut Orchard
Grus Round Balli $t2 00

Bllt

Buy, Sell
or

81 Ford Aeroatar Mint Van All

Farm Equipment

Per

:Names

Condlllon (304)8751112

Ill lVI 'oiOCK

111

a .Man of.Marry

linn 740 992 73GB
8!1 JHP Cherokee Wagon Good

fAilM Sl ll'l'lll •,

130

In Loving Memory or
James J, Smith
6/6/37 • 3/1/2000

19~1

Plono For Solo 1100 (304)882
21168

Hortt Troller a Sltll
(740)446-1""

nat mllea 'Vtry clean $5795 740-

8200

Muelcal
lnttNmenta

-

JET
AEAATION MOTORS
Ropttlrld Now 4 Robullt In Stook
Call Ron Evono 1 800ol37 D521

FREE Cltllog 6QO.II2611228 write PO
Box 701449 Dlllao TX 71370 NA

Eng no Mag Whoa o Many New
Parts $t800 1740)448-8044

Block brk:k sewer pipes wlnd
ows llnlthl etc Claude Wlnte a
Rio Grandi 0~ Call l40 245

U Inch Big Sorun TV RCA

(7ol0)441·tN2

and nen Inoooolol BLACKSTONE PAAALEOAL. SniDIE:s.l
ortdit dlfftcultlta Spl'dalizlng
colectlon
medical
Home S1udy Apj&gt;rovld AllordiDto
prenenalvt te~t training tlnoe 1690

1740)448-45 t 5

1988 Ford Ranger New Aebu tt

ooch 740 Ha-7111

Call flat flroduct Or Opportunity

===~1~8~8~8~81~5-~1~83;5~=-JI:~~,:'; homtowneq
ooooun11

1977 Ford 3/4 Ton 360 Motor
Runs GoOd Needs Tiansmlss on

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
JaCkson Ohlo 1 800-537 9528
Building
550

(304)1715225

Grubb I PiinG- Tuning I Alptlrt

~

720 Trucks lor Sale

1989 Ford F 250 4x4 tool box 4
new wide tracll I res aluminum
r1ma new clutch good shape
t32k esk no $4300 740 742

Ill 5112775 or www gronll dOl
com com

"DEBT OONSOI.IlATION

ONE almple tow monthly peyment
I
High lntar11t Savt Thouaandl
becoming debt lrte Program1

9 ooam 5 OOpm (740)388-9303

GOlden AetriiYtl pupa full blood
td flrat ahota and wormed $125

Houalng
PurcbattiAtPIIrt
Oebta Buelnell ln¥entort
Wrltera/Artlata Guaranttld 1

Genuine Opportunity!
For FrM Information
Clll Toll FrH

Escort S W $500 1986 Olds

1985 FOfd Ranger 5 Sped Good
Cond lion {740}25&amp;-6464

Steel bvildlng New Mual dell
30x40K12 Was $10 200 Now

1 1438 Startlmmed atelyt

Milling OUr Salol Brocllurul
FrH SUpolloo P&lt;&gt;o11gll
511rt lmmedlalolyl

L•vt!y s Auto Sates 1988 Ford

20 lnntbruck By Gutfalream Fully
Btlf Contelntd Used Very Little
Lilli New
Many htraa

llacUic Hoopllllllld Nlghll11nd
And Ovor Bod Tabll 1100
(740)3711-47/iO Alltr 71)1!1

Slltmpod Envelope

P0 Box 1438 Antioch

5797

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
p asston Fittings In Stock

Suppllel

auppllea provldedl Rush

91 Dodge Stealtn ES 250HP:
5 Speed Claron CD Player Tint
Runs Great $4995 (740 )2 45

7&lt;12 8200

COMPUTEI'II WE FINr\NCE
DELL COMPUT!ASI E•on wllh
1111 than porltcl crodlll 1 100
477 tOll Codo ACt www omo•
IOiuiiOntoom

11111131

Sorno Goroge Frul1 Trill CloiO
"Ill MOIZir $215 000 (740)oWa&lt;1230

Church Building with Poroonogo

Wood fl'loort G11 Flraplaoa
Gara,g t, I 47 Acr11 Mutt Set

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Heat
Pumpa l P &amp; Natural Gas Fur
nac11 II You Don t Call Us We
Bo1h Losol (74$)448-6308 &amp;
I BOQ.291 009B

1998 Pen! ac Grand Prix GT 2
Door 34 ooc Miles Leather
Loaded Garage Kept Exce tnt
Condition
$15 500
OBO

wkt old (740)448-3578

plono 40xGOx10 - •11500 now
II HO 50K100x1• woa 13&amp; 900
now 117 ItO IOxl21x14 woo
Ut 800 now 134 no 1 80().248

Fino! Dll)'o Notk&gt;nwldo lnvontory
R-nl(304ll\!&amp;-340t

ld 1!183 Squoro Fool 17 Acroo

SO DOWN HOMES I OOV T &amp;
lANK FORECLOIURESI LOW
DR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CAEDITI ,OR LIITINGSI CAU.
1 101).331 00110 Old 111 t

nett

1995 Chrysler Sebrng 1995 Ford

~~~us SE Muot Se I (740)446-

Full Blooded Oobermans e Fe
malt 3 Malta and 1 Fled Male s

ALL STEEL BUILOING Now up

330

Hornaa for ltla

Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Fu rnaces Oil Furnace~ 12 Sttr
Heat Pump &amp; Air Condltlcn ng
Systems Free 6 Year Warranty
Bennetts HealinG &amp; Cooling 1
800 872 5967 www orvb comfben

You'll always be m the kr.ow w1th a
newspaper subscnpt10n We 've got the
goods to keep you mformed,
enlightened and entertamed every day
Call today for a subscnpt10n

(304)675-566B

Tall $50 4 IROC Camara
WhHII $100 (740)245-9774

to 50% offl Pre tnglnllrld with

mon 011 - 1 100411 em

1111\1 I '&gt;11\11

Mlacellaneoue
Merchandlae

1978 SlltroniK Comanche 0 104
Mlc Orlg Manual ElCcellent Con
dltlon S100: 23Ch Cobra Cam 89
Bast Exc ..lent Condition Ex )(

(740)245-5558

RESIDENTIAL HOME DWNEAS

MOO (740J44&amp;-20Ge

Now doublo wldo 3 br I bo

TUIIHID DDWN ON
IOCIAL IICUIITY 1111'
No I'H Untoll Wo Wlnl
1.... 112-33&lt;15

Moore owner

2nd Avo phone (740)446-1615

pool1 Roqulrod (740)441-1519

Double Wldll

lilt 00 down only 1115 par

NIIO AN EARLY PloYDAY71 NO
oHICt VIlli ntiCollory Up to leoo
lnotonlly Ctll toll ~" 1 177 !AA
LYPAV 111 ADVANCE FII!EI
U0t7800011

~uss

Large Collection of Ant que Pock
et Watches Good Condition 422

IIINEED A LOAN? Try dob1
conoolldotlonl Cui poymonto up
to IO'I'o 8omo doy op~rovoll 1
1777111111
·~"EE

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverlna Antiques

(740)446-280:2

Prom Gown Dusk Color 2 P ace
Size 18 W tn Matching Slices
Size e 112 Paid $350 Asking

$21 95 Per tOO t

lndlan Creek Golf Range Ping
Calloway Taylor Made Cobra

11112 2218

5233

and everywhere m between, the
newspaper 1s THE place to fmd the
stones that are Important to you and
your community

MO 5 019 9°/o FOR LISTINGS

1972 VW Super Beetle Good
Cond lion Standard Sh ft Blue

PlaySiatlon 21 Limited 1upplltsl
To order now call 1 514 831

B5

CALL 1 800 451 0050 u1 C

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Hoi day Inn Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And Vas

Goll Clubs Spring Cloanlr1g Sale

TRANSPORTATION

9812

ERS Almost everyone approved
with SO down! Low monthly pay
mtntlt I 800.617 3476 ext 330
Orbltrtk Exerclaa Mach ne
IB5 00 1740)448-2205

To the Big City

Or (304)695 3789

1740)448-7300

638 4052

Sporting
Goode

"""" &amp; Fertilizer

Tobacco Planti For Sale Call
:(7:-:40...:)4-4......:11-_7~&amp;q:.:.:;._ _ _ __
Tobacco Plants Order Now To
GIJBrantM Early Spr ng Plant1ngs
Increase Allotments Mean Extra
P ants Thank You For Your Bus
ness Ca I Danny Dewhur,st
Leave Message (304)895 3740

SO DOWN CARS POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29

$389 Buy Sail "Tiade

520

Apartment&amp;
lor Rent

&amp;50 ., ....

1

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beams P pe Rebar For Concrete
Angle Cfllnnet Flat Bar Steel
GratinG For Drains Driveways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Metal&amp;

Services Inc Toll free 1 888

!74014-48-7398

'•*

"(304=:10::.'::;5-:..:5:.:.724::;.~:-~-­

710 Autos lor Sale

New &amp; Used Furniture
New 2 Piece Liv noroom Su fles

Whirlpool Washer $95 Elaotr c
Aartge S9!5 Frosffree Rtlr gerator
SI!SQ Frtezer S150 Nice Waatt
or &amp; Dryor Se1 S300 All Ap
pllancea Guaranteed Ska~gs
Appllancn 76 Vine Street

i304)B75-5477

Aound DtltYtry &amp; Volume Ollli
count An
Heritage Farm

1740)4oi&amp;-630B 1 BOO 291 0098

cla im dented? We apeclallze In
appeals and hearings FREE

Oval Oak Table &amp; 4 Chairs Ex
C:tllant Cond liOn $200 (304)675
7984

lor Flent

New &amp; U&amp;ed Electric A,.d Gat
Furnaces For Sate Cal For s z
as
lnatallat lo n
Ava able

515 Man Street Point Pteas.ant

..

14X79 Southern Oraam frat Ot

!Ivory lree Setup only $9995 1
888 1128 3426

Mnua (304)87573138

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

mom

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

s150 (304)773-5079

Appliances
Aa condltloned
Waahlrl Dryers Reng11 ~tfrl
gratora Up To 80 Days Guar
anttedt We Sal New Maylag Ap
pl lancu French City Maytag

lor Sale

ShlnQit Root Thermo Pane
Wlndowa Excellent Condition

Prolesalonal
Services

olpm

740.441 n95

420 Mobile Homae

Start Your Bualnen Today
Prime Shopptno Center Space
Available At Alfordable Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740-446

CALL TODAY 1 800 695 0219 or

Arms S300 (740)258-1222 Aher

Cozy In Town ~ BR llouH Largo
LR/OR Ullllly Room Porloct lor
omoll lomlly UOO/month 1300
depotll

Houeehold
Goods

47 Inch Round So! t1 Oak Oln tng
table Claw Foot o1 Chi rs w tl1

530pm

Nowly romodelod coun1ry home wJ

MEDICAl BILLING Un mlted In
come potel'ltlal No eKperience
neceuary Frea Information &amp;
CD-ROM lnvearment from $2495
Financing available (800) 322
1131if EXT 050 www bul nell
atartup com

WORK FROM HOME
Earn
$1500 p/tto $5000 111 monthl1l

51 o

2 br houtt wl tull buement
$381 oo o mon1h + 1250 oo do
posit In Point Pleaaant 304 6754469

SSO Oop011t Call Allor 5pm
(304)727 3318

1991 Mobile Home 2 Bedroom 1
Bath Sto'&lt;~e Refrigerator Back
Porch Bxl21oot Very Good Con

0101

MERCHANDISE

lngo 80Qo3111-3323 Ext 1108

hoet pump 2 car garage big yaro

ILAOKITON&amp;
~A"ALIIIAL
STUOIII Homo tludy IPI&gt;rovocl

BRIDGE STATE UNIVEASITV 1
IQOotl"-1311

Fortcloaed
Homto F"'m I 1119/Mo 4% Oown
30 Y11r1 II 8 5% -.PR For Llat

(304)882 2447(304)882 2405

on approximately 1 acre tot lOCal
td In Eastern Otstrtct Must aee
to apprecialet $72 000 Call for
appointment 740-985 3917

8ohoola
lnetruotlon

oootora11 b~ corrtaponctenoe
b111d upon prior education enct
ehort atudy coura1 Far 'AEE In
formttlon boollltt pt'lone CAM

3 Bedroom•

Mt Vernon Avenue 4 Bedroom
House New gas Furnact Centrlt
Air Interior Newly Painted Nice
Kltct'len Appllancaa Suement
Covered Patio Ptlcu 50 a

WI HAYIIXPioNDIDI

"mu can urn up 10 t?lhour and
WHk\lllort. .ll

t

Pilot Program

Anan11on WORK ROM HOME
up to $25 00.$7 00/llr PT/FT
MAIL ORDER call toll ~.. t 877
965 8739

Earn $90 000 YEARLY repairing

Chrlatlan couple looki ng tor
houat to rent no pets no kids
Jim 740 9112 3187

410 HOUIII lor Rent

Pilot Program Aentera Ntlded

4 bedroom• 1 bathroom electric

NOT replac ng Long cracks In
Wlndthlelde Free Yldeo 1 800

470 Wanted to Rent

HLNTAI S

(740)441-4782 For Sale Or
"Tiade

ARE 'IOU CONNECTED? INTER
NET USERS WANTED! $25 $7SI
HA-PTJFT WWii 9eBoaFt'll com

Earn $!500 to $900 per week In
your bathrobe &amp; sUppers Great
opportunity to secure your future
Low Investment 1 800 272 0193
awesot'nu.rntng com

(740)448-9539

PluJ All Ut lit• Socurlty Dopooll
$580 (51 3)704-1703 Allor

PrOj&gt;orty Soldl Mor1gogool Annul

GolllpOIII OhiO

lnfOriTIIllon

St9 951 COOs accepted t 800

The Dally Sentinel • Page

From the
Backyard ...

HI)' &amp; Bright Wlrt Tit Straw V.ar

LOSE 3 5 LBS WEEKLY GUAR
ANTEEOt Burn rat qulcldy doctor
recommended control crav nga
feet great 2 months 1uppty only

Hug41 trwtntory D scount P 1ces
On V nyl Sklrllng Doors Wind
ows Ancttora Water Heaters
Plumb ng &amp; Electrical Parts Fur
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Bannetta
Mobile Home Supply 740 446
9418 www orvb com/ban nett

Downtown Stt:ond A11tnue Naar
Courthouse And C ty Bu tdlng
Nicely Decorated AJC 3 Roome
Building By 111111 4ol8 2nd Ave

(7401448·0059 For

2 8 Acru Mlnutta From Town
On Paved Road Water .And
Ftnct For Stock 3 Bedroom
HOUII 2 Bllhl Femlly Room
Hut Pump Deck Above Ground
Pool Prlc:td 60 a Homeattld

SSS NEED CASH?1 WE pay

lntoelolon II plllold 1o
onnounoo 11\ot we - o
new call centar et our locltlon In

1011 Call

Hay &amp; Grt1ln

Marchand 1M

3 Room Upsla " Apt One Bedroom AI 651 Second Avenue
Galllpol I Deposit Requ red s1x
Months Ltall Utlltes Not In
eluded except Water can Debbie

460 Space for Rent

Brookvltw Subdivision Of Cente
nary 2 5 Acr11 LOts Now Avail

540 Mlacelllnaoue

2ae.09e9 Credit cards

Rodman Rldgo Ad
59511

1304)e75

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pllld Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo Start $3&amp;5/Mo No Pet.s
L1111 Plut Security Olposlt At
qulred Dly&amp; l'.o&amp;O ol46 3481
Evenlnga 740 3117 oso 2 7oiO
44S.Ot01

men1

House For Rent Bidwell Ohio 3
Btdroome 2 Bltha $650/mo

rcomo aro large 1500 IICI loot wl1h

Flooro CA 1 112 BaHI Fully Cor

3 Acre 1 &amp;onom of hill on rtghl on

310 Homaelor Sale

Energy eflicilnt home 1 1/2 year
Old 3 BFI with walk In clollht All

rara )ownnoutt Aparrmtnll
Y•ry Spacious 2 Bedroom• 2

or Judy At 1740)446-7323 ll

(740)245-5858

Btncl B"'ker (304)882 240!1

Apertrnanta
lor Rant

braryj To Set Up An Appo nl

4 Bedroom HouR In A o Grandt

4&amp;140 Doatlllno lor opplloonll 31
B/0 1 Equal Opportuillty Ert'!&gt;IOYtr

Muot own PC 1 100 OU 1311 x alfordablt comprehanalva legal
lrolnlna alnco tiDO '"II Colo
log III)O.IH.UU w~ll RO 1otc
, _ _ _ lonl
701449 Dollll TX 71370 NA or
Golllpollo DMiapment Contt&lt; on
~~- blltcltotorwllw com
ICFIMR lo racrult ng provldoro
BLACKSTONE
~A"AL!GAL
IJ&gt;I!rololllonolaOMcot 10 "'"
BTUDIII MOnti ltutly Ap
"""II lor till pof1od 07.0112001
provod Allordoolo oomproht~
0513012003
olvo logollralnlng olnco 11t0
FREE Catalog: 800 IRI 1221
ThO orooo ol profoollonll Hrvtc&gt;
w~lo ~0 lox 701~1 Dollu TX
•• art """rmeclo1 Po)&lt;hiotril1
75370 NA or http 1/www blldll!oOuorolanth~ Phyo can 8poclal
noltiWcom
Ill (On Coli) t.anguogo Dovo1op.
mon1 Srlallll (Spooon Ancl Au
EARN VCUA COLLI\~&amp; DIIIAEI
dlology
QUICKLY DIChiiO[t ~llllrl

to

opportunity -

8()()-5011777 ll(t 9813

A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Eotab

~oe

All IINICIII'IqUII'ICI are part
llmll lnllrmll•nl lnlartatld per
aonel part t1 thould submit 1 tal
ter or Intent toglthtl' with approprii1111Conoo oo~Wicatlon or o1h
er ~rtdtnt lllnform~tlon end 111
ary requ rtments or ftiiChldult

--~~~
oroiVIilble1No
onon oqull
-

oludad $31 900 At Floo1wood
Homoo 1 888-565 0187

Send ruum1 to 1!1 W Janitorial

115-e.;IIHrl Eo11DIIIItld company

kr _., igly oocopl

-..mon111or rell-11
wltlchllln vlollllon ollhl
law Our rMdlrt are htMbY
lnlomlld 1hlt llldwolllngs

230

Sorvlcl 141 Liming Farm Rd Mt
Orob OH 411&amp;4

ProOIIIIng Clalmt lrom t'lomt

TNo ---will no1

age Send Reaume To Ctcilla
Bllelt' Bucklyt Community Serv
ICII PO Box 8CM Jaekaon OH

OltanlnQ lOb In Pomeroy
area aiiCI nttCI liwn care worklr

740-tta eee1

.

~

1, 2001

3114

. . . ony ..... .......,.,.

www workfromhome247 eom

M TH 12 lpm Friday S11arv

I 1o00/llr E110111ont Sl"ollt Pacll

~or111mo

Perton to tllr down houll tor

'any.,.,.,•.,.

2001 Ooubltwtdt Frtt Setup &amp;
DIIIVIfY Maytag Apptlancll In

Ohk&gt; ~&amp;7N

local Bualn111 Ntedtng Dozer
Operator Must Hava lllplfiii"'CI

oi1DII wltlch- Uogll
to llmn.tton or dltetlmlnatiOn
- o n rooo rollglon
-lamiiiiOIIIUIOrnotiONI
origin. or 1111'- 10

Will Toko Coro ol a Eldorly male
or ltmole In yo&lt;11 homo (740)258-65511

9150 ... 3234

886 873-31393

lhO F - Fllr HOUIIng lol&lt;

Will Powtrwllh HOUMI T'rai lrl
And AV s Contact Ron At

wwwtandcom

plete lralntno Free nformallon
www creeume com Toll tree 1

AIIONI- lldVOftlllng In
1hil I lfttptper II IUbjtCt to

lim-,-~-

doublldOeureklnet com

Snear Fal'ltasy Bar Nttdl Dane
era No Experience Nece11ary

Will Troln
(304)781 7828
(304)273-0120 uk lor Solh

241~

Lota&amp;Acruga

1 &amp; 2 acr1 build ing loti tur
vtytd water &amp; 11tc1rlc 1\lllllbtt
Upllc Pre apprOV"td doubltwldt
oecoptod $UII! &amp; up 1•o.r•2

Houlteilanlno Honea! And 01
pendablt Rti&amp;Onllble Relet
Frtt Ettimatll Have Rete enc•s

11ot1lld Michigan City IN Coll1o
day! 800 551 1057 u1 140

mo11r1a~

Crivtrl PAM Transport No 111
pt~tanct nuded 2 wtlk l)ald

PIHSIAI VIlli)' Nurtlng And R•
habilitation Center Currently Hll
Oponlnga For LPN I Hour
Shif11 E~tellltnl Pey And Bent
fill Contact Human Resources

180

1hooffanng

740-451 5313 or 1 800.111 1551

tralnl!'g •Tu lion relmbu sement 11

Help Wantacl

Thu111dly, March

J•ra Waterprooflno

Homta lnaldt And Oul Car
pentry Pa inting
Plumbing

(7401441-0113

840

Electrical and
Relrlgal'lltlon

Flllldtnllat or commercial wiring
new urvlc• or rtpalrt Ma~er Ll
cenud tltctr tclan Ridenour

I

Jfe was a man of many
names
Jfls 9ra11dpa called film
Jurue
Jfls :Mortier called finu
James Julllor
Wfie11 lie 111111 JUst a little
boy Iii$ uncle called film
Jugfiead after a cartoon
cfiaracter Jfls 1111clc died
111 rfie war 111 'Europe
J{u brotfim a11d mlm
called film Jug 111 fun a&lt;
first but 11 slue~ wttfi
tfiem
I always called film
Jfo11ey (alld fie dtd tfie
same for me!
'70 our cfirldre11fie was
'Daddy and laitr 'Dad
rpops or &lt;tlfn 'Falfic•
Fnends calltd film
]111110r

J'R

S1rutty Jml

'70 meres a11d 11epfiews
fie Has Uncle Juruor
Jfc tvns graudpa or
rpoppy and SOIIICiiiiiCS
even gramps
'But as tfie lime to go
11 as ntargod called fimt "Son
We mcd ) ou oter fim

440

Apartment•
lor Rent

CROSS POINTE
APARTMENTS
Acceptmg Apphcattons
I bedroom apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or Disabled
or Handicapped
Ehgibihty Based on Income
Handicapped Access1b1hty
Please Call (7 40) 992-3055

1• rTD~.:~,:::;""
Opportunity

Eloclrlcal WV000306 304 175
1788

•

•

r

�Page

B 4 • Tha

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

Thuraday,

llen:h 1, 2001

••
•
•

:•
•

•••

••

~

Loot &amp; Found Yard Soloo,
and Wontod To Do Adt
Muot lito Pold In Advonco
m!BUNE QEAQUNE

2 00 p m tho day beloro
the ad Ia to run Sunday &amp;
Monday odltlon 2 00 p m
Frldoy
SENTINEL QEAQL!NE.

1 00 p m tho day boloro
the ad lolo run
Sunday &amp; Mondoy odlllon
1 00 p m Frldoy
REGISTER QEAQUNE

2 days before the od Ia to
run by 4 30 p m Soturdoy
&amp; Monday edition 4 30
Thuroday
Doadllnae aul~leoot

.;;........, 110

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

$1500 WEEKLY Work From
Home P ocesslng VISAIMAS
TERCARD lnv1t8l onsl $2 Per In
v tatlon No Ex per ence Netdedl
Materials Supplied ! Fnday Pay
Check$11 800-280-6609
$2 000 WEEKLY! Mall ng 400

brochures! Sat sfa.ct lon Guar
antBfJdl Postage &amp; Supp It&amp; pro
v dedi Rush Sett A.Cidreued
Stamped Erwe/Of)t GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438Startlmmedlately
$ol5 000/yr potential Need Self
sta ter s who require no super
v!a on Fu ! Tr' ning Stt Own
Hours Comp uter w/modem re
qulred Call Toll Free 1 888 523
4417 ax1 864

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

Ovorce $150
Bankruptcy $195
Adopt on $225
Not do h yourself k t
BOO 263 0503 for FREE

CALL

nto mat on Bank uptcy n!a In TN!

KY
FREE SEARCH!
www SINGLES com
STAAT
DATI NG
TON IGHT!
Have run meet ng e g be s.ng es

n your a sa Cal for more nlot
mat on I BOO ROMANCE &amp;IC!
1736

30

Announcements

I Donald Wrtgh am no Ionge
espons ble lo any debts othe
han myse f as of 02 28 01
Looking For Rom•nce Or Ju1t
A
Friend? 1 900-329-8220 Ext
8262 $2 99 Per m nute Must Be
18 Yeas 0 d Sarv U (6 19)64 5

6434

$505 WEEKLY OUARANTEEO
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIM E NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIREO 1 800 748 5716 Ext
11101

U25 WEEKLY ! Mokt Money
Helping People Aecelve Go11ern
ment Refunds Fee Delat a {24

New Zealand rabbits home
ra sed ve y g&amp;nlle 740 949

7004

I

!
l

60

Lost and Found

343 DRIVERS NEEDED! No ex

pe ence needed! Ou ck col
Ira nlng p og am available Earn
$36 000 + 1st year 5 STAR 1
aoa 260 0294 experienced drlv
e s hotdmg C a&amp; A ca I 1 800

958 2353
ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet Usera Wanted
www e commbll.net
Abso u ely Free Into
Earn Onl ne Income
52 000 $5 000/mo
Work.FromHomeOo1 rom

$1835+/hr

Po11ta!

Jobs

1888 72681)63

x17tl1 7am 7pm CST
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts

Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing

Typ ng Great Pay! CALL t 600
795 0380 Ext 20 (24hrs)
Anenlion
WOJM F om Home
$1 200 S5 000/mo
1 877 582 105ol

ATIENTION
WORK FROM HOME
earn up to $25 00 $75 001t1r PT/
FT
MAIL ORDER
Ca ol free
1 U77 965 6739

ATTENTION
EarA Online Income

$500.$7500/month
1 60().784 8556
www pcpays com

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclmty

Babys Iter needed In my noma
references required call 740 992
9197 ask for Dense

easement &amp;a e Saturday March
3 9 00 3 00 New ttema COfl'll'uler
dtaK apartment washer Panaao
nlc p Inter I Qm Racine ltlt onto

CR 2B Buhan Rd 5 mllao leh

CAREER OPPORTUNITVI Earn
excellent noome Eaay calms
p ocessing Full Ira ntng Home
PC requ red Call Physician 1
Healthcare Developments loll
free 1 800 772 5933 elt 2070
CLAIMS PROCESSOR Process
eta ma !rom nome 520..$40/hr potential Full train ng Ccmpur.r w/
modem re~utred CALL NOW 1

BIB 585-5197oxl &amp;42
Oancero
5915

Top Oollor 1304)070

Oo vou want High Wtg11 Same
Cay Pay And To Make Your Own

Schodulo1 Coli Tayloro B1olllng
0 (740).41 3305 For An Ap
polntment Monday Thuraday
9em 4pm We Are Now Hiring
State Teettd Nurtlng Altlatanta

onto Gatnar Rd laaf ho~•e

~PNI&amp;

Moving salt Mach 2 &amp; 3 t9!!
Front St Middleport

Drlvara wanted tKptrllnca pre
farred drug screen requ red cell

Tupplrt Pili na St Pau U M
Church banment 1111 March
2nd 9am 7t:Jm March 3rd Oam
2pm C othlng booke hou11hoid
and m sc Items.

Orlvort FRANKLIN OOLLIOE
NOW TRAININGIII NO EX PERl
ENCE •38k tst 'f81r •flu I bentfltl
•Modlcol •401K •14 doy CpL

li't Plaaeant
&amp; VIcinity
Mason Couf')ty Special 0 ymplc1
Yard Sate March 2 3 Fori Ran
do ph TerraCI Commvn tv Ctnltr

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Angla a Flea Market Indoor/out
door March 2nd 3rd 4th loca
lion 333 Meehan c Street or cal

741).742 1408

AUCTION Eve y Saturday 6pm
T ucM oads Of New &amp; Uaea llem&amp;
From Seve at State s Sell ng To
The Public &amp; Oaa era One Piece
Oozena &amp; Case Lot&amp; Gary
Bowen Auctlonttr Proctorville
Ohio F ea Market Juat Acron
Hunt ington WV 3111 Street

B&lt;ldgo (740JBB6 2266
R ck Pearson Auction Company
lui t me auctioneer oomdlete
auction
untlce
llce.~aed
11166 Ohio &amp; Weal VIrgin a 30ol
773 5765 Or 304 773 5447
A veratde Aucllon earn Salt
Every Saturday Night at ep m
Aucllonee r Ra ymond Johnson

(740)256-6989

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Do tar US s lver
Gold Coins P oolsets Damends
Gold A ngs
U S Currency
M T S Con ShOp 151 Second
Avenue Gall polls 740 446 2842

Actlan Ageney

GIRLS EARN $90+/hOur anytime

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

0.111• Molgo Community

24 peop e needed to lost 10 20
lbs lhla month all natural 00%
guaranteed 1-888 369 2629

AVON! A I A east To Buy or Sell
Sh rtey Spea s 304 675-1429

Garage Sa e Ram S eel Or
Sh ne March 3rd And 4th Every
th ng Must Go 3626 State Acute
141 Gall po s

Oop~~mon1

Equal Opportunl1y Emp1oyar

STOLEN Older 8 ack Mae And
Young Fema e Chaco ate La
brado s From leta t WV A ea
Rew ard (304)634 086 5 $1000
Reward For The First tnlo matton
Resu tlng In Convict on Of
Thieves

Ant que/ Moving Sale Kay Bet:z
Has Moved She Is Sell ng All
Fu mture And Ant qu es House
ho d Goods Lawn And Gard en
Ma ch 2 3 4 Inside Sale At 1552
M U Creek 1 Mile Past Golf
Course Sam 4pm

By Tho Unltod S11toa

Pu It to WO kl $25/hr $751hr FT/
PT FREE nlo 800 871 80ol.5 ext
60 www lahOmeblz com

(7401446-4393

70

To Apply Vlilt Our One Stop AI
322 Second Avenue In Gat lpolla
Or call (740).W8 1018

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?

LOs! Pet Large BrOW!'I Dog
White on Chest B dwe Eve
green A ea
Pease ca I
l os ch ld s pet Pome oy a ea
So d bacK m n atu e schnauzer
~ery fr end y red col ar If found
contact Brent or Tamm Zerk e
740 992 5151 or 740 992 2136

Milt WIA Eligibility Roqulro
mon11

01 labor Th ough The Ohio
Department Ot Job 1 Family
Servlcea And The Qallla County
Department 01 Job 1 Family
Slf'VIctt

APPLICATION AND EXAM IN
Giveaway

High School Student• College
Students And Out 01 School
Voutn Are Encouraged To Apply
Work Schedules For Sludtnla
Employed Will 81 ArrtnQtd Ar
ound Their School Schedule Ap
ptlcanta Mull Be Galli&amp; County
Rea denta AQta 14 2t And

$987 85 WEEKLY I Proceutng
HUO/FHA Mortgaie Refunds No
E11per ence Aequ red For FAEE
tnformallon Calli 800 501 6832
ext 1300

FORMATION

40

Job Tllll
Ba.. lOCI!iOn
Worker
Weathtrlzat on
Chuhlre
Ofll ct Aulatant
ChUhlre
Offici A11 1111nt
Gallpolli

hfs I t 800 449 ota25 E.t 5700

Qual y cto h ng 'and household
1 ems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday thru Saturday
900530

YEP Worktrl WI! Bt PI d $8 25
Per nour For Up To 32 Houra Per
weak And May At ctiY t Worlc
Rtlattd TraininG The Following
Foaltlont '"' Curren11y Avllllabto

Workforce lnvtatmlnt Act Serv
lctl Gallla County Art Funded

$2000 $5000/mo
New To You Th tt Shoppe
9 Wes St mson A hens
740 592 1842

Galhl Melga Community Action
.Agtncy It .Acceptlno Appllca
11on1 Foe Temporary Employtts
For The Yovt~ Employment Pro
ject Appllctnts Selected To Par
tic pate Will Work AI Aoency
Stes And other Location&amp; In Gal
lla County

RNI EOE

on your computerll Adult Internet
v deo chat nttp /I cam a voyeur
but com 1 BBH57 994o&amp; toll tree
Gonrnment Job1 $11 00
$33 00 per hour potential Paid
Training/Full Benellt1 For more
Information call call t 888 874

quolllltd Coli 1 Ill 841 1501
bporltnotd drlvtrt coli 100
858-~53

Drlvora ONLINE APPLICA
TIONS Find tho bolt drolng jObl

or ltart 1 ~lgh paying aarear now
Our placament prolasslanala will

mako londlng your job my 171
893 20158 www hookup com/drtv

...

COL

tral~ng

(lreot pay e:M 000/

yr year plua full btntlll &amp; paid
!raining Driver a baud In Mid

wtl1 1 877 230 1002 Sundoy
8am 4pm Monday ?tm &amp;pm
1\J&amp;-F I 7am 4pm

EARN S21 000 TO 110 000/yr
Medical Insurance BlUing NHd
td lmmtdllttlyl Home computer
nttdld FREE lntarntt 1 800

291 48830tptl 109
EKpertendd Automotive Counter
Sales Pertcn S•nd Reaumea To
PC24 2oo Main
Potnt
Peasant WV 2~!550

s'r"'

Full Charg~Bokktaper Neldld
For Prole o AI OffiCI Back
ground tn
mpullr zed Ac
countlnQ7'PayroH Preparation And
Reltled Flet~rna Anpond To Ball

J R27 200 Main Str11t Po ln1
Pleaaant WY 215550

GROW NG BUSINESS NEEDS

HELP I 1 Work from home/ mall
oreder/E Commerce S522+1Wtlk

PT I 1000 $4000/wk FT 800 921

8538 www aream2blrH com

Help wanted In adult group hOme
day and n gnt thlfl cal 740 992

0023

350

WantaciTo Do

(740)25e-1227

At Pleuon1 Volloy Hoopl111 2520
Valley Drive Point Pleaaant WI/
25550 Or Fu To (304)875 1971
AMOE

Mounts Tree Service Th1 Tr11
Proftsltonal•
Bucket Truck
Service Top Trim Rtmoval
Stump Grinding Fl'll Estlmatll
Fully lnaured Workers Comp

Poste l Job a 148 323 00 yr Now
hiring No e~eperlenc•pe td trtlning great bentfltl etll 7 daya
800-428-:lHO Old J-311

Bldwlll Ohio Coli &amp; $avo 1 800
838 9S88 (740)311 9648 Owner
Rick Movnl

.30

AN 1 Start
00 LPN Slart
U2 00 CllOOII ~r lloUl'l &amp; 1.0eanona Hoepttal NUillnQ Home
Correctional cunje ,;nd Privati
Duly (All PoaiUona Aequlra t
Yllr minimum E~tperilnce) Local
Interview• Available Contact
L1oo At ( 814J!~~~3D8 Po11on1

Cora Modlcltl

SECURITY
1880 HR
Tht Wackenhut Corp 11 Recruit
lng For Sovorll Polltk&gt;nl Mull
Have (l E o Or H S lllplomo
Pilau API&gt;~ A1 Jomoo M Gavin
"-r P1ont Sllto Rout1 1 Or Cot!
Capl Evano At (740)825-3010
EOE Mlf/HN

I

Ouallly house clunlnos The
Be•t BoMtd Prolaulonal RtH
able call even ing• (740)258-

1131 or 1 811 7B1

Slcllted Nurtlng FJCIIIty lllklng
an LPN or RN tor part time potl·
lion We have an excellent Bur
'Wf hlatory ancs 1 YI'Y tlllblt staff
Thlt 11 an excellent opportunity
fOr the r gtn candldlll tar ptrton
al and prortaalonal growtt1 Sub
mil rnume 10 R~'kltpringt Alha
bllltatlon Center 38759 Flock
sprlnga Road Pomeroy Oh o
45760 attn Carol Greening, RN
Director of Nuralng. EQUAL OP

PORTUNrrY EMPLOYER
Spring 11 Just around tnt eorntr
Spring lnto action with Tandem
Tranaporl Corp OTR reg iDnal

omoll

(740)448 Otlt or 339 0910 11
~0 Anawer LIM MtUigt

Will Repair Automoblllt Fa~rm
Tractora And EQuipmenl In My
Garage Low11t Ratti t.n Town

Coli (740)44 Hlt 99

FINANCIAL

210

Butlneae
Opportunity

$1 000

WEEKLY

POSSIBLE

FROM Home Fret web 1111 No
experience required Details
www wsll)mlt wllworkalhOme

S3000 Wotk lyl MAILING 400
brochurta AT HOMEI Guar
antud Fret Supplies 1 800

283-3180 ext 0388 (24 hr&amp;)
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re oo mmancta tnat you do bual
ness with people you know and
NOT 10 send money through the
ma ll unt I you have lnv11tlg1111d

Home Health Aldll The Gallla
County Council On Agtno (Senior
Reaource Center) It Currently
Accepting Appl cations For Pari
Time And/ 0 Full Time (30 35
Hours) Home Health A tie Must
Have Own Transportal on And
W ling To Travel In Gatlla
County Job Description And Ap
p tcatlona Available At The Sen
lor Resource Center 1187 Stale
Route 160 From 7 OOam unlll

STAY HOMI/WORK ONLIN!
UOO STOOO/mon1h PT/FT Com

llahed Vending Routt Will sell by
3112 Under $9K min imum Invest
ment raqutred EKctllenl Monthly
Prollt Potent at Finance Avail

3 OOpm Monday Through FrldOV
The Potlllon 11 lmmtdllltfy
Available An Equal Opportunity/
A"lrmatMt Action Employtr
tmmedlale Opening For A N Fu"
time Position In A Phyalclane Of
Ice Competitive Salary And benems Send Resume To CLA 520
clo Gallipol s Dally Tr bunt 825
Third Avenue Gallipolis

45831
lmiJleclla,tely aeeldng child care In
our home for Infant twin g1rl1 Ap
plicant mual have exptrlence/
relerenc11
Pomeroy area
Schedule will vary/ oueranteed 2
days oH For more in!Ormallonl In
tarview can 7ol0-192 1386
Janitorial Help Needed $1$ so
$7 !50 per hour dependent upon
exp•rlence Benefits atter 90
days Send Reaume 10 CLA 515

c/o Galllpoll1 Dolly Trlbuno 8~5
Third Avo Gaii&gt;OIIo OIU5831
LAWN CREW SUPERVISOR
MARCH OCTOBER

Flexible schedule dependinG
upon lawn care needs E~tperl
ance with operation care and r•
pa.lr ot var ous mowing tqulpment
Vatkt drivers lcense fl g" acMot
diploma or OED Ab lily to super
viae a mowing craw Ekptrttnct
working In the field 01 develop
mental dlaaDMitltl helpful S8 oo$7 2!5/hr depending upon experience Submit r11um1 or appllca
tton by March 1 2001 to Mtlga
lndu1trl1t BoK 307 S~racu11

The Alhtnt Meigs Educat ional
Service Center It ateklng quill
fl1d cancHdalll for the potltion of
Treeaurer Appncanta mual pos
aeu 1 Treuurer a llatnae
IJSUid by 1hl OhiO Oop1 ol edu
cation or tvldtnct that auc:h II
oen .. can bl obttlntd Expert
enct In sChOOl dlatrtct university
ot governmtnlll accounting dl·
tired E•perjence aa 1 chief rtacal
pfllcer preferred Appllcanta must

oloo have 1ho obll ty 1o lla bondld
and to provide their own tranapor
tatlon Sul:Jmll letter of Interest ,.
sume 3 references and copy oJ
current license to Jonn Constan
io Superintendent &amp;07 Richland
Avenue Suitt 108 Athena OhiO
45701 Application deadline Ia

April S 2001 ThO AMESC II and
Equal Opportunity Employer/Pro
vidor
URGENTLY NEEDED plaoma
Cjc)nort earn S3S to 145 for 2 or 3
hours wllkly Call Sera Tee 740

592 H51
Someona To Help Carpet Layer
Dtpendable honest And Will ng
To Work Waga Depends On Ex

parlanco Call (740)388 891!2
Wanted Llctnatd Practical
Nuru lor 1 community home tor
people with mental relardatlon In
Bidwell Current LPN Llctnll

OOPNES or NAPNES valid drlv
lr'l lletnn end lhrtt y11r1 good
driving ;equlrtd H®ra 11m 3pm

Ptoul Soncl Rooumo To ~0 B"
1223 Gollpollt Ohio 48831
NEEDED 31 lliOIIIo to !ott 30 !be
by Aprll111hl1llrond now 1u11
po11nlldl lloo1 23 lbo In 1 mon1hl
aoo &amp;70 9821 or www bollm4
lfecom
OWN A COMPUTEA1 Put 1110
work 121 178/hour Froo Oelollo
Will Train www tl tluootll com
OWn ACompulor?
Put HTo WOrlll
Jill 171!11tr I'TII'T
1..11.... 4311
www b-htlllloom
PARENTI ORIAMI &amp;loy Homo
lorn Monll)' 811 vour own ltouro
Training
Provldod
VIlli
www holnt'lo11111do-

aaakt people Training Provided.

able/ GoOd Credit -188BJ 270
21eeABSOLUTE GOLD MINEII SO
downtl Candy VENDING route
Net&amp; $ol8 000+ FREE Info Toll
Free 1 877 494 8695

Hum1n Rtaourctt ClptrtrT\Int

2500 Ohio Avenuo
GoNipollo OH 45e3t
Phone No (740)44fi-t642
F" No (740)448-13o41
TOO (740)448-~958

attached garege, Central heat
end air 6 exttr1or walls Thermo
spare doora end window• 1 114.
acrea property Approx 1~ mite&amp;
aoutb ot Gallipolis ofl SA 141
$72 000 (740)379-21187

FORECLOSED OOVT HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO 6 &amp; BANK~UPTCIESI OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTING! CALL 1
Half Acre 3 Bedroom Houae 1
Bedroom Apartment Beneath
Two Pole Barns Close To Town

WI allo ollor

-lltnol1io
•1'1~ Holldlyll

Vlolllonl

0111 Uo Today ,or 1vt ln11Niow1
1-07•lltlllll 811
WORK 'ROM HOMI
Ill~ 171 OOihr

I'TII'T
MltiiD*
1-IIMIII

140

lualntn
Training

180

828 8523 US/Canada www gla51
mechanixcom

320 Mobile Homaa

Cllh lor rema ining payment• on

tint Sttlltmtnltl Immediate

Ouo1tll11 'NobOdy lllall our pr1C
II • National Co111r1ct Buytrt

(100) 480 0731 OX1 101 WWW no
llol"'aacontracrbuylrs com

IIID

Ott your M8 oqulvoloncy d plomo
w th our lilY home atud)' courM
1100502te31ld 310

180 Wanted To Do
Gtorgea Portable Sawmill don t
t'laul vour loot to ltte mUijuat call

:m..75-1H7

Aeterenct

For Sa lt Rtcondlt oned wash
dryera and refrigerators
Thompeona App liance 3407

lrJ

ChiCk

Jac~oon

(740)448-9313 call ootwoon 5
and Spm for Marcn 3rd appoint

Waahera dryera refrigerators
ranges Sllaggs Appllanc11 76

Galllpollo 750 3rd Avo 1110

VIne Street Call 740 446 7398.
t 886 818.0128

Month 1 SA 1 Batt'! Frame
Houll Gal Htll No Pttl WH
konclll Nlghll (740~14

Kenmore WP~ytag Waahera
$85 each Lst
odtl Frldgaalre
Dryer S75 Oth
Oryera sao
HCh Ail whitt (740)446-9066

Galllpollo 752 3rd Avonuo 1375
Mon111 3 Sldroom 1 So1h From•
HoUle Gil Hltt No Pet&amp; WH
klncll N1ghll (740)441-1114

Mollohan Carpets &amp; Furn ture
New 2 plect Livlngroom Su te
$299 Recliner $199 Sale On
Carpet In Stock 200 Clark Ctlapel

Newly Carpeted 2 Bedroom un
turn!ehld Home With Gereo•
Gatllpollt "rea Dtpos t And All

Road Porter Ohio (740)31B.0173

oronoo No Pots (740)441-6114

Main Street Furniture

(304)675 1422

(3041736 7295
~enter•

Nteded

304 738-7295
Small 1 Bedroom 1410 Ltwla
Street Point Pleaaant $2!0/mo

t4x70 With 24 Fool Expando
$325/month + Oepoait &amp; Refer
ence In Thl Camp Conley Area

1988 12xl55 Butftfy excellent
condition pleaae call 740 247
4700 11 interested

dillon Mako OHtr (7401448--4809
Atk Fordtm

1g9e 1~x70 3 Bodroom 2 Balh
Clay1on Legond VInyl Siding
$20 000 (304)675-1121
2001 14 Wide Free Setup &amp;
Delivery Maytag Appii&amp;I10II
Included Only $17 aoo AI
FleetwoOd 1 U.585.Q187

Br1nd new O&amp;kwood hOme thrtl
bedroom two bath tnch.Jdta ahtd
OIOIId In porch Tiki over PlY
menta 13!53/mo Muat be moved
Mu1t ..ll 74G-885-4 1 12 anytime

440

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp; fur
nlahtd and unfurn ahtd security
dtpoalt required no pete 740

(740)245-5747

1 Bedroom Furnlahed Apartment
Central Heat &amp; Air Conditioning
Carpet Ttuoughout Off Street
Parking Quiet &amp; Clo11 To Gro
eery Store AduUa Only

530

1124 Eoot Main on SR 124 E Pontoroy 740 g92 2526 or 740.11112
1539

1 Bedroom Near HOlzer EcMOmlcal Gaa halting W/C Hookup
l27SJ 00 Plua Ulitltlta Lease De

CABH NOWI lrom
wtlltl1!/ lamiHoo uniOICIII!&lt;I mllono
Ol dDiflrl to htlp minimize lhllr
t1111 Wrlle lmmedlatiiV Wind

IIIII 3010 WILSHIRE BLVO
Ill LOS ANOHS CALI~OA
NIAtoo10
COIIIOLIDATI YOUR WAY
OUT 0~ DIITI Roduco mon1hly
payment• Pey ona bUIImonth

IAIV IO Oil lllrltd Plnonclol
~rotdom Chrlollon Counoollng
100 U1 1717
t&lt;l
CC3
www.dlbtool oro (Non Prollt)
CAIDIT PROILIMI? CALL THE
OAEDIT EXPERT&amp; LICINIIDI
IONDED CDAIIECTIAEMOVI
lAO CREDIT BANKAU PTCV
LAWSUITS JUDOMENTS AAA
"ATINO 1 11..111-DIOa

540

1 a,droom Upstalrt Apartm1nt
Cloat To Wal Mart Utlllllll In
eluded 1375/mo Plus D•poall
720 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upttalra Aptrtment $300 tOI
poalt Water Sewer Trath Paid

(740)«1-&amp;218 (Day) (700)441·
otot (Evonlngo)

31 o

Llnt11od Or No Crodll? Oovorn
mon1 look Flnonoo Only AI Oek
wood In larbourovlllo WV 304
738-340t
Lot mod:1l claaranc• a1ve up to

II 115 with ony homo ohock uo
out woro dllllng Colo o Mobllo
tiomot Ul 80 I ..LAlhOnt Oh
MUll 1oin 1exec
MillO a Plymon11 I MMinl

1..DO-It1 ..777

Now 14 ft wldo 14DI down only
•1n par moo ooll now 1 IDO·
111-1777
Ntw 11 II wltlt e4tt por mon
only taro por moo coli now 1
IDHtl ..m

Now F l - 1"'70 I11Ht00
3 lodroom a loth 1 177 777
4170
Now
Flootwood
lidO
111 tiD oo 3111droom a 11111 1
anm4170
Ullllty IIIII GoUing Mo11 01 Your
PIYOhtokl Coli (740)448·3013
For~r Now Homo Today
Farm• lor Stla

Perm HOUII BeauUiully

~lmold

Pond In ground Pool Slvarll

173 000 3 Sod room t

11~

Both

1740)311-1151
1774 Cholt""t By Owrwr BuiM In
1H7 3 lldroom Tax Abalement

Till 2013 IU 500 00 (7401441·

291~

I

~r rent

one bldroam turnlahld

Sawmill 13 795 New Super Lum
bermate 2000 arger capacities
more options Manufacturer of
uwmllla edgera and sk elders

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive Buffalo NV 14225
FREE Information 1 aoo 578

13133 EXT 200 U

Small ch cktn egos 20e a dozen
or case $6 Gary M1chaet 740

985 3135B
SOCIAL SECURITY OtSABIUTY
CONSULTATION Benell1 Team

Waterline Special

lpttrtmen1 In MlfiCIItporl 011 740.

'urnlihod I I J Aoom Aparl
monll Olean No Pt11 No 1mo11
lng Aoloronon a Duooll I'll•
U111111oo Purnlohod
qulrod
[140)446-1111
Golllo Monor Aporlmonlo Now
AOCIIP11ng Applloollortl ~or 1 Ill
HUO lubiiOiled Aplrlmtnll POl
lldorly And HondiOIIICII&lt;I IQull
Houolna Opportu~lty (740)441•

-

Groolouo living 1 and I bldtOOm
IPI""'Inll It Ylllogo Manor 10~
"lvorold• Aporlmon\o In Mltldlo
po~ ~rom 111'3 13:11 0111 740
Ha &amp;Oe.; IQUII Houolng Oppor
tunKIH.

Modern 1 lodroom Aparlmanl
,..,.,. (740~310
Nor11t Third Middleport 0111 llldroom lur~llltld 1111~mont a ono
ooaroom unlutnlohld oparlmonl
dtpoall A reter~no11 no p1t1

740-111.0118

Now Toklng AppiiCIIIOril· U
W11t 2 Bedroom TownhOUII

:::=

Aporlmonto lnoludoo Wottr
Troah 1350/Mo 740

Ono llldroom oportmonl a ' bod
room moollo homo no Pill 740
Ha-5851
Ont ltd room Apartment On 111

340

poJit Wotor Poltl
Allor! DOpm

Bualnaa1 and
Building•

for ule located In Point P't11ttnt

Good No lghborhood Aoduood
Ill 000 (304)175 till

350

Lota

&amp; Acre1111a

Avonuo Golllpollo Woahlrl Dry
tr Hook up S:Z7CIImo Plua 01

1740~04'

Twin RIVIr"lbMrl now IOOtll)ting
opotlclllont lor 1 IR
HUD tuboldllld lf)t lor oldlr1y
lncl dlllblod EOH 1304)175
HN

No
LOOk ing TO Buy A NtW Home? Upo1olrt Aporlmtnt 3 Roomo
Qolllpollo
Don t H1111 Lind? we pout Hurry Ptto Walor Pold
V~ nlty (740)311-1 tOO
Only t 0 L.o11 l.lff 304 738-7215

•

3/4 200 PSI

200 PSI

(740)367-7623
2000 Black Ch.,vy Extreme
Loaded Low Ml eage 4 000

Miles (304)875
(304)B75 7016

o

~Jt4

74 Monte Carte 350 Motor Good

Condition $2200 090 (740)4469611

97 Ford Escort Auto 4 Doo r
$4500 1740)245-9443

CARS $29/MONTH
POUNDS &amp; REPO
CHEVY 24 MOS 0
LISTINGS! CAU
8717 .,, c 9B14

POLICE IM
Sl HONDA
t9 9% POR
t 800 941

CIJllass Clera $1200 1982 Mer
cury Lynx SW S450 1986 Mer
cu y Cougar $1400 1994 Mer
cu y Topaz $1800 1989 Pontiac
Grand Am $1 109 t990 Old&amp; Cut
ass Clera $1200 1986 Old&amp; Oel
ta 88 $900 1993 Mercury Topaz
$1600 Call Montfay Thru Friday

OOYERNMENT POITAI. JOB81 UP TO
$36 7&lt;18/YR HtRINO FOR 2001 CALL
FOR APPUCATION EXAMINATION
IN110RMATION FEDERAL HIRE.fULL
BEN EATS 42 000 RETtRINO IN 2001
t IIOQ..I1tlo0712 OPEN 24 HOURS
WNW OOVERNMENTPOSTAUOB ORO

t994 Dodge Dakota 4x4 Extend
ad Cab 3 Inch Lift L.oaded New
Pa nt
Wheels And Tires

5121

1998 Ford Explorer 2 Door Sport
5 Speed 63 OO()rlMIIes $ t 1 BOO
(740)379-2787

A LOAN? Coneolkie.ta
110 APPt1CATION

(740)446-000S

Ext 1154

www hllp-poy-l&gt;ilo oom

$8 990 40K60x12 Was $16 400 1'-:~-::----::-----­

Now $10 971 50K100x 16 Was

$27!i90NowS19990 60x200, 16
Was S5e 760 Now $42 990
1 6QO.A06 5126
560 Pate lor Sale

4 lox Terrier Puppies 11 weeka
old Had first IJhots $50 each
Monroe Yoder 1147 Bumene Ad
Patriot Ott t milt off Patriot Rd

AKC Black Fomala Lab 12 wks

1999 Ford F 150 Supercab 2WO

VB 4 door bad cap 10000
mlas very nice 740-992 2679
89 F 150 XLT Lar at P U Load
ad Hogh Milas Body EKCallenl
Shape Must See To Appreciate
52000 (740)446-6'141
93 Chevy s 10 Standa d looks
Good Runs Good Must See To
Apprec ate $4000 {740)245

1'-'95:.;9.;.5_ _ _ _ _ _ __

old Had shott &amp;f'd wormed call
(740)44&amp;-4759
AKC German Shepherd Puppies
Solid Whitt And Silveri Sables
E11cellent
Temperment And
Structure (740)245-5408

94 GMC Extended Cab 2 Wheel
Drive Loaded 305 Aulo Over
drive Short Bed $8895 92 Sil
verado Short Bed V6 Auto
Overdrive Loaded $6600 Days
(740)245 coso
Evemngs

AKC Sho111e puppies Trls Bluo

1:7::3=::0~:-:va"n:.;s=-:&amp;-4-:-.-:-W~D~I-­

Merlll vet checked ctlamp1on
~=1~;; cute &amp; adorable 740

570

(740)8B2 751 2

1~~-::-..,..,,.---,---­

1

TVI

1989 Ford Conversion van
VCR rear a r back seat folds Into

llad 1owlng packago 73 100 orlgl

110

DIRECTV lroo lno1ollallon taoo
Clllllllck 101).1113-11140

Alllt Chllmero C Form Tloctor
a Oper
.... &amp;licit 11700 010 (30&lt;1)671
3824

rod Ford Exp loror Eddlo
Bautr Edition 112 000 mllu ntw
tlrta excellent cond ition $5500

Whlll Orlvo Edd o Bouor H 000
mltoo Good Condition (30.)733
4235

Narrow Front lnd Auna

uoo

Cht~ S 10 ~000 •x4 Ex1ondod
Cob ~ol'1or 3rd Door LS Pock
age COl Canouo Fully Loodod
11 000 MIIU $21 000 Cot!
g40)441-17aO Plouo Luvo

...,.

740

Llvaatook

IZPITIIX COM &amp;ovo up 10 IO'I'o
on ALL pol modlcollono and ou.,.
plloo Including Mll~gord lnll~
coptor FronUino morolll ~REE
IHIPPINO Ordor onllnl www El
pltllxoom t IOO.IIo44-14J7

5 Yoor Old ApptiOOII QuiiUng
Good Troll Horll 5 Ytlr Old PI
olonno Gull11ng 3 V.or Old Mort
Holl ~oint 4 Hall Arll&gt;lon Brown!
Whl11 (740)311-a:IH

, _ ''" Silo (740)3811217(740)381-1214

loyd leel Cattll F'trtormanct
~1111&lt;1

lull 8110 10 Anguo 10
Pollod Horolord Mondoy Morch
llh I 30pm At Tho Now Ook

PLOAIOA MARCO ISLAND En
lor 1ho Tropical Porodlll of Cave Ltvutook Aucllon AA
btiCihll and rtilllll lan Beach Hlghwoy Moyavlllo K~ For Mort
lront oondoa or homea For r1nt1 lnlorme11on Con1101 Chorllo Boyd
aa111 Century 21 11t Southern (1011)713-14 t I
Trull
1 &amp;00 215 9417
or
wwwcatmeroo.oom
Palomino 111111on
llog AOHA1111
FAEE OIAECTV SYSTEM lnOiud 1n MH World Chlmplon lm
lng prolo1110n lnotollo11on Call/ prolllvo B~Uno NIN WH1tm
doltllt Over 2a1 c~onnolo Local Pltaaur. Halllr BanH Stand
nttworka 1valltbll 881 57&amp; lrt9 Slud Foe $250 13041&amp;15
1100
1440
FREE Ortn1 Money I. Allorno11VI
Fod•rol Funding! Educotlon 840
Hay &amp; Grain
10001 round llaloo o1 hoy lor oalo
740892-7418

(740)oWa-nl7

Probllmo? Hold 1\rnld? Coli Tho
Hay tor till tquart b1l11 $1 25
Plano Or 740-448-41!26
1 milt on R1 ~ N :m 175-431!9
lndoponctont 111r1111111 Olo1rlbutor
Hay For Salt 4l5 Round Ba tes
~nd 2!0 SQuirt Btu Call

4110 Foreman 4x4 Eloc1rlc Bhll14
whoolor 1300 mlltl Excollonl
Ooncll1km S-4800 1 ~ Ll1or 0~101
Engine S3PO Floor 0 1111 "!luck
Toppor lor o OOd(lo yllrt 77 92 1
.,_.,Old S200 17'01448-21147

750

1989 Sy1von 8111 Boa1 17 Foot

ea

Aluminum Wltn
Horaepower
Evln Audt Motor wor)la Well tn
River Or ltkea For Bau" Qr

Cropp o (740) 388-8318

780

Campara &amp;
Motor Home•

1990 Wtnntbaoo Motor Home

Low Mlleago 31 000 MIll Sol1
Contalnetl 81•-'P• 6 Exce lent

COn dillon I 14 800 (740)UI·
82118
i1

SUlVICES

810

Hom a
Improvement•
IIAS!MENT
WATERPROOFINO

448 0870 1 eoo 267 0576 Aog

(740)448-9115

I

Home
lmprovament1

C&amp;C Oentral Home Main
ltnence Paint ng vtnyl lldlng
carpentry doora w ndowt bat~l
mobtlt home rtpair and more For

lru oa11ma1o call Chet 740 992
8323
Livlngaton 1 Baaement Water
Proofing 111 baaemenl repalra
done lrta lltlmattl tlletlmt
guarantt• 1•vra on Job expert
Superior Home Malnltnanct And

Plu1J1D ng WI Do All Rapalro On

H~

Haul

810

onco (304}BD5 3887

Unco nell! ona fet me guarantee
Lo cal referencta furnished Es
tablltthld t975 Cal 24 Hra (7.0)

You

Classlfledsl

Bolltl &amp; Motol'll
for Sale

(7~014•6-0tt 1 or (740)4487143 Alltr a OOpm

For Solo l.lrge Round Sola•

Trade
In the

Motorcyclaa

tt84 Hortllo 200 Four "!ilK 1800
740 1141 3011 cal ohor 3pm

Frat I Second cut Orchard
Grus Round Balli $t2 00

Bllt

Buy, Sell
or

81 Ford Aeroatar Mint Van All

Farm Equipment

Per

:Names

Condlllon (304)8751112

Ill lVI 'oiOCK

111

a .Man of.Marry

linn 740 992 73GB
8!1 JHP Cherokee Wagon Good

fAilM Sl ll'l'lll •,

130

In Loving Memory or
James J, Smith
6/6/37 • 3/1/2000

19~1

Plono For Solo 1100 (304)882
21168

Hortt Troller a Sltll
(740)446-1""

nat mllea 'Vtry clean $5795 740-

8200

Muelcal
lnttNmenta

-

JET
AEAATION MOTORS
Ropttlrld Now 4 Robullt In Stook
Call Ron Evono 1 800ol37 D521

FREE Cltllog 6QO.II2611228 write PO
Box 701449 Dlllao TX 71370 NA

Eng no Mag Whoa o Many New
Parts $t800 1740)448-8044

Block brk:k sewer pipes wlnd
ows llnlthl etc Claude Wlnte a
Rio Grandi 0~ Call l40 245

U Inch Big Sorun TV RCA

(7ol0)441·tN2

and nen Inoooolol BLACKSTONE PAAALEOAL. SniDIE:s.l
ortdit dlfftcultlta Spl'dalizlng
colectlon
medical
Home S1udy Apj&gt;rovld AllordiDto
prenenalvt te~t training tlnoe 1690

1740)448-45 t 5

1988 Ford Ranger New Aebu tt

ooch 740 Ha-7111

Call flat flroduct Or Opportunity

===~1~8~8~8~81~5-~1~83;5~=-JI:~~,:'; homtowneq
ooooun11

1977 Ford 3/4 Ton 360 Motor
Runs GoOd Needs Tiansmlss on

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
JaCkson Ohlo 1 800-537 9528
Building
550

(304)1715225

Grubb I PiinG- Tuning I Alptlrt

~

720 Trucks lor Sale

1989 Ford F 250 4x4 tool box 4
new wide tracll I res aluminum
r1ma new clutch good shape
t32k esk no $4300 740 742

Ill 5112775 or www gronll dOl
com com

"DEBT OONSOI.IlATION

ONE almple tow monthly peyment
I
High lntar11t Savt Thouaandl
becoming debt lrte Program1

9 ooam 5 OOpm (740)388-9303

GOlden AetriiYtl pupa full blood
td flrat ahota and wormed $125

Houalng
PurcbattiAtPIIrt
Oebta Buelnell ln¥entort
Wrltera/Artlata Guaranttld 1

Genuine Opportunity!
For FrM Information
Clll Toll FrH

Escort S W $500 1986 Olds

1985 FOfd Ranger 5 Sped Good
Cond lion {740}25&amp;-6464

Steel bvildlng New Mual dell
30x40K12 Was $10 200 Now

1 1438 Startlmmed atelyt

Milling OUr Salol Brocllurul
FrH SUpolloo P&lt;&gt;o11gll
511rt lmmedlalolyl

L•vt!y s Auto Sates 1988 Ford

20 lnntbruck By Gutfalream Fully
Btlf Contelntd Used Very Little
Lilli New
Many htraa

llacUic Hoopllllllld Nlghll11nd
And Ovor Bod Tabll 1100
(740)3711-47/iO Alltr 71)1!1

Slltmpod Envelope

P0 Box 1438 Antioch

5797

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
p asston Fittings In Stock

Suppllel

auppllea provldedl Rush

91 Dodge Stealtn ES 250HP:
5 Speed Claron CD Player Tint
Runs Great $4995 (740 )2 45

7&lt;12 8200

COMPUTEI'II WE FINr\NCE
DELL COMPUT!ASI E•on wllh
1111 than porltcl crodlll 1 100
477 tOll Codo ACt www omo•
IOiuiiOntoom

11111131

Sorno Goroge Frul1 Trill CloiO
"Ill MOIZir $215 000 (740)oWa&lt;1230

Church Building with Poroonogo

Wood fl'loort G11 Flraplaoa
Gara,g t, I 47 Acr11 Mutt Set

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Heat
Pumpa l P &amp; Natural Gas Fur
nac11 II You Don t Call Us We
Bo1h Losol (74$)448-6308 &amp;
I BOQ.291 009B

1998 Pen! ac Grand Prix GT 2
Door 34 ooc Miles Leather
Loaded Garage Kept Exce tnt
Condition
$15 500
OBO

wkt old (740)448-3578

plono 40xGOx10 - •11500 now
II HO 50K100x1• woa 13&amp; 900
now 117 ItO IOxl21x14 woo
Ut 800 now 134 no 1 80().248

Fino! Dll)'o Notk&gt;nwldo lnvontory
R-nl(304ll\!&amp;-340t

ld 1!183 Squoro Fool 17 Acroo

SO DOWN HOMES I OOV T &amp;
lANK FORECLOIURESI LOW
DR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CAEDITI ,OR LIITINGSI CAU.
1 101).331 00110 Old 111 t

nett

1995 Chrysler Sebrng 1995 Ford

~~~us SE Muot Se I (740)446-

Full Blooded Oobermans e Fe
malt 3 Malta and 1 Fled Male s

ALL STEEL BUILOING Now up

330

Hornaa for ltla

Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Fu rnaces Oil Furnace~ 12 Sttr
Heat Pump &amp; Air Condltlcn ng
Systems Free 6 Year Warranty
Bennetts HealinG &amp; Cooling 1
800 872 5967 www orvb comfben

You'll always be m the kr.ow w1th a
newspaper subscnpt10n We 've got the
goods to keep you mformed,
enlightened and entertamed every day
Call today for a subscnpt10n

(304)675-566B

Tall $50 4 IROC Camara
WhHII $100 (740)245-9774

to 50% offl Pre tnglnllrld with

mon 011 - 1 100411 em

1111\1 I '&gt;11\11

Mlacellaneoue
Merchandlae

1978 SlltroniK Comanche 0 104
Mlc Orlg Manual ElCcellent Con
dltlon S100: 23Ch Cobra Cam 89
Bast Exc ..lent Condition Ex )(

(740)245-5558

RESIDENTIAL HOME DWNEAS

MOO (740J44&amp;-20Ge

Now doublo wldo 3 br I bo

TUIIHID DDWN ON
IOCIAL IICUIITY 1111'
No I'H Untoll Wo Wlnl
1.... 112-33&lt;15

Moore owner

2nd Avo phone (740)446-1615

pool1 Roqulrod (740)441-1519

Double Wldll

lilt 00 down only 1115 par

NIIO AN EARLY PloYDAY71 NO
oHICt VIlli ntiCollory Up to leoo
lnotonlly Ctll toll ~" 1 177 !AA
LYPAV 111 ADVANCE FII!EI
U0t7800011

~uss

Large Collection of Ant que Pock
et Watches Good Condition 422

IIINEED A LOAN? Try dob1
conoolldotlonl Cui poymonto up
to IO'I'o 8omo doy op~rovoll 1
1777111111
·~"EE

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverlna Antiques

(740)446-280:2

Prom Gown Dusk Color 2 P ace
Size 18 W tn Matching Slices
Size e 112 Paid $350 Asking

$21 95 Per tOO t

lndlan Creek Golf Range Ping
Calloway Taylor Made Cobra

11112 2218

5233

and everywhere m between, the
newspaper 1s THE place to fmd the
stones that are Important to you and
your community

MO 5 019 9°/o FOR LISTINGS

1972 VW Super Beetle Good
Cond lion Standard Sh ft Blue

PlaySiatlon 21 Limited 1upplltsl
To order now call 1 514 831

B5

CALL 1 800 451 0050 u1 C

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Hoi day Inn Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And Vas

Goll Clubs Spring Cloanlr1g Sale

TRANSPORTATION

9812

ERS Almost everyone approved
with SO down! Low monthly pay
mtntlt I 800.617 3476 ext 330
Orbltrtk Exerclaa Mach ne
IB5 00 1740)448-2205

To the Big City

Or (304)695 3789

1740)448-7300

638 4052

Sporting
Goode

"""" &amp; Fertilizer

Tobacco Planti For Sale Call
:(7:-:40...:)4-4......:11-_7~&amp;q:.:.:;._ _ _ __
Tobacco Plants Order Now To
GIJBrantM Early Spr ng Plant1ngs
Increase Allotments Mean Extra
P ants Thank You For Your Bus
ness Ca I Danny Dewhur,st
Leave Message (304)895 3740

SO DOWN CARS POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29

$389 Buy Sail "Tiade

520

Apartment&amp;
lor Rent

&amp;50 ., ....

1

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beams P pe Rebar For Concrete
Angle Cfllnnet Flat Bar Steel
GratinG For Drains Driveways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Metal&amp;

Services Inc Toll free 1 888

!74014-48-7398

'•*

"(304=:10::.'::;5-:..:5:.:.724::;.~:-~-­

710 Autos lor Sale

New &amp; Used Furniture
New 2 Piece Liv noroom Su fles

Whirlpool Washer $95 Elaotr c
Aartge S9!5 Frosffree Rtlr gerator
SI!SQ Frtezer S150 Nice Waatt
or &amp; Dryor Se1 S300 All Ap
pllancea Guaranteed Ska~gs
Appllancn 76 Vine Street

i304)B75-5477

Aound DtltYtry &amp; Volume Ollli
count An
Heritage Farm

1740)4oi&amp;-630B 1 BOO 291 0098

cla im dented? We apeclallze In
appeals and hearings FREE

Oval Oak Table &amp; 4 Chairs Ex
C:tllant Cond liOn $200 (304)675
7984

lor Flent

New &amp; U&amp;ed Electric A,.d Gat
Furnaces For Sate Cal For s z
as
lnatallat lo n
Ava able

515 Man Street Point Pteas.ant

..

14X79 Southern Oraam frat Ot

!Ivory lree Setup only $9995 1
888 1128 3426

Mnua (304)87573138

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

mom

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

s150 (304)773-5079

Appliances
Aa condltloned
Waahlrl Dryers Reng11 ~tfrl
gratora Up To 80 Days Guar
anttedt We Sal New Maylag Ap
pl lancu French City Maytag

lor Sale

ShlnQit Root Thermo Pane
Wlndowa Excellent Condition

Prolesalonal
Services

olpm

740.441 n95

420 Mobile Homae

Start Your Bualnen Today
Prime Shopptno Center Space
Available At Alfordable Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740-446

CALL TODAY 1 800 695 0219 or

Arms S300 (740)258-1222 Aher

Cozy In Town ~ BR llouH Largo
LR/OR Ullllly Room Porloct lor
omoll lomlly UOO/month 1300
depotll

Houeehold
Goods

47 Inch Round So! t1 Oak Oln tng
table Claw Foot o1 Chi rs w tl1

530pm

Nowly romodelod coun1ry home wJ

MEDICAl BILLING Un mlted In
come potel'ltlal No eKperience
neceuary Frea Information &amp;
CD-ROM lnvearment from $2495
Financing available (800) 322
1131if EXT 050 www bul nell
atartup com

WORK FROM HOME
Earn
$1500 p/tto $5000 111 monthl1l

51 o

2 br houtt wl tull buement
$381 oo o mon1h + 1250 oo do
posit In Point Pleaaant 304 6754469

SSO Oop011t Call Allor 5pm
(304)727 3318

1991 Mobile Home 2 Bedroom 1
Bath Sto'&lt;~e Refrigerator Back
Porch Bxl21oot Very Good Con

0101

MERCHANDISE

lngo 80Qo3111-3323 Ext 1108

hoet pump 2 car garage big yaro

ILAOKITON&amp;
~A"ALIIIAL
STUOIII Homo tludy IPI&gt;rovocl

BRIDGE STATE UNIVEASITV 1
IQOotl"-1311

Fortcloaed
Homto F"'m I 1119/Mo 4% Oown
30 Y11r1 II 8 5% -.PR For Llat

(304)882 2447(304)882 2405

on approximately 1 acre tot lOCal
td In Eastern Otstrtct Must aee
to apprecialet $72 000 Call for
appointment 740-985 3917

8ohoola
lnetruotlon

oootora11 b~ corrtaponctenoe
b111d upon prior education enct
ehort atudy coura1 Far 'AEE In
formttlon boollltt pt'lone CAM

3 Bedroom•

Mt Vernon Avenue 4 Bedroom
House New gas Furnact Centrlt
Air Interior Newly Painted Nice
Kltct'len Appllancaa Suement
Covered Patio Ptlcu 50 a

WI HAYIIXPioNDIDI

"mu can urn up 10 t?lhour and
WHk\lllort. .ll

t

Pilot Program

Anan11on WORK ROM HOME
up to $25 00.$7 00/llr PT/FT
MAIL ORDER call toll ~.. t 877
965 8739

Earn $90 000 YEARLY repairing

Chrlatlan couple looki ng tor
houat to rent no pets no kids
Jim 740 9112 3187

410 HOUIII lor Rent

Pilot Program Aentera Ntlded

4 bedroom• 1 bathroom electric

NOT replac ng Long cracks In
Wlndthlelde Free Yldeo 1 800

470 Wanted to Rent

HLNTAI S

(740)441-4782 For Sale Or
"Tiade

ARE 'IOU CONNECTED? INTER
NET USERS WANTED! $25 $7SI
HA-PTJFT WWii 9eBoaFt'll com

Earn $!500 to $900 per week In
your bathrobe &amp; sUppers Great
opportunity to secure your future
Low Investment 1 800 272 0193
awesot'nu.rntng com

(740)448-9539

PluJ All Ut lit• Socurlty Dopooll
$580 (51 3)704-1703 Allor

PrOj&gt;orty Soldl Mor1gogool Annul

GolllpOIII OhiO

lnfOriTIIllon

St9 951 COOs accepted t 800

The Dally Sentinel • Page

From the
Backyard ...

HI)' &amp; Bright Wlrt Tit Straw V.ar

LOSE 3 5 LBS WEEKLY GUAR
ANTEEOt Burn rat qulcldy doctor
recommended control crav nga
feet great 2 months 1uppty only

Hug41 trwtntory D scount P 1ces
On V nyl Sklrllng Doors Wind
ows Ancttora Water Heaters
Plumb ng &amp; Electrical Parts Fur
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Bannetta
Mobile Home Supply 740 446
9418 www orvb com/ban nett

Downtown Stt:ond A11tnue Naar
Courthouse And C ty Bu tdlng
Nicely Decorated AJC 3 Roome
Building By 111111 4ol8 2nd Ave

(7401448·0059 For

2 8 Acru Mlnutta From Town
On Paved Road Water .And
Ftnct For Stock 3 Bedroom
HOUII 2 Bllhl Femlly Room
Hut Pump Deck Above Ground
Pool Prlc:td 60 a Homeattld

SSS NEED CASH?1 WE pay

lntoelolon II plllold 1o
onnounoo 11\ot we - o
new call centar et our locltlon In

1011 Call

Hay &amp; Grt1ln

Marchand 1M

3 Room Upsla " Apt One Bedroom AI 651 Second Avenue
Galllpol I Deposit Requ red s1x
Months Ltall Utlltes Not In
eluded except Water can Debbie

460 Space for Rent

Brookvltw Subdivision Of Cente
nary 2 5 Acr11 LOts Now Avail

540 Mlacelllnaoue

2ae.09e9 Credit cards

Rodman Rldgo Ad
59511

1304)e75

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pllld Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo Start $3&amp;5/Mo No Pet.s
L1111 Plut Security Olposlt At
qulred Dly&amp; l'.o&amp;O ol46 3481
Evenlnga 740 3117 oso 2 7oiO
44S.Ot01

men1

House For Rent Bidwell Ohio 3
Btdroome 2 Bltha $650/mo

rcomo aro large 1500 IICI loot wl1h

Flooro CA 1 112 BaHI Fully Cor

3 Acre 1 &amp;onom of hill on rtghl on

310 Homaelor Sale

Energy eflicilnt home 1 1/2 year
Old 3 BFI with walk In clollht All

rara )ownnoutt Aparrmtnll
Y•ry Spacious 2 Bedroom• 2

or Judy At 1740)446-7323 ll

(740)245-5858

Btncl B"'ker (304)882 240!1

Apertrnanta
lor Rant

braryj To Set Up An Appo nl

4 Bedroom HouR In A o Grandt

4&amp;140 Doatlllno lor opplloonll 31
B/0 1 Equal Opportuillty Ert'!&gt;IOYtr

Muot own PC 1 100 OU 1311 x alfordablt comprehanalva legal
lrolnlna alnco tiDO '"II Colo
log III)O.IH.UU w~ll RO 1otc
, _ _ _ lonl
701449 Dollll TX 71370 NA or
Golllpollo DMiapment Contt&lt; on
~~- blltcltotorwllw com
ICFIMR lo racrult ng provldoro
BLACKSTONE
~A"AL!GAL
IJ&gt;I!rololllonolaOMcot 10 "'"
BTUDIII MOnti ltutly Ap
"""II lor till pof1od 07.0112001
provod Allordoolo oomproht~
0513012003
olvo logollralnlng olnco 11t0
FREE Catalog: 800 IRI 1221
ThO orooo ol profoollonll Hrvtc&gt;
w~lo ~0 lox 701~1 Dollu TX
•• art """rmeclo1 Po)&lt;hiotril1
75370 NA or http 1/www blldll!oOuorolanth~ Phyo can 8poclal
noltiWcom
Ill (On Coli) t.anguogo Dovo1op.
mon1 Srlallll (Spooon Ancl Au
EARN VCUA COLLI\~&amp; DIIIAEI
dlology
QUICKLY DIChiiO[t ~llllrl

to

opportunity -

8()()-5011777 ll(t 9813

A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Eotab

~oe

All IINICIII'IqUII'ICI are part
llmll lnllrmll•nl lnlartatld per
aonel part t1 thould submit 1 tal
ter or Intent toglthtl' with approprii1111Conoo oo~Wicatlon or o1h
er ~rtdtnt lllnform~tlon end 111
ary requ rtments or ftiiChldult

--~~~
oroiVIilble1No
onon oqull
-

oludad $31 900 At Floo1wood
Homoo 1 888-565 0187

Send ruum1 to 1!1 W Janitorial

115-e.;IIHrl Eo11DIIIItld company

kr _., igly oocopl

-..mon111or rell-11
wltlchllln vlollllon ollhl
law Our rMdlrt are htMbY
lnlomlld 1hlt llldwolllngs

230

Sorvlcl 141 Liming Farm Rd Mt
Orob OH 411&amp;4

ProOIIIIng Clalmt lrom t'lomt

TNo ---will no1

age Send Reaume To Ctcilla
Bllelt' Bucklyt Community Serv
ICII PO Box 8CM Jaekaon OH

OltanlnQ lOb In Pomeroy
area aiiCI nttCI liwn care worklr

740-tta eee1

.

~

1, 2001

3114

. . . ony ..... .......,.,.

www workfromhome247 eom

M TH 12 lpm Friday S11arv

I 1o00/llr E110111ont Sl"ollt Pacll

~or111mo

Perton to tllr down houll tor

'any.,.,.,•.,.

2001 Ooubltwtdt Frtt Setup &amp;
DIIIVIfY Maytag Apptlancll In

Ohk&gt; ~&amp;7N

local Bualn111 Ntedtng Dozer
Operator Must Hava lllplfiii"'CI

oi1DII wltlch- Uogll
to llmn.tton or dltetlmlnatiOn
- o n rooo rollglon
-lamiiiiOIIIUIOrnotiONI
origin. or 1111'- 10

Will Toko Coro ol a Eldorly male
or ltmole In yo&lt;11 homo (740)258-65511

9150 ... 3234

886 873-31393

lhO F - Fllr HOUIIng lol&lt;

Will Powtrwllh HOUMI T'rai lrl
And AV s Contact Ron At

wwwtandcom

plete lralntno Free nformallon
www creeume com Toll tree 1

AIIONI- lldVOftlllng In
1hil I lfttptper II IUbjtCt to

lim-,-~-

doublldOeureklnet com

Snear Fal'ltasy Bar Nttdl Dane
era No Experience Nece11ary

Will Troln
(304)781 7828
(304)273-0120 uk lor Solh

241~

Lota&amp;Acruga

1 &amp; 2 acr1 build ing loti tur
vtytd water &amp; 11tc1rlc 1\lllllbtt
Upllc Pre apprOV"td doubltwldt
oecoptod $UII! &amp; up 1•o.r•2

Houlteilanlno Honea! And 01
pendablt Rti&amp;Onllble Relet
Frtt Ettimatll Have Rete enc•s

11ot1lld Michigan City IN Coll1o
day! 800 551 1057 u1 140

mo11r1a~

Crivtrl PAM Transport No 111
pt~tanct nuded 2 wtlk l)ald

PIHSIAI VIlli)' Nurtlng And R•
habilitation Center Currently Hll
Oponlnga For LPN I Hour
Shif11 E~tellltnl Pey And Bent
fill Contact Human Resources

180

1hooffanng

740-451 5313 or 1 800.111 1551

tralnl!'g •Tu lion relmbu sement 11

Help Wantacl

Thu111dly, March

J•ra Waterprooflno

Homta lnaldt And Oul Car
pentry Pa inting
Plumbing

(7401441-0113

840

Electrical and
Relrlgal'lltlon

Flllldtnllat or commercial wiring
new urvlc• or rtpalrt Ma~er Ll
cenud tltctr tclan Ridenour

I

Jfe was a man of many
names
Jfls 9ra11dpa called film
Jurue
Jfls :Mortier called finu
James Julllor
Wfie11 lie 111111 JUst a little
boy Iii$ uncle called film
Jugfiead after a cartoon
cfiaracter Jfls 1111clc died
111 rfie war 111 'Europe
J{u brotfim a11d mlm
called film Jug 111 fun a&lt;
first but 11 slue~ wttfi
tfiem
I always called film
Jfo11ey (alld fie dtd tfie
same for me!
'70 our cfirldre11fie was
'Daddy and laitr 'Dad
rpops or &lt;tlfn 'Falfic•
Fnends calltd film
]111110r

J'R

S1rutty Jml

'70 meres a11d 11epfiews
fie Has Uncle Juruor
Jfc tvns graudpa or
rpoppy and SOIIICiiiiiCS
even gramps
'But as tfie lime to go
11 as ntargod called fimt "Son
We mcd ) ou oter fim

440

Apartment•
lor Rent

CROSS POINTE
APARTMENTS
Acceptmg Apphcattons
I bedroom apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or Disabled
or Handicapped
Ehgibihty Based on Income
Handicapped Access1b1hty
Please Call (7 40) 992-3055

1• rTD~.:~,:::;""
Opportunity

Eloclrlcal WV000306 304 175
1788

•

•

r

�'
Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 1, 2001

ALLEYOOP

Public Notice

NEA Crouword Puzzle

vou
, . . 1/VtV

PHII.LIP
ALDER

G&amp;NI:Il~

TO L.E.T US

$Dollar
Daves

A&amp;D Allfo Upltofstery· Pitts, Inc.
RuHand, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers_. carpels, etc.

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.

New Ho- • VInyl
In favor of the • NtwHomea
Sldlna • New Gonaes
lid Malga
• Reptactmeat
740-992-()459
• Gll'lllll
Wlndowo•Room
Bid
Cltan basements,
II bo • Complttt
Additions • Rooftaa
Mon-Frl8:30 • 5:00
by Proof Remodeling
COMM!lCW.
andlllliOOOW.
·
attics,
garages
•
II
ol the
Over
40
yra
experience
Olllcl ' II lhl
Stop
&amp;
Compel'l
agent
FREE ESTIMATES
bamt. Fret
ICo•urthouee, Pomeroy, l•lttnlrog
Bid a FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 742·8888
740·992·7599
457111 until 10:00
end
eetlmate
Ught
lor 740-992·1671
•==· .. ccThurlday,
Mtreh
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
1·888·521-11916
and then 11
Haulln Jobs
a.m. 11 tald
opened and I'"''IIIJ
Friday &amp; Sat. 9 - 1 am
aloud lor tho moiled or dallverttd
Mtlga
County
Special Entertainment
Commllllonert
"Uz Nichols" Young singing
CourthouH
Sensation &amp; Split Second.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457119
All Makes Tndor .t
Attention of blddara
II Called to all ol lhl
SPBCIAL ANANCil DEPA.RTMIBNT I Equipment Partl
.
All Home Improvements
Factory Authorized.
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
Benefil Gun Shoot
Cue-IHPartl
"We Can Help"ll ·
PIIIIIUIUTII
for John Williams
PLIIIIII .
· ~ (UO) 311..114
March 1Oth
12 noon
IIIIORLIMI
(t17)11444U'
Call Vs first Or We Both Lose!
"IS&gt;ooi1SO•red by Racine Gun IJIUOI
and
·
Bat Quilty For The a-.t Pllce,
may bl Wlgll,
1/2 shot /1/2 slug
at the office lnturanca
GUAUNTEEDI
County raqulremante, vartoua l~~~:!,!!;:!;!,l!~02!:,r~4~4!8::;·9!8!002!!.J
l~~~:~~;:n~:!~~~~~; equal opportunity
._,.__ _ _ _...,
provlelone, end the
' '
requirement
tor
1
YOUNG'S.
Public Notice
Public: Notice
payment bond and General Controdlll9
II \RI\\TI .I.
B~·UM
performance bond tor
CARPENTER
Homes,
A viewing ot Park both the viewing an,d t•c•c.o."!~''''d
100% of the contract
Road
(Townthlp the hearing.
46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
t•
1\lOI{ \(;J·
Renovations, Rat
SERVICE
price.
Road 243) In Bedford
(740) 98!!-3301
!
•
Room
Acldltlono
&amp;
No
bidder
may
Townahlp will ba hold (3) 1, 8
roof speclaUsls
(·
RomodiNng
wlthhdraw hll bid
~I. Rl. 7
at9:30 a.m. on March 2tc
Exc:avatlnq
•Nowoerogea
wlthhln
thirty
(30)
15, 2001, It tho olte,
tllonel, MTH, K·Line,
• Electrlcll&amp; Plumbln9
daya after the actual
followed by a hoarlng
Septic
systems,.
I0 ' III '-1411
• Rooting • Outtoro
dote ol lhl· opening
at 10:00 a.m. at tho __Pu_b_ll_c:_N_ot_l_ce__
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann .
1
•
VInyl
Siding
•
Pelnllft9
thoreol
to
re)oct
any
or
water, gas lines • PaUo and Porch Decks
Commltalonar'o
10,211'-lllll
all blda.
. . &amp;Accessories
Olllco. Tho purpooo
NOTICE TO
Jail Thornton, HOME CREEK
Free Estimates
of thla vlowlng and
CONTRACTORS
0, HO; &amp; N Guage
PraaldeittV. C. YOUNG Ill
hearing
11
to
ctoae
Sealed
propoaalo
lor
1=.~~·~~~
ENT.,INC.
Malga
County
tha road. Anyone
Purehaaa and
~~2-1717
992-6215
··;. Estes Rockets
Commlaalonere
Pom.ay, Ohio
lntereotad In thlo Dlllvary ot TWo (2)
992·7943
(3) 1, 7, 13, 3 tc
roid cloalng Ia New Cab and Chuala
'
encouraged to attend 1 Tn.•••• tor uao by tho
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
~Mfttr,
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In Hrvlce"
.

IIIPUiiU
PIRtl

~

-

• J 1t u

• A a: Q
•a:QJ

....,.,_,, ....,..
•t
•18111
... 17141

------- 1------- l

• I
t

i
I

j

1
I

IF YOU NEED
t.OOKY, MAW !!
CARD-PLAYIN'
MONEY-I'M WASHIN'
. I'M FLAT
DISHES II

&amp;EARNEST

f~L~

750 East State Street Phone-(740)593-667
Athens, Ohio
•lllu•alltllll frtmllnd IIJIIr

•ll•e&amp;OII
• bhu1tW1rt • Tnamlulu Rhers
•lnkiWirt

•

Find It Allin Classlfleds

--- ---

Self-Stoaqe

"'·
THE BORN LOSER .

I f\1&gt;.\E W£ WE.I-.U\Cii:."''

POfllllroy,.Ohio

.

~D 1-\l:$.(.

740-992-5232

II'\

I/IMLI\ ...

P":

.
11-\l:.'t' ~'( ~
C.OME:.':J I~ "''
I..IK.E ,.._ 1..10~ M-&lt;b (,()€.~ OU'\"

Lll'£ Pl.

(&gt;.. UDill,

LIKE "

OUT

uo~l

.1!

TruckihS

'

11(10:.£, II C.Ot-\E:.&lt;.&gt; I~ UK£. "
LIOO, m'l'l'&lt; MJJCf\ ST"'(5 LIKE

LNt--5.. '

Savre

""'

,....

II

•''
BIG NATE
TliAT'S

HI&amp;TORY IS FULL

f

..

~IPI(.,UL.OU${
...........

A ST

740-985-3831
Worfd'l Beat Roof"
an tnd to ltakl

f40y/

wO~L.l&gt;'S

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. At. 7 North Pomeroy, OhiO 457119

Tt4f

HIQh II. Dry

33795 Hilmul Rd.

OF SO 11ANY

... GoO!&gt;

ONE .

.

I'LL .O.DD
TAAT TO

M't'STEittOUS

OIAIVoCTE.ItS!

WANTED
Old radios, old !'IIdia

tulltl, &amp; p1rta
Call Chuck

Sun~')Pt

Advertise
In this space

304-882·2220

OUR

HotnP.

Conslrucloon
New Homes, Room

for$25 per

Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,

month

Siding, Decks,

Box 189

Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
~ Can Malee Your
Dream A Reality/

Ml"dleport, Ohio 45780

740-74l.Jo411

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

· Local 843-15264
M~dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major M~dical • Nursing Homo~

IJJ/

Double Hunt

Replacement
Windows
•Htullng •UIIIIItDnt
•Qravel• "nd

•1'111 Dirt

Wlldedfnlma•

•
"'*
wn
we'll aet you ao1n1 far atna

ll1na In yoar

Every Sprln;
a
FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment lrrlvltJf d1lly
See Menning, Weyne or Jim
tor a FIIAL DIAl on a niW lawn
. tractor, lawn mower or WMd

J&amp;L

•..,.•.

28170 lltlhan Raed'
RIIOint, Ohio

4Sn1

740-949-2217
Slzel 5' x 10'
to 10'x 30'
Houri .·
7:00 AN • 8:00 PM

HowardL.
Wrltestl
Roofing • Home
Malnttnence-

Guttere- Down
Spout
FI'H EltllfllfN

949·1405
591·5011

In this

space for
$50 per

E..e

Pu.l

Pw

•

1

10

Franz Kafka wrote,
"All human errors are
impatience, a premature breaking off of
methodical procedure,
an apparent fencing-in
of what is apparently
at iss.ue."
Well, It is certainly
true that an impatient
West would have permitted today' s contract
to succeed. But by
resisting the tempta;
tion to win an early
trick, West came out
ahead at the end, when
it mattered. And fittingly, on St. David's
Day, this deal occurred
at a Porthcawl Congress, in Wales. I read
about
it in a British
1
magazine, but surprisingly the defender
wasn't named. Perhaps the author was
being modest.
How
did
the
defenders defeat four
spades? ·
South traded on the
vulnerability with his
ov!!rcall. The textbooks
recommend
bidding only three
spades, but Young
Turks, even those from
the valleys of Wales,
like to take that extra
step.
West led his singleton heart. After winning with the nine,
East continued with
the heart queen,
always playing his
lowest heart to sing a
suit-preference song
for clubs. When South
ruffed with the . spade
king at trick two, West
was ·templed to overruff with the ace and
put his partner in with
the club ace for another heart through. However, that would have
let the contract m~e.
Declarer would have
ruffed high, drawn
trumps, and claimed.
Instead, West discarded .
South continued
with the spade I 0,
which held. Then he
tried the spade jack,
but West won with the
ace (East discarding
the club I 0) and
switched to a club.
Now a third heart from
East sealed South 's
fate. Wesl had to score
a second trump trick;
his patience had promoted the nine .

DlrtCtor
May
36 Tho dam
agcy.
38 Compooe
39 Mint matter
40 Undorllood, like
oomo
agreement•
42 Map wllhln
a map
44 Orcheetra
aectlon
49 Witty
remark
50 Exlol
52 "Tho
Graatnt"
53 Fall
behind
35

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryplograms are craaled from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In ltle cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: Fl equals K

'NKIPS

MJI

TGCALE
ZMG

SGJIGV

ZA

ZMG

DASR

YGXKLSZ.

ZA

VAKLE

DGTGC

PI

MG'I

NGJLPLECGII .' IZPLE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There is much in lhe world to make
us afraid. There is much more ln our faith to make us unafraid:

-

FW

Crooo

RACK I

D
D
RACK 2

RACI( 3

PAR SCORE 145-155
by JUDD

D
RACK •

FOUR RACK TOTAL - TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN - -

DIRECnoNS: Make • 2 10 7 lener word !ram the lenera 1n MCi'L row. Add
palmi ot each word, Ullng scoring dlrecllone at rl!;lt. Netter wordl get 50~bonus. "Blink&amp;" tJMd as any Iefier have no point value . All .Judd's woMs
are In The ()tfldat Scrabtlla Players Oictlonary (Memam·Webeter) and OSW

on1c:1a1 Sc!abblt won11 (ChamberiJ. JUDD'S SOUJnON TOMORROW
02001 .U!WidfHIIIN~.Irlc:

~ 'lrD4BBJ.e'
~·~
lfWID

GRAMS SOLUTION BY JUDO

02001 . VMt&lt;!FIIIi.nS~-.Inc

~@:J ~ ~ ~ ~~ RACK

I, •

. 63

~~~~~DO

RACK 2 '

8

~~[g~Q:]~~

RACK 3

•

70

~ (!;] §;) @] [g!j ~ ~ RACK 4
PAR SCORE 145-155
JUOO'S TOTAL

•

86

227

a-tJ41
9CAA&amp;lll[e .. 1 .... ..-d .......... o.MC1 111 1M U 9 .. . 11,- HI-. IIOC- , 11 C...- by Hnbn;J
.,..,.,.-.,w
__
........,.~JW

Sptar&amp;~PLC

Balla A Servloe
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy

Friday, March 2, 2001

992·2975

992-2772

Hlll't Self

LOT OF 'fl.ltN6S
'(OU CAtfT

'(OU WERE I-IERE ~F~E [
WAS BORJ!I. AND 'I'OU'LL 8E
1o1m AFTER i'M'60NE ...

month.

lnchft
Sl H.OO IMiaUed

Middleport

1 CAN RON AND
.}JMP ANO DO A

Advertise

SalhO•IOI United

155 NZncl

PEANUTS

FREE ESTIMATES I

NoMil

Pu.l

0penll1Ciud: • 2

,_.

Teams s endin' more
money or its bag stars

Wnt

,.,

bllllry

48 Alllgllor'o
kin
51 Like
Hawater
54 Snub
eoclally
55 Grntly
happy
58 Balance
unlltadlly

Store
ladder
11 Had to have
12 Said further
19 Bird (comb.
ICIIIchlng
1 "l'mao
torm)
29 Mothor of
bored"
22 Collapoa
Milo.
2 Epic
(llke
31 Roman
· poem
atocko)
lh!H
24 Eaatern
32 - ol Blecey 3 Actre11
Jacqueline
religion
33 Havo tho
28 Mohamability to
34 Cycllol'o . 4 Betrayer
medon
nHd
5 Parlo
rayer
r.elder
HIIOn
37 Olthaaar
28 HI or bye
40 llcquered 6 Pit alice
30 Maoctra'o
melltware 7 Prlaetly
kin
41 Roman 58 8 Tranagreaa
34 Pay -to
43 --'about 9 Hawollon
volcano,
(ahow
(approxiMaunareveronco)
mately)

..

..._.

Doctore'
org.
48 Actor
Zlerlog
47 Conk out,
like I
45

23 A Gabor
57 Dellolt
24 Winter toy
playara
25 Naadlecua
27 Needed
DOWN

Vulnerable: Eut-W11I

LUMBER CO.

-1 i.4JI'rtttln Uvtstock/&lt;at11e FM4 $6.25/100
-ll" Hllllers l'ridt Dog Food 56.75/SO
. -1.21 Wtslern ,ridt hane IMd $5.60/50
$1.00 011 Coupon maltes nexr purthaie $4.60/50 .
layer Crulllbles $5.25
T.l"-Sok Blo!b SUS/SO lb. ·

f I 4

Dealer: Eut

.W&amp;W CIISTIImOI

BASEBALL

-...

•AK.Qitll
tJil
.Aitl

• KQJIIITt

· ~

Ask For Mike Hindle

. . ., .. 1

11. I I

IHPIH/111•1~

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Before the games begin, baseball camp four days after the voluntary
teams·are spending a little more money, reporting date, fueling speculation he
agreeing to big-bucks extensions with was upset after seeing Rodriguez and
Mark MeG wire and Omar Vizquel.
Derek Jeter sign colossol deals and
While others were looking at con- other lesser shortstops pass him on the
tracts, the Boston Red Sox were look- pay scale. .
But Vizquel said his tardiness had
ing at Nomar Garciaparra's right wrist.
The All-Star shortstop will be sidelined nothing to do with money, a1id he was
for at least two weeks.
confident he and the Indians would
The two-tinie defending AL batting work something out.
champion hopes to be ready for open"They didn't have to do this,"
ing day. Bltt if rest doesn't fix the prob- Vizquel said. "But the market situ')tion
!em, he doesn't rule out surgery.
made me feel like could talk about
"If (the doctors) were thinking obout my contract, and they wanted ,to listen
it, they didn't tell me and I didn't wont to me."
to hear it right now," he S&gt;id of the
In Vero Beach, Fla., Gary Sheffield is
possibility of surgery. "Ho.pefully. this still w:&gt;iting for his contract , •.~tension
works, even if there has to be rehabili- with the Los Angeles Dodgers:·
tation."
"I haven't softe1ied my stance, and I
The frustrating thing f&lt;lr Garciaparra won't;' Sheffield said.
is the puzzling nature of the injury,
Last week, he criticized Dodgers
which dates to September 1999. Garci- chairman Bob Daly and again said he'd
aparra played all of 2000 wi1h only prefer a trade.
mild discomfort in the wrist and led
When asked Wednesday if he would
mind staying with the Dodgers withthe AL with a .372 average.
He is expected to wear a removable out an extension, Sheffield wouldn't
cast for 1-to-2 weeks and take anti- give a direct answer.
'
inflammatory medication.
'
"Anything is . possible:' he said. ''I'd
"There's no need of fearing the rather be surprised that I'm traded than
worst right now," Garciaparra said. "If · disappointed that I'm not. It's in their
there's anything that iuppens, it's better court."
·
now in spring training than if it were in · Fraak Thomas and White Sox o.,vner
September."
.
Jerry Reinsdon denied they had made
McGwire and the Cardinals agreed any changes to the slugger'' contract,
to a two-year extension worth about one day after he reported to camp in
Tucson, Ariz.
$30 million, two baseball officials
The two issued a statement Wednesfamiliar with the negotiations told The day denying they verbally agreed to
Associated Press on the condition they
chat.ge the "diminished skills" clause in
not be identified.
Thomas' contract. There were no
The new deal, to be announced agreements on any other clauses, either.
Thursday, runs through 2003, the s.ea"There is not a gendeman's agreeson McGwire could be approaching ment between us," the statement read.
Hank Aaron's home-run record of755 . "In fact, no. promises have been made
McGwire, 37, missed most of the and no expressed or implied agreement
second· half of last season with a knee exists, and Frank intends· to honor his
injury and had surgery duri,.;; the off- co"tract "' written."
season, but has been healthy this spring.
There were also a couple of . odd
Big Mac is. seventh, on the career injuries - including the first casualty
home-run list with 554, just 201 from the new strike zone.
behind Aarorl, and would have to averPirates first baseman Kevin Young
age 67 homers in the next three sea- was struck on tht right elbow by a foul
sons to tie the mark.
ball as t~mpire Jim R~olds demonIn Winter Haven, Fla.,Vizqud agreed scrated the newly enforced strike zone.
to • $15 milli~ri, two-year. ronrract
Young is expected to be sidelined 4extenSJon that wt!l keep hun 1n Cleve- to-5 days and likely will miss the fi~st
bnd through 2004.
. weekend of exhibition play.
"I feel like Alex Rodri~:uez,"Vizquel
X-rays taken after Young's dbow
said.
began to swell were 11egative.
The deal includes options for both
"We couldn't eve11 get through the
parties in 2005, .with a S1 million buy- presentation without getting someout and ' a $1 million personal sc·rvices body hurt," manager Lloyd McClen:
contract.
don said from Bradenton, Fla.
"Not only is Omar a very spt·cial . At Philadelpbio's camp in Clearwar
pbyer un the field," Indians gc'nc·ral ter, Fla., coach Jerry Martin had
manager John Hart said. "Hc•'s one of surgery to repair a ruptured muscle ill ·
the gqod guys in the game. and this his left arm. The fo.nner major le.1gue
contraq gives us the ability ti&gt; retain outfielder, who will coach at Scrantonhim a little deeper into his career."
Wilkes-Barre this season, injured himVizqucl, who signed a six-year Wll· self a day earlier when he tripped over
tract in 1995, grumbled in the past .a rake on a practice field,

ACROSS
1 laraall'a
laneuage
7 Cepltll of
Montini
13 Sedative
14 Dl-cr11ald
15 Throw 1
perty
18 Rubb.d out
17 -and
downa
18 long
elendor ftoh
20 "Cyan" end
21 Bump Into

~~WITH

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUOJON

"
about being ~nderpaid.
He arrived at.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Groups o1· affiliations cun be
crrective in the year llheud in
e&gt;lablishing a ne1work helpful
to your work or rarc~r. Li11k up
wilh tho~c who share your

ELrrB MECHANICAL CONTRA-CTORS

tsi&amp;J'

interests.

PISCES !Feb. 20-March 20)
It'll tnke only a few cauSiic

/Jhlloud'RISI&lt;&gt;pA71uM!'
1-ltU75-7124

· remarks to mak~ your ~ouse. ­
hold a bailie zone today. Every-

. • •35. ,., j

R•ld•dol C-DUdal NIW COIIICriiCtloa

.... s. ''"' lnolltllallon
8peo!all..... la Sltlll Md8l Doctwock
"Trrllle" s.t.li S. •lw For
CaMhi, ~, alld Molp C-'1•
Llcutledaad llllllnd

·

WV 105176

VOUR
CONCRm
CONNECTION
Quilty Drlvtwtya,

Plllot, Skltwlllll.
25 yHI'I txpii!IIIICI

FIN Elllmllll
740-742-8015 or

Cellular

.1-877-353-7022

Jeff
Warner Ins.
'
.
992-5479

body in lhe clan may have his
or her rhetorical weapons ready
and uimed : Don 't be part of il.
Gel a jump on life by understanding the innuences that'll
govern you in the year ahead.
Send for your Astro-Groph
predictions by mullins $1 to
Aslro-Oraph, c/o thl8 newspa·
per. P.O. BoK I7~8. Murray
Hill Stnlion, New York, NY
101 ~6. Be sure to state your
Zodhoc sl~n.
ARIIiSiMurch21-Aprlll9)
It won't kill ynu to be tactful
und dlplllnuuic 1oduy with one
who usuully ~i1 •es you u hurd
lime. In fuel. it miMhlol·cn help
nlulll.'rs 1r yau s~t u c:onc:llluto..
ry 1onl.'.

,.

TAURUS !April 20-Muy
2()) Hnnndul inl'oil•ements
cnuld he trickier thnn usual
I

\.

toJay. ~o he su~ to think your
nttl\'I.'S thrttug:h v~ry .l'&lt;ll'l'fully
hL'I'tm: g~..·Hing. inV(1I\'Cll in any-

gel drawn into clcbLit ing eve ry
emotional is.:.uc that comes

thin~ .

mountains out nf molehills.

GEMINIIMay 21·lune

20)

Should Jll'opk p~o·r~:L· i vc your
inh:nti(liiS today to he too :-.elfserving. thosi!' who nrc ustlilll)'
st1pjl(lrth·~

~uuiU

of your cm.h.:a,·or:-;

bw..:k off. Think in h:nm;

Of ··we" instl!mJ of "tne."

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
If you're nol carcfulloolay. you
could inadvertently aim your
p.m1s ul your own hig tn~ . _ Ynu

mighl lmvc a

pmp~nsity

I'm

Cl\'iltillJ:! UlltlL'I.'l'."iSill')' j11'11hiCIIlS,

LEO i.luiy

2 .1-i\u~ .

221 i\

spccuhllivc, fnr ·Olll vcntun:
might ~.:npllll'l' )'(llll' ftllli.'Y
tuduy. hut ~~~ ~lumomu~ us it
mi@hl seen1. il cuuld be nolh·

. ing more limn un unfeusibl~
•cheme desiBned to •nurc
losers.
VIROO IAu~ . 2~-Sept. 22J
Pcopl~ In aencrul urc closely
observing others loduy. 1101 for
their !lOad points bulio observe
every smull infruction, h's
impetulivc lhul yc1u opcrulc ul
your highcsl slundurds.
LIBRA !Sept. 2.1-0ct. 2.1)
Guurd nkluln:-.1 indinutions to

along toJo1y. Let nthcrs make
~CORPIO

ilkl.

24-Nm .

22) Not frnm anything you've
done hut hcr;m.s~.· you're dns.cly associated with nne who has
offendl.!d others. ·you could
cmch it from all sides today.
Don' t h:t il get you down . It'll

puss. (l\'Cr.

SAGITIAKIUS iNnv. ~&gt;­
IJ~o: J..'. ~I) Wh&lt;il\ p'ot.l h•r
somJ..•tlu~ L'lsc mi~ht nut :-;crw
your h~sl intcr~'ts. 'n h~,• L'spcd;dly cardtll t o d;~ y not to put
yo ur~df

in a pmili1'11 wlk·r~

;ulothcr pet., tn Jl'~o:i dc for )'tlU.

CAPRICORN 1lloc 22-.lnn.
19 ) Knnw yollr li~nitntionli
wh~n Ill suy
~· nu ,'' ll'th~)' 1-:llll g~t uway with

toduy LUH.I know

il, C&lt;l•WtJrhrli will ~ hmking_
1\•r u pniSy nn w~ich tn push

thoir wmk .
A(.)lJi\ltlliS linn. 211-Fch.
19) Scli111.'0I1~ wh11 ill ~ivin~
uwny ~ ~tlll1l' thint-t for nothin~

isn'llikcly tnciHIIChy toclny.ll
hdmn\'I.!S ynu In not ~1.·1 lilkl..'l1

ill hy U. p1.1 1'Mllt p!.!ddlill!E thL'M!

kinds nf' !ll'omisl!s.

�'
Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 1, 2001

ALLEYOOP

Public Notice

NEA Crouword Puzzle

vou
, . . 1/VtV

PHII.LIP
ALDER

G&amp;NI:Il~

TO L.E.T US

$Dollar
Daves

A&amp;D Allfo Upltofstery· Pitts, Inc.
RuHand, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers_. carpels, etc.

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.

New Ho- • VInyl
In favor of the • NtwHomea
Sldlna • New Gonaes
lid Malga
• Reptactmeat
740-992-()459
• Gll'lllll
Wlndowo•Room
Bid
Cltan basements,
II bo • Complttt
Additions • Rooftaa
Mon-Frl8:30 • 5:00
by Proof Remodeling
COMM!lCW.
andlllliOOOW.
·
attics,
garages
•
II
ol the
Over
40
yra
experience
Olllcl ' II lhl
Stop
&amp;
Compel'l
agent
FREE ESTIMATES
bamt. Fret
ICo•urthouee, Pomeroy, l•lttnlrog
Bid a FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 742·8888
740·992·7599
457111 until 10:00
end
eetlmate
Ught
lor 740-992·1671
•==· .. ccThurlday,
Mtreh
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
1·888·521-11916
and then 11
Haulln Jobs
a.m. 11 tald
opened and I'"''IIIJ
Friday &amp; Sat. 9 - 1 am
aloud lor tho moiled or dallverttd
Mtlga
County
Special Entertainment
Commllllonert
"Uz Nichols" Young singing
CourthouH
Sensation &amp; Split Second.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457119
All Makes Tndor .t
Attention of blddara
II Called to all ol lhl
SPBCIAL ANANCil DEPA.RTMIBNT I Equipment Partl
.
All Home Improvements
Factory Authorized.
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
Benefil Gun Shoot
Cue-IHPartl
"We Can Help"ll ·
PIIIIIUIUTII
for John Williams
PLIIIIII .
· ~ (UO) 311..114
March 1Oth
12 noon
IIIIORLIMI
(t17)11444U'
Call Vs first Or We Both Lose!
"IS&gt;ooi1SO•red by Racine Gun IJIUOI
and
·
Bat Quilty For The a-.t Pllce,
may bl Wlgll,
1/2 shot /1/2 slug
at the office lnturanca
GUAUNTEEDI
County raqulremante, vartoua l~~~:!,!!;:!;!,l!~02!:,r~4~4!8::;·9!8!002!!.J
l~~~:~~;:n~:!~~~~~; equal opportunity
._,.__ _ _ _...,
provlelone, end the
' '
requirement
tor
1
YOUNG'S.
Public Notice
Public: Notice
payment bond and General Controdlll9
II \RI\\TI .I.
B~·UM
performance bond tor
CARPENTER
Homes,
A viewing ot Park both the viewing an,d t•c•c.o."!~''''d
100% of the contract
Road
(Townthlp the hearing.
46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
t•
1\lOI{ \(;J·
Renovations, Rat
SERVICE
price.
Road 243) In Bedford
(740) 98!!-3301
!
•
Room
Acldltlono
&amp;
No
bidder
may
Townahlp will ba hold (3) 1, 8
roof speclaUsls
(·
RomodiNng
wlthhdraw hll bid
~I. Rl. 7
at9:30 a.m. on March 2tc
Exc:avatlnq
•Nowoerogea
wlthhln
thirty
(30)
15, 2001, It tho olte,
tllonel, MTH, K·Line,
• Electrlcll&amp; Plumbln9
daya after the actual
followed by a hoarlng
Septic
systems,.
I0 ' III '-1411
• Rooting • Outtoro
dote ol lhl· opening
at 10:00 a.m. at tho __Pu_b_ll_c:_N_ot_l_ce__
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann .
1
•
VInyl
Siding
•
Pelnllft9
thoreol
to
re)oct
any
or
water, gas lines • PaUo and Porch Decks
Commltalonar'o
10,211'-lllll
all blda.
. . &amp;Accessories
Olllco. Tho purpooo
NOTICE TO
Jail Thornton, HOME CREEK
Free Estimates
of thla vlowlng and
CONTRACTORS
0, HO; &amp; N Guage
PraaldeittV. C. YOUNG Ill
hearing
11
to
ctoae
Sealed
propoaalo
lor
1=.~~·~~~
ENT.,INC.
Malga
County
tha road. Anyone
Purehaaa and
~~2-1717
992-6215
··;. Estes Rockets
Commlaalonere
Pom.ay, Ohio
lntereotad In thlo Dlllvary ot TWo (2)
992·7943
(3) 1, 7, 13, 3 tc
roid cloalng Ia New Cab and Chuala
'
encouraged to attend 1 Tn.•••• tor uao by tho
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
~Mfttr,
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In Hrvlce"
.

IIIPUiiU
PIRtl

~

-

• J 1t u

• A a: Q
•a:QJ

....,.,_,, ....,..
•t
•18111
... 17141

------- 1------- l

• I
t

i
I

j

1
I

IF YOU NEED
t.OOKY, MAW !!
CARD-PLAYIN'
MONEY-I'M WASHIN'
. I'M FLAT
DISHES II

&amp;EARNEST

f~L~

750 East State Street Phone-(740)593-667
Athens, Ohio
•lllu•alltllll frtmllnd IIJIIr

•ll•e&amp;OII
• bhu1tW1rt • Tnamlulu Rhers
•lnkiWirt

•

Find It Allin Classlfleds

--- ---

Self-Stoaqe

"'·
THE BORN LOSER .

I f\1&gt;.\E W£ WE.I-.U\Cii:."''

POfllllroy,.Ohio

.

~D 1-\l:$.(.

740-992-5232

II'\

I/IMLI\ ...

P":

.
11-\l:.'t' ~'( ~
C.OME:.':J I~ "''
I..IK.E ,.._ 1..10~ M-&lt;b (,()€.~ OU'\"

Lll'£ Pl.

(&gt;.. UDill,

LIKE "

OUT

uo~l

.1!

TruckihS

'

11(10:.£, II C.Ot-\E:.&lt;.&gt; I~ UK£. "
LIOO, m'l'l'&lt; MJJCf\ ST"'(5 LIKE

LNt--5.. '

Savre

""'

,....

II

•''
BIG NATE
TliAT'S

HI&amp;TORY IS FULL

f

..

~IPI(.,UL.OU${
...........

A ST

740-985-3831
Worfd'l Beat Roof"
an tnd to ltakl

f40y/

wO~L.l&gt;'S

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. At. 7 North Pomeroy, OhiO 457119

Tt4f

HIQh II. Dry

33795 Hilmul Rd.

OF SO 11ANY

... GoO!&gt;

ONE .

.

I'LL .O.DD
TAAT TO

M't'STEittOUS

OIAIVoCTE.ItS!

WANTED
Old radios, old !'IIdia

tulltl, &amp; p1rta
Call Chuck

Sun~')Pt

Advertise
In this space

304-882·2220

OUR

HotnP.

Conslrucloon
New Homes, Room

for$25 per

Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,

month

Siding, Decks,

Box 189

Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
~ Can Malee Your
Dream A Reality/

Ml"dleport, Ohio 45780

740-74l.Jo411

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

· Local 843-15264
M~dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major M~dical • Nursing Homo~

IJJ/

Double Hunt

Replacement
Windows
•Htullng •UIIIIItDnt
•Qravel• "nd

•1'111 Dirt

Wlldedfnlma•

•
"'*
wn
we'll aet you ao1n1 far atna

ll1na In yoar

Every Sprln;
a
FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment lrrlvltJf d1lly
See Menning, Weyne or Jim
tor a FIIAL DIAl on a niW lawn
. tractor, lawn mower or WMd

J&amp;L

•..,.•.

28170 lltlhan Raed'
RIIOint, Ohio

4Sn1

740-949-2217
Slzel 5' x 10'
to 10'x 30'
Houri .·
7:00 AN • 8:00 PM

HowardL.
Wrltestl
Roofing • Home
Malnttnence-

Guttere- Down
Spout
FI'H EltllfllfN

949·1405
591·5011

In this

space for
$50 per

E..e

Pu.l

Pw

•

1

10

Franz Kafka wrote,
"All human errors are
impatience, a premature breaking off of
methodical procedure,
an apparent fencing-in
of what is apparently
at iss.ue."
Well, It is certainly
true that an impatient
West would have permitted today' s contract
to succeed. But by
resisting the tempta;
tion to win an early
trick, West came out
ahead at the end, when
it mattered. And fittingly, on St. David's
Day, this deal occurred
at a Porthcawl Congress, in Wales. I read
about
it in a British
1
magazine, but surprisingly the defender
wasn't named. Perhaps the author was
being modest.
How
did
the
defenders defeat four
spades? ·
South traded on the
vulnerability with his
ov!!rcall. The textbooks
recommend
bidding only three
spades, but Young
Turks, even those from
the valleys of Wales,
like to take that extra
step.
West led his singleton heart. After winning with the nine,
East continued with
the heart queen,
always playing his
lowest heart to sing a
suit-preference song
for clubs. When South
ruffed with the . spade
king at trick two, West
was ·templed to overruff with the ace and
put his partner in with
the club ace for another heart through. However, that would have
let the contract m~e.
Declarer would have
ruffed high, drawn
trumps, and claimed.
Instead, West discarded .
South continued
with the spade I 0,
which held. Then he
tried the spade jack,
but West won with the
ace (East discarding
the club I 0) and
switched to a club.
Now a third heart from
East sealed South 's
fate. Wesl had to score
a second trump trick;
his patience had promoted the nine .

DlrtCtor
May
36 Tho dam
agcy.
38 Compooe
39 Mint matter
40 Undorllood, like
oomo
agreement•
42 Map wllhln
a map
44 Orcheetra
aectlon
49 Witty
remark
50 Exlol
52 "Tho
Graatnt"
53 Fall
behind
35

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryplograms are craaled from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In ltle cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: Fl equals K

'NKIPS

MJI

TGCALE
ZMG

SGJIGV

ZA

ZMG

DASR

YGXKLSZ.

ZA

VAKLE

DGTGC

PI

MG'I

NGJLPLECGII .' IZPLE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There is much in lhe world to make
us afraid. There is much more ln our faith to make us unafraid:

-

FW

Crooo

RACK I

D
D
RACK 2

RACI( 3

PAR SCORE 145-155
by JUDD

D
RACK •

FOUR RACK TOTAL - TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN - -

DIRECnoNS: Make • 2 10 7 lener word !ram the lenera 1n MCi'L row. Add
palmi ot each word, Ullng scoring dlrecllone at rl!;lt. Netter wordl get 50~bonus. "Blink&amp;" tJMd as any Iefier have no point value . All .Judd's woMs
are In The ()tfldat Scrabtlla Players Oictlonary (Memam·Webeter) and OSW

on1c:1a1 Sc!abblt won11 (ChamberiJ. JUDD'S SOUJnON TOMORROW
02001 .U!WidfHIIIN~.Irlc:

~ 'lrD4BBJ.e'
~·~
lfWID

GRAMS SOLUTION BY JUDO

02001 . VMt&lt;!FIIIi.nS~-.Inc

~@:J ~ ~ ~ ~~ RACK

I, •

. 63

~~~~~DO

RACK 2 '

8

~~[g~Q:]~~

RACK 3

•

70

~ (!;] §;) @] [g!j ~ ~ RACK 4
PAR SCORE 145-155
JUOO'S TOTAL

•

86

227

a-tJ41
9CAA&amp;lll[e .. 1 .... ..-d .......... o.MC1 111 1M U 9 .. . 11,- HI-. IIOC- , 11 C...- by Hnbn;J
.,..,.,.-.,w
__
........,.~JW

Sptar&amp;~PLC

Balla A Servloe
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy

Friday, March 2, 2001

992·2975

992-2772

Hlll't Self

LOT OF 'fl.ltN6S
'(OU CAtfT

'(OU WERE I-IERE ~F~E [
WAS BORJ!I. AND 'I'OU'LL 8E
1o1m AFTER i'M'60NE ...

month.

lnchft
Sl H.OO IMiaUed

Middleport

1 CAN RON AND
.}JMP ANO DO A

Advertise

SalhO•IOI United

155 NZncl

PEANUTS

FREE ESTIMATES I

NoMil

Pu.l

0penll1Ciud: • 2

,_.

Teams s endin' more
money or its bag stars

Wnt

,.,

bllllry

48 Alllgllor'o
kin
51 Like
Hawater
54 Snub
eoclally
55 Grntly
happy
58 Balance
unlltadlly

Store
ladder
11 Had to have
12 Said further
19 Bird (comb.
ICIIIchlng
1 "l'mao
torm)
29 Mothor of
bored"
22 Collapoa
Milo.
2 Epic
(llke
31 Roman
· poem
atocko)
lh!H
24 Eaatern
32 - ol Blecey 3 Actre11
Jacqueline
religion
33 Havo tho
28 Mohamability to
34 Cycllol'o . 4 Betrayer
medon
nHd
5 Parlo
rayer
r.elder
HIIOn
37 Olthaaar
28 HI or bye
40 llcquered 6 Pit alice
30 Maoctra'o
melltware 7 Prlaetly
kin
41 Roman 58 8 Tranagreaa
34 Pay -to
43 --'about 9 Hawollon
volcano,
(ahow
(approxiMaunareveronco)
mately)

..

..._.

Doctore'
org.
48 Actor
Zlerlog
47 Conk out,
like I
45

23 A Gabor
57 Dellolt
24 Winter toy
playara
25 Naadlecua
27 Needed
DOWN

Vulnerable: Eut-W11I

LUMBER CO.

-1 i.4JI'rtttln Uvtstock/&lt;at11e FM4 $6.25/100
-ll" Hllllers l'ridt Dog Food 56.75/SO
. -1.21 Wtslern ,ridt hane IMd $5.60/50
$1.00 011 Coupon maltes nexr purthaie $4.60/50 .
layer Crulllbles $5.25
T.l"-Sok Blo!b SUS/SO lb. ·

f I 4

Dealer: Eut

.W&amp;W CIISTIImOI

BASEBALL

-...

•AK.Qitll
tJil
.Aitl

• KQJIIITt

· ~

Ask For Mike Hindle

. . ., .. 1

11. I I

IHPIH/111•1~

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Before the games begin, baseball camp four days after the voluntary
teams·are spending a little more money, reporting date, fueling speculation he
agreeing to big-bucks extensions with was upset after seeing Rodriguez and
Mark MeG wire and Omar Vizquel.
Derek Jeter sign colossol deals and
While others were looking at con- other lesser shortstops pass him on the
tracts, the Boston Red Sox were look- pay scale. .
But Vizquel said his tardiness had
ing at Nomar Garciaparra's right wrist.
The All-Star shortstop will be sidelined nothing to do with money, a1id he was
for at least two weeks.
confident he and the Indians would
The two-tinie defending AL batting work something out.
champion hopes to be ready for open"They didn't have to do this,"
ing day. Bltt if rest doesn't fix the prob- Vizquel said. "But the market situ')tion
!em, he doesn't rule out surgery.
made me feel like could talk about
"If (the doctors) were thinking obout my contract, and they wanted ,to listen
it, they didn't tell me and I didn't wont to me."
to hear it right now," he S&gt;id of the
In Vero Beach, Fla., Gary Sheffield is
possibility of surgery. "Ho.pefully. this still w:&gt;iting for his contract , •.~tension
works, even if there has to be rehabili- with the Los Angeles Dodgers:·
tation."
"I haven't softe1ied my stance, and I
The frustrating thing f&lt;lr Garciaparra won't;' Sheffield said.
is the puzzling nature of the injury,
Last week, he criticized Dodgers
which dates to September 1999. Garci- chairman Bob Daly and again said he'd
aparra played all of 2000 wi1h only prefer a trade.
mild discomfort in the wrist and led
When asked Wednesday if he would
mind staying with the Dodgers withthe AL with a .372 average.
He is expected to wear a removable out an extension, Sheffield wouldn't
cast for 1-to-2 weeks and take anti- give a direct answer.
'
inflammatory medication.
'
"Anything is . possible:' he said. ''I'd
"There's no need of fearing the rather be surprised that I'm traded than
worst right now," Garciaparra said. "If · disappointed that I'm not. It's in their
there's anything that iuppens, it's better court."
·
now in spring training than if it were in · Fraak Thomas and White Sox o.,vner
September."
.
Jerry Reinsdon denied they had made
McGwire and the Cardinals agreed any changes to the slugger'' contract,
to a two-year extension worth about one day after he reported to camp in
Tucson, Ariz.
$30 million, two baseball officials
The two issued a statement Wednesfamiliar with the negotiations told The day denying they verbally agreed to
Associated Press on the condition they
chat.ge the "diminished skills" clause in
not be identified.
Thomas' contract. There were no
The new deal, to be announced agreements on any other clauses, either.
Thursday, runs through 2003, the s.ea"There is not a gendeman's agreeson McGwire could be approaching ment between us," the statement read.
Hank Aaron's home-run record of755 . "In fact, no. promises have been made
McGwire, 37, missed most of the and no expressed or implied agreement
second· half of last season with a knee exists, and Frank intends· to honor his
injury and had surgery duri,.;; the off- co"tract "' written."
season, but has been healthy this spring.
There were also a couple of . odd
Big Mac is. seventh, on the career injuries - including the first casualty
home-run list with 554, just 201 from the new strike zone.
behind Aarorl, and would have to averPirates first baseman Kevin Young
age 67 homers in the next three sea- was struck on tht right elbow by a foul
sons to tie the mark.
ball as t~mpire Jim R~olds demonIn Winter Haven, Fla.,Vizqud agreed scrated the newly enforced strike zone.
to • $15 milli~ri, two-year. ronrract
Young is expected to be sidelined 4extenSJon that wt!l keep hun 1n Cleve- to-5 days and likely will miss the fi~st
bnd through 2004.
. weekend of exhibition play.
"I feel like Alex Rodri~:uez,"Vizquel
X-rays taken after Young's dbow
said.
began to swell were 11egative.
The deal includes options for both
"We couldn't eve11 get through the
parties in 2005, .with a S1 million buy- presentation without getting someout and ' a $1 million personal sc·rvices body hurt," manager Lloyd McClen:
contract.
don said from Bradenton, Fla.
"Not only is Omar a very spt·cial . At Philadelpbio's camp in Clearwar
pbyer un the field," Indians gc'nc·ral ter, Fla., coach Jerry Martin had
manager John Hart said. "Hc•'s one of surgery to repair a ruptured muscle ill ·
the gqod guys in the game. and this his left arm. The fo.nner major le.1gue
contraq gives us the ability ti&gt; retain outfielder, who will coach at Scrantonhim a little deeper into his career."
Wilkes-Barre this season, injured himVizqucl, who signed a six-year Wll· self a day earlier when he tripped over
tract in 1995, grumbled in the past .a rake on a practice field,

ACROSS
1 laraall'a
laneuage
7 Cepltll of
Montini
13 Sedative
14 Dl-cr11ald
15 Throw 1
perty
18 Rubb.d out
17 -and
downa
18 long
elendor ftoh
20 "Cyan" end
21 Bump Into

~~WITH

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUOJON

"
about being ~nderpaid.
He arrived at.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Groups o1· affiliations cun be
crrective in the year llheud in
e&gt;lablishing a ne1work helpful
to your work or rarc~r. Li11k up
wilh tho~c who share your

ELrrB MECHANICAL CONTRA-CTORS

tsi&amp;J'

interests.

PISCES !Feb. 20-March 20)
It'll tnke only a few cauSiic

/Jhlloud'RISI&lt;&gt;pA71uM!'
1-ltU75-7124

· remarks to mak~ your ~ouse. ­
hold a bailie zone today. Every-

. • •35. ,., j

R•ld•dol C-DUdal NIW COIIICriiCtloa

.... s. ''"' lnolltllallon
8peo!all..... la Sltlll Md8l Doctwock
"Trrllle" s.t.li S. •lw For
CaMhi, ~, alld Molp C-'1•
Llcutledaad llllllnd

·

WV 105176

VOUR
CONCRm
CONNECTION
Quilty Drlvtwtya,

Plllot, Skltwlllll.
25 yHI'I txpii!IIIICI

FIN Elllmllll
740-742-8015 or

Cellular

.1-877-353-7022

Jeff
Warner Ins.
'
.
992-5479

body in lhe clan may have his
or her rhetorical weapons ready
and uimed : Don 't be part of il.
Gel a jump on life by understanding the innuences that'll
govern you in the year ahead.
Send for your Astro-Groph
predictions by mullins $1 to
Aslro-Oraph, c/o thl8 newspa·
per. P.O. BoK I7~8. Murray
Hill Stnlion, New York, NY
101 ~6. Be sure to state your
Zodhoc sl~n.
ARIIiSiMurch21-Aprlll9)
It won't kill ynu to be tactful
und dlplllnuuic 1oduy with one
who usuully ~i1 •es you u hurd
lime. In fuel. it miMhlol·cn help
nlulll.'rs 1r yau s~t u c:onc:llluto..
ry 1onl.'.

,.

TAURUS !April 20-Muy
2()) Hnnndul inl'oil•ements
cnuld he trickier thnn usual
I

\.

toJay. ~o he su~ to think your
nttl\'I.'S thrttug:h v~ry .l'&lt;ll'l'fully
hL'I'tm: g~..·Hing. inV(1I\'Cll in any-

gel drawn into clcbLit ing eve ry
emotional is.:.uc that comes

thin~ .

mountains out nf molehills.

GEMINIIMay 21·lune

20)

Should Jll'opk p~o·r~:L· i vc your
inh:nti(liiS today to he too :-.elfserving. thosi!' who nrc ustlilll)'
st1pjl(lrth·~

~uuiU

of your cm.h.:a,·or:-;

bw..:k off. Think in h:nm;

Of ··we" instl!mJ of "tne."

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
If you're nol carcfulloolay. you
could inadvertently aim your
p.m1s ul your own hig tn~ . _ Ynu

mighl lmvc a

pmp~nsity

I'm

Cl\'iltillJ:! UlltlL'I.'l'."iSill')' j11'11hiCIIlS,

LEO i.luiy

2 .1-i\u~ .

221 i\

spccuhllivc, fnr ·Olll vcntun:
might ~.:npllll'l' )'(llll' ftllli.'Y
tuduy. hut ~~~ ~lumomu~ us it
mi@hl seen1. il cuuld be nolh·

. ing more limn un unfeusibl~
•cheme desiBned to •nurc
losers.
VIROO IAu~ . 2~-Sept. 22J
Pcopl~ In aencrul urc closely
observing others loduy. 1101 for
their !lOad points bulio observe
every smull infruction, h's
impetulivc lhul yc1u opcrulc ul
your highcsl slundurds.
LIBRA !Sept. 2.1-0ct. 2.1)
Guurd nkluln:-.1 indinutions to

along toJo1y. Let nthcrs make
~CORPIO

ilkl.

24-Nm .

22) Not frnm anything you've
done hut hcr;m.s~.· you're dns.cly associated with nne who has
offendl.!d others. ·you could
cmch it from all sides today.
Don' t h:t il get you down . It'll

puss. (l\'Cr.

SAGITIAKIUS iNnv. ~&gt;­
IJ~o: J..'. ~I) Wh&lt;il\ p'ot.l h•r
somJ..•tlu~ L'lsc mi~ht nut :-;crw
your h~sl intcr~'ts. 'n h~,• L'spcd;dly cardtll t o d;~ y not to put
yo ur~df

in a pmili1'11 wlk·r~

;ulothcr pet., tn Jl'~o:i dc for )'tlU.

CAPRICORN 1lloc 22-.lnn.
19 ) Knnw yollr li~nitntionli
wh~n Ill suy
~· nu ,'' ll'th~)' 1-:llll g~t uway with

toduy LUH.I know

il, C&lt;l•WtJrhrli will ~ hmking_
1\•r u pniSy nn w~ich tn push

thoir wmk .
A(.)lJi\ltlliS linn. 211-Fch.
19) Scli111.'0I1~ wh11 ill ~ivin~
uwny ~ ~tlll1l' thint-t for nothin~

isn'llikcly tnciHIIChy toclny.ll
hdmn\'I.!S ynu In not ~1.·1 lilkl..'l1

ill hy U. p1.1 1'Mllt p!.!ddlill!E thL'M!

kinds nf' !ll'omisl!s.

�Page B

•

a • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 1, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

il....: 50s; ..uw:
Details,

Today's Scoreboard
AM£RICAN
Anaheim

Baltimore

Boston
Chiclgo

w

0
0

0
0

L
0

0
0
0

.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000

L

Pet.

0
0
0
0

Cleveland

0.

Detroit

0

Kansas City

0

0
0

Minnesota

0

0

0
Oakland
0
Seattle
0
Tampa Bay
0
Texas
.0
o·
Toronto
NATIONAL LEAGUE

New York

Arizona
Atlanta
Chicago

Cincinnati
C~orado

Florida
Houston

Los Angeles
Milwaukee
Montreal

NewYof11:

Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

St. louis
San Diego
San Francisco

w

0
0
0
0

0
0

0

0

0

0
0

0

.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000

0

.000

0
0

0
0

0
0
0
0

0

0

0
0
0
0

0

0
0
0

Pet.

0

0
0

Mllwlul&lt;le (II) vs. Dakland a1 Phoenix,
3:05p.m.
San Francisco va. Cl'ltcago Cubs at
MeN, Ariz., 3:05p.m.
MIIMut&lt;te (IS) vs. Cotor.do It Tucson,
Ariz., 3:05 p.m.
New York Mtts Ys. Montreal at Jup«tr,
Fla., 7:05p.m.
CincinNtl · (SS) vs. Minneaoll at Fort
Myers, Fla., 7:05p.m.
Seturda(l Gimes
Texas vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 1:05
p.m.
Pittsburgh vs. Cinclnnall at Sarasota,
Fla., 1:OS p.m.
Allanta vs. Tampa Bay al St. PetartbUrg,
Flo., I :05 p.m.
.
Philadelph!l vs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Cleveland va. OttrOlt at Lakaland, Fla ..
1:05 p.m.
Florida vs. Houston at klsslnvnH, Fla ..
1:05 p.m.
Minnesota va. Baltimore at Fort Lloud·
erdale, Fla ., 1:05 p.m.
Los Angeles vs. New York Mets at Port
Sl. Lucie, Aa., ,:to p.m.
Montreal vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fla .,
1:10 p.m.
Kansas City vs. New York Yankees at
Tam.,a. Fla., 1:15 p.m.
Arizona vs. ChiCago White Sox al Tuc•
son, Ariz., 3:05 ~. m .
Chicago Cubs (ss) v:s. Milwaukee at
Phoenix, 3:0! p.m.
Anaheim vs. Oakland at PhoeniK, 3:05
p.m.

(NOTE: Sf.lit·squad games count in the
I d.•ngs, I es do no I ; games aga InsI nonsan
·major league teams do not)
Thu... day'a G•rnee

Seanle (ss) vs. San Diego at Peoria.
Ariz., 3:05 p:m.
Colorado vs. San Francisco at Scotts·
d 18 Art 3 os
a ' z., : p.m.
Seattle {ss) vs. Chicago Cubs (ss) at
M
A · 3o
esa, nz,, : 5 p.m.

Detroit vs , Pinsburgh at Bradenton, Fla.,
1:Noslp.mo.
•
B
I 51 P I
ore arne vs .• ampa ay a · e ers·
buNrg, Flay·., 1k:05yp.mk.
•
I
I
ll:lw or
an ees vs. .oron
a
Dcunl e~in, ~a., 1c:ols p.lmnd
. I WI I H
n~,;~nnau vs. eve a a
n er even,
FIGa., 1:015 ~m.h
Alia I I Kl I
eorg a .ec vs.
n a a ss mmee,
FIFioa
., 11d:05Spl.ml.
Fl 'd I VI
A
r a a e vs. on a a era, a:,
1:Aosrtzp.m.
c I d IT
Arl
ona vs. o ora o a ucson,
z.,
3 05
'oakpla.m~
Mil
k
1 Ph n1 • os
nu vs. wau ae a
oe x, ~:
p.m.
Ctllcago Cubs vs. San Francisco at
Sc5oollsda lo, Art z., 3: 05 p.m. t P ria ••
a111e vs. 5an 0 1ego a eo • ,... z.,
3
at Fort Myetl, Fta.,
7:05 p.m.
.
Montreal vs. New York Mets at Port St.
Lucie, Fla., 7:10p.m.
Frldar'a llamoa
Baltimore vs. St. Louis 11 Jupiter, Fla.,
12:05 p.m.
Cleveland (sa) vs. Clnclmau (as)al Sarasots, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Kansas City vs. Philadelphia at Cltarwa·

Boston vs, Minnesota at For1 Myers. Fla.,
1:0!5 p.m.
Clnclnflltl vs. TelCas at Por1 Charkltte,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
New York Yankees vs. Pittsburgh at
Bradenton, Fla., 1:OS p.m.
. Detroit vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Houston vs. Kansas City at Haines City,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
,
Toronto vs. Cleveland at Winter Haven,
Fla., 1:05p.m.
Tampa Bay vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee,
Fla., l :OS p.m.
·
New York Mets vs. Aorida at VIera·, Fla.,
~ 05
:Bal~,n~·ra vs. Los Angeles at vero Baach.
Fla .. 1:o5 p.m.
st. Louis vs. Montreal at Jupiter, Fla.,
1
vs Anaheim at Tempe, Ariz
2'05 p m
'Milw~ukee vs. Chicago While Sox (II) at
Tucson '"z 3'05 p m
• ~.. ·• •
• ·
Arizona vs. Colorado (sa) at Tucson,
30
Ar1Sza.n' o' 1~mvs. Sealtlo al P-~a Ariz.
-·- ·
~· '
'
3:505 p.mF. I
Chi
Cubs I
an ranc aco vs.
cago
a

0

.000

°

:~n~e~O~~~~~~ston

Sundly'e Gamel

:g;fti~d

M~eu~~·~':::.i~'. •::ci.h:~

ter,
Fla., 1:0!5p.m.
Toronto
vs. New York Yankeu at Tampa, 11
Fla., 1:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh vs. Detroit at lakeland, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Cleveland (ss) vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Wldnoaday'a Major CoiiiiO
Tampa Bay vs. Flortda at V!era, Fla., 1:OS
B•lketbllll Scor..
p.m.
EAST
Houston vs. Los Angeles at Vero Beach,
Bosloo College If/, 51. John's 62
Fla., 1:OS p.m.
Davton 83, Fordham 70
Seanle vs. Anaheim atTerT1'9, Ariz., 2:05
Delaware 51. 70, Albony, N.Y. 58
p.m. .
, Georgetown 74, Rutgers 58
Chicago White Sox vs. Arizona at Tuc·
Rhode Island 86, Duquesne 75
son, Ariz., 3:05p.m.

St Bonaventure 78, GeorQ' washington
73
T-la 60, La Sallo 58
Vlllonova 74, S.loo Hall 55

SOOTH

Arbnsas 66, Allblma 63
Char1otte 90, DePaut66

Florida n. Vandolblll 62

Flotida St. 69, G~~~Tech 59
Gooogla 94, Mlssl
St 73
Kentucky 90, Aubum 76
LSU 78, Mlsslsslppl17, OT
t.lat1hall 63, llo'MI~ Groen 55

Miami 73, West Virgnla 66

Moogon Sl. 87, N. Caronna A&amp;T 83
North Call&gt;'ina 76, N.C. State 63
SoUthern Miss. 74, Memphis 55
VIrginia 84, Clemson BS

MIDWEST
Ball St. 81, Akron 62
Cant. Mlchlgart 64, E. Michigan 57
lndllna 89, MlnnesOia 53
Iowa St. 80, Texas Tech 63
·Kansas 77, Kansas St. 65
Kent St. 99 , Buffalo 65
Ml.omlfOhlo) 76. Ohio 72
Nebraska 97, Te~easA&amp;M 69
Northwestern 75, Michigan 70
Saint Louis 76, Tulane Gs
.
W. Michigan 67, N. lllinols 62
SOUTHWEST
Houston 66, Marquette 64
Oklahoma 86, Colorado 67
Oklahoma St. 71 , Baylor 68
F~RWEST

Long Beach St. 78, UC Rivers1de 52
TOURNAMENT
Trans America Athletic Conference
First Round
Fklrlda Atlantic 70, Campbell 65
fJCF 1PO, Jacksonville St. 57
Wednttdly'a Womtn'a Bukttb.all

Scorn

EAST
Amherst 84 , Framlngtlam St. 48
Bowdoin 61, E. Connecticut 53
Cor11and St. 62, St. Lawrence 60
James Madison 66, American U. 51
Mount St. Mary,·N.Y. 66, API 54
Richard Stockton 90, St. Joseph's, N.Y.
79,0T
Autgers·Camden 71 , Yor1(, N.Y. 32
Sp~ngll old 60, s . Maine 49
Swarthmore 66, Gwynedd Mercy 55
Wellesley 56, MIT 49
SOUT!f
.1111mon1 Abbey 83, Barton so
Centre 87, Thomas More 86
East Carolina 59, William &amp; Mary 56
Lindley Wilson 64, Union, Ky. 81
Loyola, NO 51, Tougaloo 37
Old Dominion 93, Va. Commonwealth 82
Tu11etgee 86, Lane 61
MIDWEST
Cent Mlsaourt 95, Pltlsburg 51. 91, 20T
Defiance 90, Penn St·Behrend 59
Gannon 73, Wayne, M~h . 67
Hlllodalo 85, Fonis 51. 78
Miami (Ohio) 72, Bowling Green 59
Mlasourl78, Colorado 61
Sltrtlng 65, Frt0f1da 61
Toledo 70, Buffalo 59
W. Mlctligan 86; E. Mlch6Qan 83
SOIITHWUT
SaVIor 74, Kansas St. 57
t&lt;ansls 75, T(txas A&amp;M 1!12
Oklahoma 65, Texas 54
Oklahoma Sl. 77, Nebraska 66
TelC88 Tech 68, Iowa St. 60
TOURNAMENTS
B.lg SoUih Conf.....,ca
Flrtt Flound
Charteaton Southam 65, Radford 60
Elan. 67, Winthrop 53
•
High Polnl 65, Coaslal Carolina 60
Liberty 57, N.C.·AShe\lllle 49
OAC~10 Toumemtnr

Waverly 57, Chllltcot:he Zane Trace 56,
CIWfl ....
Huron 63, foqyvlle St. 00
OT
Welllf&gt;gloo 73, Penlnaula WCodrtdge 65
ECAc•FinotDlvlllon IV
Montclair St. 75, Hunter 511
Cin. S.ven Hills 43, Cln. HW11 Chrtsltln
ECACIGuth
Acodem)'JII
Colland MapleWOOd 73, BrlslolvUII Brls·
Flrolw. Maryland 62, F...- &amp; Mal&gt;holl 80, 1ol60
OT
E. Can. 72, Lowellville 57
GrHt Lakea Velley Conf.,.nce
FayettevMle 58. Harmony Community 57
Firat Round
Mogadore 53, Fairport Hoot&gt;or Harding 39
SIU·Edwardsville 59, Indianapolis 58
Sebrtlg McKinley 73, lordslown 38
NCAA OMolon HI Ployoffo
Firat Round
Ohio High School Girla Beaketb.lll
Maryville, Tenn. 77, Christopher Newport
WldnoldOY'I RHUIII
65
TOUI'Niment
Ohio Weslyn 67, Lake Forool {&gt;5
Dlvlolon II
St. Thomas, Minn. 69, Claremont-Mudd
Cots. Hartley 70, London 42
59
Cole. MIHiln S.., Pataskala Watktns
Ptach Belt COnfwtnct
Memorial 28
Firat Round
, Mlllerwburg W. Holme&amp; ~. Carrollton as
Columbus 51. 79, Augusll 51. 63
warsaw Rlver Vlew 59, St. Clairsville 43
Francis Marion 69, Kennesaw 57
Olvleion II
SIA Cante~nc•
Beverty Ft. Frye 57, Sugarcreetc Garaway
Flrlt Round
A1
'Albany, Ga. 72, Clark Atlanta 69
OIYielon IV
, Bedford Chane! 93, Ashtabula Sta. J&amp;P
31
Crookovllle 56, Lynchbuog Clay 41
Frankfor1 Adena 59, Leesburg Fairfield
~6

offense/' said Salmons, who
was ave1·aging 12.8 and six
rebounds a game. "I had to
step it up."
Dwayne Wimbley blocked
Moss' shot with 46 seconds
left and Michael Simmons was
fouled on the rebound. Simmons made one of two free

.;

Natlonoll.oaluo
FLORIDA MARLINs-Agreed to lenni ·
wiltl AHP Hector Almonte, RHP A.J. Bur·
nett, AHP Jason Grilli, LHP Armando
Almanza. LHP Geoff Goetz, OF Chad "l&lt;&gt;l·
lola and c Mike Rodmond on 0110-)'111'
c:ontracts,

M"WAVKEE BREWER5-Agreod 10
terms wtth LHP Valerio Dt Los Santot on a
one-year contract.
MONTflEAL EXP05-Agrald to ltirna
wl1h INF-OF Geoff Blum, RHP Brttt
Reames, INF Tomas Dt ~ Rosa, LHP
Scott Downa and AHP Scott Strlctdand on
one-year conttacts.
BASKETBAl-L

Nlllonal BatkMbaU AIIOCiaUon

CHICAGO BULL5-Acllvaled G A.J.
Guyton from ti'MI injured Kat. Placed G
Khalid El-Amin on lhe Injured list.
·
DALLAS MAVERICKS-signed G Vernon Maxwell.
t&gt;
DENVER NVGGET8-Actlvaled C Ttooy
Davis from the injured Hat. Placed G Antno-

Ohio High School Soya Buketball
Newark Cath. 47, Cots. Academy 45
Wedne1day'e Aeeulta
t Windham 38, Newbury 32
Toumamtnt
Wor1hlngton Christian 50, Cots. WellingDlvleion I
ton 41
Akr. El!et 60, Akr. Gartlelcl 56, OT
1
Amherst 52, N. Olmsted 40 ·
ed C Erick Dampier from the Injured Hst.
Brecl&lt;svllle 52, Macedonia Nordonla 44
Cle. Collinwood 62, Cle. S. 60
Placed F Chris Mullin on the lnjurtd hst.
Cle. Hts. 69, Warren Hardl!l9 60
Waived F Ruben Garee&amp;.
U.S. Socc:ll' Sc:hedute
Cots. Beechcroft 63, Cols. MarlonHOUSTON ROCKET5-Signod G Seon
(Won 2, L.oat 1)
FrankUn 59
.
Saturday, Jan. 27 - United States 2, Colson to a 10·day contract. Pllkced F Matt
Dublin Coffman 67, Cols. Northland 47·
Bullard on the Injured list.
China 1
Euclid 74, Cle. JFK 55
MINNESOTA TIMBEAWOLVE~Ignod
Saturday, Feb. 3- Colombia 1, United
Lakewood 63, Lodl Cloverleaf so
G Felipe Lopez lor the remalndeir of ltie
5111150
·Madison 69, Chardon 54
a-Wednesday, Feb. 28 - United States season.
Massillon Jackson 36, Green 21
FOOTBALL .
2.~1coo
Sylvania Nor1hview 70, Tel. Libbey 64
SatUrday, March 3 - vs. Brazil at
National Football Luou•
Tol. Whitmer~. ·Tol. St. Francis 53
Pasadena, CaiU., 4 p.m.
CAROLINA PANTHERs-Rerooaod CB
Division II ,
a-Wednesday, March 28 ...... vs. Honduras Eric Davis, FB Williln"' Floyd, LB Lee
Anna 66, Jackson Center 58 ·
at San Pedro Sula, Honduras, 8:30p.m.
Woodall and OL Jems Dexter..
Avon lake 51, Bay Vlllage Bay 45
a·W6dnesda.y, April 25- vs. Costa Rica
DALLAS COWBOVS-Rtlaaoed CB
Botklns ·54, Sidney Fairlawn 51
at Karisas City, Mo., 7:30 p.m.
.
Ryan McNeU and LB Joe Bowden.
,
Boyan 63, Rosslord 42
a--relay, June 16 - vs. Jamaica at
KANSAS CITY CHIEFs-AeleoafCI CB
Chagrin Falls KenstQn 70, Mantua Crest- Kingstqrl, Jamaica, 2 p.m.
James Hasly and OT Chesler MeG-.
wood 38
a-Wednesday, June 20 - vs. Trinidad
NEW YORK GIANTS-Named Ertc
Chardon NDCL63, Ashtabula 30
and Tobago at Foxboro, Mass., 7:30p.m.
Sludosvlllo running becks coach. Sigrlod P
Day. Dunbar 75, Germantown Valley
a.June 30..July 4- vs. Mexico at Mexico ROdney Williams.
·
VIew 59
Clly
NEW YORK JETS-Announc~d'. )l)e
Elida 50, Della nee 48
a-S'P1:: 1- vs. Honduras at Washington, retlremenr ru em Hampton, equipment
Holland Spring. 5?, Wauseon 52
manager. Named Clay Hampton qlip10 a.m./\
~.
Kettering Alter 73, Preble Shawnee 35
a·See!n~ - vs. Costa Rica at San Jose, menl manager.
Louisville 56, Minerva 53
Costa l1fCiil
PHILADELPHIA EAGLEs-otlerod oon·
Medina Highland 51, Akt. North 39
a·SundtYt Oct. 7 - vs. Jamaica at loact 1ontle11 10 K Oavkl Akt,.., CB Juon
Navarre Falrtesa48, Canal Fulton NW 43 Foxboro, Mass.
Boot~. C-G Hank Fraley, L81ka Reese, OL
Perry 75, Jefferson Area 64
a-Nov. lQ-11 - vs. Trinidad and TObago Ryan Schau, MLB Jeremiah Trotter and
Ravenna 60, Rlchfl'ld Revere 57
at Port-ot,tlt&gt;aln, Trinidad
OE-DT Brandon Whnlng.
·
'
11)
Rocky River 56, Brookside 44
PIITSBURGH STEElERs-Roleaaad C
Tallmadge 94, Coven1oy 41
1-Worlci'Cup qualffler
Oermonnl Dawson.
Van Wert 57, Lima Shawnee 58
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-WIIvod QB
Division Ill
Ryan Leal, CB Daflon Jen~na, CB Dlrryll
Chesapeake 78, Ctlllllcothe Unloto 81
Lawla, RB Robe~ Chancey and G Kovln
C9ls. Ready 47., Grandview Hts. 31
Gooan. Agreed 1o term• with QB Dave
Girard 57, El,(ookflold 49
BASEBALL
Dickenson on a twO-year contract.
Jeromesville Hllledale 63, Akr. Manches·
... American Lugut
SEAmE SEAHAWK8-0fferod conler 57
ANAHEIM; ANGELS-Aoreod lo lonns boot tender~ to TE IIUia Mill, L8
London Madison Plains 50, Marion with RHP~
,
e FYhrle. Elvin Nina, Ben . Phlll~ Oarche, TE Rufuo French and 5
Pleasant 42
Weber and F Nathan Haynes.
Maurice Kelly.
Lorain Cloaovlew 63, Columbia 55
ClEVE
D INOIAN5-Agreod to
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER~Ignod L8
Morral Ridgedale 82, Mt. Gilead 46
terms whh 8, Omar Vizquel on a two-year. Jamie Duncll!n, RB Rablh AbduUah, OT
Plain City Jonathan Alder 58, Johnstown , contract e~slon.
Jam.. Connlcla, ca Brian Kelley, ond C·G
Northridge 55
DETROIT 11GERS-Agreod 10 lonna Todd Washington to on•year contracts.
AlpJey Ripley-Union-Lewis·Hunllnglon with RHP ·~m Bemero. RHP Dave
'
HOCKEY
74, Cln. Madeira 57
Borkowski, RHP Selh Grelslnger, RHP
Notional Hockey LuSugarcreek Oaraway 52, Cadiz Harrison Shane Hearns, RHP Krls Keller, AHP
NHL-5uopendld S1. Louie Blu.. D Oar·
Cent. 39
.
Shane LouK, LHP Mlka Maroth, LHP Man ren Rumble two games for kneeing S•n
Warren Champion 89, Garrettsville Miller, LHP A~m Pettyjohn, RHP Luis Jooa Shalka F Marl&lt; Smllh In a Feb. 2tl
Garflelct 43
PJneda, LHP t,1an PerlshO, INF Jermatne game.

n~~~g~~o ~~~ \!)'~~~~5-AollYII·

J...,.

·"

Melp County's

1999 O..rolet 112 Slfvlrado, LWB, 2WD PU
•••.•......... ~ ........................................... $18,950
1996 Gao Traclca- 4WD ••••;................. $6,875
1997 GMC Yulcorl .............................. $19,850
1~ Olc:lsrnoble Cutlass •.• :.......•••.••••$10,860
19ft Chevrolet ~ ...................... $11,400
1999 Oldsmobile Alaro ......................$10,850
2000'Buldc Regai ...•••~ •••••••• ~.,........~ ..•• S16,150
1999 Buick. c;enNry ..·.......•.............••.•. sn, 900
1999 Ford TaUNs ............................... $11,600
1999 Pontiac Grand Am ................:... $10,850
1999 Pot1llac Montana Van .............. $19,850 ·

1

'

I='ONTIAC '
~fl'IQI'tl

1ht Dlly Sailhill

i

...

..

...

..

··-

'

~

....

.

.....

Hometown Newspaper

" .

.IT

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'llo

TNIUII'I . . ...-.~

-· ,,

.

r
•

so Cents

March declared ~MR/DD nionth
, "This is a ti nle to recognize

1tr IIRwl J. Rao
SENTINEL

NEW~ STAFF

. POMEROY - Me1gs Coljllty commissioners signed a proclamation making
March "Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month" duringtheirregular~eldymeetingonThursdaymormng.
·· Steve Beha, executive director, and !Uy
DaVis, both of the Carleton School and
Meigs Industries, Meigs County MR/DD
board members Nora Rice and Father
Walter Heinz, and a number of Carleton
School students and Meigs Industries
clients joined the ·commissioners in the

tion or other developmental disabilities as
active
citizens, productive workers and
.
people across the state who
•
good netghbors;' Beha said.
have mental retardatro" or other "Our goal is to increase the public's
developmental disabilities
awarenes.&lt; and understanding of these individuals so they will have increased access in
as active citizens, productive
workers and good neighbors." the community to employment, education,
housing, ·and social opportunities:· he
added.
The -1heme for MR/DD Awareness
Month
is '~People with Disabilities are Peoproclamation ceremony.
Sandy lannarelli, mayor of Middlepon, ple with Possibilities."
Carleton School and Meigs Industries
also participated mthe signing.
"This is a time to recognize people
across the state who have mental retardaPleue ... MR/DD,AJ

SIGN PROCLAMATION- Middleport Mayor Sandy lannarelll,
seated left, joined Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets,
Jeff Thornton and Mick Davenport In declaring March as Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Month. They
were joined by students, clients and staff of the Carleton
School and Meigs Industries and members of the MR/DD
board. (Brian J. Reed photo)
·

.

Voucher
yal.idity
.sought by
backers

Wilson
res onds
'to awsuit

. CINCINNATI (AP) Supporters of Cleveland's
school vouchers program
plan to ask the U.S.
Supreme Court 10 reconsider examining the constitutionality of such programs.
.- The 61h U.S. Circuit
,&lt; ;our! of Appeah on
Wednesday declined a
'r equest for a full-court

. ~-'and_ r'w .~ ..,~...

2000 Chevrolet Impala .................:... $15,525
1998 Buick Century, One Owner.......$10,880
1996 Buick Roadmastar, One Owner, Loacled
$12,850
.
1994 Chrysler Concordt ..................... $5,450
1997 Dodge hiltepld ........................... $6,850
19971ulck LeSabra ............................ $9,850
1997 Delta 88 ···················:-·····'··········· $7,200,
2000 Chevrolet l.tMnlna ..................,..$12,900

entine

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vol u m e 5 I , Numbe r 1 5 7

, t!~~.?s\~eNII~Ol!..,, &lt;.&gt;f

Meigs County,
we'vegotpou
covered

----------------~

•

March 2, 2001

Iract.

Hurricanes
sna
,,
WVU win strea
throws then stole the ball from
Lyles on West Virginia's ensuing possession.
West Virginia GOach Gale
·Catlett thought Wimbley's
block should have been ruled
goaltending. Wimbley didn't
disagree.
"I was hoping it wasn't
goaltending,"Wimbley said. "I
was \vaiting for the whistle."
"From where I'm standing,
it's goaltending, obviously,"
Catlett said. "I'm not sure but
I am sure it was the critical
play of the game."
Simmons was fouled again
and made both free throws.
Brooks Berry then missed a 3pointer before Wimbley made
twO free throws to, wrap up
the scoring.
·
An intentional foul by Lyles
helped ignite an 11-2 Miami
run in which Salmons scored
8 points to give the Hurricanes a 56-48 lead with 10:16
. remaining. Salmons made 13of-16 free .throws.
West Virginia tied the score
at 58-58 with 6:08 left on
consecutive layups by Lionel
Armstead and a dunk by
Moss.
John Oliver:s 3~pointer at
the buzzer capped off a 17-7
Mountaineer run to give West
Virginia a 38-36 halftime ·
lead.
Simmons' 3-pointer with
I 0:20 to play in the first half
gave Miami a ichool-record
187 for the season, eclipsing
the 1992-93 mark. Mlami
made just two of IS 3-pointcrs in the first half.

A3&amp;,.;,

Clart&lt;, INF Jooe Mlclu and INF PadrO
Santana, C BIOndon lngl, OF Andrea Too·
res. OF Chris W.I&lt;Oiand and OF Billy
McMillon on ont·year contract~.
MINNESOTA TWIN8-Agraod to ttoma
wllh OF Bl1an Bucllonao. liHP Matt 1&lt;11ney. RHP Willie MlrtlrMIZ, LHP Toavl&amp; Millar
and 28 Luis Rtvu on on•year COI"'trrett.
TEXAS RANGER5-Agreld to Ianna
wtltl RHP Brlln SlkCHSkl on' one·v•r con·

COLLEGE HOOPS

MIAMI (AP) Miami
coach Perry Clark got
through to John Salmons, who
prefers to pass the ball then
shoot it.
.
Salmons scored a careerhigh 30 pomts and added II
rebounds and three steals to
lead Miami to a 73-66 victo~y
over We.st Virginia Wednesday
"I've been pushing and
pushing John ' to be more
aggressive and to take advantage of his weapons," Clark
said of Salmons, a junior
whose previous high was 22
points. "You can't do that with
every player, ·just the special
ones, .the unselfish ones with a
lot of skill."
,
The Hurricanes (15-11, 7-8
Big East) snapped West Virginia's four-game winning
streak and gave Clark his
200th win. Clark, in his first
year with Miami, was 18S-145
during II years at Tulane.
"All that means is I'm old,"
Clark said.
The loss hurt West Virginia's
chances of earning a high seed
in the upcoming Big East
tournament. Instead of tied
for second in the West, they
remained in fourth.
Chris Moss led the Mountaineers (17 -9, 8-7) with 20
points and 10 rebounds and
Tim Lyles added 16 points.
. Calvin Bowman, averaging 18
points, was held to eight
points.
Salmons hit a shot from the
lane to give Miami a 68-66
lead with 2:06 remaining.
"Coach has been on me to
be more aggress1w on

Friday

Community news and notes, AS
Reds, Tribe open Grapefruit play, B1

FROM STAFF REPORTS

~~e I

Members of the Washington-based lnstirute for ·
Justice have challenged the
Dec. 11 rulirtg that the
Cleveland
program
improperly uses public we
money .to send students to
religious schools.
The panel ruled 2-1
that the program appears
to favor religious schools
for public funding.
The Institute for Justice,
which has argued similar
cases across the nation, said
T-hursday it will ask the
U.S. Supreme Conn within 90 days 10 hear the case.
Ohio Attorney General
Betty Montgomery also is
strongly considering asking the Supreme Courl to
review the case, spokesman·
Joe Case said Thursday:
J:he attorney general's
office is consulting with
Gov. Bob Taft ' and state
lawmakers before making
the decision, Case said.
The high court ·has
p_assed up opportunities to
eonsider similar cases· from
Wisconsin and Maine.
·~· Mar1hew Berry, · institbte staff lawyer, said instit1,Jte officials will poin~ our
· to the justices that the
Ohio Supreme Court had
ruled
the
Cleveland
veuchers program constitutionally
acceptable
before the 6th Circuit
tejeCICd it, and that the
Wisconsin SupremeCourt
had ruled · Milwaukee's
vOuchers program acceptable.
. The insrilute also will
al'k the appeals cour1 to
itay its ruling 10 ensure
that the nearly 4,000 participating students can
continue altending their
vouchet-paid
sch~ols,
l{erry said. OtherwiJe, the
decision could affect as
early as next week where
the voucher students
attend classes, ~erry said.
. Cleveland school dis-·
trict officials had no1 seen
tli.e appeals court's lateSt
decision,
.
district
'spokesman Dan Minnich
said Thursday.

IPRIADING THE MESSAGE - Gallipolis Developmental Center employees, from left, Kelly McGuire, Corey
Hatfield and ·Pam Miller
their sentiments .known with slgns at a Thursday rally to save DC jobs ln front
of the Ohlo Statehouse. (Kevin Kelly pl)oto)
·

made

to'cal"officials
join rally against ·cut~acks
,
..

...

ltr KIWI Klu.Y
OVfl NEWS EDITOR

C

OLOMBUS- Attac
. hed
to a resolution asking state
officials to l$&gt;re 4J per. cent of funding fur' Ohio
developmental centers is a se19ll of
paper bearing siptures of nearly 500
people who ralliedTh~ ·i!! sup-.
......,.of
J.......;
. 'na
. PGJO"bSandsem
.· ·ces
r--- , -;r::c
as they
AmQns those signatures are those
of around 70 employees of Gallipolis

are.

·

· ....

Statehouse, chanting "Save our
The rally drew staff
from the state's 11 qther clients" and holding aloft signs in supdevelopmental centers and port ofDCs.
"Our bond is with our individus11pporters who believe the als," said GDC activity therapisl
c11ts and proposals to
Sharon Brown, a member of Ohio
provide privatized care will Civil Service Employees Association
Local 1I. "Don '11ake them away fiom
disrupt clients' lives.
·•··.

us."

Developmental Cenler, parents of

The rally drew staff fiom the stale's
II ' other developmental centers and

children at GDC, local officials and
citizens who attended the rally at the

...........lly,AJ

WELLSTON - Lance Wilson, executiv~ director of the Gallia-Jackson-MeigsVinton Solid Wasle District, responded
Thursday to a lawsuit filed in the Ohio
Supreme Court by the South Central Ohio
Dislrict Council of Carpenters.
The carpenters union has accused Wilson
and the district of failing to provide public
records in a limely· manner.
The union had reques1ed informalionon
a dock project at the district's Wellston recy·• cling facility in order 10
determine if prevailing
Tire
w~ges were warranted.
carpetlters
The district accepted
union lras
a bid from Double "M"
Construction of Jackaccused ·
son for building a loadWilson and
ing dock a1 the recytlte district of
cling facility.
The bid was for
Jailing to
514,890, just below the provide public
state minimum for
records in a
soliciting bids.
Wilson said Thursday
timely
following The Daily
manner.
Senlinel's press deadline
that all information·
requested by the union was provided, other
than desk calendars, which he and the district's morney, William S. Cole, have
deemed confidential.
"I 'have notified the chairman of my
board and I am in the process of contacting
our attorney to discuss the case," Wilson
said, noting that he had no . knowledge of
!he suit until contacted by the newspaper.
"It is my position, and the position of the
distriCI's attorney, that we have _given (the
union) everything in our possession that
they have asked for, with the exception of
our desk calendars," Wilson. said.
"Our legal counsel has confirmed what
we believed from the time the calendars
were first requested: 1hat 1hose calendars are
private, and their contents of none of (the
union's) business," he added.
The lawsuit demands a writ of mandamus from 'the stale's high court, compelling the district to prepare at actual cost,
all records requested by the union.
. ·'

BUGGED:

.

~es
•

of Asian lady

Irks homeownen

ltr TONY .M. LucH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF ·

RUTLAND- Unlike British Beade
mania, Asian Beede mania isn\ nearly as

popular.
. , The Asian Lady Beede, knoWn in sci-

enti6c cilcles as Harmonia axyridis ~las), bas ~ently been congregaong m
mass on windows,.doors, po~eh decks, and

IWIIMIOE- Martin Wolfe poses baslda a,
· Pile Allan Lady a.&amp;tla• that he colleCted
from lllllda hla home on Whltes Hill Road In
Rutland. The beetles have become 'li! nti~
aence for many area raal!lents over' the
,_.,. llecluH of their . con&amp;raptlon on
doorl, wlndoWI. POrch
(Tony M. Leach photo)

-----------

decks

alid

&lt;;ellln&amp;s·

The releases were conducted by the
U.S. Depamnent of AgriCulture and were
used as a biological ·control agent for
harmful aphids and scale pestj on trees and
crops.
However, some scientists believe that
'the recent explosion of the beedes, especially in the soUthern states, !s not a result
of earlier USDA beede releases, but possibly fiom a new sautee ofAsian Lady Beede introduced by accident on board an
Asian freighter, docked in New Orleans,

ceiJin&amp;' .ofh~dreds of homes throughout
the Ohio River Valley.
The Ohio State University Extension
Office in Meigs Collllty reported that the La.
lady beede. in~ed fiom ~Asia,
Marlin ahd Emily Wolfe of Rutland
was .first rei~ ·m Califorrua m ,1916 liav., been waging a war againsl the bugs
with additional releases made in 1976 and

1984.

,. ............... AJ

,

'IOclay's -

Sentinel
2 Sldh•- I I , . .

Calendar
Classifieds
comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

84-6
87
A4

A3
Bl-3,5-6.8
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pid&lt; 3: D-7·7: Pic:ll ~: 3-7-B-1
lk....,. 5: 5+19-~34

W.VA.
Daily 3: !HI-() Daily~: 6-0+9

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishlnc Co.

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        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23927">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23926">
              <text>March 1, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1530">
      <name>beegle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3479">
      <name>gloeckner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2887">
      <name>wehrung</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
