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                  <text>•

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 21, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..One More Net to Cut' - Eastea II spe :ial section inside

I

Eastem fans take heed

if you're bound for

Columbus on Friday
•

Eastern would play at 5 p.m.
on Saturday. An announcement will be held immediately following the semi-final
game' as to the availability and
location of ticket sales.
The tickets will be sold in
the Auxiliary ·Gym located in
the southeast corner of the
arena . Fans must have their
ticket stub from the semifinal
game to purchase seating in ·
the Eastern Section for Saturday's game.
There is several policies for
the state tournament ga mes.
The Schottenstein Center is a
no-smo king facility. However,
there are two areas where fans
can go to smoke, these areas
are located o n outdoor terraces across from sec tions 330
and 333.
Once fans enter the arena
and their ticket has been torn,
they are not permitted to leave
and re-enter. Exceptions are
made for special ci rcum- ·
stances, see a gate supervisor in
this case.
Children age 2 and under
will be admitted free, but must
sit on the lap of their parent or
guardian.
Also fans are no allowed to
bring noisemakers, signs,
school banners, pennants,
shakers, confetti, food and
beverages into the Schottensein Center. Any school whose
fans litter the arena with
debris such as confetti will be
billed for the extra expense
the tournament site incurs to
clean the arena.

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Division IV State
Toumament
Schottensteln Center
Columbus

COLUMBUS - The following information has been
releas.ed for Friday's state tournament game between Eastern and Tipp City Bethel. The
contest w;JJ begin at 2 p.m . at
the Jerome L. Schottenstein
Center on the camp us of
Ohio State University.
After each game the arena is
cleared, and at given times the
11:00
doors are open for the next
City
co ntest. The doors for th e
Easte rn game will open at 1
p.m. Immediately following
·the game the arena is cleared
in preparation fo r the next
co ntest.
Because of construction on
1-70 fans have two options to travel north on 1-71 to Lane
get to Schottenstein Center. Ave. exit. Upo n turning right
The first option ts to take US onto Lane Ave. get into the
33 no rth to 1-270 South left- hand lane and prepare co
towa rds Cinci nnati. Take 1-270 turn left at che first traffic light
to 1-7 1 north. Travel 1-7 1 onto Fred Taylor Drive. Parknorth to Ohio 315 north and ing is •vailable at the Buckeye
take Ohio 315 to the Lane Lot&lt; at the far north end of
Fred Taylor Drive. Additional
Ave exit.
Upon turning right onto parking is also available at the
Lane Ave. get into the left- lots near St. Johns Arena and
hand lane and prepare to turn near Ohio Stadium.
Parking is $5 per day. Shutleft at the first traffic light onto
tles
are available to and from
Fred Taylor Drive. Parking is
available at the Buckeye Lots the .Buckeye Lots parking
at the far north end of Fred areas. Shuttle buses will run
Taylor Drive. Additional park- from one hour prior to until
ing ·is also available at the lots one and a half after the game.
The tickets are $7 for each
near St. Johns Aren• ond near
sessions. Fans must keep their
Ohio Stadium.
The second option is to take ticket stub to have the opporUS-33 north to Ohio · ·104 tunity to purchase tickets for
west (Refugee Road). Take the championship games that
Ohio 104 west to 1-71 north, are to be held on Saturday.

Friday's Game
Delphos Sl John's v.
Strasburg-Franklin.
Eastem v. npp
Bethel, 2:00

saturday's Game.
Championship, 5:00

Family
from PageB1

•i
'·

commg through at that
time, much like we do here at
Eastern. My sophomore year,
we. made it to the regional
tournaments in the Coliseum
up at Columbus."
After his playing days were
ove r, Simpso n kept close to
the game as a coach, and in
1993, his dream of reaching a
sta te tournament was realized.
"It took 25 years to get
there," Sim~son .aid. " My
older son, Jim, at that time
, was a freshman on that tean1,
and Matt and Alex were ball
boys. The foll owing season in
'94, we went to the regional .
and lost to Bishop Hartley,
who had a very good player,
Esteban Weaver, playing at
that time."
And it's no fluke that the
Simpson family has achieved
this level of success, as dad
Tim states . .
"It's jusi kind of how things
go," Simpson added. "My sons
have all been gym rats, and
my older son played in the
regional and I got a chance to
play in the regional, and now
Matt and Alex have both been
to a regional and won the
regional championship and
have the chance to play in the
state semifinals.
"One of the boys over &gt;t
Wahama asked me 'why IS
Matt so good?" Simpson said.
"Th e answer .1s:
. h'
e s spent a
lot time in the gym. All my
boys have spent hours in the
gym. Probably the gym and
the basketball team is one our

Carter

flom PapBl

second three times.
Strasburg-Franklin has a bit
of state tournament pedigree,
although it's been 34 years
since the Tigers last visited the
Buckeye State's big dance.
Strasburg-Franklin is making
its fifth appearance .The Tigers
won it all in 1967.
Bethel has made j ust one
appearance and made the
most of its stay, finishing se~­
ond in 1978.
Eastern has enjoyed its own
success, wtnnutg back- to-

best baby sitters; We would
take them to the gym and
they were always around the
basketball players at Federal
Hocking and Matt and Alex
were always around the players at Belpre and at Eastern.
It's just been in their blood."
Conversely, the athletic
pedigree on Mrs. Simpson's
side of the family is strictly
gridiron. Cathy Simpson's
father was a football player at
the Univer1ity of Pittsburgh
and later played a few years in
the NFL.
"A lot of her uncles have
been football players . and
coaches," Simpson said. " Her
dad, when they played Notre
Dame at South Bend, he
moved to fullback and he ran
it in for a touchdown and
kicked a field goal to beat
Notre Dame at South Bend.
"Sports has been a real
important part of our family.
And my wife has been really
great. She's almost lik~ a
widow for about six months
during the season while we're
out playing ball."
Matt Simpson got his first
taste of big time basketball on
the state level when Belpre
played Coldwater in the state
semifinals in 1993, serving as a
towel boy and getting the
chance to sit right underneath
the basket at St. John Arena.
"I can't help but think that
that didn~t help motivate Matt
to work hard and get to this
point," said the older Simpson. "And . we have a really
great micelus of players
around who have helped
build this team."
The younger Simpson
agreed whole-heartedly with

,. _

~

~-·

.

... . .

~·

- .... ~---...
. ... ' . .. . ... . . ... . ..
'

~

..

--~

fromPapB1
Hayes, Whitney Ashley,
Debby Searls, Amber Haning,
Jennifer Reeves, Jessica Gray,
Carrie Abbott and Brittany
Williams.
Girls junior varsity coach
Darin Logan then introduced
members of the TVC champion j unior varsity team. They
included Brook Bolin, Maria
Drenner, Michelle Dreime~,
Tirzah Dodson. Katie Jeffers,
Shannon Soulsby, Nikki
Butcher, Christina Miller,
XantAe Smith. and Holley
Williams.

BOYS BASKETBAU AWARDS - The following
boys received awards for basketball at Tuesday evenings Meigs winter Sj)Orts banquet.
From left, J. P. Staats and Derick Johnson.
(Dave Harris)

the coal mines or tilling the
field or spending hours upon
hours in a hot factory, that
work ethic, that tlrive and
determination worked Its way
into the very fiber of those
who came after, a.i ld has
emerged in the form of kids
who put in hours at the gym
and in the weight room, honing their skills and their bodies to go out and excel.
And the culmination of that
hard work for these clubs is
the chance to show thousands
of people on Ohio high
school basketball's greatest
stage that they deserve to, be
there and that they have what
it takes to be champions.

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

·-... •

I

••

'o ""

o

.,.o . . . . . '

Details,

•
Mei1s County's

entine

Hometown Newspaper

ical Services offset increasing costs of
operation.
EMS Administrator Gene Lyons
said she and commu nity squad ch.ief1,
Meigs County commissioners and
village mayors met recently to discuss
the billing optio n, as well as the
BY BRIAN J. REED
oper:ttion of the county's only para•
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
m edic unit, "Medic 5," the addition
· POMEROY - The possibility of of a second Medic unit and the
billing patients for services is under dwindling 'volunteer workfc,&gt;rce
consideration in an attempt to help ., which operates the couney's six valthe Meigs County Emergency Med- unteer emergency squads.

The EMS service now operates
six ·Basic Life Suppo rt squads and a
first responder unit, all staffed by volunteer emergency medical technicians and first responders, respectively. EMS also opera tes one Advanced
Life Support Medic, staffed around
the clock by full-tim e paid personneL
"This setup allows the EMS to
alert the volunteer squads via a paging system, as well as send the M edi c
unit to an emergency," Lyons said.

" If the volunteer squad resp.onds,
and a paramedic is not needeo, the
Medic is released to handle other
eme rgencies. l:lut if the squad ei ther
needs a medi c or gets cancelled
because of a lack of the required
minimum of rwo E MTs, the Medic
would handle the run ," she added.
"This setup allows for maximum
use of the only Medic unit , and provides care faster if th e the voluntee r
squad is cancelled, as th e next closest
squad would be alerted if the M edic

Rainy Day

bill oes

bac to
House
· COLUMBUS (AP) -A
oill to give one-time help
to low-income Ohioans
with their winter heating
bills finally cleared the Senate on Wednesday after
·three weeks of haggling
over how much help customers will ge,l an.d how to
. spre~d tile ,ja\tiQS$ .to .more·
people.
The 32-1 vote sent the
bill back to the House,
which is expected to agree
to the Senate changes next
The bill authorizes $20
11)illion for Gov. Bob Taft's
Project THAW. or Tempol':!rv Heating Assist&gt;nce for
Warmth. The program,
which includes mother S20
million in federal &gt;id,
would give low-income
payments up to $250 to
apply to half of one heating
bill.
An · amendment that
minority Democrats put in
the bill on Tuesday allows
qualifying customers to
apply the payment to any
past-due
charges
that
· appear on their bill.
Last week, Republican
chonges had limited the aid
to one month's worth of
epergy charges. They, however, added a provision in
the final version that allows
the state to. use other
sources of revenue should
tbe program run out of
qtoney.
. . Applica,tions for che aid
limited to those making '
p,ercent of the federal
poverty level or less, mean7
ing a family of four making
~bour $37,000 a year c;ould
gu~lify. ·· Families getting
a~her forms of heating
3$sistance, such as the federal Home Energy Assistance
Program, also can toke
advantage of the state help.
• Senate Minority Leader
Leigh Herington, a Raven~a Democrat, supported
the bill but added that lawmakers should look into
long-te~m help for those
who cannot afford high
. energy bills.
... "Project THAW is not
!1{hat we hoped it would
be,"
Herington
said.
\
'.'There's more to do here.
This crisis is not over."
.. The bill will also allow
!iomrmmities to bQy natural gas from suppliers in bulk
on behalf of their citizens,
A group representing cities
in eight northeast Ohio
counties fought to in~lude
the provision .

are

:¥Jo

WRESTLING AWARDS - Nick Mclaughlin (left) and Matt O'Brien received special !!Wards on
Tuesday's Meigs sports banquet for wrestling. (Dave Harris)

fromPap81
the
likelihood
Deion
Sanders,
another
football / baseball player, will
make be added to the Reds'
major league roster 'this year.
Despite missing the fi~st 3
1/2 games with a broken
foot, Henso n completed 61.6
percetu of his passes for 2,146
yards with 18 touchdowns
and only four interceptions
last season.
I
Henson, who did not come
to spring training, is toking
ground balls indoors at Ann
Arbor, Mich.
.
Henson, one of the most
promising power hitters in

----------------·---

~--------

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to

•

'

..

-.Iff.'"--

is tied up, or on another emergency,"
Lyons said.
Lyons said volunteer squads have a
four-minute alert time. and a fourminute re-alert time. If the 1quad has
not responded after eigh t rnin'utes,
the next closest unit is d}ertt.:d in the
sa me fash ion.
. ·"Th e M edic unit was implemented because of an increasing numher
of cancellations by the volunteers,
and an incrase in the overJll emer-

Please see EMS, A3

Republican
leaders ask
Democrats
for input
Houses look for aaord
on school funding
COLUMBUS (A P) - Republi ca n Gov. Bo
b Taft and GOP leaders in the House and Sen
ate on Wednesday asked minority Democrats in bo th houses to join pri vate discussions ai1ned at reaching agreement on the stat
e's school funding situatio n .
The talks began afte r Taft, Senate President Richard Finan, R -Cin ti nnati, and Ho us
e Speaker Larry Househo lder. R - Glenford, d
ecided to abandon their sepa rate plan s to fix t
he
funding formula and focus on reac hing a cons
ens us to m eet th e June 15 deadline imposed b
y the Ohio Supreme Co urt .
The court last May rul ed for a seco nd time
that the sta te's funding fo rmula is un constitutional, mainly because it rel ies too heavily on
lo cal property taxes. That creates disparitie s a
mong Ohio's 612 school districts and deprive
s som e children o f their constitutional ri gh t t
o i n adequate education , the court said.
Democrats, who felt th ey were bein g leti: o
ut of th e process by maj o rity R epublicans in
both houses, were pleased by the announcem ent.
Senate Minority Leade r Leigh Her itlgton , D-Ravenna, and his H Ouse cou nterpart·, Jac k Ford, D -Toledo, will send staffe rs an
d lawmakers to work with th e group. The two
l ~ad e rs met with Taft, Fin an and Home holder on Wedn esday mornin g.
" You have to expec t that we were quite sur
prised that we were invited," Herin gton said. '
'We had some hard questions and we had so m
e very trank discu ss ions. Ja ck Ford and I left t
he meeting believing that th ey would like to
have an hon es t, bipartisa n discussion ."
Finan would not comment on the discussion , but said it went well.

wt;ek.

GIRLS BASKETBALL AWARDS- The following Lady Marauders received awards at the winter
sports banquet held Tuesday at Meigs High School. From left to right in the front row, Tiffany
Quails, Ashley Thomas, Shannon Price and Amber Vining. Second row, from left, Mindy
Chancey, Kayte Davis, Jaynee Davis and Lindsey Bolin. (Dave Harris)
'

.

so Cents

County EMS considen revenue options

~eating ·

factor for the money-cortscious Reds.
.
The Yankees will pay about
half the amount owed
Pena, the official said.
Coleman, an outfielder
acquired in the offseas~
from Boston for Chris
Stynes, missed most of lase
season with a broken wris~
but i s heal.thy this season.
He is a .267 career hitter
wit 87 homers and 318 RBis
in 626 minor league games.:
Coleman went 3-for-3 In
an exhibition game against
the Yankees on March 3, hitting long honte runs off
Randy Keisler and Adrian
Hernandez.
Coleman is hitting .31:2
this spring but has thr~e
errors.

March ll, 1001

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 51, Number 171

CHEERLEADERS - Jessica Gray (left) and
Whitney Ashley received special aw'ards for
cheerleading at Tuesday's winter sports banquet held at Meigs High School. (Dave Harris)

the minor leagues, hit .266
with nine homers 'in 308 atbats last season, mostly in
Double-A.
He struggled after the
trade, batting only .172 in 16
games for the Reds' DoubleA Chattanooga team.
Pena, 19, was se~n leaving
Legends Field in street
clothes . during batting practice Tuesday, talking on a cell
phone.
He has struggled in the
minors after getting a $3.7
million , five-year contract
from the Yankees in 1999.
He has hit .234 with 17
homen and 64 RBis in 488
at-bats in C lass A and Rookie ball the past two seasons
and just $840,000 remains to
be p3id on his co ntr:tct, a key

Thursday

Community news and notes, AS
State tournament preview, Bl

Hlp: 501; Low:

L£vyfunds
·instdfident to meet
·growing costs

trade

back TVC Hocking Division
titles and now earning its first
berth in the state tournament;
a championship pedigree in
the making.
So what is the key ingredi~
enc to good basketball coming
out of small towns'
Something in the water?
Home cooking?
'
Maybe.
But more than likely, it's just
good old Middle American
work ethic; the same drive
and determination that these 1
kids' grandparents and greotgra ndparents displayed while
making something out of
nothing for their families .
Whether it was working in

-----

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

his father and mentor.
"Actually being there and
seeing what it's like to be on
the floor, even though I didn't
get to play, but I was down
there and· I saw it," Matt
Simpson said. "In this giant
arena and all these people
around, screaming and yelling
for their team, that's a big .
' motivator to get back there as
a player."
Simpson said that the fact
that the Eagles are actually in
the Final four hasn't yet sunk
in 'for most of the team .
· " It's starting to, I think;' he
said. "I think that after the
season gets over with, and
everybody looks back on
what we did, I think, we as
players and probably coaches
will realize what we've done."
For Alex, the youngest of
the Simpson boys, this is his
baptism by fire as freshman on
the varsity side. Despite being
a rookie, the · youthful Simpson said he beleived that this
could be a special year for the
. Eagles.
"I kind of knew before the
year, because I went to all the
shootouts (in the summer), or
most of the shootouts," he
said. "I didn't think I'd actually get to sit the bench. I
thought I'd be practicing with
them, but other than that, no.
"It's been pretty special, to
kind of get that tournament
feel," he added. "Maybe when
I'm a junior or senior, we can
go back up there again."
If family tradition holds
true, this won't be the last trip
for the Simpsons or the
Eagles.

Meigs

•

Varsity coach Ron Logan offensive award.
All conference aw:uds weni
introduced members of his
team that went 16-6 overall to Price, who received secona
and 8-2 in the TVC. Team team honors, and was special
members include Shannon mention all district as selected
Price, Tiffany Qualls, Ashley by the District 13 coaches and
Thomas, Amber Vining, Cor- the A.P.Vining was the TVC~
rie Hoover, Lindsay Bolin, . MVP for the second consecuc
Mindy Chancey, Kayte Davis, rive year. Amber also receive~
Alicia Werry, Jaynee Davis, a special award as the school's
Shannon Soulsby and score- all time leading scorer, and fDr
the rest of her many accotbkeeper Bea Morgan.
_
Logan then presented the plishments.
Rick Ash then gave awardS
rebounding award to Jaynee
Davis, 100 Percent Award to for the TVC's All ·Academic
Qualls. The best free throw team, they incl uded Nick
percentage award went Vin- McLaughlin , Matt O'Brien,
ing. Price received the most Lindsay Bolin, Bea Morgan,
improved, and the defensive Kayte Davis, Shannon Price,
award went to Thomas and Mindy C hancey, Whitney
Vining won the most valuable Ashley and J essica Gray.

I·

· mbrellas of
all shapes
and s1zes
were seen.
around .
Wednesday
Pomeroy
morning following a .
storm front that produced
several hours of heavy
rains. Bill Smith of
Pomeroy had his umbrelljl
as he stood on the corner
ofWest Second Street and
Mulberry Avenue and
several individuals who
congregated in front of
the courthouse had theirs.

Tony M. Leach
· pbotos

Legionnaires honor their
Today"s
own at annual party
Sentinel
l Sedlons - 16 Pllps
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - More than a
hundred Legionnaires, awdliary
ntembers, their spouses and guests
gathered at the Senior Citizens
Center Tuesday for the annual
Legion birthday party of Drew
Webster Post 39.
A 'patriotic theme was carried
out in the . table decorations for
the dinner, prepared by George
Horak, George Harris Sr., George
Harris Jr., George Nesselroad,
Leonard Jewell and Tom 1\.nderson.
Joe Struble emceed the program
A BIRTHDAY GIFT- Gladys Cumings, president of the
American Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39, pre- which included the naming of
'sented a· gift of money to Gerald Rought, post com- Don Carter as Legionnaire of the
Year who was ·unable to attend
mander. (Charlene Hoefllck photo)

and will be presented his trophy at
the next regular Legion meeti ng.
Recognized were Jennings Beegle as a new member, Harvey Van Vranken, a long-tim e member
and his wife, June, who have
moved back to Meigs County, and
Dick and Ruby Vaughan. for special project assistance.
It was noted that a 50-year pin
had been sent to Wayne Milhoan.
Receiving pins for th eir work
in the membership drive from
Mi ckey Williams were Frank
Vaughan and George Harris. 10 or
more; Joe Struble. Jerry !\.o ught.
Ken Harris. Bill Matlack, Leonard
Jewell, R aymond Jewe ll, and
Williams, five or more.

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics ·
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A5
84-6.

87
84
A3
81-2.5-6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 5-7·1; Pid&lt; 4: 2-&lt;)·5-2
Super Lotio: 5-16-17-23-21&gt;45
Kkte&lt;: 2-7-9-5-3-1

W.VA.
Daily 3: 0+ I Daily .,: 7·9-().8
0 2001 OhioVllley l,ubli•hingCu.

PI•••• SH Lesion, A3
r\o- ·

~

--- ----·-

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Judge clean OSU in suit
COLUMBUS (AP) - A judge has found that Ohio State
University was not liable in the death of a graduate student
who got sick while climbing a Himalayan glacier in 1997.
Ohio Court of Claims Judge Warren Bettis ruled Wednesday in a $21 million wrongful death lawsuit brought by the
family of Shawn Wight.
They had claimed the university did not have proper plans
for evacuation when their son got sick while climbjng the
23,000-foot Dasuopu Glacier in western China.
Wight, 26, died of a lung infection· that possibly was linked
to a blood clot he developed during the 'climb up the glacier
to find ancient ice cores for a global warming project.

Jail policy concerns council
CLEVELAND (AP) - The city needs to expand jail capacity and end a "straight release" practice of freeing criminal suspects, the Cleveland City Council president said.
Michael Polensek said Wednesday council will decide
whether to pass legislation to abolish the release practice,
adopted in 1994 to ease jail overcrowding.
Under straight release, people arrested for certain crimes are
booked and fingerprinted, but are released while evidence is
provided to Cuyahoga County prosecutors.
.
C leveland Police Chief Martin Flask said police arrest about
340 people each day, bot have only 147 holding cells . About
3,800 people are given straight releases annually, usually for
drug offenses.

••

'lbursd•y, M•rch u, 2001

•

COLUMBUS (AP) - Armed with
blankets and condoms, a Cincinnati disc
jockey showed up at a Xenia park last
spring intending to have sex with a 14year-old girl he had met on the Internet.
But the teen-ager was reaDy a police
detective waiting to arrest the 50-yearold man.
He and 16 others caught in a yearlong
Internet sting were charged with misdemeanors,. frustrating Xenia officials who
wanted stricter penalties.
"He pleaded no contest, paid a fine,
was put on probation, got 30 days suspended jail time, and off he went;' police
Lt. Daniel Donahue said. "That's the best
we could do."
Beginning Thursday, police in Ohio
will be · able to charge adults with

dren are home that they are safe, but
people are out there on the Internet just
waiting for them to log on," Austria said.
"Today we have more and more children
on the Internet and we must make It a
safe environment for them."
Police officers across the state incre:l6ingly have been entering Internet chat
rooms under the guise of teen-agers.
They wait for adults to· contact them for
sex and set up a meeting place and time.
"It's out there, it's happening all the
time. Almost any law enforcement officer who does this calls it shoo.ting fish in
a barrel," said Michael SuUivan, an assistations using a telecommuni.cations tant prosecutor in Cuyahoga County. "It
doesn't take long to be hit upon by the
device.
"We assume that just because our chi!- perpetrators .''

felonies if they use the Internet .or tele·
phone to solicit sex from minors, even if
the person on the other end is an officer
pretending to be a teen-ager. Offenders
could face up to 18 months in prison
and $5,000 fine.
Th~ misdemeanor charge previously
applied in such cases carries a maximum
penalty of six months in jail and a $1,000
fine .
Sen. Steve Austria, a Republican from
Beavercreek, sponsored the new law last
session after Xenia officials told him that
they believed stricter punishments were
needed. Besides increasing the penalties,
he wanted to specifically include solici-

a

Prosecutors want adult trial

Ohio weather
Friday, March 23
forecast for

RAVENNA (AP) - A, man may have died behind the
wheel before his pickup truck went left of center in Portage
County's Brimfield Township, killing a Medina County
woman and her son on Jan. 18, a coroner said.
·
Portage County Coroner Roger G. Marcial said Wednesday.
that Richard L. Linger Jr., 36, had ingested a " lethal level" of
a painkiller.
Marcial said Linger was probably "dead before the colli.
SlOn."
In the collision, he suffered no serious internal or external
injuries, the coroner said.

PA.

.. . I

DAYTON (AP) - Prosecutors want a 14-year-old boy
acc used of shooting a woman on Feb. 6 to be tried as an adu'lt.
Mitchell Harvey of Dayton is charged with nine feloni es
and a misdemeanor stemming from a half-day spree that
ended with him leadin g police on a chase in ·a stolen car.
Judge Michael B. Murphy of Montgomery County Juvenjle
Court began hearing testimony Wednesday on prosecutors '
request to move the case to adult court.
Harvey is charged with delinquency by reason of felonious
assault, felonious ass&gt;ult on a police officer, carrying a con~
cealed knife, carrying a concealed handgun, aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, fleeing and eluding police, burglary,
grand theft of a firearm and having a fuearm while under
restrictions from a previous conviction.

Chiefs son gets probation
DAYTON (AP) -Three men, including the son of DayW.VA.
ton's acting police chief, have been placed under intensive
probation for up to five years for assaulting two men in a
·
parking lot in October.
A probation violation could result in eight years iri prisoh,
Judge Jeffrey E. Froelich of Montgomery County Common
Pleas Court told the men Wednesday. .
·
·
SuMy Pt Cloucty CIOu&lt;t,'
ShOwtll T-storma
Rain
Flurrlas
Snow
lett
Joel R . Thomas, 2l, of Dayton, the son of public safety
director and acting police chief John Thomas; Charles Olan
resume Friday in Washington. Comair has said that if no Trussell Jr., 24, ofVandalia; and Jack Clarence Elson II, 23, of
agreement is reached and pilots walk out, it would suspend all Dayton, left one of their victims with two shattered eye sockflight operations but would keep about 4,000 otber employ- ets, police 'said.
Froelich ordered that all three remain involved in alcohol
ees on the job.
and violence treatment ·programs, stay employed, and not frequent any establishment where alcohol is its primary purpose.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A team of recruiters from Cleveland's public schools is returning Thursday from India pleased
with a list of 61 candidates to fill 50 math, science or special
education teaching jobs.
·
&lt;:;arol Hauser, the district's personnel director and one of
three recruiters from the Cleveland district who went to
India, plans to make formal offers after further evaluating the
candidates.
.
The urban school district with 77,000 students will pay a
recruiting fee of $4,000 per teacher fot each of the next three
years to the New York-based Teachers Placement Group,
which paid ·for the three Cleveland school district employees
to tal&lt;e the two-week recruiting trip.
Hauser said the fee, which could amount to $600,000 after
DAYTON' (AP)'-' Ambitious plans ·are being ftiatle" 'f(Sr a
three years, was the unavoidable cost of recruitment in areas of
17-day festival to celebrate the 1OOth anniversary o! powered
high need.
flight in )lily 2003 - if funding can be found.
,.,
A group called Inventing Flight envisions barges and pa~l­
ions with flight-related themes, stage shows, roving entertainers,
downtown parades and a rally of hot-air balloons and
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Comair, with only weekend negot·
tiations standing between the regional airline and a strike by blimps at.the Air Force Museum.
It
also
wants
the
festival
to
include
annual
events
not
norits pilots, planned to began canceling flights Thursday.
"We want to reach an agreement as quickly as possible and mally connected with aviation, such as the. city's Fourth of
we are diligently working toward that goal," Comair spokes- July celebration, the dowptown CityFolk Festival and' the
woman Meghan Glynn said Wednesday, "But we also must Black Cultural Festival at the Montgomery County f'air~
take some precautions in the best interest of our custon\ers grounds.
"If yo.u look at the total activities, it's probably in the range
and employees."
C..:omair pilots have rejected the company's five-year con- of $20 (million) to $30 n1illion ," Inventing Flight Chairman J.
.
l"
tract offer and could go on strike as early as t 2:01 a.m. Mon- Bradford Tillson said.
day, when a 30-day cooling-off period ends.
Mediated tal~ with the Air Line Pilots Association are to

......

0---~-~·

FuncUni sought for festival

I

Comalr to cancel flights

{(

"

Taft urges unlvenltles to .
continue pushing for funding
ty trustees. "I would strongly
encourage you to remain
active and vigilant in continuing to advocate your case to
members of the House and
Senate."
Under Taft's 2002- 2003
budget proposal, public colleges and universities would
receive $2.6 billion in 2002
and $2.7 billion the following
year.
That is a $784 million dif-

COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov.
Bob Taft on Wednesday
warned Ohio's public universities to remain uvigilant" in
lobbying for money in the
upcoming iwo-year budget.
"We face a school-funding
· challenge, an explosion of
Medicaid costs and almost no
growth in state revenues due
to slowdowns · in the national
economy;' Taft told an annual
conference of public universi-

~ Thul'lday, M1rch 22, 2001

City awaits possible layoffs
CINCINNATI (AP) - CiJ=Y officials are bracing for possible layoffs atThePr'octer' &amp; Gamble Co., which has. long been
an important source of executive leadership, corporate dona·
;
tions and payroll taxes .
P&amp;G declined to comment Wednesday on reports that onginated in The Wall Street Journal that the company was contemplating layoffs of up to 22,000 employees from its worldwide work force of about 110,000.
The company scheduled a Thursday teleconference with
investors.
City Manager john Shirey said he would meet Thimqay
with P&amp;G's director of government relations. P&amp;G asked ior
a similar meeting the last tin1e it announced major l~yoffs, last
year, Sl\irey said.

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

ference from what the Ohio
Board of Regents had sought
over the two years. Lawmakers
must ·send Taft their version of
the budget for his signature by
·
July 1.
House
Speaker
Larry
Householder, a Republican
from Glenford, introduced a
school-funding plan last week
that threatened even deeper
cuts to state agencies, including higher education.

..

Noah Michael carson

" CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Noah Michael Carson, son of
Mindy B. Carson of Charleston, was stillborn Tuesday, March
' ~0. 2001 at Womens &amp; Children's Hospital, Charleston.
' Surviving in addition to his mother are her grandmother,
Tammy S. Carson of Mason; her godmother, Michelle L. Car40n of Mason, W.Va.; grandfather, George E. Carson of New
Haven; godfather, Michael Cook of Charleston; and several
aunts, uncles and cousins.
~- Graveside se,..;;ces will be 1 p.m. Friday at Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire, with Pastor Ron Branch officiating. There will
_be no visitation. Arrangements are by Foglesong Funeral
_Home, Mason.
·
·

MASON, W.Va. - Charlotte Amanda Carr Coleman, 60,
,.Mason, died Tuesday, March 20, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital, foUowicg a brief illness.
.
Born Sept. 7, 1940 in Point Pleasant, she was a daughter of
··the late Leslie (Boone) and Ruth Elizabeth (Downey) Carr. .
She was a homemaker and member of Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Middleport.
She was preceded in death by two sons, Steven Schneider and
·;Kenneth Scott Wolfe; and a sister, Rita Yeauger.
, Survivors include three daughters and sons-in-law, Jea nie
, Schneider and Jeff Boggs of Cincinnati, Cindy Schneider and
Rick Baker of Logan, and Julee Wolfe and Sean Meadows of
_Hartford, W.Va.; a son, Bob Schneider Jr. of Mason; a sister and
· .brother-in-law, Nancy and Mike Griffith of Pomeroy; a broth. er, Ronald Carr of Pomeroy; and nine grandchildren.
., Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
· Point Pleasant, with Pastor Mark Mora officiating. Burial will
be in Letart Falls Cemetery,. Friends may .call at the funeral
, 'home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.

Charles A. McKown

· Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001'
12:00 Noon
Insertion Date:
. FRIDAY, APRIL 13,2001

. . . . . . . . .. .. .. . . ..
'

.

~

an is now the second vice president of Buckeye Boys State,

structu re.''

••

••
••
...

Reader Services

~

Correction Polley

Our main concern In all storleals
. to be eccurate. If you know of an
ei'rCr In a story, call the newsroom
•~ at
(740) 992·2156.

~
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Call
Dave Harris or Debbie Call
For More Information

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Thl main number Ia 992·2156.

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o-ral monoa-r

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or .

Ext. 14

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992-215

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News Department•
Depanmant extentions are:

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Other ..rviCH
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Circulation

Ext. 4

Cluollled Ado

e.t. 5

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,I

:, To 1end .. mall

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dallystnUnol 0 yahoo.com

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i

'

Instrumental and vocal music

"

(USPS 213...01

Ohio Yolloy PubUohlng Co.
Publ~hOCI ovtry aftemooo. Monday
through friday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,· Ohio.
Second-class
polllge pold at Pomoroy.
Memblr: The Assoelatect Press and
the Ohio Newapaper Association .

Board meeting

Services and chairman of the
LE'PC at 992-4541.

RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education will
meet Tuesday, 4 p.n\. at Syraci•se Elementary School.

VSC will meet

Medic unit offers a different
level of care than that 'provided
by the EMTs. An EMT -

for the evening was presented
by Dee and Dallas &lt;!nd the .
Boys. Pies and cakes along.with
POMEROY
Meigs
pie carriers, doll beds and a tool
chest made by Eddie Ball were County Chamber of Comauctioned o!fby Struble for the merce will host its 12th annual dinner/dance on· March 3 1
benefit of post proJects.
at Royal .Oak Reso rt. Doors
will open at 6:30 p.m .
financial burden, the possibiliry
Dinner will be catered by
of the . closure of the Meigs Vaughan's Catering and will
Mines. which contributes a sig- be served buffet style at 7 p.m.
nificant portion to the operat- A silent auction w ill be held
ing budget, makes the future · with items donated by local
looks dismal;' she said.
mercha nts and crafters.
In light of a recent report of
"Just in Tyme" will provide
a meeting of Rutland Village the· music. Tickets are $20 per .

basic or intermediate - · can

Council, the commissioneT$

which last summer was attend-

ed by about I ,400 boys.
Gladys Cumings presented a
birthday gift to Post Commander Gerald Rought and talked
briefly about .the projects of the

EMS
from PageAl

.

'

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

from PapAl

auxiliary. Past commanders and
past auxiliary
presidents,
including longtime active
member, Mary Martin, were
introduced.

Dinner/dance

have been questioned about the
billing of patients who are
either transported or treated by
the EMS system.
"The possibility of the billing
of residents was only discussed
as an option to help balance the
budget;' Lyons said. "This
option was the most discussed,
as the board of trustees felt that
that counry is already taxed
enough."

"If billing is implemented,
the bill would be directed to
either. insurance carriers,
Medicare or Medicaid. Ifbilling
were established, it would not
be for a i'rofilt. It would be used
to imprpve the system, provide
for more personnel, upgrade
equipm~ni, and help offiet the
ever-elevating costs of supplies
needed to operate the system;'
she added.
"The board also feels that
this is the most fair option as
people who do not use the system will not be required to pay
anything above the three onemill levies now in place;' Lyons
said.

person and are now on sale at

Class offered

LEPCto meet

'Themes"
A Unique
Children's

Sub1crlptlon rates

lnoklo ~~· ea'Gniir

13 Wtokl

26 weokt •
S2 Wtel&lt;l

$27 .30
$53.82
$105.56

· Rolli Ollllkll Mlfgo County
13 Wookl
$29.25
25Wttkl
$5&amp;.88
52 Wttkl
$109.72

POMEROY - A marriage
li ce nse has. .been issued in

Meigs County Probate Cou rt
to R obit Kas byup, 29, and
Casey Lee Kashyup, 28, both
of Pomeroy.

Prosecutor
named

EMS runs

MORE LOCAL NEWS .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS .

tiona to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.

MaU sublcriDtlon

Issued license

Plays slated

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

st. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Sublarlbel'l not deslrtng to pay thl
earner may remit In advance direct kl
Tho Dally Sindnol. Credit wtB bo given
earner taCh week. No subscrtpdorrby
mall permltt~ In areea wl'ltrt hOme
Clrritr 1trvlct 11 available.

Meigs

Service
m~et on
Munday at 7:.10 p.m. at 117 E.
Memorial Dnvt'.

POMEROY
Brent
the chamber office, 238 W
Main St., Pomeroy, or through Saunders of Galli a County has
been appointed special prosethat office, 992-5005.
Title sponsors cost $200 for cutor in the Common Pleas
a gold sponsor, $100 for a sil- Court criminal case against
ver sponsor or . $75 for a Daniel J. Murphy of Long
bronzesponsor. Those with an Bottom.
item or serviae to donate may · Murphy is charged with
contact Margie Landers at the aggravated burglary.
Saunders was appointed
chamber office.
due to a conflict on the part
of Prosecutor Pat Story.

Poltmat•r: Send address correc·

By carrier or motor route
enowooll
$2
Ono month
$8.70
0nt VIII
$104
Dilly
. SO cents

POMEROY
Cottnty V~teran s
Commission wi1l

POMEROY
Meigs
High School drama students
POMEROY - · Units of
will present their annual
senior plays including "Who the Meigs Emergency Service
Am I This Time?" and :The answered seven calls for assisCrazy Mixed-Up Island of tance on Wednesday. Units
Dr. Moreau" on April6 . Price responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
of admission is $3 for adults
12 :03 am., Middleport
and '$2 for stUdents.
Police Department, assisted by
Pome roy, J. R . 131ackwell,
treated;
·
I :27 p.m., Oh io 7. assisted
POMEROY A free
by
. Tuppers Plains , Paula
Ohio Hunter Education Class
Camden-Clark
will be held Monday through Brewer,
Wednesday from 6-9 p.m., Memorial Hospital ;
3:04 p.m. , l'ine Tree Drive,
and March 31 from 9 a.m.
until noon at the Pomeroy ass isted by Tuppers Plains,
Gun Club on Pomeroy Pike. Myrtle Craft, treated;
3:20 p.m .; Dorcas Road,
Class size is limited, and
assisted
by Ra cine, Loui se
registration is made by calling ·
Meigs Soil and Water Conser- Wolfe, Jackson General Hosvation District at 992 -4282. pital.
POMEROY
Door prizes will be awarded.
9:29 a.m., Condor Street,
asSlSted by Central Dispatch,
Betty Webster, St. Josep h
able at the Buckeye Lots at the
POMEROY
M eigs Memorial Hospital.
far north end of Fred Taylor
RUTLAND
Drive. Additional parking is also County Emergency Planmng
2:30 p.m., Noble Summit,
available at the lots near St. Committee will hold its ,reguRaymond Salser, treated .
Johns Arena and near C'lhio lar meeting on March 27 at
SYRACUSE
11 :30 a.m. in the conferen ce
Stadium.
I :14 p.m.,Third Street, auto
The second option is to take room of the Multipurpose tire, Jennif~ r Michael owner,
U.S. 33 north 'to SR 104 west Senior Center.
Plans for the 2001 exercise no injuries.
(Refugee Road) . Take SR I 04
west to 1-7 1 north, travel north will be discussed. along with
· on l-71 SR 315 to the Lane the up coming terrorism risk
Avenue exit. Upon turning
right onto Lane Avenue, get
into the left-hand lane and prepare to turn left at the first traffie light onto Fred T.1ylor Drive.
Parking is available at the
Buckeye Lots at the far north
end of Fred Taylor Drive.Additiona! parking is also available. at
Subscribe today.
the lots near St. Johns Arena .
992-2 15fi

Directions to
Schottenstein Center

~

~

('

Legion

in forecast

....--------------,
~: The Daily Sentinel

assessment course to be held
April 10 and II in Gallipolis.
The intent of the course
assessments is to assist local
governments to better prepare, respond , and recover
from potential incidents and
provide a fomm to identifY
and convey current needs to
the state and the Department
of Justice.
·
Any questions concernmg
the ·meeting can directeQ to
Robert E. Byer, director of
the Meigs County Emergency M anagement Disaster

WEATHER

-~Wintry weekend

~

spokesman St.uart Roy said
Chao wants to take advantage
of special expertise at the Justice Department.
" It's a very complex issue
dealing with long-term exposure to radiation," he said. "She
believes it can be handled
more efficiently at DOJ
beca use they have _the infra· Ohio
Sens.
George
Voinovich and Mike De Wine
sent th e White House a letter
explaining that the Radiation
Exposure Compensation Act
(RECA) payments handled by
the Justice Department are
one-time apology paymen.ts,
not a medical claim$ remlbursement program. •

meeting in L~ncaster .

6'·

Department balks at starting new program
inevitably result in a delay."
In a letter to the White
House, Chao suggested that
the Justice Department be put
in charge. of the Energy
Employees · Occupational Illness Compensation Program.
Chao's letter said that the
department has the experience 'to do the job because it
handles a small program giving one-time payments to uranium miners, miUers and peaple who lived downwind of
nuclear test sites.
"To create a new infrastructure when DOJ already
has the tools to effectively
impleme'nt ana administer this
program IS duplicative," she
wrote.
Labor
Department

Office will dose

' Life Support,
provide Basic
RACINE - Charles A. McKown , 77, Racine, died Tuesday, including oxygen administraMarch 20, 200 I in Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport.
tion, splinting, glucose adminis. Born Oct. 30, 1923 in Spencer, W.Va., son of the late Cecil tration, bleeding control and the
. and Alice Starcher McKown, he was a retired carpenter and a use of an automated external
· veteran of the U.S. Navy during World War II.
defibrillator.
" Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth Harvey McKown; four
A paramedic can provide,
,daughters and ~hree sons-in-law, Ellen and David Bone of along with all of the basic and
. Malta, Rebecca Lange ofTroy, Mich., Sarah and Joaquin Diaz intermediate skills, Advanced
·'of Lancaster, Calif., apd Amy and Roger Speakman of Lewis Life Support treatment.
. Center; four sons and three daughters-in-law, Patrick and
The EMS operates from
~:Dorothy McKown of Opp, Ala., Shane McKown of Batavia, funding provided by three per·" Thomas and Becky McKown of Beverly, and Peter and Carla manent one-miD operating
_ McKown of Zanesville; and several grandchildren; a brother, levies. These levies provide the
Orval McKown; and two sisters, Ella McKown and Bess Star- basic · financies needed to keep
·
., &lt; don.
the system implemented.
. . He was preceded in death by a son, Michael McKown; and
This includes wages for
six sisters and three brothers.
administration,
dispatchers,
' There will be no services and no calling hours.ArrangementS maintenance crews, training,
are by Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
and p~medi~s and EMTs for
·
. .:'(\!~
r.,Jr.~
·" ~ :-''. ·
. ..
,
Medic 5·. These levies are also
expected to support an:·needed
purchases to include bandages
and other medical supplies.
. .
In the 1970s, when the levies
were implemented, this was
possible. Now, with health care
., av THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Highs on the weekend will costs at an all-time high , it is no
longer possible for the levies to
. Tri-county area residents be mostly in the 30s. Lows
Illl"et the costs, Lyons said.
'·'will enjoy another day of will be in the 20s.
"To add to the increasing
Sunset tonight will be at
sunny and. mild weather
before enduring another win- 6:45, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:31 a.m.
'try blast.
Weather forecast:
''' Temperatures
will
Tonight
.. . Partly cloudy.
approach 60 degrees on Friday, the National Weather Low .in the lower 30s. West
wind 5 to I 0 mph.
Service said.
Friday... Mostly
cloudy.
•• A .cold front- will usher in
~ more winterlike air for the High in the upper 50s. West
T~e story in Wednesday's
wind 5 to 10 mph .
: 'weekend.
paper
with the directions to the
·Friday
night ... Mostly
~. Snow showers are possible
Schottenstein Center for Eastc
~on Saturday and Sunday as the cloudy early, then rain likely
~l:old air flows across the Great from late evening on. Low in ern's1 state tournament game
were wrong. The directions
the lower 40s.
~Lakes.
~.
',
should have read:
Because of construction on
I-70, you have two options to
get to Schottenstein Center.
~Rocky
Boots4"1»
General
Electric
39
~AEP - ·43l,
The fi':'t option is to take U.S.
GKNLY -10),
RD Shell- 56),
~·Arch Coal - 26h
33 north to 1-270 South
Harley Davidson.
Sears~ 35~~
, i\kzo-43
toward Cincinnati. Take I-270
38\
Shonoy's-1
~ AmTechiSBC - .40
Kmart-6%
,.Aihland Inc. - 37
Wai·Mart- 48%
to 1-71 north. Travel 1-71 north
Kroger- 23%
~AT&amp;T-22~
Wendy's-21
to SR 315 north and take SR
Landi End - 26%
" Bank one - 35
Worthington - 9
Lttl.15~
to' the Lane Avenue exit.
315
~Bob Evaris -18'l.
Dally stoct&lt; reports are
Oak Hill Financial
~BorgWamar - 40~
the. 4 p.m. closing Upon turning right onto Lane
13~
c'PhamP!on - 2'•
quotes of the previous Avenue, get into the left-hand
!iCharmlng Shops- 5'1. OVB-24'·
day's transacUons, pro·
BBT-33
~City Holding - 10),
lane and 'Prepare to turn left at
vtded by Smith Part·
Peoplas - 18
"'Federal Mogul - ·3
.ners at Advest Inc. at the first traffic light onto Fred
Premier~USB-20
Gallipolis.
Taylor Drive .. Parking is availRookwall- 40'o
~Gannau - 56'·
~

WASHINGTON (AP) In just four months, the government is supposed to start
taking applications from jobsickened nuclear workers eligible for special federal compensation.
Congress gave the .Labor
Department $60.4 million to
set up the program .
. But Labor Secretary Elaine
Chao doesn't want to do it,
and lawmakers with ailing
constituents said Wednesday
they're worried about people
with incurable illnesses having
to wait too long for compensation if C hao gets her way.
"Cancer is killing my constituents right now," said R~p.
Ted Strickland, D-Ohio. "This
will, 111 my judgment_.

POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Support Group will
FLORISSANT, Mo. - Charlotte Ann McGowan, 79, of meet on Thursday at 1 p.m.
Julie Rice will speak about
florissant, died on Saturday, March 17, 2001 .
She attended Purdue University and was later empl~d by massage therapy.
Curtiss Wright during World War II, and by North American
Aviation in Columbus.
She married Warren McGowan, a co-worker at N.A.A., on
POMEROY
Meigs
April 11, 1953.They moved to Florissant in 1971.
In addition to her husband, Warren, she is survived by a daugh- County Board of Elections
ter, Stephanie (Ron); twin sons, Steven Gan) and Michael; five office will close on Friday so
. grandchildren and one great grandchild.
that employees may attend a

Charlotte Amanda Coleman

. VALLEY

Group to meet ·

Charlotte McGowan

.

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

~· ,LOCAL STOCKS

• ~oint ~leasant i\egister
• ~allipolis 11\ailp m:ribune

The Dilly Sentinel • Page. A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Penalties stiffened for soliciting sex from minors

Coroner rules in fatal crash

Recruiters return with list

PageA2

Portrait
Opportunity

Saturday, March 31st- ttam- 7pm
At

Illusions in

Mic:tdh~pc~rt

cont.mporory looks • col'9free looks • closslc looks
We Have It All

-

g~J~;o,u
S. Second 992·2550 Middleport

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Judge clean OSU in suit
COLUMBUS (AP) - A judge has found that Ohio State
University was not liable in the death of a graduate student
who got sick while climbing a Himalayan glacier in 1997.
Ohio Court of Claims Judge Warren Bettis ruled Wednesday in a $21 million wrongful death lawsuit brought by the
family of Shawn Wight.
They had claimed the university did not have proper plans
for evacuation when their son got sick while climbjng the
23,000-foot Dasuopu Glacier in western China.
Wight, 26, died of a lung infection· that possibly was linked
to a blood clot he developed during the 'climb up the glacier
to find ancient ice cores for a global warming project.

Jail policy concerns council
CLEVELAND (AP) - The city needs to expand jail capacity and end a "straight release" practice of freeing criminal suspects, the Cleveland City Council president said.
Michael Polensek said Wednesday council will decide
whether to pass legislation to abolish the release practice,
adopted in 1994 to ease jail overcrowding.
Under straight release, people arrested for certain crimes are
booked and fingerprinted, but are released while evidence is
provided to Cuyahoga County prosecutors.
.
C leveland Police Chief Martin Flask said police arrest about
340 people each day, bot have only 147 holding cells . About
3,800 people are given straight releases annually, usually for
drug offenses.

••

'lbursd•y, M•rch u, 2001

•

COLUMBUS (AP) - Armed with
blankets and condoms, a Cincinnati disc
jockey showed up at a Xenia park last
spring intending to have sex with a 14year-old girl he had met on the Internet.
But the teen-ager was reaDy a police
detective waiting to arrest the 50-yearold man.
He and 16 others caught in a yearlong
Internet sting were charged with misdemeanors,. frustrating Xenia officials who
wanted stricter penalties.
"He pleaded no contest, paid a fine,
was put on probation, got 30 days suspended jail time, and off he went;' police
Lt. Daniel Donahue said. "That's the best
we could do."
Beginning Thursday, police in Ohio
will be · able to charge adults with

dren are home that they are safe, but
people are out there on the Internet just
waiting for them to log on," Austria said.
"Today we have more and more children
on the Internet and we must make It a
safe environment for them."
Police officers across the state incre:l6ingly have been entering Internet chat
rooms under the guise of teen-agers.
They wait for adults to· contact them for
sex and set up a meeting place and time.
"It's out there, it's happening all the
time. Almost any law enforcement officer who does this calls it shoo.ting fish in
a barrel," said Michael SuUivan, an assistations using a telecommuni.cations tant prosecutor in Cuyahoga County. "It
doesn't take long to be hit upon by the
device.
"We assume that just because our chi!- perpetrators .''

felonies if they use the Internet .or tele·
phone to solicit sex from minors, even if
the person on the other end is an officer
pretending to be a teen-ager. Offenders
could face up to 18 months in prison
and $5,000 fine.
Th~ misdemeanor charge previously
applied in such cases carries a maximum
penalty of six months in jail and a $1,000
fine .
Sen. Steve Austria, a Republican from
Beavercreek, sponsored the new law last
session after Xenia officials told him that
they believed stricter punishments were
needed. Besides increasing the penalties,
he wanted to specifically include solici-

a

Prosecutors want adult trial

Ohio weather
Friday, March 23
forecast for

RAVENNA (AP) - A, man may have died behind the
wheel before his pickup truck went left of center in Portage
County's Brimfield Township, killing a Medina County
woman and her son on Jan. 18, a coroner said.
·
Portage County Coroner Roger G. Marcial said Wednesday.
that Richard L. Linger Jr., 36, had ingested a " lethal level" of
a painkiller.
Marcial said Linger was probably "dead before the colli.
SlOn."
In the collision, he suffered no serious internal or external
injuries, the coroner said.

PA.

.. . I

DAYTON (AP) - Prosecutors want a 14-year-old boy
acc used of shooting a woman on Feb. 6 to be tried as an adu'lt.
Mitchell Harvey of Dayton is charged with nine feloni es
and a misdemeanor stemming from a half-day spree that
ended with him leadin g police on a chase in ·a stolen car.
Judge Michael B. Murphy of Montgomery County Juvenjle
Court began hearing testimony Wednesday on prosecutors '
request to move the case to adult court.
Harvey is charged with delinquency by reason of felonious
assault, felonious ass&gt;ult on a police officer, carrying a con~
cealed knife, carrying a concealed handgun, aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, fleeing and eluding police, burglary,
grand theft of a firearm and having a fuearm while under
restrictions from a previous conviction.

Chiefs son gets probation
DAYTON (AP) -Three men, including the son of DayW.VA.
ton's acting police chief, have been placed under intensive
probation for up to five years for assaulting two men in a
·
parking lot in October.
A probation violation could result in eight years iri prisoh,
Judge Jeffrey E. Froelich of Montgomery County Common
Pleas Court told the men Wednesday. .
·
·
SuMy Pt Cloucty CIOu&lt;t,'
ShOwtll T-storma
Rain
Flurrlas
Snow
lett
Joel R . Thomas, 2l, of Dayton, the son of public safety
director and acting police chief John Thomas; Charles Olan
resume Friday in Washington. Comair has said that if no Trussell Jr., 24, ofVandalia; and Jack Clarence Elson II, 23, of
agreement is reached and pilots walk out, it would suspend all Dayton, left one of their victims with two shattered eye sockflight operations but would keep about 4,000 otber employ- ets, police 'said.
Froelich ordered that all three remain involved in alcohol
ees on the job.
and violence treatment ·programs, stay employed, and not frequent any establishment where alcohol is its primary purpose.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A team of recruiters from Cleveland's public schools is returning Thursday from India pleased
with a list of 61 candidates to fill 50 math, science or special
education teaching jobs.
·
&lt;:;arol Hauser, the district's personnel director and one of
three recruiters from the Cleveland district who went to
India, plans to make formal offers after further evaluating the
candidates.
.
The urban school district with 77,000 students will pay a
recruiting fee of $4,000 per teacher fot each of the next three
years to the New York-based Teachers Placement Group,
which paid ·for the three Cleveland school district employees
to tal&lt;e the two-week recruiting trip.
Hauser said the fee, which could amount to $600,000 after
DAYTON' (AP)'-' Ambitious plans ·are being ftiatle" 'f(Sr a
three years, was the unavoidable cost of recruitment in areas of
17-day festival to celebrate the 1OOth anniversary o! powered
high need.
flight in )lily 2003 - if funding can be found.
,.,
A group called Inventing Flight envisions barges and pa~l­
ions with flight-related themes, stage shows, roving entertainers,
downtown parades and a rally of hot-air balloons and
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Comair, with only weekend negot·
tiations standing between the regional airline and a strike by blimps at.the Air Force Museum.
It
also
wants
the
festival
to
include
annual
events
not
norits pilots, planned to began canceling flights Thursday.
"We want to reach an agreement as quickly as possible and mally connected with aviation, such as the. city's Fourth of
we are diligently working toward that goal," Comair spokes- July celebration, the dowptown CityFolk Festival and' the
woman Meghan Glynn said Wednesday, "But we also must Black Cultural Festival at the Montgomery County f'air~
take some precautions in the best interest of our custon\ers grounds.
"If yo.u look at the total activities, it's probably in the range
and employees."
C..:omair pilots have rejected the company's five-year con- of $20 (million) to $30 n1illion ," Inventing Flight Chairman J.
.
l"
tract offer and could go on strike as early as t 2:01 a.m. Mon- Bradford Tillson said.
day, when a 30-day cooling-off period ends.
Mediated tal~ with the Air Line Pilots Association are to

......

0---~-~·

FuncUni sought for festival

I

Comalr to cancel flights

{(

"

Taft urges unlvenltles to .
continue pushing for funding
ty trustees. "I would strongly
encourage you to remain
active and vigilant in continuing to advocate your case to
members of the House and
Senate."
Under Taft's 2002- 2003
budget proposal, public colleges and universities would
receive $2.6 billion in 2002
and $2.7 billion the following
year.
That is a $784 million dif-

COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov.
Bob Taft on Wednesday
warned Ohio's public universities to remain uvigilant" in
lobbying for money in the
upcoming iwo-year budget.
"We face a school-funding
· challenge, an explosion of
Medicaid costs and almost no
growth in state revenues due
to slowdowns · in the national
economy;' Taft told an annual
conference of public universi-

~ Thul'lday, M1rch 22, 2001

City awaits possible layoffs
CINCINNATI (AP) - CiJ=Y officials are bracing for possible layoffs atThePr'octer' &amp; Gamble Co., which has. long been
an important source of executive leadership, corporate dona·
;
tions and payroll taxes .
P&amp;G declined to comment Wednesday on reports that onginated in The Wall Street Journal that the company was contemplating layoffs of up to 22,000 employees from its worldwide work force of about 110,000.
The company scheduled a Thursday teleconference with
investors.
City Manager john Shirey said he would meet Thimqay
with P&amp;G's director of government relations. P&amp;G asked ior
a similar meeting the last tin1e it announced major l~yoffs, last
year, Sl\irey said.

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

ference from what the Ohio
Board of Regents had sought
over the two years. Lawmakers
must ·send Taft their version of
the budget for his signature by
·
July 1.
House
Speaker
Larry
Householder, a Republican
from Glenford, introduced a
school-funding plan last week
that threatened even deeper
cuts to state agencies, including higher education.

..

Noah Michael carson

" CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Noah Michael Carson, son of
Mindy B. Carson of Charleston, was stillborn Tuesday, March
' ~0. 2001 at Womens &amp; Children's Hospital, Charleston.
' Surviving in addition to his mother are her grandmother,
Tammy S. Carson of Mason; her godmother, Michelle L. Car40n of Mason, W.Va.; grandfather, George E. Carson of New
Haven; godfather, Michael Cook of Charleston; and several
aunts, uncles and cousins.
~- Graveside se,..;;ces will be 1 p.m. Friday at Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire, with Pastor Ron Branch officiating. There will
_be no visitation. Arrangements are by Foglesong Funeral
_Home, Mason.
·
·

MASON, W.Va. - Charlotte Amanda Carr Coleman, 60,
,.Mason, died Tuesday, March 20, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital, foUowicg a brief illness.
.
Born Sept. 7, 1940 in Point Pleasant, she was a daughter of
··the late Leslie (Boone) and Ruth Elizabeth (Downey) Carr. .
She was a homemaker and member of Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Middleport.
She was preceded in death by two sons, Steven Schneider and
·;Kenneth Scott Wolfe; and a sister, Rita Yeauger.
, Survivors include three daughters and sons-in-law, Jea nie
, Schneider and Jeff Boggs of Cincinnati, Cindy Schneider and
Rick Baker of Logan, and Julee Wolfe and Sean Meadows of
_Hartford, W.Va.; a son, Bob Schneider Jr. of Mason; a sister and
· .brother-in-law, Nancy and Mike Griffith of Pomeroy; a broth. er, Ronald Carr of Pomeroy; and nine grandchildren.
., Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
· Point Pleasant, with Pastor Mark Mora officiating. Burial will
be in Letart Falls Cemetery,. Friends may .call at the funeral
, 'home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.

Charles A. McKown

· Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001'
12:00 Noon
Insertion Date:
. FRIDAY, APRIL 13,2001

. . . . . . . . .. .. .. . . ..
'

.

~

an is now the second vice president of Buckeye Boys State,

structu re.''

••

••
••
...

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~

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Our main concern In all storleals
. to be eccurate. If you know of an
ei'rCr In a story, call the newsroom
•~ at
(740) 992·2156.

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Call
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For More Information

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Thl main number Ia 992·2156.

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Ext. 14

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992-215

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News Department•
Depanmant extentions are:

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,I

:, To 1end .. mall

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dallystnUnol 0 yahoo.com

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i

'

Instrumental and vocal music

"

(USPS 213...01

Ohio Yolloy PubUohlng Co.
Publ~hOCI ovtry aftemooo. Monday
through friday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,· Ohio.
Second-class
polllge pold at Pomoroy.
Memblr: The Assoelatect Press and
the Ohio Newapaper Association .

Board meeting

Services and chairman of the
LE'PC at 992-4541.

RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education will
meet Tuesday, 4 p.n\. at Syraci•se Elementary School.

VSC will meet

Medic unit offers a different
level of care than that 'provided
by the EMTs. An EMT -

for the evening was presented
by Dee and Dallas &lt;!nd the .
Boys. Pies and cakes along.with
POMEROY
Meigs
pie carriers, doll beds and a tool
chest made by Eddie Ball were County Chamber of Comauctioned o!fby Struble for the merce will host its 12th annual dinner/dance on· March 3 1
benefit of post proJects.
at Royal .Oak Reso rt. Doors
will open at 6:30 p.m .
financial burden, the possibiliry
Dinner will be catered by
of the . closure of the Meigs Vaughan's Catering and will
Mines. which contributes a sig- be served buffet style at 7 p.m.
nificant portion to the operat- A silent auction w ill be held
ing budget, makes the future · with items donated by local
looks dismal;' she said.
mercha nts and crafters.
In light of a recent report of
"Just in Tyme" will provide
a meeting of Rutland Village the· music. Tickets are $20 per .

basic or intermediate - · can

Council, the commissioneT$

which last summer was attend-

ed by about I ,400 boys.
Gladys Cumings presented a
birthday gift to Post Commander Gerald Rought and talked
briefly about .the projects of the

EMS
from PageAl

.

'

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

from PapAl

auxiliary. Past commanders and
past auxiliary
presidents,
including longtime active
member, Mary Martin, were
introduced.

Dinner/dance

have been questioned about the
billing of patients who are
either transported or treated by
the EMS system.
"The possibility of the billing
of residents was only discussed
as an option to help balance the
budget;' Lyons said. "This
option was the most discussed,
as the board of trustees felt that
that counry is already taxed
enough."

"If billing is implemented,
the bill would be directed to
either. insurance carriers,
Medicare or Medicaid. Ifbilling
were established, it would not
be for a i'rofilt. It would be used
to imprpve the system, provide
for more personnel, upgrade
equipm~ni, and help offiet the
ever-elevating costs of supplies
needed to operate the system;'
she added.
"The board also feels that
this is the most fair option as
people who do not use the system will not be required to pay
anything above the three onemill levies now in place;' Lyons
said.

person and are now on sale at

Class offered

LEPCto meet

'Themes"
A Unique
Children's

Sub1crlptlon rates

lnoklo ~~· ea'Gniir

13 Wtokl

26 weokt •
S2 Wtel&lt;l

$27 .30
$53.82
$105.56

· Rolli Ollllkll Mlfgo County
13 Wookl
$29.25
25Wttkl
$5&amp;.88
52 Wttkl
$109.72

POMEROY - A marriage
li ce nse has. .been issued in

Meigs County Probate Cou rt
to R obit Kas byup, 29, and
Casey Lee Kashyup, 28, both
of Pomeroy.

Prosecutor
named

EMS runs

MORE LOCAL NEWS .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS .

tiona to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.

MaU sublcriDtlon

Issued license

Plays slated

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

st. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Sublarlbel'l not deslrtng to pay thl
earner may remit In advance direct kl
Tho Dally Sindnol. Credit wtB bo given
earner taCh week. No subscrtpdorrby
mall permltt~ In areea wl'ltrt hOme
Clrritr 1trvlct 11 available.

Meigs

Service
m~et on
Munday at 7:.10 p.m. at 117 E.
Memorial Dnvt'.

POMEROY
Brent
the chamber office, 238 W
Main St., Pomeroy, or through Saunders of Galli a County has
been appointed special prosethat office, 992-5005.
Title sponsors cost $200 for cutor in the Common Pleas
a gold sponsor, $100 for a sil- Court criminal case against
ver sponsor or . $75 for a Daniel J. Murphy of Long
bronzesponsor. Those with an Bottom.
item or serviae to donate may · Murphy is charged with
contact Margie Landers at the aggravated burglary.
Saunders was appointed
chamber office.
due to a conflict on the part
of Prosecutor Pat Story.

Poltmat•r: Send address correc·

By carrier or motor route
enowooll
$2
Ono month
$8.70
0nt VIII
$104
Dilly
. SO cents

POMEROY
Cottnty V~teran s
Commission wi1l

POMEROY
Meigs
High School drama students
POMEROY - · Units of
will present their annual
senior plays including "Who the Meigs Emergency Service
Am I This Time?" and :The answered seven calls for assisCrazy Mixed-Up Island of tance on Wednesday. Units
Dr. Moreau" on April6 . Price responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
of admission is $3 for adults
12 :03 am., Middleport
and '$2 for stUdents.
Police Department, assisted by
Pome roy, J. R . 131ackwell,
treated;
·
I :27 p.m., Oh io 7. assisted
POMEROY A free
by
. Tuppers Plains , Paula
Ohio Hunter Education Class
Camden-Clark
will be held Monday through Brewer,
Wednesday from 6-9 p.m., Memorial Hospital ;
3:04 p.m. , l'ine Tree Drive,
and March 31 from 9 a.m.
until noon at the Pomeroy ass isted by Tuppers Plains,
Gun Club on Pomeroy Pike. Myrtle Craft, treated;
3:20 p.m .; Dorcas Road,
Class size is limited, and
assisted
by Ra cine, Loui se
registration is made by calling ·
Meigs Soil and Water Conser- Wolfe, Jackson General Hosvation District at 992 -4282. pital.
POMEROY
Door prizes will be awarded.
9:29 a.m., Condor Street,
asSlSted by Central Dispatch,
Betty Webster, St. Josep h
able at the Buckeye Lots at the
POMEROY
M eigs Memorial Hospital.
far north end of Fred Taylor
RUTLAND
Drive. Additional parking is also County Emergency Planmng
2:30 p.m., Noble Summit,
available at the lots near St. Committee will hold its ,reguRaymond Salser, treated .
Johns Arena and near C'lhio lar meeting on March 27 at
SYRACUSE
11 :30 a.m. in the conferen ce
Stadium.
I :14 p.m.,Third Street, auto
The second option is to take room of the Multipurpose tire, Jennif~ r Michael owner,
U.S. 33 north 'to SR 104 west Senior Center.
Plans for the 2001 exercise no injuries.
(Refugee Road) . Take SR I 04
west to 1-7 1 north, travel north will be discussed. along with
· on l-71 SR 315 to the Lane the up coming terrorism risk
Avenue exit. Upon turning
right onto Lane Avenue, get
into the left-hand lane and prepare to turn left at the first traffie light onto Fred T.1ylor Drive.
Parking is available at the
Buckeye Lots at the far north
end of Fred Taylor Drive.Additiona! parking is also available. at
Subscribe today.
the lots near St. Johns Arena .
992-2 15fi

Directions to
Schottenstein Center

~

~

('

Legion

in forecast

....--------------,
~: The Daily Sentinel

assessment course to be held
April 10 and II in Gallipolis.
The intent of the course
assessments is to assist local
governments to better prepare, respond , and recover
from potential incidents and
provide a fomm to identifY
and convey current needs to
the state and the Department
of Justice.
·
Any questions concernmg
the ·meeting can directeQ to
Robert E. Byer, director of
the Meigs County Emergency M anagement Disaster

WEATHER

-~Wintry weekend

~

spokesman St.uart Roy said
Chao wants to take advantage
of special expertise at the Justice Department.
" It's a very complex issue
dealing with long-term exposure to radiation," he said. "She
believes it can be handled
more efficiently at DOJ
beca use they have _the infra· Ohio
Sens.
George
Voinovich and Mike De Wine
sent th e White House a letter
explaining that the Radiation
Exposure Compensation Act
(RECA) payments handled by
the Justice Department are
one-time apology paymen.ts,
not a medical claim$ remlbursement program. •

meeting in L~ncaster .

6'·

Department balks at starting new program
inevitably result in a delay."
In a letter to the White
House, Chao suggested that
the Justice Department be put
in charge. of the Energy
Employees · Occupational Illness Compensation Program.
Chao's letter said that the
department has the experience 'to do the job because it
handles a small program giving one-time payments to uranium miners, miUers and peaple who lived downwind of
nuclear test sites.
"To create a new infrastructure when DOJ already
has the tools to effectively
impleme'nt ana administer this
program IS duplicative," she
wrote.
Labor
Department

Office will dose

' Life Support,
provide Basic
RACINE - Charles A. McKown , 77, Racine, died Tuesday, including oxygen administraMarch 20, 200 I in Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport.
tion, splinting, glucose adminis. Born Oct. 30, 1923 in Spencer, W.Va., son of the late Cecil tration, bleeding control and the
. and Alice Starcher McKown, he was a retired carpenter and a use of an automated external
· veteran of the U.S. Navy during World War II.
defibrillator.
" Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth Harvey McKown; four
A paramedic can provide,
,daughters and ~hree sons-in-law, Ellen and David Bone of along with all of the basic and
. Malta, Rebecca Lange ofTroy, Mich., Sarah and Joaquin Diaz intermediate skills, Advanced
·'of Lancaster, Calif., apd Amy and Roger Speakman of Lewis Life Support treatment.
. Center; four sons and three daughters-in-law, Patrick and
The EMS operates from
~:Dorothy McKown of Opp, Ala., Shane McKown of Batavia, funding provided by three per·" Thomas and Becky McKown of Beverly, and Peter and Carla manent one-miD operating
_ McKown of Zanesville; and several grandchildren; a brother, levies. These levies provide the
Orval McKown; and two sisters, Ella McKown and Bess Star- basic · financies needed to keep
·
., &lt; don.
the system implemented.
. . He was preceded in death by a son, Michael McKown; and
This includes wages for
six sisters and three brothers.
administration,
dispatchers,
' There will be no services and no calling hours.ArrangementS maintenance crews, training,
are by Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
and p~medi~s and EMTs for
·
. .:'(\!~
r.,Jr.~
·" ~ :-''. ·
. ..
,
Medic 5·. These levies are also
expected to support an:·needed
purchases to include bandages
and other medical supplies.
. .
In the 1970s, when the levies
were implemented, this was
possible. Now, with health care
., av THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Highs on the weekend will costs at an all-time high , it is no
longer possible for the levies to
. Tri-county area residents be mostly in the 30s. Lows
Illl"et the costs, Lyons said.
'·'will enjoy another day of will be in the 20s.
"To add to the increasing
Sunset tonight will be at
sunny and. mild weather
before enduring another win- 6:45, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:31 a.m.
'try blast.
Weather forecast:
''' Temperatures
will
Tonight
.. . Partly cloudy.
approach 60 degrees on Friday, the National Weather Low .in the lower 30s. West
wind 5 to I 0 mph.
Service said.
Friday... Mostly
cloudy.
•• A .cold front- will usher in
~ more winterlike air for the High in the upper 50s. West
T~e story in Wednesday's
wind 5 to 10 mph .
: 'weekend.
paper
with the directions to the
·Friday
night ... Mostly
~. Snow showers are possible
Schottenstein Center for Eastc
~on Saturday and Sunday as the cloudy early, then rain likely
~l:old air flows across the Great from late evening on. Low in ern's1 state tournament game
were wrong. The directions
the lower 40s.
~Lakes.
~.
',
should have read:
Because of construction on
I-70, you have two options to
get to Schottenstein Center.
~Rocky
Boots4"1»
General
Electric
39
~AEP - ·43l,
The fi':'t option is to take U.S.
GKNLY -10),
RD Shell- 56),
~·Arch Coal - 26h
33 north to 1-270 South
Harley Davidson.
Sears~ 35~~
, i\kzo-43
toward Cincinnati. Take I-270
38\
Shonoy's-1
~ AmTechiSBC - .40
Kmart-6%
,.Aihland Inc. - 37
Wai·Mart- 48%
to 1-71 north. Travel 1-71 north
Kroger- 23%
~AT&amp;T-22~
Wendy's-21
to SR 315 north and take SR
Landi End - 26%
" Bank one - 35
Worthington - 9
Lttl.15~
to' the Lane Avenue exit.
315
~Bob Evaris -18'l.
Dally stoct&lt; reports are
Oak Hill Financial
~BorgWamar - 40~
the. 4 p.m. closing Upon turning right onto Lane
13~
c'PhamP!on - 2'•
quotes of the previous Avenue, get into the left-hand
!iCharmlng Shops- 5'1. OVB-24'·
day's transacUons, pro·
BBT-33
~City Holding - 10),
lane and 'Prepare to turn left at
vtded by Smith Part·
Peoplas - 18
"'Federal Mogul - ·3
.ners at Advest Inc. at the first traffic light onto Fred
Premier~USB-20
Gallipolis.
Taylor Drive .. Parking is availRookwall- 40'o
~Gannau - 56'·
~

WASHINGTON (AP) In just four months, the government is supposed to start
taking applications from jobsickened nuclear workers eligible for special federal compensation.
Congress gave the .Labor
Department $60.4 million to
set up the program .
. But Labor Secretary Elaine
Chao doesn't want to do it,
and lawmakers with ailing
constituents said Wednesday
they're worried about people
with incurable illnesses having
to wait too long for compensation if C hao gets her way.
"Cancer is killing my constituents right now," said R~p.
Ted Strickland, D-Ohio. "This
will, 111 my judgment_.

POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Support Group will
FLORISSANT, Mo. - Charlotte Ann McGowan, 79, of meet on Thursday at 1 p.m.
Julie Rice will speak about
florissant, died on Saturday, March 17, 2001 .
She attended Purdue University and was later empl~d by massage therapy.
Curtiss Wright during World War II, and by North American
Aviation in Columbus.
She married Warren McGowan, a co-worker at N.A.A., on
POMEROY
Meigs
April 11, 1953.They moved to Florissant in 1971.
In addition to her husband, Warren, she is survived by a daugh- County Board of Elections
ter, Stephanie (Ron); twin sons, Steven Gan) and Michael; five office will close on Friday so
. grandchildren and one great grandchild.
that employees may attend a

Charlotte Amanda Coleman

. VALLEY

Group to meet ·

Charlotte McGowan

.

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

LOCAL BRIEFS

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The Dilly Sentinel • Page. A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Penalties stiffened for soliciting sex from minors

Coroner rules in fatal crash

Recruiters return with list

PageA2

Portrait
Opportunity

Saturday, March 31st- ttam- 7pm
At

Illusions in

Mic:tdh~pc~rt

cont.mporory looks • col'9free looks • closslc looks
We Have It All

-

g~J~;o,u
S. Second 992·2550 Middleport

�PageA4

ion

The Daily Sentinel

.,.rch 22, 2001

·: _Th_e_oa_ny_s_en_tm_ei_ _

I

C?Th"UR
--~~~

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

. . . . . . . . . . . . .Cilm

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlea W. Govey
Publisher
Chari- Hoeflich
General Managar

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
Diane K•y Hill
Controller

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Dear Ann Landers: I am five
months' pregnant with my first baby:
My husband and I are very excited
about it, but we are also a little nervous. Please explain to me why people seem to go out of their way to
spoil the pleasure of our anticipation.
H ere are some of the things they have
said:
"Your marriage will never be the
same."
"Your husband w ill treat you like
you are his mother instead of his

wife."

iltlllt, llol JII NOMiiJkt.

TIN opinionr txpNtml ln tlu ~oiUMn J.low lJTf tlu ~otuttwu oftlu Olt.lo V41111
PublilhinJ Co.'s tditoriGI bolud, '"'"" othfrwU1 110td.

"Expect to cut way back qn sex.
M otherhood does that."
"You wiD never go out and have
fun together or have a meaningful

NATIONAL VIEWS

Lessons
The biggest one is, don't .
laugh off school threats

I

1!

• The (Columbia, S.C.) State, on the recent school sltooting
in California:There's a fallacy that many of us fall into whenever another episode of violence erupts at one of the nation's
schools.
We generalize. We do it because we want to draw conclusions, to learn lessons. We want to imbue such events with
meaning, rather than think something so horrible could happen to no purpose....
But every incident seems to happen for its own rea.&lt;ons reasons that are difficult to fathom , even for the perpetrators.
The lesson is this: When a kid threatens violence, don't
ignore it. Young Andy WiUiams had told his few friends repeatedly that he was going to get a gun and start shooting people.
In at least one instance, he told an adult. No one took the
slight, passive boy seriously.
Someone should have. And so should we all, whenever
someone talks like that. Sure, most cif the time kids are just talking. But as we 've just been horribly reminded, sometimes
they're not.
• Palladium-Item, Richmond, Ind., on e-voting: Election
officials looking for more accurate methods of counting votes
should resist the lure of using the Internet as a technological
.cure for voting problems.
·Moving toward remote Internet voting, as some states
already have done, might well cause more problems than it
would solve, according to a study compiled by the National
Science Foundation.
That might seem like an incongruous opinion coming from
the government agency that served for many years as the custodian and promoter of the Internet. But the foundation's
report sounds a prudent note of caution against rushing to find
technological solutions to the voting woes that plagued last
·
·
November's selection.
Even if technology was available to make the process secure,
inspiring public confidence in the system would be a significant challenge. Although the Internet has found widespread
.popularity, many potential e-voters likely are unfamiliar with
- or afraid of- the technology.
If nothing else, the 2000 election underscored the vital
importance of preserving the public's confidence in the election process. At this point, the Internet does not appear to be
the answer for accomplishing that goal.
.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, March 22, the 81st day of2001. There are
284 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: ,
On March 22, 1765, Britain enacted the Stamp Act to raise
money from the American colonies and repealed it the following year.
On this date:
In 1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel
with Commodore James Barron near Washington, D. C.
In 1882, Congress outlawed polygamy.
In 1895,Auguste and Louis Lumiere showed their first movie
tu an invited audience in Paris.
In 1933, during Prohibition, President Franklin Roosevelt
signed a measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2
percent alcohol legal.
·
·
.
In 1941, the Grand Coulee Darn in Washingtoti state went
into operation.
In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adoption of a
charter in Cairo, Egypt.
In 1972, Congress sent the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution to the states for ratification. (It fell
three states short of the 38 needed for approval.)
In 1978, Karl Wallenda, the 73-year-old patriarch of"The flying Wallendas" high-wire act, fell to his death while attempting
to walk a cable strung between two hotels in San Juan, Puerto.
Rico.
In 19951 convicted Long Island Rail Road gunman Colin
Ferguson was sentenced to life in prisf1 n for killing six people. ·
Ten years ago: A U.S. warplane shot down a second Iraqi jet
fighter that had violated the cease-fire ending the Persian Gulf
War. High school instructor Pamela Smart, accused of manipulating her student-lover into killing her husband, was convicted
in Exeter, N.H., of murder-conspiracy.
Five yean ago: The shuttle Atlantis carrying astronaut Shannon Lucid to a rendezvous with the Russian space station "Mir,"
blasted off from C ape Canaveral, Fla .
One y~a r ago: Journeying to the cradle of Christianity, Pope
John Paul II knelt and prayed in Bethlehem at the traditional
spot of Jesus' birth. Some 1,100 women denied jobs with the
now- defunct U.S. Information Agency and its broadcast branch,
the Voice of America, won $508 million from the government in
the largest-ever settlement of a federal sex discrimination case.

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
conversation again. You'D notice the
change right away."
"Your house will be a mess. The
tim thing to go are the carpets."
"You will never have any clothes
without a stain somewhere."
"Froin now on, money will always

.

Nat
Hentoff ·
COLUMNIST
democracy banner in Tianannien Square.
Chinese psychiatrists, aware of what the
government expected of them, prompdy
diagnose,d him as "a paranoid psychotic"
suffering1 from ' "political .monomania."
For the next seven years he was "treated"
at a police hospital for the criminally
msane.
The World Psychological Association
. will meet next year. A group· of European
and American doctors are · lobbying
national psychiatric associations around
the world to consider censuring or suspending China, The New York Times
reports. What will American psychiatric
organizations dol
In a front-page Washington Times
report, David R . Sands noted that a new
Amnesty International report had found
that "torture is committed in the full
range ofstate institutions, from police stations to 'reeducation through labor
camps,' to people's homes and workplaces."
.
Tided "Thrture:A Growing Scourge in
China - Time for Action,'' the report
documents that "a growing range of oflicial.! are perpetrating torture: tax collectors, judges, prosecutors, court clerks,
family planning officers, village and party
leaders, and security official! ....Victims or

observers who expose the torture are
themselves targeted for reprisals."
The report also mentions that "Prodemocracy and labor rights advocate
Zhang Lin, at a Reeducation Through
Labor camp since November, 1998, .
required to work 14 hours a day while in
poor health, beaten whenever he resisted
or argued with guards about it .. . was tortured six times, as a result of which he
twiccr attempted suicide.
"!lie was beaten by other inmates who,
acting on orders from the guardS, had
stripped and dragged him on the ground
for long distances, and forced his head
under water until he submitted to the
guards. There has been no indication that
his .complaints hav'e been investigated or
that measures have been taken to protect
him against further ill-treatment during
the remainder of his 3-year term."
Perhaps President Bush, Secretary of
St;tte Colin Powell and the members. of
Congress who voted for permanent normal 'trade relations with China might
consider sending Zhang Lin a get-well
card, along with their assurances that, in
time, the spirit of the free market will lead
to an official abandonment of torture and
the horrors of forced psychiatric treatment of citizens afflicted with "political

monomania."
The international community, including the United States, celebrated. the
Olympics in Hider's Germany with the
Fuhrer in attendance. If China succeeds
in becoming the host of the 2008
Olympics, will America send its athletes?
If we do, will any of these athletes refuse
to compete on the grounds of conscience
- and humanity? .

(Nat Hentojf is a nationally renowned
authority on the First Amendment and the
Bill of Rights.)

LAMBRO'S VIEW

Tb stem the economic slide, beifup the tax cut
BY DorwD LAMIRO
·concerns, so he sounded the alarm.
WASHINGTON - Last week's deep
In a memorandum to his House colplunge in the Dow sent political tremors leagues, Armey delivered a surprisingly
through the ranks of Republicans, many blunt reappraisal of the president's plan,
of whom now say that President Bush's which he ~d helped push through the
tax cuts need to be beefed up if they are . Hous,e with high hopes. No~ he says \hat
to provide any stimulus to this year's slug- Bush s plan is "a good start. But his plan
gish economy. ·
was drafted in 1999, when the economy
Even .before the Dow's fall to below was much stronger."
10,000 on March 14, there were signs of
While the president continues to charfear and insecurity among GOP leaders acterize the economy as "sputtering,''
that the U.S. economy is tanking and that Armey has a much stronger description:
Bush's gradually phased-in, six-year taX- "an econ~mic emergency." And he t:hink$
cut plan will offet virtually no stimulus that the Bush plan is too timid in the
this year (a mere $5.6 billion in a $10 tril- short-term to deal with it.
The stock market's sharp decline "again
lion economy) to halt its decline.
Republican leaders who spearheaded shows us that we must consider a much
Bush's taX-cut plan through the House· ~r taX cut. Today, circumstances have
earlier this month had been talking up the fundamentally changed,'' he said in his
need for a sttpnger first-year stimulus, but memo.
.Bush may still be saying that the size
they kept to• the White House message
and stood behind the plan that is now and structure of his plan are 'just right:'
before the Senate. But all that changed last ·but Armey - in a break with the White
week, when a panicked Wall Street went House line - no longer believes that. He
into a steej, slide and neW indicaton is telling his party that it shquld not tie
· showed the economy growing weaker.
itself to the president's tax-cut numbers or
That's when House Majority Leader the timing of the cuts.
Dick Armey, an economics professor by
"We should no longer be restricted by
trade, decided to act. The economy is in a a proposal or a tax-cut number that was
dangerous state, he told his .coneagues, and not designed for the situation we face
the president's $1.6, trillion plan needs to today,'' the How,e Republi~an leader said.
be dramatically enlarged, perh.ips to $2
Armey's break with the administration
,F.illion. It was time to go public with his .. about what is need£d to revive the econ-

'

omy is the latest in a series of doubts
expressed by Bush's GOP allies in Congress and even his economic adviser in the
White House. - .
Ho11se Speaker Dennis Hastert and
Senate Majority Leader Ttent Lott are
simllarly fearful that the U.S. economy is
being pulled down by panic·on Wall Street
·and the rapid deterioration of major global economies from Japan to E~®pe. They
believe that stronger medicine is needed
to boost business investment. Both are
calling for making a cut in the tax on capital gains part of the taX pl:l,n.
. ·
But when I asked Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, about that, he
threw cold water on any kind of capitalgains tax cuts. Capital gains rates "have
already been reduced. The president
thinks that the first priority is to get the
income-tax rates down,'~ Rove told me.
Even White House economic adviser
Larry Lindsey, the architect of Bush's taxcut plan, confided to me recendy that he
wished "the tax cut was larger in the fust
year."When I asked him ifhe believed that
the Bush plan as passed by the House
would tum the economy around this year,
his ominous response was "I have no
opinion."

(Donald lAmbro is filling in for Morton
Kondracke.)

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 meets at hall, 7
p.m. Special drawing.

signup for the Tuppers Plains
baseball and softball season, 9
to 11 a.m. at ball field.

POMEROY- Caring and
Sharing Support Group, 1 p.m.
Julie Rice will speak abou.t
massage therapy.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Youth Baseball League
signups , 10 a.m. to noon ,
Syracuse Mayor's Office.
March 29 is deadline.

• POMEROY- Meigs SWCD
.Board of Supervisors regular
meeting, 11 :30 a.m., SWCD
office.

Are we comfortable ·trading with torturers?
Both George W. Bush and his predecessor firmly supported permanent normal. trade relations with China, and Congress agreed. With goods flowing in and
out, China's repression of its citizens who
advocate democracy would lessen. So the
theory went. But, according to the Bush
State Department's annual report last
month on international human rights,
conditions have worsened significandy
for religious organizations and others
who believe in freedom.
There is only one labor union in
·china, and anyone who tries to organize
an independent union winds up in a
"reeducation camp." Zhou Guoqiang, a
laWyer; tried to distribute T-shirts bearing
the Communist slogan "Labor IS Sacred,''
and wound up in 'the Shuanghe Labor
Reeducation Camp, appropriately (for
those who remember Stalin) near the
Russian border. .
.
HIS re-educatlon, as he to~d Enk Eckholm of The New Yotk Ttmes, meant
"(y)ou'd be locked up in a small cell and
struck with electric prods or beaten, and
afterward you'd have to write a self-critif=ism saying that you'd been reeducated."
In the spring issue of Columbia University's Journal of A.lian Law, Robin
Munro, the former director of Human
Rights Watch's Hong Kong office, confirms, with abundant detail, that dissidents
are locked up in psychiatric hospitals and
are subject to a savage "misuse of psychiaery for politically repressive purposes."
The practice "resembles in all key respects
that of the former ·Soviet Union." They
are subject to electroshock "therapy,"
drugged, isolated and diagnosed as stricken with "paranoid psychosis" and sometimes "political monomania:·
For example, Wang Wanxing was
arrested in 1992 for displaying a pro-

Thursday, March 22,2001

POMEROY- Meigs Ministeri·
al Association Lenten service,
7:30p.m., Trinity Congrega·
tiona! Church, with Dee Rader
as speaker.

SUNDAY
· MIDDL!OPORT - Gospel Sing,
MiddlepQrt Church of the
Nazarene, 6:30 p.m. Family
Heritage Singers.

RACINE - Racine American
. Legion Auxiliary 602, 7 p.m.,
Legion hall.

MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
Church of Christ, farewell din·
ner for Tom and Lynn Runyon,
who are leaving for their retire·
ment home in Florida. Dinner
will follow worship services in
church basement. Public inv~­
ed.

POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
• Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi,
· dinner 6:30 at the St. Paul
" Lutheran Church, prepared by
the social committee. ·

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT- OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at Trolle~
.
Station. Auction, drawings and
relreshments.

REEDSVILLE- Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m.,
Reedsville Church of Christ.
; Program will 'include making
; Easter favors for nursing
· home.
.

POMEROY- Veterans Ser·
vice Commission, 7:30 p.m.,
117 E. Memorial Dr.. Pomeroy.

.

· FRIDAY
. POMEROY- Fun, Food and
,, fellowship .at. God's NET, 6:30
. to 10:30 p.m. Video, computer
, and board games, pool tables,
· tree refreshments.
' SALEM CENTER - Star
·, Grange 778 soup supper, 4 to
7 p.m . Public invited. Enter·
talnment.
·
,
·
:
·

SATURDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County
Chapter of Ohio Retired Teach·
era Association, luncheon
meeting, noon, Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. Hal Kneen with pro·
: gram on perennial gardening
and musical selections.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Final

CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, special
meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY_; Ohio Hunter
Education Clas~. through
Wednesday, 6 to 9 p.m., and
Saturday, at Pomeroy Gun
Club. Register at Meigs
SWCD, 992·4282. Door prizes.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Winding Trail
Garden Club meeting, 8 p.m.
Tuesday, home of Valerie Not·
tingham.
The Community Calendar Is
publlahed aa a free service
to non·prollt groups wishing
to announce meatlnga and
special eventa. The calendar
Ia not dealgnad to promote ·
aalee or lund·ralsere of any
type.

be a problem. Forget about luxuries
and the fun stuff. They are a thing of
the pasC:'
Why do people say such terrible
things to expectant couples? Please
explain this to us. We don't get it. Baflled in Ttoy, Ohio
Dear Ttoy: These are friends? They .
don't sound very friendly to me. They
may thin k they are being funny. but
their comme nts are mean and spiteful.
Yo u should be listening to couples
who have solid ·marriages and are
enj oying their offipring. They are 'the
REAL authorities.
Dear Ann Landers: I have b ee n
married to "Jed" for 13 years, and we
. have three beautiful children. I love

my husband dearly. but his insecurities had last summer.
Ann, I am suffocating. I don't want
are driving me crazy.
Last summer, m y children and I vis- to start an argu ment w ith Jed, but I
ited my parents in Florida for two need som e space or I will lose my
weeks. J ed called every day to ask . mind. Am I wrong to want to spend a
where I was going and if I could few weeks with my parents? How ~n
come home earlier. When I did get I get Jed to calm down? - Suffocat•
home, he was depressed and miser- ed in New Jersey
Dear N.J.: Why is Jed so depenable. I insisted we get counseling,
which w e did for four weeks, but I dent? Is h e afraid something terrible
will happen while you are away from
do n't think it helped.
I am planning to visit my pa rents him? When you and the children are
again in the summer, and this time, I visiting your folks, is there a place Jed
would like to stay for three weeks. can go' H ow about a weekend fishing
Every time I bring up the subject, Jed trip with his buddies' T he depression
tells me o ur family should never be j ed suffered last summer sounds like
separated and he ca nnot go · through an ongoing problem. Perhaps medicaan other depressio n like the one he tion would help.

Good hygiene and drugs may cure foot odor

LOCAL EVENTS

HENTOFF'S VIEW

the Bend

"Why do people say such terrible things to expectant couples?

GOLDJU)CtCS aM,"Jirt. BEAR MARK£ f...

The Daily Sentinel

__;_~B=y

Page AS

M ost individ uals with truly
sti cky - in addition to stinky
-feet have an underlying
bacterial or fun gal infec tion of
the feet. I suspect that your
so n has this proble m, too. This
. is usually most apparent in the
skin betwee n the toes,
altho ugh at times it may not
John C. Wolf, D.O.
be obvious to anyone but an
A&gt;sociate Professor
.
J
.
experienced physician. It is
hJill .
of Family Medicine
essential to treat this infection
Answer: I'm sure that many
with
appropr ia te medication
readers chuckl e about your
question , assuming that this is have developed a cultural addition, shoe liners should be in additi on to doing the other
an annoyance rather than a norm that favors smelling removed in the evening to steps I've talked about. Withreal medical problem. Well, sweet and clean like the facilitate their drying out. out medi cal treatment the
sQme individuals do have a bathing products and toiletries Also, any given pair of shoes or bacterial or fungal organism
serious problem with foot that are readily available. The work boots shouldn't be worn that's causing the infection can
odor.We're not talking about a distincdy "human" aroma is more often than every other thrive in moist skin and even
stay alive in the shoes. Once
slight unpleasant tickle to the considered socially unaccept- day for the same reason.
Additional simple measures the underlying infection is
nose when you take your able. Daily bathing may be sufshoes off, but rather, a. severe ficient for some individuals to that are often · beneficial cured, the foot odor usually
odor that interferes with social maintain this socially accept- include a twi ce-daily foot vanishes also. Unfortunately,
interactions - even with the able scent, but most of us need soak. The water should be individuals who are prone to
shoes on. As I know from th e the added help of antiperspi- warm, but not hot enough 'to getting this type offoot infecrest. of your letter, this occ urs rants or deodorants to forestall make the feet sweat, and tion may get it again. Your
despite adequate bathing, and the onset of that undesirable approximately one ounce of nose will tell you if this hapdistilled white vinegar should pens.
that is typical of those with aroma .
this more severe problem.
It wasn 't clear from your let- be mixed into the foot bath
("Family Medicine " is a week·
' Most of us spend the m ajor- ter whether your son has used water. After a few minutes of
/y
column. To submit questions,
ity of our waking hours with an antiperspirant not a soaking, the feet should be
our shoes on. This can make a deodorant on his feet. If patted, not rubbed, dry. An write to Jolin C. Wolf, D. 0.,
local environment for the fe et not, he should do so. It is also additional beneficial measure Ollio University College of
that is warm and moist. It is ' important'that the inside of his is to get those feet out of those Osteopatlzic Medicine, Grosvenor
this combination of warmth shoes stay dry. This can be hot sweaty shoes. Go barefoot Hall, At/tens, Ollio 45701. Past
· and · moisture . that 1s th e accomplished by wearing cot- or wear sandals when · that's columns are available online at
wwwjlzradio.&lt;&gt;IJI IJm.)
underlying cause of foot odor. . ton socks, because they are the practical.
Sweaty feet , just like sweaty most absorbent sock material.
underarms , develop a distinct- A fresh pair should be put on
ly human aroma. Because of at the start of th·e day and
the . abundance of water. we changed again at midday. In
Question: M y son has a
te rrible case of bad foot odor.
His socks smell li ke a co mbination of bleach and a dead
skunk. The foot docto r hasn't
had any ideas that work fo r
him. H e wash es, sprays . etc. , ·
without anything m ore th an
brief improve ment in th e
odor. C an yo u please help

_fimilp

~dicine

(PifHGTIIDt IDUH(
Tlffl'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Good Through Wedneaday 3-211-01

Russell Stover

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POMEROY Elevenmonth-old Luke MoMotaro
~ Knight, son of Staff Sergeant
• Christopher Knight, stationed
at Yokota Air Force Base in
. Japan, and his wife, Junko
Knight, is a featured model in ·
the spring issue of the Japanese magazine, Aprica.
Aprica is a catalog of infant
and children's clothing, accessories· and furnishings, books
and toys.
Luke is the grandson of
1
Kensaku and · Mariko Maeda
. of Hanna City, Japan, and
· Vince and Susann Knight of
, Pomeroy.

~-

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�PageA4

ion

The Daily Sentinel

.,.rch 22, 2001

·: _Th_e_oa_ny_s_en_tm_ei_ _

I

C?Th"UR
--~~~

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

. . . . . . . . . . . . .Cilm

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlea W. Govey
Publisher
Chari- Hoeflich
General Managar

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
Diane K•y Hill
Controller

un,. to tb Hltor tin WlkOtltl. TIN, rllould H kll ·tluln JOO woN. ..tU kturr
16 •ditbtf 11M MIUI N riftvtJ.4JUI iMIIIM Mllntl 4114 t-"plto11• IUU•Nr.
No wuJtnd krun will IH '"bliJIIH. lAttin rll~ IN Itt roM WM, fiiiiiN••Utt

U'l tub~ct

Dear Ann Landers: I am five
months' pregnant with my first baby:
My husband and I are very excited
about it, but we are also a little nervous. Please explain to me why people seem to go out of their way to
spoil the pleasure of our anticipation.
H ere are some of the things they have
said:
"Your marriage will never be the
same."
"Your husband w ill treat you like
you are his mother instead of his

wife."

iltlllt, llol JII NOMiiJkt.

TIN opinionr txpNtml ln tlu ~oiUMn J.low lJTf tlu ~otuttwu oftlu Olt.lo V41111
PublilhinJ Co.'s tditoriGI bolud, '"'"" othfrwU1 110td.

"Expect to cut way back qn sex.
M otherhood does that."
"You wiD never go out and have
fun together or have a meaningful

NATIONAL VIEWS

Lessons
The biggest one is, don't .
laugh off school threats

I

1!

• The (Columbia, S.C.) State, on the recent school sltooting
in California:There's a fallacy that many of us fall into whenever another episode of violence erupts at one of the nation's
schools.
We generalize. We do it because we want to draw conclusions, to learn lessons. We want to imbue such events with
meaning, rather than think something so horrible could happen to no purpose....
But every incident seems to happen for its own rea.&lt;ons reasons that are difficult to fathom , even for the perpetrators.
The lesson is this: When a kid threatens violence, don't
ignore it. Young Andy WiUiams had told his few friends repeatedly that he was going to get a gun and start shooting people.
In at least one instance, he told an adult. No one took the
slight, passive boy seriously.
Someone should have. And so should we all, whenever
someone talks like that. Sure, most cif the time kids are just talking. But as we 've just been horribly reminded, sometimes
they're not.
• Palladium-Item, Richmond, Ind., on e-voting: Election
officials looking for more accurate methods of counting votes
should resist the lure of using the Internet as a technological
.cure for voting problems.
·Moving toward remote Internet voting, as some states
already have done, might well cause more problems than it
would solve, according to a study compiled by the National
Science Foundation.
That might seem like an incongruous opinion coming from
the government agency that served for many years as the custodian and promoter of the Internet. But the foundation's
report sounds a prudent note of caution against rushing to find
technological solutions to the voting woes that plagued last
·
·
November's selection.
Even if technology was available to make the process secure,
inspiring public confidence in the system would be a significant challenge. Although the Internet has found widespread
.popularity, many potential e-voters likely are unfamiliar with
- or afraid of- the technology.
If nothing else, the 2000 election underscored the vital
importance of preserving the public's confidence in the election process. At this point, the Internet does not appear to be
the answer for accomplishing that goal.
.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, March 22, the 81st day of2001. There are
284 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: ,
On March 22, 1765, Britain enacted the Stamp Act to raise
money from the American colonies and repealed it the following year.
On this date:
In 1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel
with Commodore James Barron near Washington, D. C.
In 1882, Congress outlawed polygamy.
In 1895,Auguste and Louis Lumiere showed their first movie
tu an invited audience in Paris.
In 1933, during Prohibition, President Franklin Roosevelt
signed a measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2
percent alcohol legal.
·
·
.
In 1941, the Grand Coulee Darn in Washingtoti state went
into operation.
In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adoption of a
charter in Cairo, Egypt.
In 1972, Congress sent the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution to the states for ratification. (It fell
three states short of the 38 needed for approval.)
In 1978, Karl Wallenda, the 73-year-old patriarch of"The flying Wallendas" high-wire act, fell to his death while attempting
to walk a cable strung between two hotels in San Juan, Puerto.
Rico.
In 19951 convicted Long Island Rail Road gunman Colin
Ferguson was sentenced to life in prisf1 n for killing six people. ·
Ten years ago: A U.S. warplane shot down a second Iraqi jet
fighter that had violated the cease-fire ending the Persian Gulf
War. High school instructor Pamela Smart, accused of manipulating her student-lover into killing her husband, was convicted
in Exeter, N.H., of murder-conspiracy.
Five yean ago: The shuttle Atlantis carrying astronaut Shannon Lucid to a rendezvous with the Russian space station "Mir,"
blasted off from C ape Canaveral, Fla .
One y~a r ago: Journeying to the cradle of Christianity, Pope
John Paul II knelt and prayed in Bethlehem at the traditional
spot of Jesus' birth. Some 1,100 women denied jobs with the
now- defunct U.S. Information Agency and its broadcast branch,
the Voice of America, won $508 million from the government in
the largest-ever settlement of a federal sex discrimination case.

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
conversation again. You'D notice the
change right away."
"Your house will be a mess. The
tim thing to go are the carpets."
"You will never have any clothes
without a stain somewhere."
"Froin now on, money will always

.

Nat
Hentoff ·
COLUMNIST
democracy banner in Tianannien Square.
Chinese psychiatrists, aware of what the
government expected of them, prompdy
diagnose,d him as "a paranoid psychotic"
suffering1 from ' "political .monomania."
For the next seven years he was "treated"
at a police hospital for the criminally
msane.
The World Psychological Association
. will meet next year. A group· of European
and American doctors are · lobbying
national psychiatric associations around
the world to consider censuring or suspending China, The New York Times
reports. What will American psychiatric
organizations dol
In a front-page Washington Times
report, David R . Sands noted that a new
Amnesty International report had found
that "torture is committed in the full
range ofstate institutions, from police stations to 'reeducation through labor
camps,' to people's homes and workplaces."
.
Tided "Thrture:A Growing Scourge in
China - Time for Action,'' the report
documents that "a growing range of oflicial.! are perpetrating torture: tax collectors, judges, prosecutors, court clerks,
family planning officers, village and party
leaders, and security official! ....Victims or

observers who expose the torture are
themselves targeted for reprisals."
The report also mentions that "Prodemocracy and labor rights advocate
Zhang Lin, at a Reeducation Through
Labor camp since November, 1998, .
required to work 14 hours a day while in
poor health, beaten whenever he resisted
or argued with guards about it .. . was tortured six times, as a result of which he
twiccr attempted suicide.
"!lie was beaten by other inmates who,
acting on orders from the guardS, had
stripped and dragged him on the ground
for long distances, and forced his head
under water until he submitted to the
guards. There has been no indication that
his .complaints hav'e been investigated or
that measures have been taken to protect
him against further ill-treatment during
the remainder of his 3-year term."
Perhaps President Bush, Secretary of
St;tte Colin Powell and the members. of
Congress who voted for permanent normal 'trade relations with China might
consider sending Zhang Lin a get-well
card, along with their assurances that, in
time, the spirit of the free market will lead
to an official abandonment of torture and
the horrors of forced psychiatric treatment of citizens afflicted with "political

monomania."
The international community, including the United States, celebrated. the
Olympics in Hider's Germany with the
Fuhrer in attendance. If China succeeds
in becoming the host of the 2008
Olympics, will America send its athletes?
If we do, will any of these athletes refuse
to compete on the grounds of conscience
- and humanity? .

(Nat Hentojf is a nationally renowned
authority on the First Amendment and the
Bill of Rights.)

LAMBRO'S VIEW

Tb stem the economic slide, beifup the tax cut
BY DorwD LAMIRO
·concerns, so he sounded the alarm.
WASHINGTON - Last week's deep
In a memorandum to his House colplunge in the Dow sent political tremors leagues, Armey delivered a surprisingly
through the ranks of Republicans, many blunt reappraisal of the president's plan,
of whom now say that President Bush's which he ~d helped push through the
tax cuts need to be beefed up if they are . Hous,e with high hopes. No~ he says \hat
to provide any stimulus to this year's slug- Bush s plan is "a good start. But his plan
gish economy. ·
was drafted in 1999, when the economy
Even .before the Dow's fall to below was much stronger."
10,000 on March 14, there were signs of
While the president continues to charfear and insecurity among GOP leaders acterize the economy as "sputtering,''
that the U.S. economy is tanking and that Armey has a much stronger description:
Bush's gradually phased-in, six-year taX- "an econ~mic emergency." And he t:hink$
cut plan will offet virtually no stimulus that the Bush plan is too timid in the
this year (a mere $5.6 billion in a $10 tril- short-term to deal with it.
The stock market's sharp decline "again
lion economy) to halt its decline.
Republican leaders who spearheaded shows us that we must consider a much
Bush's taX-cut plan through the House· ~r taX cut. Today, circumstances have
earlier this month had been talking up the fundamentally changed,'' he said in his
need for a sttpnger first-year stimulus, but memo.
.Bush may still be saying that the size
they kept to• the White House message
and stood behind the plan that is now and structure of his plan are 'just right:'
before the Senate. But all that changed last ·but Armey - in a break with the White
week, when a panicked Wall Street went House line - no longer believes that. He
into a steej, slide and neW indicaton is telling his party that it shquld not tie
· showed the economy growing weaker.
itself to the president's tax-cut numbers or
That's when House Majority Leader the timing of the cuts.
Dick Armey, an economics professor by
"We should no longer be restricted by
trade, decided to act. The economy is in a a proposal or a tax-cut number that was
dangerous state, he told his .coneagues, and not designed for the situation we face
the president's $1.6, trillion plan needs to today,'' the How,e Republi~an leader said.
be dramatically enlarged, perh.ips to $2
Armey's break with the administration
,F.illion. It was time to go public with his .. about what is need£d to revive the econ-

'

omy is the latest in a series of doubts
expressed by Bush's GOP allies in Congress and even his economic adviser in the
White House. - .
Ho11se Speaker Dennis Hastert and
Senate Majority Leader Ttent Lott are
simllarly fearful that the U.S. economy is
being pulled down by panic·on Wall Street
·and the rapid deterioration of major global economies from Japan to E~®pe. They
believe that stronger medicine is needed
to boost business investment. Both are
calling for making a cut in the tax on capital gains part of the taX pl:l,n.
. ·
But when I asked Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, about that, he
threw cold water on any kind of capitalgains tax cuts. Capital gains rates "have
already been reduced. The president
thinks that the first priority is to get the
income-tax rates down,'~ Rove told me.
Even White House economic adviser
Larry Lindsey, the architect of Bush's taxcut plan, confided to me recendy that he
wished "the tax cut was larger in the fust
year."When I asked him ifhe believed that
the Bush plan as passed by the House
would tum the economy around this year,
his ominous response was "I have no
opinion."

(Donald lAmbro is filling in for Morton
Kondracke.)

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 meets at hall, 7
p.m. Special drawing.

signup for the Tuppers Plains
baseball and softball season, 9
to 11 a.m. at ball field.

POMEROY- Caring and
Sharing Support Group, 1 p.m.
Julie Rice will speak abou.t
massage therapy.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Youth Baseball League
signups , 10 a.m. to noon ,
Syracuse Mayor's Office.
March 29 is deadline.

• POMEROY- Meigs SWCD
.Board of Supervisors regular
meeting, 11 :30 a.m., SWCD
office.

Are we comfortable ·trading with torturers?
Both George W. Bush and his predecessor firmly supported permanent normal. trade relations with China, and Congress agreed. With goods flowing in and
out, China's repression of its citizens who
advocate democracy would lessen. So the
theory went. But, according to the Bush
State Department's annual report last
month on international human rights,
conditions have worsened significandy
for religious organizations and others
who believe in freedom.
There is only one labor union in
·china, and anyone who tries to organize
an independent union winds up in a
"reeducation camp." Zhou Guoqiang, a
laWyer; tried to distribute T-shirts bearing
the Communist slogan "Labor IS Sacred,''
and wound up in 'the Shuanghe Labor
Reeducation Camp, appropriately (for
those who remember Stalin) near the
Russian border. .
.
HIS re-educatlon, as he to~d Enk Eckholm of The New Yotk Ttmes, meant
"(y)ou'd be locked up in a small cell and
struck with electric prods or beaten, and
afterward you'd have to write a self-critif=ism saying that you'd been reeducated."
In the spring issue of Columbia University's Journal of A.lian Law, Robin
Munro, the former director of Human
Rights Watch's Hong Kong office, confirms, with abundant detail, that dissidents
are locked up in psychiatric hospitals and
are subject to a savage "misuse of psychiaery for politically repressive purposes."
The practice "resembles in all key respects
that of the former ·Soviet Union." They
are subject to electroshock "therapy,"
drugged, isolated and diagnosed as stricken with "paranoid psychosis" and sometimes "political monomania:·
For example, Wang Wanxing was
arrested in 1992 for displaying a pro-

Thursday, March 22,2001

POMEROY- Meigs Ministeri·
al Association Lenten service,
7:30p.m., Trinity Congrega·
tiona! Church, with Dee Rader
as speaker.

SUNDAY
· MIDDL!OPORT - Gospel Sing,
MiddlepQrt Church of the
Nazarene, 6:30 p.m. Family
Heritage Singers.

RACINE - Racine American
. Legion Auxiliary 602, 7 p.m.,
Legion hall.

MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
Church of Christ, farewell din·
ner for Tom and Lynn Runyon,
who are leaving for their retire·
ment home in Florida. Dinner
will follow worship services in
church basement. Public inv~­
ed.

POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
• Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi,
· dinner 6:30 at the St. Paul
" Lutheran Church, prepared by
the social committee. ·

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT- OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at Trolle~
.
Station. Auction, drawings and
relreshments.

REEDSVILLE- Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m.,
Reedsville Church of Christ.
; Program will 'include making
; Easter favors for nursing
· home.
.

POMEROY- Veterans Ser·
vice Commission, 7:30 p.m.,
117 E. Memorial Dr.. Pomeroy.

.

· FRIDAY
. POMEROY- Fun, Food and
,, fellowship .at. God's NET, 6:30
. to 10:30 p.m. Video, computer
, and board games, pool tables,
· tree refreshments.
' SALEM CENTER - Star
·, Grange 778 soup supper, 4 to
7 p.m . Public invited. Enter·
talnment.
·
,
·
:
·

SATURDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County
Chapter of Ohio Retired Teach·
era Association, luncheon
meeting, noon, Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. Hal Kneen with pro·
: gram on perennial gardening
and musical selections.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Final

CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, special
meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY_; Ohio Hunter
Education Clas~. through
Wednesday, 6 to 9 p.m., and
Saturday, at Pomeroy Gun
Club. Register at Meigs
SWCD, 992·4282. Door prizes.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Winding Trail
Garden Club meeting, 8 p.m.
Tuesday, home of Valerie Not·
tingham.
The Community Calendar Is
publlahed aa a free service
to non·prollt groups wishing
to announce meatlnga and
special eventa. The calendar
Ia not dealgnad to promote ·
aalee or lund·ralsere of any
type.

be a problem. Forget about luxuries
and the fun stuff. They are a thing of
the pasC:'
Why do people say such terrible
things to expectant couples? Please
explain this to us. We don't get it. Baflled in Ttoy, Ohio
Dear Ttoy: These are friends? They .
don't sound very friendly to me. They
may thin k they are being funny. but
their comme nts are mean and spiteful.
Yo u should be listening to couples
who have solid ·marriages and are
enj oying their offipring. They are 'the
REAL authorities.
Dear Ann Landers: I have b ee n
married to "Jed" for 13 years, and we
. have three beautiful children. I love

my husband dearly. but his insecurities had last summer.
Ann, I am suffocating. I don't want
are driving me crazy.
Last summer, m y children and I vis- to start an argu ment w ith Jed, but I
ited my parents in Florida for two need som e space or I will lose my
weeks. J ed called every day to ask . mind. Am I wrong to want to spend a
where I was going and if I could few weeks with my parents? How ~n
come home earlier. When I did get I get Jed to calm down? - Suffocat•
home, he was depressed and miser- ed in New Jersey
Dear N.J.: Why is Jed so depenable. I insisted we get counseling,
which w e did for four weeks, but I dent? Is h e afraid something terrible
will happen while you are away from
do n't think it helped.
I am planning to visit my pa rents him? When you and the children are
again in the summer, and this time, I visiting your folks, is there a place Jed
would like to stay for three weeks. can go' H ow about a weekend fishing
Every time I bring up the subject, Jed trip with his buddies' T he depression
tells me o ur family should never be j ed suffered last summer sounds like
separated and he ca nnot go · through an ongoing problem. Perhaps medicaan other depressio n like the one he tion would help.

Good hygiene and drugs may cure foot odor

LOCAL EVENTS

HENTOFF'S VIEW

the Bend

"Why do people say such terrible things to expectant couples?

GOLDJU)CtCS aM,"Jirt. BEAR MARK£ f...

The Daily Sentinel

__;_~B=y

Page AS

M ost individ uals with truly
sti cky - in addition to stinky
-feet have an underlying
bacterial or fun gal infec tion of
the feet. I suspect that your
so n has this proble m, too. This
. is usually most apparent in the
skin betwee n the toes,
altho ugh at times it may not
John C. Wolf, D.O.
be obvious to anyone but an
A&gt;sociate Professor
.
J
.
experienced physician. It is
hJill .
of Family Medicine
essential to treat this infection
Answer: I'm sure that many
with
appropr ia te medication
readers chuckl e about your
question , assuming that this is have developed a cultural addition, shoe liners should be in additi on to doing the other
an annoyance rather than a norm that favors smelling removed in the evening to steps I've talked about. Withreal medical problem. Well, sweet and clean like the facilitate their drying out. out medi cal treatment the
sQme individuals do have a bathing products and toiletries Also, any given pair of shoes or bacterial or fungal organism
serious problem with foot that are readily available. The work boots shouldn't be worn that's causing the infection can
odor.We're not talking about a distincdy "human" aroma is more often than every other thrive in moist skin and even
stay alive in the shoes. Once
slight unpleasant tickle to the considered socially unaccept- day for the same reason.
Additional simple measures the underlying infection is
nose when you take your able. Daily bathing may be sufshoes off, but rather, a. severe ficient for some individuals to that are often · beneficial cured, the foot odor usually
odor that interferes with social maintain this socially accept- include a twi ce-daily foot vanishes also. Unfortunately,
interactions - even with the able scent, but most of us need soak. The water should be individuals who are prone to
shoes on. As I know from th e the added help of antiperspi- warm, but not hot enough 'to getting this type offoot infecrest. of your letter, this occ urs rants or deodorants to forestall make the feet sweat, and tion may get it again. Your
despite adequate bathing, and the onset of that undesirable approximately one ounce of nose will tell you if this hapdistilled white vinegar should pens.
that is typical of those with aroma .
this more severe problem.
It wasn 't clear from your let- be mixed into the foot bath
("Family Medicine " is a week·
' Most of us spend the m ajor- ter whether your son has used water. After a few minutes of
/y
column. To submit questions,
ity of our waking hours with an antiperspirant not a soaking, the feet should be
our shoes on. This can make a deodorant on his feet. If patted, not rubbed, dry. An write to Jolin C. Wolf, D. 0.,
local environment for the fe et not, he should do so. It is also additional beneficial measure Ollio University College of
that is warm and moist. It is ' important'that the inside of his is to get those feet out of those Osteopatlzic Medicine, Grosvenor
this combination of warmth shoes stay dry. This can be hot sweaty shoes. Go barefoot Hall, At/tens, Ollio 45701. Past
· and · moisture . that 1s th e accomplished by wearing cot- or wear sandals when · that's columns are available online at
wwwjlzradio.&lt;&gt;IJI IJm.)
underlying cause of foot odor. . ton socks, because they are the practical.
Sweaty feet , just like sweaty most absorbent sock material.
underarms , develop a distinct- A fresh pair should be put on
ly human aroma. Because of at the start of th·e day and
the . abundance of water. we changed again at midday. In
Question: M y son has a
te rrible case of bad foot odor.
His socks smell li ke a co mbination of bleach and a dead
skunk. The foot docto r hasn't
had any ideas that work fo r
him. H e wash es, sprays . etc. , ·
without anything m ore th an
brief improve ment in th e
odor. C an yo u please help

_fimilp

~dicine

(PifHGTIIDt IDUH(
Tlffl'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Good Through Wedneaday 3-211-01

Russell Stover

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POMEROY Elevenmonth-old Luke MoMotaro
~ Knight, son of Staff Sergeant
• Christopher Knight, stationed
at Yokota Air Force Base in
. Japan, and his wife, Junko
Knight, is a featured model in ·
the spring issue of the Japanese magazine, Aprica.
Aprica is a catalog of infant
and children's clothing, accessories· and furnishings, books
and toys.
Luke is the grandson of
1
Kensaku and · Mariko Maeda
. of Hanna City, Japan, and
· Vince and Susann Knight of
, Pomeroy.

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Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Help available for choosing
your power company
now

means a two to three

perc~nt

Becky
Baer

·

MIDDLEPOR'I· POMEROY
ROTARY CLUB
INVITES YOU TO THE

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

TIME .OUT
FOR TIPS

Consumers in Ohio are
being given the opportunity to choose their electric
supplier. They have the option
to remain with their local utility or they Can select an alternative power produ ction
i;ompany. The local utility will
still deliver the power, but the
source -can come from another company.
: In the beginning, residential
customers will be given a five
percent savings on the generation of th ei r power. This

ADVICE

HARRISONVILLE

a

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992-2156

ROTARY

Tankovichs
announce birth

Atkins tums 88

need ro be signed.The supplier will notifY your local utility
that you have change&lt;,l the
generation portion of your

banquet was dedicated to the memory
of George Johnson.
President George Van Matre welcomed those in attendance and a
moment of silence was observed in
memory of George Johnson. Dinner Wll
prepared by Order of Eastern Star
M.Son Chapter 157.
Chief Paul Johnson gave introductions. Chaplin Mike: Finnicum gave the
invocation.
Chuck Runyon of the WVa. State Fire
Commission was the guest speaker.
Chief Johnson presented service
awards to Dick Carson, 30 years; C.R.
Black, five years; and Kevin Turley; five
'
ATHENS - Margaret and Michael years. He also presented the Chief AWlrd
Tankovich of South Canaan Road, to all the fire department membe~ along
Athens, announce the .birth of a son, with a gift certificate.
·
Michael Anthony, at O'Bleness Memor-

Susie SteWlrt was asked to ch:rir the
monthly Chamber of Commerce luncheon for the CCW group. CCW will
be sharing the once-a-month luncheon
with other interested churches in Meigs
County.
Carol McCullough and Anna Layne
were hostesses at the meeting. Next
meeting will be held on April 4 and all
women of the parish are invited to
attend.

NELSONVILLE- Hocking College
recendy announced the narru.s of students included on the Winter Quarter
Dean's List. Each student has achieved a
grade point average of at least a 3.3 and
completed 12 .or more credit hours.
Local students on the list include:
Linda Ayres, Reedsvile; Kristin Brown,
Rutland; Stacey Ervin, Racine; Tara
Gray, Middleport; David Hoback,
Racine; 1\.nita Holter, Portland; Patrick
Martin, Middleport; Tonia Nazarewycz,
Racine; Franco Rumuno, Pomeroy;
Melissa Roush, The Plains, and Jennifer
Vining, Middleport.

supplier, a service contract will

reduction off the total month- elect Your local utility will
ly bilL This should happen send a confirmation stating
wh~ther or not a new Sltppli- that you have seve n days to
can ed, if you choose. If you
er is selected.
When a list of certified sup- do no t, the new electric suppliers is ava ilable, you can plier , will start delivering
deternune the one that is right sho rtly.
The Ohio Cons umers'
for you by as king these qu estions: What is the production Counsel has had a large hand
price per kilowatt hour?,Is the in making sure th e 'electric
rate fixed or variable? What is customer is protected. The
the lengrh of the contract? Are new law permitting electric
there start-up or ending fees? deregulation includes the folHow is the power produced' lowing: Suppliers must indiWill there be two separate cate whether they have fixed
bills? Are there any special or variable rate. They cannot
give false or misleading infor·incentives?
The Ohio Consumers' mation in promotions. They
Counsel offers a website must furnish a complete ser(www.state.oh.us/cons) thar vice contract to the customer
will permit customers to upon enrollment.
If you would like mote
compare costs and services of
information
on choosing your
potential suppliers. Information needed for the compari- new electric supplier or a list
son includes your zip code, of potential suppliers and their
current electric company, the rates, contact the Ohio Conpast year's kilowatt usage sumers' Counsel at 1-877(indicated on your electric PICKOCC.
bill) and the price to compare. · (Betky Baer is a Mtigs CoUtiWhen you have chosen the · ty extension agent)

PANC

4•H f00d, nutritiOn
Scholarship
· workshop planned
applicatiOnS aVailable POMEROY _ 4-H member1&lt;, advi-

SATURDAY, MAR~D 24, 2001
AT MEIGS tOUNTY' SENIOR tiTIZENS tENTER
SERVING FROM 7:00A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.

Pauline ial Hospital on March 16 ·

-

~kin~,e~ele~~tth

birthday recently
with a party at
the .Harrisonville
MIDDLEPORT - Applications for
Presbyterian
scholarships through the Susan G. Park
Church. A life- Scholarship Fund are now available.
long member of
Applicants must be a direct descenthe Presbyterian dent of a graduate of Middleport High
Church where · School so only natural children or natshe serves as an ural grandchildren with at least one parordained elder, ent being an MHS alumnus are eligible
Atkins is active to appIY·
in numerous community activities
Applicants must also have at lease a 3.5
including 4-H, DAR, gar&lt;,len club, and grade point average including the first
White Shrine. She has a daughter, semester of the senior year using a nonSharon Jewell, and a granddaughter, weighted 4.0 curriculum.
C heryl, a student at O hio University.
Applications are to be returned ·to a
member of the committee by April 30
along with an official high school transcript including the first semester of the
senior year, a letter. of acceptance from
an accredited college or university, and a
POMEROY - A program on Lent
was presented by Julie Randolph, at the recent photograph to be used for publirecent meeting of the Sacred Heart cation. ·
On the committee are Nancy Roller
Catholic Women's Club held at the
Cale, 342 S. Sixth St., Middleport; Cinda
church.
Sheila Cozart presided at the meeting Sauer Harris, 625 Broadway St., Middlewhich opened with the pledge of alle- port; and Judy Sauer Crooks, 536 High
giance, reports from the officers, and Street, Middleport. .

Sacred Heart catholic .
Women'S Club

announcements by the Rev, Fr. Walter
Heinz. He commented on the Redemptorist Fathers parish mission held this
MASON,W.Va.-The MasonVoiunweek and noted that on April 4 Bishop teer Fire Department held their 18th
Sheldon will hold · the annual spring
annual appreciation and awards banquet
meeting which is open to all the office~ on March to at the fire department. The
of the CCW.
'

Mason VFD ·dinner

sors and parents looking for new ideas for
4-H nutrition projects or hints on how to
prepare for project judging are invited to
attend a workshop to be held at the Chillicothe branch campus of Ohio University
on March 31.
Registration for the South District 4-H
. Food and Nutrition Workshop will be
held at 9:30a.m. and the program will run
from to a.m. until 2:15p.m. Topics ofthe
day will include basic nutrition for beginners, intermediate and advanced members; menu planning and cost per serving,
food safety, table setting and measuring,
preparing for an interview, demonstrations, club meetings and activities, taking
it the next step, calcium in the diet and the
importance of hand washing with a.
GloGerm demonstration.
Speaking will include extension agent$
from Southern Ohio and two State
Extension associates.
Door prizes which have been donated.
by major companies include cooler1&lt; and
ice packs for transporting foods to judging, cookbooks, thermomete~, a wafile
iron and product coupons. An afghan will
be the door prize. Each participant will
receive a packet of materials, snacks and.
beverages donated by a !oGal grocer.
Registration is $4 for members and $5
for adviso~ and parents. For information,
contact Becky Baer at 992-6696. Registration deadline is March 26.

•

Adults· 13 and up s4o
Children~ 6 to 12 s2°0
Pancakes • Sausage
Collie * Milk * Orange Juice
Under age 6 eat free

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

Meigs County Senior
Citizen Center
Mulberry Heights Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio

I .

Go l f e r s

the

who

The Daily Sentinel· Page A 7

a r ,e n ' t

only
love

about

We love it when people say
I\ice things about us.
Golf Digest recently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
destinations in the world!
And in its current Places to ·
Play rating~. Golf Digest gave
most of the Trc~il's 21 courses
4 stars-and some even got 4'j..
Not bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And all of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
service. '
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

world and The New York Times
called us "... some of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE
SENATOR course at our new Capitol
Hill location among its top new
courses in the country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcomers. And wait until you ·
see THE JUDGE!
So, we hope you'll understand ·
when, like all good golfers, we
like to brag about our scores.
Call today to book your golf
and hotel package and get ready
for one of the best golf trips in
the world.

b r a g·

992·6611 ·

HAMPTON COVE

SILVER LAKES

OXMOOR VALLEY

H.,Ntnille

A IIIIUtoii/GJU!t*•

Bi""i"Binl"'

!WHOLES

3&amp; HOLES

N

GRAND NATIONAL

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

985·3301

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2121 .

MAGNOLIA GROVE

Gtwt~Pilk

.f]ot/M11

Mobile

38 HOLES

se HOLEa

54 HOLES

POMEROY, OHIO

992·3345

MIDDLEPORT

. Opelib/ANbNrn

HOLES

992·2054

POMEROY, OHIO

Dowaiag·Childs·Mullea·Musser
Insurance
992·3381

POMEROY, OHIO

(row's Family Restaurant .
992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY
992·5444

MIDDLEPORT
. 992·5141

54 HOLES

992·3785
, HIGHLAND OAKS

CHESTER, OHIO

Clark's Jewelry Store

Quality Print Shop · Fisher Acree Funeral Home
Fruth Pharmacy

K&amp;C Jewelers
CAMBRIAN RIDGE

POMEROY, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home

Ingels·Furniture &amp; Jewelry

992·5627

.Proceeds to Support
Meigs County Services projects

Baum Lumber

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply

ALABAMA'S

RoBERT ThEN
GOLF

992·2194

POMEROY, OHIO

·The Shoe Place I Locker 219

their

scores.

992·5479

Support Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary

Triplett Engineering Servic•

Jeff Warner Insurance

992·2635

ones
t o

•

TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM
MEMBERS &amp; AT THE DOOR

CAPITOL HILL
.

!WHOLES

992·6491

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Home National Bank
UCINE
949·2210

SYUCUSE
992·6533

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy Vaughan's Supermarket Brogan Warner Insurance
992·2955

POMEROY, OHIO

992·3471

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6687 .

POMEROY, OHIO

Alabama'• Robert Trent Jones GoU Trail 378 holes of world-class golf on eight sites

Farmers Bank
&amp; SO\Iings Company

.Karl Kebler Ill, CPA
lnveit•••t &amp; Tax Consultant

1.800.949.4444
WWIII.rrjgolf.rom

992·7270

... t *at

POMEROY, OHIO

Pom11oy, OH 4578e
740-1112·21311

Tuppers Plalna, OH 45783

740-067-3161

The Daily Sentinel

GaMipolla, OH 45631
7-2685

'

992·2155

•

-

•

•

1'

'

"

.

POMEROY, OHIO

�..

I

...

. -··

...

•

.

,. •

...........

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Help available for choosing
your power company
now

means a two to three

perc~nt

Becky
Baer

·

MIDDLEPOR'I· POMEROY
ROTARY CLUB
INVITES YOU TO THE

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

TIME .OUT
FOR TIPS

Consumers in Ohio are
being given the opportunity to choose their electric
supplier. They have the option
to remain with their local utility or they Can select an alternative power produ ction
i;ompany. The local utility will
still deliver the power, but the
source -can come from another company.
: In the beginning, residential
customers will be given a five
percent savings on the generation of th ei r power. This

ADVICE

HARRISONVILLE

a

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992-2156

ROTARY

Tankovichs
announce birth

Atkins tums 88

need ro be signed.The supplier will notifY your local utility
that you have change&lt;,l the
generation portion of your

banquet was dedicated to the memory
of George Johnson.
President George Van Matre welcomed those in attendance and a
moment of silence was observed in
memory of George Johnson. Dinner Wll
prepared by Order of Eastern Star
M.Son Chapter 157.
Chief Paul Johnson gave introductions. Chaplin Mike: Finnicum gave the
invocation.
Chuck Runyon of the WVa. State Fire
Commission was the guest speaker.
Chief Johnson presented service
awards to Dick Carson, 30 years; C.R.
Black, five years; and Kevin Turley; five
'
ATHENS - Margaret and Michael years. He also presented the Chief AWlrd
Tankovich of South Canaan Road, to all the fire department membe~ along
Athens, announce the .birth of a son, with a gift certificate.
·
Michael Anthony, at O'Bleness Memor-

Susie SteWlrt was asked to ch:rir the
monthly Chamber of Commerce luncheon for the CCW group. CCW will
be sharing the once-a-month luncheon
with other interested churches in Meigs
County.
Carol McCullough and Anna Layne
were hostesses at the meeting. Next
meeting will be held on April 4 and all
women of the parish are invited to
attend.

NELSONVILLE- Hocking College
recendy announced the narru.s of students included on the Winter Quarter
Dean's List. Each student has achieved a
grade point average of at least a 3.3 and
completed 12 .or more credit hours.
Local students on the list include:
Linda Ayres, Reedsvile; Kristin Brown,
Rutland; Stacey Ervin, Racine; Tara
Gray, Middleport; David Hoback,
Racine; 1\.nita Holter, Portland; Patrick
Martin, Middleport; Tonia Nazarewycz,
Racine; Franco Rumuno, Pomeroy;
Melissa Roush, The Plains, and Jennifer
Vining, Middleport.

supplier, a service contract will

reduction off the total month- elect Your local utility will
ly bilL This should happen send a confirmation stating
wh~ther or not a new Sltppli- that you have seve n days to
can ed, if you choose. If you
er is selected.
When a list of certified sup- do no t, the new electric suppliers is ava ilable, you can plier , will start delivering
deternune the one that is right sho rtly.
The Ohio Cons umers'
for you by as king these qu estions: What is the production Counsel has had a large hand
price per kilowatt hour?,Is the in making sure th e 'electric
rate fixed or variable? What is customer is protected. The
the lengrh of the contract? Are new law permitting electric
there start-up or ending fees? deregulation includes the folHow is the power produced' lowing: Suppliers must indiWill there be two separate cate whether they have fixed
bills? Are there any special or variable rate. They cannot
give false or misleading infor·incentives?
The Ohio Consumers' mation in promotions. They
Counsel offers a website must furnish a complete ser(www.state.oh.us/cons) thar vice contract to the customer
will permit customers to upon enrollment.
If you would like mote
compare costs and services of
information
on choosing your
potential suppliers. Information needed for the compari- new electric supplier or a list
son includes your zip code, of potential suppliers and their
current electric company, the rates, contact the Ohio Conpast year's kilowatt usage sumers' Counsel at 1-877(indicated on your electric PICKOCC.
bill) and the price to compare. · (Betky Baer is a Mtigs CoUtiWhen you have chosen the · ty extension agent)

PANC

4•H f00d, nutritiOn
Scholarship
· workshop planned
applicatiOnS aVailable POMEROY _ 4-H member1&lt;, advi-

SATURDAY, MAR~D 24, 2001
AT MEIGS tOUNTY' SENIOR tiTIZENS tENTER
SERVING FROM 7:00A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.

Pauline ial Hospital on March 16 ·

-

~kin~,e~ele~~tth

birthday recently
with a party at
the .Harrisonville
MIDDLEPORT - Applications for
Presbyterian
scholarships through the Susan G. Park
Church. A life- Scholarship Fund are now available.
long member of
Applicants must be a direct descenthe Presbyterian dent of a graduate of Middleport High
Church where · School so only natural children or natshe serves as an ural grandchildren with at least one parordained elder, ent being an MHS alumnus are eligible
Atkins is active to appIY·
in numerous community activities
Applicants must also have at lease a 3.5
including 4-H, DAR, gar&lt;,len club, and grade point average including the first
White Shrine. She has a daughter, semester of the senior year using a nonSharon Jewell, and a granddaughter, weighted 4.0 curriculum.
C heryl, a student at O hio University.
Applications are to be returned ·to a
member of the committee by April 30
along with an official high school transcript including the first semester of the
senior year, a letter. of acceptance from
an accredited college or university, and a
POMEROY - A program on Lent
was presented by Julie Randolph, at the recent photograph to be used for publirecent meeting of the Sacred Heart cation. ·
On the committee are Nancy Roller
Catholic Women's Club held at the
Cale, 342 S. Sixth St., Middleport; Cinda
church.
Sheila Cozart presided at the meeting Sauer Harris, 625 Broadway St., Middlewhich opened with the pledge of alle- port; and Judy Sauer Crooks, 536 High
giance, reports from the officers, and Street, Middleport. .

Sacred Heart catholic .
Women'S Club

announcements by the Rev, Fr. Walter
Heinz. He commented on the Redemptorist Fathers parish mission held this
MASON,W.Va.-The MasonVoiunweek and noted that on April 4 Bishop teer Fire Department held their 18th
Sheldon will hold · the annual spring
annual appreciation and awards banquet
meeting which is open to all the office~ on March to at the fire department. The
of the CCW.
'

Mason VFD ·dinner

sors and parents looking for new ideas for
4-H nutrition projects or hints on how to
prepare for project judging are invited to
attend a workshop to be held at the Chillicothe branch campus of Ohio University
on March 31.
Registration for the South District 4-H
. Food and Nutrition Workshop will be
held at 9:30a.m. and the program will run
from to a.m. until 2:15p.m. Topics ofthe
day will include basic nutrition for beginners, intermediate and advanced members; menu planning and cost per serving,
food safety, table setting and measuring,
preparing for an interview, demonstrations, club meetings and activities, taking
it the next step, calcium in the diet and the
importance of hand washing with a.
GloGerm demonstration.
Speaking will include extension agent$
from Southern Ohio and two State
Extension associates.
Door prizes which have been donated.
by major companies include cooler1&lt; and
ice packs for transporting foods to judging, cookbooks, thermomete~, a wafile
iron and product coupons. An afghan will
be the door prize. Each participant will
receive a packet of materials, snacks and.
beverages donated by a !oGal grocer.
Registration is $4 for members and $5
for adviso~ and parents. For information,
contact Becky Baer at 992-6696. Registration deadline is March 26.

•

Adults· 13 and up s4o
Children~ 6 to 12 s2°0
Pancakes • Sausage
Collie * Milk * Orange Juice
Under age 6 eat free

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

Meigs County Senior
Citizen Center
Mulberry Heights Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio

I .

Go l f e r s

the

who

The Daily Sentinel· Page A 7

a r ,e n ' t

only
love

about

We love it when people say
I\ice things about us.
Golf Digest recently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
destinations in the world!
And in its current Places to ·
Play rating~. Golf Digest gave
most of the Trc~il's 21 courses
4 stars-and some even got 4'j..
Not bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And all of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
service. '
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

world and The New York Times
called us "... some of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE
SENATOR course at our new Capitol
Hill location among its top new
courses in the country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcomers. And wait until you ·
see THE JUDGE!
So, we hope you'll understand ·
when, like all good golfers, we
like to brag about our scores.
Call today to book your golf
and hotel package and get ready
for one of the best golf trips in
the world.

b r a g·

992·6611 ·

HAMPTON COVE

SILVER LAKES

OXMOOR VALLEY

H.,Ntnille

A IIIIUtoii/GJU!t*•

Bi""i"Binl"'

!WHOLES

3&amp; HOLES

N

GRAND NATIONAL

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

985·3301

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2121 .

MAGNOLIA GROVE

Gtwt~Pilk

.f]ot/M11

Mobile

38 HOLES

se HOLEa

54 HOLES

POMEROY, OHIO

992·3345

MIDDLEPORT

. Opelib/ANbNrn

HOLES

992·2054

POMEROY, OHIO

Dowaiag·Childs·Mullea·Musser
Insurance
992·3381

POMEROY, OHIO

(row's Family Restaurant .
992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY
992·5444

MIDDLEPORT
. 992·5141

54 HOLES

992·3785
, HIGHLAND OAKS

CHESTER, OHIO

Clark's Jewelry Store

Quality Print Shop · Fisher Acree Funeral Home
Fruth Pharmacy

K&amp;C Jewelers
CAMBRIAN RIDGE

POMEROY, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home

Ingels·Furniture &amp; Jewelry

992·5627

.Proceeds to Support
Meigs County Services projects

Baum Lumber

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply

ALABAMA'S

RoBERT ThEN
GOLF

992·2194

POMEROY, OHIO

·The Shoe Place I Locker 219

their

scores.

992·5479

Support Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary

Triplett Engineering Servic•

Jeff Warner Insurance

992·2635

ones
t o

•

TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM
MEMBERS &amp; AT THE DOOR

CAPITOL HILL
.

!WHOLES

992·6491

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Home National Bank
UCINE
949·2210

SYUCUSE
992·6533

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy Vaughan's Supermarket Brogan Warner Insurance
992·2955

POMEROY, OHIO

992·3471

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6687 .

POMEROY, OHIO

Alabama'• Robert Trent Jones GoU Trail 378 holes of world-class golf on eight sites

Farmers Bank
&amp; SO\Iings Company

.Karl Kebler Ill, CPA
lnveit•••t &amp; Tax Consultant

1.800.949.4444
WWIII.rrjgolf.rom

992·7270

... t *at

POMEROY, OHIO

Pom11oy, OH 4578e
740-1112·21311

Tuppers Plalna, OH 45783

740-067-3161

The Daily Sentinel

GaMipolla, OH 45631
7-2685

'

992·2155

•

-

•

•

1'

'

"

.

POMEROY, OHIO

�.- .

. . .. .
~

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Budget pes to House

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
States is ousting 51 Russian diplomats in
retaliation for the planting of a suspected
spy at the FBI - a move expected to
draw a tit-for-tat respense from Moscow,
U.S. officials said.
"Assumedly, they are going to make a
request for some of our most experienced
to leave,'' said Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla.,
vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee. "That is .the expected way in
which these counterintelligence incidents
work when they go sour:'
The action is the largest diplomat
expulsion since the Cold War and further
clouds dealings between the relatively
new administrations of President Bush
and Russian President Vladimir Putin, a
former KGB official.

Bush hopes for trade authority
WASHINGTON (AP) -·The Bush administration is optimistic that it will be able to succeed where the Clinton adminIStration suffered one of its biggest failures - gaining co ngressional authority to nego tiate new trade agre,ements.

lhumt.y. March n. 2001

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Eastern-Bethel vital info, Page B2

,.

Page 81

U.S. orders Russian diplomats to leave

WASHINGTON (AP) -The House will probably rubberstamp President Bush's fiscal priorities next week, now that the
House Budget Committee has approved a Republican-written
$1.94 trillion budget for 2002 that largely reflects his goals.
The budget panel gave Bush a victory Wednesday in the year's
first congressional showdown over his tax and spending plans,
endorsing the budgetary blueprint on a party-line 23-19 roll
call.
In the co urse of a partisan but chummy session that lasted 12
hours, the GOP-led committee swatted down more than two
dozen Democratic attempts to rework the measure. The defeat~
ed amendments focused on shrinking Bush's signature $1.6 trillion, 10-year tax cut, shoring up Medicare and Social Security
solvency, and other changes.
"Hope, yes, but it's probably not realistic,'' said budget committee Chairman Jim Nussle, R-lowa, when ·asked if next
week's full House vote might be less partisan. "It would be .very
difficult, based on the way things have transpired this year so
far."

In Moscow, a scheduled meeting
between Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov and U.S. Ambassador
James Collins was put off after the American envoy was called to the Foreign
Ministry early Thursday morning,
Zyuganov's spokesman said.
However, a U.S. Embassy official
denied that Collins had been called to the
ministry. Collins was having a scheduled
meeting he had requested with Deputy
Foreign Minister Georgy Mamedov, the
official said, adding that it was not related
to the current controversy.
"I'm here to discuss bilateral relations,''
Collins told reporters as he entered the
Foreign Ministry.
.
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov
declined to comment on the roiling con-

Julia Roberts, wl\o is up for an
Academy Award for her performance
in "Enn Brackovlch," has proven to be
"money" at the box office. Here Is a
look at Roberts' top-grossing movies.

NEW YORK (AP) - A tentative settlement has been
reached in a civil lawsuit brought by a Haitian immigrant tortured in a police station in !997, the Daily News reported
Thursdav.
Unde; terms of the proposal; Abner Louima would receive $9
million from the city and the Police Benevolent Association. In
return, he would drop his demand for reform in the way rhe
New York Police Department deals with officers accused of
crimes.
The proposed settlement ,was distributed to the parties Tuesday. Both sides are scheduled to meet March 28 to sign the deal,
barring any disagreemont, the News report~d.
·
If finalized, the settlement would close the ugliest chapter in
the•department's history. Louima's beating sparked protests and
led to convictions of six officers.

In n]MiOOII

$178.4

Erin Brockovich

$125.5

$152.3
$127.1

$119.7
Hook
$116.1
Nolting Hill
Sleeping with the Enemy

I

Pricey parts plague Pentagon
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a high-tech twist to a familiar
Pentagon problem, a computer system designed to prevent purchases of overpriced hammers and toilet seats created some
oxcesses of its own - incluiling spending $409 on a sink worth
just $39.
·
·
The Defense Department installed the system to automate
purchases and eliminate possible fraud by human buyers. But
the computer never checked more than one vendor to get the
best price.
Besides buying six of the high-priced sinks, the system
bought screws for $2 that should have cost less than 50 cents ·
and "dust protection plugs" for 25 cents that actually cost just
pennies, according to a Pentagon inspector general report·
obtained by The Associated Puss.
The report said contractors. probably know how to cheat the
system without getting caught. Auditors estimated that' over- .
payments accounted for $1.2. million Of the $14 million in
automated purchases they reviewed from April 1999 through
March 2000.

ing in Moscow."

Tentative accord reached in suit ·

Top-grossing movies
Pretty Woman
Runaway Bride
My Best Friend's Wedding

frontation botween the two countries,
saying the situation "must bo lookod into
carefuUy" before the . ministry reacts, tho
lnterfax news agency reported.
But a top foreign affairs aido to Putin
expre&lt;sed regret over the accused spios'
expulsion.
"Any campaign of spy mania and
searching for enemies bring deep regret,
and this is a fallback to the Cold War
epoch," aide Sergei Prikhodko said,
according to the !TAR-Tass news agency.
Gennady Seleznyov, spoaker of the
lower hous.e of parliament, the State
Duma, speculated that in exchange for
die expulsions, "We'D 6nd reasons for
finding exactly that number of (American) diplomats who should not be work-

Cochran, among others.
"! thought it was time for it to be taken care of," Sutton said.
"And there were enough peopl e who thought it should be
do·ne to insulate (Sharpton) from any further controversy."

sh

.

The idea being ·proposed by U.S. Trade Represe ntative
Robert Zoellick is to · link .the congressional negotiating
authority, which is very controversial, with legislation that
enjoys broader support, such as striking a free trade agreement
with Jordan and providing assistance to workers who lose thea
jobs because of exports.
But . the packaging approach is already drawing heavy fire
from Democrats in Congress.
Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., and 27 other House Democrats
have se nt a letter to President Bush warning that such an effort
would be a "serious mistake."

Steel

I

Report: power overcharged

Flaws found in gun checks

ShaFpton pals p•ying settlement

WASHINGTON (AP) -Armed with fake IDs, undercover
congressional investigators sailed through mandatory background checks and bought guns from licensed dealers in five
states, lawmakers were told Wednesday.
' The background che~k system can determine if a potential
gun buyer has a criminal history, but there is no safeguard to
verify whether the name or identification being used by the
buyer is valid, the General Accounting Office investigatiof
found.
As a result, the current system "cannot ensure that the
prospective purchaser is not a felon," the study said.
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who sought the undercover
investigation, said the findings point to a problem with laws
ineant to prevent criminals from purchasing weapons.

NEWYORK (AP) - Black business leaders have reportedly coUected thousands of dollars to help the Rev. AI Sharpton
pay damages a jury assessed when it determined he slandered a
former prosecutor.
The civil rights activist was ordered to pay $65,000 for
·defaming Steven Pagones by accusing him of raping a black
teen-ager in 1987. A grand jury later concluded the girl had
fabricated the story.
Former Manhattan borough president and businessman Percy
Sutton recendy made' a $40,000 payment to Pagones, The New
York Post reported Thursday. Sutton said contributions also
have come from Black Enterprise magazine chairman Earl
Graves Sr., Essence publisher Ed Lewis and la\vyer Johnnie

Visitors praise·skipper's calm
PEARL
HARBOR, right," recalled Anthony
Hawaii (AP) While Schnur, one of 16 civilians
frightened civilians struggled aboard the USS Greeneville
to understand how their . when it . hit · and sunk a
Navy submarine had just Japanese fishing boat, killing
smashed through the hull of nine people.
interviews
with
a fishing boat, they say the
In
submarine's
commander National
Transportation
snapped to action.
Safety Board investigators
Within 'minutes he was on released Wednesday, .· the
the . public address system civilian guests were unstinturging the crew to "take a ing in their praise of Cmdr.
deep breath. Settle down. Scott Waddle's professionalYou've been trained for this. ism and courtesy.
You're the best, let's do this
Some said he stayed so

cool he even remembered to
hal)-d out souvenir pictures
before they left the submarine the following day.·
"We were all just distraught. We can't believe this
has happened to this guy,"
·said Michael Mitchell, who
was among the guests, some
of whom were invited
because of their efforts to
raise money for •. World War
II naval memorial.

'Stocks move lower Wednesday on
disappointment over interest rate cut
NEW YORK (AP) · Investors punished stocks again
Wednesday, driving down blue
chips as they grappled with
disappointment over the Fed- .
era! Reserve's interest rate policy. The Dow Jones industrials
tumbled 233 points, the sixth
time in nine sessions that the
index has dropped by triple
digits.
Wall Street's foul mood
about the economy and earnings sent the Dow, which feU
238 points Tuesday, lower at
the start of trading and seUing
intensified during the last hour
of the session.
"The market is just not
happy,'' said Dan Ascani, presi-

Page AI

dent and research director at
Global Market Strategists in
Gainesville, Ga. "It's very serious ... This has spread to Corporate America from the tech
stock bubble burst. That's not a
good sign for the economy."'
The Dow fell233.76 to finish at 9,487.00, its lowest close '
in two years. Compounding
Tuesday's 238-point dive,
Wednesday's decline meant the
Dow has lost 1,371.25 points,
or 12.6 percent, over the past
nine sessions.
Broader market indicators
also fell. The Nasdaq composite index was off a more moderato 27.21, or 1.5 percent, at
1,830.23, but the Standard &amp;

Poor's 500 feU a steeper 20.48,
or 1.8 percent, to 1,122.14.
Stocks extended the decline
that began Tuesday when the
Fed cut interest rates · by 0.5
percentage point. · Investors
believed that a more aggressive
0.75 point reductiori was
needed to boost the slowing
economy and ,anemic corporate profits, and the Fed's failure to deliver a bigger cut
prompted investors to sell
heavily.
·
Wall Street has been
increasingly
downtrodden
since last week's steep drop
that gave the Dow irs worstever weekly point drop of
8:! 1.21.
I

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - E1edricity wholesalers
overcharged California $5.5 billion over the past I 0 months,
according to a report by managers of the state's power grid.
The five companies, among other things, frequently offered
electricity at prices double what it cost them to produce, concludes the California Independent System ' Operator study,
which was published Thursday in the Los Angeles Times.
"All overcharged, but some excessi\Tj:ly and some by moderate amounts," -said Anjali Sheffrin, the !SO's director of market
·
analysis.
The Times said the ISO planned to file the study with federal · regulators Thursday and are demanding that the money be
paid back.

. Fingerprints help FBrs case
'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - . An FBI expert testified on Wednesday that the fingerprints of an Algerian man charged in a terrorist conspiracy to bomb West Coast sites during Millennium
celebrations were found on virtually every significant piece of
evidence in the case against him.
.
James Rettberg, the FBI specialist, told jurors he isolated fingerprints on the covers of four timing dovices that could have
set off bombs. The agent said. the prints belonged to Ahmed
Ressam, who was arrested on Dec. 14, 1999, by U.S. Customs
officers as he arrived by car ferry from British Columbia. Tho
trunk of the rental car was fuU of bomb-making materials.

~JW~Jc£'i'w&lt;£J~~

Sft't"91t ~...
~ ~~(left 7~ &amp;4~ .

· 1~ Att ~ s~ ~ ?tetA; ..
Seed PotatoM
• ·Kennebec • Irish Cobbler
• Yukon Gold
· • Red La Soda
Onion Sets
• Red • Yellow • White • Dutch
Bulk Gorden
• Broccoli
Seed

Thumt.y, March 22, 2001

TI-illRsDAY'S

•

I

OWie S

HIGHLIGHTS
Realignment
to,c:FL
p
es

ero·es

THE CHEAP SEATS

NEWYORK (AP) -The
NFL, which must realign its
divisions when Houston
· rejoins the league for the
2002 season, wiU go down to
the June 1 deadline before
making a final decision.
· The league made that official Wednesday, saying the
~earns would not be realigned
next week at the annual
spring meetings in Palm
Desert, Calif.
· In this case, realignment
probably will be voted on at a .
meeting scheduled for Chicago during the final week of
May.
.. The basic format for the
increase from 31 to 32. teams
already is approved: eight
divisions of four teams each
with a 16-game schedule that
will include home-and-home
. games within the division,
f'?ur more games against
inother division in t\leir conference and four games
against a team in the other
conference.

Nelson

M. Simpson

Lyons

Brannon

senior Shawn Zink (7.2 ppg, 6.6
rpg) and 6:2 junior Brian Shoup
(7.5 ppg,4.3 rpg).
The Bees eight-man rotation
includes 6-4 senior Carl Swanson
(2.7 ppg, 1.8 rpg), 5-8 junior Drew
Bowman 1. 9 ppg, 1. 7 rpg) and 6-2
sophomore Kevin Shoup (2.6 ppg,
1.6 rpg).
According to scouting reports, the
Bees like to get out in transition, as
evidenced by their 71.3 points per
game average.
"I think they're a very gnod club,"
said Eastern head coach Howie
Caldwell. "They have two exceptional players in Witt and Plunkett.

Please see Eastem. B2

Please see Carter, B2

Grubb

Kimes

•
A. Simpson

Shanks

Werry

Caldwell

T. Simpson

· Flyers mn ·
'

' DAYTON (AP) - Rashad
.l'.hiUips scored 23 points to
l~ad Detroit to a 59-42 victory over Dayton on Wednesday
night to advance to the
National Invitation Tourna·ment semifinals.
Detroit will play the winner .
of the Friday night's AlabamaPurdue game at Madison
Square Garden in New York
·next week.
Detroit (25-1 0) broke the
game open midway in the
second half and led 51-31
with fiv~ minutes remaining.
The Titans then ran out the
clock and played keep~away
offense to seal the victory.
Tony Stimley scored I 7
points to lead Dayton (2113), which shot only 32 percent from the field.
'
In the first half, the Titans
played tight defense and ben.efited from the Flyers' poor
shooting. Detroit took a 1211 lead at 14:57, went on a
pine-point run, and never
trailed again. The Titans
closed the half with a 33-23
lead.

.. "Super Soph'
wins Mr.

-.. a.sketball

~.

:;COLUMBUS
This
year's Ohio Mr. Basketball
award will go down in history
as LeBron James of Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary took the.
annual honor. '
James, a 6-foot-6 ·· 1/2
superstar in the making who
most experts think will jump
from high school to the ptos,
is the first sophomore to win
The Associated Press Ohio
Mr. Basketball award, which is
in its 14th season.
··)ames, also the Division III
player of the year, will receive
a: plaque in the shape of Ohio.
Finishing behind James in
die media balloting wore
Division II player of the year
Mike Gansey of Olmsted
Falls, Kevin Martin of
:lanesville; and the Division I
Co-player of the year, J.J.
Sullinger of Thomas Wortllington.
~; Earlier this week, James was
s.!'lected as the nation's sophomore player of the year by
The Sporting News, a ·nation:ir publication based in St.
Louis.
St. Vincent-St. Mary is 51-1.
in James' two seasons, with its
only defeat coming against
Oak Hill (Va.) Academy.

,

Eagle' ready for Bees
Bv ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

EAST MEIGS- Eastern continues its odyssey Friday as the 2001
OHSAA Division IV state tournament opens play.
The red-hot Eagles (22-3) square
off with a solid Tipp City Bethel
squad in the second semifinal at 2
p.m. tomorrow at the Schottenstein
Center in Columbus.
Eastern enters play tomorrow as
one. of the hottest teams in the state,
in any division, riding a 19-game ·
winning streak.
Bethel (21-4) rolls into the Schott
on a
of its own having won
eight consecutive games.
Both clubs were ranked in the

·ron

fipal Associated Press state poll, with
the Eagles checking in at No. 10,
while Bethel was tied for 11th.
The Bees feature a dangerous 1-2
storing punch in junior Matt Witt
and senior Matt Plunkett. Witi is the
club's leading scorer, averaging 25.2·
points per game. Witt and Worthington Christian's Scott Hadley
.were tabbed co-players of the year
in the Associated Press Division IV
All-Ohio voting.
Plunkett pours in an average of
19.7 points per game and is Bethel's
top rebounder, clearing 8. 5 boards
per contest.
The supporting cast of tentative
starters includes 6-3 senior Eric
Hoivogt (3.2 ppg, 4.2 rpg), 6-4

Eagles keep
everything
the same
No big motor coach for these guys.
No fancy digs in Columbus.
No hype.
No hoopla.
No tape measure to show that the
vital pimensions of the Schottenstein
Center are the same as that of their gym
back on the banks of the East Shade
River.
It's just business as usual for Howie
Caldwell's Eastern .Eagles as they head
to Columbus in their quest to bring
back a state championship.
"We get used to doing things a certain way and I think you have to keep
that routine," Caldwell said. "The kids
' in the same seats. The cheerleaders sit
sit
in the same sears. A lot people think,
'you're carrying that too far,' but I think
ies being organized."
This is an Eastern ballclub that truly
believes in its ability to go to the Schott·
and do the business of winning a state
title. The confidence this club has displayed all week has been an inspiration .
There's a definite swagger to this club,
not an arrogant sw;Jgger, but the type
that youlve seen great teams exude
down through the years. It's a confidence that's rooted in its coaches, both
of whom have experienced championship-caliber basketball.
"Coach Simpson was with three clubs
that have been to state tournaments, and
I've been with three clubs that have
been to state tournaments." Caldwell
said. "Hey, we've dreamed about this. We
thought all along about th e state tournament; that we were going to go there.
"Now I don't mean that to be a cocky
statement, but, hey, that was our goal all
year long." .
And the Eastern fans have that sa me
confidence, as evidenced by the. advance
ticket sales this week. Caldwell said th at
as of Wednesday. the school had sold
nearly 1, 700 tickets for Friday's game.
"It's been almost like a total family

-.

·· Detroit stops

Andrew
Carter

Ohi o AP hands out Division IV honors
1

COLUMBUS (AP) - Worthington Christian's Scott Hadley and Tipp
City Bethel's Matt Witt won the top
individual awards on the 2000-200 l
Associated Press Division rv boys AllOhio high school basketball team
announced Wednesday.
Hadley, a 6-foot-5 senior, had marks
of 23.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.9 ·
assists a game. He hit 57 percent of his
. shots from the field and 84 percent of
his free throws for a team that went
16-4 and to the regional finals one
year ·after losing seven of their top
eight players from a state semifinalist.
Witt is a 6-foot junior who provid-

ed 25.9 points and 5 assists a game for Hatch of North Lima South Range
a Bethel team that has climbed all the (5-11, sr., 19.4) and poll champion
way to this week's state tournament.
Maria Stein Marion Lo.cal's B.J.
Bethel (21-4) takes on Reedsville Wolters (6-3, sr., 17.0) . .
Dethel's Matt Plunkett (6-3, sr.,
Eastern (22-3) at 2 p.m. Friday, three
hours after Delphos St. John's (21-4) 19.1) is listed on the second team.
Eastern seniors Matt Simpson and
meets Sirasburg-Franklin (22-4) in
the first Division IV semifinal. The Joe Brown were also recognized.
Simpson received special mention,
title game is at 5 p.m. Saturday.
Also listed on the first team are Matt while Brown received honorable
McCurdy of Springfield Catholic mention.
Simpson averaged 13.4 points per
Central (5-10, sr., 20.4 points per
game); Fort jennings' Matt Metzger game led the team in rebounding
(6-2, sr., 20.4); Beaver Eastern's Matt averaging 7.1 per game.
Hines (6-5, sr., 23.8); Willie McCrary . Brown led the Eagles in scoring
of Bridgeport (6-l, sr., 20.5); Chris averaging 15.7 points per game. He

also averaged 5.9 rebounds per game.
Eastern defeated Worthington
Christian 79-7 1 in overtime to win
the regional championship, and will
face Tipp City Bethel in the state
semifinals Friday at 2 p.m. at th e
Schottenstein Center in Columbus.
The coaches of the year are Maria·
Stein Marion Local's Keith Westrick,
whose teanJ captured the poll crown ,
and Kalida's Dick Kortokrax . Kortokrax ran his record to (,83-239 in 41
years ' as a head coach, giving him

more wins in Ohio than any coach

Please see D·IV, 82

Rick Pitino heads to his new
Kentucky home at Louisville

SUCK RICK BACK IN THE BWEQRASS STATE - Rick Pltlno
was hired as head coach at Louisville Wednesday. (AP)

lit

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)Rick
Pitino
became
LouisviUe's basketball coach
Wednesday, returning to the
state where he won a national championship in 1996.
Pitino and his family
arrived to enthusiastic cheers
at an evening news conference and pep rally to introduce him as coach.
"Now it's my time to lead
the Cardinals back to prominence,'' Pitino said.
Pitino, who won the
national title as coach of the
\

Kentucky Wildcats, resigned
as coach and president of the
Boston Celtics in January
after 3 112 disappointing seasons.
His hiring at Louisville follows a bold, aggressive
courtship by athletic director
Tom Jurich, who acted as a
one-1nan search committee.

Jurich said two weeks ago
that Pitino was his only ca ndidate for the job.
Pitino, who was courted by
Michigan and other schools.
said wife Joanne helped con-

vince him to take the
Louisville job.
He said she told him, " I
think th3t you love the state
of Kentucky ; you love the
people you met at U. of L. I
think you should go back to
the place you love."
He said he almost decided
to take the Michigan job
Wednesday morning.
Juri ch flew to Pitino's
Miami home on March 9 and
persuaded him to visit the

PI•••• IH Pltlno, 12

�.- .

. . .. .
~

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Budget pes to House

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
States is ousting 51 Russian diplomats in
retaliation for the planting of a suspected
spy at the FBI - a move expected to
draw a tit-for-tat respense from Moscow,
U.S. officials said.
"Assumedly, they are going to make a
request for some of our most experienced
to leave,'' said Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla.,
vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee. "That is .the expected way in
which these counterintelligence incidents
work when they go sour:'
The action is the largest diplomat
expulsion since the Cold War and further
clouds dealings between the relatively
new administrations of President Bush
and Russian President Vladimir Putin, a
former KGB official.

Bush hopes for trade authority
WASHINGTON (AP) -·The Bush administration is optimistic that it will be able to succeed where the Clinton adminIStration suffered one of its biggest failures - gaining co ngressional authority to nego tiate new trade agre,ements.

lhumt.y. March n. 2001

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Eastern-Bethel vital info, Page B2

,.

Page 81

U.S. orders Russian diplomats to leave

WASHINGTON (AP) -The House will probably rubberstamp President Bush's fiscal priorities next week, now that the
House Budget Committee has approved a Republican-written
$1.94 trillion budget for 2002 that largely reflects his goals.
The budget panel gave Bush a victory Wednesday in the year's
first congressional showdown over his tax and spending plans,
endorsing the budgetary blueprint on a party-line 23-19 roll
call.
In the co urse of a partisan but chummy session that lasted 12
hours, the GOP-led committee swatted down more than two
dozen Democratic attempts to rework the measure. The defeat~
ed amendments focused on shrinking Bush's signature $1.6 trillion, 10-year tax cut, shoring up Medicare and Social Security
solvency, and other changes.
"Hope, yes, but it's probably not realistic,'' said budget committee Chairman Jim Nussle, R-lowa, when ·asked if next
week's full House vote might be less partisan. "It would be .very
difficult, based on the way things have transpired this year so
far."

In Moscow, a scheduled meeting
between Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov and U.S. Ambassador
James Collins was put off after the American envoy was called to the Foreign
Ministry early Thursday morning,
Zyuganov's spokesman said.
However, a U.S. Embassy official
denied that Collins had been called to the
ministry. Collins was having a scheduled
meeting he had requested with Deputy
Foreign Minister Georgy Mamedov, the
official said, adding that it was not related
to the current controversy.
"I'm here to discuss bilateral relations,''
Collins told reporters as he entered the
Foreign Ministry.
.
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov
declined to comment on the roiling con-

Julia Roberts, wl\o is up for an
Academy Award for her performance
in "Enn Brackovlch," has proven to be
"money" at the box office. Here Is a
look at Roberts' top-grossing movies.

NEW YORK (AP) - A tentative settlement has been
reached in a civil lawsuit brought by a Haitian immigrant tortured in a police station in !997, the Daily News reported
Thursdav.
Unde; terms of the proposal; Abner Louima would receive $9
million from the city and the Police Benevolent Association. In
return, he would drop his demand for reform in the way rhe
New York Police Department deals with officers accused of
crimes.
The proposed settlement ,was distributed to the parties Tuesday. Both sides are scheduled to meet March 28 to sign the deal,
barring any disagreemont, the News report~d.
·
If finalized, the settlement would close the ugliest chapter in
the•department's history. Louima's beating sparked protests and
led to convictions of six officers.

In n]MiOOII

$178.4

Erin Brockovich

$125.5

$152.3
$127.1

$119.7
Hook
$116.1
Nolting Hill
Sleeping with the Enemy

I

Pricey parts plague Pentagon
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a high-tech twist to a familiar
Pentagon problem, a computer system designed to prevent purchases of overpriced hammers and toilet seats created some
oxcesses of its own - incluiling spending $409 on a sink worth
just $39.
·
·
The Defense Department installed the system to automate
purchases and eliminate possible fraud by human buyers. But
the computer never checked more than one vendor to get the
best price.
Besides buying six of the high-priced sinks, the system
bought screws for $2 that should have cost less than 50 cents ·
and "dust protection plugs" for 25 cents that actually cost just
pennies, according to a Pentagon inspector general report·
obtained by The Associated Puss.
The report said contractors. probably know how to cheat the
system without getting caught. Auditors estimated that' over- .
payments accounted for $1.2. million Of the $14 million in
automated purchases they reviewed from April 1999 through
March 2000.

ing in Moscow."

Tentative accord reached in suit ·

Top-grossing movies
Pretty Woman
Runaway Bride
My Best Friend's Wedding

frontation botween the two countries,
saying the situation "must bo lookod into
carefuUy" before the . ministry reacts, tho
lnterfax news agency reported.
But a top foreign affairs aido to Putin
expre&lt;sed regret over the accused spios'
expulsion.
"Any campaign of spy mania and
searching for enemies bring deep regret,
and this is a fallback to the Cold War
epoch," aide Sergei Prikhodko said,
according to the !TAR-Tass news agency.
Gennady Seleznyov, spoaker of the
lower hous.e of parliament, the State
Duma, speculated that in exchange for
die expulsions, "We'D 6nd reasons for
finding exactly that number of (American) diplomats who should not be work-

Cochran, among others.
"! thought it was time for it to be taken care of," Sutton said.
"And there were enough peopl e who thought it should be
do·ne to insulate (Sharpton) from any further controversy."

sh

.

The idea being ·proposed by U.S. Trade Represe ntative
Robert Zoellick is to · link .the congressional negotiating
authority, which is very controversial, with legislation that
enjoys broader support, such as striking a free trade agreement
with Jordan and providing assistance to workers who lose thea
jobs because of exports.
But . the packaging approach is already drawing heavy fire
from Democrats in Congress.
Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., and 27 other House Democrats
have se nt a letter to President Bush warning that such an effort
would be a "serious mistake."

Steel

I

Report: power overcharged

Flaws found in gun checks

ShaFpton pals p•ying settlement

WASHINGTON (AP) -Armed with fake IDs, undercover
congressional investigators sailed through mandatory background checks and bought guns from licensed dealers in five
states, lawmakers were told Wednesday.
' The background che~k system can determine if a potential
gun buyer has a criminal history, but there is no safeguard to
verify whether the name or identification being used by the
buyer is valid, the General Accounting Office investigatiof
found.
As a result, the current system "cannot ensure that the
prospective purchaser is not a felon," the study said.
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who sought the undercover
investigation, said the findings point to a problem with laws
ineant to prevent criminals from purchasing weapons.

NEWYORK (AP) - Black business leaders have reportedly coUected thousands of dollars to help the Rev. AI Sharpton
pay damages a jury assessed when it determined he slandered a
former prosecutor.
The civil rights activist was ordered to pay $65,000 for
·defaming Steven Pagones by accusing him of raping a black
teen-ager in 1987. A grand jury later concluded the girl had
fabricated the story.
Former Manhattan borough president and businessman Percy
Sutton recendy made' a $40,000 payment to Pagones, The New
York Post reported Thursday. Sutton said contributions also
have come from Black Enterprise magazine chairman Earl
Graves Sr., Essence publisher Ed Lewis and la\vyer Johnnie

Visitors praise·skipper's calm
PEARL
HARBOR, right," recalled Anthony
Hawaii (AP) While Schnur, one of 16 civilians
frightened civilians struggled aboard the USS Greeneville
to understand how their . when it . hit · and sunk a
Navy submarine had just Japanese fishing boat, killing
smashed through the hull of nine people.
interviews
with
a fishing boat, they say the
In
submarine's
commander National
Transportation
snapped to action.
Safety Board investigators
Within 'minutes he was on released Wednesday, .· the
the . public address system civilian guests were unstinturging the crew to "take a ing in their praise of Cmdr.
deep breath. Settle down. Scott Waddle's professionalYou've been trained for this. ism and courtesy.
You're the best, let's do this
Some said he stayed so

cool he even remembered to
hal)-d out souvenir pictures
before they left the submarine the following day.·
"We were all just distraught. We can't believe this
has happened to this guy,"
·said Michael Mitchell, who
was among the guests, some
of whom were invited
because of their efforts to
raise money for •. World War
II naval memorial.

'Stocks move lower Wednesday on
disappointment over interest rate cut
NEW YORK (AP) · Investors punished stocks again
Wednesday, driving down blue
chips as they grappled with
disappointment over the Fed- .
era! Reserve's interest rate policy. The Dow Jones industrials
tumbled 233 points, the sixth
time in nine sessions that the
index has dropped by triple
digits.
Wall Street's foul mood
about the economy and earnings sent the Dow, which feU
238 points Tuesday, lower at
the start of trading and seUing
intensified during the last hour
of the session.
"The market is just not
happy,'' said Dan Ascani, presi-

Page AI

dent and research director at
Global Market Strategists in
Gainesville, Ga. "It's very serious ... This has spread to Corporate America from the tech
stock bubble burst. That's not a
good sign for the economy."'
The Dow fell233.76 to finish at 9,487.00, its lowest close '
in two years. Compounding
Tuesday's 238-point dive,
Wednesday's decline meant the
Dow has lost 1,371.25 points,
or 12.6 percent, over the past
nine sessions.
Broader market indicators
also fell. The Nasdaq composite index was off a more moderato 27.21, or 1.5 percent, at
1,830.23, but the Standard &amp;

Poor's 500 feU a steeper 20.48,
or 1.8 percent, to 1,122.14.
Stocks extended the decline
that began Tuesday when the
Fed cut interest rates · by 0.5
percentage point. · Investors
believed that a more aggressive
0.75 point reductiori was
needed to boost the slowing
economy and ,anemic corporate profits, and the Fed's failure to deliver a bigger cut
prompted investors to sell
heavily.
·
Wall Street has been
increasingly
downtrodden
since last week's steep drop
that gave the Dow irs worstever weekly point drop of
8:! 1.21.
I

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - E1edricity wholesalers
overcharged California $5.5 billion over the past I 0 months,
according to a report by managers of the state's power grid.
The five companies, among other things, frequently offered
electricity at prices double what it cost them to produce, concludes the California Independent System ' Operator study,
which was published Thursday in the Los Angeles Times.
"All overcharged, but some excessi\Tj:ly and some by moderate amounts," -said Anjali Sheffrin, the !SO's director of market
·
analysis.
The Times said the ISO planned to file the study with federal · regulators Thursday and are demanding that the money be
paid back.

. Fingerprints help FBrs case
'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - . An FBI expert testified on Wednesday that the fingerprints of an Algerian man charged in a terrorist conspiracy to bomb West Coast sites during Millennium
celebrations were found on virtually every significant piece of
evidence in the case against him.
.
James Rettberg, the FBI specialist, told jurors he isolated fingerprints on the covers of four timing dovices that could have
set off bombs. The agent said. the prints belonged to Ahmed
Ressam, who was arrested on Dec. 14, 1999, by U.S. Customs
officers as he arrived by car ferry from British Columbia. Tho
trunk of the rental car was fuU of bomb-making materials.

~JW~Jc£'i'w&lt;£J~~

Sft't"91t ~...
~ ~~(left 7~ &amp;4~ .

· 1~ Att ~ s~ ~ ?tetA; ..
Seed PotatoM
• ·Kennebec • Irish Cobbler
• Yukon Gold
· • Red La Soda
Onion Sets
• Red • Yellow • White • Dutch
Bulk Gorden
• Broccoli
Seed

Thumt.y, March 22, 2001

TI-illRsDAY'S

•

I

OWie S

HIGHLIGHTS
Realignment
to,c:FL
p
es

ero·es

THE CHEAP SEATS

NEWYORK (AP) -The
NFL, which must realign its
divisions when Houston
· rejoins the league for the
2002 season, wiU go down to
the June 1 deadline before
making a final decision.
· The league made that official Wednesday, saying the
~earns would not be realigned
next week at the annual
spring meetings in Palm
Desert, Calif.
· In this case, realignment
probably will be voted on at a .
meeting scheduled for Chicago during the final week of
May.
.. The basic format for the
increase from 31 to 32. teams
already is approved: eight
divisions of four teams each
with a 16-game schedule that
will include home-and-home
. games within the division,
f'?ur more games against
inother division in t\leir conference and four games
against a team in the other
conference.

Nelson

M. Simpson

Lyons

Brannon

senior Shawn Zink (7.2 ppg, 6.6
rpg) and 6:2 junior Brian Shoup
(7.5 ppg,4.3 rpg).
The Bees eight-man rotation
includes 6-4 senior Carl Swanson
(2.7 ppg, 1.8 rpg), 5-8 junior Drew
Bowman 1. 9 ppg, 1. 7 rpg) and 6-2
sophomore Kevin Shoup (2.6 ppg,
1.6 rpg).
According to scouting reports, the
Bees like to get out in transition, as
evidenced by their 71.3 points per
game average.
"I think they're a very gnod club,"
said Eastern head coach Howie
Caldwell. "They have two exceptional players in Witt and Plunkett.

Please see Eastem. B2

Please see Carter, B2

Grubb

Kimes

•
A. Simpson

Shanks

Werry

Caldwell

T. Simpson

· Flyers mn ·
'

' DAYTON (AP) - Rashad
.l'.hiUips scored 23 points to
l~ad Detroit to a 59-42 victory over Dayton on Wednesday
night to advance to the
National Invitation Tourna·ment semifinals.
Detroit will play the winner .
of the Friday night's AlabamaPurdue game at Madison
Square Garden in New York
·next week.
Detroit (25-1 0) broke the
game open midway in the
second half and led 51-31
with fiv~ minutes remaining.
The Titans then ran out the
clock and played keep~away
offense to seal the victory.
Tony Stimley scored I 7
points to lead Dayton (2113), which shot only 32 percent from the field.
'
In the first half, the Titans
played tight defense and ben.efited from the Flyers' poor
shooting. Detroit took a 1211 lead at 14:57, went on a
pine-point run, and never
trailed again. The Titans
closed the half with a 33-23
lead.

.. "Super Soph'
wins Mr.

-.. a.sketball

~.

:;COLUMBUS
This
year's Ohio Mr. Basketball
award will go down in history
as LeBron James of Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary took the.
annual honor. '
James, a 6-foot-6 ·· 1/2
superstar in the making who
most experts think will jump
from high school to the ptos,
is the first sophomore to win
The Associated Press Ohio
Mr. Basketball award, which is
in its 14th season.
··)ames, also the Division III
player of the year, will receive
a: plaque in the shape of Ohio.
Finishing behind James in
die media balloting wore
Division II player of the year
Mike Gansey of Olmsted
Falls, Kevin Martin of
:lanesville; and the Division I
Co-player of the year, J.J.
Sullinger of Thomas Wortllington.
~; Earlier this week, James was
s.!'lected as the nation's sophomore player of the year by
The Sporting News, a ·nation:ir publication based in St.
Louis.
St. Vincent-St. Mary is 51-1.
in James' two seasons, with its
only defeat coming against
Oak Hill (Va.) Academy.

,

Eagle' ready for Bees
Bv ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

EAST MEIGS- Eastern continues its odyssey Friday as the 2001
OHSAA Division IV state tournament opens play.
The red-hot Eagles (22-3) square
off with a solid Tipp City Bethel
squad in the second semifinal at 2
p.m. tomorrow at the Schottenstein
Center in Columbus.
Eastern enters play tomorrow as
one. of the hottest teams in the state,
in any division, riding a 19-game ·
winning streak.
Bethel (21-4) rolls into the Schott
on a
of its own having won
eight consecutive games.
Both clubs were ranked in the

·ron

fipal Associated Press state poll, with
the Eagles checking in at No. 10,
while Bethel was tied for 11th.
The Bees feature a dangerous 1-2
storing punch in junior Matt Witt
and senior Matt Plunkett. Witi is the
club's leading scorer, averaging 25.2·
points per game. Witt and Worthington Christian's Scott Hadley
.were tabbed co-players of the year
in the Associated Press Division IV
All-Ohio voting.
Plunkett pours in an average of
19.7 points per game and is Bethel's
top rebounder, clearing 8. 5 boards
per contest.
The supporting cast of tentative
starters includes 6-3 senior Eric
Hoivogt (3.2 ppg, 4.2 rpg), 6-4

Eagles keep
everything
the same
No big motor coach for these guys.
No fancy digs in Columbus.
No hype.
No hoopla.
No tape measure to show that the
vital pimensions of the Schottenstein
Center are the same as that of their gym
back on the banks of the East Shade
River.
It's just business as usual for Howie
Caldwell's Eastern .Eagles as they head
to Columbus in their quest to bring
back a state championship.
"We get used to doing things a certain way and I think you have to keep
that routine," Caldwell said. "The kids
' in the same seats. The cheerleaders sit
sit
in the same sears. A lot people think,
'you're carrying that too far,' but I think
ies being organized."
This is an Eastern ballclub that truly
believes in its ability to go to the Schott·
and do the business of winning a state
title. The confidence this club has displayed all week has been an inspiration .
There's a definite swagger to this club,
not an arrogant sw;Jgger, but the type
that youlve seen great teams exude
down through the years. It's a confidence that's rooted in its coaches, both
of whom have experienced championship-caliber basketball.
"Coach Simpson was with three clubs
that have been to state tournaments, and
I've been with three clubs that have
been to state tournaments." Caldwell
said. "Hey, we've dreamed about this. We
thought all along about th e state tournament; that we were going to go there.
"Now I don't mean that to be a cocky
statement, but, hey, that was our goal all
year long." .
And the Eastern fans have that sa me
confidence, as evidenced by the. advance
ticket sales this week. Caldwell said th at
as of Wednesday. the school had sold
nearly 1, 700 tickets for Friday's game.
"It's been almost like a total family

-.

·· Detroit stops

Andrew
Carter

Ohi o AP hands out Division IV honors
1

COLUMBUS (AP) - Worthington Christian's Scott Hadley and Tipp
City Bethel's Matt Witt won the top
individual awards on the 2000-200 l
Associated Press Division rv boys AllOhio high school basketball team
announced Wednesday.
Hadley, a 6-foot-5 senior, had marks
of 23.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.9 ·
assists a game. He hit 57 percent of his
. shots from the field and 84 percent of
his free throws for a team that went
16-4 and to the regional finals one
year ·after losing seven of their top
eight players from a state semifinalist.
Witt is a 6-foot junior who provid-

ed 25.9 points and 5 assists a game for Hatch of North Lima South Range
a Bethel team that has climbed all the (5-11, sr., 19.4) and poll champion
way to this week's state tournament.
Maria Stein Marion Lo.cal's B.J.
Bethel (21-4) takes on Reedsville Wolters (6-3, sr., 17.0) . .
Dethel's Matt Plunkett (6-3, sr.,
Eastern (22-3) at 2 p.m. Friday, three
hours after Delphos St. John's (21-4) 19.1) is listed on the second team.
Eastern seniors Matt Simpson and
meets Sirasburg-Franklin (22-4) in
the first Division IV semifinal. The Joe Brown were also recognized.
Simpson received special mention,
title game is at 5 p.m. Saturday.
Also listed on the first team are Matt while Brown received honorable
McCurdy of Springfield Catholic mention.
Simpson averaged 13.4 points per
Central (5-10, sr., 20.4 points per
game); Fort jennings' Matt Metzger game led the team in rebounding
(6-2, sr., 20.4); Beaver Eastern's Matt averaging 7.1 per game.
Hines (6-5, sr., 23.8); Willie McCrary . Brown led the Eagles in scoring
of Bridgeport (6-l, sr., 20.5); Chris averaging 15.7 points per game. He

also averaged 5.9 rebounds per game.
Eastern defeated Worthington
Christian 79-7 1 in overtime to win
the regional championship, and will
face Tipp City Bethel in the state
semifinals Friday at 2 p.m. at th e
Schottenstein Center in Columbus.
The coaches of the year are Maria·
Stein Marion Local's Keith Westrick,
whose teanJ captured the poll crown ,
and Kalida's Dick Kortokrax . Kortokrax ran his record to (,83-239 in 41
years ' as a head coach, giving him

more wins in Ohio than any coach

Please see D·IV, 82

Rick Pitino heads to his new
Kentucky home at Louisville

SUCK RICK BACK IN THE BWEQRASS STATE - Rick Pltlno
was hired as head coach at Louisville Wednesday. (AP)

lit

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)Rick
Pitino
became
LouisviUe's basketball coach
Wednesday, returning to the
state where he won a national championship in 1996.
Pitino and his family
arrived to enthusiastic cheers
at an evening news conference and pep rally to introduce him as coach.
"Now it's my time to lead
the Cardinals back to prominence,'' Pitino said.
Pitino, who won the
national title as coach of the
\

Kentucky Wildcats, resigned
as coach and president of the
Boston Celtics in January
after 3 112 disappointing seasons.
His hiring at Louisville follows a bold, aggressive
courtship by athletic director
Tom Jurich, who acted as a
one-1nan search committee.

Jurich said two weeks ago
that Pitino was his only ca ndidate for the job.
Pitino, who was courted by
Michigan and other schools.
said wife Joanne helped con-

vince him to take the
Louisville job.
He said she told him, " I
think th3t you love the state
of Kentucky ; you love the
people you met at U. of L. I
think you should go back to
the place you love."
He said he almost decided
to take the Michigan job
Wednesday morning.
Juri ch flew to Pitino's
Miami home on March 9 and
persuaded him to visit the

PI•••• IH Pltlno, 12

�Page B 2 • The ·oally Sentinel

BOYS BASKETBALL ROSTER
4

5

10 11
12 13
14 15

20 21
22 23
24 25

30 31
32 33
34 35

40 41
42 43

44 45

Player
Josh Kehl
Garrett Karr
Chris Lyons
Joe Brown
Alex Simpson
Brad Brannon
Jason Kimes
Brrent Buckley
Matt Simpson
Chad Nelson
Brandon Werry
Nathan Grubb ·
Jeremy Shanks

Head Coach

-

H.!... Class
5-7
5-9
5-10
6-1
6-0
5-9
5-8
6-1
6-4
6-1
5-7

Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
So.

5-10
5-9

Howie Caldwell

Record: 21-4
Record: 22-3
Location: Tip
Location:
City
eedsville
Final AP Ranking: Final AP Ranking:
No. 11 (tie)
0. 10
Nickname: Bees
Nickname: Eagles
Boys Enrollment: Boys Enrollment:
112
104
Conference: Tri- Conference: Cros
County
illey
State Appearances: State Appearances:
2nd
1st
Champi- State
Cham pi
State
nships: none
onships: 1
Head
Coach: Head
Coach:
Caldwell . Steve Fisher (4t
owte
season)
(3rd season)
Record at School: Record at School:
73-23
4-46

The Daily Sentinel
encourages·your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

BETHEL HIGH SCHOol

Bethel

Eastern

200~

1
.'

TALE OF THE TAPE

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
HV

'lhureday, March ~.

Pomeroy, ~lddleport, Ohio

j
ctass;,~

BOYS BASKETBALL ROSTER
H
4 4
5

5

10 10
11 11
12 12
20 20

21 .21
22 22
23 23

33 33
.42 42
52 52
54 54

Player
Carl Swanson
Drew Bowman
Brett Kopp
Kevin Shoup
Matt Witt
Shawn Zink
Brian Shoup
Justin Smith
Josh Priaulx
Matt Plunkett
Garrett Ginter
Chris Swanson
Eric Holvogt

Ht.

6-4
5-9
5-8
6-2
6-0
6-4
6-2
5-8
6-3
6-3
6-0
6-5

6-3

~

1Sr.

Jr.

·so.
, So. ~~
Jr. ~
Sr. •;

.r

Jr.
Jr.

Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

'j \.I JJ. •. . f..l Jj , J
.J..r ~ ..:J...r 'J .J

-

Cl)

! ·-

CD-m
.c"C

Steve Fisher

-..e
en_

c'Eta

1

Carter

Eagles

!I
m~~
... ·ca c .

sc
ca-a.~
&gt;- . CD
CD.c
ul-

'I

I

~Shoe

·Place

992·5627

top choice, and even former to the NCAA tournament.
Louisville players voiced sup- He also coached the New
port.
York Knicks from 1987-89.
Jurich called a news conferThe season before Pitino
ence March 6 to confirm he arrived at Kentucky, the team
was pursuing Pitlno. When went 13-19- its first losing
Pitino expressed interest, record in 62 years- and was
some Kentucky fans said they · . hit with NCAA probation .
were angry that Pitino would He inherits a Louisville proeven consider coaching the gram in similar disarray.
Wildcats' rival.
The Cardinals finished this
Pitino said the opinions of season 12-19, capping the
Kentucky fans factored into worst four-year run in Crum 's
his decision but that his fami- 30 years. Louisville is 62-62
ly mattered most. His 18- since reaching the NCAA
year-old
son,
Richard, regional finals in 1997 and
accompanied him during his was twice put on probation in
recent visit to the Louisville the 1990s.
campus.
The school hopes Pitino
Pitino, 48, took the Celtics' can guide the Cardinals back
job in 1997 after eight seasons ·to the national .prominence
at Kentucky that solidified his they enjoyed in the 1980s.
reputation as a master
It took Pitino three seasons
rebuilder. He previously to do it in Lexington. Kenturned around mediocre pro- tucky went 14-1 4 in his first
grams at Boston University season and 22-6 in his second.
and Providence_. guiding both . In his third, the Wildcats

Pitino

from Page 81
Louisville campus last
week.
Pitino left impressed, but
said he wanted to consult his
family before 'making-a decision. He worked the NCAA
Midwest Regional in Dayton,
Ohio, as an analyst for CBS
before . flying to Boston to
meet his family Sunday night.
Pitino replaces Hall of
Fame coach Denny Crum,
who retired after months of
strained relations with Jurich.
The 64-year-old Crum, who
led Louisville to NCAA
championships in 1980 and
'86, had two seasons left on
his contract, but accepted a $7
million buyout.
·
Speculation began immediately that Pitino was Jurich's.

i

FIRST TEAM: Matt WIH, l1pt&gt; Clly

D·IV

Bethel, 6·foot, )untor, 25.9 points per

game: Matt McCurdy;Sp&lt;ing. Cath. Cant,
5·10,

from Pap II

Beaver Eeatem, 6·5, sr., 23.8; Willie

McCrary, Bridgopo~, 8·1 , or., 20.5; Chris
Hatch, N. Umo S. Range, 5·11 , sr., 19.4;

before him. He is 26-18 at
Fort Jennings, 200-82 at
Ottoville and 457-139 at
Kalida.

B.J. Wolt&amp;ra, Marla Stein Marion Loctl, 6·

3,

or., 11.0.

nace Green; Mitt llmpion, ft.-clntlle

SECOND TEAM: C~aoo Miller, Lrln·
caster Flahtr Cath., 8·3, ar., 18.5; Aaron
Knight, Fremont St. Joseph, 6·4, tr., 24. g;
Bob Crumrine, E. Canton, 6·2, ar., t8.6:
Marcua McCtnta, Marion Cath., 8·0,

DIVISION IV BOYS ALL-oHIO

eop~ ..

21.1: Man Plunkett, 11PI' City
8111111, 6·3, 11., 19.1: Jullln Myora, Willow
Woad Symmes VaHey, 8·4, tr., 18.3;

COLUMBUS (AP) - Tho 2000·2001
Aeoocloll&lt;l Pruo Dlvleton IV Boyo All·
0~10 ~~g~ echool blekl1blll 111m, blll&lt;l
on tht I'ICOmmtndltlona of a 11111 mt.dla

Sorgo Gentile, Bhadyoldo, S.(), Jr., 18.2.
· THIRD TEAM: Adem Novak, lndopon.
donee. 6·1, er., 1U: Dovld Wltoon, Now·
bury, 6-4, or., 23.0; Trevor Sc~aftor,

panel:

Blllllvlllt,

DIVISION IV
Playoro oll~e yHr: Mitt Witt, 11pp City
Bolhol; Scott Hedll)l, Wo~hlnglon Chilli·

5·10,

tr.,

17.0;

Alu

Schmltling, Mlnlttr, 8-8, 1r., 18.0; BI)'CI
Soll~orz, Cory-Rowoon, 6·2, or., 23.0;
John King, BnttolvHie 8r111ol, 5·11, Jr.,
1M: Andy Francie, Mogadore, 6·2, Jr.,
18.4; TyltrGrltVH, Botlclna, e·1, Jr., 17.0 .
lpoolal Mention
Jooh Drouherd, Cardlnglon·Lincoln:

11n.
Coachtt ot the yur: Dick Kortokrlx,

Kalida; Kolth Wltlllrlck, Mori1 Stoln Morlon
Local.

I

ar., 20.4; Scott Hadley, Worthington

Christian, 6·5, ar., 23.3: Min Metzger, Fan
Jennings, 6·2, ar., 20.-4; Matt Hines,

•

Zach Ross, Centerburg; Riehle Sloan,
Wellsville; Bren Hershberger, S1ralburg·
Franklin: Ryan Bates, Zanesvtlt Rote·
crans; Brian Cooper, S. Charllllon Soutll·
eastern; BrandOn Falknor, New Madison
Tn·VIIIage; Patrick Phillips, Slnduaky St.
Mary's: Ryan Bamen. Mowry1town
W~lteoak: Jos~ Ambld, W.lortord: Trent
Patton, Gloualer Tnmble: Jorry JoRUin,
Porlsmouth East; Alex Poe, Franklin Fur•
Eatt.n; Nick Economut. lndependtnctl
Carl1on Dean, Cleve. Hte. L.u1~. E.: Allen
Klrkpltrick, CliVI. Hto·. Lutll. E.: Bratt
Hl.tghtl, Fairport Harbor; Martt Jtcobl,
Cleve . Hta. Fucha Mlzrachl; Aaron Cuddy,
Aohtabula SS. John &amp; Poul: C.J. Trlvllcn·
no, Klr11ord; Ryan Run, Klnllrd; Thad
DIVII, Optn DOOr, Mlkl NIIIOn, ~·
oon Lldgemonl: Jomeo Sllrro, Cleve.

'
went 29-7, losing to Duke in
the memorable 1992 East
Regi0 nal final.
Kentucky reached. the Final
Four the following season and
went 124-19 over the next
four, winning the school's
sixth national ticle in ·1996.
The Wildcats reached the tide
game in 1997, losing to Arizona, before Pitino accepted a
10-year, $50 million contract
to .coach the Celtics.
Pitino turned the Wildcats
over to Tubby Smith, a former
assistant. Smith congratulated
Louisville from Philadelphia,
where Kentucky is preparing
to play Southern California
on Thursday in the East
. Regional semifinals.
"They're getting one of the
great coaches in basketball;'
Smith said. ''I'll welcome him
back."

Aaron Shingleton, Melvern; Trent Oing,
Shadyokle; Aaron Boug/lner, Beallsvlle:
Jloon Ogden, Bellelre SL Jo~n: Kyle
Hoo1otltr, lltf11n Hiland; Rory Kroll, New
Matamoras Frontier;
Er1c Roaanbeck, Ru11le; Jason Meyar,

Covington: Neal POj'ry, YtMow Spnngo;
Nick Trimbac~. CodaNIIIt; BraMon
Moora, Now Modloon TrWiflige: Bred
O'Dell, Arcanum;
, Jared Harmony, Manlfitld St. Plltr'l;
Jtmmy Nlcholaon. Arlington: Oertk

Ellllgn, L r l - Darl&gt;ury: Derek Slto,
Edge~on: Bren Hammon•. Convey
Crtttvlew; Joe Kapcor, Dolphol St
John'a;

Jllro Devil, l'ortomoutll Cloy: Travle
Klolmor, Po""""""" Cloy; .lot lrown,
Herlttgt; Plytn Mc(lreaJ, Daltoni Bub · IINdevtllt l111tm1 Morf&lt; W.lllr, WalorCrumrfno, E. Conton: Craig Gill)!, lno· lcrd: Joty Darnell, Mln0hl111r: Jeremy
tolvltlt Brl1tol; Kirk 8oudtrt, Stbrlng
Wallo, Lotllom Woltlm:
DrHioll, IronMcKinley: Mortc Templeton, Lowollvlllt.
iOn 81. ~: Toby JonH, L111burg
Felrtltld;
·
Honoreblt Mtntlon

Congratulations
-EASTERN EAGLES

We are proud of you
Good Luck in
the Tournament

Aultln Black, 0011. W.lllngtoni Jt~
Ctnttrburg;

Drew Johnaon,

Cordlngton·Lincoln; Jordon Sickinger,
Delewera CMtt~n: B.J. Thl-. Lin·
catlor Fll~or 011~.:
Luc11 Boylan, S1raeburg-Franklln:

Jolh Upenlra, Klneman Bodgor:
Andrew ~llltr, Dillon: Chlcl Formot,
Ca'*&gt;ri Heritage Ch-n: Todd Cope,
McOonlllrt, Jot Eaton, hbrlna McKinley;
Jon Hoohlndontr, Jacbon·MIIton; Klltll
Black, Warren JFK; Jo~n Pembe~on,
Wlrdhlm.

-··--·
- - N . C . 210M

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

O.t.ndlnl champion:
Rusty Wallace

-L--·a.

Dllt JINitt. 758

Tr1ok quallfylnt "cord:
.• Steve Park, Ctlevrolet,
126.370 mph, March 24,

Jeff Green. 807
MonKIItr. 7U

Soon RIIP. 4i5 .

2000

M"'*-'.43

KtW1 H•rvlck. 756

Rick)- Kttndrk:k,

hcMI NOord: Cale
't'afborou1h, Chevrolet.

~12

1. ~ Bet1100, "i1
.. Jatr Gllrdon, . .,
J, StM Park, 115
.. ~ltudd.fM»
J . RustyW.IItce, eoe

Grilli.,...
7152
McLI\IIMMil.

Todd Bodine, IM~

Ted,.,......, 473
J«11 8pract,lt, 472
A.nctt Tohma, ~
Terry Coole, 435

.. MldWII 'IIIIIII'JI, 587

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

. . , - . . . .r

Mike

u.

894

IWinw ¥MIDI••,..

Jlmmls Jolvlson, 110 Rick Crawford, 3i7
Chid U.) ISIO
. 'TIWs ll.¥ellll, 3t3

Kin SChrader,-

lOP TIN

100.989 mph, April 17, 1977

track), 250 laps/133.25 miles
DeftndlnJ champion :
Sterling Marlin
Track qualify In&amp; record:
Jeff Green, Chevrolet.
124.428 mph, March 24.

his won more. W!:ltrlp won

2000

IUICH GRAND NATIONAL
What: cneez-lt 250
When: 1 p.m ., Saturday
WIMr•: Bristol (Tenn.)
Motor Speedw8'1 (.533·mile

~~~~trl]:tl, ..
· IWifitutifCY ·
Fried Chlf;:ken
228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drtvt-Thru Window

992-5432

••••••••••••

Robert Pressley

OnbiMndrlokd~vtrtoftnloh

WINITONCUP

DARLINGTON. S.C.Sometimes havln&amp; the best
car just Isn't &amp;ood enou&amp;h
at Darllnaton Raceway.
St~e Perk clAimed that
dlatlnction In Sundey'a
Carolina DOd~ Dealers ~0()1

onct ·bl' all' ril~ll. )t l~ou1a

have been Chevrolet's fifth
victory In a• manr rac11.
Dale Jarrett took actvantl&amp;t
of 1 break, thoLJCh, lind hit
Ford made short WQ!k of
Park's Chtvrolet In the final
10 laps.
Derllnaton tenda to ~eke
care of ltl own. end Jai'rett'l
victory was his third at the
ea·shaped, 1 .366-mlle

track.

IUICH GRAND NATIONAL

in ttle final 25 laps of the
Suncom 200.
Green beat Kenaeth ovt of
the pits on lap 123 of ,147
and finished less than a
second In front of the
Chevrolet drlvor.
Kensettl once led by
nearly four'aeconds.
Qrlle·n·a ti8mmate, Jas~n
t&lt;l!lller, flnlstled third,
followed by Kenny Wallace,
Mlkt Mc:Leu&amp;hlln and Bobby ·
Hamilton Jr.
·

ORAniMAN TRUll!!

BAMERSFIELO. Calif. Ted Muaarave haa .found
new life In NASCAR's truck
ser111. Saturday's victory at
Mesa Marin Raceway wa.s
Musarave's second In a row.
The Qodge driver started
on the pole and led 119 of
250 laps. He passed
Brendan Gauahen on the
218th lap and ended up
wlnnln&amp; by .858 ot a second
over Jack Spreaue In a
Ctlevralet.

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

I

St. Rt. 248
985·3308

Deor Nt\SCAR Thi~ Week,

Wt are so mad. we could chew
nail s.
NASCAR MC11s the right$ to
televise races to Fo• . bul we dtd
not gel to see the Busch rate on
Feb. 24, ur the h~ppy h&lt;:lur, or the
Earnhardt apccia!, because it wa~
nOI on our F~». netwOTt or our Fol'l
Sports Net.
Then the rnce on Feb. 2~ wtu
rained out. and gueu what'l We
were supposed to see i) on FoK
" Sport! Net, but the)· chose to run
paid ads instead!
Is this the way Fox is soing to
trctd the fan~? It was &amp;O much bet·
ter on TNN and ES PN , and even
TBS and CBS.
We are very disappointed with
rh&lt;! change.
Buddy and Ylr1lnia Mldldfl'
Hor Sprlngt, Ark.

...._.

a

-~u

WI- -INC! to pinch SkiMOI Into tha Will near
tha oiiCII&gt;I 1111.Carotlnt OodJII Dllloro 400 11
.
Darllrcton, Mtlinl aff • c,.lh that caUMd Sklnnar'a
CllHOI« to bl qul1o&lt;t In ftamet ard Torry LrlbOnlt'l
C - to crollllllrd Into SkiMOI'e dlul&gt;lld - ·
, . "IIUIII ~'I opolltr (WIIIoco'l) dldn1ooo
.1

who Wflt out thti'e'or IOI'Mthtnc llkt ttlat," Sklnner'tald.
•He (Walleoe) turned up Into me and jutt kept turnlnt
Into me. I don't know why he dtdn'tjuat tum the
etMrin&amp; wf'IHI beck to the left, but ht pretty much
stuffed me Into tile fence."

NUCAI!Tiolo -'o . . _ - fiiYoO hlp.

spot.

A lot of driWra illY the HANS dfttct, 'NNCh Skinner wet
wea.rtna. makes It dltfk:ult tel
out of the car, and !t
dkl seem to prolonl Skinner's exit. Fortunately, neither
Skinner not' Llbontt WMinjurtd, but there were tome
IC8fY moment. while Skinner was freeln&amp; himself from

aet

a. .. : &amp; - , - PI l l ; , e - l t f ,I_I_ILC.,_IIIe_ ......
..
........... ••'! ____ Coo •
'

lr ....._ .._

c•...,

ltlltlltloe: 175 I'IICBI, 0 polea, 0
wins , 4 to~flve flnlshea, A to~101, more
~ ttlan S5.5 miiUon In eerhln&amp;a
Robert ~ttley wee the first rookie aver1 Plratll: Start (Feb. 20, 1994, at
to win 1 Buach Grand National race. That
Dl)'lona), pole (none), victory (nona)
NASCAR Th11

1

wee~~;

fHI OCCUrred way bllck In 1989, It Orlnll
County Speedway In Roupmont, N.C., a
tiiiCk that no lonaer hosts races In that
NASCAR urltl.
·
AWlnaton Cup re&amp;uler since 1995, last
year Pfeasley had hit best points finish ,
25th, 1nd tlt It off to 1 f11t atllrt In 2001.
Preuley's father, Bob, wu a le&amp;endary
performer on ahort tracks In tne
Clr'Oilnal. Early In RODirt'l ceretr, ne
drove 1 Busch Grand Natlcmal cer partly

owned bV pro baotcetball player Brad

Dtn.latttrty.

Cl 1$&amp;A: Coleman (12), Shelby (turns 7
on Maroh '21!1)
Olt: No. 77 Jtll)lf' En&amp;lnes Ford Taurus,
owned by Doul Bawel
Orew oMet: Ryan Pemberton

Are 1'11111111111' with till - tho 10hallarted? "I'm really happy, I fluess
there are some people who are re1lly
aurprlte&lt;:l or woncterlna whet we're doing,
but I honestly ttllnk we're on the same
track we were last year. The only
difference Is that. et Daytona thlt ~ar, we
miased the bl&amp; wreck .... lt'a 1 lot eealer
on Ryan (Pemberton) and me becauae
Wf"te able to communicate ·a lot better:
How do rou fHI about betnil tNa hlrllt
(11111) In lhl1101nb _ , . . ,
"Honestly, 1 know there are e lot of areat
teams ttlet hewe aotten off to elow starts,
but there are some teams in front of us
that we feel we can beat, too . I don't thln·k
It metttra lr lt'a three r&amp;etl or 33 races. If
we can C(]nllstently be in the lop 15, then
we're aolnl to be ttlere In points at the
end of the year. Wt don't went to run eood
and then run bad:
·

Who'&amp; HotWilds Not

• HOT: Johnny Benson,
with four top-10 finishes
In a row.

... o
!Q, '0
~
a: .!!

1. What driver (]nee drove a car co-owned by
RiCk Hendrick and actor Paul Newman?
2. Who was the first driver to win In a car wltt1 three
digits in Its number?
3. Who was Pres ident Jimm~ Ca rter's favorlte .drlver?

• NOT: Jeff Burton, who
continues to struggle this
season. He's 35ttl in
points.

'll8nOJOQJ&amp;A 918:1 't
~00£ 'ON Ul }l:lOI:I Wll

•t :s)\::1'8$ 18J9 ''):

:::)lil
~ ·a:N
ii
c:J
N
II)

Helton expects no changes for April race at Talladega
ly Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Delpite linsering safety worrle!

In the aftermath oft he Daytona 500,

NASCAR president Mike Helton
all but eliminated any NASCAR·
mandlled rule• ~hanau fort be nt:ct
reatrittor-plate raee - April 22 at
Talladega (Ala.) Supenpecdway.
"We arc not anUeipating any
rules changes a1 Talladep," Helton
said. "We are lookina at dilfercnl
thinJ! , as we normally do. but o,w
are not anticipatinJil•ny chanJilu 1111
the ne11t restrictor-platc rate, and
that just happens to be Talladega."

also revealed thlll NASCAR had a Winalun Cup races for Richard Gr,md N11.1 ional race and will also
handle the driving chores this week
dlta·reco.'ef)' drvkc of sorts in the car Childress later this year,
"We've been talking," Gn:en Jaid at Brislol. Tenn. Finch !lllid he will
in whkh Dale Earnhardt was killed.
"We have technology in the car. after winning Saturday'!; Suncom name a permanent replacemem 10
thouJh, with our hoKeS that NAS- 200. " II'! not ready to be announ~cd PJ. Jones, who was rel eased, wilhm
CAR hit• ln there now, wilh some yet. hul I've talked with the people two weeks.
with Ford to make sure I 1\nd their
inforrnllion in it," Hcllon said.
••We've hYd bo.w1 in all year long, ble~sings (to drive a Chevy in Win·
wlreleu GPS·type sys lems that !Uon Cup)."
UE JUST liKES TO A.4CE :
The pania l·scason Cllperiment
have some infonnalion in them .
We're looking down the road even had been crealed with Kevin Hnr·
more broodly than whul we're doing ~itk in min d, but lhat was before
llarvick bei:amil the tmefBency ~ue·
1orJay.''
ceuor 10 Eornhard1 in .Child re ss'

X

We '1•1! rectil·t:d do:e"s of ll'trtn
}wtt like yvurs.
.

•••••••••••

Fan Tips

&lt; :::r
CDCD~
:ceo
Q) Q) c

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CD

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.....
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... :::::J :::::J
Ul C:::!:CD
Ul CD :::::s en
c::r CD en_

c::r-en

-·o ... c.

CDO)&gt;

• MotOfspprtsTV.com is a
compretlenslve Independent
site dedicated to analyzinJ
television coVeraae of auto
racing. This sit~ will keep you
Informed of Issues about TV
co¥erage that may not nave
occurred to you, such as an
tlour-by-hour accounting of
commercial time, the
percentage of the race
actually televised and the
minutes of post-race

mC.:::r

=~~

-en

-· CD

The president of Mar1insvi lle tN.C.J

Speedway. Clay 'Campbell. wilt

~ompt'IC lhi5 year in ·wc~:kl y e~cnt ~
at Caraway S~edway 111 Asheboro.
N.C.
Monic Carlo.
Campbell will dri\'C a Chc\'rolet
ent~red by Taylor Motorspon s,
whicltlllso fi~lo.b a car in the HOOt·
SPENCER fOR fliRt: : Jimmy crs 1-'roCup Se ries for Ual Goodson,
Spencerdrovr James Finch ·~ No. \ and in the Amrritan Racing· A~~nd·
Chr ~rolct in Saturday's Busch ntion !ARM for Scott Hnll.

Anottler Interesting feature
Is the Sponsor Celebration
Station. which Includes trivia
about race winners and such
tidbits as "liQuid sprayed."
·spraying tectlnlque " and
" femlly present In victory
lane.~ The site also analyzes
television coverage throughout the country, noting what
cable outlets pre-empted
coverage and the experience
of fans who complained.

:-: CREW Of 111 Wla

605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443

• Ttle bad HWt wta
that Dlle J1rrett't pit
crew left some lu&amp;

nutiiOOH durin&amp; bit
nrst stop. The &amp;ood

newa ... more
Important, thoulfl. A
14.2-tecond pit atop
n. .r the end of the
rec:e &amp;n• Jerrttt t
leed he never
relinquished, end tome
key adjustment•
ordered by c,.w chlel
Todd Perrott pvt
Jerrett the td&amp;e he
needed lo hold on to
ttlt lnd In the Cerollna
DodCeDtalert400
over Steve Park.

Ted Dexter
Home: 740·992·5260
Dwight Honaker
Home: 740-985-3709

Fl~

Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

• •

~·

'

Ca/11·800·800-CABLE

m -1 CDn

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I'm 1 big fan of Dale Earn·
hartil, and his death iti 11 big lou to
NASCAR.
.
'
He was B good driv~r. and I
won•t foract about him. 1 would
just like' to say goodbye to him. If
anyone should get tht number] , it
should be Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1
hope he will be a good drivt"r like
· his dad. and I wish him good luck.
Jertnty Nelson
Newark. Ohio

JEFF GREEN ONLINE: Bui!Ch
Grand National el\ampion JtfT
Green now appean to be dte front·
X
runner 10 dri\'C a Chc.,.rolet spon·
LllTU BLACK BOX: Hellnn IOR'd by America Online in selected
Cowllht 2001 The Gaatoo (N .C.) Gafllt\1 · Oiltrlbuled tJfUnlvetsll Prete S)rndlcate [!00)255·6734 ' For release week of Marcl\19. 2001 · Design: CertaGraphlcs Inc .. Sarasota.

.You may experience
brief 1erviCe
inte~ptiom. 'Please
b.e as1ured we will do
everything to keep
interrupti()~&amp;~ to a

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coverage.

••••••••••••

lROUNO THE GARAGE

:z::

Q)

work ouJ.

• •••••••••

lilt wrtekqt."

w~o

adm itred
there M't're some programmi"g
problem.~ that they were trying to

-~ 41

I

o-c
c=m

WI! j)fJMed along )flllr cunu•r1u

Witt: Gina

_..: •Turn three It OlrUnaton 11 a treacherou•

DR. MARGIE LA
D.D.SANDSTAFF.
5th &amp; Pearl St.
Racine.

t.lton fnlm Our Roadtn

to ,.O.r. official!,

1101•tow11: AahtYIIIe, N.C.

fEUD 01 THE WHM

Ridenour
Supply

Your Turn

fROM LAST WEEK

Serlts ctlamplon Jeff Gretn,
who made a bold off·aeaaon
twitch from Chevroleta to
Fords, won fat the first time
. by holdln&amp; off Matt Kanseth

See us for Your Stlhl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Whlln: 1 p.m., April 7
Where: Martinsville (Va .)
Speedway (.526-mlle track),
250 laps/131.5 miles

PROFllf

u-..

DARliNGTON, S.C. -

.1/NJ.:
Ill . .

250

Notlble: Morgan Shepherd
has won more BGN races at
Bristol , four, than anyone
else. Five drivers- Mark
Martin, Todd Bodine , Steve

I. (-) Ricky Rudel
Up to elxth In pointe
I. (I) Mlahllll Wllt~p HaohlldDIIjtono.,.,.._lm
10. (-) Jl-lponoor l~otollo hll flvarlto troek

Crow's
Family
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What: Advance Auto Parts

1992

PIIIUod bJ ovorhHtln•
I. ( 4) ltorll,. Mortln llronllnt
d~vono fir
4. (I)
Bonoon LriOM lui nato ooot blm
1. (I) Kovln Horvlok Hl....ot.flnloblnl rookie
lro faur otrllpt ovonto
8, (t) Stovo Pork
Domlnrotod Darllncton
rooe but ftnlohod -ond

7. (I) JerryNide•

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

BUICk, 92.929 mph, April 4,

Firat Ford d~v•r to win

J......,

Grissom and Larry Pearson ·
tlave won two, and BOdine Is
the only one expected to be
In this year's field ....
Chevrolet&amp; have won 16 of
37 pre\llous races.

Race r•cord: Harry Gant,

12tlmes.

• NASCAR Thla Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heedln&amp;lnto this weekend's race. last
week's ranking lain parentneses.

1. (2) Dille Jorrett
2. (1) Jill! Genion

•11

Outhrlt,

7 • ESPN

POINT~ ~ T~NOING~

7001

t. BIM Elliott, 519

.

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS,
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HUSH.:PUPPIES~ OOCK~R$

p.m. • April

IIIIIR

NAICAIITiolo-

An r~me~ ·••nm

CD Cl)
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c·cn
._
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a,.

IIR&amp;,WIIte:

CIIODo.....,_

• auuh ·Grind N.atlonal, ChHt·lt 210 --.!W'!I::cNI!CT'!O:eNe,C~U:,;P_ _
Noteble: Wallace swept
WIUrt: Sharpie 500
1 p.m. • Saturda~ · FX
the two races here In 2000.
wt.n: 1p.m., Sunday
... Rusty Wallace has won
• WIMton c-., lherple IOQ
WMre:
Bristol (Tenn.)
nine
times at Brl stol. Only
1 p.m. • Sunday • Fox
Motor Speedway (.533-mlle
Darrell Waltrip, now retired ,
8 C...ttam.n Truck, Advence Auto Ptrtl 210 track), 500 laps/266.5 miles

·- CD ::C
Cl) CD
so we should have . ·some per game.
mature a club as I've coached
that's special.''
Despite the fact that his in a long time:' Caldwell said.
What will be even more
experience deciding when we
special for the Eagles is to se~
want to run and when we team faces a state tournament "I think that has a lot to do
't"
matchup, Caldwell said that it with our seniors . They keep
a veritable ocean of green and
don.
from Pip 11
fromPapBl
Bethel is also fairly solid will be business ·as usual for everything in persepctive.
white at the Schottensteih
1
They realize that this is their
We're going to have to play, defensively, giving up only the Eagles.
affair. Last year, and I had Center for Friday's game.
"If we go out and we play last opportunity to do some- nothing to do with this, it was
That's a reality that's ndt
there's no ifs, ands or buts 53.2 points per game, while
thing
that
nobody's
ever
been
1-2-2
zone.
our
normal
game,
we've
got
a
on Caldwell.
'
:
lost
employing
a
about it.
micdy the parents, at every
"At least we know we'¢
"There are two keys to the According to reports, it's a great opportunity," he said. "I able to do before.
home game and every road
"They're
anxious
for
the
was
talking
to
somebody
rare
occasion
when
the
Bees
not
going up there by outgame," he added. "I think one .
game, they feed them
today, and he asked me, 'what game to begin," Caldwell spaghetti. That's special.
selves," he said. "It'll be nic~
of the keys is we have to be go man-to-man.
added. "They honestly do
Eastern counters the Bethel do you think?'
able to rebound. They are
"The signs that you see, · to look up there and S&lt;:)!
"And I asked him, 'well, believe that, 'hey, we've got a that's very special, also. You · green and white, all cheerin~
very quick jumpers, very ath- offensive punch with a balletic jumpers. They're going anced scoring attack that fea- what tell me what you think?' great opporunity; we can do look outside and you have for Reedsville Eastern.''
to block some shots and be tures three players in double And here's how he answered something that nobody's ever your own name on a pole,
digits and two others that me, 'you're not asking them to been able to do here in Meigs
very physical in the paint. ·
"The second key is that we average better than eight do anything that they haven't County, and probably · in
.done before.' I thought that southeast Ohio, that, hey, we
have to able to transition points per game.
.z.t~e~ Brce"~ 1tc....e ?oodlrrM~... , ~· .
The senior trio of Joe was a beautiful statement, can win a state champiomhip
when we want to transition.
We can't get into a total all- Brown, Matt Simpson and because we aren't. We aren't and we've got two games to
out war of running up and Chad Nelson paces the Eagles asking them to go out and do it.'
"And I think that the comdown the court, because I offense. Brown is the club's beat the Boston Celtics or
munity is going to be behind .
think that's what they'd like to top scorer, averaging 15.7 anything like that.
"We're asking them to ·play us. I think the sportswriters, I
points per game. Simpson
do."
the
game that they've played think everybody in southeast
pumps•
in
13.4
points
per
outCaldwell believes his club's
'
Ohio is going to be pulling
experience against teams like ing, and Nelson accounts for all year long."
'
_
Heading into Friday's &lt;:,&lt;;&gt;Q- for Reedsville Eastern."
Chesapeake, Portsmouth Clay 11.5 points per game.
Junior sixth man Chris test, Eastern has been hding a
o!; the' heaith front, Lyons · ·
and Worthington Christian
will help the Eagles against Lyons averages 8. 7 points per wave of emotion spawned by -was back at practice Wednes·,.
game, while junior · point the club's success this season. day after missing practice
Bethel.
"I think if we have an guard Garrett Karr adds 8.4 That success has sparked great Tuesday due to the flu. Caldinterest, not just locally, but well said Lyons was full-(0 at
advantage · that way, it's the points per night.
.C.:;
Sophomore Brent Buckley also from around the region, yesterday's practice and will
fact that we did play ChesaMiddleport
,
peake during the year that chips in three points per with numerous media oudets be fit for Friday.
219 N. Second
Friday's first semifinal,
was a transition club. In the game, while junior Brad visiting the campus by the
tournament,
we
played Brannon averages 2.5 points banks of the East Shade which pits Delphos St. John's
(21-4) against StrasburgPortsmouth Clay, which was a per game and senior Josh River.
Despite the crush of atten- Franklin (22-4), begins at 11
transition club, and Worthing- Kehl ave.rages 2.1 points per
tion, the Eagles have managed a.m. at the Schottenstein
ton Christian, which was a outing.
Center.
Like the opposition, the to stay on track mentally.
transition club.
"I really believe that this
"So, we played three clubs Eagles have stingy on defense,
,.,.
50.6
points
surrendering
just
might
be as focused and
that like to flat out transition,

111

·

:g ...
~

Head Coach

... ,_•we ...

'

877·998·3407

.,

•

992-2155
J,

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••

�Page B 2 • The ·oally Sentinel

BOYS BASKETBALL ROSTER
4

5

10 11
12 13
14 15

20 21
22 23
24 25

30 31
32 33
34 35

40 41
42 43

44 45

Player
Josh Kehl
Garrett Karr
Chris Lyons
Joe Brown
Alex Simpson
Brad Brannon
Jason Kimes
Brrent Buckley
Matt Simpson
Chad Nelson
Brandon Werry
Nathan Grubb ·
Jeremy Shanks

Head Coach

-

H.!... Class
5-7
5-9
5-10
6-1
6-0
5-9
5-8
6-1
6-4
6-1
5-7

Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
So.

5-10
5-9

Howie Caldwell

Record: 21-4
Record: 22-3
Location: Tip
Location:
City
eedsville
Final AP Ranking: Final AP Ranking:
No. 11 (tie)
0. 10
Nickname: Bees
Nickname: Eagles
Boys Enrollment: Boys Enrollment:
112
104
Conference: Tri- Conference: Cros
County
illey
State Appearances: State Appearances:
2nd
1st
Champi- State
Cham pi
State
nships: none
onships: 1
Head
Coach: Head
Coach:
Caldwell . Steve Fisher (4t
owte
season)
(3rd season)
Record at School: Record at School:
73-23
4-46

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BETHEL HIGH SCHOol

Bethel

Eastern

200~

1
.'

TALE OF THE TAPE

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
HV

'lhureday, March ~.

Pomeroy, ~lddleport, Ohio

j
ctass;,~

BOYS BASKETBALL ROSTER
H
4 4
5

5

10 10
11 11
12 12
20 20

21 .21
22 22
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33 33
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Player
Carl Swanson
Drew Bowman
Brett Kopp
Kevin Shoup
Matt Witt
Shawn Zink
Brian Shoup
Justin Smith
Josh Priaulx
Matt Plunkett
Garrett Ginter
Chris Swanson
Eric Holvogt

Ht.

6-4
5-9
5-8
6-2
6-0
6-4
6-2
5-8
6-3
6-3
6-0
6-5

6-3

~

1Sr.

Jr.

·so.
, So. ~~
Jr. ~
Sr. •;

.r

Jr.
Jr.

Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

'j \.I JJ. •. . f..l Jj , J
.J..r ~ ..:J...r 'J .J

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Steve Fisher

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Carter

Eagles

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·Place

992·5627

top choice, and even former to the NCAA tournament.
Louisville players voiced sup- He also coached the New
port.
York Knicks from 1987-89.
Jurich called a news conferThe season before Pitino
ence March 6 to confirm he arrived at Kentucky, the team
was pursuing Pitlno. When went 13-19- its first losing
Pitino expressed interest, record in 62 years- and was
some Kentucky fans said they · . hit with NCAA probation .
were angry that Pitino would He inherits a Louisville proeven consider coaching the gram in similar disarray.
Wildcats' rival.
The Cardinals finished this
Pitino said the opinions of season 12-19, capping the
Kentucky fans factored into worst four-year run in Crum 's
his decision but that his fami- 30 years. Louisville is 62-62
ly mattered most. His 18- since reaching the NCAA
year-old
son,
Richard, regional finals in 1997 and
accompanied him during his was twice put on probation in
recent visit to the Louisville the 1990s.
campus.
The school hopes Pitino
Pitino, 48, took the Celtics' can guide the Cardinals back
job in 1997 after eight seasons ·to the national .prominence
at Kentucky that solidified his they enjoyed in the 1980s.
reputation as a master
It took Pitino three seasons
rebuilder. He previously to do it in Lexington. Kenturned around mediocre pro- tucky went 14-1 4 in his first
grams at Boston University season and 22-6 in his second.
and Providence_. guiding both . In his third, the Wildcats

Pitino

from Page 81
Louisville campus last
week.
Pitino left impressed, but
said he wanted to consult his
family before 'making-a decision. He worked the NCAA
Midwest Regional in Dayton,
Ohio, as an analyst for CBS
before . flying to Boston to
meet his family Sunday night.
Pitino replaces Hall of
Fame coach Denny Crum,
who retired after months of
strained relations with Jurich.
The 64-year-old Crum, who
led Louisville to NCAA
championships in 1980 and
'86, had two seasons left on
his contract, but accepted a $7
million buyout.
·
Speculation began immediately that Pitino was Jurich's.

i

FIRST TEAM: Matt WIH, l1pt&gt; Clly

D·IV

Bethel, 6·foot, )untor, 25.9 points per

game: Matt McCurdy;Sp&lt;ing. Cath. Cant,
5·10,

from Pap II

Beaver Eeatem, 6·5, sr., 23.8; Willie

McCrary, Bridgopo~, 8·1 , or., 20.5; Chris
Hatch, N. Umo S. Range, 5·11 , sr., 19.4;

before him. He is 26-18 at
Fort Jennings, 200-82 at
Ottoville and 457-139 at
Kalida.

B.J. Wolt&amp;ra, Marla Stein Marion Loctl, 6·

3,

or., 11.0.

nace Green; Mitt llmpion, ft.-clntlle

SECOND TEAM: C~aoo Miller, Lrln·
caster Flahtr Cath., 8·3, ar., 18.5; Aaron
Knight, Fremont St. Joseph, 6·4, tr., 24. g;
Bob Crumrine, E. Canton, 6·2, ar., t8.6:
Marcua McCtnta, Marion Cath., 8·0,

DIVISION IV BOYS ALL-oHIO

eop~ ..

21.1: Man Plunkett, 11PI' City
8111111, 6·3, 11., 19.1: Jullln Myora, Willow
Woad Symmes VaHey, 8·4, tr., 18.3;

COLUMBUS (AP) - Tho 2000·2001
Aeoocloll&lt;l Pruo Dlvleton IV Boyo All·
0~10 ~~g~ echool blekl1blll 111m, blll&lt;l
on tht I'ICOmmtndltlona of a 11111 mt.dla

Sorgo Gentile, Bhadyoldo, S.(), Jr., 18.2.
· THIRD TEAM: Adem Novak, lndopon.
donee. 6·1, er., 1U: Dovld Wltoon, Now·
bury, 6-4, or., 23.0; Trevor Sc~aftor,

panel:

Blllllvlllt,

DIVISION IV
Playoro oll~e yHr: Mitt Witt, 11pp City
Bolhol; Scott Hedll)l, Wo~hlnglon Chilli·

5·10,

tr.,

17.0;

Alu

Schmltling, Mlnlttr, 8-8, 1r., 18.0; BI)'CI
Soll~orz, Cory-Rowoon, 6·2, or., 23.0;
John King, BnttolvHie 8r111ol, 5·11, Jr.,
1M: Andy Francie, Mogadore, 6·2, Jr.,
18.4; TyltrGrltVH, Botlclna, e·1, Jr., 17.0 .
lpoolal Mention
Jooh Drouherd, Cardlnglon·Lincoln:

11n.
Coachtt ot the yur: Dick Kortokrlx,

Kalida; Kolth Wltlllrlck, Mori1 Stoln Morlon
Local.

I

ar., 20.4; Scott Hadley, Worthington

Christian, 6·5, ar., 23.3: Min Metzger, Fan
Jennings, 6·2, ar., 20.-4; Matt Hines,

•

Zach Ross, Centerburg; Riehle Sloan,
Wellsville; Bren Hershberger, S1ralburg·
Franklin: Ryan Bates, Zanesvtlt Rote·
crans; Brian Cooper, S. Charllllon Soutll·
eastern; BrandOn Falknor, New Madison
Tn·VIIIage; Patrick Phillips, Slnduaky St.
Mary's: Ryan Bamen. Mowry1town
W~lteoak: Jos~ Ambld, W.lortord: Trent
Patton, Gloualer Tnmble: Jorry JoRUin,
Porlsmouth East; Alex Poe, Franklin Fur•
Eatt.n; Nick Economut. lndependtnctl
Carl1on Dean, Cleve. Hte. L.u1~. E.: Allen
Klrkpltrick, CliVI. Hto·. Lutll. E.: Bratt
Hl.tghtl, Fairport Harbor; Martt Jtcobl,
Cleve . Hta. Fucha Mlzrachl; Aaron Cuddy,
Aohtabula SS. John &amp; Poul: C.J. Trlvllcn·
no, Klr11ord; Ryan Run, Klnllrd; Thad
DIVII, Optn DOOr, Mlkl NIIIOn, ~·
oon Lldgemonl: Jomeo Sllrro, Cleve.

'
went 29-7, losing to Duke in
the memorable 1992 East
Regi0 nal final.
Kentucky reached. the Final
Four the following season and
went 124-19 over the next
four, winning the school's
sixth national ticle in ·1996.
The Wildcats reached the tide
game in 1997, losing to Arizona, before Pitino accepted a
10-year, $50 million contract
to .coach the Celtics.
Pitino turned the Wildcats
over to Tubby Smith, a former
assistant. Smith congratulated
Louisville from Philadelphia,
where Kentucky is preparing
to play Southern California
on Thursday in the East
. Regional semifinals.
"They're getting one of the
great coaches in basketball;'
Smith said. ''I'll welcome him
back."

Aaron Shingleton, Melvern; Trent Oing,
Shadyokle; Aaron Boug/lner, Beallsvlle:
Jloon Ogden, Bellelre SL Jo~n: Kyle
Hoo1otltr, lltf11n Hiland; Rory Kroll, New
Matamoras Frontier;
Er1c Roaanbeck, Ru11le; Jason Meyar,

Covington: Neal POj'ry, YtMow Spnngo;
Nick Trimbac~. CodaNIIIt; BraMon
Moora, Now Modloon TrWiflige: Bred
O'Dell, Arcanum;
, Jared Harmony, Manlfitld St. Plltr'l;
Jtmmy Nlcholaon. Arlington: Oertk

Ellllgn, L r l - Darl&gt;ury: Derek Slto,
Edge~on: Bren Hammon•. Convey
Crtttvlew; Joe Kapcor, Dolphol St
John'a;

Jllro Devil, l'ortomoutll Cloy: Travle
Klolmor, Po""""""" Cloy; .lot lrown,
Herlttgt; Plytn Mc(lreaJ, Daltoni Bub · IINdevtllt l111tm1 Morf&lt; W.lllr, WalorCrumrfno, E. Conton: Craig Gill)!, lno· lcrd: Joty Darnell, Mln0hl111r: Jeremy
tolvltlt Brl1tol; Kirk 8oudtrt, Stbrlng
Wallo, Lotllom Woltlm:
DrHioll, IronMcKinley: Mortc Templeton, Lowollvlllt.
iOn 81. ~: Toby JonH, L111burg
Felrtltld;
·
Honoreblt Mtntlon

Congratulations
-EASTERN EAGLES

We are proud of you
Good Luck in
the Tournament

Aultln Black, 0011. W.lllngtoni Jt~
Ctnttrburg;

Drew Johnaon,

Cordlngton·Lincoln; Jordon Sickinger,
Delewera CMtt~n: B.J. Thl-. Lin·
catlor Fll~or 011~.:
Luc11 Boylan, S1raeburg-Franklln:

Jolh Upenlra, Klneman Bodgor:
Andrew ~llltr, Dillon: Chlcl Formot,
Ca'*&gt;ri Heritage Ch-n: Todd Cope,
McOonlllrt, Jot Eaton, hbrlna McKinley;
Jon Hoohlndontr, Jacbon·MIIton; Klltll
Black, Warren JFK; Jo~n Pembe~on,
Wlrdhlm.

-··--·
- - N . C . 210M

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

O.t.ndlnl champion:
Rusty Wallace

-L--·a.

Dllt JINitt. 758

Tr1ok quallfylnt "cord:
.• Steve Park, Ctlevrolet,
126.370 mph, March 24,

Jeff Green. 807
MonKIItr. 7U

Soon RIIP. 4i5 .

2000

M"'*-'.43

KtW1 H•rvlck. 756

Rick)- Kttndrk:k,

hcMI NOord: Cale
't'afborou1h, Chevrolet.

~12

1. ~ Bet1100, "i1
.. Jatr Gllrdon, . .,
J, StM Park, 115
.. ~ltudd.fM»
J . RustyW.IItce, eoe

Grilli.,...
7152
McLI\IIMMil.

Todd Bodine, IM~

Ted,.,......, 473
J«11 8pract,lt, 472
A.nctt Tohma, ~
Terry Coole, 435

.. MldWII 'IIIIIII'JI, 587

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

. . , - . . . .r

Mike

u.

894

IWinw ¥MIDI••,..

Jlmmls Jolvlson, 110 Rick Crawford, 3i7
Chid U.) ISIO
. 'TIWs ll.¥ellll, 3t3

Kin SChrader,-

lOP TIN

100.989 mph, April 17, 1977

track), 250 laps/133.25 miles
DeftndlnJ champion :
Sterling Marlin
Track qualify In&amp; record:
Jeff Green, Chevrolet.
124.428 mph, March 24.

his won more. W!:ltrlp won

2000

IUICH GRAND NATIONAL
What: cneez-lt 250
When: 1 p.m ., Saturday
WIMr•: Bristol (Tenn.)
Motor Speedw8'1 (.533·mile

~~~~trl]:tl, ..
· IWifitutifCY ·
Fried Chlf;:ken
228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drtvt-Thru Window

992-5432

••••••••••••

Robert Pressley

OnbiMndrlokd~vtrtoftnloh

WINITONCUP

DARLINGTON. S.C.Sometimes havln&amp; the best
car just Isn't &amp;ood enou&amp;h
at Darllnaton Raceway.
St~e Perk clAimed that
dlatlnction In Sundey'a
Carolina DOd~ Dealers ~0()1

onct ·bl' all' ril~ll. )t l~ou1a

have been Chevrolet's fifth
victory In a• manr rac11.
Dale Jarrett took actvantl&amp;t
of 1 break, thoLJCh, lind hit
Ford made short WQ!k of
Park's Chtvrolet In the final
10 laps.
Derllnaton tenda to ~eke
care of ltl own. end Jai'rett'l
victory was his third at the
ea·shaped, 1 .366-mlle

track.

IUICH GRAND NATIONAL

in ttle final 25 laps of the
Suncom 200.
Green beat Kenaeth ovt of
the pits on lap 123 of ,147
and finished less than a
second In front of the
Chevrolet drlvor.
Kensettl once led by
nearly four'aeconds.
Qrlle·n·a ti8mmate, Jas~n
t&lt;l!lller, flnlstled third,
followed by Kenny Wallace,
Mlkt Mc:Leu&amp;hlln and Bobby ·
Hamilton Jr.
·

ORAniMAN TRUll!!

BAMERSFIELO. Calif. Ted Muaarave haa .found
new life In NASCAR's truck
ser111. Saturday's victory at
Mesa Marin Raceway wa.s
Musarave's second In a row.
The Qodge driver started
on the pole and led 119 of
250 laps. He passed
Brendan Gauahen on the
218th lap and ended up
wlnnln&amp; by .858 ot a second
over Jack Spreaue In a
Ctlevralet.

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

I

St. Rt. 248
985·3308

Deor Nt\SCAR Thi~ Week,

Wt are so mad. we could chew
nail s.
NASCAR MC11s the right$ to
televise races to Fo• . bul we dtd
not gel to see the Busch rate on
Feb. 24, ur the h~ppy h&lt;:lur, or the
Earnhardt apccia!, because it wa~
nOI on our F~». netwOTt or our Fol'l
Sports Net.
Then the rnce on Feb. 2~ wtu
rained out. and gueu what'l We
were supposed to see i) on FoK
" Sport! Net, but the)· chose to run
paid ads instead!
Is this the way Fox is soing to
trctd the fan~? It was &amp;O much bet·
ter on TNN and ES PN , and even
TBS and CBS.
We are very disappointed with
rh&lt;! change.
Buddy and Ylr1lnia Mldldfl'
Hor Sprlngt, Ark.

...._.

a

-~u

WI- -INC! to pinch SkiMOI Into tha Will near
tha oiiCII&gt;I 1111.Carotlnt OodJII Dllloro 400 11
.
Darllrcton, Mtlinl aff • c,.lh that caUMd Sklnnar'a
CllHOI« to bl qul1o&lt;t In ftamet ard Torry LrlbOnlt'l
C - to crollllllrd Into SkiMOI'e dlul&gt;lld - ·
, . "IIUIII ~'I opolltr (WIIIoco'l) dldn1ooo
.1

who Wflt out thti'e'or IOI'Mthtnc llkt ttlat," Sklnner'tald.
•He (Walleoe) turned up Into me and jutt kept turnlnt
Into me. I don't know why he dtdn'tjuat tum the
etMrin&amp; wf'IHI beck to the left, but ht pretty much
stuffed me Into tile fence."

NUCAI!Tiolo -'o . . _ - fiiYoO hlp.

spot.

A lot of driWra illY the HANS dfttct, 'NNCh Skinner wet
wea.rtna. makes It dltfk:ult tel
out of the car, and !t
dkl seem to prolonl Skinner's exit. Fortunately, neither
Skinner not' Llbontt WMinjurtd, but there were tome
IC8fY moment. while Skinner was freeln&amp; himself from

aet

a. .. : &amp; - , - PI l l ; , e - l t f ,I_I_ILC.,_IIIe_ ......
..
........... ••'! ____ Coo •
'

lr ....._ .._

c•...,

ltlltlltloe: 175 I'IICBI, 0 polea, 0
wins , 4 to~flve flnlshea, A to~101, more
~ ttlan S5.5 miiUon In eerhln&amp;a
Robert ~ttley wee the first rookie aver1 Plratll: Start (Feb. 20, 1994, at
to win 1 Buach Grand National race. That
Dl)'lona), pole (none), victory (nona)
NASCAR Th11

1

wee~~;

fHI OCCUrred way bllck In 1989, It Orlnll
County Speedway In Roupmont, N.C., a
tiiiCk that no lonaer hosts races In that
NASCAR urltl.
·
AWlnaton Cup re&amp;uler since 1995, last
year Pfeasley had hit best points finish ,
25th, 1nd tlt It off to 1 f11t atllrt In 2001.
Preuley's father, Bob, wu a le&amp;endary
performer on ahort tracks In tne
Clr'Oilnal. Early In RODirt'l ceretr, ne
drove 1 Busch Grand Natlcmal cer partly

owned bV pro baotcetball player Brad

Dtn.latttrty.

Cl 1$&amp;A: Coleman (12), Shelby (turns 7
on Maroh '21!1)
Olt: No. 77 Jtll)lf' En&amp;lnes Ford Taurus,
owned by Doul Bawel
Orew oMet: Ryan Pemberton

Are 1'11111111111' with till - tho 10hallarted? "I'm really happy, I fluess
there are some people who are re1lly
aurprlte&lt;:l or woncterlna whet we're doing,
but I honestly ttllnk we're on the same
track we were last year. The only
difference Is that. et Daytona thlt ~ar, we
miased the bl&amp; wreck .... lt'a 1 lot eealer
on Ryan (Pemberton) and me becauae
Wf"te able to communicate ·a lot better:
How do rou fHI about betnil tNa hlrllt
(11111) In lhl1101nb _ , . . ,
"Honestly, 1 know there are e lot of areat
teams ttlet hewe aotten off to elow starts,
but there are some teams in front of us
that we feel we can beat, too . I don't thln·k
It metttra lr lt'a three r&amp;etl or 33 races. If
we can C(]nllstently be in the lop 15, then
we're aolnl to be ttlere In points at the
end of the year. Wt don't went to run eood
and then run bad:
·

Who'&amp; HotWilds Not

• HOT: Johnny Benson,
with four top-10 finishes
In a row.

... o
!Q, '0
~
a: .!!

1. What driver (]nee drove a car co-owned by
RiCk Hendrick and actor Paul Newman?
2. Who was the first driver to win In a car wltt1 three
digits in Its number?
3. Who was Pres ident Jimm~ Ca rter's favorlte .drlver?

• NOT: Jeff Burton, who
continues to struggle this
season. He's 35ttl in
points.

'll8nOJOQJ&amp;A 918:1 't
~00£ 'ON Ul }l:lOI:I Wll

•t :s)\::1'8$ 18J9 ''):

:::)lil
~ ·a:N
ii
c:J
N
II)

Helton expects no changes for April race at Talladega
ly Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Delpite linsering safety worrle!

In the aftermath oft he Daytona 500,

NASCAR president Mike Helton
all but eliminated any NASCAR·
mandlled rule• ~hanau fort be nt:ct
reatrittor-plate raee - April 22 at
Talladega (Ala.) Supenpecdway.
"We arc not anUeipating any
rules changes a1 Talladep," Helton
said. "We are lookina at dilfercnl
thinJ! , as we normally do. but o,w
are not anticipatinJil•ny chanJilu 1111
the ne11t restrictor-platc rate, and
that just happens to be Talladega."

also revealed thlll NASCAR had a Winalun Cup races for Richard Gr,md N11.1 ional race and will also
handle the driving chores this week
dlta·reco.'ef)' drvkc of sorts in the car Childress later this year,
"We've been talking," Gn:en Jaid at Brislol. Tenn. Finch !lllid he will
in whkh Dale Earnhardt was killed.
"We have technology in the car. after winning Saturday'!; Suncom name a permanent replacemem 10
thouJh, with our hoKeS that NAS- 200. " II'! not ready to be announ~cd PJ. Jones, who was rel eased, wilhm
CAR hit• ln there now, wilh some yet. hul I've talked with the people two weeks.
with Ford to make sure I 1\nd their
inforrnllion in it," Hcllon said.
••We've hYd bo.w1 in all year long, ble~sings (to drive a Chevy in Win·
wlreleu GPS·type sys lems that !Uon Cup)."
UE JUST liKES TO A.4CE :
The pania l·scason Cllperiment
have some infonnalion in them .
We're looking down the road even had been crealed with Kevin Hnr·
more broodly than whul we're doing ~itk in min d, but lhat was before
llarvick bei:amil the tmefBency ~ue·
1orJay.''
ceuor 10 Eornhard1 in .Child re ss'

X

We '1•1! rectil·t:d do:e"s of ll'trtn
}wtt like yvurs.
.

•••••••••••

Fan Tips

&lt; :::r
CDCD~
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CD
CD

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.....
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CD

!!!.

... :::::J :::::J
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c::r-en

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CDO)&gt;

• MotOfspprtsTV.com is a
compretlenslve Independent
site dedicated to analyzinJ
television coVeraae of auto
racing. This sit~ will keep you
Informed of Issues about TV
co¥erage that may not nave
occurred to you, such as an
tlour-by-hour accounting of
commercial time, the
percentage of the race
actually televised and the
minutes of post-race

mC.:::r

=~~

-en

-· CD

The president of Mar1insvi lle tN.C.J

Speedway. Clay 'Campbell. wilt

~ompt'IC lhi5 year in ·wc~:kl y e~cnt ~
at Caraway S~edway 111 Asheboro.
N.C.
Monic Carlo.
Campbell will dri\'C a Chc\'rolet
ent~red by Taylor Motorspon s,
whicltlllso fi~lo.b a car in the HOOt·
SPENCER fOR fliRt: : Jimmy crs 1-'roCup Se ries for Ual Goodson,
Spencerdrovr James Finch ·~ No. \ and in the Amrritan Racing· A~~nd·
Chr ~rolct in Saturday's Busch ntion !ARM for Scott Hnll.

Anottler Interesting feature
Is the Sponsor Celebration
Station. which Includes trivia
about race winners and such
tidbits as "liQuid sprayed."
·spraying tectlnlque " and
" femlly present In victory
lane.~ The site also analyzes
television coverage throughout the country, noting what
cable outlets pre-empted
coverage and the experience
of fans who complained.

:-: CREW Of 111 Wla

605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443

• Ttle bad HWt wta
that Dlle J1rrett't pit
crew left some lu&amp;

nutiiOOH durin&amp; bit
nrst stop. The &amp;ood

newa ... more
Important, thoulfl. A
14.2-tecond pit atop
n. .r the end of the
rec:e &amp;n• Jerrttt t
leed he never
relinquished, end tome
key adjustment•
ordered by c,.w chlel
Todd Perrott pvt
Jerrett the td&amp;e he
needed lo hold on to
ttlt lnd In the Cerollna
DodCeDtalert400
over Steve Park.

Ted Dexter
Home: 740·992·5260
Dwight Honaker
Home: 740-985-3709

Fl~

Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

• •

~·

'

Ca/11·800·800-CABLE

m -1 CDn

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I'm 1 big fan of Dale Earn·
hartil, and his death iti 11 big lou to
NASCAR.
.
'
He was B good driv~r. and I
won•t foract about him. 1 would
just like' to say goodbye to him. If
anyone should get tht number] , it
should be Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1
hope he will be a good drivt"r like
· his dad. and I wish him good luck.
Jertnty Nelson
Newark. Ohio

JEFF GREEN ONLINE: Bui!Ch
Grand National el\ampion JtfT
Green now appean to be dte front·
X
runner 10 dri\'C a Chc.,.rolet spon·
LllTU BLACK BOX: Hellnn IOR'd by America Online in selected
Cowllht 2001 The Gaatoo (N .C.) Gafllt\1 · Oiltrlbuled tJfUnlvetsll Prete S)rndlcate [!00)255·6734 ' For release week of Marcl\19. 2001 · Design: CertaGraphlcs Inc .. Sarasota.

.You may experience
brief 1erviCe
inte~ptiom. 'Please
b.e as1ured we will do
everything to keep
interrupti()~&amp;~ to a

-

coverage.

••••••••••••

lROUNO THE GARAGE

:z::

Q)

work ouJ.

• •••••••••

lilt wrtekqt."

w~o

adm itred
there M't're some programmi"g
problem.~ that they were trying to

-~ 41

I

o-c
c=m

WI! j)fJMed along )flllr cunu•r1u

Witt: Gina

_..: •Turn three It OlrUnaton 11 a treacherou•

DR. MARGIE LA
D.D.SANDSTAFF.
5th &amp; Pearl St.
Racine.

t.lton fnlm Our Roadtn

to ,.O.r. official!,

1101•tow11: AahtYIIIe, N.C.

fEUD 01 THE WHM

Ridenour
Supply

Your Turn

fROM LAST WEEK

Serlts ctlamplon Jeff Gretn,
who made a bold off·aeaaon
twitch from Chevroleta to
Fords, won fat the first time
. by holdln&amp; off Matt Kanseth

See us for Your Stlhl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Whlln: 1 p.m., April 7
Where: Martinsville (Va .)
Speedway (.526-mlle track),
250 laps/131.5 miles

PROFllf

u-..

DARliNGTON, S.C. -

.1/NJ.:
Ill . .

250

Notlble: Morgan Shepherd
has won more BGN races at
Bristol , four, than anyone
else. Five drivers- Mark
Martin, Todd Bodine , Steve

I. (-) Ricky Rudel
Up to elxth In pointe
I. (I) Mlahllll Wllt~p HaohlldDIIjtono.,.,.._lm
10. (-) Jl-lponoor l~otollo hll flvarlto troek

Crow's
Family
·Restaurant

What: Advance Auto Parts

1992

PIIIUod bJ ovorhHtln•
I. ( 4) ltorll,. Mortln llronllnt
d~vono fir
4. (I)
Bonoon LriOM lui nato ooot blm
1. (I) Kovln Horvlok Hl....ot.flnloblnl rookie
lro faur otrllpt ovonto
8, (t) Stovo Pork
Domlnrotod Darllncton
rooe but ftnlohod -ond

7. (I) JerryNide•

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

BUICk, 92.929 mph, April 4,

Firat Ford d~v•r to win

J......,

Grissom and Larry Pearson ·
tlave won two, and BOdine Is
the only one expected to be
In this year's field ....
Chevrolet&amp; have won 16 of
37 pre\llous races.

Race r•cord: Harry Gant,

12tlmes.

• NASCAR Thla Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heedln&amp;lnto this weekend's race. last
week's ranking lain parentneses.

1. (2) Dille Jorrett
2. (1) Jill! Genion

•11

Outhrlt,

7 • ESPN

POINT~ ~ T~NOING~

7001

t. BIM Elliott, 519

.

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS,
EASTLAND·.DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH.:PUPPIES~ OOCK~R$

p.m. • April

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Noteble: Wallace swept
WIUrt: Sharpie 500
1 p.m. • Saturda~ · FX
the two races here In 2000.
wt.n: 1p.m., Sunday
... Rusty Wallace has won
• WIMton c-., lherple IOQ
WMre:
Bristol (Tenn.)
nine
times at Brl stol. Only
1 p.m. • Sunday • Fox
Motor Speedway (.533-mlle
Darrell Waltrip, now retired ,
8 C...ttam.n Truck, Advence Auto Ptrtl 210 track), 500 laps/266.5 miles

·- CD ::C
Cl) CD
so we should have . ·some per game.
mature a club as I've coached
that's special.''
Despite the fact that his in a long time:' Caldwell said.
What will be even more
experience deciding when we
special for the Eagles is to se~
want to run and when we team faces a state tournament "I think that has a lot to do
't"
matchup, Caldwell said that it with our seniors . They keep
a veritable ocean of green and
don.
from Pip 11
fromPapBl
Bethel is also fairly solid will be business ·as usual for everything in persepctive.
white at the Schottensteih
1
They realize that this is their
We're going to have to play, defensively, giving up only the Eagles.
affair. Last year, and I had Center for Friday's game.
"If we go out and we play last opportunity to do some- nothing to do with this, it was
That's a reality that's ndt
there's no ifs, ands or buts 53.2 points per game, while
thing
that
nobody's
ever
been
1-2-2
zone.
our
normal
game,
we've
got
a
on Caldwell.
'
:
lost
employing
a
about it.
micdy the parents, at every
"At least we know we'¢
"There are two keys to the According to reports, it's a great opportunity," he said. "I able to do before.
home game and every road
"They're
anxious
for
the
was
talking
to
somebody
rare
occasion
when
the
Bees
not
going up there by outgame," he added. "I think one .
game, they feed them
today, and he asked me, 'what game to begin," Caldwell spaghetti. That's special.
selves," he said. "It'll be nic~
of the keys is we have to be go man-to-man.
added. "They honestly do
Eastern counters the Bethel do you think?'
able to rebound. They are
"The signs that you see, · to look up there and S&lt;:)!
"And I asked him, 'well, believe that, 'hey, we've got a that's very special, also. You · green and white, all cheerin~
very quick jumpers, very ath- offensive punch with a balletic jumpers. They're going anced scoring attack that fea- what tell me what you think?' great opporunity; we can do look outside and you have for Reedsville Eastern.''
to block some shots and be tures three players in double And here's how he answered something that nobody's ever your own name on a pole,
digits and two others that me, 'you're not asking them to been able to do here in Meigs
very physical in the paint. ·
"The second key is that we average better than eight do anything that they haven't County, and probably · in
.done before.' I thought that southeast Ohio, that, hey, we
have to able to transition points per game.
.z.t~e~ Brce"~ 1tc....e ?oodlrrM~... , ~· .
The senior trio of Joe was a beautiful statement, can win a state champiomhip
when we want to transition.
We can't get into a total all- Brown, Matt Simpson and because we aren't. We aren't and we've got two games to
out war of running up and Chad Nelson paces the Eagles asking them to go out and do it.'
"And I think that the comdown the court, because I offense. Brown is the club's beat the Boston Celtics or
munity is going to be behind .
think that's what they'd like to top scorer, averaging 15.7 anything like that.
"We're asking them to ·play us. I think the sportswriters, I
points per game. Simpson
do."
the
game that they've played think everybody in southeast
pumps•
in
13.4
points
per
outCaldwell believes his club's
'
Ohio is going to be pulling
experience against teams like ing, and Nelson accounts for all year long."
'
_
Heading into Friday's &lt;:,&lt;;&gt;Q- for Reedsville Eastern."
Chesapeake, Portsmouth Clay 11.5 points per game.
Junior sixth man Chris test, Eastern has been hding a
o!; the' heaith front, Lyons · ·
and Worthington Christian
will help the Eagles against Lyons averages 8. 7 points per wave of emotion spawned by -was back at practice Wednes·,.
game, while junior · point the club's success this season. day after missing practice
Bethel.
"I think if we have an guard Garrett Karr adds 8.4 That success has sparked great Tuesday due to the flu. Caldinterest, not just locally, but well said Lyons was full-(0 at
advantage · that way, it's the points per night.
.C.:;
Sophomore Brent Buckley also from around the region, yesterday's practice and will
fact that we did play ChesaMiddleport
,
peake during the year that chips in three points per with numerous media oudets be fit for Friday.
219 N. Second
Friday's first semifinal,
was a transition club. In the game, while junior Brad visiting the campus by the
tournament,
we
played Brannon averages 2.5 points banks of the East Shade which pits Delphos St. John's
(21-4) against StrasburgPortsmouth Clay, which was a per game and senior Josh River.
Despite the crush of atten- Franklin (22-4), begins at 11
transition club, and Worthing- Kehl ave.rages 2.1 points per
tion, the Eagles have managed a.m. at the Schottenstein
ton Christian, which was a outing.
Center.
Like the opposition, the to stay on track mentally.
transition club.
"I really believe that this
"So, we played three clubs Eagles have stingy on defense,
,.,.
50.6
points
surrendering
just
might
be as focused and
that like to flat out transition,

111

·

:g ...
~

Head Coach

... ,_•we ...

'

877·998·3407

.,

•

992-2155
J,

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••

�Thunct.y, Men:h 22. 2001

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 22 2001

.uo

210

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Ptnoburgh
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M ssoul1 (22 9) vs Lou s ana Tech 30
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Monday March 26
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Eas em (22 3 Friday 2 00
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THE FINAL FOUR
At The Hubert H Humphrey
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Mlnneapo Ia
Netlonel Semlf na 1
Saturday March 31
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Monday Apr 2
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' c nchod playoff spot

WldnoldoyoaSan An onlo 97 Boa on 77
nd ana 9ti Or1ando 95
Charlotte 11 Toronto 95
Mlam tOO Chicago 8t
M nneso a 09 Da as 97
M !waukee 07 LA Lakel1100
Wash ng on 99 Golden State 9&lt;4
Thu aday • Gamee
SanAnonoa A ana 730pm
Vancouve a C eve and 7 30 p m
Bos on a New Jersey 7 30 p m
Ponanda Utah 9pm
PhOen x a Sean a 0 p m
De ro a Sac amen1o 10 30 p m
Housona LAC ppe s 1030pm
FrldlyaGamH
A anta a Torono 7 pm
vancouve a ndlana 7 p m
New Jersey a New York 7 30 p m
Den e a Mmesota Bpm
Chanone a Ch~go e 30 p m
011ando a M rwaukee e 30 p m
Ph adephaa PhOenx 9pm
Washngona LA Lakes 030pm

Champlonahlp Round
Thu 1day March 2i

Mclead s Pe G oom ng g dogs
g oomed ba hed &amp; d pped $40
g Co es $35 sm Co es $30
Cocke Span e s $25 g Food as
$ 6 sm Pood es S 6 740 667
395

BASEBALL
Ame can League
ANAHE M ANGELS-All gned RHP
Aa on Sma o he m no eague camp
BOSTON RED SOX-Op ontd 3B
W on Ve as o Pawtucket o the n ema
ona league Ass gned LHP Bryan Wlrd
o ne m nor eague camp
CLEVELAND
NO AN5-P emoted
m no eague h ng coo d nato Dave
Kt e o he mao eague coach ng staff
and Chria Bando to manage ot Akron of
he Eastern league Named W e Upal'\lw
l'lnng eoordna o
NEW YORK YANKEES-T adad OF
W y Mo Pena and cash to C nciMIU tor
38 0 ew Henson and OF M chae Colt
man
SEATTLE MAR NER5-Ao aaaod RHP
Was Moane AHP No Longo FIHP RhoU
A v a a and AHP Greg Beave Announced
he a ement o C Ryan Bundy
Not onol Ltogut
C NCINNAT AED5-Ag aod to ltrmt
w1 h OF Ruben Rivera on a one yH oon
tract P aced AHP Salh E1hanon on tht eodly d aab ed at
ST LOU S CAADINALs-opttonod C
Ke th McDona~ to Momph a ol 1ha PCL.
Aoaaa gnad AHP M ke Ca1ha FIHP Dtn
Carlson and INF ,l.u s Garc a to tht r rnnor
eague camp
BASKETBAU
Notlonol Baokotblll Aatocllnon
DALLAS MAVEAICK5-Act va td C
catv n Booth.lrom tha n1ured llat P toad F
GaryTentonth• nuadls
FOOTBALL
Wldneldor, Morch 21
Notlonol Footlllllltaguo
New Mex co 77 A abama B nn ngham
ATLANTA FALCONS-Ao signed S
55
Ge a d McBurrowa
Hawa 52 Ok ahoma S a a 5
CLEVELAND BROWNS-S gnad OL
Semifinal•
m Bund en o a one yea contract
March 23 25
New Melt co vs Hawa TBA
DALLAS COWSOY5-Ro olgnod FB
James Mad aon vs on o Sta e TBA
Robert Thomas o a th ee ~ea contl'lct
Chomp onahlp
DENVER BAONC05-Ra 1 gnod OT
Matt Laps s
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Re I gnad
TE Ty one Oav s o a mu yea con ract
NEW YORK JET$-Ag eed 10 terms
w h LB James Dal1 ng
SAN FRANC SCO 49oR5-Wa vod S
Jason Moo e
Eaele n Conference
HOCKEY
At ant c Dlvlalan
National Hockey League
OB
W
L Pet
NHL-F ned M nneso a coach Jacques
x Ph ada ph a 48
20
706
Lema e and gene a manage Doug A se
New Yo k
4
26 612 6 2
7
b ough S5 000 o the crit c sm o efetee
Mam
41
27 603
Orlando
37 3
544
BadMee ala egameagans De a on
Boston
29 38 433 8 2
Ma ch
Named Brian Wa Ice manage
26
New Je sey
23 47
329
o corpora e commu ca ons
3
Washing on
7 5
250
COLORADO AVALANCHE-Co ad 0
Cent al D v 1on
Bryan Muir and G Ph ppe Sauve rom
GB
W
L
Pet
Hershey o ha AHL
42 25
627
M waukee
COLUMBUS
BLUE
JACKETS
40 211
588
Charlotte
Reca ed F Chns N e sen and F B Bowie
36 32
529
To ono
om Sy acuse o he AHL
30 37 448
ndana
LOS ANGELES K NGS Reca ad RW
25 43
368
De o
Marko Tuom anen f om Lowe o he AHL
24 43
358
C evetand
COLLEGE
2
47
309 2
A an a
CLAFL N-Named M am Wake
56
64
Chcago
Samue s women s baske ba coach
Waate n Conte enca
LL NOS WESLEYAN-Named Oav d
MdwestOvaon
W
L
Pet
GB
Ba e t mens and women s socce coach
48 20
706
NO ANA-Named M ke Oav s mens
San Antono
46 20 697
u ah
baske ba coach
5
43 25 632
Oa as
LOU SVIllE-Named
R ck P llno
8
40 28 588
M nneso a
n en s basketba coach
10
38 30
559
Hous on
ACE Named Cay Homan mens go I
15
33 35 485
Oenve
coach
20 49 290 28 1 2
Vancouve
Pac ftc D v a on
GB
W
L
Pet
Sac amen o
45 2
682
L A Lakers
45 23 662

Subscnbe toda&gt;
992 2156
810

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; UVESTOCK

Home
Improvements

810

Home
Improvement•

3 STEEL BU LD NGS 24•30
was $7 900 SO $3 400 40•46
was$10900 sa $5200 SO•t20
was $2 900 se $ 1 900 Ne~e
PU1 Up Can De ve Tom 1 800
392 7103

Furn lhld 2 &amp; 3 Room Apa t
menta Clean No Pe a No Smok
lng Re e encas &amp; Depo• t Re
qu od
U Itt oa Fu n ahod
(740)4411-1519

36 Gas Cooks ove Needs The
mos at Fo Oven $50 CO OBO
(740)446-4680
ALL STEEL BU LD NGS Sma
Depos I w hOld Up o 60o/. OFF
40•75 50,~0 50x 20 80x150
Bast Olio Doug
800) 778
1507

110 Help Wantad

AUTOS FROM $&amp;00 00
ce mpounds &amp; Repos
Toyolta ChavYs Jeeps
P ease Ca ror L at nga
1 600-451 0500 Ex C9817

Po

Go1 • Manor Apartment• Now
Aecopt
App teat ona For 1 SA
HUO Subo d rod Aportmontt Fo
E dt ly And Hand cappod Equa
Houttng Oppo tun
(740)448

-

MANAGEMENT

no

v

N co t Bedroom Aportrnan a Fo
Atnt n GIHpor 1 Arta (740)44111181

Rill Eatata
Wanted

11929 32

loaornant Boauttu Vow 01 A v
tr Wu $98 500 Atducad To
See 500 By Appo ntmon Only
(7&lt;10)258-11 72

Rtglona Stmlftntll
Thuraday Merch 22

1 and 2 bedroom apa ments rur
n shed and unrurn shed aecu y
depos t equ ad no pe a 740
992 2216

Look ng To Buy A Now Homo?
D'on t Hovo Land? Wt Oolll Hurrv
On~ 10 Lottltft 304 738-7295

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T I
BANK FO~ECLOSURESI LOW
OR NO MONEY OOWNI OK
CREDIT FOR LISTINGS GALL
11100-331-()()20 tilt 118 1

Feet 1~1 2 40tll Fu

WEST REGIONAL
At Arrawhu.d Pond
Anahe m Calli

Apartmants
lor Rant

440

340 Bualneae and
Building•

Rd Wilt l IIWO Ill up 740
742 2103

1

Moten ng Couch And Cha S 50
And La ge Wooden Rock ng
Cha
$25 Good Cond ton
(304)675 4 37

Sma two bedroom mobUe home
lu n &amp;hod $275 po mon h $200
dopoa t no peto ca 740 992
2808 740 992 1573 leave mea
aoga

s

310 Hom11lor Sale

Squ•

House
TraUt
For
Ran
Be ow Gal pols Locks On S ate
Aou o 7 Soulh (740)44 -&lt;1619

Aaducad 199 Sunsh na no 1
w de 1Bx80 Tn 11 Bed oom 2
Fu Ba ha Washer &amp; Drya Must
Sa $ 3 900 OBO (740)379-9236
Evenings

1'NO aero rot lor lilt off Naw L""'

2 S1ory Brick Appro• molt~ 3400

988 Chevy Co s ca V 6 au
oma c PW $400 down $ 00
mon h 992 Gao S o m 5 speed
am m cassene $400 down $100
mon h ca f 740 388 9693 o 740
742 742B Buy he e pay he e

New&amp; Used Fun u e
New 2 P ece Llv ngroom Su es
$399 Buy Stl Trade

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
D vii om $297 to $383 Wa k o
shop &amp; mov 11 Ca I 740 448
2568 Equal Housing Opportunity

make ony IUOh ,...,.,.,,..
llmlatlon or dlll:llmlnl1lon

adVartlltrn«Q for rwalwhlclt It In YIOtetiOn of the

USED APPLIANCES
1 d ya s e ge a o s
Skaggs App ances 76
ao Call 740 446 7398
8.() 28

New
F eetwood
1exao
$1999900 3Bodroom 2Bath 1
B77m4 10

Thll MMfiiPII' wll net

210

App ancu
Aecona ontd
washe a D ye s Ranges Re
g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se New May1ag Ap
p aneta F ench C y May ag
740-448 7795

Tappan H E 1 c anev 90o/. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 12 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Systems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Hea ng &amp; Coo ng
800 872 5967 www orvb com/ben
nan

New And Used Fu n tu e Sto e
Be ow Ho day Inn Kanauga We
Sat G ave Monumen s And
Vases

330 Farm• lor Sale

f

Household
Goods

44
39
37
24
II

Sem na wlnne s 8 07 p m
M DWEST REGIONAL
At Ptpl Arena
Denve
EAST REGIONAL
ReglonaiSam fln11 a
At Flttt Un on Canter
Saturdey March 24
Phtodt phlo
No e Dame (30 2) VB Utah 28 3 8 07
Region• Sem f na a
pm
Thuttday March 22
owa Sta e 27 5 vs Vandertl (23 9
Ken ucky 24 9 vs Southam Ca fom a
o
37 p m
239 738pm
Rtg1on11 Champlonah p
Duke 3 -4) va UCLA 23 8) 25 m n
Mondlly March 25
u es al e frat game
Semltlna w nners 9 07 p m
onal Champlonehlp
aturday March 24
WEST REGIONAL
SemI na w nnera
At Spok•n• Arena
Spokana Waah
SOUTH REGIONAL
Regional Semlllnals
At The Georgi• Dom•
Saturday M11rch 24
At antll
Duke (30 3) va Sou hwes M asour1
Aaglonol Somltlnt o
Sate(275 007pm
Frldoy March 23
Ok ahoma 28 5) va Washington (2
M ch oan Sttto 18-4) va Gonzaga (26
9 237lm
6) 738pm
Roglonol Chomp onthlp
Penn Stell (21 1 ) VI Tamp 0 (23 2)
Mondoy Morch 2t
215 m nu ea aHe Hrat game
Sam ns winners 10 07 p m
Aeglanal Chemp onah p
Sunday Much 21
THE PINAL FOUR
Sam na wlnnara
At The 8awla Center
&amp;t Loulo
MIDWEST REGIONAL
Notional Bamlflnolo
At Tho Alomodomt
Frtdoy March 30
San Antonio
East champion VI M dwest champ on
Rf91Drlllltmlflna I
7or930pm
Frldoy Morch 23
M deast champion vs wea champ on
Anrona (25 7 vs M sa 11 pp 27 7)
7o 930pm
7 55 pm
Netlonel Champlonahlp
I nots (28 7) va Kansas (28-11) 25 m n
Sundoy Aprl11
utes a te t rst game
Sam
flna winners B30 p m
Rf9lonat Champlonohlp
Sundoy March 25
Sem I na w nr~ers
Women I NIT

MERCHANDISE
510

Portland
Phoenl•
Soa111o
LA C lpper&gt;
Golden S1A e

NCAA Batketbatl Toum1m1nt

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS A mas e e yona app o ad
w h SO down Low man h y pay

928~8

No Fees Sa v ce Cha gas n
Need at Finane a Ass s ance?
Please Ca Us To F ea 1 866
813-6881 24h

A~kMount

OWN A COMPUTEA? tPut to
wo k $25 $75/hOII Fro• 0118110
w Tretn www9t auocosacom

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52 Foot Doublo W de $1 750
Down $329 Por Mon h 1 888

2 Btdroom t 1 2
E eel lc n Po te
Pay
Deposl &amp;
(740)3811-9162

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash o ema n ng paymtn a on

butd on raca oc10r rtllglon

U5 000 YR po ent a Oocto 1
need peop e to p ooeat c a ma
Fu ~ aln ng Mua own compu a
w modem Cal 1 888 867 4886

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

For Lease

GOOD
Waahe
engea
Vlno S
1 888 6

Canso dat on Cu Payments Up
To 80% Same Dav App ova 1
877 769-8 68

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CAEO T EXPERTS L CENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 1 688 8t1o0902

W Powerwash Houses Tra 1 a
And AV a Contact Ron A
(740)446 015 or 339 0950
No Anawo Loave Mouaot

IBI your own boul
homo Up lo $500.$9000/MO
Plf.Fir 800.810.0705
www caahNowAndForave com

WORK FROM HOME
$500 $ 500 po rno PIT
$2000 $8000 pe mo Fir
No expe ence needed
Tra n no p OYidad
I 800 880 9468

998 Oakwood Mob to Homa 2
Bad oom 2 Bath $21 500
(3041727 386.4 Alit 8pm

All rn

~om

JET

Fo Salt Aecond oned wash
as dyes and e geaos
Thompsons App anca 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675 7388

Pltlle

JOB POSTING
WICDirtctor
eaaltkm: Jackoon V nton Community Action Inc. Currently Hat
A !'clition Ava lallll Fo W I C
0 rector Th 1 Ia A Full Yea Pc
8 ton Sa ory Ft,ngo 10 $11 00.
$ 5 00 pe Hou Based On oua
fica ton And E)(J)O tence Work
Schldut M~8430
Ma!or Beaoons!bl!ijaa Aeapons b e Fo Compte ng The G an
App k:a on And 0 he F seal Re
qu emen s Fo The Jackson
County Women nfan And Ch d
on WC P ogram Aospons~e
Fo Suporv &amp;ion OF w C C n&lt;
Pe sonnet Mus Mon o As
s gned Cosaload Vondof Acttvl
ties W C C ntc Opera tons And
Ptr1o&lt;m W C Cor llcottons Atspans bit Fo Communication
And Coord nation or Thew c
P ogram ActMtlea W«h Loca
And S1a e Agencies Muat Have
Exoo ten Ore And W tttan Com
muntca tons Sk I 1 Some Travel
Is Aequ red
Oual!f!cttfoo&amp; Rag a ered L
cenaed Dla can nThe Sta e Of
Ohio P alerrod Asglatarod NufH
Or Ololt lc Tochn~ an May Qua;
ly Muat Have Va d OhiO Dnv
eraL~enao And Own Aelab~
Transportotion P IVIOUI Supo
vlsory Elq)Oflanot And Know
edge Ot P enata nfant And
ChUd Nutrlllon P aforrad Comput
o Sk I Requ red Knowtodgo 01
Netwo ~no Exotl And Word A
Pus

At Mldlton aq.,.,., Gordon
NtwYorlt
Third Pltct
Semlf na 10Hf1 tip m
Champion ahlp
Sem tina winners 9 p m

At Ohio St.l1 Unlverefty COIUmbul
DIVISION I
Cos B_.,.van (26.0) vs Cln Eldo
(20-ll) Friday, 6:00
C e S Ignatius (23 2) vs Mass on
Jackson (22 3 Friday 9 00
Champonsh p Saturday 8 30
DIVISION U
Kottonng A o (23 2 VI Cos Eas ( 6
8) Thu &amp;day 6 00
W ad 24 1) vs WarrensYI e H s 24
) Thu sday 9 00
Champ onsh p Sa urday 2 00
OIV SION IH
Be pre (23 3) vs Casstown Mlam E
24 2) Thursday 1 00
Havi and Wayne T ace (24 1 vs Ale on
St Vlncen S Mary (24 1) Thu sday 2 00
Championship Sa u day 1 00
DIVISION IV

TRANSPORTATION

App At Budott Inn Jackton
P ko Go tlpo Ia No Phone Ca to
p ....
NEED HELPII notd poop t to
ne p me expand ma o de •
comma ct bua nus toea y na
lone y and nte nat one y wh e
wo k ng I om homt EKCI en n
como pottntial FREE nlo rna ton
www oad2aucctll com 1 888
717827

490

Oa polo 750 3rd Ave $180
Month
BR 1 Bath Frame
HOUH Gil Holt No Pttl Wtt
ktndll Nlghll (740)-14

Cal 1 1100-490-11480 24 hro

Hou11keep•

s Scoreboard

R,

v

START OAT NG TONIOHTI
Hevt un m11 ng 1 gbe sngta
n you 1 ea Cafl to mo 1 nlor
mot on 1 800 ROMANCE u
1736

•

LlvHtOCk

NEW AND USED STEELS oa
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Ang e Cha ne Fa Sa Stee
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(740 446-7300

3 Bed oom, 1 Bath HouH Wash
a &amp; 0 ye Now Ca pa $450
month Pus $200 Oeposl No
Pol
MtUpRou112A1Gtn
wood
(304)578 8981
0
(304)4!78.()127

Qalllpo a 782 3 d Avonua $300
Month 3 Badroom 1 Bath Frome
HOUII Gil Heat NO Pttl Wtt
kOndl Nlghtl (740)44HB 4

L VE OIRLSII
NOWII
1 900 226 1940
EXT 9789
399pe mn
Mus be 18 yrs

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

Delphos S Johns 2 _.) vs S rasbu g

F YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOMEI Bu d you own IUC

00

630

AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n S ock
Ca Ron Evans 800 537 9528

460 Space for Rent

Friday
SI!NTINI!b DfAQUNE
1 00 p m till day before
lha ad Ia to run.
Sunday I Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday
AEGimA DEAQUNE.
I Monday edition 4 30
Thur8day
DeedllnH aublactlo
change due to holldoya"

540 Mltcellaneout
Marchandlee

Ta a Townhouse Apa tm@n a
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed oomt 2
Floofl CA 1 12 Balh Fu ly Cs
ptled Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pat 0 S I $365 Mo No Pe s
Lilli P us Secu ty Otpos 1 Re
qu act Days 740 446 348
Even nga 740 367 0502 740
448.0 0

310 Homealor Sale
3 Bedroom

Apartment•
lor Rant

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Now Tak ng App catlona 3e
Wut 2 Bad oom Townhou1e
Apar men 1 Inc udtt Wa t
Sowaoo hah $350 Mo 740
448-0008
OakWOOd Apartmonta
10 Bat
woon Town &amp; HOIZI t Bodroom
Stove Atl tgera1o Fu n s~od No
Pt11 Dtpoalt $190 P uo Ut H11
Cal (740)4411-3929 Alit 7pm

SERVICES

810

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
DEL~ COMPUTERS Evon w th
len han pe ec c td t
800
477 90 8 Coda AC 2 www omc
sotut ana com

EZPETRX COM Slvt up o 50%
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800 242 0363
tK14009 0
wwwg an 8 do com com
OET SEXY FOR SUMMER Lost
3 !S bs week y Gua an ted con
1 o c av ngs faa g ea Burn tat
qu ck v On v $ 9 951 COOS
Phonecl'ltcka C ad Ca dt 1
800 258 0989

C808

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
uncond t ona e me gue an ee
Lace 1 t eneea u n shed Es
ab shed 975 ca ri!4 H a 740
446 0870 BOO 287 0578 Aog
esWaeproo no

Lovin~

Memory of

760
97 Jeep !J and cne okee La edo
4x4 ed PW PL c use e c
89 000 m ea book o $ 5 300
ask ng S 3 500 740 742 7200 o
740 742 2675

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce88orlaa

1-888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Davtlopment Group/Millennium teleoarvlc••

rP!.n
on

Established local company looklno to Rll S
entry-level manaoemenl positions
Associates deoree or manaoement
experience Solid people skills oroonlzatlonal
skills and self mollvatlon are a must
$23-$30k to start
Benents and 401 K plan available

Jeremy Guinther
07/23/77 3/22/90
Sadly massed by
Mom &amp;Dad,

t_nny&amp;~

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed In Meigs County Hours 1Opm Frl thru Bam
Mon sleep over requrred Duties !nc!ude teaching
commun ty and persona skills to an Individual with
mental retardatton Requ rements High school
diploma /GED valid dr ver s Jlcensa three years
good dnv ng experience and adequate automob!la
nsurance coverage Start ng salary $6 OO,.,r
Send resume to Buckeye Commun!ty Services
P0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Dead!lne for
appl cants 3/29/01 Equal Opportunity Employar

�Thunct.y, Men:h 22. 2001

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 22 2001

.uo

210

AIIP-,.1

Announcement

BullnHI
Opportunity

(ilveeway L.oet I Found
Yard S.lea, and Wanted
To Do Ada Mull! 81 Paid

Bath Frame hoult

w Dtttchtd Garooe

Acre mil
Ext 1 Tra to Lot GCLS Ru a
WI tr Ntlr C ty $55 000
(7&lt;10)4&lt;11-0527

In AdVance

lWtn R verTowe s now accep ng
BPP IC8 IOns Of BR
HUD subs d zed ap fo a de y
and d sablod EOH 304 675
6679

TRIBUNE D§AQUNE

2 00 p m 1he day before
1M ld 1• to run Sunday &amp;
Monday edition 2 00 p m
Needed Someone To live n And
Give Ass s ance To Edt y Ladv

2 dayabelort 1M ad Ia to
run by 4 30 p m S.turday

343 OR YEAS NEEDED No ex
pe ence needed Qu ck COL
c a n ng p og am ava abe Ea n
$38 000 • 1&amp;t VII 5 STAR
800 448 6669 Expo anced d v
eshodngCassAca 1800
958-2353

F NALLY A LEO T MATE HOME
BUSINESS Beeoml a highlY pad
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Bankruptcy $195
Allor&gt;tlon $225
Not de&gt; 1yourull k
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ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Peraonall

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Down own Second Avenue Nea
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NCAA Wom•n 1 Tournament
EAST REGIONAL
At Mellon Arena
Ptnoburgh
Flogtonot &amp;om ftnolo
Saturday March 24
M ssoul1 (22 9) vs Lou s ana Tech 30
4
37 am
Cannec cu 30-2 vs N C Sta e 22
o) 207prn
Reg1ona Champtonsh p
Monday March 26
Sem hna w nners 7 07 p m
M DEAST REGIONAL
B rmln&amp;ham Ala
Reg onal Semlflna 1
Saturday March 24
Tennessae 3 2) vs X&amp;Yle

F ank n (22-4 Friday 1 00
T1pp City Be he (2 4 s Reedsv e
Eas em (22 3 Friday 2 00
cnamp onsh p Sa urday 5 00

men a

30 2
2 07 p m
Texas Tech 25-e vs Pu due 28 6
2 37 p m
Rtglonal Champ on1h p
Monday Ma ch 26

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Georgetown (25 7) vs Maryland (23
10) 755pm
s an ord 30.2 va c nc nna (25 9 25
mnuesale trs game
Regional Champlonsh p
Salurdly Merch 24
Sam na winners
THE FINAL FOUR
At The Hubert H Humphrey
Netrodome
Mlnneapo Ia
Netlonel Semlf na 1
Saturday March 31
Eas champion vs Wes champ on
Sou h champ on vs M dwes champ on
Game t mes 5 42 and app ox 8 2
pm
Nat anal Champ onlhlp
Monday Apr 2
Sam na wnners 918 p m

520

Sporting
Goods

Nation• lnvltat on Tou nament
Th rd Round
Wednnday M1 ch 21
De rol 59 Dayton 42
Tusa77 Msssslpp Sae75
Thu aday March 22
New Mex co 2 2) a Memph s 9
14 Bpm F day Mach 23
Aabama 23 0 a Pudue 7 4 7
pm

Sem nna 1
At Mldlaon Squa 1 Ga den

1 btd oom apa tment $225 pa
month p us ulll t 11 &amp; depos
Th d Sir&amp;ot Rae no Oh 740
247-&lt;1292

New Yo k

Tueadey March 27
De o 25 o vs A abama Pu due
wnne 7o 930pm
Tu sa 24
vs New Mex co Memph s
7o 930pm

A•• 11tatt wanted lam forced
out or my houat lor h ghwav m
provemtnt Looking to o d ra m
hOUII n Ml 01 Coun y W 1'1
acre•o• ca 740 797 930~ 740

RENTALS

410 HOUIIIfor Rant
Fou Room HOUII 52 0 VI
S roo phone 7&lt;0)4411-3948

VA500
Race At Ma ns e Mo o
Speedway Ap 8 h Exce en
Seas (740)258-1304

24
27
33
45
52

847
2
591
•
52i
10
348 22 t/2
235
30

' c nchod playoff spot

WldnoldoyoaSan An onlo 97 Boa on 77
nd ana 9ti Or1ando 95
Charlotte 11 Toronto 95
Mlam tOO Chicago 8t
M nneso a 09 Da as 97
M !waukee 07 LA Lakel1100
Wash ng on 99 Golden State 9&lt;4
Thu aday • Gamee
SanAnonoa A ana 730pm
Vancouve a C eve and 7 30 p m
Bos on a New Jersey 7 30 p m
Ponanda Utah 9pm
PhOen x a Sean a 0 p m
De ro a Sac amen1o 10 30 p m
Housona LAC ppe s 1030pm
FrldlyaGamH
A anta a Torono 7 pm
vancouve a ndlana 7 p m
New Jersey a New York 7 30 p m
Den e a Mmesota Bpm
Chanone a Ch~go e 30 p m
011ando a M rwaukee e 30 p m
Ph adephaa PhOenx 9pm
Washngona LA Lakes 030pm

Champlonahlp Round
Thu 1day March 2i

Mclead s Pe G oom ng g dogs
g oomed ba hed &amp; d pped $40
g Co es $35 sm Co es $30
Cocke Span e s $25 g Food as
$ 6 sm Pood es S 6 740 667
395

BASEBALL
Ame can League
ANAHE M ANGELS-All gned RHP
Aa on Sma o he m no eague camp
BOSTON RED SOX-Op ontd 3B
W on Ve as o Pawtucket o the n ema
ona league Ass gned LHP Bryan Wlrd
o ne m nor eague camp
CLEVELAND
NO AN5-P emoted
m no eague h ng coo d nato Dave
Kt e o he mao eague coach ng staff
and Chria Bando to manage ot Akron of
he Eastern league Named W e Upal'\lw
l'lnng eoordna o
NEW YORK YANKEES-T adad OF
W y Mo Pena and cash to C nciMIU tor
38 0 ew Henson and OF M chae Colt
man
SEATTLE MAR NER5-Ao aaaod RHP
Was Moane AHP No Longo FIHP RhoU
A v a a and AHP Greg Beave Announced
he a ement o C Ryan Bundy
Not onol Ltogut
C NCINNAT AED5-Ag aod to ltrmt
w1 h OF Ruben Rivera on a one yH oon
tract P aced AHP Salh E1hanon on tht eodly d aab ed at
ST LOU S CAADINALs-opttonod C
Ke th McDona~ to Momph a ol 1ha PCL.
Aoaaa gnad AHP M ke Ca1ha FIHP Dtn
Carlson and INF ,l.u s Garc a to tht r rnnor
eague camp
BASKETBAU
Notlonol Baokotblll Aatocllnon
DALLAS MAVEAICK5-Act va td C
catv n Booth.lrom tha n1ured llat P toad F
GaryTentonth• nuadls
FOOTBALL
Wldneldor, Morch 21
Notlonol Footlllllltaguo
New Mex co 77 A abama B nn ngham
ATLANTA FALCONS-Ao signed S
55
Ge a d McBurrowa
Hawa 52 Ok ahoma S a a 5
CLEVELAND BROWNS-S gnad OL
Semifinal•
m Bund en o a one yea contract
March 23 25
New Melt co vs Hawa TBA
DALLAS COWSOY5-Ro olgnod FB
James Mad aon vs on o Sta e TBA
Robert Thomas o a th ee ~ea contl'lct
Chomp onahlp
DENVER BAONC05-Ra 1 gnod OT
Matt Laps s
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Re I gnad
TE Ty one Oav s o a mu yea con ract
NEW YORK JET$-Ag eed 10 terms
w h LB James Dal1 ng
SAN FRANC SCO 49oR5-Wa vod S
Jason Moo e
Eaele n Conference
HOCKEY
At ant c Dlvlalan
National Hockey League
OB
W
L Pet
NHL-F ned M nneso a coach Jacques
x Ph ada ph a 48
20
706
Lema e and gene a manage Doug A se
New Yo k
4
26 612 6 2
7
b ough S5 000 o the crit c sm o efetee
Mam
41
27 603
Orlando
37 3
544
BadMee ala egameagans De a on
Boston
29 38 433 8 2
Ma ch
Named Brian Wa Ice manage
26
New Je sey
23 47
329
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3
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7 5
250
COLORADO AVALANCHE-Co ad 0
Cent al D v 1on
Bryan Muir and G Ph ppe Sauve rom
GB
W
L
Pet
Hershey o ha AHL
42 25
627
M waukee
COLUMBUS
BLUE
JACKETS
40 211
588
Charlotte
Reca ed F Chns N e sen and F B Bowie
36 32
529
To ono
om Sy acuse o he AHL
30 37 448
ndana
LOS ANGELES K NGS Reca ad RW
25 43
368
De o
Marko Tuom anen f om Lowe o he AHL
24 43
358
C evetand
COLLEGE
2
47
309 2
A an a
CLAFL N-Named M am Wake
56
64
Chcago
Samue s women s baske ba coach
Waate n Conte enca
LL NOS WESLEYAN-Named Oav d
MdwestOvaon
W
L
Pet
GB
Ba e t mens and women s socce coach
48 20
706
NO ANA-Named M ke Oav s mens
San Antono
46 20 697
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baske ba coach
5
43 25 632
Oa as
LOU SVIllE-Named
R ck P llno
8
40 28 588
M nneso a
n en s basketba coach
10
38 30
559
Hous on
ACE Named Cay Homan mens go I
15
33 35 485
Oenve
coach
20 49 290 28 1 2
Vancouve
Pac ftc D v a on
GB
W
L
Pet
Sac amen o
45 2
682
L A Lakers
45 23 662

Subscnbe toda&gt;
992 2156
810

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; UVESTOCK

Home
Improvements

810

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Improvement•

3 STEEL BU LD NGS 24•30
was $7 900 SO $3 400 40•46
was$10900 sa $5200 SO•t20
was $2 900 se $ 1 900 Ne~e
PU1 Up Can De ve Tom 1 800
392 7103

Furn lhld 2 &amp; 3 Room Apa t
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HUO Subo d rod Aportmontt Fo
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Houttng Oppo tun
(740)448

-

MANAGEMENT

no

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N co t Bedroom Aportrnan a Fo
Atnt n GIHpor 1 Arta (740)44111181

Rill Eatata
Wanted

11929 32

loaornant Boauttu Vow 01 A v
tr Wu $98 500 Atducad To
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(7&lt;10)258-11 72

Rtglona Stmlftntll
Thuraday Merch 22

1 and 2 bedroom apa ments rur
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992 2216

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WEST REGIONAL
At Arrawhu.d Pond
Anahe m Calli

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lor Rant

440

340 Bualneae and
Building•

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742 2103

1

Moten ng Couch And Cha S 50
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Cha
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(304)675 4 37

Sma two bedroom mobUe home
lu n &amp;hod $275 po mon h $200
dopoa t no peto ca 740 992
2808 740 992 1573 leave mea
aoga

s

310 Hom11lor Sale

Squ•

House
TraUt
For
Ran
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Aou o 7 Soulh (740)44 -&lt;1619

Aaducad 199 Sunsh na no 1
w de 1Bx80 Tn 11 Bed oom 2
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Evenings

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mon h 992 Gao S o m 5 speed
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mon h ca f 740 388 9693 o 740
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Skaggs App ances 76
ao Call 740 446 7398
8.() 28

New
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B77m4 10

Thll MMfiiPII' wll net

210

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washe a D ye s Ranges Re
g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
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740-448 7795

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nan

New And Used Fu n tu e Sto e
Be ow Ho day Inn Kanauga We
Sat G ave Monumen s And
Vases

330 Farm• lor Sale

f

Household
Goods

44
39
37
24
II

Sem na wlnne s 8 07 p m
M DWEST REGIONAL
At Ptpl Arena
Denve
EAST REGIONAL
ReglonaiSam fln11 a
At Flttt Un on Canter
Saturdey March 24
Phtodt phlo
No e Dame (30 2) VB Utah 28 3 8 07
Region• Sem f na a
pm
Thuttday March 22
owa Sta e 27 5 vs Vandertl (23 9
Ken ucky 24 9 vs Southam Ca fom a
o
37 p m
239 738pm
Rtg1on11 Champlonah p
Duke 3 -4) va UCLA 23 8) 25 m n
Mondlly March 25
u es al e frat game
Semltlna w nners 9 07 p m
onal Champlonehlp
aturday March 24
WEST REGIONAL
SemI na w nnera
At Spok•n• Arena
Spokana Waah
SOUTH REGIONAL
Regional Semlllnals
At The Georgi• Dom•
Saturday M11rch 24
At antll
Duke (30 3) va Sou hwes M asour1
Aaglonol Somltlnt o
Sate(275 007pm
Frldoy March 23
Ok ahoma 28 5) va Washington (2
M ch oan Sttto 18-4) va Gonzaga (26
9 237lm
6) 738pm
Roglonol Chomp onthlp
Penn Stell (21 1 ) VI Tamp 0 (23 2)
Mondoy Morch 2t
215 m nu ea aHe Hrat game
Sam ns winners 10 07 p m
Aeglanal Chemp onah p
Sunday Much 21
THE PINAL FOUR
Sam na wlnnara
At The 8awla Center
&amp;t Loulo
MIDWEST REGIONAL
Notional Bamlflnolo
At Tho Alomodomt
Frtdoy March 30
San Antonio
East champion VI M dwest champ on
Rf91Drlllltmlflna I
7or930pm
Frldoy Morch 23
M deast champion vs wea champ on
Anrona (25 7 vs M sa 11 pp 27 7)
7o 930pm
7 55 pm
Netlonel Champlonahlp
I nots (28 7) va Kansas (28-11) 25 m n
Sundoy Aprl11
utes a te t rst game
Sam
flna winners B30 p m
Rf9lonat Champlonohlp
Sundoy March 25
Sem I na w nr~ers
Women I NIT

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Thompsons App anca 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675 7388

Pltlle

JOB POSTING
WICDirtctor
eaaltkm: Jackoon V nton Community Action Inc. Currently Hat
A !'clition Ava lallll Fo W I C
0 rector Th 1 Ia A Full Yea Pc
8 ton Sa ory Ft,ngo 10 $11 00.
$ 5 00 pe Hou Based On oua
fica ton And E)(J)O tence Work
Schldut M~8430
Ma!or Beaoons!bl!ijaa Aeapons b e Fo Compte ng The G an
App k:a on And 0 he F seal Re
qu emen s Fo The Jackson
County Women nfan And Ch d
on WC P ogram Aospons~e
Fo Suporv &amp;ion OF w C C n&lt;
Pe sonnet Mus Mon o As
s gned Cosaload Vondof Acttvl
ties W C C ntc Opera tons And
Ptr1o&lt;m W C Cor llcottons Atspans bit Fo Communication
And Coord nation or Thew c
P ogram ActMtlea W«h Loca
And S1a e Agencies Muat Have
Exoo ten Ore And W tttan Com
muntca tons Sk I 1 Some Travel
Is Aequ red
Oual!f!cttfoo&amp; Rag a ered L
cenaed Dla can nThe Sta e Of
Ohio P alerrod Asglatarod NufH
Or Ololt lc Tochn~ an May Qua;
ly Muat Have Va d OhiO Dnv
eraL~enao And Own Aelab~
Transportotion P IVIOUI Supo
vlsory Elq)Oflanot And Know
edge Ot P enata nfant And
ChUd Nutrlllon P aforrad Comput
o Sk I Requ red Knowtodgo 01
Netwo ~no Exotl And Word A
Pus

At Mldlton aq.,.,., Gordon
NtwYorlt
Third Pltct
Semlf na 10Hf1 tip m
Champion ahlp
Sem tina winners 9 p m

At Ohio St.l1 Unlverefty COIUmbul
DIVISION I
Cos B_.,.van (26.0) vs Cln Eldo
(20-ll) Friday, 6:00
C e S Ignatius (23 2) vs Mass on
Jackson (22 3 Friday 9 00
Champonsh p Saturday 8 30
DIVISION U
Kottonng A o (23 2 VI Cos Eas ( 6
8) Thu &amp;day 6 00
W ad 24 1) vs WarrensYI e H s 24
) Thu sday 9 00
Champ onsh p Sa urday 2 00
OIV SION IH
Be pre (23 3) vs Casstown Mlam E
24 2) Thursday 1 00
Havi and Wayne T ace (24 1 vs Ale on
St Vlncen S Mary (24 1) Thu sday 2 00
Championship Sa u day 1 00
DIVISION IV

TRANSPORTATION

App At Budott Inn Jackton
P ko Go tlpo Ia No Phone Ca to
p ....
NEED HELPII notd poop t to
ne p me expand ma o de •
comma ct bua nus toea y na
lone y and nte nat one y wh e
wo k ng I om homt EKCI en n
como pottntial FREE nlo rna ton
www oad2aucctll com 1 888
717827

490

Oa polo 750 3rd Ave $180
Month
BR 1 Bath Frame
HOUH Gil Holt No Pttl Wtt
ktndll Nlghll (740)-14

Cal 1 1100-490-11480 24 hro

Hou11keep•

s Scoreboard

R,

v

START OAT NG TONIOHTI
Hevt un m11 ng 1 gbe sngta
n you 1 ea Cafl to mo 1 nlor
mot on 1 800 ROMANCE u
1736

•

LlvHtOCk

NEW AND USED STEELS oa
Beams P pe Reba Fa Cone e e
Ang e Cha ne Fa Sa Stee
G a ng Fo D a ns 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways l&amp;L se ap Me as
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3 Bed oom, 1 Bath HouH Wash
a &amp; 0 ye Now Ca pa $450
month Pus $200 Oeposl No
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MtUpRou112A1Gtn
wood
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0
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Qalllpo a 782 3 d Avonua $300
Month 3 Badroom 1 Bath Frome
HOUII Gil Heat NO Pttl Wtt
kOndl Nlghtl (740)44HB 4

L VE OIRLSII
NOWII
1 900 226 1940
EXT 9789
399pe mn
Mus be 18 yrs

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

Delphos S Johns 2 _.) vs S rasbu g

F YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOMEI Bu d you own IUC

00

630

AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n S ock
Ca Ron Evans 800 537 9528

460 Space for Rent

Friday
SI!NTINI!b DfAQUNE
1 00 p m till day before
lha ad Ia to run.
Sunday I Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday
AEGimA DEAQUNE.
I Monday edition 4 30
Thur8day
DeedllnH aublactlo
change due to holldoya"

540 Mltcellaneout
Marchandlee

Ta a Townhouse Apa tm@n a
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed oomt 2
Floofl CA 1 12 Balh Fu ly Cs
ptled Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pat 0 S I $365 Mo No Pe s
Lilli P us Secu ty Otpos 1 Re
qu act Days 740 446 348
Even nga 740 367 0502 740
448.0 0

310 Homealor Sale
3 Bedroom

Apartment•
lor Rant

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Now Tak ng App catlona 3e
Wut 2 Bad oom Townhou1e
Apar men 1 Inc udtt Wa t
Sowaoo hah $350 Mo 740
448-0008
OakWOOd Apartmonta
10 Bat
woon Town &amp; HOIZI t Bodroom
Stove Atl tgera1o Fu n s~od No
Pt11 Dtpoalt $190 P uo Ut H11
Cal (740)4411-3929 Alit 7pm

SERVICES

810

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
DEL~ COMPUTERS Evon w th
len han pe ec c td t
800
477 90 8 Coda AC 2 www omc
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for Sala

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W lilA 110 &amp; Many Mot IN
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800 242 0363
tK14009 0
wwwg an 8 do com com
OET SEXY FOR SUMMER Lost
3 !S bs week y Gua an ted con
1 o c av ngs faa g ea Burn tat
qu ck v On v $ 9 951 COOS
Phonecl'ltcka C ad Ca dt 1
800 258 0989

C808

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
uncond t ona e me gue an ee
Lace 1 t eneea u n shed Es
ab shed 975 ca ri!4 H a 740
446 0870 BOO 287 0578 Aog
esWaeproo no

Lovin~

Memory of

760
97 Jeep !J and cne okee La edo
4x4 ed PW PL c use e c
89 000 m ea book o $ 5 300
ask ng S 3 500 740 742 7200 o
740 742 2675

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce88orlaa

1-888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Davtlopment Group/Millennium teleoarvlc••

rP!.n
on

Established local company looklno to Rll S
entry-level manaoemenl positions
Associates deoree or manaoement
experience Solid people skills oroonlzatlonal
skills and self mollvatlon are a must
$23-$30k to start
Benents and 401 K plan available

Jeremy Guinther
07/23/77 3/22/90
Sadly massed by
Mom &amp;Dad,

t_nny&amp;~

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed In Meigs County Hours 1Opm Frl thru Bam
Mon sleep over requrred Duties !nc!ude teaching
commun ty and persona skills to an Individual with
mental retardatton Requ rements High school
diploma /GED valid dr ver s Jlcensa three years
good dnv ng experience and adequate automob!la
nsurance coverage Start ng salary $6 OO,.,r
Send resume to Buckeye Commun!ty Services
P0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Dead!lne for
appl cants 3/29/01 Equal Opportunity Employar

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 22, 2001

Pomeroy,.~ddleport, Ohio

Thuraday, March 22, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

!ALLEYOOP

NJ:A Croaaword Punle
PHil. LIP

Savre

CON'IUOOIS, IlK.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RIICI,., Ohio 41n1

• New Homes

P/8

Truckins

740-985·3948
CONCRETf/BLOCW/BRICK
• Footen, Walls, Steps •

Flat Work,
Replacements. • Walks

TIM SAYRE
(740} 698-8577

and Drives • Slencil

Crete Free Estlm1tes

S.n&lt;lnc Ohio and W. V.
wv 1031711

• Gat'llges
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Comp.re
FREE ESTIMATES

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH

BAUM LUMBER CO.

Trucks· Tractor TrailersHouses - Mobile Homes

(740) 98!5-3301

46384 St. llt. 248 Chuter, Ohio

-Decks -DrivewaysEquipment Cleaned &amp;
De greased

Lionel, MTH, K·Line,

Jetr Stethem

Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann

Email:

&amp; Accessorie~
0, HO, &amp;. N Guage

(740) 985-4Z18

740-992·1671

Advertise
space for

$50 per
750 East State Street Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio
•

.

Public Notice

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts Faclory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealen

Public Notice
AMENDMENT TO
ORDINANCE 521.08

premlsoa any aolld

The
Pomeroy
VIllage will be
accepllng sealed bids
on pointing and
repairing wlndowa on
tht front and wall
olde of tho Municipal
Building. All bldl
mutt .,. roctlvad by
ApriiZ, 2001, at 11:00
a.m. 11 the Clork'l
Office, 320 EISt Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45768. Tho VIllage
Council hot tho right
to accept or roloct
any and 111 bldo.

waste such a manner
It will

(3) 22, 29, 2001

LITTERING, AND
DEPOSIT OF
GARBAGE,
RUBBISH, JUNK,
ETC. ·
Sub-per1gr1ph E.
No peraon ohall

1tore, place. burn or

dlapooe . on

hla

premlaea or premlaea

of another or permit '
to accumulate on hla

whereby

become rodent or' 2tc
Insect h&amp;rboraga, or

•..

, ,.....

1000 St. Rl. 7 S&lt;Hifh
CooM//t, OH 4117113

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

National Guard Armory
Saturday March 31 ·
10:00 am • 5:00 pm

brooding place, or
create a health
or

nuisance.

PASSED: February

19,2001.

John W. Blaottnar,
Mayor
Kathy
Hysell,
Clork/Trell.
John F.
Proaldont

Muaoer,

(3) 15, 22, 2001
2tc

Sell Your Used
Marchandlle I
Olllly Sentinel
Cilllllfleds
892·2156

• P1Uo and Porch Decke

Free Esllmates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

HELP WANTED
GRILL COOK

meanace, Insanitary

condition

• Room Addltlona 6
Rom-ling.
• NtwGaratltl
• Elactrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roollnti &amp;Gultara
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting

Pom~y.

two seasons.

Realizing they couldn't lure Henson
away from football, the Reds traded him
back to the Yankees for a player who's
committed to baseball.
"We didn't think we conld sign
Drew," general manager Jim Bowden
said. "We figured we would hold onto
his rights in case something happened
down the road. We didn't want to trade
him, unless we could get a young
prospect that had a chance to be an
impact player like Drew.
"We think we ·got that in Wily. We
think he's got the potential to be Sammy
Sosa."

·

When Rivera was with the Yankees. he
also was considered a star in the making.
Instead, he has struggled to hit much
above .200 and was released last week by
San Diego.
for now, he figures in the Reds' plans
as a backup outfielder.
" He has an outstanding glove. He has
power," manager Bob Boone said. "If he

J.;I044i75-1114
1-100-zS0-!107'7 .
·Residential Commerdol New Construction
Salts Senice Installation
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. ..
THE BORN LOSER
'Oo.o I lEU. YOU I W~ GO\N{, Wfhl
f'E.lDI froM

~(.OUNTIW.,?

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vlayl
Siding • New Ga,.,...
• Replacement

Windows • Room
Additions • Roonna
COMMERCIAL anoliEliDIKJW,
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

VOUB

Reserve Your

(740) 949-7039
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP)
Less
than two weeks before opening day, the
Cincinnati Reds have rearranged their
outfield and traded one prospect for
another.
On their list of things yet to do: fill out
the starting rotation.
The Reds agreed to a one-year contract Wednesday with San Diego castoff
Ruben Rivera, a good-field, no-hit outfielder who gets a chance to become a
backup. ·
Rivera, 27, essentially takes the place
of outfielder Michael Coleman, who
was sent to the New York Yankees on
Wednesday almi.g with minor league
third baseman Drew Henson.
In return, Cincinnati got minor league
outfielder Wily Mo Pen a and $1.9 million to help pay Pena's contract.
Pena, 19, has struggled in the minors ·
after get.ting a $3.7 million, five-year deal
from the Yankees in 1999. He hit .234
with 17 homers and 64 RB!s in 488 atbats in Class A and rookie ball the past

JJiJLW'

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Reds shake up outfield

ever learns to hit, he can be special."
or
Rivera generatedtremendous hype as
(740) 992-3203
a Yankees prospect, and played 51. games
in New York from 1995-96. He went to . . - - - - - - - ,
the Padres in the complex deal that gave The CRAFTY,
the Yankees negotiating righ1s to Hideki ·
BLIND SPOT
lrabu in 1997.
(Factory Outlet)
The Padres thought so much of him
All vertical blind• are
that they opened a spot for him by let- made to order at our
ting center fielder Steve Finley leave as a
loeation
free age nt after the 1998 World Series.
· UP TO 70% OFF
Rivera helped the Padres reach the
• Vertleals • Wood
• Minis • Etc
World Series in 1998, often spelling
144 TWrHve. Galpolls
right fielder Tony Gwynn late in regularseason games, then started two games in
446-4995
place of injured left fielder Greg Vaughn
in the NL championship series against
Atlanta.
Double HunQ
Though he lived up to the billing
Replacement
defensively, showing a strong arm ·and ·
Windows
great range, River never did much
Welded
Frome &amp;
offensively.
Sash0-101 United
In four seasons, Rivera played 394
Inches
games and got 1,026 at-bats. He hit .201
$1119.00 Installed
with 46 homers and 341 strikeouts. He
led the Padres in strikeouts the last two
seasons, with 143 in 1999 and 137 in
155H2nd
2000.
Middleport
The Reds figure he can help them
992-2772
defensively in the later innings and as
part of double-switches.
"Given our starting pitching the way it
is, the better the defense, the better the
pit~hing's going to be," Bowden said.
Pete Harnisch is the only proven
starter in the rotation. -Boone said
Wednesday that he's still .undecided on
who will fill it out.
Notes: SS Barry Larkin, sidelined by a
strained groin, was examined Wedne•day
and cleared to do a light workout. ·
Boone said he's more confident Larkin"
will be ready for opening day. .. . 2B
Pokey Reese started at shortstop
Wednesday but came out of the 8-5 loss
Open
to Pittsburgh after getting hit on the
Mon-Fri 9-5:30
right sho ulder by a pitch in the third
Sat 9·1
inning. He suffered only a bruise. "They
just said it will be so re for a coupl·e of
~40)
days," Reese said.

J&amp;L

Racine
Mower
Clinic

949-2804

'
• r

~

,.

~ ,.

...

.,._-

• ........... rr.tlllll...., .
•liiii&amp;U
• Eldllnl Wll'll • Trl••ltllll fllllll

Free Elllmatea

•ll'lh Wll'll

740-742-8015 or
1-an-353-7022
Sunset Home
Conslrucllon
New Homes, Room

Howardl.
Wrltesel

Additions, Garages,

Roofing • Home

Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kilchens; Drywall &amp;
More

We Can Make Your
Dream A Reality!
740-742·3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

FrH Estimates

949·1405

591·5011

••

J &amp; L SANITATION

URNPIKE

LINCOLN

M&lt;rcnry

SPEtCIAL FINANCE DEPAJmiENJ'

Now Rentilg
A·J MINI·STORAGE
992:-6396
992·2212

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

74().992-5232
Pd1 mo.

P...

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• lllulllt
10 Proltollon
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ourrtnoy
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21 Klntl'
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41 lulflng
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"'"

I THURSDAY

SHANE!

MARCH 22l

H Blu.-grwn

42 Nonprofn

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42 Long ltlrolc
21 Bid lhi'Oit
poam
aound
45 Source of

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45 Art dlco
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lllullrllor
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tht
turt
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37 Actrtu
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12 Bini (comb.
born
form)
40 Aocumulalt 53 8outht1ll
41 ThNid (of
Aalan
tmoka)
holld1y

27

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos
Clltbrity Cipher cryptogram• are crMted from quotations b~ famoua
piOpll, put and preeenl. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

·

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SHANE!
COME 81\CK,

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BUK,

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The cullure of a nation is, after all, as
lmponant as Its economy.•- Eleanor Roosevelt

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f)

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Frozen- Uofit- Offer- Nimbus · FIRST ONE

I agree I have been behaving as though I were 1n my
second childhood The bes\ part, thou gh . I am havmg
more fun than in lhe FIRST ONE

. 420 W.

Main.St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(aero" from Pizza Hut)

(740)992-1
Full service auto center

· Hill's Self
Ster•e•

2$670 B11llln R01d
Racine, Ohio
·

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Friday, March 23, 2001
Your probabiliries for developing needed access Jo material and

Keep your wits ahout yOu, and · know it. you could have a seriou.s
don't he suckered imo doing halflood of bills thai will need lobe
paid. Be diligenl and auenlive Jo
tle.1

CANCER (June 21-July 22) ·
•
it's
important you Iry to work
excellent in the year ahead. The
Irick is to uJilize it aggressively wilh others today insJe~d of
ugain~t them, even when your
and producJively.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) · iden.li are belter lhun their:;; . Find
. Don't gel off on !he wrong foot way:;; to compromi~c if )'Clll hope
today if you should have lo deal to get anything d 1111C.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22l -- A
with someone who made a bad
hi~h·rollin~
[riend or yours could
impression on you during your
las! encounter. Use experience to tukc you on a ride about Jown
deal with this person. Gel a jump today that proves to be far more
on life by understanding the influ- than you can afford. Before getences lhat'll govern you in the ting involved, set the ground
year ahead. Send for your Astra- rules.
.
Graph prediciions by mailing $2
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) ••
lo Aslro-Oraph, c/o !his newspa- Openly discussing a disagreeper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill ment belween you and your mate
SJalion, New York, NY 10156.1!e with outsiders I.oday nol only
sure 10 slate your Zodiac sisn.
makes each of you look bad, but
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) • encourages a gossip Jo spread the
• No relalionship can nourish if word.
there are loa many strings
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0c!. 23)-- A
attached to iJ, Be careful today mishap is likely if you do things
thai you don't put too much pres- ·in hasle today, even that which is
sure on a pal, making him or her routine. Unless your mind is on
feel unduly controlled.
whai.you're doing. you risk makGEMINI (May 21-June 20l -- ing mistakes.
1
There's a good chnnce you could . SCORPIO (0¢1. 24-Nov. 2~) •
be confronJed Joday by an indi- . If you fail to plug up Ihe leaks
viduul who is openly hostile. in your budge! today, before you
data that can ensure success are

Marathon Service Center

. 740-985-4212

45n1

Pau

Did you know thai
bridge was played in
Alcatraz? Apparently
the players used dominoes thai came in four
WHAR DID SHE HIDE
colors. The
different
ER BUTIER AN'
jack had II dots, and
EGG MONEY?
so on. They sal on
hassocks, playing on
low tables about 20
inches · high: They
were behind the firstand lhird-base lines,
so occasionally a softball would land in the
middle of a table.
However, from a population of only 250
prisoners, it was common to see 80 of them
playing five or six
hours a day on weekends.
It is fun to find a
winning
deceptive
play. Any Alcatraz
'+ ..
inmate would have
. enjoyed pulling off
this ·coup, which
helped Zia Mahmood
and Andy Robson to
.
WT t 1\SI'.ED 1U OUT
retain their title at the
50
. ~~0 :filE.
. :'&gt;1\1 \)
Cap Gemini World
~I'£ UP
Top Pairs, held in The
w1m 1-\U:. 1.
Hague, last January.
Looking at all 52
cards, do you see any
way in which declarer
could fail to.make six
spades?
In the auction by
Piotr
Tuszynski
(South) and Krzysztof
Jassem, I'm guessing
SO MOVEt&gt;.
that five clubs and five
...W"' SECOIIDS?
hearts were controlw---:;:::---..._u bids (cue-bids) showing firsl- or second,-:::...-~~ round controls in those
suits.
West led out two
top clubs. Thszynski
ruffed and cashed the
Zia
spade
king.
dropped a deceptive
jack. Perhaps Thszynski shou Id have been
1-lER' NAME
skeptical, but assumISN'T''5HANE" 1
ing the jack to be a singleton, he played a
diamond to dummy's
queen, returned to his
diamond · ace, and
ruffed a low diamond
with dummy's spade
ace. Next, declarer
played a spade to his
eight; expecting to
claim immediately.
However, Zia produced the nine out of
his hand and the conlract was one down.

YEN-\,

H=~ka

I A Ql,.hwln

WI a.

Call Ua First Or We Both Lose!

l-800-272-6179 or

• PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE
• STEADY'

Self-Storage

LOOI&lt;~ DID 'I'OU SEE TI-l AT ?
OUR TEACI-lER WAS W"'A'I't'IT:1RNIE6Nit7l
IN'llER CAR. AND 1-lER DO. 1 1
· DIDN'T 51-lOW UP...

NO 1 l 1-\1&gt;..0
NO \Clel\ 1.

4 Pond du -, 24 Bello-

Bankruptcy? credit Problems?
•we Can Help'll
·

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 ~arsl"

High&amp;Dry

S•
Pul

uCtup

Ask For Mike Hindle

Locally owned and operated by
JACK &amp; LINDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~~~

PEANUTS

Wlmopd

Maintenance-

Gutters· Down
Spout

P11.1

-(lflk)

32 FloRIIIIII
II Capilli ol

BY PHILUP ALDER

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRA.CTORS

Mon-Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1·888·521..()916

Quality Dnveweye,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experl~

J•
4.

Eaet

A coup

=il

992-2975 ·

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seals,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpels, etc.

Pul
PIU
Pua

....

Openln&amp; luct. • A

and

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

1•
I• •

Salee &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

(7;~;o;e~~e~~~O . . ,

North

5.
••

HAULING
Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • Fill Dirt
0
Mnlch
~

Wnt

wlthout-

Ilene~

Vulnerable: Elltt·Well

lo~tU•

NWttrdl

3 Work

21 Ontwho

tAKIII

Dealer: East

lllbr.

2WIItltl'

17 Aug. tlmt
11-VIQU
20 OccuPied 1

..

See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

EXCAVATING

root

11 Rulm

• J I t
" J 4I
• J TI
• Q II I J

•KQJOII

New equipment arriving dally

WICK'S

...

DOWN
1 T1f1111111Pir

15 lledloiNI

".

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

~

.....

6,\KIISI

740-985-4180

'

CROWS STEAKHOUSE
APPLY IN PERSON
Meigs Co. Bike.rs'
Spring Party
Saturday, ~arch 24
Where: Mizway
Cost: $5.00 each
Band- Three Sided Soul
8pm-12pm
Contests: Wet tee &amp; buns
(must have at least 5 entries)
Prizes: $50/1st, $25/2nd
· 50/50 Raffles

Olio

• Q I
• Ia I '

BelOit 6 p.m.
leave Message
Aher 6pm

~

DIPOYIII
PIR'PI

Wt~l

oJ I

Nllllll

II 111m

liD"

•AIC IOIII
• Q •

.,

:c.,

pronoun
11 Prw Ucketl
11 TWIIfolcl
17 14 ·-Howw.

•.d ..l

• A ~ I

Bring In your repair work
we'll get you going for
spring

rzl

month.

"!Mt·

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

740-985-3831 .

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retire men!,
Emergency Funds; Mongage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home ~

304-882-2220

1

"Tako the pain out
ofpainti1J8· Lot,..
do it for you"

Nolth Pomeroy, Ohlci 457118

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Old rlcllot, old rtdllol
: · tubtt, &amp; 111r11

Call Chuck

in this

35537 81. Rt. 7

14=

11tyteol

UNDA'S
PAINTING

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

Estes Rockets

WANTED

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AO. SERVICE
"AhNd In Hrvlce"
-11.6!, l'rOitln limlodv'talllt fMd S6.2S/100
-21" Hunters l't1lt Dog Food S6.7S/50
-12% W..n ,Me han. IIIII 55.60/50
$1.00 off Coupon mobs. next punhoH S-4.60/50
l§ytr Csumbles SS.2S
T.M. Sah Blotb S.US/SO ill.

It Qulclllunah

ACAOII

ALDER

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

I

your spending ha~ils.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) -A mauer you're anxious to
conclude may not gel completed
Joday as you thought. Keep cool
concerning this comple" situation
!'O lhat you don' t create additional prohlems.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) .. Do 1101 respond in kind to
the thoughtless hehuvior of an
assodutl!. No matter how angry

you might gel. when you're feeling more lolcrunt later, you'll
regret your retaliulion.
AQUARIUS ilan. 20-Feb. 19)
.. Yielding to the harassment of a
lriend to lend somelhing nenr and
dear to you would he u misiuke.
Additional use puts wear and lenr
on Jhings und lessens !heir value.
PISCES (Feb. 2Q..March 20) •
. Even if you c:m'I discern the dif;
ference belween acling aggressively from being properly
assertive, I hose with whom you'll
have dealings will know tbe dif·
ference.

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 22, 2001

Pomeroy,.~ddleport, Ohio

Thuraday, March 22, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

!ALLEYOOP

NJ:A Croaaword Punle
PHil. LIP

Savre

CON'IUOOIS, IlK.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RIICI,., Ohio 41n1

• New Homes

P/8

Truckins

740-985·3948
CONCRETf/BLOCW/BRICK
• Footen, Walls, Steps •

Flat Work,
Replacements. • Walks

TIM SAYRE
(740} 698-8577

and Drives • Slencil

Crete Free Estlm1tes

S.n&lt;lnc Ohio and W. V.
wv 1031711

• Gat'llges
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Comp.re
FREE ESTIMATES

TRI-STATE
MOBILE POWER
WASH

BAUM LUMBER CO.

Trucks· Tractor TrailersHouses - Mobile Homes

(740) 98!5-3301

46384 St. llt. 248 Chuter, Ohio

-Decks -DrivewaysEquipment Cleaned &amp;
De greased

Lionel, MTH, K·Line,

Jetr Stethem

Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann

Email:

&amp; Accessorie~
0, HO, &amp;. N Guage

(740) 985-4Z18

740-992·1671

Advertise
space for

$50 per
750 East State Street Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio
•

.

Public Notice

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts Faclory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealen

Public Notice
AMENDMENT TO
ORDINANCE 521.08

premlsoa any aolld

The
Pomeroy
VIllage will be
accepllng sealed bids
on pointing and
repairing wlndowa on
tht front and wall
olde of tho Municipal
Building. All bldl
mutt .,. roctlvad by
ApriiZ, 2001, at 11:00
a.m. 11 the Clork'l
Office, 320 EISt Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45768. Tho VIllage
Council hot tho right
to accept or roloct
any and 111 bldo.

waste such a manner
It will

(3) 22, 29, 2001

LITTERING, AND
DEPOSIT OF
GARBAGE,
RUBBISH, JUNK,
ETC. ·
Sub-per1gr1ph E.
No peraon ohall

1tore, place. burn or

dlapooe . on

hla

premlaea or premlaea

of another or permit '
to accumulate on hla

whereby

become rodent or' 2tc
Insect h&amp;rboraga, or

•..

, ,.....

1000 St. Rl. 7 S&lt;Hifh
CooM//t, OH 4117113

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

National Guard Armory
Saturday March 31 ·
10:00 am • 5:00 pm

brooding place, or
create a health
or

nuisance.

PASSED: February

19,2001.

John W. Blaottnar,
Mayor
Kathy
Hysell,
Clork/Trell.
John F.
Proaldont

Muaoer,

(3) 15, 22, 2001
2tc

Sell Your Used
Marchandlle I
Olllly Sentinel
Cilllllfleds
892·2156

• P1Uo and Porch Decke

Free Esllmates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

HELP WANTED
GRILL COOK

meanace, Insanitary

condition

• Room Addltlona 6
Rom-ling.
• NtwGaratltl
• Elactrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roollnti &amp;Gultara
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting

Pom~y.

two seasons.

Realizing they couldn't lure Henson
away from football, the Reds traded him
back to the Yankees for a player who's
committed to baseball.
"We didn't think we conld sign
Drew," general manager Jim Bowden
said. "We figured we would hold onto
his rights in case something happened
down the road. We didn't want to trade
him, unless we could get a young
prospect that had a chance to be an
impact player like Drew.
"We think we ·got that in Wily. We
think he's got the potential to be Sammy
Sosa."

·

When Rivera was with the Yankees. he
also was considered a star in the making.
Instead, he has struggled to hit much
above .200 and was released last week by
San Diego.
for now, he figures in the Reds' plans
as a backup outfielder.
" He has an outstanding glove. He has
power," manager Bob Boone said. "If he

J.;I044i75-1114
1-100-zS0-!107'7 .
·Residential Commerdol New Construction
Salts Senice Installation
Speciolidnc in Shoot Metal Dltctwork
"Trane• Salrs &amp; Senlce For
Gollio, M11110a, oad Melp Countl•

Liunsed and ,,........,.

WV (!05176

. ..
THE BORN LOSER
'Oo.o I lEU. YOU I W~ GO\N{, Wfhl
f'E.lDI froM

~(.OUNTIW.,?

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vlayl
Siding • New Ga,.,...
• Replacement

Windows • Room
Additions • Roonna
COMMERCIAL anoliEliDIKJW,
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

VOUB

Reserve Your

(740) 949-7039
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP)
Less
than two weeks before opening day, the
Cincinnati Reds have rearranged their
outfield and traded one prospect for
another.
On their list of things yet to do: fill out
the starting rotation.
The Reds agreed to a one-year contract Wednesday with San Diego castoff
Ruben Rivera, a good-field, no-hit outfielder who gets a chance to become a
backup. ·
Rivera, 27, essentially takes the place
of outfielder Michael Coleman, who
was sent to the New York Yankees on
Wednesday almi.g with minor league
third baseman Drew Henson.
In return, Cincinnati got minor league
outfielder Wily Mo Pen a and $1.9 million to help pay Pena's contract.
Pena, 19, has struggled in the minors ·
after get.ting a $3.7 million, five-year deal
from the Yankees in 1999. He hit .234
with 17 homers and 64 RB!s in 488 atbats in Class A and rookie ball the past

JJiJLW'

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Reds shake up outfield

ever learns to hit, he can be special."
or
Rivera generatedtremendous hype as
(740) 992-3203
a Yankees prospect, and played 51. games
in New York from 1995-96. He went to . . - - - - - - - ,
the Padres in the complex deal that gave The CRAFTY,
the Yankees negotiating righ1s to Hideki ·
BLIND SPOT
lrabu in 1997.
(Factory Outlet)
The Padres thought so much of him
All vertical blind• are
that they opened a spot for him by let- made to order at our
ting center fielder Steve Finley leave as a
loeation
free age nt after the 1998 World Series.
· UP TO 70% OFF
Rivera helped the Padres reach the
• Vertleals • Wood
• Minis • Etc
World Series in 1998, often spelling
144 TWrHve. Galpolls
right fielder Tony Gwynn late in regularseason games, then started two games in
446-4995
place of injured left fielder Greg Vaughn
in the NL championship series against
Atlanta.
Double HunQ
Though he lived up to the billing
Replacement
defensively, showing a strong arm ·and ·
Windows
great range, River never did much
Welded
Frome &amp;
offensively.
Sash0-101 United
In four seasons, Rivera played 394
Inches
games and got 1,026 at-bats. He hit .201
$1119.00 Installed
with 46 homers and 341 strikeouts. He
led the Padres in strikeouts the last two
seasons, with 143 in 1999 and 137 in
155H2nd
2000.
Middleport
The Reds figure he can help them
992-2772
defensively in the later innings and as
part of double-switches.
"Given our starting pitching the way it
is, the better the defense, the better the
pit~hing's going to be," Bowden said.
Pete Harnisch is the only proven
starter in the rotation. -Boone said
Wednesday that he's still .undecided on
who will fill it out.
Notes: SS Barry Larkin, sidelined by a
strained groin, was examined Wedne•day
and cleared to do a light workout. ·
Boone said he's more confident Larkin"
will be ready for opening day. .. . 2B
Pokey Reese started at shortstop
Wednesday but came out of the 8-5 loss
Open
to Pittsburgh after getting hit on the
Mon-Fri 9-5:30
right sho ulder by a pitch in the third
Sat 9·1
inning. He suffered only a bruise. "They
just said it will be so re for a coupl·e of
~40)
days," Reese said.

J&amp;L

Racine
Mower
Clinic

949-2804

'
• r

~

,.

~ ,.

...

.,._-

• ........... rr.tlllll...., .
•liiii&amp;U
• Eldllnl Wll'll • Trl••ltllll fllllll

Free Elllmatea

•ll'lh Wll'll

740-742-8015 or
1-an-353-7022
Sunset Home
Conslrucllon
New Homes, Room

Howardl.
Wrltesel

Additions, Garages,

Roofing • Home

Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kilchens; Drywall &amp;
More

We Can Make Your
Dream A Reality!
740-742·3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

FrH Estimates

949·1405

591·5011

••

J &amp; L SANITATION

URNPIKE

LINCOLN

M&lt;rcnry

SPEtCIAL FINANCE DEPAJmiENJ'

Now Rentilg
A·J MINI·STORAGE
992:-6396
992·2212

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

74().992-5232
Pd1 mo.

P...

IIOPPirtl
• lllulllt
10 Proltollon
35 Philoden- 11 lillian
ourrtnoy
dron, a.g.
lllllrrl- 12 Cold(llmldtty)
17 .._IM(on)
II !ntlngllcf 1t •rokt
bNid
41 25th lelllr
21 Klntl'
44 Ill,.
wlvu
41 lulflng
32 lnvltlbll
I pol?
41 AnltiOPI 23 Run off
~n

"'"

I THURSDAY

SHANE!

MARCH 22l

H Blu.-grwn

42 Nonprofn

010·

lhldt
42 Long ltlrolc
21 Bid lhi'Oit
poam
aound
45 Source of

City In
wa•r
Norway
45 Art dlco
2$ llngor
lllullrllor
Clllrtt- 47 Unpllyid
30 Llka tht
goH holtl
Gobi
48 L.ttttr1 ol
31 COVtrl wHh
tht
turt
1lphlbtl
37 Actrtu
50 Dlreclor
Joan"" Splkl38 l!lrllttl
12 Bini (comb.
born
form)
40 Aocumulalt 53 8outht1ll
41 ThNid (of
Aalan
tmoka)
holld1y

27

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos
Clltbrity Cipher cryptogram• are crMted from quotations b~ famoua
piOpll, put and preeenl. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

·

""'

SHANE!
COME 81\CK,

In lnllrVtlJ

1 l.t., In full
I CruiMor

34Jm!o.

PAM
Pau

I Recurring

Today's clue: C equals U

'KFZ

BUK

JTHUO

HN

BSX

KFZ

KFZ

TLJFK

LY

HN

BUK,

KFZ

ZPVUtYYLHS,
YCSYF

SZ

HN

TZKKZUY

HN

YLWYTLMLKO.'

GBTK

OFLKWBS
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The cullure of a nation is, after all, as
lmponant as Its economy.•- Eleanor Roosevelt

,::~:t;~'

S©\\clllA-l&amp;t.trs· UMI

WOlD

- - - - - - ldiiH ~y CLAY I. POLLAN
Rearrange Ienart
0 lour
scrambled

of the

-&lt;~~

be·

low to form four simple· words.

lr

l2WIL

~ YIL I

I iRill'

1

11

C UV H 0 5

I I I 1

I

~',

'Suffering with a head cold, my

uncle tried various ineffective rem-

_

edies. He discovered, however,
r -.~R:-:!~W-A:--:N-:-:0:--,-,I'his favorite was - - - - - - -.

I. I I I I

t) Comptole the chuckle quoled
.
by filling in lhe mi»&gt;Ag words
•
•
l.......L.....JL..-..L--1.-"--....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

1

7

A PRINI NUMBER~O LETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUARES

f)

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

~ I'

r I' 1· r 1

1111111

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Frozen- Uofit- Offer- Nimbus · FIRST ONE

I agree I have been behaving as though I were 1n my
second childhood The bes\ part, thou gh . I am havmg
more fun than in lhe FIRST ONE

. 420 W.

Main.St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(aero" from Pizza Hut)

(740)992-1
Full service auto center

· Hill's Self
Ster•e•

2$670 B11llln R01d
Racine, Ohio
·

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Friday, March 23, 2001
Your probabiliries for developing needed access Jo material and

Keep your wits ahout yOu, and · know it. you could have a seriou.s
don't he suckered imo doing halflood of bills thai will need lobe
paid. Be diligenl and auenlive Jo
tle.1

CANCER (June 21-July 22) ·
•
it's
important you Iry to work
excellent in the year ahead. The
Irick is to uJilize it aggressively wilh others today insJe~d of
ugain~t them, even when your
and producJively.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) · iden.li are belter lhun their:;; . Find
. Don't gel off on !he wrong foot way:;; to compromi~c if )'Clll hope
today if you should have lo deal to get anything d 1111C.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22l -- A
with someone who made a bad
hi~h·rollin~
[riend or yours could
impression on you during your
las! encounter. Use experience to tukc you on a ride about Jown
deal with this person. Gel a jump today that proves to be far more
on life by understanding the influ- than you can afford. Before getences lhat'll govern you in the ting involved, set the ground
year ahead. Send for your Astra- rules.
.
Graph prediciions by mailing $2
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) ••
lo Aslro-Oraph, c/o !his newspa- Openly discussing a disagreeper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill ment belween you and your mate
SJalion, New York, NY 10156.1!e with outsiders I.oday nol only
sure 10 slate your Zodiac sisn.
makes each of you look bad, but
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) • encourages a gossip Jo spread the
• No relalionship can nourish if word.
there are loa many strings
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0c!. 23)-- A
attached to iJ, Be careful today mishap is likely if you do things
thai you don't put too much pres- ·in hasle today, even that which is
sure on a pal, making him or her routine. Unless your mind is on
feel unduly controlled.
whai.you're doing. you risk makGEMINI (May 21-June 20l -- ing mistakes.
1
There's a good chnnce you could . SCORPIO (0¢1. 24-Nov. 2~) •
be confronJed Joday by an indi- . If you fail to plug up Ihe leaks
viduul who is openly hostile. in your budge! today, before you
data that can ensure success are

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Did you know thai
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Alcatraz? Apparently
the players used dominoes thai came in four
WHAR DID SHE HIDE
colors. The
different
ER BUTIER AN'
jack had II dots, and
EGG MONEY?
so on. They sal on
hassocks, playing on
low tables about 20
inches · high: They
were behind the firstand lhird-base lines,
so occasionally a softball would land in the
middle of a table.
However, from a population of only 250
prisoners, it was common to see 80 of them
playing five or six
hours a day on weekends.
It is fun to find a
winning
deceptive
play. Any Alcatraz
'+ ..
inmate would have
. enjoyed pulling off
this ·coup, which
helped Zia Mahmood
and Andy Robson to
.
WT t 1\SI'.ED 1U OUT
retain their title at the
50
. ~~0 :filE.
. :'&gt;1\1 \)
Cap Gemini World
~I'£ UP
Top Pairs, held in The
w1m 1-\U:. 1.
Hague, last January.
Looking at all 52
cards, do you see any
way in which declarer
could fail to.make six
spades?
In the auction by
Piotr
Tuszynski
(South) and Krzysztof
Jassem, I'm guessing
SO MOVEt&gt;.
that five clubs and five
...W"' SECOIIDS?
hearts were controlw---:;:::---..._u bids (cue-bids) showing firsl- or second,-:::...-~~ round controls in those
suits.
West led out two
top clubs. Thszynski
ruffed and cashed the
Zia
spade
king.
dropped a deceptive
jack. Perhaps Thszynski shou Id have been
1-lER' NAME
skeptical, but assumISN'T''5HANE" 1
ing the jack to be a singleton, he played a
diamond to dummy's
queen, returned to his
diamond · ace, and
ruffed a low diamond
with dummy's spade
ace. Next, declarer
played a spade to his
eight; expecting to
claim immediately.
However, Zia produced the nine out of
his hand and the conlract was one down.

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SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) -A mauer you're anxious to
conclude may not gel completed
Joday as you thought. Keep cool
concerning this comple" situation
!'O lhat you don' t create additional prohlems.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) .. Do 1101 respond in kind to
the thoughtless hehuvior of an
assodutl!. No matter how angry

you might gel. when you're feeling more lolcrunt later, you'll
regret your retaliulion.
AQUARIUS ilan. 20-Feb. 19)
.. Yielding to the harassment of a
lriend to lend somelhing nenr and
dear to you would he u misiuke.
Additional use puts wear and lenr
on Jhings und lessens !heir value.
PISCES (Feb. 2Q..March 20) •
. Even if you c:m'I discern the dif;
ference belween acling aggressively from being properly
assertive, I hose with whom you'll
have dealings will know tbe dif·
ference.

�- ... ...

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Thursday, March 22, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Senate support for campaign finance

bill holds, but big tests ahead
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. seats to ease their re(AP) -The first commander encounter with gravity.
The doctors expected the
of the international space stathree
spacemen to be weak,
tion surprised his doctors, his
trainer-wife and even himself wobbly, nauseated, possibly
by walking off space shuttle even powerless to move. But
Discovery on -Wednesday and all three declined to be cor-·
celebrating the end of his 4 ried out on stretchers and
1/ 2 months in orbit with a walked away on their own,
alongside their four shuttle
cheeseburger and a beer.
M any space travelers come crewmates.
" Everything is about three
back to Earth feeling queasy
and too weak to walk times as heavy as l expected,"
because of the punishing said Shepherd, 51, who lifts
effects of gravity after even weights. "Just putting on
just a few weeks of weight- these coveralls, l picked up
what's got to be a couple
lessness.
American astronaut Bill ounces of cloth and it felt
Shepherd's only complaints: like five pounds."
Even more amazing than
Everything felt heavy and his
his agility was his appetite.
balance was a little off.
Almost
all of the seven
'Tm glad l didn't make a
bet with him .beca use l Ameri can s who returned
would have lost big-time,'' from long Mir missions a few
marveled wife Beth, who is years back took it slow and
also his rehabilitation thera- easy. A few could bardy stand
the smell of food .
pist.
Shepherd returned from
A team of doctors and·
fire-and-rescue technicians space station Alpha requestrushed to the space shuttle ing a Heineken .
"Unfortunately, we didn 't
following its pre-dawn landing to help Shepherd and his have any Heine.kens , but he
Russian crewn1ates, Yuri did have a beer. I figure it was
Gidzenko
. and · Sergei like a Budweiser or someKrikalev. The three men flew thing," his wife said ..
Shepherd and his two
back to Earth .in reclining

crewmotes exercised vtgorously aboord the space station
to minimize the damage.
The astronaut savored his
first shower and his first night
in a bed since October. The
couple hope to fly home to
Houston - and their two
Labrador retrievers on
Thursday following a round
of medical tests that began
almost immediately after
touchdown.
" Hopefully, the first thing .
that we'll do is we'll grill a
big steak out there by the
pool - drinking Heineken,"
his wife said.
. The resting to measure
Shepherd's bone and muscle
loss and exanune his heart
and lungs will continue,
along with grueling rehabilitation, for the next several
weeks.
Shuttle co!nmander James
Wetherbee guided Discovery
to a 2:31 a.m. touchdown an hour and a half late
because of rain clouds and
gusts. The shuttle returned 13
days after it lifted off on a
mission to deliver a fresh
space station crew and five
tons of gear.

WASHINGTON (AP) The bipartisan Senate coalition behind campaign finance
legisbtion is holding firm into
a fourth day of debate, but the
toughest tests are yet to come
in the struggle . over a bill to
curb the influence of money
in politics.
"This is a poison pill that
. has nothing to do with union
members' rights . but everything with defeating campoign
finance reform:' Sen. Charles
Schumer,
D-N.Y.,
said
Wednesday as the Senate killed
a. proposal for new barriers in
the way of political activity by
unions and corporations.
The. vote was 69-31 , and
came after critics said that
despite an appearance of evenhandedness, the principal
effect would be to require
organized labor to obtain permission frmn its members
before usmg their dues for
political activity.
Sen . Orrin Hatch, R-Utah,
author of the defeated proposal , sought a vote Thursday on a
second, related provision. This
one p1erely would require
umons to report to their
members on political activity,
and require that corporations

do the same to stockholders.
Supporters of the campaign
finance legislation, led by Sen.
John McCain, R-Ariz. , ond
Russ
Feingold, D-Wis.,
claimed they possessed the
votes to defeat it1 as well, and
prevail as they have on each
test since the legislation
reoched the Senate floor on
Monday.
The bill would ban socalled soft money, the loosely
regulated, unlimited donations
that unions, corporations and
individuals make to political
patties. It also would place
restrictions on certain types of
political advertising broadcast
within 60 days of an election
or 30 days of a prim~ry - a
provision that even its suppotters concede raises constitutional concerns.
Despite their successes thus
far, aides to the bill's leading
supporters copcede tougher
tests
ahead. Still to be navigated is the issue ·; ,f increased
limits on campaign contributions that individuals may give
direcdy co candidates, McCain
has said the "only question" is
how high to raise the $1,000
limit, in place since 197 4, but
some supporters of the mea-

lie

sure say they will work to keep
them in pbce.
"Let's not increase the hatd
money limits:' Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle of
South Dakota said Wednesday.
"Let's stick with what wt!'ve
got and tty co take that as far as
we can. That seems to me to
be the best way to approach
campaign reform this year."
Also on the horizon is an
alternative backed by Sen .
Chuck Hagel, R-Neb. that
would limit soft money do!lations, but not ban them. At
least two Democrats have
expressed support for the measure, and Hagel's effort has
been encouraged by the White
House as ,v.,U as Republican
senators who iong have
opposed the soft money proviSIOn at the heart of the
McCain-Feingold measure.
Constitutional concerns
also hover in the background,
leading to a controversy about
whether the Supreme Court
should be permitted to judge
each provision of the legislation on its own, or should be
'
'
required to rule on the measure as a whole.
.

'

Vaccinating kids against
flu protects the elderly .
vania Medical Center. Be said
the strategy should be considVaccinating schoolchildren ered in the United States.
against the flu protects elderly
Health programs . here and
.· people from the sometimes most developed countries focus .
deadly virus, too, according to a flu-prevention
efforts on
huge study in Japan, the only groups most likely to develop
country ever to focus flu-con- complications such as pneumotrol efforts on youngsters.
nia. The CenterS for Disease
From
the
mid-1970s Control and Prevention recthrough the 1980s, about two- om"\ends annual flu shots. for
thirds of Japanese schoolchild- people 50 and older, and for
ren were vaccinated under a
anyone with chronic medical
government program. The
problems, patticul;u1y children
number of flu deaths dropped
with asthma.
by . about 43,000 each year,
, Lone Simonsen, an expert in
mostly among the elderly,
epidemiology at the NIAID,
amounting to one death presaid that although more elderly
vented for every 420 children
people live with their families
vaccinated.
When the government in Japan than in this country,
phased out the program in the "my own hunch is that you're
1990s, death rates from the flu probably going to get the same
and its complications returned protective effect" in the United
. to their prior level, acco'rding to States if children are vaccinated,
The study was reported in
researchers in Japan and at this
country's National Institute of Thursday's New England JourAllergy and Infectious Diseases. nal of Medicine. ·
A CDC advisory panel is
They concluded that vacciconsidering
adding children
nating schoolchildren, the
group that spreads flu the most, under 5 to the recommended
groups, but Dr. Carolyn
helps protect senior citizens.
"It's a pretty clever idea," said Bridges, a medical epidemioloDr. Stephen Gluckman, chief of gist in the CDC's ,influenza
infectious disease clinical ser- branch, said that presents logisvices at University of Pennsyl- tical problems.

BY LINDA A.

JOHNSON

~SSOCIATED PRESS WRitER

.

' ' I •

'

• I

..

j

•••

.'

Seattle losing a 'family
member' with departure
SEATTLE (AP) - Before
there
were
lattes
and
microchips, protests
and
grunge rock, there was Boeing.
For 85. years, the aerospace
,giant has been more than a
part oflife in Seatde. It became
synonymou1 with the city,
even as other high- tech com. panies invaded the skyline and
suburbs..
So Wednesday's news that
Boeing, which has 78 •400
workers in the region, plans to
move its corporate headquarters firom the city that fueled
its growth astonished residents.
"Being born and raised in
Seattle, this is quite a loss," said
Richard Powell, 49, who
works · at a dmvntown hotel.
"This is like losing a family
member.''
Phil Condit, Bo·eing chairman and chief executive, said
the company hopes to save
money and establish )leadquarters more centrally located to
its operations , spread over 26
states. Boeing, the No. 1 maker
of passenger jets, hopes co
choose a new site by early
summer and have it running
by fall .

.

The company's huge jet
manufacturing plants and
office complexes will remain
in the Seatde. area but' more
than half the 1,000 employees
wodting at the headquarters
will be transferred or may be
laid off.
. "It's not good news,'' said
Mark Blondiri, president of the
Machinists Lodge 751, Beeing's largest union. ult's discurbing news that they ~ould
move their headquarters out of
the town that built Boeing."
Union and community
leaders said they received no
advance word and they'd do
what they could to persuade
Boeing to stay. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., talked to Condit,
who told her the decision was
final.
William E. Boeing Jr., son
of the company's founder, said
he was saddened to learn of
the decision. "However, two
certainties of life are taxes and
change,'' he said.
Despite the loss of several'
hundred high-paying jobs,
more people worried Boeing's
departure would leave a bigger ·
·void jn terms of prestige.

1999 DODGE DURANGO
1999 FOJlD RANGER 12 ~od-.rrom&gt;
2000MERCURY MYSTIQUE
1999BUICKPARKAVENUE
2000 MERCURY SABLE tltocltaoHrrom&gt; 1998 FORD RANGER t•tocltooHrrom;
2000MERCURY MOUNTAINEER
1998FORDF150
.
2000 LINCOLN TOWN CAR
1998 DODGE NEON
2000 FORD FOCUS 4 DR
1998 DODGE RAM 1500
1998 FORD MUSTANG
2000FORDTAURUS!ltocltooMiroml
2000 FORD EXP~ORER!2toclt&lt;,.,..lr&lt;ond 1998FORD CROWN VICTORIA
1998 FORD ESCORT 12 ..,_rrom&gt;
2000 LINCOLN LS
.
2000 FORD MUSTANG 1110 _ , _ , , 199BLINCOLN TOWN CAR
1998 CHEVY 1500
2000FORDWINDSTAR
1997 MERCURY MYSTIQUE
2000 FORD ZX2 1210-from)
1997 OLDS SILHOUE II E
1999 LIMITED EXPLORER
1997 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
1999 FORD f1 SO (2tochOOMirom)
(2to-lrom)
1997 FORD RANGER

FORD EXPEDmON E•.B.
1997 MERCURY SABLE
1997 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
1997 FORD ESCORT
1997 FORD EXPLORER
1996 FORD EXPLORER
1996FORDF150
1996 JEEP CHEROI(EE
1996 FORD WINDSTAR
1996MERCURYG~Uo

IJ•MA

1996FORD CROWN VICTORIA
1995 FORD EXPLORER
1995 FORD EXPORT
1995 JEEP CHEROKEE
1995 FORD WINDSTAR
Fl50

~ily
'

.

' '

Sentinel

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