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Page B~ • The Daily Sentinel

www.•mydailysentinel.com

Moft"day,,February 7, 2005

· Vatican says pope will ·
remain hospitalized; top
churchmaD addresses
resignation question, A2

High School Boys Baskellell Sectional Pairings
Division II

at Logan-Hocking Middle Sci.ool

Monday, February 14
Fairfield Union vs. Athens
Tueaday, February 15
Vinton County vs. New Lexington, 6:15p.m.
Sheridan vs. Gallia Academy, 8 p.m.
·
· Wedneaday, February 16
Warren vs. FU/Athens winner, 6:15 p.m.
River Valley vs. Meigs, 8 p.m.
Friday, February 18
VCINL winner vs. Sheridan/GA winner, 7 p.m. (winner advances to distrie) tournament at Convqcation
Center, Athens.)
· .
Saturday, February 19
Warren/FU/Athens winner vs. RV/Meigs winner, 7
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
at Southeastern High School
Monday, February 14 ·
Washington Court House vs. Rock Hill, 7 p.m.
Tuesday, February 15
Logan Elm vs. Waverly, 6:15p.m.
Jackson vs. Miami Trace, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 16
· McClain vs. WCHIRH winner, 6:15 p.m.
Hillsboro vs. Circleville, 8 p.m.
Friday, February 18
LE!Waverly wjnner vs. Jackson/MT winner, 7 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Saturday, February 19.
McCiain/WCHIRH winner vs. Hillsboro/Circleville
winner, '7 p.m. (winner advances to districl'tournament at Convocation Center, Athens.)
Division Ill
· at Jackson High School
.
Monday, February 14
Coal Grove vs. Portsmouth, 6:15p.m.
Minford vs. South Point, 8 p.m.
Tuesday, February 15
Wheelersburg vs. Wellston, 6:15p.m.
Alexander vs. Nelsonville-York, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 16
Federal Hocking vs. Oak Hill, 6:15p.m.
Belpre vs. Fairland, 8 p.m.
Friday, February 18
• .
Ironton vs. CG/I"ortsmouth winner, 6 p.m. (vollnner
advances to district tournament at Convocation
Genter, Athens.)
."
Saturday, February 19
Chesapeake vs. Minford/SP winner, 3 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament at Convocation
Center, Athens.)
FH/OH winner vs. Belpre/Fairland .winner, 6 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Wheelersburg/Wellston winner vs. Alexander/N-Y
winner, 7 p.m. (winner advances to district tourna-

Crennel
from Page 81
Chris Palmer, who was fired
after going just 5-27 in two
years. In Crennel's one season in charge of Cleveland's
defense, the Browns recorded
. 42 sacks a 17-sack
improvement over the previ-

Patriots
from Page 81
This time, the Patriots
sealed it with a stop.
Philadelphia ( 15-4) got
the ball back at its 4 with 46
seconds remaining. It was
hardly enough time and far
too much territory to cover
against such a formidable

foe.

Harrison got his second
interception with 9 seconds
remaimng to end it. ·
Playing before a sea of
mostly green jerseys in the
crowd of 78 ,125, the
Patriots
ended
· Philadelphia's chance of
heading north with its first
pro sports title since 1983.
Indeed, it's been 45 years
since " the Eagles won the
NFL crown. And even
though they made it to the
Super Bowl for the first
time since 1981 - .after
three . s(raight conferen.ce
championship flops - their
sparkling season still ended
in disappointment.
"We were too sloppy· to
win."
receiver Terrell
Owens,said. "It was great to
get back, but we made too
many mistakes. We could
have won and that hurts."
Corey Dillon, a newcomer
· to the championship game,
scored the go-ahead points
on a 2-yard run early in the
fourth period . And when
Branch . wasn't 'catching
passes; the Patriots flaunted
their .versatility by again
using linebacker Mike
Vrabel to find the end zone.
Vrabel has caught TD
passes in two straight Super
Bowls and has five TDs .in
as many career catches, not
bad for a linebacker - or
. anyone else. •
Brady wasn't as fluid as
he: was when he won the
MVP awards i'n the 2002
and 2004 games, but he was
23-fqr-33 for 236 yards and
two TDs.
"It doesn't matter who
gets what," Branch said of
taking the MVP away from
his quarterback.
When the offense bogged
down or turned over the
ball , Harrison and hi s mates
forced four turnovers,
including a goal-line inter, _

Lynchburg Clay vs. Wellston, 6:45 p.m.
ment.at Convocation Center, Athens.)
Division II
at Waverly High School
at University of Rio ·Grande
Coal Grove vs. West Uni,on, 8:30p.m.
Monday, February 14
Wednesday, February 9
Monday, February 7
Zane Trace vs. West Union, 6:15p.m.
Portsmouth vs. Portsmouth West, 6: t 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. River Valley, 6:15p.m.
Unioto vs. Westfall, 8 p.m. .
Chesapeake
vs. North Adams, 8 p.m.
Waverly
vs.
Rock
Hill,
8
p.m
.
Tuesday, February 15
Thursday, February 10
12
Saturday,
February
Huntington vs.l"ortsmouth West, 6:15p.m.
Ironton
vs.
Wheelersburg/Peebles
winner, 6:15 p.m.
Gallla
Academy
vs.
Meigs/RV
winner,
1
p.m.
(winAdena vs. Valley, 8 p.m.
(winner
advances
to
district
tournament
at Waverly)
ner advances to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Wednasday, February t 6
Piketon vs. Paint Valley, 6:15p.m.
Warren vs. Waverly/RH winner, 2:45 p.m. (winner · LCNVellston winner vs. CGNVU winner, 8 p.m. (winNorthwest vs. Lynchburg Clay, 8 p.m.
ner advances to district tournament at Waverly)
advances to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Friday, February 18
Saturday, February 12
,
at Adana High School
North Adams vs. ZTNVU winner, 6:15p.m. (winner
South
Point
vs.
Portsmouth/PW
winner,
1
p.m.
(winMonday, February 7
advances to district tournament at Convocation Logan Elm vs. McClain, 6:15p.m.
ner advances to district tournament at Waverly)
Center, Athens.) ·
Eastern (Brown) vs. Chesapeake/NA 'winner, 2:45
Washington
Court
House
vs.
Hillsboro,
8
p.m.
Eastern Brown vs. Unioto/Westfall winner, 8 p.m.
p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at
Thursday,
February
10
(winner adva~ces to district tournament at
Waverly)
Convocation Center, Athens.) ·
Unioto vs. Northwest, 6:15p.m. (winner advances
Saturday, February 19
· to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Piketon/PV winner vs. NorthwesVLC winner, '6 p.m.
Division IV
Miami Trace vs. Circleville, 8 p.m . (winner advances
(winner advances to district' tournament at to district tournament at Chillicothe) ·
at Atihens High School
Convocation Center, Athens. )
Monday, February 7
Saturday, February 12
Huntington/PW winner vs. Adena/Valley winner,
Fairtield Union vs. LE/McCiain winner, 1 p.m. (win- Southern vs. Ironton St. Joe, 7 p.m.
8:45p.m.
Wednesday, February 9
ner advances to district tournament at Chillicothe)
at Wellston High School
Sheridan vs. WCH/Hillsboro winner, 2:45p.m. (win- Crooksville vs. Miller, 6:15p.m.
Monday, February 14 ·
Crooksville vs. Southeastern, 7 p.m.
ner advance's to district tournament at Chillicothe)
Green vs. South Gallia, 8 p:m.
Tuesday, February 15 ·
Thursday, February 10
At Oak Hill High SChool
Millervs. Ironton St. Joe, 6:15p.m.
Thursday, February 10
Trimble vs. Southern/ISJ winner, 6:15 p.m. (winner
Southern vs. Waterferd, 8 p.m.
Vinton
County
vs.
Fairland,
6:
15
p.m.
(winner
advances
to district tournament at Wellston)
·'
Friday, Fabruary 18
advances
to
district
iournament
at
Chillicothe)
Southeastern
vs.
Eastern
(Meigs),
8
p.m.
(winner
Eastern (Meigs) vs. Crooksville/Southeastern winJaGkson vs. Athens, 8 p.m. (winner advances to dis- advances to district tournament at Wellston)
ner, 6:15 p.m. (winner advances to district tournatrict tournament at Chillicothe)
.
Saturday, February 12
ment at Convocation Center, Athens.)
·,
South Gallia vs. Symmes Valley, 8 p.m. (winner
Watertord vs. Crooksville/Miller winner, 1 p.m. (winadvances to district tournament at Convocation
Division Ill
ner advances to district tournament {II Wellston)
Center, Athens.)
at Wellston High School
· Symmes Valley vs. Green/SG winner, 2:45 p.m.
Saturday, February 19
Monday, Ftibruary 7
(winner advances to district tournament at Wellston)
Eastern (Pike) vs. Miller/ISJ winner, 6:15p.m. (winat Northwest High School
ner advances to district tournament at Convocation , Huntington vs. Piketon, 6:15 p.m.
Nelsonville-York
vs.
New
Lexington,
8
p.m.
Monday, February 7
Center,'Athens.)
Wednesday,
February
9
Paint
Valley
vs.
Manchester, 6:15p.m.
Trimble vs. Southern/Waterford winner, 8 p.m.
Fede'ral
Hocking
vs.
Alexander,
6:15p.m.
Sciotoville vs. Notre Dame, 6 p.m.
at Valley High School
I·
· .
Monday, February .14 .
Belpre vs. Adena, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 9
New Boston vs. Leesburg Fairfield, 7 p.m.
Thursday, February 10
Western Latham vs. New Boston. 6:15 p.m.
Tuesday, February 15
Oak Hill vs. Huntington/Piketon winner, 6:15 p.m. Whiteoak vs. South Webster, 8 p.m.
Western vs. Manchester, 6:15p.m.
(winner
advances to district tournament at Waverly)
Thursday, Februaty 10
.
Peebles vs. Notre Dame, 8 p.m.
Minford
vs.
N-Y/NL
winner,
8
p.m.
(winner
advances
Portsmouth
Clay
vs.
PV/Manchesier
winner,
6:15
·
I
Friday, February 18
,
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
South Webster vs. NB/LF winner, 6:15 p.m. (winner to district tournament at Waverly) ·
Satu':day, February 12
Wellston)
advances to district tournament at Convocation
Center, Athens.)
.
Zane Trace vs. FH/Aiexander winner, 1 p.m. (winner valley vs. Sciotoville/ND winner, 8 p.m. (winner
Sciotoville vs. Green. 8 p.m. (winner advances to advances to district tournament at Waverly)
advances to district tournament at Wellston)
district tournament at Convocation Center, Athens.)
Westfall vs. Belpre/Adena winner, 2:45p.m. (winner
Saturday, February 12
Saturday, February 19
·
advances
to
district
tournament
at
Waverly)
·
Fairfield
Leesburg
vs. WL/NB winner, 1 p.m. (winner
Whiteoak vs. Western/Manchester winner, 6:15
at
Valley
High
School
advances
to
district
tournament at Wellston)
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
Monday,
February
7
Eastern (Pike) vs. Whiteoak/SW winner, 2:45 p.m.
Convocation Center, Athens.)
· Wheelersburg vs. Peebles, 5 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at Wellston)
Portsmouth Clay vs. Peebles/NO winner, 8 p.m.

.

•.,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o ( I \ IS • \

ol. .1-~ '\o . 1:! 11

looked like his illustrious
teammate on receptions of
17 and 40 yards. On the
longer one, he soared high
for yet another misthrow by
McNabb and took it away
from Gay.
On third down from the 6,
McNabb hung in the pocket
and waited for Smith to get free ·in the end zone for the
game's first score with 9:55
left in the half.
It was the first time New
England trAiled this postseason.
Brady then made a ·rare
mistake, fumbling at the
Philly 13. Darwin Walker
recovered · New England's
first giveaway of the postseason.
It didn't lead to anything
for the Eagles, and after a
29-yard punt by Dirk
Johnson, the Pats drove 37
'yards to tie it a't 7. Brady
found Givens behind Lito
Sheppard in the right corner
of the end zone for a 4-yard
s·core, and Givens mocked
Owens' wing flap after the
wnh
I: I 0
touchdown
., .
remammg.

Patnol s 2 -1

i .. 45

•Firetquarter

•••112

1.:.-;.-;;-;,;;; ---------- ·

~~

Ptit- TO DonoVan McNabb pass ro I

219

L. Smith tor&amp; yartl&amp; (David Akers 1 ...- -.. --------.. .. _.
1, TOTAL YARD&amp;
kick Is good). Drive: 9 plays, 81
yards, 4:36) . . ,
·
l
.•
NE- TO Tpm Brady pass to David t .
GM!ns lor 4 yards (Adam V108tien . 'i ~------ _
. kick is good) ..Drlve: 7 plays, 37
f FliiBT • 2&gt;4 PENALTY• 35
yards, 3.:15).
, , [ DOWNS. 2t .YARD&amp;. - 47

... TNrd........

1·-~··

'

NE- TDMike Vl!lbei, two- yaldpass ! TIME OF POII~Q
tromTclmBrady(AdamVInallen
1 •28:23 •31:37
Is good).
3:56).

Drive: 9 plays, 89 ya~ds. [ - - ·

.
I
·PHI-T0DonoyanMcNabb1()-yard I
)lass to lk1an Wab®J&lt; (David
Akers kick Is good). DriYe: 10 plays,. '
74 yards, 4:17).
'
!

'

'

·

OBITUARIES
.

• Ford, Dodge recalling
thousands of vehicles, ·
government says. See
Page A2.
.• Time out b tips. See
· Page A5

WEATHER

117

-VALUABLE

Charlene Hoefllchj photo

A $3,000 co14tribution to the $7,500 cost of tJringing the.Ohio Chautauqua to
Fran Tiburzio. right, of the Ohio Humanities Council which will bringing the '
Meigs County was made by the Meigs County Tourism Office and Chamber of· 2005 Chautauqua to Chester in July, came to town Monday afternoon to disCommerce. Bill! Bentley, tourism director, presents the check tC) Mary Powell,
cuss plans with the event committee. With her from the left are Mary Wise of
event chairman, joined by Don Vaughan, Chamber president, and Dave Schatz, . the Riverbend Arts Council, Gerald Powell. and Mary Powell, event chairman
Chester-Shade president!'"
•
for the Chester-Shade Hls1orical Association.
'

Humanity Council meets with local committee
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLiCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER
"The Roaring
Twenties" will be the theme of Ohio
Chautauqua 2005 whiCh will be coming to Chester July 12-16 for first ·person historical portrayals of famous
people or that time period.
Hosting the Chautauqua, an initiative of the state 's National
Endowment for the Humanities, will
be ·the Chester-Shade Historical
Association.

relations for the Ohio Humanities people who helped shape one of the
Council, was in Chester Monday most influential decades in our
afternoon to work with the Chester- nation 's history.
Events will take place under' a big Shade steering committee which is
The characters .are industriali st
red and white striped tent to be erect: handling local details of the Henry Ford, writer Zora Neale
ed on the Chester Commons. Seating Chautauqua. Mary Powell is general Hurston, flapper Zelda Fitzgerald,
will be provided for 500 and there chairman of the group which encom- baseball great Babe Ruth , and the legwill he space for those who want to passes members from areas around endary gangster Floyd Dillinger.
bring their own lawn chairs.
the county including Chester.'
In the workshops. the actors will
In addition to evening presentalion s Pomeroy, Reedsville, Middleport and come out of first character to share
· under the tent, two workshops will be Long Bottom.
.
historical stories abou t who they are
held each day -· one at the Senior
The local committee will be portraying. to give behind-the-scenes
Citizens.Center for adults. and four at responsible for providing 45 minutes descriptions of thei r portrayal prepathe .Pomeroy Library and one at the of entertainment each evening before ration, and to involve those attending
Riverbend Arts Council for you ng a portrayal begins.
·
. in various activities of significance to
·
people.
''The Roaring Twenties ' will
Fran Tiburzio, director of public explore the lives and legacies of five
Please see Chester, AS

Corps: Locking at
Bush .budget cuts Medicaid, disabled
Belleville back to normal · housing, but still worsens deficits
Details on Page A8
AP

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BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECTIONS.-

Sales Support..•
Superior sales support, including a full
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Hoefllch/ photo

12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

BJ-4

Comics .

Bs

Dear Abby .

A3

Editorials .

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© aoos Ohlo Valley Publishlnz Co.

·stream of boats which had
been
awallmg
passage
through the locks from either
. side of the project made their .
w~y through the project's two
lock chambers. According to
Noel, 46 towboats carrying a
variety of products along the ·
Ohio were in queue upriver
and downriver from the dam
while navigation was halted.
Those boats have now locked
through the project, and traf-.
fie flow is back to normal.
A navigation control center
operated by the riverboat
industry determined the locking order after the locks were
re-opened, based on the cargo
of each towboat and its

REEDSVILLE
Navigational traffic flow is
back to normal at Belleville
Locks and Dam, a U.S. Army
Corps
of
Engineers
spokesman said Monday. All
that remains to be done now
· at the · locks at ReedsviUe is
the removal of remnants of
barges which sunk downriver
from the dam.
River traffic resumed navigation through the Belleville
project early a week ago, and
Peggy Noel, spokesman for
the Corps of Engineers '
Huntington District, said
locking activity returned to
normal just a day later, after a

a

Please see Corps, AS

ing automatically paid benefits like Medicare- by nearly I percent next ye&lt;IJ'. Bush
WASH1NGTON
said it was the first such reducPresident Bu sh proposed a tion proposed by the White
$2 .57 trillion budget Monday House
stnce
President
that erases scores of programs Reagan· s day.
and slices Medicaid, disabled
Fofly-eight education prohousing and many more but grams would be eliminated,
still worsens federal deficits including one for ridding
by $42 billion over the next · drugs from schools. In all.
five years .•
'
more than 150 governmentIn one of the most austere wide programs ·would be
presidential budgets in years .eliminated or slashed deeply,
- one that faces precarious including Amtrak subsidies.
prospects in Congress -.
oil and gas research, and
Bu sh would .give nine of the grants to communities hiring
15 Cabinet-level departments police officers.
less money in 2006 than they · . Bush would slow the
are getting this year. Overall, grqwth of benefit programs by
he would cut non- security $137 billion over the n~xt
domestic spending - exclud- decade, nearly quadruple the
BY ALAN FRAM

ASSOCIAJEO PRESS WRITER

'

ble!

P.O. Box 300

Gallipolis, Ohio 4$631
'.

charged wi th felony receiving stolen property and ·
felony complicity.
·
Both men are due back in
Meigs County Court for a preliminary hearing on Feb. 17.
"We try to serve lhe com•nu nity .as fa st a'i ~·c can,"
Jones said about the swift
inves1i ga1i on resulling in
arrests and the recove ry of
stolen property. ''Crime will
not be tolerated in the village
of Racine.''

.PI,AVEA

Drive: 9 plays, 66 yards, 4:15) . .
PHI- TO Donovan McNabb 30-yard I
palls 10 Greg LeWis (David Akers
klc~ Is good). Drive: 13 plays, 79
yards, 3:52).

Management..
The best management team in the
area to ·assist you in sales.

stolen property was recovered. The proper! y included
coi ns, antique pocket watch- .
es. cash and miscellaneous
papers wi.th an eslimated
value of $4500.
On Monday both Rowe
and Neigler were charged in
Meigs County Court. Rowe
was charged with felony
theft, two counts ·felony
receiving stolen .property,
fe lon y burglary and unautho- .
rized plates. Neigler was

Ohio Chautauqua conting to Chester

... Fourth qii&amp;IIW
·
i
NE - TD Coley DUion scores on a 2 i
.yafd n.n (Adam l/hatier1 kick Is good).

Training... ·
Two week initial &amp; orientation classes ·
. with continued ongoing t,raining.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Cha~ene

~-

YAROSLOtiT .33

\

by two unknown suspects. A about
possible
Rowe's
white vehicle was seen leav- . involvement ·in the burglary
ing a parking lot adjacent to and observed several old
RACINE - Joshua Rowe, the residence.
coins on the . lloorboard of
23, and CUrtis Neigler, 19, both
The incident wa.s investigat- Rowe's vehicle. Several items
of Racine were arrested in con- ed by ,Racine Marshall Curtis were later recovered from the
nection with a burglary that Jones who later questioned vehicle believed to he taken ·
occurred on Feb. 4 at the resi- Neigler. gr.mdson of Powell.
from the Powell residence.
dence of Ivan C. Powell locatRowe was later pulled over
Sgt. Spaun was ,assisted in
ed at 527 Fifth Street in Racine. while driving his vehicle by the a~rest by Jones, Meigs
According to the Raciqe · Sgt. Ronnie Spaun of the Cou nty Sheriff's Deputy
Police Department a safe Pomeroy Police Department Adam Smith and Racine
containing- "various . items" on Welch Town Hill. Spaun Patrolman Brent Rose .
was taken during the burglary had beeit alerted by Jones
According to Jones all the

SACKeD

i --:-----

m~&lt;laih-.·utiu,· l.'""'

• Southern downs Flyers
in sectionals. See Page 81

INSIDE

, RUSHtNG YARDS

"""

Two locals arrested in connection .with Racine burglary

'

Eagles 21

1{, :!OO,'i

SPORTS

Page ~5 . · ,
• Mildred Seyfried
• Geraldine Cross

Quarter ·
1 ' 2 3
4 .
New Englanlt-o 0 7 14 24
Philadelphia 0 7 14 21

'lll ·SI&gt; \\. 1'1 IIRl'.\1{\'

.

1

ception by the veteran sqfe- England its second team
ty. The Patriots also had · championship since the fall,
four
sacks,
making though this was hardly as
Donovan McNabb _ look dramatic as the long-sufferordinary, · c;ven ·skittish at ing Red Sox winning the
times.
.
World Series. Still , this cerAnd while Owens' return tifies Boston as the hub. of
from a seven-week injury champions.
layoff was an individual
Philadelphia's
title
he had nine drought goes on, but Owens
success catches for 122 yards - it certainly did his best to end
was not nearly the star turn it. The All-Pro receiver fulthat Branch made.
filled his vow to start the
Branch was most instru- · Super Bowl , defying his
mental on the opening drive doctor and playing with a
of the second half, which metal plate and two screws
·
set the tone for New in his right ankle:
England's 57th victory in its
"T.O. did a heck of a job,"
last 14 games.
coach Andy Reid said. "I
While New England han- was proud of the effort and
dled
frequent
blitzes , they battled, but we came ·
· Branch caught four passes up just short - too many
for 71 yards on the series turnovers - and against
that ended .with Vrabel's .such a tough football team
TD.
you can't do that."
"We ·did a great job of
Replay played a signifiadjusting during the game," cant role on the first series.
Branch said. "It was physi- McNabb dropped the ball ·
,al; a lot of guys were when he was hit by Willie
bumped and bruised."
McGinest and New England
The Eagles responded recovered
at
the
with a 74-yard drive . Philadelphia 34. But Reid
McNabb whipped a I0-yard ehallenged that McNabb's
pass over the middle knee was down when hit
between two defenders to seconds before by Tedy
Bri an Westbrook for the Bruschi.
TD.
Replay showed McNabb,
Still, as winners always indeed, was down.
do, the Patriots reasserted
Philly put together the
themselves,
effectively first good ·drive late in the
using screen pas ses against opening period. Owens got
a tiring' defense. Even when open on a. crossing pa.ttern
Eagles defenders shouted to and gained 30 yards on third
each other to watch for the down, with a roughing·
scr,een, New England made penalty adding .9 yards, but
it work; particularly on a 16-yard sack by Mike
Kevin Faulk's 14-yarder Vrabel set back the Eagles.
that preceded Dillon's 2Then McNabb threw a
yard run to make it 21-14.
poor pass that Asante
Vinatieri hit his chip shot Samuel intercepted in th'e
to make it 24-14 . The end zone, only to have it
Eagles 'came back on Greg · overturned because of illeLewis ' 30-yard TD recep- gal contact by linebacker
tion with I :48 remain'ing.
Roman Phifer.
Not that it bothered the
No matter. McNabb again
Patriots,' not thjit anything threw a duck, which
seems to bother the Patriots. Harrison picked off at the 3.
Here's a team that's losing
But the Eagles got the ball
offensive
coordinator again at the New England
Charlie Weis to Notre Dame 45 after a punt. Three plays
and defensive coordinator later, another turnover :
Romeo Crennel to become Randall Gay knocked the
Cleveland's coach.
ball loose from L.J. Smith
"When you're in the mid- and Samuel recovered at the
dle of it, you're not tl)inking 38.
about what you're doing,"
Once more, the defense
Weis said. "Dynasties are held, and when the Eagles
talked about 10 years later." got the ball back at their 19,
the they fi nail y finished off a
Sorry,
Charlie,
Patriots are the talk of the drive.
league now ..
Todd Pinkston, often
The victory .g ave New overshadowed by Owens,

--- ---·------------'•- - - - - - -- - - -

••

1

ous year.
with Browns owner Randy Crennel gave a glimpse of
"It's been good to me," he possible.
·'
'
said.
Before hiring Butch Davis Lerner, Collins and general ' what type of coach he will be .
"You'd like to be able to
Cleveland's base defense run t!Je ball, use play-action
in 2001, the Browns inter- manager Phil Savage, who with the Browns.
viewed Crennel, who was a had been hired that day:
Crennel, who spent four · 'last season was a 4-3 under passes and throw the ball
· candidate for other openings
"1. put my best foot for- seasons on Bill Belichick's coordinator Dave Campo, when you want to throw the
the past few years ~ut was ward," Crennel said last staff in New England, said who is not expected to be ball clown the field."
passed over despite his sue- week at the Super Bowl. "If that if he was hired as a head retained by Crennel.
Crennel isn't the only
Offen
sively,
Crennel
their
impression
was
that
I
coach he would prefer to use
cess and a handful of Super
assistant leaving the world
floored them, then that's a 3-4 defense. The Patriots hopes to mimic what · was champions for a head coach-·
Bowl rings.
But he emerged as the great."
perfected that scheme, using successfu I for the Patriots: a ing job. Offensive coordinaDuring an interview on it to confounded · opposing run-oriented system that will tor Charlie Weis is going to
Browns ' No. I choice during
media
day in Jacksonville. offenses.
try to make big plays when . Notre Dame.
a Jan. 7 interview in Boston

Clinton:·More must be
done to improve health
coverage for·all, A2

•'
.,,

.

-- - --

==~-·· -..~

savings he proposed a year
ago with little succe.,s. Chief
among the target&gt; would be .
Medicaid. the federal-state
health insurance program for
the poor and di sabled, but
farmers' payments, student
loans and veterans medical
services were also on the
chopping block.
"li~s a budget that foc~ses
on re sults." Bush told
reporters after meeting with
his Cabinet. ." The taxpayers of
America don't want us spending our money into something
that 's not achieving results."
Yet largely because of
Bush's plans for a defense
buildup, 'this year's Iraq and
'Afghanistan war costs. and a
Please see Budcet. A5

�The Daily Sentinel.

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

. Tuesday, February 8,

2005

must be done to
improve health
coverage for all

.'

BY ·AARON BEARD
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

RALEIGH ,
N.C.
Fonner President &lt;:;linton ,
speak ing Monday at a
forum on health care access,
contrasted hi s own recent
medical care with that
received by less-fortun ate
Americans.
In September, Clinton
underwent quadruple bypass
surgery after suffering chest
AP photo/Gerry Broome
pain s and shortness . of
breath.
Former President Bill Clinton delivers the keynote speech . at
"I never blinked.' l wasn't . The North Carolina Museum of Art as part of an Emerging
scared
five
minutes... Issues Forum at North Carolina State University Monday in
because I knew where I was Ra1e1g
• h. N.c.
·
going . I knew wlw was
introduced were .prov iding adequate
going to take care of me . Hunt. . Hunt
And I knew \hey would get Clinton. Erskine Bowle s health coverage to employpaid ," Clinton told about Clinton's form er White ees and noted that the num800 people at the North House chief of staff and a ber of uninsured people has
Carolina Museum of Art. "I . two-ti~e u.S. Senate e&lt;mdi- risen in recent years.
never had to give it a sec- date _ also attended.
Clinton said that all parand thought."
Clinton 's speech was the ties, including insurance and
The experience of many key note address tor the pharmaceutical companies,
_others, he said, is different , forum, which is celebrating would have to. work togethand ·the natton . must do its 20th anniversary.
e.r · to find a solution that
more to make sure good . Clinton called the current would create affordable
health ins~rance and care · system "a crazy quilt pat- · health care for all.
to
all tern" of health insurers and
"You can say you don 't ·
are . avatlable
Amencan.s.
said changes must be. made want to fool with thi s. but
Clinton S' appearance came in time to handle a g.rowing it's just going to get worse."
dunng
the
two-day number of aging Americans· Crinton said. "We are on
Emergmg Issues Forum , who will need care later in course to have human misfounded by former governor life.
ery that's unacceptable in a
and Clinton confidant Jim
He said fewer companies country as wealthy as ·ours."

·AP Photo/Aiastalr

Pope John Paul II waves to faithful from a window of Rome's Agostino Gemelli hospital as he
appears for the Sunday Angelus prayer. Feb. 6, 2005. The 84-year-old pppe was rushed to Gemelli
Tuesday night with breathing problems. In background Archbishop Leandro Sandri looks on.

Vatican·says pope will remain
hospitalized; top churchman .
.addresses resignation·question
BY VICTOR L. SIMPSON

said . . "Let 's pray that Holy
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Spirit Consoler is at his side.
The affection of the children
VATICAN . CITY - Pope of the church is the best medJohn Paul II will remain hos- icine for him."
pitali zed a few more. days as
The pope has been reading
a precaution, the Vattcan sa t.d the newspapers, and NavarroMonday, an~ the Holy S~.e s .. Vall s quoted John Paul as
No. 2 offtctal for the ftrst sayi ng he was doing, so "j ust
tune pubhcly _addressed the to foJlow in the papers the
tssue of a posstble ·papal res- evolution of my health."
tgnatton .
.
John Paul 's 10-minute
Papal spokes.man Joaqum appearance at an open winNava rro· Valls said the 84- dow Sunday gave the public
year-old pope. who he ·said its first glimpse of the pontiff
was continuing to im prove, since his hospitalization nearhad no fever. was eating reg- ly a week ago for breathing
ularl y and has been sitting in problems and the flu rekina chair every day for several dled quest ions about his abil hqurs.
ity to carry on.
'~ Hi s doctors have advised
. The Vatican said. the next
him to stay a few more medical bulletin would be
days," Navarro-Vall s . said, issued Thursday.
declining to set a date for the
T~e
pope,
who has
pope's release.
Parkinson 's disease and hip
Vatican Secretary of State and knee ailmeAts, was
Cardinal Angelo Sodano. ru shed to Rome's Gemelli
asked by a reporter Monday Polyclinic on Feb. I. Vatican
whether the pope has thought
about resigning, re.sponded: official s last week suggested
his hospitalization might last
"Let's leave this hypothesis about
a week.
·
up to the pope 's conscience."
Asked if the pope would
" If there is a man who
attend
a previously scheduled
·loves the church more . than
service
dedicated to the
anybody else·. who is guide&lt;)
World
Day
of the Sick on
by the Hol y Spirit , if there's
a man who has marvelous Friday, Navarro- Valls said : "I
wi sdom', that's him . We must can neither exclude nor conhave great faith in the pope . firm. It is the doctors who
He knows w)Jat to do," said have the say. They are the
Sodano, the Vatican's No. 2 ones who advised ihat the
pope stay another few days."
official.
·
Navarro- Valls said the
Vatican observers said that
pope
has received "hundreds,
since Sodano had not closed
maybe
even thousands" of
the door on the issue and had
get-well
messages from other
responded to the question, it
could mean top church offi- patients . at the hospital, as
cials were discussing such a well as from people elsepossible scenario. Popes can where in Italy and around the
·
resign but cannot be forced to world. . · .
"Some of them are very
do so. ·
moving,
from people who
A few minute s earlier,
open
their
hearts and lives to
however, Sodano spoke of
John Paul's longevity in the .· pope," he said. "Many
remarks dedicating a new people confide their sufferings to the pope ."
· Vatican bookstore.
Among those · who wrote to
. "Pius IX was pope for 32
years. Let's pray that John John Paul was a mother who
·Paul passes thi s mark," sent a letter accompanied by
Sodano said. referring to the a photo of her son, who she
pontiff ahead of John Paul on said was hospitali zed at
the li st of. longest-serv in g Ge melli 's pediatric cancer
ward near the pope's suite for
popes.
"Let's pray in this moment treatment of an abdominal
for a long ' life and for .sere ni ~ tumor, Navarro- Vall s said.
ty for the Holy Father," he
The pope reads some 0f the

messages and "keeps everyone in his prayers," he said.
John Pau I concelebrates
Mass eve'ry day in hi s room
and has asked those who are
caring for hiin t0 join him,
Navarro- Vall s added .
An Italian prisoner with a
police escort visited the hospital Monday and left John
Paul with two gifts made by
fellow inmates: a harp crafted out of matchsticks and a
wooden shoe.
On Sunday, the pope
.looked rested and alert in his
hospital window as he gave
the world its first glimpse of
him since hi s hospitalization .
Although he spoke with difficulty, a message read for him
by an Argentine archbishop
standing beside him seemed
to respond . to, any doubts
about the pope' s readiness to
continue leading the Roman
Catholic Church.
"In this hospital , in the
middle of other sick people
to whom my affectionate
thoughts go out. I can continue to serve the churc~ and
the whole of humanity. ' the
message said.
John Paul has been cutting
back on hi s schedule in
recent years and turning
more of his speeches to aides
to be read because of his difficulty speaking · due · to
Parkinson's. · But until · he
came down with the flu a
week ago, he has been 1n
good form and recently confirmed he would visit
Germany in August for a
church youth festival.
The latest illness led him to
cancel his first audiences in
16 months, and the list of
missed appearances is growing.
·
·Sodano · will meet with
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza
Rice
on
Tuesday, and American
Cardinal James Stafford will
lead an Ash Wednesday
prayer service in the pope's
place.

Death inJawyer's family delays jury selection

about the defect listed on the
safety agency's Web site.
The defect is caused by corrosion of the latch . The door
may be difficu lt to open and
close, and eventuall y may not
close at all.
·
Also Monday, the· safety
agency Sl\id Dai mlerChrysler
is recalling 26.000 . Dodge
Durango S UV s from the 2005
model year because the fuel
tank fi ll.e r valve may not fu lly
close after refueling, and fuel
could leak. DaimlerC hrys ler
hasn' t yet determined when
the recall will begin, NHTSA
said.
.
Kinley said Ford will begin
notifying customers. about its
recall March J . Ford dealers
wi ll replace corroded l atch~s
for · free or wi ll clean and

•

Associated Press writers
Daniela Petroff and Marta
Falconi contributed to this
story.

lubricate unaffected latc hes to
prevent corrosion.
The states where the affected Focus cars were sold or are
registered are Connecticut,
Delaware, Illinoi s, Indiana,
Iowa, Maine, Maryland,
Massac husetts, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri , New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New
York , Ohio, Pennsy lvan ia,
Rhode Island, Vermont, West
Virginia and Wisconsin.

On the Net:
Dodge: llllp:llww•v.dodge.com

Ford Motor Co.:
http://www-ford.com
. National Highway Traffic Sqfety
Administmtion:

We 11l run your clB!llified line ad W sell yonr Boat, Camper, Motorcycle, 4-Wbe'eler,
Van, Pi~k-Up Truck, or AutomobUe for the low price of only $25.0,.

This special is only available to·private,. ~on-commercial individuals.
We'll run. your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis. Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Point Pleasant .Register. Your ad will reach over
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in our weekly Tri County Marketplace
which is delivered I«' 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicle within 25 days, just tall .
and we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just call prior to the end of 25 days
and we'll extend •vour ad another 25 davs.
•

.

***You must call prior to the end of initial 25 day period to extend.
***Limited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of SO days)
***Cia!llified ad limited to IS words or less.
***25~ for each additional word over IS words.
***Typographical corredions must be made within first 3 days of publication.
,,
***Only orie Item per classified ad.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non-refundable.
***Available only to private, non·commercial individuals.

Call us today at 304-675-1333 or 740-992-2155 or 740-446-2342
Limited time offer expires 3·1-05

'~t ~aUipolis iailp lri~~nt

.740·446·2342

The Daily Sentinel

_________ __ ________
__,

ill

•'

740·992·2155

http://www.11Htsa.dor.gav
_:

the judge to determine which
people would be able to serve
on the expected six-month
trial. The next round of questioning will · involve defense
attorneys and prosecutors.
Prosecutors had agreed to the
release of the completed questionnaires, but defense attorneys argued that jurors might be
less candid if they knew their
answers would be made public .

the Lord's Prayer and
Refreshment s were served
singing of the National and dour prizes awarded.
Attending were Gary Holter.
Anthem.
It was noted that Erma Joann Ritch ie, Arden Depoy.
Cleland and Hclert Wolf are Kathryn Baum , Janet Depoy.not well. An associate vice Mary Hol ter, Opal Hollon.
councilor · was ins tall ed. Esther Smith. lnzy Newell ,
Letters were read from Lora De loris Wolfe; Laura Nice.
Damewood and Eita Wi ll. Sandy White . Eve rett Grant ,
Esther Smith read a Poem, Thelma Whit~ . Charlotte
· . Grant and Ruth Smith .
"My Snowball."

'

Senior athletes and their parents we re honored a a recent senior n1gl1t at the Ohio Valley
Chnst1an School. In the group were from the left , Elizabeth Steven·s. head cheerleader, and her
parents , John and Donna Stevens; Andrew Holcomb, two-time defensi-ve basketball player of
the year and servant award, and his parents. Lee and Jan Holcomb; Conrad Buffington, basketball courage award and most rebounds, and his mother Maria Buffington and in memory of
hts dad, Le roy Buffington; and Ha llie Carter, most steals, points , and free throws in basketball,
·a nd he r parents, Rick and J&lt;m Carter.
'

___

Community Calendar
.

Public meetings
'

. TUesday, Feb: 8
POMEROY Bedford
Township Tru stees will meet
at 7 p.m. at the town hal.i.
Wednesday, Feb. lJ
POMEROY - The Meigs
Co u11ty Board of Health
will meet at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of · the
Meigs
Co unt y
Heaith
Department ,
I 12
E.
Memorial Drive.

,

..,. . .

~

~.....

.. '

....

304·675·1333

~,

I

VISA

, .... .

l~e Joint jltasant ltglstrr

....,..

I

••.,.
304·675·1333

• O'Bieness Memorial Hospital 's certifi ed phlebotomy technician Angie Andrews, right, collects
blood samples from Jerr y Weiss, left , at O'Bteness. satell ite medical laboratory located in the
Castrop Center. For patient convenience, the hospital opened a satellite laboratory to collect
specimens for the same array of diagnostic testing procedures currently available through the
medical laboratory at O'Bieness. The new laboratory and patient registration office are easily
accessed directly off the center's mai n lobby. Hours of operat1on are weekdays from 7:30a.m.
until 4 p.m. No appointments are required. The Castrop Center is located west of the hospital
at 75 Hospital Drive in ·Athens.
·

New doctor joins. PVH staff
.

POINT PLEASANT In the very near future, hi s
Stephan J. Setfontein, MD, a permanent location wi II be at
physician specializing in inter- 24 18 Jefferson Avenue in the
nal medicine , has recently new P)easant Valley Hospital
joined the medical stan· at Medical .Office Center and the
Plea s ant
telephone number wi ll be
Valley
(304) 675-6835 .
· Hospital.
Serfontein received his med· William
ical degree in 1987 from the
A. Barker,
University
of
Pretoria
Jr.' vice(Pretoria, South Africa) . In
president of
1993 he completed a cardiothe
nonvasc ular residency at the
profit
University
of
the
hea lth care
Witwatersrand
m
facility.
Johannesburg. South Africa
Stephan J.
where he was also named the
made
the Serlonteln,
·
recipieut
of the Miller Post
announced of
M.D.
Serfontein 's
Graduate Prize in Surgery. ·
addition to the staff.
Prior to coming to Pleasant
He will be temporarily Valley Hospital. Serfontein
located in the oftice of Ismael was working on his internal
Jamora, MD, Suite 116 of the medicine residency through
Pleasant. Valley- Hospi tal West Virginia Umvcrsity. In
MediCal Office Build ing, until addition , · he
prev iousl y
co nstruction has been com- worked as'aTesearch fel low in
pleted on his permanent office. the
Depariment
of
For nqw appointments can Cardiovascular Surgery at tht;
be made by calling, (304) 675- University of Virginia in
5188'. Office hours are I0 a.m. Charlottesville. Va. ·
to 7 p.m. on Tuesdays, 8:30
Recruited by the Irish
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Wednesdays College
of
Surgeons,
and Thursdays, and 8:30a.m. Serfontein
served
from
to 4 p.m. on Fridays . New January 1999 to October 2000
patients, 18 years of age or in the Northwest Armed Forces
older, are currently being Hospital of Tahuk. Saudi.
accepted. The physician also Arabia. lp thi s positiotl . he
accepts worker's compensa- established a cardiac unit and
. .tio n patients. Walk-ins are oversaw the acquisiti&lt;'ll . of
wekome .
equipment and personnel.

.

2005

DEAR ABBY: In 1964. I
ROB.ERTBYRNE
read a column of your moth"A lady i&gt; cha:-.te. A tramp is
er's thut hit home with me . It
chased."- ROBERT FROM
was about a man leaving his
SAN DIEGO
wile. a lady. for a tramp. I was
..T here arc 11&lt;) tramp,. Onl y
enduring a' similar situation at
.lonely ladie,." _ MARGIE
Dear
FROM MANSFIELD
that time. and my mother cut
the column out and gave it to
Abby
··A lady lies aro und and
me to comfon me . The clip, leep,. A tramp ,Jeeps around
ping , now fragi le and yel- .
.• - ..
1 d ·h
anu 1te&gt;. - J.S. IN ASH·wt t age, wash a ~onLAND. ORE .. ·
t o~b'e.
n uung 1actor m my ea 1 mg.
·• y ou pay a tramr in advance
Now
I'd
like
to
do
the
same
lady)
like
a
tramp
because
he
·
1
·~ hut a lad y cmh more in the ·
tor otters who are experienc- feels that by degrading her. he lon g run ·· _ WESTPORT
ing my puin . There appears to will bring her down to hi' .PETE
beanepidemicofspousal infi - level . Th is makes him feel
"A latjy.i' tlic femal e yo u're
de lity here.
guilty. so to get e·ven with hi1
·
f
living with rich t now. A tramr
It would heI p l hern ·r
1 you· wi e lor making him feel
is the one Y~•u u'ed 10 Ji,·e
wou ld repri nt that article . gu ilty. he keeps right on punC uri osity prompt s me to i s lt in~ her.''
with ." - CHICA GOA N
inquire whether professional s
Years Iute r. a reade r asked .
" A lady lives fur a luving . A
were consu lted regarding that "What ts the difference tramp luvc' fur &lt;I li ving." ~
inspired response . Would you between a lady and a tramp'!" CHUCK IN FAW N GROVE.
please - consider printing it Mother was stum ped. so , he PA .
"A ' lady' i&gt; the woman Ill).
· agai n?
LONGTIME as ked th e readers for their
READER IN NEW YORK
input. Their answers were fa ther left. A 'tramp · is the
DEAR
LONGTIME enli ghtening - and rev iewing · woman he left her fm."
READER: No professional them is like looking into a time ST IL L MAD AFTER 1-l
was consulted; my mother was capsul e.
YEARS
a woman of great. insight. The
'The difference between a
"The dtiTerence hctwec n a
leller first appeared in 1964. h lady and tramp? About three lad y and a tramp is di&gt;ercuon
isoneofmy fa vorites, and I'm drink s."- TENDS BAR IN I should know. J' w been
pleased to reprint it. Read on: MILWAUKEE
both."
RICH AND
"DEA R ABB Y: Why wi ll a
"A lady goes out. goes home FAMOUS
married man pick up a tramp a'nd goes to bed. A tramp goes
"There is no differe nce.
and treat her like a lady. then out. goes to bed, then goes Both are the children ol God ...
turn around and treat his wife home." - MURPH
·
- KENNETH A. FR ITCH ·
(whoisalady)likea tramp? - ·
''There' s no · difference. Mi\N. HELLAM . PA .
MINNIE
·
Kiplin g said. 'The Colonel\
Dear Abby is written h1'
"DEAR MINNIE : A man · lady and Judy O'Grady are si'- Abigail Van Buren, a/s;,
ptcks up a tramp because he ters under their sk in ." ' -' known as Jeann e Phillips,
want s a femal e companion F.t.H. IN TEXARKANA
alldwasfmmded hy hermothwho is no beller than lte is. In
"The difference between a er, Pauline Phillips. Write
· her company. he 'doesn't feel lady and a tra,mp i ~ men with Dear
Abby'
at
inferior. He rewards her by big mouths."- MET A FEW www.IJearAhby.com or P.O.
treating her like a lady.
.
"A lady draws . a line. The Box 69440, Los A 11ge /es, CA
''He treats his wife (who is a tramp falls for tl.
90069.

0'Bleness Memorial HospitaLadds
new laboratory ·
. .
.
...,;·_

Tuesday, February 8,

Lady-and-tramp letters still resonate today

TUesday, Feb. 15
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
counci l chambers .at Village
Hall. Date changed from
Feb. 14.
·
RUTLAND
- Rutland
Town ship· Tfustees, 5 p.m ..
Rutland Fire Station.

Fprd, Dodge recalling thousands.
of,vehicles, government says
DETROIT (AP) - Ford
Motor Co. is .recalling nearly
359,000 Focus cars because
their rear passenge r doors
may not latch properl y. officials said Monday. The defect
has prompted some complaints from motorists.
The recall affects four- and
five-door Focus cars from the
2000-2002 model years, the
Nat ional . Highway Traffic
Safety Admi ni stration and a
Ford spokeswoman said. All
of the vehicles were sold or
are registered in 20 Eastern
and Midwestern states and
the District of Columbia.
One person reported a
minor wrist injury because of
the defect, Ford spokeswoman Kristen Kinley said.
There are 33 complaints

Superior Court Judge Rodney
Melville said jury selection
will resume on Feb. 14.
Melville also agreed to a
request from various new s
organizations, including The
Associated Pre&amp;s, to see the
questionnaires filled out last
week by prospective jurors.
A pool of about 250 prospective juroJs \vas formed after the
first round of questioning by

SANTA MARIA, Calif.
(AP) - Jury selection in the
Michael Jackson molestation
case will be delayed for a
week because.of a death in·the
family of the pop star's attorney, a judge said Monday.
Monday's scheduled questioning of prospective jurors
had been postponed last week
becau se Thomas Mesereau
Jr. ·s· sister was gravely ill.

CHESTER - Valentines
were signed for friends and
members at a · recent · meet'
ing of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, held
at the Masonic hall.
Thelma White presided ·at
the meeting which opened
to
the
wtth
pledges
Christian an d American
tlags. a scripture read ing,

PageA3

BYTHE BEND

Chester Council 323 meets

Clinton: More

I

The Daily Sentinel

For the Record .
Marriage
license
POMEROY - A marriage lic~ n se was issued in
Meigs County · Probate to
James Adam Hicks, 18, of
Poineruy,
and
Heather
Nicole Kerns, 16, Pomeroy.

Civil suits

His professional orgamzaPOMEROY
til1ns incl ude the American Foreclosure actions have
Medical Association,' American been tiled in Meigs County
Cnllege of Physicians and the Common Pleas. Court by
American Society of Internal Wells Fargo Bank, Fort
MediL·ine. In addition. he has Mill. S.C .. agai nst Anthony
writ ten numerous anicles in T. Wolfe. Middlepon , and
medical journals and profes- others, alleging default on a
mortgage ag reement in the
sional publications.
Serfontein and hi s wife, amount of $52,655. 29, and
Marie, an accountant turned ·Fifth Third Mortgage Co ..
homemaker. have one son. Cincin nati , against Rick
Stephen. seven- months.8 ' ·Hatfield. Pomeroy, and oth-

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Feb. 10
POMEROY - Apha Iota
Masters will meet at noon
at ·sob · Evans Re staurant.'
Mason. for a .luncheon.
C HESTER
Shade
·River Lodge 453 wiU meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall .
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Relay for
Life m c~t i n g, 5:30 p.m. at
the Meigs County Library.
Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post ,9053 will meet
at 6:30 p.m. for a meal and
at 7 p.m. for their regular
meeting at the VFW ha ll.

Lutheran Church will beg in
Lent with a Shrove Tuesdav
(Fat TuesJay 1 pancak e supper, 6 to 7:30 p.m.
\Vednesday, feb. IJ
POMEROY - St. Paul
Lutheran
Chu,rch
A'h
Wedne s·da."' .serv'tc·e . 7 p.m.,
with ashes · marked on the
forehe ad ..
RAC IN E - Da\' id Dailey
wil be preaching at 7 p.m .
Wedne sday evening at the
Penteco,tal As,embly un old
Route 124. Racine . Hi s services wi ll be held e very
Wednesday night.

Saturday, Feb, 12
REEDSVILLE
Valentine dinner at the
TUesday, Feb. 8
Reedsville United Methodist
POMEROY - St. Paul ·· Church . 5 p.m.

Church events

ers, alleging default in the
amount of $84.1 88. 10.
· A personal injury lawsuit
has been fi led by Nicole A.
Phillips. Pomeroy. against
Douglas
B.
Stewart,
Pomeroy. and others.

Divorces
POM EROY
- Actions
for divorce have been filed
. in ·Me igs County Common
Pleas Coun by Jeffrey L
Hirzel, Albany.
against
Christ ina
M.
Ooten,
Reedsvill e.
and · · by
Christine
Y.
Bragg.
Ru tland . against . Rod~e y
Ray Bragg. Sr.. Rutland .

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions
for dissolution of marriage
have been fi led in Meigs

County Common Plea,
bv
Jeremy
G.
Court
Coleman. Rutl and. , and
Karah
' M.
Coleman.
Rutl and. and by Keith A.
Kinzel. Pomeroy. agains t
Lori A. Kinzel , Cheshire .
A di ssolution was gramed
to Wendy A. . Wilfon g and
Tommy G. Wilfong.

Local Briefs
Correction
Student omitted
from honor roll
RACINE
Southern
Local School s omitted Jaime
Warner from the
eighth
grade all A'&gt; honor roll list
fo r the second nine weeks .

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Senti~el
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992"2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freehmd
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

·.

•

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion; or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to asJemble, and to petition
.the Governmentfor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S .VIEW

Support
!Ou am help
J)epr Editor:
We Meigs County reighbors have some local companies,
such as Overbrook Center in Middl_eport and Middleton
Estates in Gallipolis which have many of our loved ones being
given excellent care by employees who struggle with these .
.. tough daily emotional giving_tasks." The real present Medicaid
money being disbursed is too low to pay these loving caregivers the wages theY can survive on so the turnover rate is
.too high · and hurts our loved ones and our neighbors who
work · at these jobs. We can help! Get on the web at this
address: www.anco·r.org, and fiil out your own letter to our
national legislators in support of H.R. 5791. the Direct
. Support Profession·al Fairness and Security Act that would ask
for specitlc Medicaid
money to improve the wages of these
'
.
wonderful hard-working neighbors. Remember, $1 new that is
spent in our county means $10 more in usu"al actual community circulation. If w~ could get all tri -county employ.ers and
·iheir employees to work within this economic truth, it might
be a small part of a better future for our falling communities.
Clarence E. "Ed" Eva11s
Dexter

TODAY I-N HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 8, the 39th day of 2005. There are
· 326 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History : On Feb. 8; 1915, D.W.
Griffith's groundbreaking as well as controversial silent
movie epic about the Civil War, "The Birth of a Nation ," pre. miered in Los Angeles.
On this date: In 1587, Mary, Queen ofScots was beheaded
at Fotheringhay Castle in England after she was implicated in
a plot to murder her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I.
·
In 1693, a charter was granted for the College of William
and Mary in Williamsburg, Va.
.
In 1904, the Russo-Japanese War, a conflict over control of
: Manchuria and Korea, began as Japanese forces attacked Port Arthur.
In 1910, the Boy Scouts of America was incorporated.
In 1922, President Harding had a radio installed in the
White House.
In 1924, the first execution by gas in the United States took
· .place at the Nevada State Prison in Carson City.
· In 1968, three college students were killed in a confrontation with highway patrolmen in Orangeburg, S.C., during a ·
· civil rights protest against a whites-only bowling alley.
In 1974, the three-man crew of the Skylab space station
. returned to Earth after spending 84 days in space.
In 1989, 144 people were killed when an American-chartered Boeing'.707 filled with Italian tourists slammed into a
·
·
fog-covered mountain in the Azores.
In 1992, the 16th Olympic Winter Games opened in
Albertville, France.
·

The Daily Sentinel
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'

.

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"

PageA4
Tuesday, February 8,

Tuesday, February 8, 2005

2005

Obituaries

Dems yield Social Security initiative to Bush
something good to younger markets because politics
It ought to be possible for
workers - a bigger return . gets involved in investment
.President ·
Bush . and
on their tax money than · decisions. Bush isn't saying
Congress to work out a
Social Security allows. And, what kind of benefit cuts he
biparti san fix for Social
they'll be right: Social favors, leaving the hard part
Security. But . first Bush
Morton
Security earns 1.8 percent up to Congress.
would have to agree to at
Nor did lie say i.n hi s State
least consider tax increases.
Kondracke annua l interest,'. while a
mixed stock-bond index of the Union address that, to
And Democrats would have
fund will return 4.9 percetlt . finance private accounts, the
to admit that there's a probgovernment will have to borafter intlation.
lem .
Democrats shout that Bush row. The White House puts
The day after Bush's State
wants to "play roulette" with the borrowing requirement
of the Union address, Senate benefits will have to be cut.
Minority Leader Harry Reid,
So, Bush h'as the high Social Security or "give the at $745 billion in the first !O .
D-Nev., held a media event ground in at least addressing money to Wall Street." · But &gt;'ears. Other economists say
at the · Franklin . Delano the issue, and that has given those arguments are hollow. thtit, after that, the cost will
Roosevelt Memorial, under- him the opportunity to seize The · 4.9 percent ave rage be $1.5 trillion over each
lining how old-fashioned the initiative in proposing-a return goes back to 1926, decade.
And that borrowing will
solution. Right now, the before the Great Depression.
Democratic thinking is.
And , as Bush and hi s come on top of other deficits
· Meanwhile,
House Democrats are reinforcing
Minority Leader Nancy the GOP caricatures of them aides point out, they're the government was already
Pelosi. D-Calif.; declared, as naysaying obstruction- refining his proposal to going to run up due to Bush's
reduce risk and administra- tax cuts and Medicare and
"this is a crisis of (Bush's) ists.
Moreover, Bush's· private tive costs - limiting the Medicaid obligations.
own making, so he can have
Sen. Lindsey Graham. Rhis pre~o rdained idea about . savings account idea has numt:&gt;er of funds people
privatization, which . under- . politicaL potency, especially could invest in, for instance, S.C., proposes to pay for primines Social Security, which for younger workers who · and co've rin g losses from vate accounts by raising the
makes a guaranteed benefit don't believe that they'll col- suuden market sw ing·s. current cap on w'ages subject
into a guaranteed gamble .".
lect any Social Security ben- Moreover. the private sav- to payroll tax from $95 ,000
Every serious economist efits when they retire. Many ings plan is voluntary. No to $140,000 or $200,000
· while also perhaps lowering
who looks at Social Security a,lready save through 40 I (k) one has to enroll in it .
acknowledges that the sys- . accounts, so Bush's accounts
Bush has been skating the tax r~e from 12.4 pertern faces a '21st century are a familiar concept. And lightly over two big objec- cent · to 11.4 percent. He'd
. shortfall. .In · FDR's day polls show that they favor tions to his plan: first, that also means test benefit cuts
that's 70 years ago - 16 his idea.
by th emselves, private to protect the poor. .
workers paid payroll taxes to
Democrats see m to be accounts won't solve Social
Other ideas have been
support each retiree. Now, relying on the hope that Security's long-term solven- advanced - by AARP, by
that's down to 3.3, and not opposition from seniors will cy problem . and second, that economists at the Brookings
long from now it will be help them defeat Bush's pro- the government will have to Institution ,
by
former
down to 2.
posal and that this will help borrow huge sums to cover Clinton White House aide
In 2018, the amount of them politiclllly - say, the funds diverted to tl1e Gene Sperling. Most of them
money collected in payroll way ·defeat of President Bill accounts.
involve tax increases of
taxes will begin falling short · Clinton's 1994 health plan
Over the next 75 years, the some sort.
,
of what's needed to pay ben- helped the GOP.
anticipated
difference
Bush ought to be willing
efits," and Social Security
But it's a fallacy. One of between payroll taxes .and to consider raising taxes as a .
will have to start poaching these days, Bush is going to Social Security benefits is Social Security solution .
from general revenue in get it through to seniors $3.8 trillion. There are three But, to drive him . there,
amounts ·that get progres- indeed, everyone under 55 potential ways to ~ lose that Democrats will have to
sive"ly bigger.
- that thei r benefits will not gap: cut benefits. raise taxes make a case for why he
Democrats hissed Bush be cut a cent. Then the or let the government inve st should. They can't fight .
· when he said that the system Democrats' base of support. in private markets.
something with nbthing.
would eventually go "bank- will be cut out from under
Bush has ruled out raising
(Morton Kondracke is
rupt," but it will - in 2042 them.
taxes. Various foreign gov- exeCllti•'e editor(){ Roll Call,
And Republicans can . ernmen ts have not done too the newspaper of Capitol
or 2Q52, depending on who's
estimating - and by law, claim that they are offering well inves1ing in private Hill.)

- - TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Geraldine Cross
RACINE
- Geraldine
Mae Holter Cross, 77, of
Racine, passed away on
Sunday, · Feb. 6, 2005, at
Hearl'land of Centerburg.
Geraldine was preceded in
death by her loving husband .
Earl Parrett Cross; a brotherin-law and sister-in-law,
Clyde and Selma Cross; her
parents; and a brother.
She is survived by her
daughters: Diana Mae Cross
of New Albany, Donna Marie
(Gary) Norris of Racine,
Deborah Mary (Jeft} Harris of
Portland, Denise Maxine
Mamone
of
(Frank)
Columbus and Della Margaret
•Cross of Dublin; grandchildren : Kendra (Andrew) Heck,
C.J. (M ichelle) Harris, Hillery
(Matthew) Gaiser, Kyle
Norris,
Lori. [M ichael)
Bongiorno, John Mamone and
Kri sten Convery, Christine
Mamone; and Stephanie
Mamone; great grandchildren:
Selina Mamone, Alcssandra
and Juliana Bongiorno. and
. Abigail Heck; a sister, June
Ashley; and a brother, Larry
(Mary) 1-folter; a brother and
sister-in-law, 'George and
Edna Cross; and many other
. relatives and friends.
Geraldine was a member of
the Racine First Bapti st
Church and was a member of

Chester
from Page A1
the characte r's life.
Ttburzio said the actors have
already been selected and this
year's Chautauqua will consist
of "actors who are good on
stage , know abOlli the 20's
and are scholars in their field."
She said they Will perform on
a 12x 16 stage under the tent.
. "This will be a very
rewarding program for your
community,'" said Tiburzio.
She explained that all of the
actors will be there in costume for the opening night

)

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

the Racine Grange No. 2606 · Robert E. (Jean) Seyfried of
for over 50 years. She was an Col4mbus; three grandchilavid Cincinnati Reds fan.
. dren : Mrs. I. Lee (Janet)
The family. will receive Hawkins,
Mrs.'
Sandy
friends and relatives from 2 to Thornsbury of Lynchburg
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, and Mrs. James W. Seyfried
Feb. 8, 2005, at Roush . of Elyria; five great grandFuneral
Home
in children: David L. Hawkins
Ravenswood. W.va. Services of Charlotte, N.C. ; Ann L.
will be held at II a.m. on Hawkins of Richmond, Va.,
Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2005, at Christopher L. Thornbury
Roush Funeral Home , with and Krystal L. . Thornbury,
Rev. Terrance W Heck offici- both of Lynchburg and Alexis
ating. Interment will follow at R. Webb of Columbus; a
Cross family section in Oak great -great grandson, Derek
Grove Cemetery in Racine.
L. Thornsbury of Lynchburg;
Memorial . contributions three sisters: Mrs. Clara
may be made to the American Sayre of Pomeroy, Mrs. Ruth
Heart
Association
in Leifheit of Uniontown and
Geraldine's name.
,
Mrs . Betty Darst of Ru ssell s
Condolences may be e- Point.
mai led to Roush Funeral
She was a member of
Home for the Cross family, at Grace United · Methodist
roush Ius2000@yahoo.cm:n .
Church in Gallipolis.
Visitation will be. from 9 to
II a.m on Wedesday, with
. funeral immediately followPOMEROY
_ Mildred ing at Ewing Funeral Home,
Mae Eichinger Seytiied, 93, which is handling arrangewent to be with her Lord on ments for the family. Burial
Saturday, Feb. 5, 2005. She will be in Rockspring!'i
was the daughter · of Clara Cemetery.
The family would like to
Pa 1tiow and William Eichinger.
She was preceded in de,ath acknowledge . and thank at
. by her husband , William G. this time the employees and
"Bill" Seyfried and her two staff at Scenic Hill s Nursing
sons,'Junior W. "Sy" Seyfried Center and Mr. Thomas S.
Moulton, Jr., attorney at law,
and Robert E. Seyfried.
She is survived by her two . in Gallipolis, for their love
daughters, in-law, Mrs. J.W. and care of our mother and
(Maxine) · Seyfried
of grandmother while she was
·Lynchburg, ,\Ia., and Mrs. in their care .

Mildred Seyfried .

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS CO. EXTENSION EDUCATOR
Being a caregiver to someone who is chronically ill or
disabled can take a tremendous toll on a person, physically, emotionally, ,socia ll y
and financially. Twenty-five
percent · of Americans are
family caregivers at some
point during the year - almost
22.5 million people.
There are several things you
can do as a caregiver to help
you deal with your situation.
First off, take care of yourSelf.
You won't be able to do a good
job of seeing to the needs of the
other person, if you don't take
care of your own. Make time
for yourself. eat properly, get
plenty of exercise and sleep,
and keep your own doctors'
appointments in order for you
to be at an optimal health and
energy level required to care
for another. Set aside time each
day to do soniething you like.
Take a walk, go to the movies
or. participate . in a hobby something that you enjoy and
find meaningful. Try to keep
things as normal as possible.
Don't isolate yourself.
Seek out a friend or courtselor in whom yo u can con,
fide. A person who is no
longer indepe ndent may
sometimes lash out at his .or
her caregiver. Finding someone to talk with can help alleviate that burden and negativity.

along _the piers of the dam.
The final barge was
removed from the dam on
from Page A1
Jan . 31. the navigation pool
was restored later that day,
and
traffic resumed on Feb.
importan ce. the Corps of
I.
program, and will be back County.
Chester Shade Days. an Engineers said a week ago.
·'It took two days for those
The locking operations
again on the closing night out
In preparation ·for the event, . annual festival , will be held
of costume for conversations Powell and her plaf!ning com- in conjunction with the were halted on Jan . 19, when boats which had been waiting
with the audience.
mittee members are working Friday
and
Saturday the navigational pool between in queue to lock through the
Chester was one of five · toward raising the required Chauqmqua activities. These Belleville and the Willow dam," Noel said .. "'Locking
communities across the state $7,500 and booking local will include the annual har- · Island Locks and Dam at began for upriver traffic at 6
selected Jar the 2005 entertainment for openers to monic championship, special Newport reached a level a.m . on Feb. I, and upriver
Chautauqu[t. The responsibil- the Chautauqua performers. A exhibits in the historic court- deemed unsafe for navigation traffic began locking through
by the Corps, the U.S. Co;~st at 8 a.m."
ity of each community is to barbershop chorus, harmonica house, and a Civil War ball.
Upriver traffic was held up
host the tr;lveling tent show players, a 20's dance demonContacts ~re being made Guard and an industry trans.
because
of fog. Noel said.
and make it ·an event unique strati on, and the Community with the Ford Model T Club portation center controlling
Noel said a salvage operato the ir community.
Band have already committed of Gallipolis about an antique · navigation. At its lowest
tion
is still in place al the
car show since Henry Ford's level, it was estimated to be
Chliutauquas are not new. for the event.
1
Tiburzio said they were started
To date there have been life is being portrayed by one 14 feet below normal. The . Bellevi,lle project. and is
in 1874 at LakeChautauqlla as contributions of $3,000 from of the actors. The Ohio Corps of Engineers was working to remove iwo and a
a school for Sunday school the Meigs County Tourism Historical Society's Muffins unable to lower live of eight hal f barges sti ll submerged
teachers. They later became a Office and Chamber of are also· bei,ng contacted gates at the locks after four downriver from the dam. She
traveling company and by Commerce and '$500 from about having a ball game on barges from the B&amp;H Towing said there is no schedule for
1900 were brought into many · the Middleport Community · July 16 since Babe Ruth will Co.'s Jon . J. Strong broke removing those remaining
be portrayed that evening. . loose in high water and sank barges .
communities, including Meigs Association.

Corps

deficit would otherwise be hide-and-seek game""' asked
$36-1 billion, the budgettabl~s Sen. Kent Conrad of North
showed. The figures (lemon- Dakota, top Democrat on the
from PageA1
strated how fed eral costs are Senate Budget Committee. "I
soaring despite growing rev- believe it's because he really
handful of new tax cuts, t.he enues the economy is pump- doesn't want people to know
where he is headed. ~
budget shows that deficits ing into the government.
Bush's
package
faced
an
·.
Bush was expected to proover the five years ending in
20 I0 would total nearly $1.4 uncertain fate in Congress. pose an $81 billion war packwhere conservatives seemed age for the rest' of 2005 in a
trillion.
That is $42 billion worse ready to demand deeper few · days. Congress ·has
reduction
and already approved $25 billion
than they would be if the gov- deficit
Democrats
and
some
for the year.
ernment continued cuFrent
Besides . omittint the
.spending levels and made no Republicans- were sure to
oJ revamping
resist
its
spending
cuts.
impact
tax-law changes other than
making permanent hi s ,already · Underscoring the jostling Social Security. Bush proenacted tax cuts, his budget that lawmakers were prepar- posed no specific s~vings
ing for, House Speaker Dennis at all from Medicare , the
tables skowed.
Bush's blueprint would Hastert, R-111., lauded the plan ·health program for the
leave next year's deficit at an as "a blueprint to fund our elderly and cti'sabled . The
nation's priorities" but called $340 billion-a-year proestimated $390 billion and omit any .new money it "a good starting point for the . gram, though $200 billion
smaller ' than
Social
nextyear for wars in Iraq and Congress to begin its work."
Democrats chided the Security, faces a long-term
· Afghanistan. That would be
package
for its proposed.cuts solvency pr.oblem whose
a reduction from last year's
record $412 billion shortfall and because they said it solution is technically and
and would still leave Bush obscured . more serious politically more complion his course to halve deficit problem s ahead . cated because of the intrideficits by 2009, the White They complained it excludes cacies of health costs.
Bush was. using some.ofhis
next year's war costs and the
House said.
Even so, a $390 billion price tag s . of Bush's Social budget cuts to funnel billions
shortfall would be the third Security overhaul · and of to White House priorities.
Defen s~ and domestic
worst ever if his projection for keeping the alternative mini$427 billion in red ink for thi s mum tax from affecting security would both see
more middle-in come fami- healthy growth, as would
year comes true.
se lect education, public
Without Bush 's new tax and lie s.
"Why is he playing this. housing, space and other
spending ·plans, the · 2006

_Budget

A shamiful partisan vote
.

'

.

.

On Jan. 26, by a strict I08 partisan vote; the Senate
Committee
Judiciary
approved the nomination of
Alberto Gonzales to be U.S.
attorney genenil ·- the chief
Nat
· enforcer of ou~ rule of law,
Hentoff
·which is the essence of our
democratic freedoms that
the president admirably
hopes will resonate through- -·. documents used to justify
out the world. Having what became extreme inter. reported on Congress · for rogation techniques. includmore than 40 years, I rate ing tmture, of detainees in
this as one of the most Iraq,
Afghanistan,
shameful votes I've seen. Guantanamo Bay and conWhy? · Because Gonzales ceivably at secret CIA interdoes not embody the rule of rogation centers 10 vanous
law.
parts of the world.
Two days before the vote,
Moreover, Gonzales ha s
retired Maj. ·Gen. Melvyn refused to supply Congress
Montano, a Vietnam veteran with the .documents involvand the first Hispanic Air ing a March 19, 2004, memNational Guard officer to be orandum, written at hi s
appointed an adjutant gener- request, allowing the CIA to
al~ said: "I respect Judge ship certain hidden detainees
Gonzales' inspiring personal out of Iraq in direct violation
story. But I reject the notion of Article 49 of the Geneva
that Hispanics should loyal- . Convention, which states:
ly support the nomination of
"Individual or mass
.a man who sat. ·quietly by forcible transfers, as well
while administration offi- as deportations of protectdais discussed using ·torture ed persons fFom occupied
against people in American territory to the territory of
custody, simply because he the Occupying Power or to
is oneof our own."
that of any other country,
'On the day of the commit· occupied or not, are protee vote, Sen. Ted Kennedy hibited, regardless of their
(D-Mass.), speaking out motive."
ag~inst Gonzales' nominaThis evasion of · internation, said: "We hav'e a torture tiona! law is embedded in
problem. The FBI says so. the administration's approval
·The Red Cross says so. The of the CIA's "extraordinary
Defense Intelligence Agency renditions" of prisoners to
says so. Additional allega- countries known for torturtions of abuse are being ing their own _prisoners.
reported on a daily basis. Yet These "ghost. prisoners" of
Mr. Gonzales can't remem- the CIA are forbidden visits
ber any details of how it from the .Red Cross, and
conditions of their treatment
happened."
Kennedy added
thai are held in resolute secrecy.
When the covert removal
Gonzales refused to provide
the dpcuments on the torture of I 00 or more detainees
.memoranda he orchestrated· from Abu Ghaib became
as counsel to the. president known, Sen. John McCain

.

(R-Ariz.) said: "The situation with the CIA ghost soldiers 1s beginning to look
like a bad movie.... This
needs to be cleared up rather
badly."
Alberto Gonzales has
shown no inclination to clear
it up .
.As While House counsel, .
Gonzales amazingly advised
the president that he could
imprison American citizens
indefinitely as ene my combatan ts without charges or
access to lawyers .· The
Supreme Court rul ed that the
president could not.
In a Jan. 12 letter to Seoate
Judiciary
Committee
Chairman Arlen Specter (RPa.), nine Latina/Hispanic
law professors from the university law schools of
.Stanford, UCLA. Pittsburgh
and other campuses said that ·
the Judiciary Committee
hearings
"remindeu
Americans
that
Mr.
Gonzales is li ving the
American dream. ... (But)
what Mr. Gonzales has yet to
prove is that he meets the
most crucial requirement for
· an Attorney General: a commitment to upholding the .
law."
On
the
Judiciary
Committee, Sen. Russell
Feingold &lt;D-Wis.) made the
same point, adding that.
"time after time, Judge
Gonzales has been a key participant in developing sec ret
legal theories to justify poliCies that, as they have
become public , have tarnished our nation's international reputation"
Of the Republican senator,; on the committer who
voted for Gonzales, tlil" m,;,t
disappointing .for me \\' ,"
Sen . Sam Brownback of
Kansas, a persistent champi -

on of human ri ghts around
the world, vety much including Sudan where he ha&gt; traveled.
But
Brownback
ignored Gonzales' involvement in the torture memoranda and in the legal black
hole qf "ghost prisoners."
Sen. Brownback, is party
loyalty that important"'
Before the floor vote that
would have made Gonzales
ge neral ,
our
attorney
Jonathan Schell of the
Nation Institute wrote, in an
attempt to reach the senators: "Torture destroys the
soul oflhe torturer even as it .
destroys the t&gt;(ldy.of his victim. The boundary between
hum ~nc treatment of prisoners and torture is perhaps the
clearest boundary in existence between civilization
and barbarism.
"Whelher the elected rep- .
resentatives of the people of
the United States are now
ready to cross that line is the
deepest. ·question before the
Senate as it . votes on the
nomination of Albertp ·
Gonzales."
In the final vote on the
floor, did those senators who
crossed the line remember
the president say ing on
Inauguration Day: "From the
day of our Founding, we
have proclaimed that every
man and woman on thi s
earth has rights, and dignity,
and
matchless
value,
because they bear the image
of the Maker of Heaven and
earth."
(Nw Hemoff is .a rwtiona/1\'. renowned awhorirv. on
the Firs/ Aml'lldmerll mul
the Bill of Rights '"'d outlwr
of num1· books, incl!tding
"The War on the Bill pf
{?ights and the Gathering
Resistance " (Seven Stories

APphoto

President Bush listens to a reporters question, Monday In the
Cabinet Room of the White House as he met with his cabin~t..
Bush sent Congress a $2 .57 trillion spending plan f;:londay
that seeks to slash spending In a number of popular programs
from farm subsidies to health care. Left to right are Secretary
of the Interior Gale Norton, Secretary of Treasury John Snow,
and Bush.
1200e FEDERAL BUOOE:T}

Agency expenditures under Bush's plan
Change , What each agency would spend next year under President

Bush's

budget proposal, compared wltti this year:
HEalth and Human Services

'

Socfal S.curit

4 .4

9.5

''

-0.3

o:3
-9.4
5.4

4.1
3.4

2.4
-5.7

0.1
.10 .~

14.9
.().9

15.4 •

Aglleuitu~

4.0

4.3
3.5
7.0
6 .7

583 5

441.2
426.3
94.8

Veterans Affairs

68.3

Educa~

64.3
64 .3
60.6

Tranapo.tadon
Labor

517

OefenMICivll Programo
Housing and Urban Development

44.5

Homeland Security

33.3

Justice

Other Independent agendes

••

Energy

22.6
22.0

s .....

14.1

Interior

9.6

EPA

6.2

,N ational Science FoundatiOn

.

~ ,4

17.0
15.7

Commerce
Judlclaty

LegltlaUVe Bnlneh ,

programs. He would also
· create tax breaks totaling ·
$74 billion over the next
decade to encourage lowincome people to buy health
insurance.
Even so, the budget provided ample ev idence that
deficits were lim iting his
agenda.
Bush' s proposed 4.8 percent increase for the
Pentagon wo.uld bring its
. budge! next year to $4 19.3
billion, excluding Iraq war
costs. Yet that ,was $3.4 biLlion less than he projected for~
2006 j ust a year ago, wi)h
weapons procurement among
the leading areas feeling the
crunch. .
He· was seeking increases for perennial favorites
like veterans health care,
aid to low-income school
district s. special educa:
· tion- but all dramatically
less th an he proposed last
year.
Even his tax-cutting agenda was under the gun and had
little new. Of the $1.4 trillion
in I 0-yeartax cuts. more than
$ 1.1 trillion was his oft. repeated call to make his
200,1 and 2003 tax cuts permanent.

40.2

NASA

l nt...,..onal 81811118!1&lt;'1 programo

I
I
I
I
I

0 .4

$643 9 billion

Office of Personnel Management

I
I
I

0.2

18.2

•

Treasu
OafenaaiMIUta

-.-..
••
•

-4.0

zation affiliated with that disease,
and contact community agencies that can provide
resources and services for your
relative, yourself and other
family members. These may
be in the form of daycare,
respite, family counseling, inhome services, etc. Many of
the fees are · based upon the
client's ability to pay.
Don't forget to tend to your
spiritual needs.
Prayers ,
meditati'ons, personal retlections; church activi ties and
devotionals may help . you
keep your life in balance :
Check with legal and
financial advisor' to help you
and your lovell one make suit·
able decisions dealing with
medical and financial power
of allorney and . long-term
care options. If expet't a.dvice
is acquiced early on, it can
help you focu' later on giving .
care, not on resolving money
problems and critical issues.
For information about
resources and caregiver services available in our area. contact the Meigs County Council
on Aging at 740-992-2 161. .
Staff at the Senior Citizens
Center cim coun,el you on how ·
best to tend to ym1r c ~ ronical l y
ill toved one, while mj1intaining
xour own health anu stability.

Keep your sense of humor.
Having a positive attitude can
help you cope with stressful
circumstances. Try looking
at things from a lighthearted
poi-nt of view.
,
Ask lor assistance lium family members and social agencies. Have a family meeting to
discuss what each person may
or may not be able to con. tribute. Relatives, neighbors·
and friends may be willing t&lt;'l
help, but don't know what
specifically needs to be done.
Let them know. ·· Accept help
when it's offered. Don't think.
that you have to be Superman
or Superwoman and shoulder
the whole burden yourself.
Meet periodically with family
members to re-assess the status
of the situation.
Don't be too hard on yourself since it may now take
longer to accompli sh things
than it did previously. Be
patient and set realistic goah.
Concentrate on your successes, not your failures.
Find out.all you can about the
illness or condition that affects
your loved one. Read the latest
medical informati6n so you can
ask appropriate questions of the
. patient's health professionals.
Participate in support . groups,
. com municate w.ith the organi-

6.5 .

6.1 ,.,
5 .7

4.4

• Location:
The Middleport Clinic
788 North Second Street
· Middleport, OH 45760

• Office Hours:
•
•
•
•
•

Mondays:
(9 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
Tuesdays:
(II a,m. to 7 p.m.)
Wednesdays: (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
Thursdays: \ (9 a.m. to 7 p.m.)
Fridays:
(II a.m. to 5 p.m.)

Spending aa a percentage of GOP, 1930-2010

.

43.11 1943-44
(World War II]

45

35

30

25

11.8
2004 .

Walk-ins wek'Onu~.
Accepting new patients~

Calf fo,..

a;, o/'fOtidKe,rt:

740-992-6434

Press, 2003).

..
....... f

...

l'

.. -~ • .,. .

•

�•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Tuesday, February 8, 2005

·Bush budget pumps up defense, slashes funding to other programs
BY MALIA RULON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

programs that the pres ident
wants to eliminate or vastly
scale back.
Among the programs on the
chp pp ing block is the
Manufacturing
Extension .
Part.nership, which provides
consulting services to small to
medium-sized manufacturing
businesses: The pre~ide ~l pro- .
poses spending $47 mill ion
on th is program, down fro m
its current allotment of $109
million.
The president's budget
elim inates completely a $12
milli on Trade Adjustment
Assistance program that hel ps
manufacturi·ng companies that
have been hurt by fo reign
imports improve their competitiveness. It also reduces
the amount of· money available to retrain dislocated
workers who lose their jobs
due pl ant closings, from $ 1.5
billion to $1.35 billion .
The president's budget also
el imin ates $50 million from a
program Congress created .to
help strapped steel companies
get private loans by providing
.guarantees of 85. to 95 per- .
cent.
.__ _ _ __.

WASfilNGTON
President Bush's· $2.57 trillion proposed budget released·
Monday boosts spending on
the Great Lakes and military
·construction pmjects in Ohio
·· but cuts money for programs
important to the state's mamlfacturers and steelmakers.
The budget, which reflects a
record deficit and costs of the
war in Iraq, was praised by
Republicans: Columbus Rep.
Pat Tiberi called it ''strong
medicine." But Democrats,
such as Rep. Dennis Kucinich
of Cleveland, denou nced it as
being "lean and mean."
" Is thi s the thanks Ohio ge ts
for putting the president over
the top: Cuts in high tech jobs
and the elimination of programs to help manufacturing?"
Kucinich
said.
President Bush defeated John
Kerry by about 118.000 votes
in Ohio. and the state 's 20
electoral votes gave the
Republican the 270 he needed
. ,...
to win re-election.
Bush's budget plan is only a
AP PhotoiAI Behrman, File
\
The president has tried to
proposal and still must be
approved by ·Congress. which eliminate some of these pro- A worker wears protective clothing .;hile working near a lab building being demolished, Feb. 4, 2004, at a form er uranium prowas bracing . Monday for a gra ms before, citing waste cessilig plant in Fernald, Ohio. President Bush's proposed budget released Monday, cuts spending for cleaning up large
fight to save more than 150· and inefficiency..
amounts of rad ioactive .contamination and hazardous waste at more than 100 sites nationwide. including the Fernald plant near
Cincinnati. Those sites still are supposed to be fully cleaned by 2006.

;~~r:~~~~~~~f ~

W

2

. . Thesday, February 8
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A
cloudy
morning.
Temperatures. will hold
steady around 50. Winds will
be 5 to 10 MPH ftom the
southwest turning from the
west as the morning progresses.
Afternoon .(1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. There is a slight
chance of rain. Temperatures
will linger at 51 with today's
high. of 52 occurring around
3:00pm. Winds will be I0
MPH from the southwest
. turning from the . south as the
afternoon progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
. It will remain cloudy.
There is a good chance we
could see some ' rain .
Temperatures will ho ver at
50. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the south turning from
the southwest as· the evening
progresses.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It should remain cloudy.
There is a slight chance
we · couid .see some · rain.
Temperatures will remain
around 49 with tod ay's
low of 49 occ"urrin g
.a round 6:00am . Wind s
will be 5 MPH from tl1 e
southwe st.
Wednesday, February 9
Morning (7 a.m.-No011)
It should be a cloudy morning. Expect a couple of raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will stay near
49. Winds will be 5 to 10
MPH from the south turning
from the west as the morning
progresses.
Afternooll (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
diminish from 46 early this
afternqon to 37. Winds will
be 5 to I 0 MPH fro m the
west turning from the north
as the afternoon progresses.

Local Stocks
ACI-37;5l
AEP-35.32
Akzo-40.38
Ashland Inc.- 61.65
AT&amp;T-19.65

Oak Hill Financial. 37.95 .
OVB-34.99
BBT-40.30
Peoples-. 26.97
BU-12.48
Pepsico- 54..70
~lob Evans- 24.06
Premier- 10.78
BorgWamer- 53.66
Rockwell- 58.69
Champion- 4.05
Rocky Boots- 29.27
Charming Shops- 8.28
RD Shell- 59.34
City Holding- 32.78 ·
SBC-24.47
Col-43.94
DG-22.15
Sears- 52.10
DuPont- 49.30
U$8-30.79
federal Mogul- .36
Wai-Mart·- 53.51
Gannett-80.92
Wendy's- 40.14
General Electric- 36.23
Worthington- 20.68
GK~LY-4.74
Harley Davidson- 61.17 Dally stock reilorts are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
JPM-37.97
of the previous day's
lmart-102.17
transactions, provided by .
Kroger-17.11
Smith Partners at Advest
Ltd.-24.41
NSC-35.29
Inc. of Gallipolis.
'·

..

Rep. Deborah Pryce, the
No. 4-~anked Republican in
the Hou se, prai sed Bu sh's
approach.
"Many
Ohio
fa milies
understand the constraints of
a budget and the tough decisions that sometimes have to
be made to meet priorities;"
said
Pryce,
of Upper
Arlington . · ·
Bush's plan also . has
includes funding increases:
Money to clean up the Great
Lakes would be doubled from

money for projects at Ohio's
Army N~tional Guard installations and the Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base would increase
from nearly $50 million to $68
miflion, good news for the
state as it braces tor this year's
base closure recommendations.
Meanwhile, Ohio defense
companies stand to gain in the
Bush budget. which would
spend nearly $84 million
more on the F- 16 Falcon
fighter.
multi-mi ss ion
Engines fo r the aircraft are
thi s year to $50 being built by Genet:al
millionmillion
next year.
· $22.5
Also under Bush's plan, Electric in

Some funding was included
for the M l Abrams tank and
light-armored Stryker vehicles, which are built at the
Lima Army Tank Plant. Since
the budget doesn't include
money to pay for the Iraq war.
these programs should · get
more funding throu gh a supp!Cmental budget plan.
·Money to process depleted
uranium at . the ·shuttered
Portsmouth
Gaseous
Diff11sion Plant in Piketon
was to double from $91 mil- .
lion to $ 192 million, mostly to
pay for a new facility to do the
work. But funds to keep the.

pl ant on cold-standby were to
end at the end of 2006.
Eiush 's budget include s
money to clean up radioacti ve
contamination and haZardou s.
waste
at the
Battelle
Laboratory in Columbus,
Mound plant in Miamisburg,
Fernald plant near Cincinnati
and Ashtabula site. Funding
for these sites was down a
combined 7 percent, as'
cleanup continued toward a
deadline of 2006.
Funding
for
· the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission would remain
about the same at $65 million.

INSIDE
Redwomen.collect road win, Page 82
Radmen blown out at Walsh, Page 82
Crennel's agent meets with Browns, Page B2
Rio track fares well at Cedarville, Page 86

Tuesday, February 8, 2005

PREP BASKETI3A LL

LOCAL

SCHEDULE
(REGULAR SEASON)

Todav

Girls Basketball
Ohl9 Valley Christian at Calvary
Boys Basketball
Eastern at Wellston; 6 p.m.
Grace Christian at OVC
Southern at Meigs
Miller at South Galrra ·
Thursday's gamu
Boys Basketball ·
River Valley vs. Gallia Acad. (at URG)
C1r11 Basklllball
Wahama at Southern
Friday, Feb. 11
Boys Basketball
Gallla Academy at Marietta
Meigs at Vinton County
Eastern at Miller
Southern at 11irrible
Buffalo at South Gallia
O'IC at Cross Lanes
Rock Hill at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Qlrls Basketball
·
O'IC at Cross Lanes
Saturday, Feb. 12
Boys Basketball
South Gallla at Oak Hill, 6 p.m.
·
Girls Basketball
Sclotoville at South Gallia
BoYS PREP BASKETBALL

ovc

School
ALL ~
'Chesapeake .: .......... 16-0 ...... 9-0
Coal Grove ............ ....8-9 ........ 5-3
River Valley ...............9·8 ....... .4-4
South Point ...............7-1 1 ..... .4-4
Fairland .....
...3· t 4 ...... 2-7
Rock Hill ....
... 4-12 .. 1-7

SEOAL

School
ALL
~
Warren ...................... 14-3 ...... 8-1
Logan ........................ 12·5 ...... 7·2
Jacllson ..................... 15·2 .. .... 6·2
Marietta. ....
.....6-11 .... ,.2-6
Gallla Academy .........6-t2 ...... 2-7
Athens ......... ........ ...... 2-t 5 ...... 1·B

TVC
Ohio Division
School
AI.1.
!YC
Belpre ........................ 13-5 ...... 8·1
Vinton County ........... 12·5 ...... 7-2
Alexander .................. i 2-6 ...... 5-4
· Meigs .
...8· 1o ...... 4-5
Nelsonville-York .........6· t t ...... 3-6
Wellston .. .. .. .. ............ 2· 16 ...... 0·9
Hocking Division
School
ALL m
Federal Hocking ........16·3 ,...:.8-1
Easlern ..................... 14-3 ...... 6·2
Trimble .................. .... 12-5 ...... 6-2 ,
Southern·..... .. ...........5· t 3 ...... 3·6
Miller ."........................6·12 ...... 2·7
Watertord .... .............3-16 ...... t-8
OTHERS
South Gallia ............................ t 4·3
ovcs .......
.......... 1-16

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eoutest Rules: ·

I) Must be at least 18 yrs of age.
2) Must register at one of these participating

••
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•

businesses•

. ' 3) Name, phone number and name of
business must appear in each entry
form.
4) No purchase necessar31. .
5) Employees of this newspaper &amp; their
immediate families are not eligible. ·
6) Contest good Feb. 1- Feb. 11, 2005
7) Winner will he randomly -drawn Friday,
February 11, 2005.
8) Winner will be contacted to schedule
promotional photo at business location.

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•
Be Sure to Rejster.at "•
.,These Partieipatini
POMEROY
Weaving Stitches
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Hartwell House ·
Dan's
Swisher &amp;. Lohse
K&amp;.C jewelers
Riverfront Past &amp;. Present
Francis Florist
Long john Silvers/KFC
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Clark's jewelry
The Fabric Shop

RACINE
Love Your Tan

SYRACUSE
The Cutting Crew
Riverway Cafe
TNT" Pit Stop (4 Locations)

• .....•.....• ... ~ .•.....•...

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MINERSVILLE
River Bed Tanning&amp;. Party Supplie,s

•

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MIDDLEPORT
Dairy Queen
Nails by Pam
Added Toud)
Locker 219 &amp;. The Shoe Place
White Ulac Inn
Middleport Flower Shop
Ingels Jewelry &amp;. Picture Gallery
Middleport Department Store
&amp;. Sue's Selectables
'Two on the T"

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MASON, WV
.Bob Evans Restaurant
Debpie's Flowers N' More
Mason Bowling lanes
Riverside Golf Club .
Oopsa Daisy Flowers &amp;. Gifts

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Bl

.The Daily Sentinel

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL

ovc

School
ALL ~
'South Point... ........... 18-2 ...... tO-O
Chesapeake ....... ....... 12·8 ...... 7·3
Fairland ....... ...............9-1t ...... 6-4
Coal Grove ......... ....... 12-8 ...... 5-5.
· .tRiver Valley ... ..........3-17 ...... 1-9
fRock Hilt .................. 2· t 5 ......t ·9
School

SEOAL

ALL

SEQ

•Marietta .................... 1 t -8 ...... 7-3

'Warren ..................... t4-6 ......7-3
Logan ........................ 11·9 ......6-4
Gania Academy ......... 12-8 ..... .4-6
Jackson ..............,.. .... 11 -9 ..... .4-6
Athens ... :...................6·1 3 ..... 2.-8

TVC
Ohio Division ·
School
ALL
~
'INelsonville-York .. ... 14·7 ...... 9· 1
Vinlon Co ...
.... 11-9" ...... 8·2
Belpre ........................ 12-8 ...... 7-3
Ale•ander .................. 5-t5 ,. .....3-7
Meigs ...·.... .-................ 7-14 ...... 2-8
tWellston .................. 2-19 ... .'.. t ·9
Hocking Division
Scbool
ALL ~
'Trimble .................. 19- t ...... 9· 1
'Watertord ...
... 16-4 ...... 9· 1
Eastern ........ ............. ,.3. 7 ...... 5·5
Federal Hocking ........ 10-lo .... 5·5
Southern ..................7-13 ...... t-9
Miller .. ........... :...........6-14 ...... t-9
OTHERS
ovcs ·······
.................. 7-10
South Gallia ......................... 5-13
• --' clinched league ririe
I - eliminated from tournament

Attention varsity ,
·hoops coaches
Boys and girls ·varsity basketball coaches are reminded
lo send us your final regular
slats upon the completion of
the season for considemtion·
for the Associated Press all·
district team as . well as the
OVP Super I0 teams .
You may fax them to 446·
3008 or drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
Avenue.
You
also e-mail them to ·
sports@mydailysentinel .com
or call in any nominees, with
their stals, to 446-2342, e~t. 33.
Deadline for this infonnation
is 5 p.m., Feb. 23. To get someone on either of these teams,
this information is required . .

may

Girls prep tournament to be played at St. John Arena
. COLUMBUS
(AP) The 30th annual girls stale
high school basketball tournament will shift in March
from Value City Arena back
to its old venue at St. John
Arena so, that the Ohio
State's men's hockey team

can host playoff games.
Dan Ross, co mmi ssioner
of the sanctioni ng Ohio Hi gh
School Athletic Association,
ann ou nced the switch on
Monday.
The tournament is set for
March I0- 12.

St. John Arena hosted the
girls tournament fo r 23 of
the eve nt's first 24 ye ars
before the ga mes were
moved to Value City Arena
in 2000. St. John Arena's
capacity I S 13,276 as
opposed to 19,200 at Value

City Arena . The girls hig h. Centra l Coll egiate Hockey
Sf:hool tournament has an Asso&lt;:iation playoff games
ave rage attendance of 6,365 that week.
"We felt that. in being a
over the past five years.
Ohio State asked the good partner with the wi iverOHSAA to maRe the change · sity. we wou ld be a&lt;:commoso that the• men' s hockey dating to meet their needs,"
team migh t host poss ible Rrm said in a statement.

Southern downs Flyers in sectionals

Toumament

Results - Girls

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Dlvlalon II

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com

at University of Rto Grande
Monda~, February 1

Meigs 42, River Valley 32

THE PLAINS - Press ure
can be a killer at tournament
time .
Southern demonstrated that
Monday ,by forcing Ironton
·
St. Joe into
29 turnovers
en route to
claiming a
50-34 victory in the
Di\li sion IV
sectional at
Athens High ·
School.
IIUiill T h e
Pickens
Tornadoes
(7- 13)
. jumped out tQ a 27-12 halftime advantage by coaxing
the Flyers (8-.11) into 18
giveaways over that span, .·
, then held on to advance to the
sectional final . Thursday at
McAfee Gymnasium,
SHS Seott Wolfe was most
pleased with the defensive
effort after the game. particularly in the opening !6 min·utes.
"We knew coming into the
ga me that St. Joe was· known ·
to make some bad passes ·and
had a lot of turnovers .ag ai ~st
team s that pressured the ill."
he said . " I tho~~ the girlS"
really picked up ihe defetisi ve intensity and the last pari
. of th e first quarter really
seemed to set the tempo of
the game. From there, we
practicall y did . everything
ri ght. It was probably our
best half of the season."
St. Joe busted out to a 4-0
lead 33 seconds into the tilt,
but Southern ·went on an 8-0
run over the next 5:01 of the
opening frame. The Flyers
ended a six minute scoring
drought at I :26 to end the
first trailing 8-6. St. Joe averaged a turnover per minute
during the opening.eight minutes.
Bryan Walters/photo
The 'Does continued to
Southern
's
Brooke
Kiser
(11)
dribbles
past
Ironton
St.
Joe
defender
Raven
Blake during the
give ISJ tits on the offensive
second half of the Tornadoes· 50-34 victory Monday. Kiser finished with 13 points, four
Please see Southern, B:Z
rebounds. an. assist and a stea l in the contest.
·

Meigs pulls away from Raiders
. BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com
RIO GRANDE - Meigs controlled the
offensive boards in the th ird quarter .and held
Ri ver Valley to five points in the fourth as the
Marauders went on to a 42-32 victory in the
Di vision II sectional tournament opener
Monday.
.
The Marauders (7- 14) will face Gallia
Ac~demy I p.m.. Saturday for the right tp
advance to the district tournament next week.
Meigs was 7-for-8 at the foul line during
ttie final 2: 19 of the game, holding the
Raiders scoreless over that time to pull away
for the win,
"We 're a pretty good free throw shooting
team." said Meigs head coach Darin Logan .
''We didn ' t really take advantage of that in the
first half. We were in the bonus and they
weren't. In the fourt~ quarter. we were able to
get to the line and make some shots.''
Sam Pierce opened the fourth quarter with
a 3-pointer to put the Marauders up 33-27.
Kristina Naylor came back with a basket of
her own for River Va lley to cut the lead to
four. ·
Later in the fourth , with less than three
minutes remaining and Meigs sti ll leading
33-29. Naylor -cored again and was fouled .
She connected on the ensuing free throw to.
make it a two-point contest.
'
Meigs, though. held the Raiders scoreless
from that point on.
·
"Our nerves were probably as big a part as
anything ... said River Valley head coach
Harvey Brown. "The ball slipped through our
hands several times. They held on to it more
•
then we did. We didn't protect the ball the
.
.
Brad Sherman/photo way like should have
Meigs· senior Renee Bailey, right, dribbles past River Valley's Kyla Adkins (40) .
·
. during the Marauders' 42-32 victory at Newt Oliver Arena Monday.
PIHH IH M.-p. 11

Waverly 52, Rock Hill 48

Saturday, February 12
Gallia AcadelllY, vs. Meigs, .1 p.m. (win·
ner -advances to district tournament at
ChUIIoolhe)
Warren v6. Waverly, 2:4:5 p.m. (winner
advances· to district tournament at

ChHIIoolhe)
II Adena High School

Motldoy, FtbrulfY 7 ·

Logan Elm 47, McC1aln 35
Washington Court House 43, Hillsboro

37
Thuraday, February' 10
Unloto vs. Northwest 6:,15 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament at
ChUIIcolhe)
Miami Trace vs. Clrcleviile, 8 p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
ChUIIcolhe)
Saturday, F«Jruery 12 .
Fairfield Ltnlon VB. logan Elm, 1 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament
at Chitlicolhe)

Sheridan vs.'Washlngton Court House,
2:45 p.m. (winner advances to distric1
tournament at Chillicothe)
..

At Oak Hill High School
Thurodoy, February tO

Vinton County vs. Fairland, 6:15 p.m.
(w!nner advances to diBtrict tournament
at ChiHicothe)
Jackson vs. Athens, 8 p.m. (w,lnner
advances to district tournament at
ChiHicotl&gt;el
DIY!olon nt .
It W.Holon Higl1 School

•

Moftd8V, Febi\Nory 7

Huntington 62, Piketon 40

New Lexington 51. Neleooviii&amp;-Yot1&lt; 35
Wadnoodoy, F........., I
Foderal HoCI&lt;Ing vs. Atei&lt;inder. 6:15,
p.m.
.
Belpre vs. Adona, 8 p.m .

Thurtday, February 10
Oak Hill vs. Hunting1on, 6:15p.m. (winner advances to diatrict tournament at
Waverly)
Minford vs. NGI&amp;onville·York,· 8 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament
at Waverly)
Soturdoy, Ftbruary 12
Zare·'Ti'Bce vs. Fl-jiAJexander winner, 1
p.m. (winner advances to di6trict lour·
nament at Waverty)
Westfall vs. Belpre/Adena winner, ~ :45

p.m. (winner advances_to district tour·
nament at Waver!~)

ltVatloy High~

Monday, Februi!Y 7
WheelerSburg 58, Peebles 31
~ynchburg Clay 79. Wellston 24
Coal Grove n, Weet Union 36
Wednoodoy, Fobnwy 8
Portsmouth vs. Portsmouth West. 6:1.5
p.m.
Chesapeake vs. North Adams, 8 p.m.
Thurtday, ftbruory 10 .
Ironton VI. Wheelef'SbufQ, 6:,5 p.rft.
(winnBr advances to district tournament
at Wave~y)
Lynchburg Oay YO . Coal Grove, 8 p.m.
(winner advances to dist~ tournament
a1 Waverly)
Sltumoy, Ftbruory 12
South Point vs. PortsmouthiPW ·winner,
1 p.m. {winner advances to district tour·
nament at Wa...erly)
Eastern {Brown) vs, Chesapeaka'NA
winner, 2:45 p.m. (winner advances to
dlstric1' tournament at Waverly)
DMtlontY
o1 Athena Higi1Sc:Mol
~.February

7

Southern 50, Ironton St Joe 34
Wedneoday, Fobruary 9
Crookswle vs. Miller. 6:15p.m.
Green vs. South GaiHa, 8 p.m.
lhurtday, Ftbruory 10
Trimble vs. Southern, 6:,5 p.m. (Winner
advances to district tournamapl at

Wellolon)·
·
Southeastern va. Eastern (MeiOI), 8
p.m. (winner advances to district tour·
namentatWeltllon)
Soturdoy, Ftbruary 12
Wat&amp;llorQ""' Crooi&lt;Siri- wlmo&lt;,
1 p.m. (winner actvances to district tour·

nament ol W_,)

Green/SG winner.
2:•5 p.m. (winner _,..,.. to district
tournament at w.uoton)

Symmet \/Olley ••·

---·Higll-

......,, Fobrurt 7
Poin1 va1oy 5-4. ~ 3-1
Sclotoville ~ . Notro oa,. 40

Wadi Jldllf. ,....,., •

-19m l.ltham va. Now Bootoo. 6:15
p.m.

- -...--.8p.m.
10
TlMn4llly, _ _ ,

Cloy .... Point Vlltoy. 8:15
p.m. (wlmo&lt;- 10 diolrlct lour·
namont at WOIIIIOft)
v.lley ... 8 p.m. (wlmo&lt;
actvancet to ctt.tric:t IOUtnafl"'eeI at
Wotls1on)

_,.,__,11
-looltlu'!IVO. WlfliB wimo&lt;, 1

p.m.~--to--

IW'nlnt.at Wlll•on)'

raw-.

(PIIoo) vo. M" 1
p.m.(--- 10IOurnlment It WJINMM}
·
-

2:~

~------'!.._---------------'-----------------•-----------~-----'·-------

--- __I

�'

-

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 8, 2005

Tuesday, February 8, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

.-

\!l:rthitne - Sentinel - laeglster
CLASSIFIED

Crennel's
agent
huddles
Redwomen collect road win
with Browns' top brass
COLLEGE BASKETBALL

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SpeCial to the Sentinel

NORTH CANTON
NAIA DIVISIOn II No. 20 RIO
Grande gai ned another ke y
road v.m m Amencan Miueast
Conference South DIVISIOn
women\ basketb,III action on
Saturday afternoon. pulling .
away late 111 the game to defe.tt
the Walsh Cavaliers, 83-66.
In the process, semor forw,Ird
Alkia Fount.un became the alltune 1ebounLI leauer. m Rio
Grande women· s basketball
hiStory.
RIO G1ande (20-6, 9-3 AMC
South) held a lour-pomt lead
(54-50) with 10:4R remammg
in the 2.une afle1 W.IIsh fm v.ard LeAnne Ware nmled "
three-pmnter trom the lett
wing. The Redwon1ea then
went to wo1k and hrought the
knockout punch With a I 9- 10
run to leaL! 73-60 with I 53 Jell
on the clock
Rio built the lead to .Is h1gh
as 20-points (83-63)
The Redwomen placed three
players 111 double ligures, led
by semor guard Angel Allen
with 12 points. Allen also

L11shed opt fo ur asSists Jumor
wmg guard Marcm Smoot continuecf her solid play of late.
.tdding II points and Fountain
prouuced her 43rd caree1 double-double with I0 pomts and
12 rebounds.
Fountain emered the game
tr.1iling K&lt;u ley Mohle1 by nine
rebounds on the all-lime list
Fountain
would- surpass
Mohler m the second half with
the former reconcl holder setting
on the other bench as asSIStant
coach lor the Cavaliers
Fountai n was as ked 1f she
was keepmg a running total m
he1 mind as the game was progress mg. "No, I leave that up to
my giandpa:· she qu1ppcd.
Fountam ts more about than
te,un than individual goals, but
was happy to have the record.
"It means a lot. especially to get
11 with the player who held the
record sitting on the other
bench," she added "I appreciate everything that my teammates and coaches have done

for me."
Walsh ( 11-12, 5-8 AMC
South) v.as led by Dianna
Hammett, who produced her
own double-double with 20
points and 14 rebounds. Beth
Stemberg added 13 points and
Ware notched II . Sternberg
and lngnd Bramard handed out
tive assists each .
R10 Grande Head Coach
David Smalley was happy to
get the win and was thnlled for
Fountam on her reconcl-scttmg
day. "Aikia Fountam has been
tremendous asset to thi s progrJlm," Smalley said. "She is
JUSt a qualtt~ person, tirst and
foremost, a tremendous student"
"We could not have made a
better chmce four years ago
when we brought her mto thts
program," Smalley added.
R1o is now setting in second
pl ace m the AMC South
DivisiOn
The Redwomen swept the
season senes wtth Walsh. They
defeated the Cavaliers, 67-50,
Jan. 15 at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
The Redwomen will travel to
Wilberforce today. Game time
is set for 5.30 p.m.

Red men blown out ·at Walsh·
NORTH CANTON - The
depleted University !'Jf R1 0
Grande Redlllen basketball
team continued it 's late season downward spiral , suffermg an 81 -47 loss at NAIA
Division II No 5 Walsh ,·
Saturday afternoon.
Rio Grande ( 16-9, 5-7
AMC South) has now
dropped fo ur 111 a row and five
of Jts' last SIK games, as they
continued to be plagued by
.
injuries,
Playmg without the se rvices of seniors Matt S1mpson
and Jarrod Hames. the
Redmen were fo rced to run a
four-guard offen se. Despite
the tour guards on the floor,
Rio sfrugg led to solve the
Walsh pressure defense: wm'
mi!ting 21 mrnovers. Couple
that ~ 1th a cold shooting

Meigs
"That was the overall problem We just didn't play a
good ball game. You've got
to give them credit, they took
It away from us tomght
The game was tied at 18all gomg In the third quarter.
That\ when the Marauders
took control of the oftenSI ve
boards, giving Meigs pl ent y
of second and third chances
under the glas s
Meigs fimsheLI the mght
outreboundmg the Raiders
37-26 as the Marauders had
20 otten sive boards, I0 of
. which came tn t~c third .
Brittany Hyse ll had f1ve of
those third-quarter offensive
rebounds, on ly s1x overall ,
as Mei gs took a 30-27 lead
tnto the fmal frame.
··w e weren't boxing out
ltke we should be ," sa1d

Southern
from Page B1
end as they went on a I0-0
run over the open ing 3.41 of
the second frame, jumping
out to a commandmg 18-6
edge. Southern forced I0
more turnovers before half
and took the IS-point lead
into break
The Tomadoes hit eight of
14 tleld goal attempts 111 that
pivotal second canto and
combmed for an II ot 24
effort from the floor in the
first half.
SHS also held a 14-9 edge
on the boards at intermission ,
including a 7-3 discrepancy
on the offensive glass.
Wolfe fe lt his sq uad's
rebounding prowess also
contributed large ly to the•
great start.
"One thing that has hurt us
all year has been our
rebounding . Some of the
games we got beat 111 this
year, the other team just dummated the boards," commented Wolfe. "Tontght, we got
some of those second and
third chance shots and put
them in the basket That was
another reason for our success this evenrng."
The Flyers battled back to

•

ing two powerful one-handed
slam dunks jn the ftrst half,
four rebounds and five assists
He also altered numerous
shots in the. paint.
Randy Sistrunk picked up
h1s game in the second half,
after getting in foul trouble in
the first half. Sistrunk scored
II of h1s 18 points in the second half
· SIStrunk also pulled down,
a game-high, eight rebounds
and swiped three steals. Point
guard Jason Hicks added
eight points, five assists and
three steals to the Cavalier
attack
Walsh shot 49 percent (31of-63) from the field, 43.5
percent (I 0-of-23) from
three-point land and 90 percent (9-of-10) from the charity stnpe.

Brown . " Somettmes, it give her any lanes to drive."
looked like we weren't e'en
Leslie Ward fimshed with
gettmg ott the tloor to even I0 points to lead the
get a rebound. It just wasn't Raiders , who dropped to 3our mght.
17.
"Out post players aren't
"It was di sappointmg, "
as far as pomt production said Brown of the season.
for us, but they do a nice "We thought we'd win
JOb playin g defense and more than three ball games.
rebounding," added Logan . Our expectations were high
"The btg thing m the sec- at the beginmng of the year
ond half was R1v er Valley and actually they stayed
went oold. They had trouble high through out the year
making shots 111 the second even though we were down.
half ,.
But, we were never always
Also in the third quarter, out. We had a lot close ball
Renee Bailey scored eight games We just couldn't
of her game-high 16 points, pull them out in the end.''
while Pierce added nine on
Meigs 42 , 'River Valley 32
the mght
RVatley
11 7
9
s - 32
12 6
12 12 - 42
Pierce, the Marauders' Metgs
leadtng scorer, was held to RIVER VALLEY - Knsltna Naylor 3 2-4 a,
mne points. f1v e m fourth Beth Payne 3 0-0 7 Leshe Ward 4 0-0 10
Ashley Caldwell 1 1·2 3. Letea McAvena 2
quarter
0·0 4 TOTALS - 13 3·6 32
"They d1d a good JOb on MEIGS - Rehee Batley 4 8-W 16,
Dowler 1 0-2 2, Sam Pterce 2 4-5
Sam Pierce . They played Justin&amp;
9 Amber Burton 0 2-2 2 Meg Clelland 2
zone a lot, but they knew 2-3 7, Brtttany Hysell 3 0-0 6 TOTALS12 16-22 42
where she was and kept a 3-polnt
gaols - RV 3 (Ward 2, Pay ne),
hand in her face and didn ' t Metgs &lt;2 (Pterce. Clelland)

from Page B1

••

game and the Redmen were
no match for the juggernaut
Cavaliers.
Rto managed to shoot only
36.5 percent (19-of-52) from
the floor. They were only 12.5
percent (2-of-16) from threepoint range and 70 percent (7of-1 0) from the free throw
line . Rio had as many
turnovers (21) as tt had field
goals (21 ).
Rto was led by sent or guard
Ca in Vandall and junior center Reggie Williamson with
I0 pomts each Williamson
also pulled down f1ve
rebounds.
Wal sh ( 19-5, 12-1 AMC
South) got a. dommatmg performance from center Robert
Whaley. . The
former
University of Cincinnati
product had 20 pomts, mclud-

outscore the hosts 12-9 out of
the break , but Southern
responded with a 14-10 run
down the stretch to advance
to the final s with TVC
Hock1ng
co-champion
Trimble
"Right now our matn focus
IS on Tnmbfe
The girl s
believe that we can play w1th
them and we gave them a
couple of pretty good game s
earlier. We JUSt weren't able
to put four quarters together,"
smd Wolfe. "These girls are
goi ng to do whatever it take s
to put four qlmrters of basketball together."
The Tomcats ( 19- 1) won
the tirst Contest at Southern
by a count of 49-27, then
swept the reg ular season
scncs wtth a 79-44 vrctory at
THS.
"Tn mble has everything to
lose. They are the number
one seed and we already have
a game on th1 s floor," elaborated Wolfe. "The old saying
goes that 11 is hard to beat
somebody three times and
I'm gmng to play that up as
btg as I can. We are going to
come in here with everything
we've got and try to get this
wi n."
'
Joanne Pickens paced the
Tornadoes with 15 points
while Brooke Ki ser and
Ashley Roush added 13 and
12, re spectively. Krisuina

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

CLEVELAND - After
wmning another Super
Bowl , New England's Mr.
Do-lt-All Issued a warnmg to
the rest of the NFL
"Look out for Cleveland
next vear," said two-way
standout
Troy
Brown .
"They ' re ge ttin g a great
coach."
Romeo Crennel, who borrowed Brown from the
Patriots' offense to play cm nerback thi s season, accepted Cleveland's . offer to be
the1r next head coach
Sunday, fulfilling the longtime ass istant's il fe long
dream.
Crennel 's agent, Joe Lmta,
arrived at the Browns' headquarters in suburban Berea
on Monday mornmg and
spent the day in contract
negotiations with team president John Collins, the final
step in making the 57-yearold defensive coordinator the
II th full -time coach - and
first full-time black coach 111 Cleveland hi story. Lmta, who is seeking a
five-year deal for h1s client ,
sa1d that talks were progressing and he expects the contract to be finalized on
Tuesday.
"It has gone very well," he
sat d. "We've hammered out
a lot of things, we'll get thi s
thing done."
Linta said Crennel is
scheduled to arrive 111
Cleve land on Tuesday and
will be mtroduced by the
team at an afternoon news
conference.
His return to Cleveland he was the Browns' defensive coordmator 111 2000 will cap an emotional few
days fo~ Crennel , who JUSt
won his third Super Bowl
title with New England and
the tlfth of hts career as one
of the league's pre-eminent
assistants.

6
19

12
9

10 14 -

Preview

.•

Tum ltltlttlclllndlvldual 111cBre
IRONTON ST JOE: 16·38 FG ( 421). 1·2
3PG I 500), 1·2 FT ( 500), 19 rebounds

t

992-2156

turnovett, 16 fouls

SOUTHERN· 19·45 FG 1422) 0.1 3PG

I 000)

12·22 FT ( 545), 29 'rebounds •
{Aouah 7) 15 offens1ve rebounds (AOlJSh

·•
,

•
'

,\chl·rtising lkadlinl' is h .·hruan• 10. 2UfL

5), 10 aaslats (Williams 3 Roush 3) 1 18
steals (Williams 8), 1 bloc~ (Roush). 19
turnowHI, folJ IS,

e

'

•

klav

0

'

I

•

150

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client to client App ly at 221 · Information sei'V!ce compaFult-t1me poSitions B'IBIIable 112 Ma1n Streel
Polnl ny IS seekmg med techs.
Working Wllh MRIDD adults
Pleasant from 8 30-3 30pm phlebotomieS, EMTs and
m Vaned settings
or 3041675·3300
MCAG, •LPNs to do rnsurance
Send reaume or
Inc IS an EOE M/F AlA e11ams 1n the Gaflipohs &amp;
Interest letter to:
employer
Me1gs County area Must
Green Acres Regional
have 1·yea r blood draw
Center, Inc ,
Med1 Home Health A~ency 9)(penence
Contractor
AHehtlon: Pereonnet
Inc seek ing a lull 11me AN Postlan
Fax resume to,
P.O. Bo• 240
Case Ma nager for the Dtstnct Manager 614-785Lasage, VVV 25537
Galilpohs. Ohto locat10n 0565 or ema11 to
Fax 304·762·2862
Must M llcensect ooth m ph11120dm1Cportamedlc nel
Email:
OhiO and West v .rgm1a
Sw1mm1ng Pool Serv1ce
garcOdlreaway,com
M1n1mum two years superviTechnic1an
EOE
Sion
managemenl and
home health exper~ence We Job dutres lnclucle servlc1ng
MANAGER·IN·TRAINING offer a competl11ve salary aboVE! ground and rn ground
benef1ts package, 401 K, ancl pools, spas mstalhng liners
Health Care S.rvlca1 cur- llex t1me E 0 E Please and butldtng billiard tables
rentlv has a IQundry/hotJse- send reslJme to 352 secOnd Wages cons1dered on expe·
keeplng super\IISOr·•n·lraln- Avenue.
Galhpoh5
OH neflCe Must have valid dnvmg positiOn open Aotallng 45631 Ann Audrey Farley s rs l1censes
Contact
schedule Wl!h on-call duties R N Chn1cal Manager
Debbie (304)295· 6985 or
requ~red
Must
posses
(304)488·7272 Atte r 6 00
strong superv1sory sktl ls be Part-t1me help wanted Must PM call (740)378·6 1 I 1
hardworking and depend- have office expenence
able Benel1t package al/sll- tnendly honest depend·
able EOE
able Must be avail able for
Send appllcaMnlresume to Saturctay and somet imes 1111
The Arbors at Gall1poi1S
1n thr u !he week Please
170 Prnecresl Drive
dehve1 res ume 1n perso n to
Gallipolis OH 45631
Pay Day Express 900
ATIN Linda Oenms
Secono Ave Gallipolis. Ot-i
Fa}l No-,.46-9088
No phone cal ls please

To Do

low prompts to apply
Applicants may apply only
once per announcement
number Duplicate apphca
liOns wil l not be accepted

D.H K C Iea n• ng Do you
need? House Clean1ng or
Elderly Care Call (740)985 3633 / { 7 4 0) 41 6-1823
References ava1lable Ask
for Karen!Da'le

10

mRS\If

DIRECTV
Free OVD Player
Free HBO &amp; Cmama)(
Free Protess1onal
!nstallat1on
' up to 4 Rooms
Ca ll 1·800-523·7556
fm deta1ls
Jewelry Buy Sel l Go ld
Diamonds
Gems tones
Repa~r
A.ppra1sals Ge m
Test1ng
Graduate
Gemologtst
Jewele r
(740)645·6365 or 17401446

3060
Rogers Home
Improvements
Spec1allzes 1n all mob1le
home parts &amp; accessortes
wtlh sales &amp; serv1ce
Home· (740)384-341 2
Cell (740)7 10 1861

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1 888 582 3345

IH\II"d\11
10

"""P'P'' I

HO\Ib

SERIItF.,

Membe r Accred1tmg

w~~n:n

'

PRons,tOMI.

230

CQI,Iflcll lo1 lndependenl Colleges
5&lt; hooiS 12746

:&amp;! 2005 by NEA ,•IrlC.

tmmedtate
Open1ngs
Re s1dentml
Treatmenr
Facll1ty lor boys now h~r~ng
1·800-873.()345 OX1 t200. Youth Worker pos1t10n Pa1d
Med1ca1 In surance
Call
Established Hea11ng-Cool1ng
between
9
00am·4
OOpm
Company m Gall1a Co lookmg
!or
Exper1eoced (740)379 9083
mstallers &amp; lechn1c1ans If Local electnca l cl1stnbutor IS
Interested send resume to now hiring a counter sales
CLA Box 548 c/o Gallipolis person Prevtous experience
Oatly Tnbune PO Box 469 , or ttas1c elsctncal knowl·
Gallrpolis OH 4563 t
edge 1s prefer red Please

1

HFl.P W~~TE.IJ

Wanted and needed m
Pomeroy Oh 10, Fullt1me live
m care Iaker for spec1alty
bed and breakfast, 11 you are
ol Engf1sh Welch
lr 1sh
decent and an accent ,
enJOY cookmg house keep·
mg and general canng tor
Oth ers th iS pDSitiOn IS made
for you We offer a sa lary
plus and upscale env1ron
ment lifesty le Non-smok1ng
non dnnktng culturecl per·
son(s) destred Please con
tac t us at Dr and Mrs M
OeUavalle 8227 Blueberry
Dnve New Port RLCh ey Fl
34653,
727·808·402 1
DADOKTA@att net

740·894-4360

a

Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llvestock ...................................................... 630
Loll and Found ................... .......... ,............. 060
Lola &amp; Acraaga ............................ ................ 350
Mlacollaneous .............................................. 170
Mllcollaneoua Marchandlse....................... S40
Mobllo Home Ropalr ....................................860
Moblto Homeolor Rent. .............. ................ 420
Mobile Homoalor Salo....................... ......~ .. 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheelero ................ ........ 740
Mualuttnatrumenta ................................... 570
Per10na11 ..................................................... 005
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Profo11lonat Sarvlcea ...........................:•.. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ...............................160
Real Eatete Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoole tnstructlon .....&lt;.............................. 150
Saed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ............................. 650
SHuotlona Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rant .............................................A60
Sporting Goods .......................................... 520
SUV'a tor Sale .............................................. 720
Truckl for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
vans For Sate......... ............................. ........ 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. oso
Wonted to Buy- Farm Supplte1 .................. 620
wanted To Do ..............!............................... 180
Wonted to Rant ............................................ 470
V.rd Sal• Galllpolls .................................... 072
Yard Soi•Pomeroy/Mtddle ............... .......... 074
Yard Sai•PI. Pteaaant ................................ 076

lwright@Jc.net

1-877-50-NECCO

Prootsets, Gold Rmg s, US
Currency -M T S Co 1n Shop
Black Lab &amp; Airedale m1x 151
Seconcl
Avenl.\e
Pupp1es 11 weeks old 675- Oalhpohs 7 40-446· 2842
4469 or 441 -7 193
Cash for JUnk cars &amp; trucksFree to good home three
Gallla
Me1g s
Alhens
mo old black Lab/German Vmton
&amp;
Washmgton
Shepherd m1x pups 60·65# , County (740)508 0487
!O'IIng sweet pups eXcellent
compan1on good w/other Wanted to blJy Fash1on
dog &amp; chtldren only dog magazm es from the 1960 s
lo'lers raply all shots vet Seventee11 Vogue etc
1740)446·4034
Qhecked (740)742·2377

10

www comics com

CHILD'S LIFE

112 Lab (740)379 2715

li

110

DIFFERENCE IN A
Foster Pa rents needed
To learn more ab~u t
lostenng and lree tram1ng
opportunlttes contacl
K1m Romeo at

VISA

POUCIES Oh io Valley Pubt1ahing reserves the nght to ed it , reject, or cane!!! any ad at any time Errors must btl repor1ed on tl'le ftrst day ol
Tnbuoe·Senttnei-Regt alar wll l be reaponalble for no more than the coat of the apace occ:up•ed by the error and only the ftrst m-.en•on We
any 1011 or npenae that reeulte from !he pubhcatlon or 6mt ....on of an adllerttMmenl Correct ion wdl be made 1n the ft rst ava•lable ed111on
Brll alwaya conftdenhlll •,Current rate card applies • A ll l'ftal eatMe Adverluwtments a re aubJecl to th e Flldlflll Fair Hcusmg Act ol 1968 •T h1s
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE standards. We w111 not knowmgly acc&amp;pt any advert1amg m v1olat1on ol th s Jaw

MAKE A

5 female puppies, 7 weeks ~bsolute Top Dollar US
old, ~ /2 reg Coonhound &amp; S1 lver and Gold Cams

.r

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays·P,•D••r

"""'NECCQ"'"'

WANll:l)
mBu~

_

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• Att ads must be prepaid•

Ht I .t• WAN'l'Eil

FouNn

L,___
r G.rv•E•ii\•w•~v _..~l r

Dally In-Column: 1 :00 p.m.
Monday • Friday ror Insertion
In Ne xt Day's Pap@r
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
v For Sundays Paper

•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
_;.;~
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

REWARD II
Lost- 2 cats 1 neutered
No ATV S or veh1cles at any orange male othe r one 1s
kmd permitted on Zuspan black female B1dwell area
prop erty near Mason 1 (740)388 8166
Cl1fton ,WV

The Daily Sentinel

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I

(Harvey 7), 6 offensive rebounds {Dresser
3, Harvey 3), 8 aaeleta (Dressel -4), 11

Oleals (Dressel jl), 4 blocka (Harvey 3), 29

~

Insurance ........... .......................................... 130

1·3 15, Kf'lstilna W•lllame 1 3·8 5 Jordan
Ne.gler 0 0·0 0, Ash~ Roble 2 0·0 4
TOTALS 19 12·22 50
ThrH-polnt go111: ISJ - 1 (Dressel), S
-None

HOW IQ WRITE AN

675-1333

Soph1e Schwab 0 0.0 0, Oan•elle Bla1r 2 0-

3Reg_lster

Sentinel

W _o..r.d Ads

Mondav thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

4x4's For Sale ..... ................................... ... 725
Announcement. ....... ....... ...... . ...... .. .... 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments tor Rent.. .......................... ,... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ....................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair............... . ..... ....... .............. 770
Autos tor Sate .................... .......................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
• Building Supplies ....................................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity..... .... .................210
. Business Tralmng ............. ......................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 o
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment tor Rent ............................... ...... 480
Excavating .................................................. 830
Farm Equipment........................................610
Farms tor Rent.. ........................... .......... .....430
._ Farms for Sale.................... ................. ..330
For Lease ............................. ......................:. 490
For Sale ........... ........................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ...... ................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
.,. Furnished Rooms ......... _. ........ ,_.. . .. ...450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Giveaway ................................................... 040
Happy Ads ................................. ................... 050
Hay &amp; Gratn.................................................. 640
Help Wanted .................... ............... ......... 11 o
Home lmprovements ............................. ...... 810
• Homes tor Sale ........................................... 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses tor Rent .................... ...................... 41 o
In Memoriam .................... ........................ 020

'oint 'lta•ant )!tgh1ter

0 4, Lindsey Dressel 2 0.0 5 TOTALS 16

R1ffle 0 1-2 1, Brooke Kiser 5 3-5 13
Kas1e Sellers 0 0 0 0, Linda Eddy 0 0-0 0,
Ashley Roush 4 4-4 12. Joanne P1ckens 7

Nextel

~allipolh~ JBailp ttribune
446-2342

IRONTON ST JOE (8-11) - Charle1gh
Haas 1 0-0 2, Sarah Webb o 0-0 o
Mallory Hasenauer 2 0-0 4, Chnstln8
Harvey 6 1·2 13. Raven Blake 3 0-0 6,

SOUTHERN (7-13) -· Whitney Wolfe ·

Otfftee-llorue-.s-

Spec1al numbers 389 6·ply " - - - - - - - - "
t1res Sl olen from Harley
Kmg R esidences on At 87 Sell Avon make 50% Call
Jan 3 t between 7 pm · 12 j740)446·3358
pm Any 1nto call (304)372
9741 (Deut 5 19)
Help " Wa nted Bartenders,
Lost Red Pom from Paul's Cooks &amp; Waitress ptck·up
EIIXOO and JeriChO Ad At 2 ApplicatiOns at the Moose
&amp; 62 (304)675-61 63
Lodge on Charleston Ad

-

34
50

1·2 34

\!l:rlhune·

Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call
Today•••
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
-.~~--~~--~--------o_r_F_a_
x_
To(740)446n
-3~0~
08~______o
__
rF_a_x_T_o~(7_4_0~)9~9~2~-2~1~57~·~-.

$500 Reward for return ol
Yellow Hon da 400 4-wheeler

Februarv 18, 2005

Southern 50, Ironton Sl. Joe 34
6
8

To Place

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Race tor

MrJpCounty OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPE·CTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

It's Time To

Williams fini shed with five
markers, Ashley Robi~ had
four and Whitney WolfeRiffle rounded out the scortng wtth a point in the VIctory.
Chnsttna Harvey guided
the Flyers with 13 points.
Raven Blake and Lindsey
Dressel contributed six and
fwe markers,' respectively, tn
the setback
T1p-off
of
the
Trimble/Southern contest IS
slated for 6:15 p.m.
St Joe
Southern

But now he'll be in charge
of reblllldtng the Browns.
who are commg off a disastrou s 4-12 season that
Included Butch Davis· re signation on Nov. 30. Crennel is
mheriting a team that has
gone 30-66 since 1ts expansion rebmh in 1999. Over
the same span, the Patriots
won consecutive Super
Bowls, three titles in four
years and assured the1r place
among the league's dynasties.
.,
Soon to be fitted with
another Super Bowl rin g,
Crennel is ready for a new
challenge.
"Now I have an opportum ty to take the next step, be 111
charge of a team, and see it I
can be as successful as I have
in the past," he satd .
Crennel's initial task in
Cleveland will be asse mbling a coaching staff. He
has
reportedly
chosen
Maurice Carthon to be hi s
offensive coordinator, prying
h1m away from Bill Parcells
and the Dallas Cowboys.
Carthon, a fullback for the
New York Giants when
Crennel was a defen sive
asststant for Parcell s, previously worked with Crennel
on Bill Belichtck's statt tn
New England.
Crennel's top choice to be
h1s defensive coordinator is
believed to be Patnots defensive backs coach Enc
Mangim , whose brother-In law is Cleveland lndtan s
general manage r Mark
Shapiro. The 34-year-old
Mangini is considered a ri smg star anLI couiLI be offered

a JOb by other teams.
Anothe1 possible candidate
to join Crennel is Patriots
linebackers coac h Pepper
Johnson,' who played for the
Browns fro m 1993-95.
Terry
Robi sk1e, who
served as Cleveland 's interIm coach for five games after
DaviS quit, may stay with the
Browns as wide re ce ivers
coach, the job he had for
three seasons before being
promoted to offensive coordinatoi last season. Robi skie
went 1-4 fillin g m for Davts.
Comin g
from
New
England's system, Crennel,
who bega n his pro career as
an assistant with the Giants
in 1981, has a deep apprectatton for what great chemistry
on a coachtng staff can produ ce
His loyalty to BeiJchtck
allowed the selfless Patnots
to mai ntain a level of consistency and exce,lence rarely
seen in today's game.
Crennel IS leaving New
England as is offen sive coordinator Charlie We1s, who ts
headed for Notre Dame
The tno of coaches spent
nme years together coachmg
1e1ther the Giants and Patnots
and as th e final seconds
ticked off m the wm over
Philadelphia m Jack sonville,
Fla , Belichick. Wei s and
Crennel huddled for the fin al
ttme.
They hugged and cried.
Only then dtd Crennel realIZe he wouldn 't be on the
same Sideline with his
fnends aga in.
"It did {hit me) when Bill,
Charlie and I got together,"
Crennel said ''That let you
know It was · over, the last
time we v. ere going to coach
toge ther It .telt different , a
little strange. But if you have
to go out . go out a winner ol
the Super Bowl. We· ve bee n
to ge ther a long time. To
know the ftnailty, tt hits you.
But footb all is a game of
Change."

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

HO\U::S
FORSAU:

Own your land? • Ha .. e
S500 00 oown "'
95°c
app roval on your dre am 1
800·349-6411
AedlJCcd 3bdr 2ba 28x 56
home
2 8~4e
oarn hld
1ngrounci-poo l hQ.t-\ub en 6
acres Millstone A a S95 ODD
,1304)576·2920
Sortng Valley
3 Bedro om 1· 1 2 baths
Large
Fam1ly
Aco rn
F1rep1ace
&amp;
Garage
Recently
renovated
lmmed1ate
Poss ess1on
(740)446 788t
Use your tax relu nd to buv
your DREAM HOME We
have government programs
and spec 1al fma nc1ng to hetp
make you r dreams come
true Call now L1m1ted pro ~
grams availab le 1·800 349
641 1
Yo~Jr drtSam home IS only a
phone ca ll away Appl~ now
land programs a available
w1th rates as low as 4 ggc,.,
1·800·349-64tt

(320 Monn.F How:'
mRSAtl-'

t

i

1 36 Grah am Streetlor Sale
by Owner 3 bedroom
house 1 car garage large
lot
Rodney Vtll3ge II
(740)245-9917 or (740)446·
3644

1995 S~ylln e t4X 70 vmyl
s1d1ng
sh1ngle
roof
$13 995 00 Call Karena
1.7_4_01_3_85_7_6_7_
1 _ _ __
2 bedroom mob1le home' for
West sale (740 )992-5858

m
Fu rnace and a1r conct1Mn 2br
HOlJSB
change outs heat pumps Cotumb1a call (304)773· 92 Breezewoo d 14x76- 3
and duct work Cert1hed 5284
bedroom
2 oath C A.
(740)245·9 108
$10 000 Valley V1ew Dr
3 bedroom 1 story all elec (740)44 1 ·0953
Georges Portabl e Sawm1ll
tnc remodeled house rn
don t haul your togs to the
Middleport 371 Broadway Ava ilable tor ,mmed1au.
m1ll ]lJSt cal l 304·675 1957
m
Countr ~
sJreet $26 000 00 1740)992 occupancy
Homes
10°c
oown
$175 41,
. Ha'rdwood lloor ceram1c !1le 3194
per month Ca ll Harold
pole barns remodeling
Opportunity- (740)385 -436 7
additiOns or a new neuse Busmess
Three
rental
propertJes lor "Fo_r.:csc:a.:c
le:_:t4c:X~?-O-w-,n-d-so_c_o
licensed &amp; mslJred Top
Notch Bwld1ng Contractors sale Duple)( eac h w1th 3
B/A UR D/R Kitche n- Bath bedroom set up m Country
304·675-3042 or 593·1115
Homes S6 9 9 ~ 00 Mov e 1n
&amp; Porch HOlJSB 3 8/R lJR today ' Call (740)992·2167 or
J1 m's Carpentry
K1tchen, Bath Cottage BI A {740 )385 _40 t 9
We do remodeling and mos't: KitChen
Balh
Rental
any unhnrshed 'lfQrk also Income for all th ree Approx lmmedtate posses510nl Ollly
small
tree
removal
$900 per month Price lor all $213 68 perm o New 3 bed
(740)446-2506, (740)367three S75 000
Located room 2 bath mob1le home
0437
104·106 7th Street Po1nt Only m1nute s tram Alhens
:_::::.:__ _ _ _ __
1304!675-24 951·.::·6.:.00:.·.:.83:.:7~·3::2:::38:__ __
W1U do oH1ce clean 1ng m Pleasanl
Pomeroy
M1ddleport
&amp; alter' 6 00
lnve nlor y Clea rance 24X60
Mason areas Have refer
3 bedroom 2 bath Delive ry
ences Phone after 5 00 or
and se t up mcluded Cal l
leave message (740)992·
M1ke J740J 385·9948

'-'--==-=--=----

6564

All applicants are requi red to
take a multipl e chotce exam·
1na110n that w1ll be g1ven 1n
Apnl Applicants applyi ng
online wtll be sent a sched·
lJllng package that 1nclucles
the exam dates t1me and
loca!10n and matenals need·
ed Ia prep8re fo r the e11am1·
natton Complet iOn of the
exam 1nabon and other forms
will take appro111mately 3 112
hours to complete All app h·
cants on current reg1sters
must take Test 473 to mam
ta1n potenllal employment

10

"---:.:.;~~:.:.:­
, "EARN S0"1" TO OVER
1ooao EVERY 28 DAYS II
For comp lete tnfo-send
name,address fa&gt;: or phone
to Dale Ptrlot 460 Hodges
Ave San Jose, CA 95126

r-a;,I!ITil!l'"-;;&lt;1

reqwrements The general
m1nlmum age reqUirement
tor pos 1tlons 1n the U S
Poslal Service Is 18 years at
the t1me of appOintment or
16 years w tth a h1gh school
drploma Apphcanl s must be
a U S c1t1zen or have permanent res tdent alren status '
An Equal Opportunity
Employer

UN(TE!l STATES
POSTAL SERVICE
r.:S~h-op-=c.,-la_s...,s'•'"'fl'ed--:-s-.

FIND AJOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

"'

.,

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do busmess With pea

cons1deral1on
Qualified applicants mlJst
successfully pass a pre·
employment drug screentng
to
meet
US
Postal
Serv1ce's
employment

Bll~lNl-~
OPPOKI U~IT\

le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a1l unlit you have 1n"esh
ated the offerln

j

MONE\'

~::;;:ro;Lo:::AN:::~
••NOTI£ IE••
rrow Smart Contact tn
hiO DIVIS IOn Ol F1nanc1a
nst1tutlon s
Of11ce
o
onsumer
Alla ~r
EFORE you relmanc
ur home or obta1n a loan
EWARE of reques1s fa
ny large actvance pay
ents ot tees or 1nsurance
the
Ofttce
a
all
nsumer Affa1rS toll tre
t 1 -866·278-QQ03 to lear
I the mortgage broker a
end~r I&amp; proper!~ licensed
Th1s 15 a publiC serv1c
nnouncement from th
t)to Valley Publ leh ln

All real estate ltdvert1alng
rn th1s newspaper Js

subJect to the Federal
Fair Housrng Act of 1968
wh1ch makes it 1llegal to
11dvertl.e any
preference, limitation or
d lscrlmlnatlorl baaed on
race , color, religion , sex
fam ilial status or nallonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference. limitation or
diSCriminat ion "
This newspaper will not
knowln~al~

accept

adver11sementa tor real
astatl whlch Ia In
violation of tnt lew. Our
reedtrl art hettby
lnfo r!Md that all
dwell l nt~a adwrtiaed In
thll ntWIIPI~ ate
all'alt.t»le on an equal
opportun ity bl•••

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old pr1ces
2005 mod els arriVIng No -,;
Co le s
Mobile
Homes
t 5266 LJ S 50 East Athens
Ohio 45 701 (740!592·1 972
-wne re You
Ge t 'four
Money s Worth
SSI SoCial Secunty '
St 300 N el mcome We can
l1nan ce you a noma CaJI

(304 1736·3400

Rl l"l'~~&lt;...~'
.\~ll B liiJ)I, G.'"i

Elega nt Cafe for s'a le
BarbourSVIlle WV call 593
2869 leave message 1t 1nte r·
ested

r.

12 40 ac res bUIIdmQ s1te
960 IT road frontaQe some
wooded ru ral water on stte
gas &amp; etectnc available
For Sale "Greal Investment' home s1te cl ea red sur·
3 nomes 7 acres located veyed ro ad to site SJO 000
on G raha m School Ad t ~rm (7401992-2800
$t65000 Phone 7'40-446
3t84 or 740·441 -0219 or Approx 64 ac:res ol wooded
land wesl stele St At 160
74(}.441-9974
between Kerr &amp; Eve rQreen
House tor sale by Owner $95,000
740·245·54, 8
4br 2ba, Lg Eat·l n Kitchen , 740-446-7611 after 5pm
Bonus rooms 0 /2 Car
1&lt;1 ' 1 \ 1 '
Garage WOOd Floo rs &amp; Ti le
located on approx 1-acre,
lots of E)(tras (304 \675 2523
Move-m co ndition
room 1 tlath home
deck
close to
Reaso nab ly

(740)949·3090

3 bedgacage
school 2 or 3 bedroom hOuse 1"1
pnc eel Pomeroy
rent no pets
1740)992·5858

Over 2000 sq It hOme $53,999 00 delivered Offer
ends 02/28105 Only 2 ava il
able No trades-no dealers
t ·800·349-&amp;411

ror

3
bedroom house
1n
h.Mdleport all elect riC No
pets $450 00 per month and
$450 00 Geposlt 17401992
3194

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

L,e.O_.FORii;Hjj;OlSESIORENrliiil,;.,-'1 r

APAinMI-Nrs

FORRENr

1r

bedroom h'ouse in 2 bedroom trl·level apt.
Middleport. $400 a month, Spring Valley area. Deposit
$200 deposit, (740)949- required. Phone (740)446·
2025
2957

3

3 bedroom house near Rio 2BR apt. State Route 160.
Grande, $550/month. Call $400/month, stove/retrigera·
·• (740)441-0194 or (740)441· tor included. washer/dryer
., 1184 .
hoo~up .
(740)441-0194 or
(740)441·1184.'
· 87 SpruCe St. sma·u 2-3 bed. room home, $375 month fet- 2BR upstairS apt. 238 First

· erences

required.

-(740)446-2158.

APAKrMENrs
FOR

RENr

pets. $385/monlh +utilities+
deposit.
(740) 446·4~26 .
House unfurnished 2 br,
gas heat, Middleport, 740bath,
3
room
and
742-2424 or
(740)992downstove/ref riga ra tor,
3439.
stairs, all utilities paid, 46
$450.
Olive
Str eet
MOJIILE HOME'i
(7~0)446·3945 .

821 1!2 Second Ave. 2 bed·
2 bedroom, 1 bath. W/0 room , upstairs apt. $315

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA, 1
1/2 Bath_... Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Patio. Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required , Days:
740-446-3481; E\lenings:
740-367-0502.

FO~~

For rent: 2 and 3 bedroom Housing Opporturiity.
mobile homes starting at
$260.00 per month . Call CONVENIENTLY LOCAT •
ED &amp; AFFORDA~LEI
(740)992-2167.
ToWnhouse
apartments.
For rent: 2 BD mobile home, and/or small houses FOR
$400/monlh $350/deposil, RENT. Call (740)441-1111
: water &amp; trash included. fo,r application &amp; information.
(7401388·9905 or (740)388·
For Lease: One bedroom.
0159.
nice 2nd floor apt. Corner'
Mobile home , Rio Grande Pine and Seco nd . Large
araa, 2 bedroom, 2 bath· kitchen with dining area.
$300/deposit.
• room.
New range, refrig erator.
• · $400/month. No pets. Phone Water included . References
• (740)367-7025
required . $300/mo. Security
Nice 2br. Mobile-Home for deposit. No pets .. Ca lf
Rent , Apple Grove ,Ar9 a. (740)446-4425 or (740) 446Garbage/Wale( paid, No- 3936
Pals,
From
$260
to
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
$300/month(304)576-2999
room apartments at Village

:r

Manor
ami
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295·S444.' Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing

1 and 2 bedroom apit rt· Opport~nities .
ments, furnished and unfurnished, security deposit New 1 bedroom Bpt. Call
required, no pets, ,740-992· (7401446·3736.
2218
One Bedroom furnished
Pt.
Pleasant,
1 bedroom apartment for Cottage,
rent in Pomeroy, no pets, Adults only, Nb Pets, Phon~
(3041675·1162
(740)992·5858
1 bedroom apt. in Spring
Valley, $290 month plus
deposit, WI D hookups.
(740)388-0017 or (740)339-

H&lt;U&gt;TJIOW

317/1924-'1131/1995
and our Father
Clarence Bradford

~~ ·I'

.,

9/02/1920 ·_ 21sn004

North

Wondertui opportunities are available in Tom Peden Country.
We are e&lt;panding our staft and need more sales people.
No Experience is required, only awillingness to learn, work
as ·a team and have a strong initia!lve.

''The eternal God is
your dwelling place

.

Furn::r~

• Excellent PaY and Bonus Plan • Greal Beneflls
• Work At The If Dealership

MONTY

Call To Sclledule An lnlervlew:

Home o Auto o Life o Retirement
o IRA o 401 K Rollovers o Major Med o
Medicare Sup. o Cancer o Accident

Tom Peden Country
1-800·822·0417 ~ 372·2844 .
475 South Church Slreel• Ripley, WV 25271

YOUNG'S

r

1

_,

r

Hay for sale: Square and
round
bales.
Delano 200 1 Dotlge Caravan Sport.
Jackson Fcirm, 304·675· 70,000 miles, excellent con· :
dltion, sliding "doors-both
1743.
sides. auto. V6, NC. power
11(1 \'I 'OIU \110\
everything, time /tempera:;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
$11 000
10
A•u ~
~ - twe
gauge.
,
.
JUQ
(
)
43
740 256 65
•
mR SALE
.

,2000 Ford Winstar _LX , 81 K,
2/sliding doors, sea ts 7. all
power, rear ai r, tinted win dows.
asking
$6,900,
(7401669·5653

•r

I

Ne~ Shipment

20-tubs in-stock
Cedar Knoll Mall,
Keptucky Trading Post,
Ashland .
1sosi922-718s
. Tow-dolly, new tires , 6 ply
and new straps, $42ti OBO
(740)379-2706.

1740

l

MaroRC\'CJ£'&gt;'

'

o

24'
Coachman
2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5 1997
speed, 29,000 miles, air, Catalina Lite Trailer Frt
one owne r.. Nice (740) 441 · Queen Bed, Awning, 2 -301b.
0157 or (740)645~514 t .
Propane .
Excellent
Condition $7,495
080
2003 Dodge Naon STX· (304)675-2039
4door, 4cyl., automatic, - - ' - - - - - - - - - - , - power eve rything , 11 ,000 1998 30' fifth wheel travel
mi le s, $6,500. (740)441· trailer, double slide, excel0337 or (740)645-6153.
lent condition, $13,900
phone; (740)898-9319
2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse,
· Excellent Condition $14,500 Class C Dutchman Motor
(304)675·6986
Home 2000 Model. ' New
!Ires,
all
accessories,
93 Ford Escort LX. Auto, PS, sleeps-e. (304.)675-7388 to
PB, AJC, 88,000 miles, inquire
$1.800 080. (740)446 " I R\ I&lt; I "
6304.

I

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. OH

I'E'1s
FOR SALE

93 Honda Accord LX, auto, rlO
HoME
PW, 'Pl, Great Car. Only
IMPROVEMENTS
51 ,000 miles (304)675·7565 .._. .iiiiiiiiloiiioiiiiillliii_.l

BASE1,1ENT
1 Pit Bull for sale. Asking 93 maroon Caravah, 4 cyt..
WATERPROOFING
$150. Call (740)388-8309 or 3rd row seat, runs good.
(740)388·8526.
$900 080. (740)256- 1652. Unconditional life time guaran tee . Local references furAKC Reg . Lab pups. 96 Grand Pri J!., clea n.
nished. Established 1975
Excellent hunting stock. 95 Ford F-150, clean ·
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446American and Canadian (304)675-7315 (8•5)
0870, Rogers Basement
Champion in parents pedl' (304)674-0098 after 6 pm.
Waterproofing.
gree. (7401388 "9269 ·
98 Cadillac Cat era. Fully
Llewellyn Setter puppies. equipped , lea ther interi6r,
FDSB Registered. Excellent low miles, mint condition,
blood lines. DNA certified. $7,900. Call (740)704·3751 .
Intelligent, loyal, mak9 outstanding hunters &amp; loving Toyota Rav-4. '97 all wheel
pets. Ready Valentine's Day. drive. Loaded, 1 owner.
(740)379-26 15 .
$5,700. Ca ll (606)923·3259
or (304 )429·8032, leave
The · perfect
gift
tor message.
Valentine's Day! Yellow Lab. ~~,figF;:,;;~:-"----,
5 fe males, 3 me tes. $12.5.
TRUCKS
Call (7401446·458~.
FOR SALE

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

UKG reg . Rat Terrier' pup, 990 Chevy, ext~nded cab,
pies. Shots and wormed ,
B·toot bed. 32,000 actual
$100 each.(740)256·6824 .
miles, excellent mechanical
shape
305 ~utomatic .
$3,400.00 080. (7401696·
1227

I'Jebruary 251 2005

!it

Ad Deadline 2-17-05
(a(f:
' *allipolts iailp lribune •446-2342
i)oint J!ralanllt~tillrr • 675-1333
The Daily Sentinel• 992-2156

I
\'

Conn Alto S~· hardly used·
new condition , $1 ,095.
Yamaha Tenor Sax- excel·
lent condition, $695.
Artley C,larinet- excellent
condition, $250.
Conn Trombone- excellent
condition, $295. (740)4461304
I \ In I .., , 1'1 ' 1 II ..,
,\ I I ' I .., It H h

IL.,i,t_~
_
J

_.l

~

Pyginy goals. $50 oach or
all 4 lor $175. (740)256·

7

•

9 6 4

K

67

·I ~=.o~~ ;~::r ;:11ion.

1990 Ford F~so . 4x4, auto,
PW, POL, cruise , 92,!)00
actual
miles.
$3,000.
(740)446-4053.

.,

r

4x4

FoaSALE

1987FordF·1504x4wlth3~

c

"·D

0

0

0

0

•

0

.,

~ UNI&gt;~JfSTANI&gt; Tt4AT

Sidi ng • N~:w Gi.iragl;s
• Rcphtcemcnt
Windows • Roofing.
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

0

,

0

A~~ ~~ACTLY
ALII'~.

0

Sunset Home
Construction
'

0

2-S

"f"!-IAVE~

Brian Reeves
New Home Construclion , Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks. Garages, Pole·.
Buildings, Roofs. Siding, Window s &amp; All
Other Res idemial Needs
Phoue: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

• BARNEY
&gt;r.:~~~r-~~.S~P~A~'&lt;~IN~'~M~E--1:r-~

ARE COMIN'
MILES AROUN'

i

i
!~ I ('.~,.:e.J.:r;·(l(.~

TO, WATCH

SNUFF'f'S
WINNIN'

STREAK,""'-'--·

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON
··New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

:Q.....l,.....J

1:::=.;.~:....: Q._....L...C-..J.:..::~

THE BORN LOSER
P")\OP fi&lt;.E:TI\1'16

·t\501.!1 ou~ eut::G&lt;.T,
~UIUS ..

p-1-JE.'LL W~Y N;OUI
iOMQey.cW
TOfi\ORROW 1

';EN\ . BUHf\1\T)
WI-\~\ '\0\l :i/\11::&gt;
&amp; '\E.'S1'EIZ.DI\'t'!

I~-------- .---~

•~

'I

fOCUSf

MY FOCUS I"&gt; FINE .
IT'S THOSE CLOSE -UPS
r Ho'\VE: PFI.OBLEMS
WITH .

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.6S I Darwin . OH
740-992· 70 13 or 740-992-5553
Rt·,.tockir'9 I.ale Mo~lef Sa I• age
and .4rter · ,\il.rket l'a rls

PEANUTS

YES, MA'AM ..'' A TALE

See Bren1 or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

CHUCK? CHAZ?
""'"u'., ? WHATEVER. ..

TWO CITIES r'

Now Available At

BAUM LlJ!\1BER
Scorpion Tractors
SUNSHINE CLUB

Mid -Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor

SOl SAID... SH€.S OOT €0/JNA
&amp;UE.VE A C:UMB STOR--t'
UK£. THAI

Engines

BAUM LUMBER

IWO Sf£ Dl Dl\lT.. SO Sl-It.
JUST UPS A~D WALKS
CUT 0\H-IIM-.. f.\J\1.

I 1:1\U.J 11-lf:RE.'~ A PHONE 00
+11M. EUr i-\.: STILL LJ::OI;:~ UKE' At-J
IDIOT.TALKING 'D HIMSElF .

/

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

Shop the
Ctassifleds!

GARFIELD
OI71E 15 ON ··n11:0 -rRAIL.
OF 50ME:-rHtNG&gt;

A•slstllnce, the Meigs
l:toualng Authority will
be adopting a raduc·

' tlon In the current

bo&lt;ly lift 14x35x15 Monsler houalng

paymen1

Mudder Hres , motor out covered
in garage with lots of
~~r, $3soq, (740)992·
new parts lor motor,
(740)247·2581
For Sale: 14 foot siock trail·
er, In good condition. 1997 Dodge Ram 1500
Several registered tullblood truck. 4x4 , (luad cab. Call
yearling Boer Buekl (goata), (740)446.()924.
reglt1ored 2 yaer old Suffolk
11198 Dodge Dakota Sport
ram (s heep ). Call (740)256· extended cab 4~~:4 , V6 , auto·
1330 anytime.
malic, 63,000 miles. $7,000.

standard to 9Cr'4 o1 the ·
Oct. 19 2004 Fair
Market rents, 88 pub-

Yearuno Angus Bulls, Moat1V (740)441-o337 or (740)645153
8_
A.I. excellent bloodlines, ' _
_·_ _ _ _ _ __

Melga
Houalng
Authority office at 117

llshad by HUD.
A 1 0 day period of
public comment from
Feb. 10, 2005 to Feb.
20, 2005, will allow the
public an opporlunHy
to
provlda
written

comments

at

the

Hill ·s Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

ADVERTI E
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $50 per month

~M OA'"'5 Z·B

7 4D-949· 2217

iu aa'X1r ~

GRIZZWELLS

- tt1Ch'ID' .

()11,/M't\ ... !'\IE

IH

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00

2· •

Pas s

4•

All pass

Philosopber and poet George Santayana
wrote, "Sanity is a madness put to good
uses; waKing life is a -dream controlled."
Discuss!
·At the bridge table , the delenders usually
work together to try to defeat th'e contract.
But if one defender can see what to do.
he 'takes control. Or, if he isn' t on lead , he
s1gnals so that partner will understand
what is required.
However, now and then. one delender will
see the winning defense, but his partner,
dreaming that he knows better. maddeningly grabs the steering wheel - as 1n
this deal.
Look on ly al the North and East hands.
South is in tour spades. Your part(ler,
West, leads the hear! queen. How wou ld
you plan the defense?
South Opened with a modern weak two·
bid: Six cardS in the su1t, but little regard
for its quality. West allowed his partner's
ini!ial pass and the unfavorable \/U inerabil ity to keep h1m quiet. North's jump to
game was two-edged: maybe it would
make, or it might keep the opponents out.
U permitted to win th&amp; first trick , West
would have known exactly what to do, He
would have. cashed the club ace, then
played a low heart to his partner. The
automat ic club return would have been
ruffed to defeat the contract.
· However, East, Brazilian superstar
Gabriel Chaga s, is a take-charge type of
guy. He overtook with 'his heart king,
cashed the heart ace, and shifted to a low.
club. Declarer, Fredrik Nystrom from
Sweden, made no mistake, going low
from hand to maK'e his contract. •.
After the deal, I w~rider if East' blamed
West , saying that he should have led the
club ace.
·
'

Anawer to Previous Puzzle

1 - out
(relax)

4 Web site
· clutter

52 Peeve

7 Naughty kid 53 Elevator
t I Summer
guy
cooler
54 Ramble
12 Typawrller
around
type
55· Daisy 14 Emanellon
Yokum
t 5 Wire gauge 56 Barber's
1 6 Twinge
call
17 On the
57 .Furniture

horizon

buy

18 Bother
58 .Cease
20 No-waist
dresses
DOWN
22 Beamoflight ·
23 Score big
1 Boot upper
24 Heron or
2 Pop' s ·
· egret
- Adams
27 Bordered on 3 Hair-styling
30 Santa goops
(hot winds)
4 Become

31 Foal parent
32 Witticism
34 After taxes
35 . Expensive.

visible
5 Journal
6 Chem. or
geology

coats

13 Grabs the
phone
19 Very ,
to Vvetle
21 Bring on
board
24 Colorless
25 Once again
26 Numbers
to c runch
. 27 Be different

28 Grounded
birds

7 Cote

29 .P uts on

murmur

god
43 Diet

44 PC oopeonoraliol11iroog&lt;&gt;

system
46 Small coin
47 Com's
country
48 Barely

31 Dimmer

managed

shot
8 Elizabethan 33 Round
37 Thin, as soup
collar
stopper
39 Mural base
9 Trapped like 35 Spore
40 Tex. neighbor
,
producer
41 Olsen
10 Resurfaces 36 Owner 's

o1 vaudeville

38 Gentlest
39 Stared
balefully
41 Relish lray
item
42 NefertHi's

51 Crowd

p~p~r

a road

· GELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetll'ity Ci:tler cryp;ograms are, creat&amp;d from QUOWlllonli b~ hii'T'(JU!i peo.,;e put and p!'esent
E;tr;l1:kl"er mthe CIPher slall(ls !a• ar.oltw

Today's flue: K equals R

." EOHVZ

YIOIHBLUB

ZLU

GJ

HB

TPI

LU

EGG X

POZLGK

AORUIPV

SKHTU. "

" URUKF
ZLU

ZL .U

EDHVZF
XHXI ' Z

PVV

GJ

X G.

RGVZPHKU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I love being booed ... I'd rather gel booed . It giVeS
me a lot more incentive." - Michigan running back Michael Har1
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 2-8

':YG\\4t}M.- ~r,zr.~·

WOlO
UMI

- - - - - - - Edit~d ·~ CLAY R. I'O~LAN

IMPORTS
Athens

Kubo~a

F.ast
Pass

Puzzle

45 Edinburgh
boy
49· Prong
SO Qatar ruler

~~~~:~:~'

·RoctMt ··~~,~:
.l:lupp·

with 30hp &amp; 40hp

North

~~~~~·~~~~~

See ., .

"Taki11g The Sii11g Out Of
Hard Work!"

Stop &amp; Compare

t&gt;.'ll\111"&gt;1

~

work
•1\lforda ble Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• leave a messa e

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

fi.JI'\..... -

•

SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABLE TO!lfT RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992·3251 OR 591-8757

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
. CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

Is

M•lga Ca. Rnldlinta!!l

BUCKEYE Sanitation

TO POST FLYERS!!

l

El !! .

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

liNDA'S PAINnNG

NO TwO Of US

o

Ta~e

Let me do it for youl

g~cAus~ of ou~
SNOWfLAI'~ DNA.

·~ts" /
d

New Humes .• Vinyl

West

Out of the hands
of partner

•

W\' 036725

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 't'ears Local Ex erlence

1998 Che\1. Sil\leredo 112
Ton Extended Cab. 4x4, ·
4.3L, V·6, Au10, PS, PB, PL, ' - - - - - - - - - - '
PW, Alum . R,lms, Fiber~;~lass - - - - - - , - - - , topper, Pew1ar co lor 98,000
Public Notice
mlleo'Phone (304) 675-2o39 -~-----­
$9,995 080
PUBLIC NOTICE
91 Chevy S10, VB, 5 speed,
Due to recent cuta
$1,200. (740)256-6507.
In HUO funding of
Section
8
Rental

Shown Flunning Colo r pro·

priced reasonably. Slate Flu;,
Farm, Jackson. (740)286·
5395.
www.slaterunfarm.com

992-6215

South

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Bucket Truck

V.C. YOUNG Ill

140-992-1671

.r~~l

Cl

olo Q76543

Crossword

42 Graduates ·

36 Basketball

• Stump Grinding

• E!ectrlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

BISSEll
I BUILDERS
InC.

MOfOR

~~~

I

... A

8

Opening lead: " Q

Top • Removal • Trim

Remodeling

HaY for Sale: Good quality
Timothy &amp; Alfalfa. S3·$4 a
bale. Taylor Farm (740)6432285.

MrscEuANF.ous

Tree Service

• New Garages

::====.:.:...__

' '

¥ AK4

South
4Q 97652
• 9 7 2

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Roo m Additions &amp;

FOR SALE

couches, dinettes, recliners,
grave monuments. much
more. ·
(740)446-4782.
Gallipo lis, O H, H~s. 11·3 (M·
S)

. _...
.,.,_
...........
_ __.J.

\

•

¥ QJIOB6
. Q 87532

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

Bula\lille Pike. Appliances, .
HAY &amp;
1
bunkbeds, twin, full, queen.
GRAIN
~ing mattresses, · dressers. ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..,

r

'YOlfti!P~'I~

East

• K

•

$5001 Honda'S, Che\ly's,
4 WHEEI...FRS
Appliance
~CHANDISE .·
Jeep's,
Ect. · Police .
-• Impo unds! Cars from $500 04 Suzuki Volusie BOO,
Warehouse
for listings 800-39 1-5227 black,
1,000+
miles.
1 electric scooter: 1 electric
EXT 390 1
(740)256·6938 leave ·meswheel chair, 2 electric Iitts tor
in Henderson, WV.
Pre- ve hicles. Call . (740)446· 1981 Olds 98. 4dr, Runs· sage.
own'ed appl!canes starting at
2
$ 75 &amp; up all under warranty, _00_2_._______
Good, Condition fai r $1,000 1979 Honda 750 1Oth
we do se rvice work on all Electric Scooter
Rarely _c.:.a_ll.:.l3.:.0_4.:.16_7_5·_1_264_-,- Anniversary Limited Edition.
ignition
work .
Make anr:t Models (304)675- used, Excellent Condition 1985 Mazda low Aider. Needs
Evening
(740)256·6870.
7999
$900 (304)675-6114
1999 Ford Expedition, S&gt;"ri·
Lew mileage, $2,500.
---,-,----,----,----,----:ET
ous calls only (304)675 lnside sa le: Mise items. such
J
or
593·0665
664
1998
Yamaha
Warrier.
as -clothing, sorne furniture,
AERATION MOTORS
E,.;cellent condition. $2,600.
pictures, lamps, all reason· Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
-wheeler tires- \larious
1991 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Stock. Call ·Ron Evans. · 1- Supreme, 4 door, sunroof, 4
able priced.
sizes
and
conditions
Skaggs Applianoos
800·537·9528.
good condition, $1,200
(740)4
46·0048.
76 Vine Street
OBO. (740)245-9652.
(7401446·7398
1999 Honda ES 4'·wheeler
King size waterbed frame,
1992 Chrys. Imperia l. V6,
Excellent co(lditlon. $4.000
liner
and
heater$1
00.
4
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
niCE! cer. $1.BOO
.
080. (740)256·6655.
dresSer·
~50. 1'996
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. drawer
Dodge
Grand
(740)446-7444 1·877·830- (740)441 ·0500.
Caravan, V6, dual 'air&amp; h'eat, 2003 Suzuki Vinson 500. 4
9'162. Free Est imate~, Easy NEW AND USED STEEL AM-FM -CO, dual sliding wheel dri\le, alum. wheels,
financing, 90 days same as Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar doors. $3,250. (740) 256· lTD tire s, low miles. Call
cash . VisaJ Master Card. For
(740)446·6688 or (740)339Concrete,
Angle. 11 89,
Drive- a-·llhle save atot.
4221.
C h~nnel , Flat Bar, Steel
1998 Chrysler Concord
Th ompsons Applia nce ' &amp; Grating
For
Drains, 111 ,000 miles. clean car, 2005 Kawasaki V-Twin 750
Repair-675-7388. for sale, Drivewa~s &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L $3500 OBO. (740)256·6169 Vulcan
Cycle,
never
re-conditioned automatic Scrap Metals qpen Monday,
dropped, garaged, 50mpg.
washers &amp; dry~rs, refrigera- . T~e sday. Wednesday &amp; 1998
Dodge
Strauss. $4.400 (304)675·2942
tors . gas .and electric Fr1day, Sam-4:30pm. Closed 100,000 miles, runs great,
CAMPERS &amp;
ranges, ai r conditioners, and :rn~rsday,
Saturday
&amp; power everyt hing , $2 ,400
080. (740)256-9031 or
HOMf:';
wringer washers. Will do Sunday (740)446-7300
(740)256·1233.
.... . . . . . . . . . . ......
repairs en major brands in
SPA FAOURY Ounrn

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for 2BR, 3BA &amp; 4BA.,
Applica tions
are
taken
9362.
Monday lhru Friday, from
9:00 AM.·4 P.M. Office is
2 bedroom apartment for
Located at 1151 Evergreen
rent in Syracuse. $200.00
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
deposit,
$330.00/month
Phone No is (304)675-5806. shop or at your home.
rent includes water, sewage
E.H.O
and trash. Must ha\le suffi·
cient income to qualify. Twin Rivers Tower Is accept·
(740)378-6111
ing apPlications for waiting
Pilot Program· Renters. list for Hud-subsized . 1- br,
needed . Call (304)736· apartment, call 675·6679
3409.
EHO

West

... K J 8

130 ' - - - - - - - - -- -30----V·AN-S_.,_

owner.

02-0k-os

AJI043

• 5 3
• A J 10
... 10 9 2

j,O

Used

NEA
ACROSS

Buy or
sell. Riverine
Antiques, 11 24 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992-2526. Russ Moore,

Gooos

''
BRIDGE

Ruth Bradford

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

•

Phillip
Alder

MAPLES,
100
Drive
East,
and underneath are
Pomeroy, 740-992-7022,
lhe everlasting
Subsidized
Residential
arms"
Deu1.33:27
Housing for 50 vears of aga
'
Y
ou
will
live forand ~ older.
PRIORITY
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS · ever in our hearts.
WITH INCOM E AT OR
We love and mis&lt;&gt; Vou.
BELOW $10,650. Maximum
Terry &amp; Leo~~
Income eHecti'w'e 01-28-2004
Brenda
&amp; Kel, and
for t person $H,700.00.
grandchildrenMust meet HUOJ202/8 crile·
ria for household composi ·
Monica. Malt,
tion .
Managed
by
ennifer and Julie
Sil\lerheels, Incorporated , A
Realty.. Coinpany Equal
Housing Opportunity.
-,
H(XJSEH()LD

t

www.mydailysentinel.com

In Memory of our
Mother

THE

' ,hookup. $350 rent, deposit/ month reference required.
references
re_quired . Call (740)446·2158.
Mercel'\lille area. (740)256Beautiful 2-story townhouse.
1008.
overlooking Gallipolis City
2 bedroom. 2 bath ·on SR park. Kitchen-fam ily, D.R.,
554~ $400 month, no pets. L.A. 3 B.A.. study, 2 baths,
Bidwell School District laundry area . References
(7401367-0255.
required . secunty deposit,
no pets. $900 per mo. For Lease: Office or retail
2 bedroom, all electric. $335
(740)446·2325 or (740)446- spaces in \l&amp;ry good condi·
month, reference &amp; Cteposl t.
4425.
lion. Downtown Gallipolis.
No pets. Aprox. 10 south of
Approx . 1600 sq. ft . each. 1.
Gallipolis. (7401256·6507 .
BEAUT1FUL
APART·
or 2 baths. Lease price
AT
BUDGET
2BA mobile home 10 BidwelL MENTS
negotiable. to encour8ge
Waterltrashlsewer
paid . PRICES AT JACKSON new
business.
Ca ll
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
$435/rent + d~j.posit. Will
(740)446·4425 or (740)446·
(Pro-rate)
No
pets . Drive from $344 to $442. 3936
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
(7401388·93?5.
\IIIH 11\\1&gt;1'1
740-446-24568.
Equal

•

Tuesday, February 8, 2005
ALLEY OOP

In Memory

Call Ave . Stove/r-efrigerator, no
Memorial

FOR RENT

Tuesday, Febfuary 8, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

(i6f" ~l!TI~FLI£5

'w ednesday, Feb. 9, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol
Someone who has considerable clout in
your chosen field of endeavor may take a
special Interest in you in th e year ahead.
Cultivate 1'1 is or her attenti on to you
because the results ol this alliance will
prove very beneficial.
AQUA RIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Although you probably have your normal
sources lor making money, today you will
be very clever at envisioning new' ways to
add to your resources. Implement what
you conceive.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Try to
leave your day open for tak1ng advantage
of spontaneous activities that pop up,
beca1.1se t!ley'll bB the ones th at will hold
the greatest promise lor you . Fly by the
seat of your pants
ARIES (March 21-Aprfl 19) - Although
une~pected circumstances may develop
in a way that would enable you liD tie
something elusive down to your satisfaction , you 'll be the one who starts the ball
rolling.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Bumping
into friends who you haven't seen in a
long time may be the order ot the day
today, inctudmg someone who 'means a
great deal to you . II should turn out to be
a tun day.
'
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Be watchful today tor two un1que career opportunities . One will pertain to a curren t goat
you've been working on . and the other
could have to do with an ascendancy of
statuS
CANCER (June 2 1-Juty 22)- Vo1o1 ha\le
the happy !acuity today for saying all the
rigtll thmgs at !hi;! right t1me to companions. which will result in uplifting their
spints m ways that will spur the'm onto
successful fulfillments.
LE O. (July 23-Aug. 22) - Something of
significance to you. but also to several
others. may undergo a fa\lorable change
today. What results will be of financ ial
importance to everyone in\lolved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Get involved
in activities. today that could provide you
with the opportunity to meet new people.
Someone ybu get to know could end up
being one of your more valuable ass ociates.
LtBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Matters that
could haw an immediate but pertinent·
etfect on your work should be take n care
of ahead of all otl'ler jobs today. It can put
you on a roH in ways thal'll make much
from nothing.
SCORPIO (Oct
24-Nov. 22)
Enterprises Jhat may be a bit dar~ng , but
innovative. are the ones that are likaty to
work out the most successfully for you
ioday_Be 1mag1native, creative and bold.
SAGIITAAIUS (Nov, 23 -0ec. 21) - It
you are anx1ous to get the consent ott he
entire familv regarding a change you
would lil&lt;e to make. do so today. It's a day
when they're likely to see things your
way.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. t9) - What
makes you such a successful prod'~cer
today ts that you'll be a fast thinke r with
profound judgment about how to imple·
ment that which you conceive. Sl'low your
stufl.

lettars ol · the
0 horrongo
four scrombl!d words brIo,.... to form four

w~rd~

LFEK!rl

I I I,

I Ry s u 0
'I I

f.~

I

1.

r~---R-f_Y_E_I
~
0
.

I.·' I. ·I_ I".

I I~
.

. ..~!.

U
l RIGEl aT I..
.

.

_

Overheard in line at Post
Office. "Mailing a letter seems
ld get more expensive every
year. Soori il w1ll be cheaper to

f

.

·I; -~o~~~~~-:
.

C..-l._..__,_ _.__..__,

:·h.

chuc~l, Q'o"d

bv fd,i1 ng rn lhe m•SWliJ word1
you dev@ lan lrom stf"p No. 3 b@low.

PRINT NUMSERf O

lETTt RS !N SQUARE S

E) ~~~c:~~~~EE,LEHEP.S

IIIIIIIII

SCRAM-LETS

ANSWERS

2-1, o s

Wallop- Stoke· Laugh· Bucket· GET UP
"You look awiul, what's wrong?" I asked my friend . "I
·know I'm .a true insomniac." my fri end repl ied ' I can't
fall asleep even when it's time to GET UP.'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

w 7Jll/v\I&gt;.CU -1

PM

East Memorial Drive,

99 Jeep .Cherokee Sport,
Pomeroy, Ohio during
4x4, EC, gold. auto. PW, Pl.
normal office hours
VB. CD, CC, keyless entry,
from 8 :30 A.M. 19 4 :30
$6,500. (1314)231·1355.
P.M.
Monday
thru
Friday.

.
'

Jean Trussell, Director
Meigs
Authority

I

~

•

Housing

!

(2) 8 1TC

•

•

I

•

\

�,

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

I

•

~esday,

www.mydailysentinel.com.

February 8, 2005

Winning next ye~r ~s the Rio's Perry,has big day
at Cedarville Inv-itational
Only goal for the Patriots ,

CEDARVILLE - University of
On the women's side junior Tory
Rio Grande freshman Josh Perry had Jordan tallied II total points for the
three straight Super Bowls and the deal is unlikely to be among them.
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
· a big ·day at the Cedarville Collegiate Red women with a third place finish in
first to win four in five seasons.
With rookie Randall Gay and secAssociated .Press
Invitational at the Doden Field the 55-meter dash with a time of 7.37
The San Francisco 49ers .came ond-year player Asante Samuel at ·
House.
and a fourth-place finish in the 200,
closest to three NFL titles in a row, cornerback, the Patriots obviously:
Perry, a nati~e of Gallipolis, was clocking in at 27.04:
·
~ JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
· · th 1'989 d 1990 S
did well without him·, after
responsible for .18 points by himself
Freshman thrower Leah Bonnell
e
an
uper
Peion Branch needed.J·ust five lit- wmnmg
Bowls, then losing the next NFC Eugene Wilson left the Super
by
winning
the
men's
200-rheter
dash
produced
a third place effort in the
tie words to explain why the New ·
B 1· b ~
h If ·
·h
.England. Patriots have won three championship game on a last-secow JUSt e ore a lime Wit an
with a time of 22.64 and finishing as shot put. The Wellston native .regis. p.layed the second
O'nd t"Ield goal ·by the New York ar1n inJ·ury. thev
runner-up in the 55-meter dash with a tered a throw of 32 feet, 9.5 inches.
of the laSt four Super Bowls.
half with Harrison as the only regGiants' Matt Bahr. .
.
Junior Billie Robinson finished third
time of 6.63.
. .
. .Asked Monday if he had any
That New York team. which ular starter in the secondary. .
in the · l ,600-meter race walk with a
Perry
then
teamed
with
Howard
thoughts of leaving the team when went on to beat Buffalo in the
That's how the Patriots workHoisington,
Brandon
Baston
and
time of 8:44.48. ·
fie becomes a restricted free agent,
S
B
hd
h'
they alway·s find someone to fill in.
'the Super Bowl MVP reiJlied: 1991 uper ow.1 a a coac mg
Gi Ibert Evans to take. second in the
Other scoring efforts for the
"My home is in Foxboro.'.'
staff headed by Bill Parcells and without los.ing a step.
.
4x400 ~elay. The foursome timed out Redwomen: the 4 x 400-meter relay
Then. referring 10 team owner inclu&lt;;ling Belichick, Crennel and
Branch, who had 133 yards in
at 3:35.83, scoring eight more points team of Hope' Jagodzinski, Shannon
Robert Kraft, Branch added: "I'm Weis, along with futur~ NFL head receptions and tied a Super Bowl
for the Redmen.
· Soulsby, Nicholet McKinniss and
proQd of the family that Mr. Kraft coaches Tom Coughlin, AI Groh record with II ·catches, was the
Rio finished 5th (out of 7 teams) Niesha Fuller finished fourth with a
ltas built."
and Ray Handley. Two of the game's MVP, but it could have
time of 4:36.55, freshman Cassie
accumulating 44 points.
·
·
·
·
. . An emphaSIS on wmnmg over players on that team are . also _been any one or a number or playSenior Matt Boyles also captured Chaffins was 6th in the long jump (I 5
money is what. drives the Patriots coaches and are reportedly on ers: Harri son: linebacker Tedy
firsi place in the 5,000-meter run. The feet, 9.75 inches), junior Dawn
to success in an era when free Cretlnel's wish list for his staff Bruschi: or Mike Vrabel, who
Tuppers
Plains native, pact;d the rest Nagle, tied for 7th in the 800-meter
agency and the salary cap force with the Browns: Pepper Johnson, played linebacker, defensive end,
· of the field with a time of 15:00.
run with Cedarville's Audree GoQdew
major turnover at most teams each New England's defensive line had a sack and also caught a
The Redmen also collected points (2:41.55) and sophomore Alicia .
season.
coach, and ,Maurice Carthon, the touchdown pass for the second
from
senior Brian Mitchell , 6th in the Smith finished 8th in the shot put (29
Next season's Patriots 'certainly offensive coordinator· in. Dallas Super Bowl in a row.
55-meter
hurdles (8.92), junior Brad feet , 10.75 inches).
will be different than this season's. under Parcells.
Or, of course, it could have been
Gilders, 7th in the 800-meter run
Other Redwomen . results: sophoThe biggest losses are not players
Belichick's first order of busi- quarterback Tom Bra&lt;;ly, the MVP
(2:02.67),
Hoisington,
8th
in
the400.
more
Jana Marshall, 5th in the 1,600but coaches: Offensive coordina- ness, therefore. is rebuilding his in the Patriots' first two Super
m'eter dash (53.52) and freshman meter race walk. (8:54.80), Soulsby,
tor Charlie Weis is the new ,head coaching staff, although he will Bowl v.ictorics, Who played his
Richard Reffitt, 9th in the shot put (37 II th in the 400-meter run (I :07.24),
coach at Notre Dame. and defen- take at least a week off, traveling usual steady game.
feet,
0.25 inches).
Sarah Brame, II th in the shot put (26
sive coordinator Romeo Crennel to California for the AT&amp;T Pebble · "Every time we play, it's a total
Other Redmen · results: freshman . feet , 8.25 inches), sophomore Sharita
accepted the Cleveland Browns' Beach National Pro-Am.
effort . from everyone," said
Dennis
Hange, 7th in the I ,600-meter Was~ington, 12th in' the 200 (28.35), ·
head coaching job immediately
Most of the core players, how- Branch, an emerging star ;vho had .
race 'walk (I 0:28.37), freshman Cody Chaffins, 19th in the 200 (29.36) and
ever, should be back, although a 60-yard touchdown catch and a
after Sunday night's game.
12th in the 800 (2:12.97), McKinniss, 21st in the 200 (29.83).
Rochus,
Crennel's move, which gives some are getting up there in age, 23-yard TD run in the AFC title
Baston,
13th in the 200 (24J9),
The Redwomen were 7th (out· of ,
ihe NFL a record six black head notably
linebacker
Willie game in Pittsburgh. "It's a total .
junior Brian Hill, 19th in the 1-mile eight teams) with 27.5 points.
coaches, was hardly a secret. As MeG in est and safety Rodney organizational effort from the top
run (5:36. 73), freshman· B.ryan Cedarville also captured the women
'the Patriots·' 24-21 win over Harrison, both of whom have down."
Workman,
25th in the 200 (25.35) and event, tallying 154.5 points.
Some of the top of the organizaPhiladelphia was ending, coach . played major roles in the team's
The Redmen and Redwomen will
Mitchell, 30th in the 200 (25.83).
B_ill Belichickyut his arms around success . . Hamson, who ,had 1wo tion will be missing with Wej,pnd
his two top rudes m a gesture of . mtercept1ons m Sunday s game, Crennel "gone. Belichick said that
Cedarville won the men's meet, participate in the All-Ohio Meet held
will turn 33 next [)ecember, when h6 had been too busy working on
. affection and appreciation.
at the University of Akron, ~aturday .
scoring 174.5 points.
McGmest w1ll turn 34.
the Super Bowl to start considerThey will be hard to replace.
"Romeo and Charlie have done
One member of the Patriots ing replacements. although it's a
~mall us~ ~
a great job. A lot of the success unlikely to return is cornerback Ty_ sure bet he has some in mind. ·
we've had should go to them." Law, who missed the second halt
Then he brushed off all' the talk
Belichick said Monday. "I've •of the seas.on with a broken foot about a dynasty.
been with them both a long time. I after quarreling with the team over . "Every ye&lt;)r is. a new year," he
e~N~t··· ·· sports@ mydally s e n1:1 n el.com
go back to 1981 with Rom~o and his contract in training cam(J: · said. "We start at the bottom with
.
·
Fllx numb•r• · 446-3008 . ,
I'll miss both of them a lot.'
And while Behchick md1cated · the other 31 teams:"
Sport• lin·•• . 446-2343. • x t 33
The Patriots might, too.
that the team will spend the next
That philosophy i.s one reason
· Next season, they will be seek- few weeks renegotiating contracts New England tends to wind up at
ing to become the first team to win for salary-cap purposes, Law 's the top.

Coaches::

', In y~r. g;~m,

Eastern makes Rockets
misfire, Bt

• Meigs downs Torn~does
on Senior Night. ·
See Page 81

or phonE
Np0rt:51

money

faster.
With Instant Money you cun walk
into H&amp;R Block with your taxes

and walk. Out with a refund
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Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6674 .

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304-77~

State co~sidering hotel tax to promote tourism ·
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pay Taxes? .
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COLVMBUS - Gov. Bob Taft's ' commit s_pccific revenue w promote
as much as Michigan while secondadminisiraiion may propose a t percent · touri sm and expand rn,arkeLing progmms.
ranked Illinois has a $46 million budge!
"Our goal is 10 gel more revenue for
statewide hed tax to promote trave l and
and third-ranked Pennsylvania 'spends $30
travel and tourism," said Philip Craig.
Iourism in Ohio as pari of a budget plan
million. .
·
executive director of the Ohio Association
in which slate agencies are being asked to
Tourism in Ohio wa s a $28.5 billion
of Convention and Visitor Bureaus.
1rim budge1 requ eSJS and look for
induwy in 2003. TuurisiS spend $135 in
Bul some worry that !he increase could · Ohio and contribute nearly $10 in state
alternative fundin g sources.
make Ohio more known for high 1axes
"We're not ready to talk about what we're
and local dollars for every dollar lhe state
1han
auractions.
·
·
looking at, b~I like every olher sl ate
spends on rourism advertising.
·
Keith Stepl_len son, execu tJve vice
agency we've been tas ked wiih finding
E·ven with Lhe high retu.rn, the sta le is
·president of th~ Ohio Hotel and Lodging
ways to reduce our dependence on
unlikely to. increase funding for ~ ourism
general revenue funds," said Bill Teets. · Association, said a tax increase wou ld be
considering that il is facing up !O a $5
had for 1he induSiry ~rid !hat many Ohio
spokesman for the Ohio Dcpanmeni of
billion deficii for the next Iwo-year
ctlies already charge some of the highesl
Developmem, which includes Travel and
budget period beginning July 1.
bed taxes in the counlry.
Tourism.
·
Taft's
request has other state agencies
He said the hotel occupancy rates have
Ofticials would not say .how much money
looking
for \\;a&gt;'s .to raise money. This
heen llat in Ohio as the state. along with
the lax would genera1e.
.month, !he Ohio Deparimeoi of Natural
the' nation. cont inue s t.o recover from the
The money would be in addition to' local
Resources said ii would ask for a $5
Sepl.
II . 200 I, terrorist auack and lhe·
bed and sales taxes lha! visitors already ·
parking fee a! its 74 parks.
recession
pay. If !he tax is implemented, a visiiOr
The Legislature will begin hearings on the
The
Ohio Departmenl i)f Travel and
staying in · a $100-a-nighl room in
· budget afler Taft releases his proposal in
Tourism 's $8 million annual budget is · February.
Columbus would pay $17.75 in ta.xes.
··
31s1 in !he counlry. The state
spends
about
Tourism officials have long asked Ohio !O
'
.

748-992·1771
aoo-aG&amp;-1771
124 west Main Street
Pomeroy, Otl

"A ll of us wan! Io hold .down

governm~nt

.

.

spending," Wilkins said , adding, "and when people file their Ohio individual income tax
·

number~

everi higher.

"Some states, like Michigan,' are mandating electronic fi ling for higher-volume tax preparers. We'd like to see 1he program grow on a
voluntary basis first. Electronic filing makes sense for everyone involved." . '
,
·
Wilkins noted there are several ways Io file Ohio income lax returns electronically. Taxpayers can file on-line using Ohio !-File, available
at the ODT web site (lax.ohio.gov). They can file lhrough a lax prac1itioner or with any nuinbcr of commercially available lax ·
preparation software programs.
.

• It delivers the quickest refunds- usually in five Io seven days - when the taxpayer chooses direcl deposit to their bank account. .
• Ohio 1-File (and TelcFile) has no fcc. Most tax preparation programs charge extra for tiling an electronic re!urn wilh Ohio.
~Fewer

errors. Ohio !-File does the math and finds the correct tax rate . '

,

•GET
STUCK.
HERE!

In addition to saving 1axpayer dollars, Wilkins said electronic filing offers many other advantages:
• It, employs the highest level or cnmputer security.

www.ovbc.com

.

One new feature this year is that Ohio 1-File offers eleclronic tiling .of the school' district income 1ax for resideots of the 133 Ohio school
districts lhal had an income tax in 2004.
.
Wilkins said I he rapid pace·of filing electronic reiurns probably will slow bel ween now and April 15 but added he's confiden! !hat Ohio
will remain one of the top fi ve states in the country in paperless returns.

"Our goal is to have 80 percent of our returns come in electronically," Wilkins said. "Getting rid of paper completely isn'I realistic a11his
point. But I would say 10 paper filers, on the basis of the cost savings alone, to please consider filing' electronically this year, or a.'k lheir ·
tax preparer Io send !heir returns in electronically. h 's good for 1hem and good for every taxpayer in Ohio."

INDEX
2 Sl!criONS '-

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

· Obituaries

· As

618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Phone: 740-992-7270

.'

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@ MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - Last week
the $1.53 , billion capital
appropnatwns bill . was
·approved by the Ohio Senate.
Funding for the Cultural
Facilities
Commission,
appropriated within the. bill,
affects historic site&amp;_such as
the old Chester Academy in
· Chester which will receive
$25,000 for rel)ovations.
Historical sites, museums,
cultural and sports facilities
fall . under the Cultural ·
· FaciLities Commission. By
providing funding for these
organizations the hope iS'that
they will create jobs and
attract tourism.
Meigs County is in need
of an economic boost · and
the $25,000 for Chester
Academy will be welcome;
but where is the rest of. the
money going across ·lhe

A6

397

w. Main St.

(1/2 block East of McDonald's)

740-992-9000

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

Please see Taxpayers, AS

Ple•se see bster. AS

Cost fQt the six-week session 'i s $50.00

_________ ..:..._______.,:'-----1
••

•

•
--·-----....... - --· ..

---

sponsored by the
Arthritis Foundation
Tai Chi combln~ agile steps, joint safe
exercise and mental strength to improve
mobility, breathing and relaxation. It is
shown to reduce pain and stiffness and
may improve concentration, memory,
balance, muscle strength and stamina.

Holzer Medical Center French 500 Room
Instructor Mark Hasseman, LMT, MMP
Please wear loose clothing and prepare to have fun!

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HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

This year's first-half bills will be mailed
about two' weeks later than they were last
. year, because they have not yet been received
from the printer.
Frank said his office has been inundated
with taxpayers who .wish to pay their firsthalf taxes before bills arrive, and althougb
·taxpayers· may do so by paying an estimated
bill as calculated in his office .·it ultimately

Please see Schools, A5

Tuesday, February 15 • 5:00 PM

Income Tax &amp; Financial Services

- BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

.

Frank: Taxpayers will have plenty of time to pay
POMEROY - · Real estate tax bills will .be
later than usual arriving in property owners'
mailboxes this winter, but Treasurer Howard
Frank said there will be plenty of time to pay
them before the .deadline.
Frank said the bills are calculated and printed_at an out-of-county computer company,
and shipped back to his office for mailing.

Merchants to sponsor Easter egg hunt
POMEROY - Again this year the Pomeroy Merchants
Association will sponsor an Easter egg hunt for area children . .
. Plans were discussed at a meeting of the merchants held at ·
Far111ers Bank Tuesday imd it was decided to provide $300 for
the purchase of several hundred plastic eggs and t,he candy,
_and trinkets needed to fill them. Prizes will be awarded to the
winners of specially marked eggs.
John Musser. president, noted that Michelle Noble who
chaired the hunt last year has agreed to serve as chairman
again this· year. A bunny suit was purchased for last year's
hunt. Tentative place for . holding the hunt is the Meigs '.
Marauder football · field. in Pomeroy. The . qate will be
announced later.
Mary Powell met with the group to talk about ihe Ohio
Chautauqua which will be casting · its tent on the Chester
Common s on July 13-16. A Chautauqua feature.s a living
history of historic characters through first person presentations, she said.
The Chester-Shade Historical Associatimi made applicatimi with the Ohio Humanities Council for a Chautauqua last

Tai Chi Beginner Classes

Kehler Business Services
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© aoos Ohio Volley PubU.hlng Co.

'.

"Karl Kebler, Ill, CPA. A&amp;9iatered Reptesentallve 01 H.D Ve81tnve1tment ServiCes•~
Securltiea oflt1ed ttlfougtl H.O. V8St lm.oestmerrt Seivk::ea.., Msf(lbtlr SIPC
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12 PAGES

Calendars

Weather

For more-information: http://tax..ohio\gov/divi sions/communications/news- releases/index.stm

Kari-Kebler 111•
Certified Public Accountant
e-mail:kkebler@chaner.net

Pork politics
or progress?

lion in grant funds for the purchase of automated external detibrillators.
Ohio House Bill434.appropriated the funds
to equip Ohio schools with an AED. The .initiative also includes training of five staff
members and alerting the local EMS operation of the placement and location of the
device. The grant program . also includes

REED

POMEROY - Two local school districts
are -seeking funds for heart defibrillators in
their buildings through a grant program from
Ohio Emergency Medical Services.
Meigs Local School District and Southern
Local School District have applied for funding through a new program offering $2.5,mil-

Detlllle on P"'e A6

sports

·

J.

BREED@MYDAILr$ENTI NEL.COM

· Ask About
Our On-Line
·san king

Wilkins said last year almosl half of the 5.2 million income tax reiUrns filed canie in eleCtronically, saving abom $2.1 millio11. .This year
he wants to push those

Please see 9 11, As

WEATIIER

BY BRtAN

returns elccti'onically. it cuts our expenses considerably."
,
·
.
t
II eost.s !he Ohio Departmenl of Taxation (ODT) approximalely $1. 15 Io process an electronic return compared to $3 for a paper one.

Meigs County'EMS Administrator Gene tyons (rigl'lt) talks with
Meigs County Chamb.er of Commerce President Tom Reed at
the chamber's business-minded luncheon Tuesday. A topic .of
discussion was the proposed 911: service for Meigs County, ·
now the only county in Ohio without the servi.ce .

Schools ·seek funding for defibrillators

Ohio Tax Commissioner William W. Wilkin's says electronic filing delivers more thim just refunds. He says it produces benefits for
,

Beth Sergont;photo

Please see Procress. AS

COLUMBUS (Business Wire) - Ohio lax payers, most eager to claim a lax refund, arc ftling their retu;ns electronically at a record rale
- up '39, percem Ihi s year from the sarJOc period laSI year. As of·lan. 25, 128,112 taxpayers had filed !heir state income tax re!Urn
e~~

POMEROY - The history and goals of
the Emergency Medical Serv.ice and the
urgency for establishing 911 were discussed by Administrator Qene Lyons at
Tuesdafs Chambe[ .of Commerce . meeting
at the Wildhorse.
•
Lyons· said Meigs County is the only county in Ohio· without 91.1 service.
"It is desperately needed," she said.
. Currently on a 911 committee which meets
every ·first Wednesday of the month, Lyons
described the biggest hurdle to bringing the
service to Meigs County as being funding.
"We're trying to decide what we're going
to do about funding," she said about where
the committee is at the moment.
Initia,ting 911 requires a two-year proce ss
securing funding for operational costs like

• Meigs District
announces .honor rolls.
See Page A2
· St Paul ·Lutheran Church in Pomeroy dbserves a pancake supper
• Garden Club for OAGC every ~rove Tuesctay, in keeping with the pr~n tra(:lition. Here,
A'/ink ~~~~~. for the suppe.r, while Jaxon Ohlirger,
convention. See Page A3 -~;:,s~~
~.n:I9ar~~!· ~~· ... ._ __ __
---.--sons,of Union Veterans
Brian Jc....,/pllotoo
·. ~
install new officerS.
See Page A3
.. o Boil advisory issued.
See Page AS
o Record breaking year
for Ohio deer hunters.
See . Page AS
• Tai Chi beginner class .
begins Feb. 15 at HMC.
See Page A6

Filing electronic~lly saves Ohio money
electronically. an innease uf 49Jr:S5 from the same point iast year.

BSERCiENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM "

Shrove Tuesday, also known as "Fat Tuesday," is a day of Christian
celepration as well as penitence, because it's the last day before
Lent It has tra(:litionaliy been a day to indulge, and to ~ up the
foods that aren't allowed during Lent. Fats, eggs, and milky foods
were'once forbidden by many churches during Lent, and so 110 food
·Was wasted, families would have a feast on the Tuesday prior to ASh
Wednesday. This need to eat up the fats gave rise to the French .
name Mardi Gras, meaning "Fat Tuesday. " Pancakes becarre associated with Shrove Tuesday as they were a dish lhat could use up
all the eggs, fats and milk in the house with just the addition of flour.

·INsiDE

SPECIAL EDITION

phone lines. Securing the funding cou ld
come from a surcharge on phone hills or a
sales tax levy.
Lyons estimates that lJ II is two years away
. from becoming a reality in the counfy.
Other goals for the Meigs County EMS as
outlined by Lyons were to provide advanced
life support coverage to all residents. There
are currently two paid medic units on standby
24/7 but Lyons hopes to have a third.
She also hopes for a · new, larger EMS
building sometime in the future . ·
"We have outgrown our building on the hill,"
she said, adding that her staff has also-grown to
35 employees of which 16 are full-time.
Lyons welcomed the public to stop by
the EMS office if they had any suggestions
and expressed her gratitude at the ~ommu­
nity 's suppor.t.

BY BETH SERGENT

Ready for Lent

It's that &amp;asylll

Instant Money.
gets you more

honored,A6

911 reality discussed at eha•ttber luncheon

SPORTS

us

Taxes: .Tips

·Real daughter

..

-------~~-

\

---'--- -- -

.

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