<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4983" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4983?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T15:46:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14911">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2b16b7c7323cd02ee8604584689c593d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e52083f2bc4ab5cd5b8cac73539be32a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17052">
                  <text>.

!

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo~ • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, February 13, 2005

Ray Charles'
'Genius Loves Company'
sweeps Grammys
,
awards, A2

I arkin ca11s it

a career, Bt

HOLZER CUNIC

Bringing you the latest Healthcare News

Sheets: 911
proposal
is
''place
to
start"
.

.SPORTs

Heart Disease and What Yo·u Should Know

.

• Manning, AFC topples
NFC in Hawaii.
See Page 81
I

lives of more women than men; Morepver, .
woijlen die within 1 year of having a heart attack-. · . ·
· ..
ahnost double the statistic .for men. .

Heart disease is the number

. . . . l'lllong·,
llf\lG'm,.iS ·o})feancer. Both
early warning ·signs
until it's too \ate:' ·

A,ilierican ~omen,
lneliand wmpen, t$
and:0ften do
r -;.

j

&gt;"'
:rbere·are many risk factors associated with ci!rdiov~lar diSease. These risk factors inc,ude,: •&gt;
~~~!...

··,. . ' .,.

.

:

.

. ._

.

.._..,
'&gt;

disease is a stroke or a transient
attaclc (mini-stroke). PeripheraJvail~ular· ·
is an intetmitteil claudicatipn (l~g pain) and 01tll,ej:
'Petrter1sicm is higll bloqd press~e. :Qften greater · '
'
140/90.
' .

~1\ge,

*Gender

~F~Iy htstory ·. ·

Ohio 9-1-1 Service

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

tor, all at an estimated payroll
cost of $296,349 per year.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
POMEROY -An early said Friday ·that many cost
proposal for Enhanced 911 estimates included in the pro.
service in Meigs County may posal may not be realistic for
not be cost effective for the planning purposes - includcounty, but gives local offi- . ing costs incurred in buildcials a "place ·to start" in ing, equipping and operating
implementing the service, · a new building- in that ·the
Commissioner Jim Sheets county may not have finansaid F:riday.
'cial resources 'to support
A proposed Meigs County them.
Enhanced 9JI · Plan .. submitThe
911
Steering
ted to Meigs · County Committee, made up of local
Commissioners earlier this elected officials, iocluding
winter calls for construction mayors,
County
of a 5,000 square-foot Commissioner Jeff Thornton
$350,000 multi-use building and township trustees, and
and over $500,000 in new representatives from local
equipment in order to imple-. law enforcement and emermen! the service. It also pro- gency medical personnel,
vides positions for I0 to 14 hopes the county can access
911 dispatchers and a direc- Homeland Security funds and

other public grant sources for
at least pan of the funding
needed to construct a new
faci Iity for the 91 1 operation
and· the County Emergency
Management Agency, which
now operates.from the former
County Home.
The proposal also relies on
funding from an additional .
sales tax for operations, a
means provided through the
Ohio Revised Code.
"The only forseeablc way
the 911 Committee has found
to fund and continue·to operate a c.ounty-wide E-91 1 sys- .
tern would be tnrough an
. additional sales tax," the proposed . plan says. "Several
other counties in Ohio, ·

....

CJ ..,.t In..,...
PI~"

Please see 911, AS .

fJr/1,., ComlfHflon of Ohio

trttp :ffl!lt'WW.PUCO.ohlo.p

~!~iiia
-o -·1·1~

0BITUARIFS

· S0 what are th~ early. amin
w·

lar disease: .
Some heart'

Page AS
• Mildred M. Hubbard

s·) \1efor.e ·caJiitlg

jenitrig: :But most , . ho~~ital ril!h1fa\irav:
mild pain or dis~
affected aren't sl.ire what's·
wait too lo~g before getting help. Here · ' ,

Offering

·INsiDE
• Catholics protest plan
to close Toledo Diocese
chu~hes. See Page A6

a variety of comprehensive cardiology services, . including:

Cardiovascular
Institute

-Stress Testing
-Echocardiograms
-Cardiac Catheterizations
-Vascular Surgery
-Thoracic Surgery
,.

..

·Mary Rose. chairman of the annual D.A.R.
contests for Return Jonathan
Charlene ,H qeftlch/photo
Meigs Chapter, presents certificates and pins to first place winners, Andrew
Pat Missin, a native of England now residing in Jackson, plays "God Save the Bissell, 9th grader, left, on Christopher Columbus, a(ld Brayden Pratt, 6th gradQueen" on his harmonica for members of the Daughters of the American er, on the Lewis and Clark -Expedition. Christopher Bissell, the 5th grade winner.
Revolution .
·
was not present. All are students at Eastern.

•

Daughters of the American Revolution:recognizes essay winners
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
American .Revolution, highHOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM· lighted a meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
POMEROY- Recognition Saturday at Grace Episcopal
of Meigs County winners in Church.
the annual American History
Brayden Pratt; first place
Essay contest •of the National winner in ·6th ·g'rade, read his
Soci-ety, : Daughters of the essay on the topic, "Along

COLD WEATHER ·ARE YOU PREPARED?
By:· Stephen E. Popper, D.O., Ph.D., M.P.H.

.

'

Cold weather challenges are not just how
frigid temperatures can affect your body when a
cold spell or storm hits. Yes, extreme cold can
· cause hypothermia (an extreme lowering of the
body's temperature), frostbite, and deaih, but fireplaces, emergency heaters, and candles used during
cold weather can be as haz11rdous to your health.
Hazards, _such as starting household fires and generating toxic fumes, such as carbon monoxide,
from heaters causing asphyxiation (unconsciousness or death from a lack of oxygen) are alsp serious threats. Hazardous road conditions also contribute by increasing car accidents.
.
'
Serious h~alth problems can result from
prolonged exposure to the cold. The most common
cold-related problems are hypothermia and frostbite. When exposed to cold temperatures, your
body begins to lose heat faster than it can be pro- ·
duce.d. Prolonged exposure to c~ld will eventually
use up your body's stored energy. The result is
hypothermia, or abnormally low body temperature.
Body temperature that is too low affects the brain,
making the victim unable to think clearly or move
well. This.makes hypothermia particularly dangerous be.:;ause a person may not know It is happening
and won't be able to do anything about it. .
Hypothermia is most likely at very.cold temperatures, but it can occur even at cool temperatures
(above 40?F)jf a person becomes chilled from
wind, rain, sweat, or submersion in cold water.
Victims of hypothermia are often ( 1) elderly people
with inadequate food, clothing, Gr heating; (2)
·.babies sleeping in cold bedrooms; (3) people wbo
remain outdoors for )ong periods-the homeless,
hikers, hunters, etc. ; and (4) people who drink alco•
hoi or use illicit drugs. You must be able to recog-

nize tht: warnings signs of hypothermia:
Adults: shivering, exhaustion, confusion, fumbling
hands, memory loss, slurred speech, drowsiness.
Infants: bright red, cold skiiJ, very low energy.
If you noti·ce any of these signs, take the
person's temperature. If it is below 95?, the situa. tion is an emergency - get medici!! attention immediately. A person with severe hypothermia may be
unconscious and may not se.em to have a pulse or .
to be breathing. In this case, handle the victim
gently, and get emergency assistance immediately.
· Even if the victim appears dead, CPR should be
provided. CPR sho~ld continue while the victim is
being warmed, until the victim responds or medi~;al
aid becomes .available. In some cases, hypothermia
victims who appear ,to be
dead can be successfully
resuscitated.
Cold weather also
puts an extra strain on the
heart. If you have heart
disease or high blood pressure, follow your doctor's ·
advice about shoveling
snow or performing other .
hard work in the cold.
Otherwise, if you have to
do heavy outdoor work,
dress ·.varmly and work slowly. Remember, your
body is already working hard just to stay warm, so
don't overdo it
Anounce of prevention is worth a pound of
cure. Before a ·winter storm hits, stock up on emergency supplies for communication (make sure you
at least have a ·battery-powered radio for listening
to local emergency instructions in case there is a
power failure- have extra batterie~) ; food and safety (one 'week's worth of food and safety supplies ~

such ·as drinking water, no11-electric can opener,
canned/no-cook food [bread, crackers, dried fruits],
rock-salt to melt ice on walkways, fl~shlight and .
extra batteries, battery-powered lamps or lanterns
[to prevent the risk of fire, avoid using candles],
first"aid kit, supply of cat litter or bag of sand to
add traction on walkways; heating (make sure you
have a non-electric source of heat); and car(flashlight, blankets, ice scrapper, folding shovel, sand
and/or rock salt) in case a storm hits.
Proteci your water supply. Extreme cold
can cause water pipes in your home to freeze and
sometimes break . .Leave all water taps slightly
open so they drip continuously. Keep the indoor
temperature warm. Allow more heated air near
pipes. Open kitchen cabinet doors under the
kitchen.sink. If your pipes do freeze, do not thaw
them with a torch. Thaw the·pipes slowly with
warm air from an electric-hair dryer. If you cannot
thaw your pipes, or if the pipes have broken open,
use bottled water or get water from a: neighbor's
home. Have bottled water on hand. In an emergency - if no other Water is available 7 snow can be
melted for water, Bringing water to rolling boil
for' one minute will kill most germs but won't get ·
rid of chemicals sometimes found in snow.
Taking preventive action is your best
defense against having to deal with. extreme coldweather conditions. By preparing your home and
car in advance for winter emergencit:s, and by
observing safety precautions during times of
extremely cold weathe:r, you can reduce the risk of
weather-related health problems. ·

a

Racine Police
Marshall
appeals to
public .

Details Qn Page A&amp;

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECTIONS·-

~2 PAGES .

Calendars

A:3

Chissifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A:3
A4.

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© zoos Ohio Valley Publishing~·

RACINE - Racine Police
Marshall Curtis Jones is mak-

the Trail. with Lewis and
Clark and the Corps of
Discovery, May 1804 .September 1806." Second
place in that grade went to
Devon Baum, and third to
Chad Roush. All are students
in the Eastern Local School

District
Fifth grade winners on the
same topic were Chris
Bissell, first; Shannon M.
· Gok, second, and Kayte
Nicole Lawrence, third, all of
Eastern.
On the second topic of the

ing an appeal to county residents who may have information about four'burglaries that
BY CHARLENE ·HoEFliCH
have occ·urred in and around
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Racine within the last' month.
Jones withh~ld the identiROMEROY - A local task
ties of the victims and the
location of their residences force to work on cancer relatfor fear of jeopardizing his · ed· issues is being organized
ongoing investigation. He did by Meig&gt;County members of
reveal that the following the American Cancer Society
items were stolen from vari- with a first meeting schedous victims: golf cart, · air uled for noon Wednesday at
the Wildhorse Cafe.
Please see Racine; AS
At the fii:st meeting those
attending . will ' look at ' the
types of cancers with the
highest mortality and incidence rates in Meigs County
and decide on some plan of
Volu'nteer
Firefighters action.
·
. Association, Inc. ·
Programs
which
the
Mayor Eric Cunningham American Cancer Society
. accepted oflicers recommend- currently have in place will
ed for. the fire department by be evaluated and volunteers
Syracuse Fire Chief Jack will be sought to help with
Peterson. They ,are as follows: expediting any proposals. .
Peterson, chief; Bill Roush,
"What we are wanting to
address are some i'ssues
which have been a concern to
Pluse see Council, AS

the citizens of Meigs County
for some time, like what can
be done in the way of preventive measures to decrease
certain types of cancer," said
JoAnn Crisp who h~s been
active for many years in local
Cancer Society activities.
"Our goal,"· she continued,
"is to make a diflerence."
Crisp said that a representative of Holzer Hospital will
be there to work with th,e task
. force and present ideas.
"What we need is ,an org!lnized group which will stay
intact and be availab.le to provide infotmation or assist ·in
other ways those who are
touched by cancer."
Crisp said she felt Meigs
County lost a lot when the
local office of the American
Cancer Society closed. She's
hopeful the task force will be
able to work in the .community and in a small way gain

Officers for fire department appointed
during Syracuse Village Council meeting
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
SYRACUSE - At their
recent meeting Syracuse
Village Council approved
several motions to help
strengthen its volhnteer ftre
department, now officially
known as the Syracuse

contest, "Christopher Columbus
- Imperfect Hero" the winner
was · Eastern
freshman ·
Andrew Bissell, who was
also present to read his essay.
The first .Jilace winners
. Please ... D.A.R., AS .

Task force ·for cancer issues being organized
.back some of the advantages
lost when the offtce closed.
'This task force should be a
big step in that direction,"
she said.
· Crisp said she feels the
Relay for Life is making a
difference Ill that some
patient serv1ces are being
funded with that money as
well as research programs .
and educational aspects of
the Cancer Society's program.
Another plus for Meigs
County, said Crisp, is the
addition of the patient navi- ·
gator · program,' Coleen
Dietsch-Krubl is the navigator for Meigs, Athens,
Washington, Morgan, Noble
and Monroe Counties. Her
office is at O' Bleness
Hospital. ·
Her role is one of helping
PIHH He Task. AS

�.

PageA2

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 14, 2005

Community Calendar

AP

MU~IC

·

WRITER

LOS ANGELES - Ray . Charles, whose
legacy erased boundaries between ·ge nres and
generations . received a fitting musical eulogy
Sunday night as his final album, "Genius Loves
Company," won a leading eight Grammys.
Charles' album of duets, recorded in the final
months of his life, was· the clear sentimental
favorite . It won album of the year and best pop
album; the song "Here We Go Again,'' with
Norah Jones, won record of the year an'd best
pop collaboration with vocals.
"!' m going to cry, actually." Jones said as she
ac.cepted the trophy for record of the year. "I
thi~.k it just shows how wonderful music can
be.
.
,
.
Other winners inCluded Alicia Kevs and
Usher, each nominated for eight Gnimmys.
Keys won four while Usher had three . They
shared one award. for best R&amp;B performance
by a duo or group wi th vocals, for their charttopping duet, "My Boo."
·
U2 won three awards. including best rock

performance by a duo or group. Green Day, the bestrap song for "Jesus Walks."
most nominated rock act with six fortheirpolitHe was upset in the best new artist category,
ically charged punk opera "American Idiot," losing to Maroon 5 in a race that al so included
won best rock album.
· .
country singer Gretchen Wilson, the Los
"Rock · n' roll can be dangerous and fun at the Lonely Boys and soul siren Joss,Stone.
same time, so thank s a lot." Green Day lead
Maroon 5's Adam Levine seemed almost
singer Billie Joe Armstrong said as he accepted aRologetic after winning.
.
the award .
"Kanye West, l want to. thank you so much lor
Keys ha(l a chance to win more than any other being wonderful," he said. The· camera cut
woman in one evening. In 2002 Keys won five away to West, who looked less than pleased.
Grammys for her debut album , "Songs in A · SomeexpectedWesttohaveameltdownlike
Minor.,'' becoming only the second woman to. at the American Music Awards, where he comwin that many in one night. (Lauryn Hill won plained bitterly backstage after losing the same
five in 1999: Jones,matched Hill and Keys' feat award to Wilson. But on Sunday night he went
in 2003.)
on to deliver an eye-pqppi ng performance of
John Mayer was one of the artists who pre- · "Jesus Walk's" and an emotional acceptance
vented a record ni ght by Keys, as hi~ mellow speech for best rap album.
tribute '.'Dalighters" won song of the year.
After referencing the car accident a t'ew years
The most nominated m1ist of the year was ago that ahnost took his life, West promised to
perhaps the most multifaceted - Kanye West, . live life to the fullest: "I plan to celebrate and
the songwriter-producer who made his rap scream and pop champagne every chance I get
debut in 2004 with the cutting-edge CD "The because I'M AT THE GRAMMYS BABY I "
College Dropout. " He was nominated for 10
He also referenced hi s American Music
Grammys, including albtim of the year, but only Awards embarrassment. "Everybody wanted to
took home three, including best rap album and know what would I do if I didn't win. I guess
we' ll never know," he said, holding his trophy
up high.
At least West didn 't have to wait decades to
get a trophy, as did some veterans final·ly honored by the Recording
Academy.
Steve Earle's left-leaning
"The Revolution Starts .. . ·
Now" won for contemporary
folk album. And Rod
Stewan- who had complained in recent years
about never winning a
Grammy - won for
traditional pop vocal ·
album for his standards ' recording
"Stardust ... The
Great American
Songbook Vol.
Ill."
.

Grammy and it was well worth the wait,"
Wilson said back ~tage. "It represents tnumph
anti achievement in music that I feel that I
deserved, and I'm really glad I won."
. The oft-nialigned Britney Spears also won
her first Grammy - best dance recording for
"ToXic ."

.

Spears wasn 't present, but another newlywed
was on hand: Jennifer Lope.z performed a duet
in Spanish with new hubby Marc Anthony, their
first publiC performan ce together:
·
Other performers included Green·Day. whose
rollicking performance was bleeped by the censors: and U2.
Perhaps the evening's most exhilarating performance was from . Melis sa Etheridge. The
rocker, who is batt! ing breast cancer. took to the
stage for a Janis Joplin tribute with a ~ haved
head but strong voice, and received a standing
o.vation.
But ultimately. the night belonged to Ray .
Charles. Besides the four awards tor best album
and song, "Genius Loves Company" won for
best instrumental arrangement accompanying a
vocalist, best gospel performance; best engineered album and best surround sound album .
Charles was 73 when he diod in June, with a
total of 12 Grammys in hi s 50-plus year career.
The most he ever won in one night was four in
1960, including two for the classic "Georgia
On My Mind."
That was the song performed Sunday by
Keys and the actor Jamie Foxx, considered an
Oscar lock for his ponrayal of Charles in
"Ray."
Foxx. a more then decent musician. sat at a
piano opposite Keys as Quincy Jones conducted the orchestra.
''For an old friend,'' Foxx said as he
began to play.
On I he Nel:
h lip ://WI\'1-V. g I'CIUI/11,1'.COli I

B r i a n

Wilson, who
released hi s
a I b u m
"Smile" after ·
a more than
three-decade
wait, won best
rock instrumental performance
for
"Mrs.
O'Leary 's Cow." He
had never been honOf\!d before, even as
leader of The Beach
Boys. The big irony:
the man who did more ·
for vocal harmony
than anyone in rock
'n' roll won in an
instrumental category.
"! waited
42 years
for thi s

(AP)

,
·~

Kathy Searls; I truly
love you, these last
three years have been
the best In my Hfe. I am

so glad that you
married me. Happy
Valeritine's Day/
You Loving Husband
' Paul

·-- -

Day Non Laine
Love
Mommy&amp;NaNa

Olivia:
I thank God for my
.little girl, /love you.
· Youarenowa
Searls, Happy
Vantine's Day
From Your Daddy

.•1

..:..

on your 1st Valentine's

;..

__ _

,.

David Pearce:
HaPJ1i Valentines
Day Baby.
/Love You
Vey Much!
Love, Sabra

. Happy 1st
·Valentine's Day Tessa
Coates, you 81"'! growing so
fast. We love you very
much.
·
· Mommy &amp; Daddy

Brady,
Thank you for being a loving father and a wonderful
companion~ your'e our
love, our lives, our
valentine.
Happy Valentines Day
Terri Lou
Gage, July an,
At.. &amp;Ozz

Bob,.
wonder and joy, Jaughrer
.md bve, magic and
moonllght are just a feN
. af the things you

· glveme.

· lloveyou
Betty

Other events

Clubs and
·organizations

Dear
Abby

your service .to our country. I
pmy that everywhere you go,
and in everything you confront,
that you will be,gtven a special
wisdom. It is my hean's desire
that truth and freedom be
strengthened, and flourish, and
all error manifested and dissolved."
FROM ROBYN G., THE
WOODLANDS,
TEXAS:
"Tharik you for all of your sacrifices and hardships. I want
everyone over there fighting the
goodfighttoknowthatAmerica
IS thankful, even if we don't
write all the.time or send packa!les. We are here for you and
will be here for you when you
come home. :) Love and
prayers."
FROM
. LOUISE
IN
LEWISVILLE, OHIO: "You
may find it hard to understand

ihat someone you don't even My thoughts and prayers are .
know is thinking about you. I with you ..J am a senior citizen
am a mother of three and wa' an and understand why you are
Anny wife. You all are near and there. And although some in this
dear to my heart. Know that country disagree with why you
someone is prdying that you are there. we all agree that you
come home safe and sound; that should come home soon.
someone needs you to know Nevenheless, while you are
you are not forgotten . Finish there, we recogni7..e that you are
your job, make the world a bet- . fighting the good fight, and
· ter place and come home soon." hope . your service ends soon.
FROM
BECKY
IN 'Thank you' .seems an inadeEDWARDSVILLE,
ILL.: quare phrase for what should be
'Thank you for volunteering, said for your brave service. We
and thank you for hanging m all love you and hope you are
there during the tough times. reunited with your family as
There 's no doubt .we have the soon as possi ble."
·
best sailors, soldiers, airmen,
READERS : I know many df
Marines and National Guard in you have plans for tonight that
lhe world, and you make us very mclude candlelight and flowers.
proud. I'll continue to pray lor This is a time when our memyour safety and hope you soon hers of the military deployed far
have a happy voyage home." · · from home acutely feel the
· FROM .ASHLEY IN MER- absence of their loved ones. So,
R!TT ISLAND. FLA.: "Find please,
· go
to
strepgth in the small things. OperationDearAbby.net and
laugh every chance you get, and send a message telling them
knowthatyou'remissedandwe they are in our heans. Happy
pray every day for your safe Valentine 's Day, everyone!
return. Never-ending courage
Dear Abby is written by
deserves never-ending gratitude. , Abigail Van Buren, also ktWwn
Tharik you so much for all your as Jeanne Phillips, and was
sacrifices."
founded bl. lier mother,
FROM
"M!KEY"
IN Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
PAYSON, ARIZ.: 'Tharik yoLI a Abby at www.DearAbby.com or
million tihles for the job you are P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
. doing in that distant location. CA 90069.

Sonshine Circle completes projects for others O'Bleness Memorial Hospital to &lt;?ffir health screenings
RACINE - · ·Reports on the new parsonage.
several activities mcluding
Lillian Hay man , Ruth
.pa11icipation in a fund raiser Simpson, and Bernice Theiss
for tsunami victims were presented a program revolvgiven at a recent meeting of mg around love. Hayman
the Sonshine Circle held at read I st Corinthians, Chapter
the Bethany Church .
13, the love cha,pter,
It was noted that members Proverbs 4:23, "What Comes
made 233 dozen cookies for in Mind When You Think of
the Southern Elementary Valentines Day?'', and The
School class of Jan Hill to Characteristics of Love."
be used in the special project Simpson read "Legend of
of the class to raise money Valentines Day", "Please Be
for the tsunami victims. ·
My Valentine" and the poem
Recipes are being collected "To Her." .
now for the new cookbook · , Theiss gave the ''Life of
to be published in the fall: George Washington" and
Order are also being taken "Lincoln's Habits in the Oval
for photographs to be taken Office." Judy Gilmore led
at the church, March 5 ad 6. the group singing "Let Me
Anyone wishing .to have a Call You Sweethean", while
. family photo . taken can Hayman played the piano,
arrange it through any mem- and then closed with prayer.
ber of the group .
.
Lois Sterrett, president,
It was voted to place an opened the meeting with
ad in the Meals on Wheels scriptme · Acts I :8, about the
Gospel Booklet. A gospel power that God gives · us.
hymn sing to be held 6 Hart , read a story "On the
p.m. on March 12 at Meigs First Day." Officers' reports
Elementary Sc'hool was were given.
announced . While a date
Fifty cards of encouragehas
not
yet
been rnent were signed, and thank
announced, members agree you cards were read from
to ·host an open · h'ouse ·at · Manha Greenaway, Cookie

ATHENS - , O'Bieness only from 10 a.m. until
Salser, Harold and Sue
Hospital
in noon and from 2 p.m. until
Hager, Frank and Delores Memorial
Cleland, Frances McKenzie, Athens will offer blood 4 . p.m. To make an
Sheriff Robert Beegle, Reta pressure· screening as well appointment , call O'Bleness'
Hill , Franklin Lemley, Jean as cholesterol and glucose community relations departAlkire, Grace and Raymond scree!ling Wednesday, March ment at (740) 592-9300.
Furbee, 'and Garnet Roush.
Appointments are limited.
2.
The group accepted donaThe free blood · pressure
Free colon-rectal cancer
lions from Martha . Lou screening will be open to· home screening kits and
Beegle, Larry and June the public from 10 a.m. information will be availRoush, Roses Excavating, until noon and from 2 p.m. able at the March 2 screenLucy Taylor, Jackie .White, until 4 p.m. in the hospi- ing. The free kits can also
Betty Carpenter, · Jr Neigler. tal's patient entrance lobby. be obtained on a daily
Howard Ervin, Jean Alkire, ·The cholesterol and glucose basis at . the information
Grace Furbee· and Gladys screening, which · will be desks near the ' hospital's
Cumil)gs.
offered for a $5 fee, will patient and visitor entrances.
Hayman,
Theiss
and be available at the same
Cholesterol levels typical Simpson served refreshments location by appointment ly do not change dramatito Blondena Rainer, Edie
Hubbard, ~velyn Foreman,
Betty Proffitt, Letha Proffitt,
Jo Lee , Hazel McKelvey,
. Lois , Sterrett, Kathryn Han,
Judy Gilmore, Edna Knopp,
POMEROY · -Lecturer "Winter Days" by Patiy
Manha Lou Beegle, Mabel
Brace, Mildred Han, Nondus Vicki Smith presented a pro' Dyer, "Somebody Else·· by
Hendricks, Jackie White and gram, "February," at the Smith.
Four demits were received
recent meeting . of Star
Julie Campbell.
and accepted for membership
Next meeting will be on Grange #778.
Master Patty Dyer conduct- into Star Grange: Pauline
March 10, with Jackie White
and Kathryn Hart having the ed the meeting. Readings Atkins, Raben and Sharon
and
Raymond
program and each member is included "Goals" by Tom Jewell
"Words
from Cotterill. Plans were made to
to being a basket lunch. All Bartley,
Lincoln" by Maxine Dyer, host Meigs County Pomona
area women are invited.

cally in one month so individual s may want to wait
two to three months betore
being screened again . Also,
screenings do not take the
place of testing . A screening wil.l indicate whether '.
an individua!'s le vel is
below, at or above normal
ranges ; however, for specific readings, . an · individual
may be directed to see a ·
physician for further testing. The cholesterol and
glucose screening measures
total cholesterol, HDL and
glucose levels.

Presents Grange program
Grange on March 4.
Members worked on ABC
quilts and will do so at l p.m.
prior to Fun Night on Feb.
19. Carl Morris, Legislative
Agent, discussed the Law of
Sea Treaty (LOST). Twenty
four members and junior
enjoyed potluck ·refreshments
prior to the meeting.

.

EAS,TERN HONOR ROLL School Briefs

Norah Jones accepts the award ·1h~ won with the late Ray Charles for best pop collaboration
with vocals for :'Here We Go 'Again" at the .47th Annual Grammy AWards Sunday, at the Staples
Center in Los Angeles, Producer John Burk, left, looks on.

You stole our hearts

Church events

.

AP Photo

Snuggle Bug, another
wonderful year in my life;
I love you Pooh Bear

Monday, February 14, 2005

GratefUl Americans send their hearts to our troops overseas

DEAR READERS: Because
today
is Valentine's Day, I
m~tings
thought you niight enjoy reading
some of the 5 million messages
1\u!sday, Feb. IS
Thursday, Feh. 17
of
love and suppoit sent to our
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
ROCKSPRINGS -Rev.' men and women in -the military
VIllage Council regular meeting, Walter Heinz of Sacred Heart
during the Christmas holidays
7:30 p.m., council chambers at
via OperationDearAbby.net.
Church
speaks
at
community
Village Hall. Date changed from
Those
"love letters" warmed my
Lenten
service,
7
p:m.,
Feb. 14.
·.
heart,
a~ I know they will yours
United
RUTLAND
- Rutland Rocksprings
a~ well. Read on: ·
Township Trustees, 5 ·p.m., Methodist Church . . Services
FROM
RHONNIE . IN
planned
at
community TEXAS: "! know things must
Rutland Fire· Station.
'churches through March 25.
be hard for you, being·far !rom
Thusday, Feb. 17
home and missing tile friends
POMEROY - Salisbury
and family you depend on for
Township Trustees wil met
comfoit. I know that when you
adt 6:30p.m. at the town hall.
signed on, you knew you could
-Thesday, Feb. 15
end up in an unfriendly· place
POMEROY -· Meigs County and would be gone for long.
· Health I Depanment · offers periods of time. You knew this,
evening clinic hours, 4 to 7 p.m. yet you did it anyway. That selfChildhood and adult immuniza- less act says much of your charWednesday, Feb. 16
lions, 9 to II a.m., I to 7 p.m. acter, your strength and your
courage.
POMEROY - .American Bring sliot records and Medicaid
"You're probably homesick,
Cancer Society · meeting to cards if applicable, $5 donations as are your family and friends
form task force to work on accepted but not required Blood for you. You are loved and
cancer related issues, noon pressure and blood sugar aS.-;ess- appreciated by more than only
luncheon at the Wildhorse.
friends and family. You
Anyone interested in assisted ments; WIC infOilllation; pre- your
have a strong nation behind you
invited to attend. .
natal services; head lice screen- that wishes you horne soon,
POMEROY _M iddleport ini~ and eradication education; whether you be in the heat of the
Litarary Club will meet at 2 environmental health sanitariims desen or the cold and snow. Be
p.m. at the Poineroy Library. will conduct appointments; vital safe, and tharik you."
Ida Diehl will review "Poe statistics; .general health informaFROM SHARON IN SANand Fanny" by John May.
· lion available. ·
·
FORD, MICH.: 'Tharik you for

Public

Ray Charles' 'Genius Loves Company' sweeps Grammys with eight .awards
BY NEKESA MUMBI MOODY

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentint:;l
'

GRAMMY AWARDS

PageA3

To Lorrie Thompson:
I just wanted you to know
how much I love yOu. I
, just can 'I wait 1111.1 see you
again! You are the sweetest
person I knn\\', You made
me a better person by
being wilh nte. Whatever
you do I just want you lo
be happy . .
Your Always In My Hearl
Happy Valentines Day
. Love, Kenny

-----:------- - -----,------- - - - - -..--•

-~-

TUPPERS PLAINS
Jasmine Smith, Alex Victory,
These students were named Phoenix Watts, Heather
Wyatt
Westfall,
to the honor roll at Eastern Wells,
Elementary School for the Lindsay Wolfe, ' Christopher
second nine-weeks grading ··Yeater.
period:
. ·
Grade
4:
Marshall
Grade 2: Haley Bissell, Aanestad,
Alex
Amos,
Abigale Collin·s. Grace Rebecca Chadwell, Larissa
Edwards. Linsday Hupp, Riddle, Kyle Young, all A's;
Kwesi Lane, Kylie Long, Hannah Adams, Randall
Makayla Smith, Morgan Armes, Maxwell; Carnahan,
Tackett, all· A's; Willow Samuel Collins, Nicole
Adams, Breanna 13ailey, Brad Gilbride, Victoria Goble,
, Buckley,
Zachary Bradley Goeglein, Breanna
Cunningham, Johnny Curtis, Hayman, Alexandria Hendrix,
Preston Denney, Try stan Rachael Markworth, Timothy
Dowell, Daschle Facemyer, Minear,' Christopher Morris,
Dustin Frost,, Erin Glaze, Ethan Nottingham, Kiana
Kaitlynn Hanenbach,. Jenna Osborne, Derick Powell,
Kehl,
Austin
Little, Thomas Pullins, Garrett
Christopher Long, Mallory Ritchie,
Joshua Shook,
Mcintyre, Asia . Michael, Shanda Welch .
Casey Ridenour, Austin Ross,
Grade
5:
Christopher
Allison Seers, Brock Smith, Bissell, Cierra Carr, Danielle
Christian Speelman, Ethan , Cline, Tyler Cline, Bay lee
Steger, Kathryn Townsend, Collins,
Emily
Davis,
Jacob
Tuttle,
Meloney Cheyenne Doczi , Kristin
Victory, Brench Welch. ' · Fick,
Brenna
Holter,
Grade 3: Tyler Barber, Savannah Moore, Marie
Latham
Bissell,
Jenna Powell , Ashley Putnam,
Burdette, Samantha Cline, Jenah Sampson, all A's ;
Paige Cline, Chase Cook, Christian Amsbary, J amiee
Molly Dunlap, David Frank, , Batke, Janae Boyles, Leslea
Meredith Gaul; Katie Keller. Frank, Wade Gibbs, Arik
Sarah Lawrence, Joshua Horner, Brooke Johnson ,
Parker. Jessica Sampson, Erin Luke
Kimes,
Kayte
Swatzel, David Warner, all Lawrence, Amber Lawson,
A's; Zachary Browning, Paul Morrison, Kelsey Myers.
Garrett . Caldwell, Cas sidy Michael Nutter, Jacob Parker,
Cleland, Monique Dugan, Cas sie Randolph, Robert
Aliyah Gantt, Austin Gheen, · Reel , Shalaina Robinson,
Hannah
Hawley, Jenna Courtney Thomas, Sarah
Hysell ,· Tanner Jenkins , Turner, Autumn Trussell,
Jordan Koblentz , Jonathon Aimee Watson, Sarah Turner.
Keri
Lawrence,
Grade 6: Devon · Baum,
Kuhn,
Whitley Leach, Emily Moore, Brady
Bissell,
Megan
Dakota O'Brien, Jordan Carnahan, Jessica Cleland,
Parker, Lindsey Putman, Ashleigh Duffy, Morgan Hall,
Cody , Rayburn, Madison Rachel Kille, Allie Rawson,
Rigsby. Benammin Sampson, Zari Roush, Robert Wagner,

all A's; Hayley Aanestad,
Ryan Amos, Jonathan Barrett,
Chantel Bauer, Tia Collier,
Jenna
Collins, · Colin·
Connolly, Trenton Deem,
Briar Dill, Nathan Gheen,
Scott Gilbride, Timothy
Markworth, Danielle Maxey,
Beverly Maxson, Ashley
Miller,
Brayden
Pratt,
Jennifer
Reed,
Hannah
Ridgway, Sheena Riffle,
Scyoc, · John
Michael
Tenaglia, Lonnie Westfall,
Matthew Whitlock, Morgan
Windon.
Grade 7: Wade Collins,
Matthew Friend, Hannah
Hysell, Whitney Putman, all
A's ;
Breea
Buckley,
Lawrence Collins, Erin Dunn,
Samuel Evans, Kimberly
Minear, Audrionna Pullins,
Amanda Roush , Hannah
West.
Grade 8: Tina Drake,
Michael Moore, Amber
White, all A's; Keith Aeiker,
Brittany Casto, Hannah
Cozart. Matthew Hosken,
Joshua
Hupp,
Anthony
Putman, Kyler Sargent, Katie
Wilfong.

Stephens of Pomeroy and
Daniel Sayre of Raci ne
Ohio
.graduated
from
University· ill the e'nd of the
REEDSVILLE
- Joh)l fall quaner.
Rice, president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education,
has been named to the
Southeast Region Executive
Committee of the · Ohio
ATHENS -The followSchool Boards Association.
The committee provides ing local stuents were
governance and leadership to named to the dean's list at
school board members m Ohio University for the fall
Athens, Belmont, Coshocton, quarter: James Bennett,
Gallia, Guernsey, Hocking, Jeffrey Gandee, Kenneth
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Sisco, Esther Van Oort;
Monroe;
Morgan, Coolville; Jessica. McDaniel ,
Muskingum, No&amp;le, Perry, Brooke Vaughan, Elizabeth
Pike, Scioto, VInton · and Wilfong, Middleport: Cassie
Washington counties.
Braun, Jennifer Buckley,
The committee members Maegan Dodson. Andrea
are elected by OSBA mem- Krawsczyn,
Robert
bers in the region, and their Malioltra. Sara Man sfield ,
appointmeins were finalized Morgan Mathews, Lee Nau,
at the January OSBA Board Ryan Pratt, Tia Pratt,
of Trustees meeting.
Jeffrey Shank, Pomeroy ;
Deana
Pullin s.
Arian
Smedley, Portland ; Joseph
Cornell ,
Macyn
Ervin ,
Sarah
Fisher,
POMEROY Ladona Jessica

Serving on
committee

On , OU
dean's list

Graduate OU

Hawley,
Autumn
Hill .
Kimberly
lhle,
Rachel
Marshall.
Katie
Sayre,
· Robert Taylor, Jennifer
Walker, Racine; Bethany
Barber, Carrie Johnson.
Melissa Johnson, Joshua
Kehl. Reedsville; ·Lauren
·Logan ; Amber Sno~den.
Rutland ; Matthew Ash,
Cara Bullington. Syracuse:
Kimberly
Ma;cinko,
Tuppers Plains.

Earns honor
at Institute
LANGSVILLE - Eric D.
Montgomery. formerly of
Langsville, recently received
a 3.70 gtade point average
for the fall quaner at An
Institute of Pittsburgh. He
is in his founh year at AlP.
majoring in graphic design .
He IS the son of Larry
and Linda Montgomery of
Langsville and lives in
Pittsburgh with his wife
and children.

Sunday
11mes Sentinel992-2155
' '
-;.
'

•

�\

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Se11;tinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
'.

Jim Freeland

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 assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Feb. 14, the 45th day of 2005. There are
. 320 days left in the year. This is Valentine's Day.
Today's Highlight in. History: On Feb. 14, 1929, the "St.
. Valentine's Day Massacre" took place in a Chicago garage as
seven rivals of AI Capone's gang were gunned down.
On this date: In 1778, the American ship "Ranger" carried
the recently adopted Star and Stripes to a foreign port for the
first time as it arrived.in France.
In 1859, Oregon was admitted to the Union as the 33rd
state.
In 1903, the Department of Commerce and Labor was
established. (It was divided into separate departments of
Commerce and Labor in 1913.)
In 1912, Arizona became the 48th state of the Union.
In 1920, the League of Women Vot~rs was founded in
Chicago: its first president was Maude Wood Park.
. In 1'945, Peru, Paraguay, Chile and Ecuador joined the
·United Nations.
· · In 1979, Adolph Dubs, the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan,
was kidnapped in Kabul by Muslim extremists and killed in a
shootout between his abductors and police.
·
In 1984, 6-year,oid Stormie Jones became the world's first
heart-liver transplant recipient at Children's Hospital of
· Pittsburgh (she lived until November 1990).
·
· In 1985, Cable News Network reporter Jeremy LeVin, who
· was being held hostage by extre!llists in Lebanon, was freed.
In 1989, Iran's Ayatollah Khomcini called on Muslims to
kill Salman Rushdie, author of "The Satanic Verses," a novel
condemned as blasphemous.·
·
Ten years ago: A federal judge rejected the Justice
Department's proposed antitrust settlement with Microsoft
. Corporation; U.S. District Judge Stanley Sporkin was later
overruled by an appeals court. The House passed the c·enter· piece of the Republican anti-crime package, voiing to create
· block grants for local governments .while eliminating
President Clinton's program to hire more police (the president
later vetoed a spending authorization bill containing this provision).
,
Five years ago: Three tornadoes tore across rural south~est
· Georgia, killing 20 people and destroying homes, businesses
and farms. Two sophomores at Columbine High School in
. Littleton, Colo., )Yere found shot to death in a fast-food
restaurant just two blocks from the school, which was still
reeling from the April 1999 massacre.
. One year ago: Guerrillas overwhelmed a police station west
of Baghdad, killing 23 people and freeing dozens of prisoners.
, Twenty-eight people were killed when the glass-and-concrete
; roof of an indoor water park in Moscow collapsed.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director Alan Parker is 61.
Journalist Carl Bernstein is 61. TV personality Pat O'Brien is
· 57. Magician. Teller (Penn and Teller) is 57 . . Tennis player
Manuela Maleeva is 38. Rock musician Kevin Baldes (Lit) is
33: Rock singer Rob Thomas (Matchbox Twenty) is 33. Actor
. Freddie Highmore ("Finding Neverland") is 13.
Thought for Today: "Love that's wise wilt not say ali it
: means."- Edwin Arlington Robinson, American poet ( 18691935).

OPINION

.

PageA4

. Monday, February 14, 2005

~onday,Februaryt4,2005

Obituaries

Sir Paul played for our past sins
It would be a hoot to hop

into a time machine and trav- ·
el 40 years back, with press
Paul
clippings
of
McCartney's Super Bowl
performance in hand, and try
to . explain \O the folks . in
1965 the cultural changes
that were ,in store for them.
Not that this would be an
easy task. Who in 1965 could
Imagine, as Beatlemania was
approaching
its
anti Establishment crescendo,
that the . day would come
when Beatie Paul would be
the one the whole nation
would cgngratulate, according to one review, for providing "decent half-time entertainment," fulfilling a virtual
"guarantee he'll be innocuous," while not minding "his
role as the Super Bowl's
atonement for past excess."
The fact was, once,
"decent," "innocuous" and
"atonement" were not the
first words associated with
young Pa11!, John, George
and Ringo. As The Beatles,
they, more than any other
rock act, prodpced the heartbeatingly familiar and practically · worshipped 1960s
soundtrack of rebellion and
collapse. · Or was that ·peace
and love? I always get them
confused,
·
In any case, the Fab Four
were still combustibly controversial with barely prevailing middle-class culture
back in 1965. They were still
seen as the flying wedge of
rock culture that sundered
families and propelled gen-

Diana ··
West

erations along separate
tracks. Indeed, The Beatles
were rather more likely to be
banned from major venues
(as they were in Cleveland)
than credited with raising the
moral tone inside them.
What would help 2005
explain to 1965 the transfo~­
mation of Paul _McCartney
from barbarian at the gate to
defender of the faith? I'm not
sure that simply appending
the appearance of the Beatie
to the appearance of the
breast would make much
sense. But even ·if The
People We . Used To Be
acknowledged .that The
People We Have Become
regard Paul . McCartney as
mainstream-wholesome, it
remains very hard to explain
why. Sure, at age 62, Paul
McCartney is older. But it's
worth noting that the songs
he played to be innocuous
and decent in the 21st century were the songs he played
to be groovy and cool in the
20th. In other words, he didn't change: We did.
Listening to Sir Paul the
other night (note: don't forget ·to tell 1965 that Queen
Elizalreth knighted him in

1997) was an unnerving of the universities, the
experience for a kaleido- explosion of illegal drug use,
experimentation,
scopic -dare I say psyche- . sexual
0
delic - mix of reasons. He four-letter-language; the culwas in fine, if paler voice, tural and stylistic works.
hitting every familiar noie Theirs was a songbook redoand lick (to the point where lent of the . revolution that
one critic wondered if he had has permanently eliminated
been lip-synching). It was as the barriers .and boundaries
though the performance had that once regulate(!. the mainbeen frozen in time, his for stream. That revolution. of
course, is how we got to
the remixing.
Jackson's
MT.V
This is one thing if you're Janet
62-old Pavarotti singing moment last year in the first
.
"Pagliacci," or even 62-year- place.
It's
also
how
we
got
to
old Noel Coward si11ging
"Mad Dogs and Englishmen." Paul McCartney's perforBut
62-year-old
Paul · mance - to - the - rescue . ·
McCartney singing "Baby, Having rejected flesh,
you can drive my car" is primetime has turned to
something else again. Jingle- "innocuous," a move that
catchy · tho1.1gh the song may reveals just how grossly limbe, there was something more ited the spectrum of popular
than a little pathetic about entertainment·has become. It
"Car/star/car/cuz baby I love ·also .shows how the injection
you" 40 yel!fs down the pike; of rage and revolution and
ditto for..,Get Back," with its ·smut and self-pity into the
once .. : Shocking? Unsavory? cultural mainstream seems
Dangerous? Reference to to have pretty much dried
"California grass." Today, of the whole thing up.
course, soaked in the tepid Certainly, the life has
wash of a toxic mainstream, leached out This i&amp;~~'t to say ·
Paul McCartney was "offenwe consider it decent.
I'm not sure what I was sive." He was indeed quite
expecting, but the hollow- "innocuous." And he didn't
ness of the McCartney music seem to mind a bit his role as
was a little surprising. That "atonement" for past Super
hollowness was probably Bowl excess. Which, I
accentuated by the music's guess, is about as good as it
place very much at center gets these days in the muddy
stage, and by its distance old mainstream. But frankly,
from the psychodrama of the I think 1965 would say we
· 1960s. Long ago, The told you so.
(Diana West is a columnist
Beaties sang the songs that
accompanied the upending · for The Washington Times.
of a civilization - the anti- She call /Je contacted via
war movement, the sacking · dianawest@verizon.llet.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Foundation now taking.applications

· Mildred M. Hubbard

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWSCII&gt;MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

able by calling 674-7234.
The foundation initiated the
financial aid program recognizing the serious shortage of
health care professionals that
exists throughout the nation ,
including the Upper Ohio
Valley and the state of West
Virgi ni a, as well as the
iocreasing costs of higher
education.
To be eligible for financial
as sistance from the Pleasant
Valley Ho spital Hea.lth
Foundation , an individual

mu st be a re sident. of Mason
County, W.Va., or Gallia
County or Meigs County,
Ohio, have graduated from
an accreditell high school or
possess a GED. certificate,
and been accepted for
ad mission and declared a
major area of. study in a
health care field at an
accred ited · institution of
higher educaiion in either
West Virginia or Ohio. Pre program students are not
eligible for funding (e.g .

pre-nur&gt;ing. pre -pharmacy,
pre-med. etc .)
Applications must
be
received by Friday, April 8,
2005. along wuh letters of
reference from two people
familiar with the applicant's
academic and/or employment
history, as well as school transcript s. These document s
should be mailed Jo Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
Health
I John
Foundation at
Marshall Way; Point Pleasant,
W.Va. 25550.

SYRACUSE - Mildred M. Hubbard, 83, Syracuse, passed
POINT PLEASANT away at 2:54p.m. on Friday, Feb. 11, .2005 at Rocksprings Applications for the Pleasant
Rerabilitation Center, Pomeroy. Valley
Hospital
Health
grant-in-aid
.She was born on May 21 , t 921 in Mason Co11nty, W.Va. Foundations
Sh e was the daughter of the late Leonard and Hattie loans, which provide financial
(Nelson) Haning . She was a beautician and a homemaker. assistance to local students
preparing for careers in Lhe
She is survived by two daughters, Sally (Roger) Holman, field of health care, are curRutland and Penny (Butch) Brinker, Pomeroy: five sons, Dale rently ' available in local high
(Betty) Willis, Racine, Robert Willis, Syracuse; Virgil (Pam) schools, according to Bryan
Dill , Racine, Tony Salser, Racine and Mark Sal'ser, Racine: Stepp, foundation chairman.
one sister, Lucy L SiCkle, Mogadem, Ohio; 19 grandchildren Applicati~ns are . also availand 33 great-grandchildren .
She was preceded in death by ·husbands, Dale Willis and
Bill Huhbard ; one daughter, Linda Ann Je.nkins, a son,
· Jackie Willi s: a step;dali ghter, Betty McKinney;. one
POMEROY -The Big Ellis, and Carrie Cade attendFive gi rl s altended the thi s year because of floodgranddaughter,. Monica Holman Wolfe; three gre.at-grandBend
Girl
Scout
Service
Unit
ed
the
Cookie
Crunch
on
Jan
.
Secret
Santa· workshop. The . in g. They hope ' to go next
children , Tyler Willis , Kenneth Tyler Wolfe, Cholie
is
planning
for
several
sum4,
and
on
Jan.
17,
met
and
mali
lock-in
in January was year. No meeting wa s held
Mundy: brothers Donald Covert, Dana Cevei't , and
mer ·events around the coun- worked on the Playing discussed.
on Jan . I 0 because of floodCharles Covert: a sister Ethel Johnson and special daugh- ty.
Around the World, Cookie. . The troop played games Ing.
.
'
ter-in -law Shirley Willi s.
Future events include Dad, and Math Fun Try-its.
with Southern Brownie
The next mce1ing was held
Troop 11 20 to help .the on Jan . 17 . Report on ,the
Funeral services will be l p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2005 at Grandpa &amp; Me Fishing Day, .
Brownies meet one of their cookie kickoff wa.s given .
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. Officiating will be Rev. Art in ·the Park, Extreme
Try -It badges.· The ' girls Dawn fl.omine &gt; gave a
Jim Satterfield. Interment will be at the Bradford Cemetery. Outdoor Challenge for Girls
11-n; and Brownie-Junior
. enjoyed it and the Junior report on going to Columbus
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday at the Cremeens Pow Wow.
troop may do it .again. Ashlee to a factory where the girls
·Funeral Home in Racine .
Thinking Day event will
Worked on several Try-its Bateman Lee and Jes sica could put bears in balleons
be held at the Reedsville is beintg carried out by the Stines served refreshments.
and take a .tour. More disChNr:ch
of
the
Nazarene
Zink
.
cu ssion on thi s will be held
Girls
talked
about
Brownies, who are al so planMaison, Ferman Moore, Rae
fron\ noon until 3 p.m. on ning Thinking Day and will the Zebra at the Dec. 13 ·tater.
Moore,
Billi
Bentley, Feb. 26.
·
'
More work was done on
be going to a Valentine's Day . meeting . Joyce Romines.
Courtney
S'im,
Paula
The
service
unit
will
also
·
Brittany
Cogar,
Cat
·
the
Cookie badge. Girls hope
party. 'the Brownies have
· from Page A1
Eichinger and Crisp.
Payne,
Maynard,
Rachel
host an all-level Career just completed the "Through
to finish at the next meeting.
Day on March 12 at the the Years" Try-it using the Kimmy ·Deaver, Ashiee For the next meeting, the
patients "navigate" through
Bateman Lee , Sara Van girls will bring a fruit/veg Middleport Church of program box.
all Uie problems of having
'Christ, Family Life Center.
Cooney, Megan McGee. etable drink to share. After
cancer and link up with the
along with four members this, they will have one more
Any organization wh.ich
from Page A1
right resources and assistance
from
Southern Brownie food group to do.
would like to help with this
Troop 1120 all attended the
The Jan. ·24 Softer Side
event is urged to contact
programs.
Jerrena
Ebersbach
at
992in
Parkersburg,
W.Va.
badge
workshop was canevent
Dietsch-Krubl will be pro- including the neighboring
The girls learned about a celled because of snow .and
viding litemture on coping, counties of Athens, Gallia 7747.
Southern Junior Troop
Cookie
deliveries
will
be
-young
girl, Kelly. who i).ad ice last Saturday. but has
· referring patients to suppon and Hocking, use a sales tax
1204 met on Nov. 29 and dismade in March. There wi II cussed going horseback rid- cancer and created a story been reschedule for Feb. 21.
groups, classes and programs ' to fund their systems."
about accepting and loving Cookie forms were turn·ed
also
be area booth sales.
ing in the spring.
.
Such a sales tax hike would
for information, identifying
· A Junior · Music Day is
.one another through t,he 10 .
~
resources for financial assis- require approval from Meigs planned for March 19' at .The girls participated in the charming tale of Zink the ' The troop picked China for
tance with home care, trans- County voters. The 9ll com- Meigs High School. For Pomeroy Christmas parade, Zebra.
Thinking Day 'and decided to
portation and other concerns, mittee estimates the tax more information, contact including Rachel Payne, Cat
Cat Maynard presented attend the Janimin' Juniors .
Maynarcj, Brittany Cogar,'
identifying activi.tie s that would generate approximate- Cheryl King at 992-6895.
music badge workshop to be
work
for Careers badge.
Ashley
Deem,
Ashley
ly
$500,000
per
year,
and
improve their qualify of life,
The girls started work on a held in April and to attend
Bateman
Lee,
Joyce
tree craft.
the Careers badge workshop
Christmas
of
a
2003
nationand just listening, caring and uses results
,
Romi'nes, Kimmy Deaver
For
the
Dec.
20
meeting.
to be held in March. The
helping in their time of need. wide. survey to estimate the
and Tara Eakins.
Crisp asks that anyone cost of operating a 911 sys·
They shopped for items to the troop finished working on ieader told members they
The
troop
is
now
meeting
interested in becoming a part tern in ·Meigs County at at the Meigs County Museum send to soldiers serving in their Christmas tree craft and could be in a· talent show in
of the Meigs task force con- $566,406, Grants for equip- on the first and third Operation Iraqi Freedom. exchanged gifts. The troop April.
has been, working on a cookThis event will be for the
tact her, 992-2136, or attend ment could be available from Tuesdays of each month. They purchased items for ·a ing badge, preparing dishes Family Partnership camthe Wednesday meeting. several source!;, the commit-· · This month the girls took a care package and for a needy for a specific food group each paign. The next few month&gt;
Currently there are 10 mem- tee says, · including .the tour of Wendy's of Pomeroy child in the area for · month. The girls chose meat appear to be busy. Meetings
Regional and learned how a hamburge~ Christmas ..
bers, David Harris , Steve · Appalachian
The girls discussed attend- tor December. Each member will now be held from 5:15 to
was made. ·After their ·tour
Beha, Julie Campbell, Sue Commission.
ing the SecJ;Ct Santa work- in attendance brought a /neat 7:15p.m. to help with work'they had lunch there.
dish to share. The recipes will ing . mom s getting their girls
·
!
· The girls have been prepar- . shop.
McKenzie Greene visited be combined for the girls to to the meetings .
history on harmonicas, listed ing a poster and learning
At the Jan . 29 meeting, lasi
have a cookbook at the end of
some famous people who about Germany as their coun- the troop for the meeting. the series. The troop chose meeting of the month. girls
played them, talked about try for Thinking Day. They Tara Eakins provided refresh- fruits and veggies for the next elected · new officers for
.
from Page A1
technique, and then presented will b attending Disney's ments.
February and March.
.
At the Dec. 6 meeting, new group.
several songs.
Beauty and the Beast on Ice .
President thi s time and next
The Jan . 3 ·meeting opened
officers were elected includwere presented certificates
The native of Engiand
time
will be sixth graders so
with
a
flag
ceremony
..
Dues
ing: Jessica Stines, presid~nt ;
. and
pins. Participation described himself as a semiSara Van Cooney. vice presi- and attendance were taken they can use it on their
included three students from professional player in his
dent; and Cat Maynard, sec- and minutes of the last meet- Leadership Pin. Elected were
grade 5 in Meigs Local, nine country who built · and
President Ashley B. Lee.
retary. Megan McGee was ing were .read.
from' grade 5. three from repaired instruments, enter· The girls reported on Polar Vice
President
Joyce
elected to collect dues and
Romines,
Secretary
and
grade 6, and one from grade tained with them, and judged
Express.
Five
girls
attenoed.
Tiffany Withrow, Ariel take attendance at meetings. ·
l&gt;ublic
Relations
·
Ashley
rroop voted to go to
9 at Eastern Local.
contests .. He has judged
Columbu s Zoo with their si s- Deem. and Due s and
Mary Rose, chairman for Ohio's champion harmonica
ter Brownie Troop in May. Attendance Brittany Cogar.
the contest, explained that the contest held at ChesterPast officers were told to
Work was started on the
. essays were judged on histor- Shade Days for the past two
evaluate
themselves on how ·
cookie
badges
and
pin.
Two
ical accuracy, adherence to years.
rriore girls served their food well they thought they had
subject. organization of
Missin demonstrated sevSyracuse,
and
Paula
Renae
for
the meat group.
done ~nd what improvements
material. originality, interest,
eral
techniques
including
Allen,
29,
Pomeroy;
and
Levi
they need to do next time
The
girls
ended
the
meetspelling and punctuation,
how to control breathing by
Daniel Searls, 23, of ing with a friendship squeeze. they are elected. This is part
grammar, and bibliography.
Syracuse,
and April Michelle
the
positioning
of
hands.
On Jan . 4. se ven girls of the Leadership Pin.
Pat Holter, regent, presided
POMEROY -· . Marriage Turner, 24, Syracuse.
More work was done on
'attended the annual Cookie
the
meeting
and "Everyone has some talent,
at
issued
in
Meigs
their
Recipe Books. Phylli s
licenses
were
at
Syracuse
Kickoff
held
announced the Charter Day something that they do well, · County Probate Court to
Deem
told them she ordered
Community Building. Joyce
luncheon to be held on March and mine just happens to be Charles Francis Wagner. 56,
Romines won the cookie I , 728 boxes of cookies. Top. .
5 at Trinity Church. Good playing· the harmonica," he Racine, and Sherry Diane
eating
contest . in her age Seller was Ashley Deem.
.
POMEROY-· A foreclosure group.
Citizenship awards will be said. .
Rickard, 54, Racine; Jimmy
selling 260 boxes and
Refreshments carrying out Ray Lee, Jr., 32, Pomeroy, was granted in Meigs County
presented at that meeting.
On Jan. 8, more work was Rachel Payne was runner-up
For the program Mary a· valentine theme were and
Samantha
Jean Common Pleas Court to Bank- done on/the Cookie badge. with 236 boxes. Top cookies .
Powell introduced Pat Missin served ·by hostesses, Carol Wilcoxen, 21, Middleport; One, NA , against Michael A. Troop
members
were again weFc Do Si Dos,
·of Jackson who gave some Sisson and Linda Russell.
Anthony Todd Wolfe, 33, Willford, and others.
unable to attend the Samaos, Tagalongs. and
Huntington Mall Locl; -in Mints.
upgrade
self-contained cil . that she had recent! y . Communications is schedbreathing apparatuses and attended Mayor's Court uled to attend to discuss
renewing Charter's .franchise
training in Columbus.
turn-out gear. .
• Councilman Kenny with the village.
Council also agreed to
from Page A1
. Charter Communication's
send an undetermined repre- Buckley informed council
assistant chief; Bud Lavender, sentative of the Syracuse that he had recently met with last contract with the village
·capt.; Larry Ebersbach, presi- Volunteer . ·Firefighters . FEMA regarding damages was signed on March 7, 1996
dent; Mike · Hoffman, vice- Association · and Syracuse the village had sustained dur- for a duration of I0 years.
president; Tammy Bable, sec- Grants 'Administrator Rick ing the September 2004
retary; JeffBable, lst Lt.: Don Chancy to a grant writing flooding.
• Wood commended
Whan, 2nd Lt.; Brent Schuler, class for fire departments on
everyone
who kept village
Feb.
23
·in
Gallia
County.
3rd Lt. ; Joey Riffle, 4th Lt.;
In other council business: streets .free of recent snow
Sandy Cunningham, treasurer.
from Page A1
•
Shannon Smith was and ice, saying they had done
Councilman Bob Wood
was
appointed
by approved for hire as a part- an "excellent job."
• It was announced that the compressor, Sawzall brand
c;un9ingham to head the Fire time police officer for the
cutting saw and other mi scelDepartment
Gnevance Syracuse Police Department fire department will bf hold- laneous power tools .
'for not .more than 22 hours a ing , two fundraisers . A
Committee.
Jones requests that anyone
spaghetti dtiiner will be held
Council approved the week.
who
has been approached by
• Council accepted a bid from II a.m. to 3 p.m. on
2005 by. laws of the Syracuse.
).
Volunteer
- Firefighters from Carl Hysell for the used March 6 at the fire depart- an individual(s) selling these
items
to
contact
him
either
.at
ment, at a cost of $5, and a
Association with the e«cep- police cruiser.
Racine
Police
.• Syracuse Clerk of Courts basket bingo event will be the
tion of article live, section
Department
949-2296
or hi s
one which dealt with discipli- Tammy Smith reported that held on May 12.
~~.t~
M
~.
• Council approved meet· home 949-460 I .
nary actions for members of she ·will be attending clerk
ings for the Syracuse. Water . "People work hard for
the firefighters association . training March 10 -I L
• Village Clerk Sharon Board to be· held .on the first what they got." Jones· said
Article five , section one will
about the residents of. Racine .
Cottrill
and Pro-Tempore Monday of every month.
be discussed again at the next
President of council Donna
The next council meeting "This is a small community.
counci I meeting.
East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH
Peterson
will
be
attending
a
will
be lleld at 7 p.m. on If you do something wrong
. Peterson was given · per740-992-6614 • 1-8()()-837·1094
mission by council to apply Sunshine Law forum on Feb. March 3 at Syracuse'"Village people are not going to toler16
in
Marietta.
·
HaiL
Michael
Kelemen
repate
it
and
five
minutes
after.
for a State Fire Marshal
Charter . you do it. I'll knmv."
• Peterson informed coun- . re senting
· Grant for Up to $1 0,000 to .

-MEIGS CouNTY GIRL Scour' ·DIARY-

Eastern Brownie
Troop 1316

Task

911

Southern Junior
Troop 12'04

Daisy Troop 1334

D.A.R ..

Sen. Clinton's frank talk on abortion·

choice. This is - or ought to · grams that acknowledge the
You have a teeiuige son.
He has a girlfriend. You have
be - the shared goal, the reality· of teens' lives and
cr.itical common ground, of provide solid informatio'n
had the sex talk. You have
had multiple sex talks. He .
those for and against legal- and arguments for choosing
ized
abortion.
birth control or abstinence?
wants you to stop. He gets it,
"So my hope now, today,
The 8ush administration
he ~ays. You want to think he
Joan
·does, but still you artfully
is that whatever our di s- also recent! y announced that
Ryan
work pregnancy and safer
agreements with those in this Medicare now would cover
debate," Clinton said in her the cost for sexual enhancesex and abstinence into con- .
versations about cars and
speech, "that we join togeth- ment drugs like Viagra, yet it
ceramics class, as if he won't
er to take real action ... to · still is blocking women's
.notice what you are doing .
she did something so few reduce the number of abor- ready access to Plan B, the soMaybe you are going too politicians
dare:
She tions (among) women and called inorning.after pill.
far. But you know today's acknowledged the conflicts, girlS In our country and Even in the Department of
LETTERS TO THE
130-page
Justice's new
teenagers are inundated with ambiguities and complexi- . around the world."
For
abortion
activists,
that
national
protocol
for
treating
messages
that'
sex
is
part
of
ties
of
a
controversial
issue.
EDITOR
any relationship, no matter She opened herself for bat- will mean being more op'en sexual-assault victims, there
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should . how casual or callow. What tering from both sides - about the ·price most women isn't a single mention of offer. you want your teenager to some of her own allies con- pay emotionaliy in having an ing this emergency contracepbe less than 300 words. Allletters are subject to
understand is that an unwant- tending that she is undermin: · abortion, and it means tion - which could prevent
· editing and must be signed and include address
ed pregnancy exacts a sub- ing support for abortion at a refraining from characteriz- the 15,000 abortions each year
stantiai price, no matter what time when Roe is as vulner- ing the decision. as no more that result from rape.
. and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
path the woman chooses. .
able as ever, and her adver- momentous than a tooth
Of the 6 million pregnan· be published. Letters should be in good taste,
This is the common saries crowing that Clinton extraction.
cies in the United States
addressing issues, not personalities. ·
For those who oppose legal each year, half are unintend. ground between those who is finally conceding that
abortion, joining in the fight ed. About half of those end
a~ against legal abortion
abortion is bad.
and those who support · it
This reaction, of course, is to eliminate unwanted preg- in abortion. This .is why you
. This is where, after decades why we are still stuck swing- nancies will mean acknowl- - talk to· your .children about
of ossified, · oversimplified ing the same sticks at the edging that abstinence-only abstaining from sex, why .
·'
Reader
Services
(USPs
213·9601
credenda on both sides, the same horses and traveling education isn't working. A , you tell them they're too
•••
Correcllon J&gt;ollcy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
national debate about abor- nowhere. So it was no small recent study out of Texas young, but why you also say
Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
tion needs, finally, to move. thing thill Clinton said what A&amp;M found, as some other that if sex is for whatever
accurate. H you know of an error in a through Friday, 111 Court Street ,
Sen. Hillary Clinton nearly every woman who studies have, that abstinence reason inevitable, to use proIIOry. call the newsroom at (740) 992- Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
recently
took a step toward has had an abortion knows. programs were not stemming tection.
2156.
• paid at Pomeroy.
Member. The Asso:ciated Press and the
stripping away the defensive Almost. every woman who the sexual activity of high
Your kid is only 14, and he
Ohio Newspaper AssociaHon.
Our main number le
armor that has thwarted becomes pregnant before school students. About 23 or she could be having ·sex,
PoetmBter: Send addf'ess correc11ona·
(740) 982-2158.
almost any meaningful con- she is ready to be a mother percent of ninth-gmde girls in or at least considering it. At
• Depeibll8&lt;11 extenelona are: · ~o The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cour1 Street,
versation about the most grapples with her decision. the study had sexual inter- 14, I was still trying .to finaPomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
. talked-about issue of our She is likely to think about course before they received ·gle my first real kiss. .
Subscription Rates
News
time.
the potential of the fetus abstinence . education .. After
But I do remember that I
By carrler or motor .route
EditOr: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
In
a.speech
to
a
pro-c!Joice
inside
her,
and
to
think,
too,
the
course,
the
number
of
saw
the world in absolutes;
One month . ..... . ....'1 0.27
. Rap aftel: Brian Reed, E.1d. 14
audience
in
New
York,
she
about
the
almost
unimagin~
those
same
gifls
who
had
had
right
or wrong, good or bad.
One year .•. .. ....... '123.24
lloJporW : Belh Sergent, Ext 13
called abortion "a sad, tragic able prospect of bringing sexual intercourse rose to 28 Teenagers don't know yet
Dally ... ................50'
Senior Citizen rates
choice to many, many into the world a baby she . percent.
how few things in life fit
Advertising
One month ........... .'8.70
women," a comment that could neither give up nor
"We didn't find what ma~y neatly into either/or. We. do,
: ~ SeiM: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
One year ............ .'96.10
reportedly ¢1icited a few raise. The choice is, for would have liked for us to and yet we pretend we don't. ·
• ~ - : Brenda Davis, Ext 16 SOOEKdbet s shOuld remit in actvanoe direct
~ a.-JCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
gasps. She reiterated h~r . most, fraught with ambigui- find," the lead researcher The abortion battle for too
to the Daily Sentinel. No subscription by
mail permitted in areas where home
· long has been waged from
un~avering support for Roe
ty and contradictions and was quoted as saying. ·
carrier
service
is
awllabkt.
vs. Wade, pledging to "fight grief, and even for all that,
Circulation
Undeterred, the Bush ,behind our separat~ walls,
' Dt tlcf Mgr.: Ja'son Patterson, Ext. 17
administration
will spend and all along, right outside·
to
defend
it
in
th~
coming
for
many
women,
still
the
Mall Subecrlptlon
years," but she talked about right choice.
about $131 million this year in the field between us, the
•
lnMie Metoa County
General
Manager
13
Weeks
.
..
..
..
.
..
.
.
.'32.26
the
complexities
of
abortion,
We
must
fight
to
keep
it
on
abstinence-only pro- wounded have been waiting.
•
•
Cllar1ene Hoenich, Ext 12
26 Weeks ............ .'64.20
too, how it is "often the most legal , knowing that banning grams, a puzzling decision.
(loon Ryan is a ,olumnist
52 Weeks .... . ..... . .'127.11
difficult
(decision)
that
a
abonion
does
not
stop
aborIf
its
goal
is,
as
it
says,
to
for
the San . Francisco
E-mell:
woman
will
ever
make."
tion,
and
we
m'ust
fight
to
reduce
teenage
pregnancy,
Chronicle. Send commenrs
\f Ougtde Melga County
MWSO mydallysentineLcom .
13
Weeks
..
·
.....
·
.
.....
'53.55
why
isn't
it
spending
money
Hallelujah.
protect
as
·many
girls
and
to her in ca re of this newspa- .
'
26Wael&lt;s . .. ......... '1 07.10
No matter what you think wome11 as · possible from on programs that n;duce per or send her e-mail at
52 Wael&lt;s .. . . . .......'214.21
www.mydallyoen1lnel:com
of Clinton's political beliefs, ever having to make that teenage pregnancy - pro- · joanryan@sfchronicle.com.)

The Daily Sentinel

-:

Meigs Brownie
Troop 1015

For the record

Marriage
licenses

Foreclosure

Council

Racine

.

.. -·' .. ' .

.. . . . .

.

SERVICE
TECHNICIANS
NEEDED

Service Technicians
please apply in person.
Experience preferred
but others considered. ·

'P'tiuleaMt- de

Don Tate Motors

"'!'- •; , .. .... ...

•

www.mydailysentinel.com ,

- ~~-..;_

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

_

�(

PageA6

OHIO
Teen's family ,pushes for experimental cancer treatment

The. Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 14,

Rio hoops wraj&gt;up; Page 82
OHSAA boys sectional pairings, Page 82
Mailman calls It a career, Page 86 .

2005 ·

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) Amei-itan Cancer Society.
With no private company or · TheAronsarefightingforan
government agency willing to experimental gene therapy ·
back an experimental gene treatment
at
Cincinnati
therapy, the parents of a 14- Children's Hospital Medical
year-old With cancer are push- Center. Dr. Tiniothy Cripe
ing to raise $1.7 million to fund hopes to study an altered form
the treatment themselves.
of the herpes simplex virus in
. Doctors at two hospitals told pediatric cancer patients.
In experiments in lab mice,
Jordan Aron's parents in
October th~t his cancer was. the:virus obliterates malignant
incurJble. The next step was tumors. according to Cripe's
comfort care, then hospice .
latest research published
But Jordan 's mother, W~gdy, online by the journal Cancer
. said she won't give up d~p ite Gene Therapy. ·
what the doctors say. . '
Success in animals doesn't
. "They try their best, but it's necessarily
translate
to
not an exact science. They're humuns. But Cripe says the
not God," she said.
herpes virus appears particuAron says she knows her son larly suited for rhabdomyosardiJesn'!'have much time. ·
coma.
Cripe is at least $1.7 million ·
Jordan has a tumor pushing
out from hi s jaw and temple. and several·regulatory hurdles
He had surgery to remove the ·away from human testing. He
tumor in July but the cancer . lost ·. sponsorship from a
roared .back in a matter of Californi~ biopharmaceutical
months, just as it did before. · company a11d has been turned
Jordan didn't understand down three times by various
what it meant when they said offices of the National
· two years ago he had rhllb- Institutes of Health, the federal
domyosarcoma, a fast-grow- agency that charts .the course ·
.
AP Photo!The Plain Dealer, Dale Omori
ing childhood cancer.
for biomedical research.
Dr. Timothy Cripe talks to George ana Wendy Aron in Cincinnati about seeking another surgery for their son, Jorqan. Removing
:·1 thought it was like a cold , Scientists say
moving . the tumor would be a risky operation. WitH no private company or government agency willing to back an experimental gene ther;
or something," he said, sitting promising gene therapie~ for- apy, the. parents 14-year-old Jordan are pushing to raise $1.8 million to fund the treatment themselves . .
at the edge qfhis'bed on .anoth- ward is hampered by problems
time with new caReer drugs · cto'n' t think it's false hope. You
er day of missed school in of the 1990s, .including the there's a.·backlash,'' said. Dr. his own gene therapy study.
that are FDA approved for never know if the. thing that's
Jt's
also
uncommon
·for
a
Boardman, a Youngstown sub- death of an 18-year-old in a Mark Kay, head of human gene
urb.
quest ionable trial at the therapy at Stanford UniversitY: patient to try to find financing, adults but unproven in chil- going to help a patient is right
·
dren. He said he was scolded around the corner."
An Nl H committee that Kay said. ·
"I didn' t think it would last University of Pennsylvania.
by
a
previous
doctor
of
Jordan 's mother sent out
The governme11t set up more reNiewed Cripe's application
this long," · he said in a low,
fund-raising
letters
in Jordan's, who believed ihe
said
his
preliminary
data
was
fragile voice.
layers of red tape with an eye
On the Net:
teenager should be receiving
December.
A
local
Rhabdomyosarcqma toward patient safety, and encouraging. But reviewers,
American Cancer Society~
accounts for about 4 percent researchers say fed~!ral grants wrote that Cripe's experience Presbyterian church is plan- end-of-life comfort care at
home
.
http://www.cancer.org
with geric therapy and the data ning a bow Iathon, and the famof childhood cancers with are tougher to find.
"I've thought a lor about
Information from: · The
ily's synagogue is hosting a
about 350 new cases occur"An enormous amount of from his studies fell short.
this,': Cripe said, "I do think Plain Dealer, httpJ/wwl~clevt!­
.
NIH says it's rare for a spaghetti dinner.
ring each year in the United money was spent on trials that
it's
·important to offer hope. I . ·la!Jd.com
Cripe
is
trying
to
buy
Jordan
researcher
to
seek
funding
for
States, according to the were 110t successful, so now

Monday, February 14, 2005

================···= ========
Bovs PREP BASKETBALL

map." .

The diocese i~sued a statement !hat said although closing any parish will be painful,
the · changes are necessary.
The diocese said it has consulted extensively with
parishes and churches on the
recommendations.
The plan, which will be
finalized in · March, would
affect one of . every five
churches in the diocese,
reducing the number of
parishes. from 157 to . 13 I. A
two-year study 'by a church
· committee also recommended
that 16 other parishes remain
operating but share pastors.
The diocese has about
307,000 Catholics in 19 counties in northwest Ohio.

ovc

S~boof

AIJ. Q\IC ·
'Chesapeake ........... ,19·1 ...... 10-0
Coal Grove ................ 10-10 .... 6-4
South Point ......:........ 9-11 ...... 6-4
River Valley ............... 10-1 0 .... 5-5
Fairland ..................... 3-1'7 ...... 2-8
Rock Hill ....................5·15 ...... 1-9

SEOAL ,

Schoof
A1J.
_sEQ
•warren .... ................. 17-3 ...... 9-1
Jackson ................ 17-3 ...... 7-3
Logan ....................... 12'7 ... ... 7-3
Marietta ............ . ...... 8-11 ...... 4-6
Gallia Academy ... :..... 7·13 ...... 2-8 ·
Athens .:: .................. 2-18 ...... 1-9

TVC
Ohio Division
School
AIJ. M
'Vinton County .......... 13-6 ...... 8-2
'Belpre ...................... 13-7 ...... 8·2
Alexander .................. 13-7,...... 6-4
Meigs ...... ...... ,.......... :9-11 .... ..4-6
Nelsonville-York ......... 9-11 ...... 4-6
Wellstqn ................. ... 2-18 ......0·10
Hocking Division
School
A1J.
M
'Federal Ho'cking ...... 17-3 ..... 9-1
Eastern .... :................. 17-3 ...... 8·2
Trimble ...................... 14-6 ...... 7-3
Southern ................... 5·15 ...... 3·7
Miller ......................... 7-13 ...... 2·8
Watertord .................. 3·17 ...... 1·9
OTHERS
South Gallia . .. ... .. .. ..
... 14-5
OVCS ...................................... 1-17

GIRLS

.

PREP BASKETBALL

ovc

School
ALL Q\IC
'South Point.. ............ 19-2 ...... 10-0
IChesapeake ............ 13-9 .. :.. .7-3
#Fairland ...... :............ 9-12 ..... 6-4
ICoal Grove .............. 12.9 ...... 5-5
IRiver Valley ............. 3-1 7 ...... 1-9
fRock Hill. ................. 2-15 ...... 1·9

Catholics protest plan to close Toledo Diocese churches .
TOLEDO (AP) - . About
150 Roman Catholics protest· ed on Sunday the Toledo
Diocese's recommendation to
close ,or merge 33 pari shes to
account for shifting populations and the declining num'ber of priests.
Some parishioners outside
the diocese's main church, the
Queen of the Most Holy
Rosary Cathedral, said they
feel the diocese is moving
ahead with the closing recommendation without' consiqering their opinions or other
options.
The protesters prayed,
sung, read the names of the
churches ·recommended for
closure and held up signs,
including one that said,
"We're people, not pins on a

SEOAL

School
A1J. · ~
'Marietta .................... 12-8 .. .' .. f3
*Warren ..................... 14-6 ...... 7-3

Logan ........................ 12-9 ......6-4
Galli a Academy ......... 13-8 .... ..4-6
tJacksori ................... 11-1 o .. ..4-6
Athens ....................... 7-13 ...... 2-8

TVC
Ohio' Division·
School
.
A1.1. M
'INelsonville-'l:'ork ..... 14-7 ...... 9-1
Vinton Co .................. 12-9 ..... 8·2
Belpre ........................ 14-8 .... ,.7-3
1Aiexander ..' .... :......... 6-16 ...... 3-7
tMeigs ...................... 7-15 ...... 2-B
1Wellston .................. 2-19 ..... 1-9
Hocking Division
School
AIJ. M
'Trimble ..................... 20-1 ...... 9-1.
•watertord ... .. ............ 17-4 ...... 9-1
tEastern :......... :..... 1..13-8 ......5-5
IFeaeral Hocking ...... 10-11 .... 5-5
Southern ................... 7-14 ......1-9
IMiller ....................... 6-15 ...... 1-9
OTHERS
CNC$ .............................. ,. .....9-10
South Gallia .............. .............. 5-14

WHAT
(WOULD
JESUS
DO?

•-

t -

Boys Regular Season
Saturday ·

.......
: Jllat~w Fn PrUlllla 1Am aiiii!M (Mi FA)
•.

NOT

.

NOT llmrnQM•••ONLY Ser1a

Beverly Ft.

L

Warren 105, New Matamoras Frontier 40

Nelsonville-York 57, Athens 48

Girls Tournament
Saturday
Division·II
· Gallia Academy 31 , Meigs 28
Fairfield Union 67, Logan Elm 25
· Warren 54, Waverly 41
Thorn.Sheridan 44 , Wash. C.H. 28
,

Division Ill
Belpre 59, Wesllall 52
Zane Trace 58, Alex&amp;nder 42
S. Point 53, Portsmouth 46 ,
Eastern Brown 67, Chesapeake 24

,.

TODAY'S GAME

Girls Basketball - Rag. season
Wahama at Southern, 6 p.m.

Attention.varsity
hoops coaches

the southwest turning from the
south as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatutes will rise from 56
e\lfiY this afternomi to 5'! by
3:00pm then~ down to 50 late
afternoon. Skies will range from
panlycloudy to mostly cloudy with
5 to I 0 MPH winds tium the south.

FREE
Parking

FLAIR

FREE

Layaway

· FURNITURE .·
Tue-Set 9to5
. "BRAND NAME FtJRNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES" ,
Mon &amp;Friday Q.S
CloHd Sunday to be Ate 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV (304)675-1371
with family
5 'h mllu 10uth of Point Plenont on Rt. 1
•

Longtime Reds shortstop retires, joins Nationals
WASHINGTON (AP)
Shortstop Barry Larkin, a 12time all-star who spent his
entire 1'!-year career with the
Cincinnati Reds, has retired
and joined t~e Washington
Nationals in their front office
as a special assistant. ·
"! just feli it was time,"
Larkin said when reached
Sunday at his · home in
Orlando, , Fla. " I had some
opportunitie s with other
teams to play, but I didn't feel
that I could ·make the commitment as a player ·with

another team."
Jim Bowden
The Reds, ·his hometown
said m a
team, had rejected his overstatement
tures to return for a 20th seaSunday.
son, deciding to turn the posiLarkin, 40,
tion over to younger players.
said he had
"While his tasks and chal'been interlenges will be different than
ested
in
he experienced as a player,
working In a
Barry's presence coupled
team's front
With an eagerness to be
office and
involved in all facets of our ·
Larkin
perhap ·s
operations will undoubtedly
eventually
y1eld positive results for both managing a team and tl:tat his
Barry and the Nationals," new position would allow
Washingt11n general manager him to gain necessary ex peri.-

ence. He also said joining a
new organization appealed to
him.
" I just thought that thi s was
a way for me to get some
exposure with a front office
and do some things that I
may possibly want to do in
the future ," he said.
Larkin's 19-year tenure
with the Reds was the loi)gest
streak among aq iv.e pl~yers
who had been with just one
team.
Over 2,180 games, he hit
.295 with 441 doubles, 76

triples , 198 home runs, 960
RBI and 379 stolen bases. He
helped the team win the
World Series in 1990 and was
National League MVP in
1995:
Larkin batted .289 in Ill
games last season and was
chosen for hi s .f·2th All-Star
team, promptinl\ him to reevaluate his dectsion to retire
after 2004. He wanted to stay
with the Reds for another
season. but they de,cided to

Please see Larkin, 81

Eagles tame Trimble on Senior Night
.· BY BRYAN WALTERS

tiwalters@ mydailytribune .com
TUPPERS PLA·INS Nothing like a tournament
test before the real boys
basketball
madness
begins. .
Eastern ( 17-3, 8-2 )
closed .out the Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking division Saturday with a hardfought 78-61 victory over
rival Trimble to secure
second place outright and
celebrate Senior Night in
style.
.
The rivHI Tomcats ( 14-6, .
7-3) claimed a 39-33 edge
on the boards, including a
staggering · plus- 13 in the
offensive de.partment, but
never rebounded from the
3-2 zone that the Eagles
threw at them from the
opening tip. .
It was the firsr zone that
· EHS played all season, ·
and coach Howie Caldwell
knei.v it would be a tough
32 minutes for his troops.
Afterward, the venerable
coach could only smile
about his team's performance.
. "I was very pleased with
the way we played tonight.
. I thought we were focused
from point A to point B,"
said CaldwelL "We asked
the club to do some things
that we don't normally do,
and I think it . was something that Trimble was not ·
expecting.
It
really
allowed us some good ·
things early on."
Like holding the guests
scoreless for 3:55 in the
opening frame, turning a

Please see Eastem, 81

Browns
hire
Carthon

•.

.. "',. if'.....·•
': -

\ ~...,

&amp;

',.~

··'f·.

'

a

...
Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern~ s Adam Dillard , left, looks to make an entry pass during the third quarter Saturday .

versus Trimble. Dillard led the Eagles with ·24 points in a 78-61 victory.

CLEVELAND (AP) - . The
Cleveland Browns on Sunday .
hired Maurice Carthon, a
Dallas Cowboys assistant last
. season, as offensive coordinator.
Carthon and John Lott, who
was hired· as strength coach,
are the titst two additions to
head coach 'Romeo Crennel's
coaching staff.
Carthon, who ran Bill
Parcells' offense- in Dallas the
· past two seasons, has II years' ,
experience as .an NFL coach.
Carthon also played fullback
for the New York Giants in the
mid' 1980s when Crennel was
the team's special teams coach
and later its defensive line
coach .
"He has tremendous work
ethic," Crennel said of
Carthon. "Maurice and I share
the same philosophy .on how
our offense will run· and I
know he will be a great asset to
the Cleveland Browns."
Crennel, Carthon and Lott
worked together on Parcells'
staff ·with the New York Jets
from 1997-99. Lort served the
past eight years as Jets strength
coach. Lott also worked as a
strength coach at the collegiate
level and has trained Olympic
athletes inducting Carl Lew1s.

Frye 88, Belpre 56

Coal Grove 59, Wayne, W.Va. 56 ·

Division IV
Green 45, Symmes Valley .38
Lees. Fairtield 72, New Boston 30
Waterford 56, Crooksville 48
Frontier 45, Calpwell 37
Monday, February 14
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will be a breezy and cloudy
morning. Some rain is likely.
Temperature's will hold steady
around 53. Winds will be 15 to
10 MPH from the so.uth.
. Ajttrnoon (l-6p.m.)
It ,should continue to be ·
breezy and cloudy. There might
be a bit of rain around the area.
Temperatures .will linger at 55
with today's high of 56 occurring around 4:00pm. Winds
will be 15 MPH from the south
tumjng from the southwest as
·(he afternoon progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.•Midnighl) ·
Temperatures will diminish L~~~=~~!!:!!!!!
from 54 early this evening to
44. Skies will be clear to most- MPH winds from the west
ly cloudy with 5 to 1.5 MPH turning from the southwest as
the overnight progresses.
winds from the west.
1Ue&amp;day,February15
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures · will hover at . Morning (7 a.m. ~Noon)
Temperatures will rise from 41
40 with today's low of 40
to
54 by late this morning. Skies
occurring around 6:00am.
Skies will range from mostly will be mostly sunny to most! y
clear to partly cloudy with 5 cloudy with 5 MPH winds from

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

.Eastern 78, Trimble 61

CONSUMER ADVISORY: More than

AP Photo/Daniel Miller
Joan Knapke, from St. Paul parish in Hamlet, stands behind her
· sign &lt;;luring a protest in front of Rosary Cathedral in Toledo.
Toledo Diocese members are concerned about a recommenclation that 33 Roman Catholic churches· either close oc merge.

clinched league IItie
final record

BASKETBALL RESULTS

700 piopliln the Unllad Statla die In biGoom flree allah~ ...
Effectiv&amp; Januart 21. 2005, ~ beCame the only major
mattress rr-anufacturer to indude open 1lame retardant
materials in the production of all Serta beddlflg nationwide.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

' Boys and girls varsity basketball coaches are · reminded
to send us your final . regular
slats upon the completion of
the season for cons~deration
for the Associated Press alldistrict team as well as the
OVP Super 10 teams.
You may fax them to 4463008 or drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
Avenue.
You may also e-mail them to
sports@mydailytribuneorcall .
in any nominees, with their
stats, tQ 446-2342, ext. 33.
Deadline for this information is 5 p.m., Feb. 23. To get
someone on either of these
teams, this information is
required.

Manning, AFC topples NFC in Hawaii, 38-27
throws and Vick's jaw-drop- dance with Viii the Wairior,
ping elusiveness and creativi- the University of Hawaii's
ty.
mascot.
Manning
hi\sthrown
II
TO
Philadelphia's
Brian
HON 0 LULU - Pe.yton passes in the Pro Bowl, four Westbrook scored on a 12Manning was still at the peak more than any quarterback in · yard run later in the half - ,.
of his game in the Pro Bowl. NFL history. He hit Colts but when the NFC tried an
and Michael Vick showed teammate Marvin Harrison, ·onside kick, Ward leaped for
he's only beginning the .Ward · and San Diego's the ball and outran several
climb.
Antonio Gaies in the first 25 defenders, avoiding tackles.
Manning threw three minutes while the AFC built a and somersaulting through
touchdown passes to extend 28-10 halftime lead.
the end zone.
·
his career record in the NFL's
But Vick was determined to
It was the first touchdown
all-star game, while Vick led make a splash in his tirst trip . on a kickoff return in the 55. the NFC to .17 points in a sec- to Hawaii - and with the year history of the Pro Bowl.
Yick went 4-of-6 and hit
ond-half comeback that fell Atlanta coaching staff calling
short in the AFC's 38-27 vic- the plays, he led three straight Torry Holt for a 27-yard
tory Sunday. ·
scoring drives after entering touchdown play in the ftrSt
Pittsburgh's Hines Ward the game in the third quarter. series of his first Pro Bowl
caught a iouchdown pass and Vick was · 14-of-24 for 205 appearance. Vick, a four-year
returned an onside kick for a yards and a score, nimbly veteran, had to drop out of the
score. and three Chargers avoiding several sacks along 2003 game with an injury.
stars led the. clinching TO the way.
Vic~ led another scoring
drive in' the fourth quarter of · The NFC got within 31-27 drive moments later, diving
the AFC's seventh victory in on David Alj:ers' field goal, over the goal line for a 3-yard
nine meetings.
but the AFC's San Diego con- score - even though his hel. ·Manning, the regular-sea- nection took over. Drew met was knocked off hi s head
son MVP after breaking Dan Brees hit Gates for a 33-yard by Baltimore's Ed Reed, the
Marino's NFL record .with 49· gain on a Ilea-flicker play NFL's defensive player of the
touchdown passes. completed selected by fans in an online year.
·
just six passes for 130 yards. vote,
and
LaDainian
While Manning an&lt;;! Vick
13ut three were spectacular Tomlinson tinished the drive starred, the Super Bowl quarscoring tosses. and the Colts with a 4-yard TO run with terbacks had considerably
quieter days. NFC starter
quarterback was named the 5: 15 to·play.
MVP in his fifth trip to the
Harrison scored on a 62- · Donovan McNabb went 1Pro Bowl. .
_
yard
pass
from · his for-8 with an interception,
The game didn' t quite have Indianapolis teammate in the while Tom·Brady was 4-for-9:
the offensive fireworks of last · first quarter, tying Jimmy for 48 yards' in two series:
· .
season's 107-point marathon. Smith's career record with his yielding one field j!oal.
but Manning and Vick · fifth Pro Bowl . touchdown.
The (Jiants' Tiki Barber
photo thrilled the 26th straight sell- . Ward followed ~ith a~ 1-yard . ru,shed for 70 yards iri his f~! ·
NFC quarterback Donovan McNabb (5) drops back to pass dur- out crowd at Aloha Stadtum TO catch on a pmpomt throw Pro Bowl, and St. Louts
ing the first quarter of the 2005 Pro Bowl at Aloha Stadium in with exhibitions of their from Manning, and he cele- Torry Holt caught five passes
Honolulu on Sunday. At left is Pittsburgh Steelers' Joey Porter.. strengths: Manning's expert brated with a goofy hula for 99')'ards.
BY GREG BEACHUM

Associated Press

l

·-··---- L.

�.

..
•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Redwomen narrowly
escape against Tiffin
BY MARK WILLIAMS
Spec1al to the Sent1nel
RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
Red'women basketball team.
ranked No. 18 in the latest
NAIA Divrsron II Top 25
Poll \ had a great start and a
good enough fini sh to hold off
visiting
Tiffin .
64-58 .
Satu.rday night at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande (21 -8. I 0-5
AMCS) jumped out quickly
to a 9-2 lead and showed
signs of blowing out the Lady
Dragons early. Trll1n (5· 19.
2-·13 AMCS) contributed to
the Rro cause with four
turnovers on rt 's frrsl four possessiOns.

The Lady Dragon s were
able to weather the storm and
gained the lead 15-12. The
visitors wou ld push the
advantage to as hi gh as six
points at 26-20 in the first half
-and a take a nan ow 34-JJ
lead to halftime.
The Redwomen bega n to
put things together 111 the sec, ond half and would surge
ahead 52-46 at the 7:46 mark
on a jumper by jun,1or center
T1tTanie Hager (B1dwell.
OH). The Redwomen would
get the lead to as high I0

points at 58-48 with 4 44
remaming.
Tiffin was not tini shed as
they went on a 8-0 run to cut
the margin to two . That
would be as close as thev
would get.
·
Rio placed three players in
double led bv the duo of
Hager and sophomore point
guard Carlesha Chambers
(Columbus, OH) with 13
points each.
Hage r just
m1ssed her second straight
double-double 1n collecting
nme rebounds.
Senior guard Angel Allen
(Be,kley. WV) tossed in 12
points. pulled down s1x
rebounds and hand,ed out four
a.,s ists. Fellow semor Alkia
Fountain (Columbus , OH)
added nme points and eigh t
rebounds to the wmnmg
effort.
T1ffm was led by L1ndsay
Redl av,sk. Jennifer Rosselit
and Bnenne Beaschler with
I0 points each. Beaschler
collected six rebounds Sarlr
Pilson led the Lady Dragon.
charge on the glass with eight
rebounds. Redlawsk dished
out. a game-high, five assists
and had four steal s.
Tiffm was hurt by an ankle
injury suffered by Rosselit
when she got tangled with
Hager in diving for a loose

h,rll in the tirs.t half. Rosselit
played only 10 minutes in the
game.
Trffin was able to stay in the
game by out-rebounding Rio
Grande. 46-41 and nailing 13of-16 (81 percent) shots at the
free throw line.
"A ll wms are beautrful ' at
thr ~ point, we just didn 't execute and play as well as we're
capable of."' said Rio Grande
Head Coach David Smalley.
"However ugly it may have
been, we got a w; let's forget
about it and move on and go
from there.''
Rio Grande said good-bye
to it's two seniors, Angel
Allen and Alkia Fountain,
before t.he game. Smalley
talked about the impact the
pair have had on the program.
"I don't think we have enough
time to talk about them adesaid.
quately." Smalley
"Those two young ladies are
not only good people , good
students and good basketball
players. but they ' re JUSt great
people to be around."
Rio will close out the ho111e
portion of the regular season
schedule on Tuesday when
they entertain Shawnee State
at 6 p.m The Lady Bears
defeated Rio 65-55 last month
in Portsmouth.·

Redmen slain by Dragons
RIO GRANDE - After the euphoria ot
upsetting NAIA Drvis10n No. II Cedarville
on Thursday, the University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketball team tell . back to earth
hard on Saturday night. losing to Tiffin, 6964, at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande ('Jg. Jo. 7-gAMCS) led for only
a scant few possessions and just could find
any continurty on the offensive or defensive
end.
Tiffin ( 10-13, 6-9 AMCS) forged ahead 31 21 late in the first half and carried a 31-25
edge to the locker room 'at halftime.
The Redmen made a senes of mini -runs in
the second half but could never get over the
hump. The Dragons would get the lead back
to as high .as nme points 111 the second half at
56-47 . .
Rio placed three players m double figures
and two recorded double-doubles. Senror for-

Larkin
from Page 81
turn the posrtron over to
younger players.
Until Sunday's announcement. Larkin was managing a
sports complex 111 Orlando,
workiug in a development
management group, spending
time with his family and considering his options for playing one more season .

Eastern
'

from Page 81

l

•

two-poini deficit into an II -3
lead .
The Eagles hit seven ·of 18
field goals and hefd a 12-9
rebounding edge , while at the
same t1me perplexed the
guests into a meager three of
16 effort from the floor. Both
teams matched potnts over
the final 2:22 to give Eastern
the eight-point advntage.
Trimble made its size
advantage most apparent during the middle quarters with
Robert Cross and Cody Dill
both in foul trouble. posting a
25-11 overall and 15-2 offensive rebound drscrepancy
over that misfotruned span.
The ' smaller
Eagles
responded by netting 16 of 27
shots during that 16 minutes.
and al so contmued to stymie
the opposition' s offense with
that packed-in z9 ne.
Tnmble hit just 15 of 37
from the floor durin g its best
chance for a comeback.
Trailing by five at the 5:37
mark of the third stanza,
Trimble 's Terry Holbert
capped an II A halftime
surge with a trifecta to pull to
40-38 .
Eastern cancelled out the
rally with a 19-10 run the
remainder of the th ird and
missed only two of II shoi'
in that spell
·
The hosts survived all
obstacles down the stretch by
regaining control of the glass
( 10-5) and connecting on 13

Monday, February 14.

www.mydailysentinel.com

ward Dawayne Mcintosh (Philadelphia, PA)
scored 16 points and pulled down 13 rebounds
to pace the Rio attack . Mcintosh would foul
out late 111 the game . Junior center Reggie
Williamson (Columbus , OH) added 15 points
and II rebounds ,and senior post man Sean
Plummer (Porunore, JAM) tossed 11114 points
and collected five rebounds.
Tiffin also ha(l three players score in double
figures. Nick Scheutzow paced the Dragons
with 15 point s ( 12 in the second half. Michael
Dhondt added 13 point s (nine·in the first half)
and Connor Gregg chipped 111 12 points (nine
in tbe second half).
Tiffin outscored the Redmen 21-6 in .threepoint shooting and was much better at tbe free
throw line. The Dragons bagged 18-of-26 (69
percent) fron1 the charity stripe while Rio
struggled, makmg only 12-of-22 (54.~ percent).

He long had dreaJTlt of
working in the Red's front
office, but that chance disap·
peared when he and the
team 's chief operating officer, John Allen. clashed over
a take-it-or-leave-it contract
offer late in thll'2003 season
Larkin was prepared to leave ·
then ; the team reconsidered .
and negotrated a one-year
deal for 2004.
Bowden w'as the Reds·
general manager from 19922003.
" I ·have long admrred
of 14 free throws to pull
away late. The Eagles netted
20 of 23 charity tosses in the
triumph.
·
"I thought our foul shooting tonight was tremendous
all nrght." sard Caldwell.
"W hen you get into tournament time, you have to put
foul shots together. We did a
real nice job at that."
Adam Dillard had 15 of his
garne·hrgh 24 pornts in the
first half. j'qathan Cozart. the
lone junior to score, followed
wllh 22 · points and five
assists.
Cody Dill and Robert
Cross both had nine markers
with Dill also hauling down
seven caroms and rejecting
live shots.
ChriS' Carroll and Chris
Myers chipped in three
apiece, wh1le Carroll Jed
Eastern with nine boards.
Derek Baum grabbed three
steals and added .eight pornts
in the triumph
Seniors Baum , Carroll ,
Dill ; Cross. Dillard. Myers
and Ed Beatty accou11ted for
56 points_and 30 rebounds m
their home finale.
"It's a very emotional ni ght
for the seniors. they have
done a remarkable job over
their careers at Eastern We
are somewhat disappointed
in not going undefeated. but
we are very proud of'our 173 record," Caldwell humbl y
added ''They've won a lot.of
games. but you have to p111 it
in perspecuve . We don' t play
to win leag ue titles, we play
to win at tournament. "
The Tomcat twin towers.
Matt Christman and Bruce

Division II
at logan-Hocking Middle School
Monday, February 14
Fa1rtield Union vs. Athens
Tuesday, February 15
Vinton County vs. New Lexington, 6·15 p.m.
Shendan vs. Gallia Academy, 8 p m..
Wednesday, February 16
Warren vs. FU/Athens winner. 6:15p.m.
River Valley vs. Meigs, 8 p.m.
Friday, February 18
VC/NL w1nner vs. Sheridan/GA winner, 7 p.m.
(w1nner advances to distnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens )
Saturday, February 19
Wanen/FU/Athens winner vs. RV/Me1gs winner,
7 p.m. (winner advances to distnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
at Sou,theastern High School
Monday, February 14
Wash1ngton Court House vs. Rock H1ll , 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. WCH/RH winner, 6:15p.m.
Hillsboro VS Circleville, a p.m.
Friday, February 18
LE/Waverly winner vs Jackson/MT winner, 7
p.m. (winner advances to district tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
McCiain/WCH/RH
winner
vs.
Hillsboro/Circleville wmner, 7 p m. (winner
advances to d1stnct 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 W~llston , 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/Portsmouth w1nner, 6 p.m (winner advances to d1strict tournament at
Convocation Center, AtheiJs.)
Saturday, February 19
Chesapeake vs. Minford/SP winner, 3 p:m. (win·
ner advances to distnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens )
.FH/OH w1nner vs. Belpre/Fairland wmner, 6 p m
(winner advances to d1stnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens )
Wheelersburg/Wellston wmner vs. Alexander/N·
Ywinner, 7 p.m. (winner advances to district tour·
nament at Convocation Center, Athens.)

2005

Monday, Febru!lry 14, 2005

mrtbune - Sentinel - ~egt~ter

at Waverly High School
Monday, February 14
Zane Trace vs. West Union, 6 15 p m.
Umoto vs . Westlall. 8 p.m.
Tuesday, February 15
Huntington vs Portsmouth West, 6:15p.m
Adena vs. Valley, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, February 16
P1keton vs. Pa1nt Valley, 6:15 p.m·
Northwest vs. Lynchtiu,rg Clay, 8 p.m
Friday, February 18
North Adams vs ZT/WU w1nner. 6:15p.m . (win·
ner advances to dJstnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
.
Eastern Brown vs. Umoto/Westfall winner, 8
p.m. (winner advances to d1stnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
Piketon/PV w1mier vs. Northwest/LC winner, 6
p.m. (winner advances to distnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Hunllngton/PW winner vs. Adena/Valley w1nner,
845 p.m.
Division IV
at Wellston High School
Monday, February 14
Crooksville vs. Southeastern, 7 p.m.
Tuesday, February 15
Miller vs.lronton St Joe, 6:15pm.
Southern vs. Waterford, 8 p.m.
Friday, February 1B
Eastern (Meigs) vs Crooksville/Southeastern
w10ner, 6:15 p.m. (winner advances to d1stnct
tournament at Convocation Center, Athens.)
South Gallia vs . Symmes Valley, 8 p.m. (winner
advances to distnct tournament at Convocation
Center, Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
Eastern (P1ke) vs. M1ller/ISJ w1nner, 6:15 p.m
(w1nner advances to d1stnct tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Tnmble vs Southern/Watertord Winner, 8 p m
at Valley High School
Monday, February 14
New Boston vs. Leesburg Fa1rt1eld, 7 p.m
Tuesday, February 15
Western vs. Manchester. 6:15p.m.
Peebles vs. Notre Dame, 8 p.m
Friday, February 18
South Webster vs. NB/LF winner, 6:t 5 p.m. (winner advances t0 d1stnct tou rnament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Sc1otovllle vs. Green, 6 p.m. (w1nner advances
to district tournament at Convocation Center,
Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
Whiteoak vs . Western/Manchester w1nner, 6 15
p m. (winner advances to district tournament at
Convocation Center. Athens )
Portsmouth Clay vs. Peebles/NO. winner, 6 p.m .

CLASSIFIED

Tnmble
Eastern

East'Vn 7&amp;. Trimble 61
9
18
21
13 -

17

19

23

19 -

61

78

TRIMBLE (14-6, 7·3) - Matt Chnstman 5
2·2 12, Anth,any D1xon 1 0·0 2, Robby
Jenkms 7 4-9 19, Zach Shust 2 0-0 5,
Terry, Holbert 2 0-0 6 , Justin Limo 0 1-2 1,

Bruce Fouts 6 4--6 16, Matt D1xon 0 0-0 0,-

Jake Thompson 0 0-0 0. Mike Harper 0 DO 0 TOTALS. 23 11 · 19 61
EASTERN (17·3, S.2) - Just1n 8rown1ng
0 0-0 0, De re~ Baum 3 2-2 8, Nathan
Cozart 9 2-2 22, Bnan Castor 0 0-0 O,
Adam D1Uard 8 5-6 24. Ed Beatty 0 0-0 a,
Ma r ~

Guess 0 0-0 0, Chr1s Carroll1 1-2 3,

Chris Myers 1 0·0 3, Dere~ Roush 0 0-0 0,
Robert Cross 2 5-5 9, Cody Dill 2 5·6 9
TOTALS 26 20-23 78
T~ree-polnt

goals: T -

Jenkins. Shust) E 2, Myers)

4 iHolbert 2,

6 (01llard 3, Cozart

Team etatisticsllndlvldual leaders
TRIMBLE : 23-69 FG ( 333), 4·17 3PG
(.235). 11 -19 FT ( 579), 39 rebounds
(Ctmstman ~ 4 Fouts ~ 2). 22 oHenstlle
rebounds (Chnstman 7 Fouts 6), 7
ass1sts {Chnstman 2; Jenktns 2, Holbert
2). 7 steals (Jenkms 4 ), 1 block (Jenktns) ,
17 turnovers .18 fouls
EASTERN . 26-56 FG ( 464 ), 6J'I4 3PG
(.429), 20·23 FT (.870), 33 rebou nds
(Carroll 9, 0111 7) , 9 offenstve rebounds
(Carroll 2, Cross 2), 9 asststs (Cozart 5), 8
steals (Baum 3), 7 blocks (Dtll 5),e&gt;1 4
turnovers. 15 fouls

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

/

i\egl~ter
(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Sentinel

992·2157

Of{tee llo~~
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should ·Include These Items
To Help Get
\ \ \ 01 \1 I \I I \ I "'

t
I

GIVEAWAY

_ca_rs_..:.(7_40_1C,44&amp;_7_63_7_
. --

r

%~

I'

r

l \ l l'ltn \ 11 \1
$500 Reward for return of
'- I IC\ I ! I "
Yellow Honda 400 4-wheeler
Spectal numbers 389, 6-ply n~
10r------....,
tires, Stolen from Harley
H£Lp WANnD

11

"-""'""'""'""'""'""'_.!

King Res1dences on At 87.
Jan 31 between 7 pm - 12
pm Any 1nkl call (304)372- An EXcellent way to earn
money The New Avon.
9741 tDeul 5: 191
Call Martlyn 304·882-2645
Found
Saturday Young
Fem81e Aottweiler tn the Addresses wanted immedi·
Letart area, no collar atelyl No experience neces(304)895·3483 !eave mes· sary. Work at home Call toll
405-447-6397
sage

CLASSIFIED INDEX

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.
We'll run your classified line a~ 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 oil'l wl!kly Tri Counfy Marketplace·
which is delive..W to 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicl~ within 25 days,jost can
and we'll cancel ~our ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just call prior .to the end of 25 days .
and we' II extend your ad another 25 days.
***You must call prior to the end of initia125 day period to extend.
***Limited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of 50 days)
***Classified ad limited to 15 words or less.
***25¢ for each additional won! over IS words.
***Typographical correetions must he maile within first 3 days of publication.
***Only one Item per classified ad.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non·refundable.
***Available only to private, non-commercial indh·iduals.

In Memoriam ................................................ 020

tnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Livestock ............................................. , .......630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ........................................,... 350
Miacellaneoue ............ :................................. 170
Mlacellaneous Merchandlae ....................... 54D
Moljlte Home Repalr ............... , ................... 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 42D
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 32D
Money to Loan ................................... ,.,, ...... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Muolcallnatrumenle ................................... 570
Personata ..................................................... OD5
Petl for Sala ................................................'580
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 82D
Profualonal Sarvlcea ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... !~
Rut Eatate Wantad ..................................... 380
Schoola lnatructlon .............................. , ..... 150.
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllur .............................. 650
Shuatlona W.ntld ....................................,.. 120
Space lor Renl ............................................. 480
Sporting Good8 ........................................... 520
SUV'a for
720
Truckl for Sate ............................................ 715
Upholatery ........................................... ,, .. ,... 870
Vane For Sale ...............................................730

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

304·675·1333
frl Cllatr ldip,.
• 304·675·1333

The Daily Sentinel
740·992·2155

I VISA I.

1R

• All ads must be prepaid•

POUCIES: Ohio Valley P\lbllahlr.g ruervH the right to edit. re~. or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first ~Y of
will be rMponelble tor no more thin the co.t of the space octupt.cl by the error and only tlw flret ln....tlon. We
any lo.. or txptn•• that rtteulte frOm the pubUcatlon ar omlulon of en ad~ertiaemant. Corre.:tlon will be made In the first •~•liable edition. • Box
are
contldentl.&amp;. • Current r.te c1rd apptltl. • All real eetlte advertl•mentl' are 1ubjecl to the Federel F1lr Housing Act of 1968. • This

Trlbun..S.ntlnei·R~Iet.,.

•tw•v•

ac:cepta only

10

lwright@lc.net

INDEPENDENT CONSUL·
TANT
Bu1ld your home
based business marketing
natural ant1·ag1ng skm care
and nutrition. 25 year old
company
of
1ntegmy
Contact Lmda at vouogto-

Sa". . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .

W•nted to Buy ............................................. OIO

I

Wantld to Buy· Farm Suppltea .................. l20
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rant ............................................ 470
Yard Sat• Gatllpotla .................................... D72
Yard Sei•Pomeroy/Middte,,,,, ...... ,.,, .......... 074
Yard Sai1-Pt. Ple11ant ................................ 076

..

.,

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
Ou do bus1ness Wtth peo
!e you know and NOT t
end money th rough th
811 unttl you have tnvestl
ated ttle offerln .

0
()

r

borers, Operators,
elders, COL Drivers and
eman needed tor

....

end resume to·
Personnel
C J Hughes Construction
PO Box 7305
Huntm ton WV 25776
1116

Sh~rley

Immediate
Openings .
Residential
Treatment
Facility for boys, now htrlng
'routh Worker position. Paid
• Medical Insura nce . Call
between 9:00am -4·00pm
(740)379·9Q83
Interim Healttlcare· AN's
•
ruH-tlme &amp; P~rt-time avail·
able tor rap1dly grow•ng
home health agency, 401 K
plan,
heal th insurance .
vacation &amp; per&amp;onal days &amp;
mileage reimbursement, c:all
(740)592·6941
or ' lax
resume to 740.e93·5348.

HELPWIINIID

u .... .., 11111,..1U'n:'n

•o.u.rn~"~

"------· "------·
Mason
County
Actton
Outdoor Careers
Group, Inc. ts accepttng
Htrtng work1ng Foremen tor
applications for In-Home
utH1ty contraC1 held crews
Personal Care Assistants
Paid tratmng, $14/hr plus
Our serviCe area Includes al!
perlormance bonusas affer
of Mason County. Starting
promot1on, benet1ts, and
rate $6 15 per hour, plus .50
company truck &amp; tools.
per hour additional for Sub·
Must enJoy physiCal outdoor
Pay, plus .35 per m1le for work, possess strong lead·
traveL fo r shopptng or travel
erstlip skills, tlave a good
chant to client Apply at 221·
driv1ng record, and be f!exi112 Main Street. Pomt
ble to travel in OH, KY, WV
Pleasant from 8.30-3:30pm
and mid·east States.
or 3~/675 ·3300
MCAG.
Osmose, Inc.
Inc IS an EOE, MIF, AlA
Call Toll·frea tor
employer.
Information
McClure's Restaurant now
tli rlng all locations, fuH or
EOEMIFIDN
parHtmEt, pick up apphca~
Www.olmoM.com
tton at locat1on &amp; brtng back
between ' 9 30am
&amp; Overbrook Center IS current·
11 ooam , Monday th ru ly accepting appHcations lor
Nurs1ng Assistants . Please
Saturday
-M-cD_o_n-al_ds_of-A-,o'-Gra_nd_e call Hollie at (740)992-6472,
or come in and fill out an
now h1r1ng a!l shtffs. Flextble application 333 Page Street.
hours, pa1d vacatton and Mtdd!eport, Oh EOE
holidays. Startmg rate abOve
mimmum wage . Apply with~ Overbrook Rehab Center is
1n
currenlly accepting apphca·
: - : - - - - - - - lions for anyone Interested
Med1 Home Health Agency, In the STNA classes. The
Inc. seeking a full·tlme AN class wilt begin on Febn..ary
Case Manager for the 22nd
and
appli cations
Galhpohs , Oh1o location should be turned 1n by
M 1 b 1
d bolh
us
e tc ense
In February 17th Class space
0
d
y
·
hto an
est
ugtn!a. IS hmlted, so If you are mter·
M1n1mum two years supervi- ested, please stop by and !til
ston, management and out an application at 333
home health experience. We Page Street, Middleport, Oh
offer a competitive salary. 45760 . EOE
benefits package, 40, K, and
&amp;
EMT's
flaK time E.O E. Please Paramedics
send resume to 35.2 S.econd needed Apply at 1354
Avenue, Galltpolis, OH Jackson Ptke, Galllpohs
4563t . Attn Audrey Farley,
R N C!tmca! Manager.
Ptzza Plus
Now under new manage·
Meigs
Soil
&amp; Water ment. Hiring all sh ifts~ an
ConservatiOn D!str1ct IS poSitions. Must be neat and
accephng applications tor clean . Apply within, 1044
leading Creek Watershed Jackson Pike, Spring Valley
Coordinator Call 740 992- Plaza
4282 lor apphca110ns and - - - - - - - details
PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
PHLEBOTOMIST
Needojob?

1·877-676-8731

w

We era Hlrlngl
Earn up to $8/hour plus
bonuses. Pa1d tra1mng and
holidays .
Full or part 11me shifts
' available!
Call N~ to set up an
interview!
, 1-877-463-8247 8XI. 2Q5
NoW lak Inn
.~pllca11ono
Mr
•
,,..
'"'
Truck Drivers Also, hiring
seasoned garden center
help
(740) 256·~247 or
.(740)G4S-o870.

Now' under new
management!
Plua Plus
Hirin g al! &amp;h!ftl· all pos1t1001.
Overbrook Center 11 current· Must be neat and &lt;;lean
ly accepting applications 1or Apply within , 10« Jackson
a Fu!I·Tima LPN for the 7p· Pike, Spring Valley ptara
7a shirt You may call Hottle
at 740·992-6472 or come In
SASSY StiSSORS
and ,til! out an application at
Sty!let wanted . Salary/
333
Page
Street, Commission 7 40 -441 · 1880
Middleport, Oh , EOE
or 740.256·6336 ,

'
'

MONEY

=

~aleatate advertlelng
In this newspaper Is
subJect to the Federal

All

NEA,

lw-•IIELP--W-ANIID""'""',..I

~

rrow Smart Contact th
hlb D1v1S1on of Fmanc1a
Reporter Opening
Office
o
onsumer
Affa1r
Ttle rtght 1ndiv1dual w1!1 have
EFORE you relinanc
common sense and the abilur home or obtatn a loan.
EWA.RE of requests fo
Ity to recogntze a news
ny large advance pay
story, as well as a keen
ants of fees or insurance.
sense of enthusiasm about
all
the
Office
o
the profesSion We take our
onsumer AHalrs toll fr
job senously and are com·
1 1-866·278·0003 to lear
mitted to the commumty we
serve. Interested? We will f the mortgage broker o
ender ts properly ltcensed
~eep you busy Please ema1l
hts Is a public servtc
your
resume
to Jim
Freeland, jfreelandCmydai, , nnouncement from th
Valley Publtshm
l ytnbun~ . com or mall to
Galltpohs Tnbune, 825 Th1rd
Ave., Gallipolis, OH 45631 ,

j

Swimming Pool Service
~AI~
TechniCtan
.._ _ _
SERiiiVIiiiCESiio-_..1
Job duties 1nclude, serviCing · '
DtRECTV
above ground and tn ground

~lsbu~f:~g ~~~~~~gt~'::s

Wages considered on expe~
nence Must have vahd dnvers licenses
Contact
Debbie (304}.295·6985 or
(304~488-7272 . Af1er 6·00
PM cal! (740)378-6~ 1 1

Wanted part time babysitter
1n
Vtnton
area
Call
1740)388·8160 or t740)645·
2640 alter 1.2pm.

1!i6

.

1

ScuoOLs
~lXfllON

Galllpolla Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74(j-446·4367
1·800-2 !4.()452

176 inJ.~
....~~..,,...,
....l'IVU..,.
••u .•LA~

l1nance you a home Call
(304)736·3400
'

r

Lars&amp;
ACREAGE

60x100 lot w1th .28 ft 5th
wheel camper &amp; outbuilding
28x24 shelter Beaut~ul v1ew
ot
Raccoon
Creek
Access!ble to the Ohio River
wtth boat Call
Asktng
$.23.000. pnce negotiable.
740 446·0022

House At 141 Cent91'1ary. 3
bedroom .2 baths, LA. FM , 2
car garage, Basement
1740)44£.1035
3 bed·
garage ,
school
pnced

No Down Payment needed
even wtth tess than perfee1
credi t on this 3 bedroom, 2
1/2 bath home 4 years old.
basement. 15 acres, garage
with a beautiful v1ew, 14x70
mob1le home on property
used as rental pays lor large
part of psym'er]t (740)992.4212

I BUY HOMES
Need to sell your home
qu1ck!y because of a
dtvorce, bankruptcy JOb
transler, or death Don't let
the bank foreclose and rum
your credt l Local person
buys houses Fast ciOStngs
All cash . .J1m {740)992·

iiiiiiiil
HOllSES
FOR Ibm
2 or 3 bedroom house 1n
Pomeroy for rent , no pets ,
1740)992-5858

_____ _

3 bedroom House tn Letart
$450 month $3CO depOSit
(304 )882 -2858

Over 2000 sq 11 home •
$53,999 00 delivered Offer
ends 02/28105 Only 2 avatlable No trades-no dealers
1-BOQ.-349·641 t
_O_w_n-yo_u_r-,-an_d_?--H-.-,.

3 bed room house near A10
Grande $550/ month Call
(?40)441-0194 or (740)441 1184

Fr:.~a~~ ~:~~~ax

- -bed-roo_m___ _b_a-lh-.-k~-c-he-n
1
3

~~;~, l ~v~~~r r:~ge~~~~~

$500 oo down?
95%
approval on your dream. ,.
800-349·6411
front porch Klneon Dnve
Spnna vauev
$550tmonth $550/depoSit
740 245
7
Calll-800·5.23·7556
3 Bedroom. 1· 112 battts, Phone (
&gt;
.()43
tor deta1ls ~
Large
Fam1ly
Room . 3 bedroqm, 2 t /2 bath 1 car
Ftreplace
&amp;
Garage garage
RACINE
Hud
Jewelry Buy Sell Gotd , Recently
renovated . approved, pets allowed. 1·
D1amonds,
Gemstones. Immediate
Possess 1on . 80(};340-8614 !eave mes·
Repair, Appratsa!s. Gem (
_
7401446 7881
sage
Testtng
Graduate
Gemo!ogtst,
Jeweler. use your true refund to buy 4 roo ms and bath 52 0+1ve
(740)645·6365 or (740)446· your DREAM HOME We St No pets, $300 month
3080
have government programs (740)446·3945
and spec1al f1nancmg to help
TURNED DOWN ON
make your dream s come Hou se unlurntshed 2 br
SOCIAL SECURITY /SS1?
true Call now Limited pro- gas heat, Middleport. 740No Fee Unless We W1n•
grams ava1lable 1-8()().349- 7 42-2424 or
(740) 992 ·
1-888·582·3345
64 11
3439
Free Professtonal
• lnstallatton
up to 4 Rooms

IH \ I I ' I\ II

www galtipolt.iC•rwrcollege CQm
Accredl!ed Member Accredlt~ng
coui"!Cll 101' Independent Coltegn
and 50'too!a 1274B

SSt/ Socia! Security

This nwapaper will not
knowingly accept
1dverti11mente for real
estate which ia In
violation of the lin~. Our
readers ar. hereby
lnlorm.d lh•t all
dwellings advertised In
thla newspaper are
available on an equ•l
opportunity ba....

Move-1n cond1t1on
room, 1 bath home,
deck , close to
Reasonably
(740)949-3090

FOR SALE

$1 ,300 Net tnrome. We can

www.tn'&lt;estmentllnai'ICtal o

1116

MOIIu..EHOMES

Money's Worth"

Fair Housing Act ot 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertlu "anv
preference, llmltallon or
dlscrlmln1111on baled on
rece, color, religion, HX
femlllelatatua or national
origin, or any jntentlon to
make eny auch
preference, !Imitation or
dlacrlmln•tlon.'"

roLoAN

•••
.,..,;..,,..1

SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at old pnces ,
2005 models arnv1ng Now.
Cole's
Mobile
Homes ,
15266 U.S. 50 East, Athens ,
Ohto 45701, (740)592·1972.
"Where You Get · 'vour

~

ea 1ng tnancta
1nst1tUI10n approvtng Small
Bus1ness. Mortgage
Personal and Veh1cle
Loans Immediate
response
gtve us a cal! at
1·866-228-7063" Or apply
online at

-

2005 by

@

AVON! All Areast To Buy Of ·1116
Sell
Spears, 304·

Htring all sh!ftS· a!! pos!tlons
Pizza Plus
Now under new manage~
ment Must t1e neat and
clean . Apply w1ih1n , 1044
Jackson P1ke, Spring Valley
Plaza

..

r

morrows@ sbcalpbal net

re you w ng
rava
or steady work, good
ay and benefits?

Help Wanted Bartenders,
Cooks &amp; Wa1tress. pick·up
A.pphcaiiOns at the Moose
L.odge on &lt;?llarteston Ad

•ccept an~ .ctvertlalng In vlol1tlon of lhe law.

r -~ I ~.,rl:O==m=H~~~SIFS:(:~E=~I r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Are you a sales person?
A.udtt and sell Cable TV
E~~:cellent Commissions
1·800•270 · 1780

675· 1429
CtHidren's Home Society
currently has an open1ng for
a Youth Services Social
Worker 1n the Mason County
oH1ce . PoSition wt!l provide
case management and sup·
porttve serv1ces to DHHR
Youth
Servtce
cases
Requ irements
.nc!ude
Bachelor's degree and SW
license eligibility, expertence
preferred.
Competitive
Salary and benefits. Please
send !ener ol interest and
resume to
Mason County DHHR
ATTN : Youth Services
710 Vtand Street,
'Pomt P1easant. WV 25550
EOE

knowing!~

wanted •d• meeting EOE ...ndarde. We will not

1-877-50- NECCO

4x4's For Sale .... :......................................... 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques., ...................... ,.,.,.,.,, ... ,...... ,,,,,...... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 780
Auto Rep~ir .................................................. 770
Autos for sale ................................ :............. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles........................................sso
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity................................. 210
Business Tralnlng .........................:............. 140
· Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
DATA ENTRY
Camping Equipment ...........~ ....................... 780 Work
home
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010 Flexiblefrom
Hours!
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
"'"' eay!ISS ·
Etactrlcai/Relrlgeratlon ...............................840 sssc;
Personal Computer
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480 Reqwred
Excavating ............... ,,.,, .. ,,.,,,,,, .................. 830 1-800-873-0345 IKL 1200.
Farm Equipment.......................................... &amp;10
FRIENDLY PEOPLE
Farms for Rent.. ........................................... 430
to hand out samples m local
Farms lor Sala .................. :.......................... 330 stores. PP,
flexible,
For Lease .................................................... .'4QO Fn ,Sat Sun schedule.
Call
For Sale ........................................................ 585 800·700·0747 1pm-5pm·
For Sata or Trade .........................................590 weekdays.
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................580 .
babys1ner needed
Furnished Rooms ....................... ,,,.... ,,, .....450 Full-ttme
cal! between 6pm·9pm 304·
General Hauling ...........................................aso 576·3353
Glveaway................................. ,,.,., ..... ,,,.. ,...040
GET READY FOR
Happy Ada ....................................................050
SPRING BREAK!
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
We 1ght with Herbatife.
Help Wanted ................................................. 110 Lase
can Tracy (740)441 · 1982 or
Home lmprovements................................... 810 (B00)201.0S32
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310 http://www.famousnutrihon.c
Household Goods ....................................... 510 om
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 41D - - - - - -- -

We'll nm your classified line ad to sell your Boat, Camper, M~torcycle, 4· Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

740·446·2342

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thu ... day for sunday•

~

Female cat , 7 1/2 years old, r.,~-------·
spayed, dectawed. very 1oving, needs to be only cat m Absolute Top Dollar . U.S.
home, inQoor only Her name Silver and Gold Coins,
IS Nestle (740)245·5935
Proolsets, Gold Rings , U.S
Currency,·M.T.S Co1n Stlop,
· Second
To good home 1 male. 1 151
Avenue ,
female cats
Declawed, GallipoliS, 740·446-2642
fixed , shots up to dale
Cash lor junk cars &amp; trudc:s·
(740)388-0008.
Gallla,
Meigs.
Athens,
Vmton
&amp;
Washington
Lai'rANV
County. t740j508.Q487
FOUND

.com

m~e ~oint ~lmant l\rglster

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day•• Peper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m .
Friday For Sundays Paper

"***NECCO****
Lost·Very Sick Dog -Owner
·
of a Black Toy-Poodle on Mt
MAKE A
4 yr female Chow, good Vernon ran away on the
DIFFERENCE IN A
watch dog, nqt good wlk1ds even1ng ol Feb 1, OS Please
CHILD'S LIFE
includeS
dog
house call (304)675-5357
Foster Parents needed
(304)675-8714
To learn more about
Reward for mformatlon
Black/white mate cat, 6 regardmg lost white male . lostering and free traming
months old. Female caltco, 6 West Highland Terner. can
opportunities contact
months old. 2 solid black kit· (740)388·01 57
K1m Romeo at
740·894-4360
tens, e months old AU tnside

news

«~t ~aUipoli~ iail~ Otrlbunr

Now you can have borders and graphics
IL-'
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
· $1.00 for large _

Display Ads

• Start Your Ada Wtth A Keyword • J:ndude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid AbbreVIations
• Include Phont;t Number And Addrea• When Nnded
·
• Ads Should Run 7 D•v•

~OO:o ll~..u.o_HELP_
- .w_ANI_'ED_rl

r"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'_.!

Oecullfir~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m·.

Barry 's on- and off.field
knowledge and judgment of
the gari1e," Bowden said.
In the Nationals'· front
oftice, Larkin is joining Bob
Boone, a former Reds' man·
ager, and Jose Rijo. a former
pitcher for Cincinnati . Both
are special assrstants to
Bowden.
'T ve never been wrth
another organization (than
the Reds) , so familiarity with
Jim Bowden, Bob Boone and
Jose Rijo, all of that made it
very easy for me." he sard.
Fouts, both had double doubl~ outmgs. Fouts had 16
points and 12 rebounds while
Christman added 12 points
and 14 caroms in the setback.
Robby
Jenkins
paced
Trimble v,ith 19 markers.
The Eagles made it a sweep
on the mght after a 51-32 vic·
tory in the junior varsity till.
Justin Browning guided EHS
with 22 points while Matt
Young paced Trimble with
II. EHS led 27-12 at intermission.
Eastern starts the Division
IV 'tournament trail Friday at
Wellston High School, as it
takes on the winner of
. Crooksville/Southeastern at
6:15p.m.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Hc»IFS

I

I"ORSAI..E

Your dream home ts only a
phone call away Apply now·
land programs a available
w1th rates as low as 4.99%.,
t -800.349·64 11

Ntce Large 3br Home in
Town Upstairs Laundry 1· ,
Year Lease $550/montn·•(
plus Oepo!Ht (304)675-4030
9-5

136 Graham Street tor Sale
Owner, 3 bedroom
1 c~r-:-M:-01111..E-"'":'H::-QI\-1ES-.,I
house, 1 car garage, large
~
FOR
FOR Rfl&gt;.T
•
677, DVD vldao lo t $10.000 lot. Rodney Vtllage 11
or
trade
for (740)245.99 17 or (740)446·
convertible/sports car, nego14x70 mob1le home $2500, 1 bedroom Trailer tn Letart,
3644
furnished . utilittes pd $350
11able. (304)593-0830 after - - - - - - - - _17_40
_1_9_
49_-2_0_7_&lt;_ _ __
month
$350
depostt
2 bedroom house 10 Mason 1993 14x70 Norrts. 2 bed·
(304 )882·2858
one block from Wal Mart, no room . 2 bath. garden tub.
petS $400 per month $400 dishwasher, 8x8
deck
2 bedroom Tra11 er for rent on
depoSit,
(740)992·6324
or
$,
~
,900
(740)446·9480
Pleasant Valle'/ Hospital Is
Ptymale Ad
at Gallipolis
740-116-4000
currently accepting resumes Georges Portable Sawmill ,
Ferry
(304)675-4044
1995 Skyline, 14X70, vinyl
lor a Par-Diem
don~ haul ~ur logs to the 3 bedroom, 1 bath, corner
siding,
shmgle
roof
2 bedroom. $300 rent !Jius
mHI just call 304-675-1957.
Phlebotomist. Applicants
lot, beh ind Armo ry, Pt $13 ,995 00 Call Karena .
$200 deposit plus uti!Jhes
must have a ~altd drl'ver't
Pleasant.
$69,900, (740)385·7671
Absol utely
no
pets
license S!x month&amp; expert·
(304)593-3542
ence preferred. Position
Available for tmmedlate Aeterenc::e
req w ed
Involves drawling blood In a
tn
Country (740 )256·6202
3 br House , 5 bath . occupancy
nursing hQfM sentng and
Garage, Basement New
2 bedroom. nO pets, S275
tranlpOrtlng apeclment
AJC New Furnace, Large eat
month ,
mcludes
For mDfelnformatlon:
In Kitchen Located In (740)38S·"'367
BUSINESS OPf&gt;ORTUNITY
' - ' - - - - -- - water/aewage.
$~50
P1
P1HI.
$87,900 (304)675·
25 yr old bunleeu with verFor sale. 14X70 W1ndsor. 3 deposit Reference required.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
6052 or 13041593-1912
tical satls Create your
bedroom, set up In Country (740}446·3611
clo Human Resources
home
based
butlne11
mar·
Homes. $6 ,995.00 Move in
2520 Valley Drive.
Bu•ln.. •
Opportunity·
Poim Pleasant, Wv 25550 keting Herbal and Botanical Three rental properties lor today! Call (740)992-2t 57 or 2 bedroOm State Route
(740)385·4019.
160, srm~ll with garage No
baled
anti-aging
aldn
care
(304]675·2 4 !7
sale Duplex , each. w1th 3 :........:..~----- pet1, $295 month plus
and
nutrition.
Contact
Linda
AAIEOE
9/Ft l/R, OIA . Kitchtn, Bath !mmed1ate possessiOn I Onty deposit (740)388-8371 .
at youngtomorrowsO abc·
www.pvalley.org
&amp; Porch House 3 BIR. lJR $213 68 per mo. New 3 bed·
global net
Kitchen, Bath Conage BJR room, 2 beth mobile home. 3 bedroom Trt.Mer !n letar1
Kitchen . Batn
Rental Only m1nutes tram Athens all
monlh $250
Wanted 23 more people to
Income for all three· Approx 1-800-837 ·3238
' EARN 50% TO OVER
depooll
( 304 ~882-28&amp;8
loae up to 30 tba. Or. recom·
mend. Call Darlene or Carol HlO% EVERY 28 DAYSII" $900 per month . PrJCe lor all
For complete lnlo· send three.. S75.ooo
Localad Inventory Clearance. 24X60, Fo r rent . 2 and 3 bedroom
(740)38o4·33n
ntme addren, fax or phOne 1o.4·106 7th Street, Point 3 bedroom , 2 bath Delivery mob1le homes starttng at
(304 1675·2495 and set·u~ lnctut1ed Call $260 00 per month. Call
Sell Avon make SO%. Cal! lo: Dole PlriOI 480 Hodgeo Pleasant
(740)992·2 167
Mike (740)385·9948
al'ler 6 00
Ave , San Jose CA 95128
(7&lt;0j.I46·33SII.
1

by

i

MOBil£ HoMES

SAl£

.L

::ne~~~~ ~· s~z;o::

Electric S350

�•

Monday, February 14, 2005
ALLEYOOP

Monday, February 14, 2005
HOUSFJIOLD

www.niydailysentinel.com
THANK. "ffU,
W..,.., DOI&lt;l'T
Wf!. JUGT 6N.JOV
BE. ING e.a.cK I-I.Ofo'IE.
'TOG~TM eR.~

Townhouse RCA T. v maple wood cabinet. swivel baSe, sa· wide .
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 Good condition . $75. Call
112 Bath , Newly Carpeted, (740)446·6137.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $365/Mo. No Thompsons· Appliance &amp;
Pets, Lease Plus Security Repair-675·7388. For sale,
Deposit Required , Days· re-conditioned automatic
740.446·3481 ; Evenings: washers &amp; dryers , ·retrigerators, gas and electric
740-367-0502.
ranges, air cOnditioners , and
'
'
wringer
washers . Wi lt do
MAPLES,
100
Drive
East, repairs on major brands in
Memorial
Pomeroy,
740·992-7022, shop or a\ your home.

area. 2 bedroom, 2 batll· Apartments. Very Spacious.
room,
$300/deposit ,
$400/month. No pets. Phone
(740)367-7025

r

APAKIMENfS
FOR JbNr

l

•••iillii.iiiiiilio•,..l·
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfur-

nished. security deposit
required, no pets, 740-9922218.
2 bedroom "tri -level apt.
Spring. Valley area. Deposit
required . Phone (740}4462957.

2BR apt State Route 160.
$400/month, stove.lrefflgerator included, washer/dryer
hookup. (740)441-0194 or
(740)441-1184.
2BA upstairs apt. 238 First
. Ave. Stovfllrefrigerator, no
pets. $385/month + utilities +
deposit 1740)446·4926.

3

room

and

bath.

stove/refrigerator,
downstairs, all utilities paid. 46
Olive
Street.
$450
(740)446-3945.

~ Beautiful 2-story townhouse,

Subsidized
Residential
Housing for 5.0. vears pf age
and· Older.
PRIORITY
GIYEN TO APPliCANTS
WITH INCOME AT OR
BELOW $10.650. Maximum
Income effective 01-28-2004
lor 1 person $17-,.700.00 .
Must meet HUD/20218 crile·
ria tor houSehold composition .
Mgnaged
by
Sllverheels, Incorporated. A
Realty Company Equal
Housing Opportunity

t
Commercial office space tor
lease-approx. 900sq. ft . in
downtown Gallipolis. Ideal
for professionals. $450/mo.
Call {740)286-3100.

~overlooking Gallipolis City

Kitchen-family, D.R.,
~ L.A . 3 B.A .. study, 2 baths,
: laundry area. References
' required, secUrity depoSit,
: no pets. $900 per mo.
• 1740)446-2325 or i740)446: 4425.

rv

Lle.wetlyn Setter puppies.
FOSB Registered. E~~:cellent
bloodlines,. DNA certified .
Intelligent. loyal, make outstanding hunters &amp; loving
pets. Ready Valentine's Day.
' (740)379-2615.

The
perlect
gift
for
Used Furniture Store. 130 Valentine's Day! Yellow Lab,
Bl.llaville Pike . Appliances , 5 females, 3 mates. $125.
2003 Oodg~ Neon
mattresses.
dressers. Caiii740)446·45B9.
4door, 4cyl., automatiC.
couches. dinettes, recliners,
I \R \ 1 " 1 1'1'1 II "
power everything, 11,OOO
grave monuments, much '
,\ I 1\ I " I I H t...
miles. $6.500. (7401441 •
more,
(740)446-4782.
0337 Or (740)645·6153.
Gallipolis. OH . Hrs.- 11-3 (M·
FARM
S) We buy used furniture.
93 Ford Escort LX. Auto, PS,
EQuiPMENT
PB,, AJC, 88,000 miles.
SPORilNG
$1 ,BOO 080. i740)446·
John Deere 2040, diesel,
6304.
EC. new tires, $8,950. Ford
Ruger M77 22-250 heavy 3000
diesel ,
$5,995. 98 Cadillac Caters. Fully
barren with 3,.;9 bushnell i614)419-27B1 :
equipped, leather interior.
scope, $450; Remington
low miles, mint condition .
11 oo U20 synthetic stock, Specia'ls-ol the Month on
$7.900. Call (740)704-3751.
$400; New England 223 sin· Farmpro Tractors. Farmpro
Jeep Grand Cherokee 00
gle shOt, $200; Ruger single- 20hp, 2-wheel drive, diesel
siK 22. 22 mag blued, $250; utility tractor, $3899.
Laredo. 65K miles. Exc~llent
New England 20ga single Farmpro 30hp 4-wheel
condition, 4X4, remote start,
Shot tull , $80; Mossberg 22 drive, diesel uti lity tractor
e)iJras:
$1 3,000neg.
rna~
3X9tasco.
$175. wlloadei', $8999. More
' 1304)617-1360.
units available. all with 1yr
E740)446-2905.
warranty, call tor more
·Toyota Rav-4, '97 all wheel
delails. (740)696-Q35B
drive. Loaded, t owner,
ANT1QI._JE5
$5,700. Call 1606)923-3259
Tractor parts &amp; service, spe- or ( 304 )429 _8032 , leave
Buy or
sell.
Riveri ne
,
message.
Antiques, 11 24 East Main Belarus. (740)696·0358
ri'I::I5!"'".;;...'":TR::'"'•U.C•'•KS---,~
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,
LlvEsrocK
FOR SAlE

Phillip
Alder

.

North

riO

i

GoOos

I

~~:~~~~~ F~~d. Lo.~;,s:~~

r_

1

~

• 1990 ·Chevy, extended cab.
4 Pygmy goats, $SO each or · 8-foOt bed. 32,000 actu~l
all 4 lor $ 175 . (740)256 _ mu.~s. excellent mechan1~1
shape.
395
AutomatiC.
10go-.0 , (7401645 _6746
, - - - , - - ' - - - - -·_
$3,400.00 080. (740)696For Sale: 14 loot stock trail- 1227
er, in good condition.
Several · registered fullblood 1998 Chev. Silverado 112
yearling Boer Bucks (goats), Ton Extended Cab. 4x4,
registered 2 year o'id Suffolk 4.3L. V-6. Allto. PS. PB, PL,
ram (sheep). Call (740)256· PW, Alum . Rims, Fiberglass
topper, Pewter color 98,000
1330 anytime.
miles Phone (304) 675-2039
Miniature Donkeys, All white $9,995 080
Jack Syr old. 2· 1 1/2 yr old
Jennys, 2- 6 months old 1 • 87 Chevy 112-lon, 2WD 350Jenny 1-Jack, 2· sy·r old englne. 81 ,oOO-miies, good
Jennys Ca tt (304)882-2213 condition, PW/P L, orig. 4
new
tires.
Red/black.
Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly $4,700. (740)506-1367.
A.l. excellent bloodlines,
priced reasonably. Slate R~n
SUVs
Farm, Jackson i740)2B6t'OR SAlE
5395.
1.~---oiiiiiiiii-_.1

-

-"AKQ 98653

•

j

r·

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

1999. Honda ES 4-wheeter.
Excelleht condition. $4,000

• Rooting I Gutters

• Vinyl Siding I Painting
• Patio and Porch DeckS
We do It all e~:cept
furnace work

080.1740)256·6~55 .

2004 Harley Davidson 883
custom, black, 4,500 miles,
$7,500. (740)441 -1583

· ,

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

. &amp; Trailer, 760 GP 1740)4469177
·

• Replacemenl

rM~~~

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

1997

24'
Coachman
Catalina Lite Trailer Frt
Queen Bed, Awning, 2 -301b.
Propane,
Excellent
Condition
$7,495 OBO
(304)675-2039

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

r16
I••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioor.l

per bale, 1740)949-2083

•

Mixed Square Bales ot Hay
$2 per Bales (304)675·1118 t998 Dodge Dakota Sport
if no answer leave message extended cab 4X4, V6, auto·
malic, 63,000 miles, $7,000.
I H " " 1'4 ~~ ~I\ lit
(740)44l-D337 or (740)64o·
6153 ,

I'

AIJIU&gt;

I

-

UIII'S Pllmll

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
anlee. Local relerences furnlshed . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. 1740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Reaeh 3 Uounties

•

=

I

I
I
I
•

I

I

I
•

l•

·I

.9lJtSTION5

$1NGLt

"A

A

DAY?."

"MAil~YTHON"!
2-l&lt;f.

Brian Reeves
New Home Construction. Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks, Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Re sidential Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411
I
for a free estimate.

BARNEY
DANG IT, LOWEEZY
I TRUSTED YOU TO
KEEP A

SECRET

IT'S YORE FAUI,.T,
YA BIG BLABBER,.

WHY'D YA HAFTA GO
AN' TELL ME ?!

MOun4 !!

AN' YOU

SPILT TH'
II

SfPTIC TANK PIJMPINC $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPO/fiTMENT TODAY
992·3251 OR 591·8757

~

OF Nt&gt;.LT Wf\1\MN-\':&gt; I'OC\~Y­

YOU

... ''i 1&lt;\Ei&gt;-I'IT r-. ~ox

'-"-'~"&gt; Y1~1

OF C.I-\OCOL"-IE.:'l!

r-S~t~'A~N~L~EY~~TR~E~E....,

Affordable Service, paint.
chimneys , trees , Guners.
Jack of All Trades. Senior
discouril , lree eslimales.
i304)B82·2196, 1304)3778266, cell.

•

I

;6ll?'!~vltDPINGS IN

Let me :Jo 1t for you'

FOR SALE

B6 Bronco XLT. 4 wo. 302. 4
BBL, auto, new tires, raters,
$500\ Honda's, Chevy's, $1 .100, (740)992-3679
Jeep's,
Ect. .
Police
Impounds! Cars from $500 96 Jeep Grand Cherokee
for liS11ngs 800·391-5227 Laredo 4&lt;4 (304)675-1705
EXT 3901
99 Jeep Charokee Sport,
1981 Otds 98, 4dr, RUns 4x4, EC, gold, auto, PW, PL,
Good, Condition fair $1 ,000 V6, CO, CC, keyless entry,
Call (304)675-1264
$6,500. (614)231-1355.

PtllFO#lMS FIFTY

~OMANCt

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In .Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County· Marketplace!

n

TRIMMIN'" &amp;

GENERAL

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Av· a 1"1able

992-3194
or 992·6635
"Middlepolt's only
Sei#,Storop•

• New Homes

I

• Complete
Remodeling

741·982·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

C~N

TO BE

BREAK'

ll ""

IIPOm

Athena

* leave a me·ssa e

• .Garages

I

HERE r

740-742-2293

10xl0x10x20

(,01"

SOME RECORD IN

Call Gary Stanley

ROBERT
•
BISSEll
CIISTRICTIII

I

THERE'S

Free Estimates

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

I
!

T+ltNKIN&amp;
THt5 WA5
C,OtN&amp; TO
BE A SLOW
WEEK, BUT
THtNG.S ARE
LOOKING
UP~

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St Rt68 I Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992·5553
Restockillf} l.ate -~' Salvage
and Aller Market fhrls

WELL, TAKE IT AN'&lt;WAY,
'(OU BLOCKHEAD!

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

.

. SUNSHINE CLUB
~-a.! . THE. GOJ'r FIGURE.':&gt;
·-mAT I~ ~R 10 1\1\Ajq;.

IH'- SCX:I.X SE&lt;DRITY
SYSThM AFFOI&lt;OA8lL
/

I HOPE YOU 170N'T
MINI::&gt; ME 5A'r'INGr•••

NORTHUP IOIGE

152 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
740·446-0841 • 949-1155 Evenings

800-446-0842

ADVER I .E
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $50 per.month

]
'·
•IJ
~~-----li
.___ _ _ _ ____,I
. GRIZZWELLS
611l\1\1~, ~LP 'bU

Ll KE

Houra
7.JGO AM - 8:00 PM
1114./t mo. pd

• PICTURE THIS!!
Pnifttllonal Photogrtphy

~alltpoli~ iailp ~ribune The Daily Sentinel Joint Jlea~ant ~~gt~ter!
L._{~.~~~·-··-·-··-J~.~·~·-·-··-·-(~ill.:~.m._._j

&amp;: Vldeognphy
AnY Ol:caslon-Purtr•ll
Seslions, Weddinp,
famlllcs. Enpgemenu.

Booblto

Caillan Carpcnltr
7441-74l-Jl17

WHILE
WALK.lNG
ON BROKEN

IT'S 50 ROMANTIC ..

Now Available At

Hard Work!"

BRICKS ON
HEi&gt;,O

l LOVE VALENTINE'S DM:..

Sat 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

"Taki11g The Sti11g Out Of

HPt!
" ~ALANCING

PEANUTS.

Sec Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00

Scorpion Tractors

AH

GLASS'' ~

.GARFIELD

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

33
34
35

36
39
40
41

wisdom that married couples shouldn't
pl,ay bridge together. However, back in
1935, in New York City, the re was a mem·
arable 150-rubber match between two
marrie.d couples: Joseplline and Ely
Culbertson, and Dorothy and P. Hal Sims.
Those who knew the players were expect·
ing firew~rks , but everyone behaved
impeccably. Ely called hi s wile sweetka
(e:.poslng his Russian connectiOns) or
darling . Ely called Hal maestro or
Petronius (a Roman satirist). Hal referred
to Ely as the professor. The wome n called
each other Jo and Dorrie. How did Hal
comPlim ent his wife? Read on.
Mrs. Sims made a psychic opening bid of
one club. (She inadvertently invented the
word "psychic." She was trying to say
"psychological.") Hal, unable to find out if
his partner had the spade ace. sensibly
leapt straight to seven clubs.
II Ely (West) ·had led a ·spade, declarer
would have had to rely on the heart
finesse . II West had opened with a low
heart.. Dorrie probably would have spent a
long time deciding what to do, but everything would have worked. When West
started with a trump, declarer won in
hand, ruffed a low diamond on the board,
and ran dummy's trumps, keeping· the
spade ace, a heart and three diamond
honors in her hand . Then , she plaYed a
spa~e to her ace and cashed the two top
diamonds. throwing hearts f rom the
board. When East's queen dropped,
declarer claimed. II the di amond queen
·had not appeared. ' SQuth still had the
heart finesse available
Immediately. Hal exclaimed, "My angel! "
Then , thinking that that was insufficient,

.

I WAS

.:

Hill 's Self
Storage

2

32

~Graph

. BIG NATE

MANlEY'S
SElFSTOUGE

26

30

~Astr.o­

CONTRACTING
Prompt &amp; quality

•

17
19

he added, "My sweet!"

"'

,

16

A1&gt;\ECE 01'

~UTC~EAM
'T'I~ :&gt;

BOT I THINK

YOU'RE

SWELL

AW.
5J.IUC.K!l

54 Omens
. 55 Family

member

Copland
56 Any ship
NOW cause 57 Lisper's
Junk food
. problem
Climber 's
58 JFK posting 22
looll2 wds.)
serv co
.DOWN
23
charge
•
Gridiron div. 1
24
Hideouts
2 Dunks
Shortfall
3 High splr~s , 25
Point-4 Seismic
26
return
event
• 27
Sugarcane
5 Corn units
product
6 Twosome
28
Work In lhe
7 Swiss artist
garden
8 Town
29
Blubbery
meetings
Commotion
9 Persuade
31
Open wide
11 Tightens
35
Priam's
a corset
subjects
12 Falnl aroma 37
Godzllla foe 18 Big hairdo
38
31-day mo. 20 201,
Hold fondly
lo Claudius 39

-chants

Verno's
skipper
Artis!'a
rental
In the
distance
A biQ fan of
Washouts ·
Actor
-Everett
Copt Kirl&lt;'s

41 Tuba ond
bugle
·
42 Fom. JFK
43 Milne boar
44 Mandolin
· cousin
45 Complains
persiiiiBnlly
4ll Renolr
subject
home
47 Slope to
Doilywood ' lhe Go~
loc .
50 HOtfoot rt
TelejlhoiiOCI · 52 Vllamln
Jellyslone
monitors

bear
-alai
Gas
guzzlers
Clover ploys

Even on valentine 's Day, it is still common

IJoME
IMPRoVF..MENrs

~ot--•~'•O·R-SiiAI.Eiiir-rl

...,

Sunset Home
Construction

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

I
iiRAINiiiil;.••

4x4

A ~tAI&gt;tlf IN SAN .10St vllliTfi:S,
"!)tAll C.UPII&gt;, WtiAT IS IT &lt;.ALHI&gt;
/
.
WtitN A &lt;.LtllGYMAN

lftAl&gt;EifS'

Ta~e

1998 30' fi"h wheel travel
trailer, double slide, e~~:cellent condition, $13,900
phone: (740)698-9319

Pas!)

'-'!!

North . Easl
7 .t. !
~I pass

A loving card for
a beloved partner

BEANS

~---,------

l

game
14 Sauna aile
15 Burr or

31

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

CUPID
ANSwEifS

BUILDERS IDC.

~000 Yamaha Wave Runner

1995 Jeep Che.rokee Sport, Class C Dutchman Motor
HAY &amp;
4.0 automatic, air, excellent Home 2000 Model, New
·cond. $3495.00 304'-727- tires,
all
accessories,
G
· ~,._ _ _ _
·;~
·
6924 _
sleeps-8. (304)675-7388 to
•
- - - - - , - - - - - inq~Jire
1,000 lb. round bales, 1998
Jeep
Cherokee
orchard gr~ss and alph · Classic, 4.0, automatic, fully
" I I{\ It I ..,
alpha mix. Barn stored. loaded $5495. · 304-727(740)245-9652.
6924

j

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

BISSELL

Morons 1·

www.slaterunfarm.com

ll'llr""--"!'"!'-,..._,

South

Ope~ing lead: "'

992·6215 wv ()36125
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Ve11rs Local Ex rlence

2005 Kawasaki V-Twin 750
Vulcan
Cycle,
never
dropped, garaged, 50mpg.
$4.400 (304)675-2942

West

Tree Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

a~;;,;;;;,;;~;;;_;~;;;;-.,

4x5 round bales ol hay, $10

. JONES'

South

airpor1
51 Antenna
lype
53 Little one

22

Vulnerable: 'Neither

YOUNG'S

gee's
11 kaual
cookouts
13 Old card

23

-".J
Dealer:

42 Champagne
bottle
1 Lyric poem 45 Pushing
4 Proof andsr
ahead
7 Fasl-focd
48 Worthless
acronym
coin
10 Thousand
49 Mldwesl

· 21

+AKJ4 2

740-843-5264

1998
Yamaha
Warrier.
Excellent cond ition, $2,600.
4-wheeler tirEis· various
sizes
and
conditions.
(740)446-0048.

IDR SALE

• Q 10 8
"' 10 4
South
to A 9 7
• J 10 S4

"' 7 2

Home • Auto o Life o Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup.' o cancer • Accident

1995 Harley Softail Custom,
$9,995. Call (606)232-6319.

BoATS &amp;

.KQ 6432
• 8 7

K 9 3

f97 653

1986 Honda Foreman, 4 wd,
excellent condition, garage
&lt;epl, $2000.,(740)992-0413

j

East

West
• J 10 8

Honda 750 101 h
. .
..
AnniVersary L1m1ted Ed1t1on.
. Need.s
ignition
work.
Even1~g
(740)256-6870.
Low mileage. $2,500.

___

02· 14·05

• 5
• A Q• 2

, . ~··-. -··-·-·-··-··-··-··.....;...,,_. -:··-··--·~~··-··-·-··-··-·1
I· -

ACROSS

s:x 1 97 ~
.

For Lease: Office or· retail ,
spaces in very good condi·
lion. Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx . 1600 sq. ft. each. 1
or 2 baths_ Lease price
neQ'otiable to encourage
new
business.
Call
(740)446-4425 or (740)4463936.
MISCELLANEOUS
: BEAUTIFUL
APART· \ - - - - - - - MERCHAND~'E
;, UENTS
AT· BUDGET ·For rent: Ground levelluxu· l.oo•oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio...
~ PRICES AT JACKSON
office suite(s) for rent, 3,
~ ESTATES, 52 Westwood 4. or 7 rooms suite. utilities 7 day/ 6 night Disney area
~ Drive from $344 to $442. included. Suites offer private vacation . Paid $600 must
• Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call restroom dedicated to area, sell $199. Cal l (614)590' 740-446-2568.
Equal private entrance. and ample 5244.
:. Housing Opportunity.
parking . All handicapped
accessible. For further 1nfor- Chain link fence, various
&gt; CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- mation contact Melanie at ·heights, 740-949-2803.
~ ED a AFFORDABLE!
1740)446-7866.
Electri_c Scooter. .Rarely
• Townhouse
apartments,
lJSed, Excellent Condition
\ ll]{( ll\ \ 111 " 1
• and/or small houses FOR
$900 (304)675-6114
: RENT. Call (740)441-.1111
JET
: for appllcatkln &amp; Information.
AERATION MOTORS
For Lease: One bedroom,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
nice 2nd floor apt. Corn·er
Stock. ca:lt Ron Evans, 1·
Pine and Second. Large
B00-537-9528.
kitchen with dining area.
New range, · refrigerator.
Appliance
NEW AND USED STEEL
Water included. Aet~rences
Steel. Beams, Pipe Rebar
required. $300/mo. Security
Warehouse For
Concrete,
Angle.
deposit. No pets. Call
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
(740)446-4425 or (740)446For
Drains,
in Henderson, WV. Pre- Grating
3936.
'f
owned applicanes starting at Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- $75 &amp; up aU under warranty. Scrap Metals Open Monday,
room apartments at Village we do service work on all Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
and
Riverside Make and Models (304)675· Friday, Bam-4:30pm. C loSed
ManOr
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Apartments in Middleport. 7999
From $295-$444 .. Call 740- - - - - - - - - •Sunday. (740)446-7300
992-5064. Equal Housing Furniture: Sofa- chair sels.
$399; Sofa- love seat se ts .
SPA FACfORY OUTI.EI'S
Opportunities.
·
$499. Mollohan Carpet
New Shipmen!
20·tubs in-stock
large 1 bedroom apt, new 1740)446-7444 or (740)388·
carpet, stove, refrigerator. 0173.
Cedar Knoll Mall,
Waterftrash included. No
Kentuc~s~~=~~~g Post,
pets, $300 month plus Inside sale: Mise items, such
)
_
1606 922 7185
as clothing, some furniture,
deposit (740)388·8371 .
pictUres, lamps, all reasOnTow-dolly, new tires, 6 pl)l
t;.Jew 1 bedroom apt. Call able priced.
and
new straps, $425 OBO.
Skaggs
Appliances
(740)446-3736.
i740)379-2706:
76 Vine Street
Pilot Program- Renters
(740)446-7398
needed. Call (304)736Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
3409.
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
Twin 'Rivers Tower is accept- (740)446-7444 1-877-830ing applfcations for waiting 9162. Free Estimates, Easy
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
list for Hud-subsized, .1· br, financing. 90 days same as
windows, lintelS, eto. Claude
apartment, call 675-6679 cash . V1sa/ Master Card.
Winters. Aio Grande. OH
EHO
Drive- a· Httle save alot.
Call 740-245-5121.
~ park .

1993 Chevrolet Astra Van , 2000 Ford ~lnstar LX, 81 K,
good
condition
phone 2/sliding doors, seats 7, an
(304)675-5077
power, rear air, tinted windows,
asking
$6,900,
1996 Buick Century, 4 dr. (740)669·5653
Maroon in color, 94:ooo
miles,
good
condition 2001 Dodge CaraVan Sport,
70,000 miles, excellent con$2,995 (304)675-1506
dition, sliding doors-both·
1996 Olds Vfi Auto, $1,600 sides, auto, V6, AJC, power
(304)576-3231
everything, time/temperature
gauge.
$11 ,000.
·2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
(740)255-6543.
speed, 29,000 m\Jes, air,
one owner. Nice (740)441·
0157 or 1740)645-5141.

AKC
A6gtstered
Toy
Poodles. 4 blaCk m'lt!les. 1
black, 1 cream lemale. $500.
Ready by 2126105. (740)3677429.

NEA Crosswor.d Puzzle

BRIDGE

....._t..e.'Y"!

MobWe home, RiO Grande Tara

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

-...'Birthday:

Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2005 ·
By Bernice Bade Osol

Two projects that you have been working
pn lor some time will be successfully concluded in the year ahead and you will be
appropriately rewarded lor your eHorts.
They will be ' replaced by ventui-es that
are new 8f'ld different
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -There 's
no excuse tor «_oming down hard on others today tor not doing things that you
should have taken care of yourself. Close
your mouth and Qo yo~Jr d~Jties, don't del·
egate them.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20} - Your
active imagination is one ol your greatest
assets !hat can work to your benelit or
lead you astray. Don't dwell on negative
visions that lnake your life miserable
today.
ARIES {March 2t~April t9) - Be smart
and mak.e do with the cash you have on
hand today. Loading up your credit cards
or requesting loans -'from lriends will
. make your life missraf&gt;le later on .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Should
persons with whom you get Involved
today not be interested in the same prodlJctive objectives as you are. lose them .
Don't let anyone waste your lime or get
you oft track .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - All the
fancy plans and concepts in the world will
count lor nothing today II you fail t9 take
the initiative and implement lhem . Action
,is the only th ing that gets results , conver sation doesn't.
CANC ER (June 21-Juty 22)- Should ,a
delicate matter pop up which begs tor
resolution today with a close friend. make
it a point to be tacttul and considerate. If
you appreciate this person's position. it'll
make things easier.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Timing, can turn
out to be essential to your success today.
II !here is an important proposal you want
to present to another, be sure this individual has adequate ti me to give it the
affention it deserves.
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sep1. 22) Guard
against tendencies to p~Jt th ings off until
the last minute today. Delays will not only
jam up your schedule; but they may affect
someone else who is important to your ·
·
weit8re as well:
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23)- Try not to let
your curiosity probe too deeply into .a
lriend's personal affairs today thai are
none ol yo~Jr business. This person will
resent your interference.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You'\1
have a better chance ol getting others to
cooperate with your goals today if .you
first set the example you want your asso-,..
ciates or family to follow. J-tounding them
to comply won 't work.
SAGITTARtUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - II
you look only lor !laws and Imperfections
in others today rather than concentrate
on their virtues. your associations aren 't
· apt to work out too happily. Don 't be judgmental.'
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan'. 19) Unless you have money to burn. today.
as alwayS, you must be diligent and Pru·
den! regarding the management of your
resources. Don't !ritter away that which

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebfrty Crphe! cryplograms ar&amp; a eated trom Quotalionli by famous people! , past ¥(1 prestri
Each 18!\er in the ct illel Slartas tor aoothef.

Today's clue: J eque!s B

" A N EX

Ny

CJNEX

KXCD ·

ANEX

WGTR

NDX

Z . L.

PBX. "

c

CAA ,

NDX T XA Y. "

"Z X

NM

BT,

5 BY R

CDNGBAL

CDNRLXM

CGPXO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I'm juS1 a foreign actor wh&lt;llives in Spain il/1d can
barely lalk English." - Spamsh superSiar Javier Bar(lem
· (c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 2-12

S©\\~}A-~t-~5·

IHII DIIIT
'UIILII

- - - - - - - lclitttl lty CU.Y

Recno11"e letter!. of
0 lour
.crambled words

t.

WOlD
GAMI

'0UAN

thtl
be·

'low to l orm fovr words

GRAFU ~

~

.
B E N L 0 -:
.--------.(N-=,~
s_ J· JG 1

1
I

.I . .

.

'You must be careful which
person you choose as leader,'

.

Granny told me . 'The true

,-----------,~ value afa leader is determined

RAWNOO

.oywho •5·-- - ------lhem'

f,7:;-TJ':"a""!J':"g-rJ---'rJ--'-TJ--i
.

.

.

PRYNT NUMSFREO ~
8 LETTERS
•1
D UNSCRAM!!LE FORI
ANSWER

•

0

Complttc the chud.le

q~.rote-d

by hilu'lg in lht ITIISS ir"lg word$
you d~~elo~J hom step No. J below. ,

.

I' I! I' Is I' I' I I' I
IIIIIIIII

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Outlet. Wllisk -Inlet· Unload- S'NELLED .
A new colleague seemed very self assured an~ over ·
confident. "He's not so great," another colleague grinned.
"no big idea wjll come from a SWELLED head."

ARLO &amp; JANIS .

you worked so ha.rd to gain

SOUP TO NUTZ
WISHING To Gi 116.
V8LeN1iN!iS 1HtS Yet&lt;
f'le.aSE 8E SUI&lt;E \bo6,'v,;_
ONE: 10 ~ CtJI&lt;.sMSJE.

;
I

=::;:::~ 11..-;===n nr:::=::;::::~
•!
t.:.!==- - '

�..
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

•
Monday, february 14 2005

www. mydailysentinel.com

-Bush's latest
$81.9 billion request for
wars pushes total past
·$300 billion, A2

Malone announces his ·retirement from ·NBA
Bv DouG ALDEN
Associated Press
-~----___;___;..:.::.:____ _ _
SALT LAKE CITY _ As much
as Karl Malone wanted to win an
NBA title, he just didn ' t have the
desire to play a 20th seaso n.
Malone officially announced his
retirement Sunday, ending his
career where it started when the
Utah Jazz selected him with the

13t~ pick in the 1985 draft.
"Even though I left for a year, I
grew here as a Jazz man," Malone
said at a · news conference at the
Delta · Center. "If I'm fortunate
enough to go into the Hall of
Fame, l will go as a Jazz man ."
The 41-year-old finishes second
on the NBA's career scoring li st
with 36,928 points , just 1,459
behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Malone met with the San
Antonio Spurs last week and was
considering a return, hoping for
one more chance at a cham pionship ring , but he decided that
mentally he couldn' t play at the
level that made him one of the best
ever in the league.
Malone had knee surgery last
summer and said he was fully
recovered frorn the injury that'
forced him to miss half of last season. But his mind wasn't up to
returning to basketbalL
"When 1 got on that plane, 1
knew I was done. · That it was
.time," Malone said. "I look at basketball as 100 percent physically
and 100 percent mentally. And if 1
can't bring you 200 percent, from
me, I can't brjng you anything. "
Malone said he wanted to keep
from getting too emotional, and he
succeeded - even when recalling
Utah's glory days of the 1990s.
Sitting on platform with his wife ,
Kay, Jazz owner Larry Miller and
coach Jerry 'Sloan , Malone thanked
the Jazz for picking him after. 12
teams had passed.
.
An avid outdoorsman, Malone

sported a cowboy hat and T- shirL
'He still !ooked to be in great
shape, showing that he hasn 't let
up on the relentless workouts that
allowed him to play into his 40s.
The . news conference was
· packed · with reporters, some fan s
and a few .former teammates who
came 'to say goodbye to the certain
Hall of Famer.
Malone was the league 's MVP in
1'197 and '99. One· of the most
durable players ever. Malon e is
also second only to Abdui-Jabbar's
57,446 minutes played with
54,852. Malone 's 14,968 rebounds
rank him sixth all -time and he also
was a 14-time A ll -Star selection,
· ·
wmnmg
t he game MVP ·111 1989
and sharing it with longtime teammate John Stockton in 1993.
"1 had greai players in Karl
Malone and John Stockton, so I
was very lucky," Sloa.n said. " I
said all along when L had them.
You don't find this· every day. And
you know what? There was a ·great
deal of jealousy that people had of
those guys because of that."
Malone also won gold medals
with the U.S. Olympic teams of
199 2 and 1996. About th e' only
thing missing in hi s career is an
title ring , which he missed out on
in three trips to the N BA Finals.
Malone and Stockton led the Jazz
to the 1997 and '98 Final s, losing
to Michael Jordan and the Chi cago
Bulls each time . ·
He sig ned with the Los Angeles
Lakers before last season and
made it to the finals again, losing
this time tothe D.etroit Pi ston s.
So Malone, whose nickname was
the Mailman, e nd s hi s career withoui a ring and without a chance to
catch Abdui-Jabbar, which he said
was never really a goaL
"I wanted a champion ship. I'm
not going to li e to you . That was
my ultimate goal, but that was a
team goaL That wasn't an indiv,idual goal," he 'Said. " I will say that
the two years we made it to the

'

AP photo

Utah Jazz toward Karl Malone lays one in during.the third quarter against the
Denver Nuggets in t hi s March 4, 2002 photo, in Salt Lake City. Malone, who
for 18 seasons as a member of the· Utah Jazz, announced his reti rement
Sunday,
Finals ~-ith the Jazz: that was the
funnest years I had playing baiL"
Malone said he chose Sunday to
honor his mother, Shirley Jackson
Malone , who died iri August 2003.
He said she would have turned 67
on Sunday.
·

(Palmetto_ FL) struggled
through live innings but managed · to get · the win.
· Watterson went five innings,
· giving up eight hits, striking
five and hiui ng lwo batters.
He was the victim of a 6-run
seco nd inning by .the Trojans.
. Rio trailed 7-2 after the second inning.
Gollom went 3-for-3 collecti'ng a si ngle, a double and
·a triple. He was also hit by a
pitch and drove in three runs.
Junior Kevin Dolan (Newark,
OH) went 2-for-4. with a pair
of RBI's and junior Matt
Martin (Cle veland, OH) was
1-for-2 with an RBI.
Freshman
Kenta
Sato
(Fukuoka, Japan) was credited with his first collegiate as
he sported some effective
breaking pitches in his relief
stint. Both team s tallied eight hits
and Rio Grande· played some
shaky defense in committing
live errors.

Malone teamed with . Stockton
for 18 seasons with Utah , fanning
one of the NBA's greatest duos.
Malone said Stockton, who retired
in 2003 as the NBA' s ca~eer leader
in assists and stea.ts, was one of the
first people. he called last week to

.

.

E-mail your SP.Orts news to:
sports@myda•lysentinel.com

.
.
.
Pf)WI
'

'-

'

.

Middleport • Po~eroy, Ohio
:; o (

L:\ IS • \ 'ol. :&gt;4 . '\; o .

• Browns release Garcia.
• SeePage B1

CHUCK ScHOFFNER

Associated Press

IOWA CITY, Iowa - No.2
Ohio State had to battle to the
end to beat Iowa and OSU
coach Jim Foster was· delighted.
Jessica Davenport scored
21 points and converted a key
. three-point play 'tate in the
game that enabled the
Buckeyes to hold off Iowa 6760 Sunday for their 13th
straight victory.
"We needed to be in a game
like this," Foster said. "We
needed to have to fight and
we needed to have to come
from behind and up the level
of execution.
"It was good for us to be in
a game against a team that
. ·was clawing at us the way that
Iowa was, on the floor with us
after loose balls."
Ohio State (24-2, 11-1 Big
Ten) used a 16-0 run to erase
. a 12-point Iowa lead in the
fJJ'St half, then went on a '13-2
second-half run' to take the
lead for good.
Caity Matter added 18
points for. the Buckeyes,
mcluding a 3-pointer with just
under 5 minutes left to break
the final tie. It was Ohio
State's closest game si nce a
52-50 victory over Rutgers on
Jan. 16.
.
·1bere wasn ' t panic in anybody's eyes," Matter said.

· "We just knew we had to get lead to three with 4 m'inutes to
the job done. We knew we play, but the Hawkeyes came
had to get a stop and Score up empty on their next three
and that 's what we did."
possessions and the Buckeyes
Iowa (16-7, 5:7) led 53-47 fina ll y got the ball to
when Krista VandeVenter Davenport on the low block .
scored on a putback with
The 6-foot-4 so phomore
II :41 remaining, then made was fouled by Cavey as she
only two baskets the . rest of hit a turnaround and sank the
the way. Jamie Cavey flayed free throw, making it 63-57
D
d f · h
·h
1 15
· ·
avenport to a stan o m t e Wit
:
remmntng.
battle of post players and led Davenport said she knew she
Iowa with 22 points and I 0 had to get involved again
rebounds.
after her lon g sco re less
There was some coilsola- stretch.
.
tion in ~oming close for the
''I think ·it was a matter of
Haw keyes. who had played me posting up harder and
poorly in losing to Wiscon sin · making myself available to
in their last home game.
my teammates," she said.
."We at least. competed,"
Brandie Hoskins added 14
Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said. points for Ohio State, while
"I told our team we played a Wilburn finished with eight
team that's better than steals and six· assists. Crystal
UConn,
· better . than Smith scored 12 for Iowa and
Tennessee, better than Duke Armstrong had r I.
and we came out and com petIowa made seven 3-poini ed.'"
ers, three by Armstrong, and
Beth Howe started. Ohio got four baskets inside from
State's decisive rally with a Cavey in zooming to a 34-22
ju!llper and .Davenport, who lead. But Ohio State extended
had been scoreless the first 13 its defense and the Haw keyes
· minutes of the half, hit coo- didn't score again in the half,
secutive shots in.side to tie it 'missing eight ~lraight shots.
at 53. Then, with the score The Buckeyes didn ' t let that
tied at 55 , Iowa's Jenna opportunity go to waste.
Armstrong lost the ball dri Matter made two 3-pointers
ving int\1 the lane and Kim an(l a layup. Davenport
Wilburn hit Matter for a wide 'cored twice in the lane and
open 3 on the right wing.
Ho,k in' added a ba,ket ai1d
Tamarah . Riley followed two free throws. In' less thhn 5
with a basket inside to com- minutes. Ohio State ran off 16
plete the run, making it 60-55. straight points to lead 38-34
Cavey's final basket cut, the at halftime. ·

BY BRtAN J.· REED
.BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

siiff competition.
In an Inside Bulletin to AEP
employees, dated Feb. 10, AEP
announced it has asked PJ M
Interconnection, an independent electric transmission
provider, to evaluate transmission interconnection feasibility
for three potential sites: AEPowned land at Great Bend. the
Mason Comity site at New
Haven, and an Ohio River site
in Lewis County, Ky.

OBITUARIES .
.Page AS .·
• Kenneth Cooke
• Dennis Wendell Howard
• Mona Lee Neal
• Emma Jeari Wilson
• Sharon .Elaine Hart

111!1·-A6 '-:·'!

.

WEATHER

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - "Abraham
Lincoln was open about hi s
faith, much like America's
leader George Bush is today,"
said State Sen. Joy Padgett ·
(R-Coshocton) in her address
at the annual Lincoln Day
dinner of the Meigs County
Republican Party.
More than 200 people
attended the dinner held at
Meigs High School Monday
night when Padgett spoke .on
"Abraham
Lincoln ,
a
Spiritual Journey."
She talked about the
Lincoln "we all remember
and love, a man of co mpassion, outreach and principle,"
and ·made comparisons to
President Bush describing
thein both as "men never
afraid to profess theif"faith in
. God.
, "The way today 's ·media
snickers about President
Bu sh's openly expressed
faith would be mild as to how
they would review Lincoln's
words of faith. Somehow
that irony never occurs to
them," Padgett said.
Padgett .described Lincoln
Cha~one Hoefttch/PIM&gt;to
as usinr the Bible as his "rule
Joy
Padgett,
(R-Coshocton)
20th
District
state
senator, speaks
of life' and commented that
he spoke openly and ·easily at the annual Lincoln Day dinner of the Meigs County
about his faith, just as . Republican Party.
President Busi:) does today.
She said his greatest execu' "Individual freedom was stone. today. We believe in
tive decision was the Lincotn:s cornerstone and
Emancipation Proclamation . remains our country's comerPlease see Padcett. AS
.

'

Pomeroy PD confiscate crack
cocaine during traflic.- stop
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DetJitla on P... A&amp;

INDEX
2 SEC110NS' -

12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

Ad Deadline 2-17-05

Call:

\

, Those sites are considered play a "key role" in final site
front-runners because they are selection .
•·
already owned by AEP, and
"We will not select a site
because of their acreage, con- until we are comfortable
lour and water proximity. The about our ability to recover
proposed plant is a commercial- the costs of constructing and
size Integrated Gasification operating the plant ,'' Morris
Combined Cycle ·(IGCC) said. "Over time, we expect
clean-coal plant, and would be • to build several new plants,
the first of its size in the U.S.
so cost recovery will be a
AEP Chairman Michael G. critical part of our decision."
Morris sa id regulatory factors
Commissioner
Mick
in eac h o{ the three states will Davenport said he knew the

Bv

INSIDE

I

,, ,. ,

Meigs County site was being
considered, but did not real ize Meigs had been included
on AEP' s short li st until
Monday,
Davetiport said he plans to
attend a meeting Friday in
Columbus to discuss site
requirements. with AEP,
Corps of Engineers and
Environmental
Protection

Please see AEP, AS

Sen. Padgett speaks ~ood pl~ads insanity
.. ·
br
di . · 1nshoot1ng of Hunt
at R~pu Ican_ nner TMALO~~:~~D~L~~~~~ECOM ;;~~~~~ T~~~:; H;a~~~if~~

• More colleges making
h~alth insurance mandatory
among its students. See

February 25, 2005

'""' ·""'t "il l't'll l "'"'·'

II I·.'-;))\\ , 1 1-.!U{l ',\ ]{\ 1:; . :! llCI :i

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners con'
firmed reports that American
Electric Power has selecte&lt;:l
Meigs County and two othec
potential sites For a new
clean-coal power plant, but
said property adjacent to
-AEP's Mountaineer Plant in
· Mason County, W.Va. will be

'

'

"-'.&gt;

Sheets: Mason likely threat to Meigs in bid for AEP.plant·

SPORTS

Lady Buckeyes battle past Iowa·
Bv

in Chinese coal mine
ki11s 203, A2

·r

Redmen baseball moves to 4-0
CLEVELAND, Tenn The University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball team continued to pound opposition's ·
pitching Saturday, ·winning a
pair to improve to 4-0 on the
. season. Rio defeated Bryan second homer of the season.
CtN) College in the first Newcumer and Duke transfer
game, 13·2 and captured the Mike Gollom (Homer Glen,
second game versus Taylor IL) finally got untracked and
(IN), 10-8.
ripped two hits , including a
Rio Grande was able to gain three-nm bomb. Senior Scott
a second straight win over Peterman (Westerville, OH)
Bryan (1-4) in a game that was 2-for-2 with a double and
was closer than the final score scored four runs.
.indicated.
The Redmen
Columbus State tra·nsfer
· 'pounded three more home Barry Roe ( 1-0) lasted five
. runs after hitting seven in the innings on the mound and
first two games. Sophomore collected his first win in his
Nate Chau (Lockbourne, OH) first outing as a Redmen. Roe
went 3-for-4 with a home run, fanned six, walked live and
double and six RBI. The six hit three batters. while yieldRBI's set a new single game ing only two hits and one
school record, eclipsing the earned run. Roe carried a no. mark of five set last season by hitter int.o the fo.urth inning.
Game two versus Taylor ( 1H.A. Scott.
Michael 2), the Redmen had to come
Sophomore ·
Warren (Gallipoli s, OH) went from behind to get the win.
Starter Brent Watterson
2-for-3 includmg clubbing his

say he. was finished . .
Malone was close to retiring last ·
summer, but decided to wait until
he was fully recovered from the
. knee surgery before making up his
mind . And he said Suhday that
there wou ld be no changing it.
" When said I retired from bas- ·
ketball playing, I have retired. You
will not see me play again. That is
a promise," he said. "There· will be
no unbelievable comebacks. Seen
that, didn't like that. Won't do
that."
.
Malone was so an~ious to thank
Miller, Sloan and former team"
mates over his 19 years that he for·
got to make the announcement.
Miller had to prompt him a few ·
minutes into the news conference
to say why he was there.
.
It wasn't a surprise. The Jazz
sen t a release Friday saying
Malone' s retirement news conference would be Sunday.
Miller, who! had many very public run-ins with Malone over the
years, said the overall experience
of having Malone lead the team for
so long was well worth the
headaches.
"The good outweighed the bad
remarkably," said Miller, who
paused several times to collect
himself during his remarks.
· Bronze sc ulptures of Stockton
and Malone are in the works and
will stand outside the arena.
· Stockton's No. 12 · was retired in
November and Malone 's No. 32
will follow next season.
Always outspoken, Malone criticized some of the current Jazz
players for not playing . hard
enough. The tei}m is struggling,
and was 17-33 on Sunday.
And Malone offered ·no apologies for the criticism or for any
remarks that may have offended
somebody in his career. And there
.were plenty.
"People that was around Karl
Malone knew at the end of the day
what they had," Malone said.

Gas explosion

Editorials
Obituaries
B Section

Sports
Weather

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

be driving under three license
suspensions. Upon a search
. for weapon s, Grucber also
POMEROY - · A Vinton found Camelin to be in posman was taken into custody session of a . large vial conby Pomeroy Police Friday taining what was later field
night for allegedly driving tested to be crack cocaine,
under the influence of drugs , . according to Pomeroy Police
possessing crack cocaine and C hief Mark E. Proffitt.
endangering a child.
Grueber was assisted at the
Frank E. Camel in, 11,. 27, scene by Sgt. Ronnie Spaun ,
On Monday, Camel in was
Vinton, wa.s driving his
wife's white Monte Carlo charged in Meigs County
with his 7-year-·old step- Court with operating a vehi·
daughter as a P.a ssenger when cle while under the influence
he was pulled over by of drugs , F-3 possession of
Pomeroy
Patrolman crack cocaine, F-3 child
Christopher Grueber at 9:45 endangerment, possession
p.m. for improper backing drug paraphernalia, iinproper
near the inter~ection of backing_ and driving under
Mulberry
and
Union suspens)on.
avenues .
Please see Crack. AS
Grueber found Camelin to

McARTHUR -Ruth Ann
Wood pleaded not guilty by
reason of insanity Monday to
a charge of aggravated murder again~t her for the death
of Marvm Hunt: 53, · of
Ewington.
.
.
.
Wood. 38, ot 36029
Carpenter Htll Road, Dexter,
along with Donovan K. ·
Cremeens, 18, of 8 194 Bull
Run Road, VmtoD , have had
true btl Is returned agamst
them on charges of aggravated murder by a Vmton
County grand jury.
.
Both Wood and Cremeens
face life sentences for the
Janu~ry shooting of Hunt.
whose body was found by

POMEROY - If learning
to quilt is something you've
always wanted to do, this
may be your chance.
·

Please see Wood, A5

Beegle, deputies approve
three-year contract
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

raises for all II employees in
his department, and allows
deputies who are assigned to
POMEROY
· Meigs road patrols to continue driCounty
Sheriff
Robert ving their cruisers back and
Beegle said a new contract forth to work.
approved by he and his
The three-year contract
deputies will go into effect · also allows for a re-opening
early next month, ·and for new negotiations at the
includes modest pay .increas- end of 2005 , and provides a
es for all employees in his longer recall period for laiddepartment.
off employees .. Beegle said.
Beegle .said the contract he
Meigs
County
and the union approved on
Feb. 7 includes 3-percenl pay
Pleaie see Beecfe, AS

Make your own quilt
BY CHARlENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Jan. 15. Vinton County
Prosecutor Tim Gleeson has
decided nqt to pursue the
death penalty in the case.
Wood and Cremeens are
alleged to have lured Hunt to
a rural cemet~ry in Vinton
County, where Wood has
confessed to ~hooting Hunt
twice in the back and once in
the chest. Crem~ens is then
alleged to have run over
Hunt's · body with a vehicle,
breaking eight. of his rib,.
Wood 's plea of insanity '
means that she must be
examined by . a psychiatrist
froni the Shawnee Forensic
Center in Portsmouth, said '

. Classes for beginners and
intermediate and .advanced
quilters are being offered at
the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.
Bunny Kuhl who has many
years of experience as a quit-

ter will be teaching classes in
the afternoons apd evenings
beginning in March. The
evening sessions wjll be held
from 6 to 9 p.m on March 8
and 15. and the afternoon
classes from 2 to 5 p.m. on
March 10 and 17.
During . the classes, a ·
full/queen size quilt top in the
design "A trip Around the
World" will be · made .
Registrations are being takell'
now at the center, 99:2-2 161.
The fee is $20 for both classes.
Kuhl has been a quilter,
exhibitor and instructor for

Please see Quilt. AS
Hoitfltch/ phola
This Quilt displayed by Alice
Wolfe , left. and Bunny Kuhl is
of the design to be created in
classes offered at the Senior
Center. Kuhl will instruct two
classes. one daytime. the
other even1ng.

Ch..i-

®aUipolisllailp '1ICribune • 446-2342
il
-u~·,.

.t)oint ~leasant ~rgister • 67S..1333

www.syncro.oticonus.com

Cal/. or come in to receive .a
FREE CD or VHS Tope of
actual user comments! '

Oticon Syncro

The Daily Sentinel • 99,Z-2156

(((Ge&lt; Hooting Empowe...d)))

•

Diane McVey GALLIPOLIS
M.A. CCC·A
Owner &amp; AudloluPt

•

43~'/,

Second Annue

. JACKSON

ATHENS

232 Huron Street

275 Wesl Union Street

Open Mon . • Thurs . I:U0-5rm

Open Tues .. Wed .. Thurs. 8 : 30-~pm

Open Mon . · Fri . 8:30-5pm
Saturday hy Appo) nunem

(740) 446-7619

(740) 286-1430

(740) 594-3571

( A.crot:l

from Pl»l omcc,

(MLVraw

Pby~1cal

Therapy hldJ )

'

. __.__....

.'
1 .,.

· With Syncro you can talk on the phone or get a
hug without worrying about the age-old problem
·of whistling. Syncro continuously searches for
unwanted sounds and removes them before they
· are even heard.

----------~----~--------~--~--~--------~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="501">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9952">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17054">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17053">
              <text>February 14, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1051">
      <name>haning</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="259">
      <name>hubbard</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
