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·iunbaplimd·ientintl .
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PageD6

·HOUSE .OF THE.WEEK

Sundal;, January 18, 20f,»4

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

.

Memories haunt
survivors·ofaparbnents
destroyed in 1994 ···
lA earthquake, A2

· Patriots gl-ound · ·
Manning to move on to
Houston, .Bt

'

"The Tudor exterior is quic'k/y recognized with
the formal ornamentation, 'fireplace detail and ·
rooflines. /like this floor plan with its· separation
of living areas. This retains the tradition of wonderful interior Tudor woodwork and great window
treatments."- Ted Allen
step forward, too.
The modern kitchen and
pantry open to a family
room with fireplace nook.
Formal dining and living
rooms are kept apart from
areas.
high
traffic
Yesterday's Tudors lacked
the pleasing patio that
opens from a well-win·
dowed family room.
There are four bedrooms
· upstairs. A nicely appointed
mas ter suite has touches
modern homeowners expect.

BY BRUCE A. NATHAN

AP Weekly Features
The English got it right with
Tudor
home
design.
Refinements over the cen·
turies have added to . a
legacy of warmt h and
charm. This Plan is a fine
example of this approach.
Tradition is well served
with multi·pane casement
windows, steep roof lines
and half.timbering. But
contemporary
touch es

en
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
~IJ( I '\. 1"-,• \ol . al '\ o

The English Lady. Designed in the Tudor style, this home sets a warm, inviting tone. Steep roof lines and
work are emblematic of this architectural approach.

==F=r=r-r"il

d~tailed

. • Panthers down Eagles
to earn Super Bowl berth.

exterior wood·

See Page 81

MAIN L.EVEL PLAN

1366 SF ·

.....

~

~

DESIGN DETAILS

UPPER LEVEL PLAN

1134 SF

Architectural style: Tudor Total: 2,520 sq. ft. Main
level plan: 1,386 sq. ft. Upper level plan: 1.134 sq.
ft. Garage: two-car attached Overall width: 44 ft.,
Overall depth: 63 ft. Recommended lot size: 60 ft.
wide, 140 ft . deep Bedrooms: 4 Baths: 2·1/2
Laundry: main level Exterior materlal(s): stucco
plaster and brick veneer Foundation: full basement
2 in. x 6 •in. stud exterior walls, wood frame Two fireplaces with Count Rumford design fireboxes Roof
material: wood shingles Attic: yes

l!et&gt;ltOOM
1-4 X 10

I!WIOOOM
1&lt;4.)( 10'6"
BI!DROOM

Midwest
Northwest
Southwest

lq

\ ' ' ' ' ' 111 \ d,nl\ •.tullllllllllll

' 'fHJI

Army investigator
to head Meigs
Health
Department

POMEROY - Matthew
and Kristina Finlaw of Long
Bottom are the wiJ1ners in
the "First Baby of 2004"
c.o ntest sponsored by The
Daily Sentinel and local
merchant s.
They are .the parents of
Lucas Gage, born on Jan . 6,
at 5:30 a.m. at St. Joseph's
Hospital in Parkersburg, W
Va. He weighed 6 pounds. 8
ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Finlaw
also have a daughter,
Mattision Taylor, three. ·
Maternal grandparents are
Cindy and Rick Koblentz
and Mark Warner of
Pomeroy, and ·maternal
great-grandmother is Janice
Reynolds of Mason, W Va.
Paternal grandparents are
Debbie and Steve Finlilw of

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM ,

POMEROY
- Pubiic
health issues relating to the
war on terrorism and the
socio-economic condi tions in
Meigs County face the former U.S. Army forensic specialist who will soon head the
· Mei gs
County
Health
Department
Larry Marshall , a Pomeroy
native, has returned to Meigs
County as deputy health
commissione·r.
but will
replace Heahh Commissioner
Norma Torres when she
retires in ApriL .
Marshall said the department' s priorities of sanitation. public health infrastructure - ·which
includes
bioterrori sm readiness in
light of the country's war on
terrorism - and public educati'on on issues like diabetes.
smoking and childhood
obsesity, will continue to be
priorities under his leadership. but said he will also
place increased attention on
two other publi c health
issues: Illegal dumping and
health conditions in mi grant
workers' camps.
Marshall served a four·year
term in the U.S. Navy al'ter
his graduation from Pomeroy

10 X 11

ESTIMATED COST OF CONSTRUCTION
(excludes lot)
Northeast
Southeast

.J\ '\ 1 \1&lt;\

Finlaws have Meigs County's first baby of 2004

SPORTS
··- ...

\ lfJ '\ 1»\\

')fl

Please see Baby, AS

$281,000.$309,000
$232,00().$255,000
$252,000.$275,000
$270,000.$297,000
$245,00().$270,000

Little Lucas Gage Finlaw born at
5:30 a.m. on Jan. 6, held here
by his mother, Kristina Finlaw, is
Meigs County's First Baby of
2004. (Charlene Hoeftich)

ARCHITECTURAL 'GLOSSARY
Hall-timbering: Exposed exterior timbering. Spaces
between timbers are filled by stucco, cement plaster or
stone.
For • atudy plan of fhJ. lrouae, •end SS tv Hou•e of the Week, Bolf 1582, New York,
NY 1.0~1562, call (811)·2~2954, or order at APHOUHOftMwHit.com. S. ture ro
ltreludtl tire plan numHr. For downloadable 1tudy plan• and ~tructlon blueprlnf• of
HOUH ol tiHt W.... before April 2003, see houteortlteweelc.eom.

Secretary of State looks back to King's contributions to the·nation
BY

WILLIAM C.

MANN

.. -· , ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

INSIDE
• Car dealership in the
cards for Pomeroy

.See Page A6
• Community Calendar.

See Page A3

o

..

WEATHER

1
'

Brand flew 2004
Pontiac Vlbe
5 Door suv · .

11 80*

Air Conditioning. CD System With £quc!llzer,.Fog
Lamps, Rear Window Wiper, Roof Luggoge Rock,

Brand New 2004 Pontiac
Grand Prix GT Sedan

Brand New 2004 Bqlck
LeSabre Cu1tom Sedan

3100 V-6 Powor, Cnho &amp;Tilt, 1-11 loyhss
lotry, Spit fold I• !tot, (D Sys1• Will
·
ll!"inr, Powsr Wlolows &amp; locls

POWO&lt; Soot, Pow• Wlodows &amp; Loeb,
. 3800 V-6 Po-, CD Stor10 Sys.._
(llltso (ootrol, •-•• Koylo11 llltry

*17 150* •1&amp;
Aut-1~

Brand New 2004

AluM• Wlsotl~ PO!Wtr
Wlllilows &amp; Locks, Ptwlf Stat, Croi11
&amp; Ttlt, Air C...Hooiog

121

Chevy. Silverado
Ext. Cab 4x4 · .

Brand New 2004 ChtvJ
Sllvtrado Shortbetl 4x4

Brand New 2004 Ch11y
Trallbla1tr LS 4 Door 4x4

Delallo on Par;o A8

270 hp 6 Cyhntltr lnt•• Powo.r
Window~ Pow11 Lodos, 16" Alunslnum
Wlrool~ CD Syslo"" Troilorint Pkg.

BD* 123 820*

Ptwlf Itt! &amp;loW, Powsr WiordowJ &amp;
Mm!s, V-6 Powsr, Cnht &amp;Tit, RKsyloll blry, CD Stor•Srst-

.'

3100 V-6 Powor, Pow11 !tot, Power
Wlodows, Cni1t &amp; Tit, CO St....
lysiN\ Alororloorm W1INis

INDEX
.
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGFS

·

114170*

V·l Power, 4 SpHd Automatic, Air Conditioning, AM/FM
St1reo, Smaoth Ride Sus,.nslon, Driver Info Center

Calendars .

A3

Chissifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

R,. Hoot &amp; Air Cotol. Po- loots,

Ptwll' W1Mtw1 &amp; Lodis, Y·6 ~IWII',
Cnht Ctnttol, Alototoooo Wlotols

WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Colin Powell remembers the
· first time that he, as a young black Army officer, was
'
allowed to buy a hamburger at a drive-in joint. in
Phenix City, Ala. He credits Martin Luther King
. . for the law that let him do it.
!t was July 1964, when the Civil Rights Act
· . . was passed, "and I was able to go to the
. ~~ drive-in h~burger stand that had denied me
,.,...-.. . service just a few weeks earlier (and) that , ·
now had to serve me," Powell said in /
an interview aired Sunday. "I'll
never forget , that particular
day.... And no

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.•

~onday

.

•n•eeunu•

___

EAM'

o

BY

e

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS Fighting fires just became a
little easier in Meigs County.
The
Tuppers
Plains
Volunteer Fire Department is
in the. proce ss of receiving
more than $13,000 in firefighting equipment from the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
"This is a good thing for
everybody in the county,"
said Jeff Newell, Tuppers
Plains Fire Chief 'This
equipment will help out
Tuppers Plain s and everyone
else because if they need
something that we have.
because of our mutual aid
agreement, we can help them
out."
Some of the equipment the
fire department will have
includes a smoke ejector fan.
a portable light plant. a water
pump and two 83 gallon
water tanks, Newell said the
department already has some
of1he equipment and the rest
will arrive Jan. 27 .
State representative Jimmy
Stewart played a role in
securing the equipment from
the ODNR: He leaned on a
few desks and made a few
phone calls to speed the

Please see Fire, A5

"Reaching Out to Meet Senior Needs"
Take t-77 to Ripley FAIAPLAIN lnterchahge
(exit 132) Turn North on At. 21.
Dealership is 3 mites on left

• Saturday 9 am • 8 pm e Sunday 1 pm • 7 pm

- ·-

I

Senior· Outreach

G2) Oldsmobile.

PONTIAC

Tuppers
Plains
rece1ves
$13,000 in fire
equipment

U.S. Lt. .General Colin Powell, commander ofthe
5th U.S. Corps, salutes as his wife Alma left
looks on during a farewell ceremony as Powell
will return home to the U:S. In Frankfurt, West
Germany in this Dec . 30, 1986 file photo.
Powell remembers the first time that he, as a
you'ng black Army officer, was allowed to buy a ·
hamburger at a drive-In joint in Ph~nix City, Ala.
He credits Martin Luther King for the law that let
. him do it. lAP Photo/File)

w

.., '

WI'LLIItMIU'

1 HAVE
A

deserves greate( credit for bringing
about that day and that act than Dr. King."
Powell was interviewed for a syndicated television
program on King titled "We Have a Dream," reminiscent
of King's "I have a ~ream'~ speech at the March on
Washington on Aug. 28, 1963 .
That speech, Powell said, "was essentially a mirror placed in
the face of the nation, and that speech said: 'Look at yourselves: look
at us; look at who we are and what we are, and let's all have thi s dream.· And
with that speecfi, he convinced all of America that what we had been doing was
wrong and •that things had to change."
,
Powell, whose last military job was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. the nation 's highest-ranking soldier, attributed his career not only to King but to the civil rights leader 's lieutenants including Jesse Jackson and Ralph Abernathy. Also, he said. black soldiers who
fought thanklessly for their country: the post-Civil War Buffalo Soldiers on the American
frontier; and the Tuskegee Airmen, the Triple Nickel Parachute Battalion and the Montford
Point Marines of World War II.
"All of them went and served their nation over a period of close to 300 years of military
service in this
,country when they
were ... asked to give blood for the
nation but were not going to get the privileges of
beilig citizens of this natiqn," Powell said ,
"But they did it anyway. They did it anyway in the
certainty that sooner or later right would triumph
and our Constitution would be made whole:·
·

• Taxes, Tags, Title Fees exira. Rebate induded in sale price of new vehide listed where applicable. **On approved credit.
On sele&lt;ted models. Not responsible for lypographical errors. Prices good January 14th Through January I8th.
·
CHIY.DUT

n

Please see Health, AS

·Free Telephone Reassurance,
Socialization and Prescription Reminders

Discover
the Holzer Difference
.
.

NOW ACCEPTING NEW CLIENTS

wWw~holzer.org

M E D I CAL C EN T E R

1

(740) 446·9560
_,__ . -·-·

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-· ---···

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The Daily Sentinel

-··

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

.

Target of classmates'teasing
needs someone on her side

Serena Williams

.

awaits trial.
LOS ANGELES (AP) .
Inve sti gators
believe
Sheriff's
deputie s
on
Saturday arrested the man Price and Wormley got
who allegedly shot and into an argument with resi'
killed the half-sister of ten- dents on a street known
nis stars Venus and Serena for gang s and drugs .
Williams -last year, authoriAfter the shots . were
ties said.
fired, Wormley drove to
Robert Maxfield, 23. was his relative 's hou se in
booked for investigation of · Long . Beach and call ~d
first-degree murder in con- 911 . Price was transported
nection with the Sept 14 to the hospital, where · she
shooting - of 31-year-old died.
Yetunde Price. He was
.Initial reports said that
being held without bail. Price was shot in the
Deputy Rick Bavouset said. chest. But ·a· coroner's offiMaxfield was arrested at cial te stified she was killed
4:30 £.m. but no other by a gu_nsliot to the head ..
infor~ation was immediateHammer, a felon with
ly available.
ties to u street gang,
The sheriff's department admitted to fi ring_ a halfearlier in the week ' issued dozen shots from a .22-calan arrest warrant for iber rifle, a - sheriff 's detecMaxfield
and
released t;ve testified in court.
wanted posters identifying
But prosecutors, agreeing
him.
He was one of at least with the defense, said the
two suspects whom author- fatal shot did not come
ities believe shot and killed from a .22-ca liber weapon
and that someone else fired
Pri~e while she was sitting
in a car in Compton with an AK-47 ritle.
Pri~e . a mother of three,
her boyfriend, Rolland
Wormley, about a mile was a registered nurse and
from the courts where her beauty shop owner. She
also was a personal assister
sisters once played tennis.
An assault ritle and shell ..l'l.._ her two famous sisters.
Ray Hudson r!lacts as a friend's home goes up in flames at the Oak Ridge Trailer Park in Sylmar, Calif., after a major earth- casmgs were found at the She lived in Corona at the
time of the shooting.
quake hit the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles .in this Jan. 17, 1994, file photo. Ten years later, it' s hard to imagine scene.
Messages
left
for
that so many parts of Southern California lay in ruins on Jan. 17, 1994, thousands of its· buildings smashed, millions of its
The other man , Aaron
people shaken both emotionally and physically, 72 of them killed . •(AP Pnoto/Douglas C1 Pizac ,. File)
Michael Hammer, 24, was . Raymone Bain, publicist
charged with murder. He ' for Serena Williams, were
Bv PAUL CHAVEZ
into an underground garage, trains colliding together."
holding hands in bed. The has pleaded innocent and not immediately returned.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
while the upper lloors panThe wreckage of the Englurs had moved into the
caked on top, trapping and apartment complex has since unit a · few months earlier,
·~~ ·0&gt;·· ~~ 0&gt;.0&gt; ~~ .·.· ~~
LOS ANGELES ' (AP)
killing residents in the lower been. razed and replaced by after Mekinski and her husErik Pearson was asleep units.
the 158-unit Pare Ridge, band left it to take a thirdwhen the Northridge earthPearson , a trained emer- which opened in November tloor apartment.
quake struck, bouncing him gency medical technician , 1998.- None
of
the
Pearson, now 35, became
a foot off the bed inside his got out. and began helping Northridge Meadows tenants a registered nurse after the
third-story apartment and survivors off the balconies.
returned.
quake. His fiancee is due to
slamming his . television into
Pat Mekinski, who manMekinski and her husband have a baby soon and he has
a glass table across the aged the complex with her moved tq Nevada and start- a ,5-year-old daughter with
room.
husband, Tony, was also in ed over. They had no insur- his ex-wife, who also sur"All I remember is the bed when the quake sent ance and had lost their vived.
.
~
walls opening up, and then their top-floor apartment clothes, furniture, car and
He was generally talkative
dropping straight down and crashing down in a deafen- even their jobs. They ~ven­ during a recent interview
being able to see trees tight ing roar. They picked their tually' settled in Henderson, but grew quiet while dis- ~
out of our walls," he said. way through shattered glass a suburb of Las Vegas, and cussing a woman he could- ~
"The floor opened up about and debris ' but found the still work as property !llan- n't rescue from her first,..
four feet."
front
door
jammed. agers.
tloor unit.
The Los Angeles area took Neighbors helped lower
"The lady ·was on her bed,
A decade later, Mekinski
the brunt of the 6.7-magni- them about 15 feet from the can still match Northridge face-down with a large
tude quake that hit a decade back porch with a ladder Meadows apartment num- beam on her back, and she
ago, on Jan. 17, 1994: 72 and rope. Their dog, Nikky, bers with residents.
was moaning," Pearson said.
dead, 9,000 injured and $25 was brought down in a pilThe Lees, a family of "I tried to go over and get
billion in damage. Pearson's low case.
four, lived in No. 10 I. The somebody to help her. It
Nort~ridge Meadows apart"Everyone was just in mother and one son sur- was basically crushing her ~
Our Special Page(s)
ment complex had the most shock and couldn't believe vived the quake, but the and I believe it was suffodeaths in one place, 16.
what was going on because husband, Pil , and son cating her, because the next
The bottom floor of the of the tremendous noise," Hawan, 14, were killed.
time I got back she wasn't
three--story complex near the she said. "It would be like if
In No. I02, Sharon and making any sound. She was ·
••
will be published
quake's epicenter collapsed you had a bunch of freight Phil Englar we~e found dead gone."

.·.

DEAR ABBY: I am a girl
in the fourth grade, and there
are some mean people in my
class. They 're always mak:mg fun of this girl from
China.
· When I see them teasing
her, I want to be nice to her
- but I'm afraid if I am nice
to her, they will make fun of
me.
I am one of the cool kjds.
:Abby, please tell me if I
·shou ld be her friend .
TRYING TO BE NICE IN
·PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR TRYING: You are
an intelligent, compassionate
girl. The time to be a friend
:is when somebody needs
one, and your ·classmate cer" tainly needs one now. One
effective way to defuse this
kind of harassme nt is to
speak up and say that YOU
don't thmk what the bully is
saying is funny.
Another way is to tell your
"parents , your teacher .and the
principal what is happening.
That girl is being harassed
because of her ·race .-- and it
is against the law for it to be
ignored . So don't wait.
_Speak up now. I com mend
·you for writing.
- DEAR ABBY: I am a 38year-old divorced mother of
two boys, ages 12 and 14.
My boyfriend. "Nat," is
divorced and has no children.
.We've been dating for three
,years. He is my best friend,
and we get along great.
- I am very much in love
with Nat, but he says he will
11ever marry again. I try dat-

.

~ Pieture yoUr pet ~

••

~.. Pet Valentines! ~
••
...

•

~••

••

••. "for Pets Only"
~

GARDEN
· GROVE, ting your money 's worth
Calif. (AP)
Roy E. and it stands for a lot of
Disney got a standing ova- innovation and a lot of
tim)
Saturday
as
he new and creative ideas that
brought his campaign to make things fun every time
oust Walt Disney · Co. you visit a park' or go to a
chairman and chief ex:ecutive Michael Eisner to film."
Disney, who also gave
lovers of all things Disney.
Disney said management up his chairmanship of
decision s have dulled the Disney's animation unit
creativ.e .edge of the enter- when he resigned, decried
tainment giant.
the recent closing of the
"One of the reasons for . company's animation studio
my leaving, other than the in Orlando, which resulted
fact that they fired me, in about 230 layoffs.
'
was that I saw that quality
"To me, it's a failure of
slipping away from us,'' ll)anagement to •figure out
Disney told about 200 collectors of Disney memora- what to do with creative
bilia at their semiannual ' people, a failure to realize
creativity is the basis of
meeting.
The 72-year-old son of thts company," he said.
Disney did not offer
company co-founder Roy
0 . Disney resigned from many specifics about his
the board of directors in campaign · against Eisner
_NQ_vember &lt;1fter learning an&lt;L acknowledged "a sense
that that the board's gover- of fru stration" about the
nance and nominating com- time his efforts were takwas going
to ing.
mittee
. enforce
the mandatory
Disney, who ·still lias
retirement age of 72.
Disney and ·longtime sup- some shareholder voting
porter Stanley Gold, who privileges, "Said he planned
also resigned from the · to attend the company's
board, are trying to drum .annual meeting March 3 in _
up support to replace Philadelphia, when manageEisner, saying he is 'io . ment will present a slate
blame for embarrassing of nominees for election to
management missteps and the board. Eisner is expecta focus on short-term prof- ed to be up for re-election-.
its over the company 's
While the Disney board
core mission.
The Disney· brand "stands formally rejected Disney
for quality," Disney said at and Gold's critici sm as
"untrue and unwarranted
the' meeting of "NFFC The Club for Disneyana allegations," Eisner has not
·Enthu,~iasts." "It stands for spoken . publicly about the
• families, it stands for get- resignations.
'

••
•·•

~

Friday
::
February 13th
~
~
in The Daily Sentinel ••
~

..

• · Also a special section is available ~
•: for In Memory Valentine Pets ~

sunaay'limes-sentinel
74()..992-2155

.,

' ,

..•..

.'

••••

You feel

~••

••
~

Tessa The Cat

...~

....

)th:,
,.

7

-

~••

..

....

..;~
'*'~

•'-

-~

. Valen~lne Pets c/o The Dally Sentinel,
111· ~ourt Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
· For more Info: 992·2155.

t·
~

VALENTIN£ PETS

~

~

~: Address: .
~ Clty/State/Zif:

.-~

VIA

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
kn (&gt;wn a~ Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by · her
mothet; Paulille Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAhhv.com or P.O.
Box 69440, LOs Angeles, CA
90069 .

I

.
.

Thursday, Jan. 22
program on her work at 7
POMEROY - Salisbury . p.m. at the Faith Full Gospel
Township Trustees, 6:30 Church. Eshenour has been
Monday, Jun. 19
at the township build- in the mission field for 28
RACINE - A recessed p.m.
mg
on
Rocksprings Road .
years having served · in
meeting of Racine Village
Co unci I will be held at 7
Kenya, Pakistan, and India.
.
p.m. in Council Chambers at
village hall.

..

Clubs and
Organizations

Other events

LETART - Letart township Trustees, 5 p.m. at the
office building .

Sunday, Jan. 18
RACINE - The presentation and raising of flags honoring
those serving in the
Tuesday, Jan. 20
military
will be held at I
ATHENS ' AthensMeigs Educational Service.. p.m . at the Racine Fire
Center, special meeting, 7 Department on Fifth Street
p.m. at the Athens ESC con- and I :45 p.m. at the Racine
ference room, 507 Richland American Legion Post 602
Ave., Athens. Purpose to dis- _on State Route 124. The
euss and take action on · public is invited .
'tmployment related issues
·Monday, Jan. 19
and transportation issue
MIDDLEPORT
The
relating to Trimble District.
Meigs County Right to Life
POMEROY - College will meet at 7:10 p.m. at the
of Christ.
financial aid workshop for Middleport Church
I .
seniors planning to attend
Tuesday, Jan. 20
college and their parents, 7
MIDDLEPORT - Special
p.m. in the Meigs High
meeting
of ·Middle-port
School
Library.
Lodge
363,
F&amp;AM at 7:30
Re~resentatives from the
for practice in the
Umversity of Rio Grande p.m.
Master
Mason degree for
will be speaking.
inspection. All officers asked
RACINE - Racine Water to attend.
Board will meet at 10 a.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 21
in Council Chambers.
. MIDDLEPORT - .The
Middleport Literary Club
MIDDLEPORT
will
at 2 p.m. at the
Brooks' Grant Camp of the homemeet
of
Sara
Owen. Dana
Sons of Union Veterans ·of
Jhe Civil War a-nd the Major Kessinger will review "Bel
.Daniel McCook Circle Canto" by Anne Pratchctt.
Ladies of the Grand Army of
Thursday, Jan. 22
the Republic will meet at
POMEROY
,Alpha Iota•
7: 15 p.m. at the Riverbend Masters will -meet
at 6:30
Arts
Council building.
p.m. at the St'. Paul Lutheran
installation of officers will Church
for a soup supper. A
-be held. The public is invit- white elephant
to be coned.
ducted by Donna Byer will
follow.
Wednesday, Jan. 21
MIDDLEPORT
Regular meeting of Board of
Middleport Board of Public
Wednesday, Jan. 21
Affairs, 5:30 p.m., council
LONG BOITOM - Ruth
'C hambers. Meeting changed
Eshenour, mi ssion to South
due to holiday.
Korea, will be presenting a

Tuesday, Jan. 20
POMEROY - Meigs
County Health Department
will hold a childhood
immunization clinic from 9
to 11 a.m. and I to 3 p.m.
Take child's immunization
records and Medicaid cards
if· applicabJe. Parent or legal
guardian to accompany
child. Donation accepted but
no one denied services .due
to inability to PilY·

I

Church services

Support Groups

I
Thursday, Jan. 22

POMEROY - Caring jnd
Sharing Support Group, I
p.m.
at
the
M ~ igs
Multipurpose Senior Center.
For more information call
992-2161. Topic of disc4ssion will be stomach di sorders .

Birthdays
Sunda
Josephine Smith wi
1
94 years old on Jan. 18. . \
Cards may be sent to her 'll ,
room 312A, c/o Overbrook ·
-Center, 333 Park St.,
Middleport Ohio, 45760 .
Edna Clark, formerly of
Hemlock Grove, will
observe her 95th birthday
on Jan . 18. She now resides
with her daughter in
Proctorville. Her mailing .
address is Edna c::Jark, 208
T.R . 11 58 Proctorville.
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O~retllll ·
DINETTES

list Price

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Sale Pnce

$$

Light Oak 7 pc. all wood set
6 spearback chairs, 36x34x72 table .......................... $t199.00... .. ...$899.00 .. .. ..
Natural oak Finish 7 pes. - 6 bowback chairs
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Frigidaire 7.2 cu . ft. Chest Freezer (dented side).$349.00 ........ .. ..... $299.00 .... ..
Frigidaire 16.5 cu. ft. Regrigerator
glass shelves-_see thru crispers .... ......................... ... $729.00 ............... $629.00 ... .
gibson 18.2 ~u ft . Refrigerator- glass shelves'ftuxe - 10 yr warranty ................. .. ..... ,..................... $849.00 ...... ......... $749.00 .... .
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illlre shelves- 10 yr. warranty ........ ..... ............... .......... $1 099.00 .... ......... $899.00 ... ..
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~IM'II'WF?b'nt Load Washer/Dryer,
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Webb 5 pc.- Dark Pine Poster Suite Lighted mirror ..... $2199.00............. $1699.00 ... :... ... .
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American Drew 6 pc solid Cherry Suitelarge drawers • pediment m.irror &amp; bed,
night stand included ... ........ ...... ...... .. ..... ........ ........ ..... $3599.00 .. .... .....$2999.00 ....... ..
Vaughan/Bassett 5 pc Light Pine Queen size
Sleigh Bed Suite- beveled glass mirror ... .................. $2499.00 .... ... ...... $1999.00 .. .. ...... .
Ashley Wall Unit Bed· 5 dr" Chest- Dresser &amp; mirror
Ute Oak Finish - Bookcase, Head wlpier unit .............$2399.00 ......... .... $1999.00 ........ .
Harden 4 pc. Suite- Light Pine- 5 dr chest
Double Dresser ............. ............ ............. ..................... $699.95 ............... $549.95 .. ...........
Hart 4 pc. Medium Oak Suite· arch headboard
double dressarlmirror/4 dr chest... .......... ........ .. .......... $569.95 .. .... '*'· ... $429.95 ..
Four Dresser Chests , Select Finishas .. ......... .... c•. • $89.95 ....... ....... .. $69.95

UPHOISTfRY
England 3. pc. Reclining Chaise Group·Reclining SofaReclining Lovaseat, rocker recliner- Blue._........ .. ....... $3299.00 ........ ..... $2999.00 ... .. ... ..
England 2 pc. Corner Sectional.,
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semi·attached back-throw pillows, green ................ ~... $1699.00 ...... ....... $1399.00 .... ..
England 2 pc: Suite- Beige Leather ,
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overstuffed- p1llow arm .. ................... ......... ....... ....... ..$2399.00 ...... ..... .. $t899.00 ......... .
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Bushline 3 cp. Brown Acrylic Pattern
overstuffed back- oak trim..................................... ... . 2399.00 ............. St899.00
Bushline 3 pc. Arch Back Style
Roll Arm- Pleated Skirt· Blue multi,floral .......... .

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England 3 pc. Traditional· Gold/Mauve
Floral/Stripe Pattern·\hrow pillows ....................... ..... , 299.00 .. ........... $1899.00.

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Pioneer 3 pc. Contempary- Tan Acrylic
"velour look" cov,er· Dacron fill seat &amp; back ................$\ 199 00 ...... ..... $1699.00 .
England 3 pc. Trad. ·Green wlcream welt-bun leg.$2t99 00 ....

·

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Bushline ·3 pc. Camel Back Traditional
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Cream/multi-colored print- green contrst .. .................. $26'19 .00 ........ .. ... $2199.00 ..... ..

ODDSN'ENDS

Twin Size Wood Headboards . .,.. ... . ............... .. .. . ..
:.. f .... ..
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·Uptiolstered Storage 24x36-ottoman.
White Metal 24" Utility Cabinets ....................... ..
Swivel .Bar Stools ...................
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Roll Away Bed 39" innerspring ...... .................. &lt; ................... f., .
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Silk Plants 24" • 72" ............ ..................... ............... ... ................ ,,/
Mirrored Hall Tree ............... ............ .............................. ........ ... ....., \ . . ,.1 ,., : . .... ...... , . •
All Accessories &amp; Christmas.J.tems.... ........... .. .. .......... .. ..
Green Slat Seat Wood Rocker ..... ...............
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Solid Oak Child's Hi-Chair... ......................... .
Rheem Electric 50 gal. Water He~ter.. ... .... .
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DMITIC UDUCTIONI TllllOUCBOUT THE ITOIE!

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Pictures at $8.00 each.

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Bushline 2 pc. Traditional - greenlbluelburgandy
pattern, coil spring .... .......................... ...................... $1499.00 .. .. .

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We're movtna out aU la·atock mercbaacllH to make room lor
&amp;004.ltem• that lll'e arrlvlna dally! _

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2004

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Public meetings

I

Monday, January 19,

frif;lidail'9"20:~ cu ft. Refrigerator \
·
$ta1nless steel doors- deluxe mtenor. ...... ........ .. .... .. .. $1 099.00 ............. $799.00

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~'&gt;; Pet's Name:
\'1
••
,. Owner's Name:

•

ing other men, but they don't
measure up to Nat. It seems
. Nat · could get along fine
without me in his life . I don 't
feel the same. Tell me , Abby.
what's his problem'' WAITING IN THE' SOUTH WEST
DEAR WAITING: Nat
doe-sn' t have a problem. You
·do. You have fallen in love
with a man who has made it
clear that he is unwilling to
make a commitment to you
and the boys . I give him
credit for being honest with
you. ·
DEAR ABBY: My co worker's 20-year-old son
recently committed suicide.
His mother was a single parent an (I the young man had
long-standing
emotional
problems .
We are a departme.nt of
about 20, and all her coworkers felt heartsick for her.
All of us contributed toward
the funeral spray.
When the fun~ral arrangements were finalized, the
information · was e-mailed to
only about half of us. The
rest -' - including me - were
not invited. On the day of the

~-

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:{.Ma~l ~r-;rl~; t~ ;h7:a~t";y·,:,~~j,~';o~~ ;.;,;;.~;,::· ~

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Dear ·
Abby

funeral , the "invitees" came
to work dressed in dark suits.
It was very awkward.
While it is true that a
grieving mother is justified
in doing whatever makes her
comfortable, I feel my feel·ings were· not considered at
all. I am deeply hurt that my
gesture of sympathy was
unappreciated. - SLIGHTED 'IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR SLIGHTED: · Get
over' it. Your co-worker lost
her child. You seem to feel
that because Y!/U weren 'i
invited to the funeral you
somehow lost face. A funeral
is not a party. It's als&lt;;J not a
social gathering. Your grieving co-worker wanted. those
people to whom she felt closest around her when she
huried her son. She does not
de serve to be criticized for it.
CONFIDENTIAL
TO .
"FEELING REVENGEFUL
IN CLEVELAND": In the
words of Martin Luther King
Jr., whose birthday we
remember today : "To retaliate in kind would do nothing
but intensify the existence of
l)ate in the universe. Along
the way of life, someone
must have sense enough, and
morality enough, to cut off
the chain of hate ."

·community Calendar

.~

among the...

Pagei\3

BY.THEBEND

The Daily Sentinel ·

Monday, January '19,_2004 '

Vivid memories haunt survivors of apartments -· Man arrested for allegedly
killing sister of Venu~ and
destroyed by 1994\Los Angeles earthquake

Roy Disney rallies the faithful
at Disneyana convention

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0

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) a92-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
0

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 peaceaGly to assemble, and to petition
the Go1•ernment for a redress ~f grievances. '
-The First· Amendment to the U.S. ~onstitution

VIEW

Patrol focuses on new
strategic goal
The Ohio State Highway Patrol is adopting a goal of a fatality rate of one per 100 million vehicle miles traveled in the
:state of Ohio by 2008.
· In 2002. there were 1.417 fatalities on Ohio' s roads - in
order to meet this aggressive goal, the fatality rate needs to be
reduced to I, 120 -or 297 live s.
: When you look artechnology. homeland security, and chal: lenging economic times - the Patrol is in uncharted territory.
:The organizations that will succeed will be the ones that adapt
. to changes and make them work for their organizations in
: order to make a difference .
The goal of one fatality per 100 million vehicle miles trav. :eled by 2008 is a strategy that was developed nationally with
:the United States Department of Transportation. Ohio is a
:major player in the national picture of changing highway safe: ty in the entire country.
- In the Gallia-Meigs area in 2002, there were 18 rural traffic
fatal crashes with 20 persons killed. There were nine fatal
crashes in Gallia County with twelve fatalities and nine fatal ·
crashes with nine fatalities in Meigs County. During 2003,
there were a total of ten rural traffic fat&lt;il crashes with ten
·fatalities. Gallia County experienced six fatal crashes with six
fatalities, while Meigs County had four crashes with four
fatalities.
The Patrol is looking to meet this goal through three, t~r­
:geted key points: Evaluation, education and enforcement.
· • Evaluation: Each of the Patrol's 56 posts must evaluate
·where crashes are occurring, what·types of crashes are occurring and what action needs to be taken to prevent these crashes in their area.
• Education: The Patrol's public education efforts will con. iinue, but with a focus on the .individual needs of each community across the state.
• Enforcement: Enforcement will be more focused as each
. Patrol post evaluates its community needs. When troopers
•. head out to patrol. they wi II know exactly when and where
. they need to be to reduce fatalities.
We have tremendous response to our crashes now from the
emergency medical community, which makes a large impact
on saving lives. When we look at what's happened over the
·last 30 years and where we are now, now is the time adapt to
change and push forward to meet the aggressive goal of
reducing fatalities on Ohio's roadways.
U. Richard Grau
ComfiUlnder of the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol.

Reader Services

(usPs 213·960l

accurate. II you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992-

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio." Periodical
postage paid at .Pometoy.

2156.

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and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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Published every afternoon,
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Our main number Is·
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tions to The Daily Sentin el, 111
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News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14 ~
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www .mydailysentinel.com

2004 .

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Rutland student interns at Disney ·Literary Club hears review of 'Caramelo'

Not too long ago, I
ordinance frorr, Allah to proWhen Jacques Chirac
tect (girl s') chastity.' In other received an e-mail from an
announced his intention to
words, unlike yarmulkes and American woman married to
unveil /slamic schoolgir~s in
crucifixes, the hijab doesn't a ' basically enlightened
France by bamng the htjab,
function as a sign of piety, as Lebanese husband.' From
· or headscarf, from state-run
many assume. It is wrapped him, she wrote, she was surschool&gt;, he raised some
Diana
around a girl's 'head and prised to learn that 'the conprovocative questions., Why
West
upper torso to sen!e a ·pur- cept •of conttplling lust,
wou ld a French president
pose. As one Web site schol- anger, etc., is not taught in
whose power as a global
ar
puts ~t. 'If a . girl is th e Arab world .' Rather,
broker derives from his close
approaching puberty, there is what in the West are matters
ties to the Arab-Mu slim
the fear that her not weari ng of self-control and personal
world (and'distance from the and will take place.'
Meanwhile, does banning hijab may cause young men responsibility are ill the Arab
United States and Israel) act
tO restrict Islam's burgeoning -Muslim
headscarves in to be tempted by her. or her world outwardly and 'social0
·French
public
school s by them ... The parent or ly controlled.' Her husband
place in French socie ty
Why would the European infringe on freedom of reli- guardian has to make her has commented , she continleader behind the interna- gion0 Most clergy, along wear hijab so as to prevem ued. 'that some Arabs come
tional opposition to the . war . with such watchdog groups means that may lead to evil to the U.S. and lose their
manners - once outside the
in Iraq -dubbed by at least as Freedom House and the or immorality.'
.
contro
lling environment ,
Such a re velation should
one Arab media outlet 'the U.S.
Commission
on
Religious give the hijab a new look. It they have none.'
Western Saladin' - sudden- International
That observation . could
Fre.
e
dom,
have
already
said certainly offers insights into
ly seek to sweep a big chunk
ex.plain
of the enduring
of Islam out of the French yes,lzyffily. But here's where ongoing culture clash . While
things get intellectually most. We sterners wince at nature of the hijab, the
public square?
Sure, Chirac took the ecl)- gooey. If the headscarf is a ·the dowdy uniformity of the abaya anu burqa in Islamic
menical approach and barred feature of lslftm, and Islam hijab. all the whi le hopi ng ro society. But· what about in
Jewish yarmulkes and 'obvi- has a hi story of repressing con vince themselve s to France - not to mention
ous' Christian crosses from non-Mu slims. then is· the accert ;
a symbol of fem- Paris , the· , city of li ght ,
the schools as well, but it heauscarf a symbol of reli - mim modesty. Muslim s Balenciaga and Yves St.
was the scarf-wrapped girl - gious repression '' If so, ho w regao J it as a functional Laurent? Such uniforms
multitudes in increasingly can Chirac be curtailing reli - mean s of safeg uarding reflect both women's secMLoslim France that caused gious libert y by restricting a you ng girls and women from ond-class status within
pr&lt;!siuent ial concern. There symbol of religious repres- tl1e untrammel ed sex ual Islam . and Muslims' newly
hasn't been a goou explana- sion ?
impulses of men . Thi s belies expandin g place in the
Also worth wondering is a fairl y unevolved set of Western world. All of which
tion tilr hi s decision, but the
untamed uproar in the Arab whether a headscarf is a reli - manners and mores (not to may help explai n why,
and Muslim world makes it gious 'symbol ' in the first mention an almost li teral despite my own hankering
pretty clear that the priciest place. ·This sounds like a state of war hetween the for a little more modesty
dates on sale next Ramadan question for the muftis· on sexes) that reflects the cui · (and a Jot more style) across
won't be called (as they were ·call at ' Fatwa Corner' at turally entrenched repres - the board, the hijab remains
this year) 'Chiracs.' Indeed, www.islamonline.c om; a sion and abuse of women in · a symbol of repre ssion and
some analy sts . see hijab- fundamentalist Web site . Islamic society. Little won- ex tremism -a definite fashtrouble ahead for France, tracking every wrinkle of tlie der that Turkey and Tunisia, ion-don't.
(Diana Wes/ is a columnist
with Middle East expert hijab controversy. There, a . two Islamic societies with a
Walid Phares predicting that reader learns that the head- somewhat more modern f or The Washington Times.
'a myriad of jihads,' both scarf is not ·a symbol of bent, have long banned the She can be conracted via
diana ww @wrizon. net.)
nonviolent and violent, 'can Muslim faith, but rather 'an hijab in public places.

RUTLAND - While the
rest of her classmaies brave
the winter weather at the
· University of Rio Grande,
· Kara Musser of Rutland will
spend her time l!t Disney
World in sunny Flori!la,
where she ·will continue her
college studies, receive valu. able intern ship ·experience
. and even take courses taugh~
by Rio Grande professors.
Musser, 20, is a Meigs
High School graudate, and a
Rio Grande sophomore
majoring in public relations,
with a . minor in busi ness
management.
Last year, Musser spoke to
Brian Howard, an assistant
.coach for ' her softball team
at' Meigs l-!igh School, and
mentioned that she wanted
. to work at Di sney World
· when she finished college.
. Howard informed her about
· Disney's internship program, '
Musser re searched it and
interviewed for the program
in October'.
"Two weeks later I
received a package saying I
was accepted," Musser said.
. "! am going to be in a mer- .
chandising role at Disney
World," Musser said.
•
She will work in Di sney
stores in sales and other

Kara Mu&amp;ser
./'

areas. After she completes
the internship, Musser hopes
to apply for an advanced
internship in public rela!ions
and her area of study.
Musser will also earn college credits while at Disney.
The Disney program satisfies the internship requirement for her program at Rio
Grande, and she will be able
to ·continue taking college
classes while she is living
and working at Disney
Wotld, including an internet
course through URG, so,
while she will be far away
from Rio Grande and away
from her home for the first
time, she will still be learn-

School News
Graduates
with honors

for the 2003 fall semester.
He attained
4.0 grade
point average for the
semester.
An athletic training major,
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Haggerty
is a Meigs High
Colte Ingels, son of Jason
School
graudate
.
and Diana Ingels of New
Haven, W.Va., has successfully graduated with honors
from the Nashville Auto
Diesel College in Nashville,
Tenn.
POMEROY
- Andrea
He has si nce met all
qualifications and testing Burdette of Pomeroy has
and has been chosen to been named to the dean's
atte.nd their Mercedes- Benz list at Ashland University in
Elite .program in Allentown, Ashland for he fall semester. Students selected for the
Pa.
1
dean 's list attain ·. a grade
point average of at least 3.5
on a 4.0 grading sale.
Ashland University is a
POMEROY _I Johnathan 'private college with 6,500
R. Haggerty of Pomeroy students on campus, in
was named to the dean's graduate programs and offlist at
College campus centers.

a

Attains
dean's list

UQ'! I'M Tll&lt;ID
OF BEING A

PIN CUS"ION!

On Dean's List

ing from Rio Grande professors aitd learning with other
Rio Grande stttdents.
The other courses ~he will
be taking during her paid .
internship will be in classrooms on the Disney World
complex.
"That is what really drew
me to it. I can still graduate
on time," Musser said about
this unique internship Jlrogram. "I thought it was the
smart choice."
Her mother, Kathy Mu sse.r.
works in the public relations
office at Rio Grande, and
Kara wants to follow in her
mother's footstep s.

Baby
from Page A1
Pomeroy, ·and paternal greatgrandpare nts are Bill and
Naomi King of Middleport
As winners of the contest
the parents wi II receive a free
meal from . Crow's Family
Restaurant in Pomeroy; a pair
of Nike baby shoes from The
Shoe Place and Locker 2 19 in
Middleport; a $20 gift card
from Powell's Super-Valu of
Pomeroy ; a picture frame and
ring from Acquisitions Fine
Jewelry in Middleport: a $25
gift
certificate . from
Vaughan 's Supermarket in
Middleport; a $20 gift certificate from Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy in Pomeroy; a $20
gift
certificate
from
McDonald's in Pomeroy; a
case of diapers from Fruti]
Pharrnacy in 'Pomeroy ; and a
$50 U.S. savings bond from
Home National Bank in
Racine.

POMEROY ~ ln keeping Am erica n mother and a the ro ll call response from
with the year's theme of Mexican father who ofteo1 14 members was naming a
prize-winning books, the took hi s children from favorite va.;ation. .
novel "Caramelo", .a ' New Chicag'o to stay with their
New ·officer' were elected
York Times Notable Boo~ grandmother in Mexico City. · for 2004-2205 at the busifor 7002, was reviewed by
l.n the book, f.-ala re'tells .ne' s meeting . They are
Pauline Horton at a recent and embroiders scores of Frankie Hunnel , president:
meeting of · the Middleport · · family stories· she heard Oliw Heig hton, vice-presiLiterary Club held at the complete wilh colorful char- dent : Jeanne Bowen, secrePomeroy Library.
acters. Divided into three tary. and Ann Rupe. treasurWritten
by
SandFil parts. the autho r of . the er.They will ta ke office at
Cisneros, the story is ;}bout novel tells of La Ia 's large the end of May. ·
a Mexican-American family and often boi sterous family .. ·. The &lt;~nnual treasurer's
with a granddaughter. Lala in · Mexico. the story of her report was presented by An n
Reyes, as the storyte ll er for grandmother's past. · and her Ru pe . A short nole fran\ an
the Reeves clan , descen· own growing up .•
ab, ent member was read by
dants of shawl makers. and
Horton commented on the secretary. and members
relates to a shaw l which · rev iews . both favorable and . brietly discussed some club
comes ' i~to her possession unfavorable rcce iv,ing tradit-ions. At the close of
and become~ a symbol of hi gh prai se
for viv id the meeting. members rec".
her family' s history.
description and emot ion and ommended books 1hey had
Horton said that the story low mark ·for comp lexi ty read redj:ntl y and commentopens with the faTl)ily trav- and disjointedness. To ill u&gt;- ed o n ' the soon-t.o-be eling from their Chicago trate the beauti ful the releaseu film ol "Gi rl wi th
home to their father's home reviewe r read parts of ' "wr- the Pearl Earrong .. which
in Mexico City ·where they al stories from the book.
wa~ reviewed in Nvvember.
visit the "awful grandmother
. Since "Cara melo" began
Next meeting will be
and the little grandfather." with the Reyes fami ly traY- Weune&gt;day at the home of
She said that the story mir- eling from th eir home in Sara Owen. and Dana
rors the au thor 's ow n li fe as Chicago to visit their ;once, . Kes~ inger \v iii review "Be l
a child of a Mexican- tral, home land in Mex ico. Cant&lt;&gt; .. by An ne Prate hell.

Home National Bank president makes donation

Fire
from Page A1
f

process up a bit.
"We have made a lot of
phone calls for the local fire
departments to help them .
out," he said. "I am glad they
got their equipment. Every
once in while you get lucky Home National Bank president Bill Nease presents a donat ion to Southern Loc;;~ l
and this is one of those Superintendent Bob Grueser for the Southern Local Athletic Department. The donation is part
times."
of the Home National Bank's night-at·the·game program at Southern'. Simi lar progra·ms are held
The Tuppers Plains Fire annually at Eastern and Meigs High Schools and at the Unive rs ity of Rio Grande.
·-·
Department is seeking three
fire fi~hting vehicles. On
Newell s wish list is a 6X6
600 gallon "brush truck.''
Newell said the fire department seeks this equipment to
POMEROY -Activity reports were given and women 's Bible group will
maintain ami improve and plans for the , year were thank you cards were read. also be s.tarted ·next month.
the quality service it pro- made when Lydia Council
Feb. 15 at I p.m. was se1 Devotions for the year will
vides to Tuppers Plains and met recently at the Bradford for work on the scrapbook . focus on women of the
the county.
Church of Christ.
Plans were made to send Bible. Sherry Shamblin 's
During the meetin~ con- more care packages to ser- uevotio ns at the meeting
ducted by Paula Pocken s, vicemen along with card s were ·on ··sarah .''
Pmyer requests we re taken
involved in these local farm- decisions were .made on and letters. It was noted that
who
would
be
getting
sunboxes
will
be
put
out
for
and
refre:-. hmenb ;..~r ved to
ing operations, but it is
important in terms of public shine bags, whci would anyone wanting 10 give Carolyn Nichol son,
Sherry Shamblin . Phyllis
health to en&gt;ure that the receive get well cards, and things for the packages.
where
the
mi
ssion
s
collecPlans
for
the
·
pastor'
s
Ba ke r. Mi sty DeWee se,
workers are kept sate,"
tions
would
go.
Sunday
were
noted.
It
Diana
Ma.x wdl. Charlotte
Super
Marshall said. "Domg so will
Slgnup sheets for meals to was det·ideu that during Hanning. Suzie Will. Neva
also keep the farms as probe delivered. for handling february, there will be a Chapman. Charl otte Van
ductive as possible ."
the visitor's List, communion meeting to arrange teams to '.1 eter.
Madel ine Painter.
and hostess preferences visit those on the visitor. Paul a
Picken'.
Nancy
were circulated. Committee sick ·and. shutin lists.
A Morri s and SheiTy Smith .

Lydia Council plans activities for new year

.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 19,

~onday,January19,2004

1 ' "

New goal

I

PageA4

Off with their headscarves

•

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

OPINION

Daily·sentinel

GUEST

'

Health

Crisis can simplify daily lifo
From inside our rented
Tahoe condo, the snow drifts
against the sliding glass door
looked as if a gusty, bitter
blob of precipitation had
come to it s final resting
Joan
place on our balcony, blot:
Ryan
ting out every inch of sky.
·'
The cable television was out.
Most of the ski lifts were
closed. An avalanche had
shut part of Highway 89, so ' People have thi s feeling
no one was going anywhere. that .they're always missing
It was heaven.
out, that if they rest they're
We slowed down. Played going to fall behinq. As a
games. Had a second cup of result. they multi:task like
coffee.
Talked.
Read. crazy people."
Listened to nothing more
So l begin the new year by
exciting than the murmur of offering this overdue contlte central heating system. clu sion: Because it took the
We walked to a friend's condo forces of nature to deli ve(
and played more . games. unto us one si ngle day of the
Made dinner together. Began simpler, quieter life we have
another round of Trivial long been seeking - the life
Pursuit. Poured more wine.
we resolve year after year to
The next day, at the very create - then the advice ~e
hour cable serv ice was have been following is clearrestored, my teenage son ly not working. It's time to
answered my invitation to a forget Phil and Oprah, to
game of Othello wiih those scrap the aromatherapy and
four familiar words: 'Law &amp; soothing rainwater CDs.
Order's on." My husband left
The new course to calm is
for a business trip. I checked crisis.
e-maiL My friends called to
There are two rules in a
say they were heading home crisis: First things first, and
to beat the traffic and get one thing at a time.
their kids to finis h their high
'That's what the simple
school application essays.
life means," Whittington
'There is no quiet space in said. 'Oo what's in front of
our Jives anymore," family you. Enjoy the sensation of
therapist Joann Whittington . accomplishment. Then rest.
explained to me recenily. In our Jives, thet'e is no room

for rest, no provision made
for the nee&lt;;i to enjoy and
connect.'
During the blizzard, eight
of us had trudged through the
biting wind and snow to a
nearby restaurant to be
together for a Junch' we coulc
have cooked on our own. At
the door of the cafe, as snowy
boots stamped the welcome
mat, strangers asked, 'Get
your car out?" and 'Your ·
ppwer on?" and 'JusL ordering another round, sit down."
Long after lunch, none of
us made a move to leave.
'Some of our friends were
visiting from New York during the blackout there last
~ ummer, " my friend Sharon
said as she poured tea. 'I
said I bet.they were happy
they weren't there. But they
said they wished they were.
They said everybody's at
their best in a cri sis."
UC- Berkeley
graduate
school dean Mary Ann
Mason, an author o'f numerous books on families and
children·, laughed in recognition when I told her m)(
Tahoe experience.
'Unfortunately, yo u do
have to remove yo urself
from everyday life (to find a
si mpler one)," Mason said,
acknowledging that blinks,
beeps and blares, the touchtone tyranny of instant communication, are here to stay.

'Removing yourself is not
going to happen on its own.
And you ca n't keep counting
on acts of God."
In urban and · suburban
li ves. she said, people have
to ' institutionalize" quiet
time. Simply being at home
used to ensure some semblance of silent downtime,
but not with e-mail and cell
phones and P!lgers transporting work into the living .
room, and not with television news shows delivering
a relentless barrage of fear,
from terrorism to joblessness to mad cow disease.
More than ever. a truly
simple life seems to mean,
ironi cally. that we have to
leave our homes, even if just
to the library or the park
down the street. More ironic,
·it seems to mean we have to
stop living in fear - especially of falling behind and start living in crisis.
First things first. One
thing at a time.
Here's to figuring out how
to create your own personal
blackouts and blizzards.
May they be frequent, and
may you never run out of
poker chips .
(Joan R yan is a columnist
for rhe · San Francisco
Chronicle. Send comments
to 'her in care of this n~ws­
paper· qr send her e-mail at
j oanryan @sfchronicle.com.)

•

farm workers, who now provide much of the labor on
Meigs County's Ohio River
• vegetable farms, will be an
from Page A1
increasing priority, since so
many
seasonal workers are
High School, and was subse- employed
here during the
quently employed as a cam- summer month
s, and in light
pus police officer at The Ohib
State University. He then
joined the U.S . Army as a
. criminal investigator for the
Army Criminal Investigation
Command. He also served as
an intelligence coordinator,
narcotics supervisor, forensics and death investigations
consultant, special agent-incharge and detachment commander.
He also worked as a field
protective agent for the secretaries of defense and army,
before retiring in 1994 as
commander of the Criminal
Investigation detachment at
Fort Bragg, N.C.
Marshall holds a master's
degree in management ·.and
administration from Webster
University and a master's
degree in forensic science Larry Marshall, who will replace Me igs County Health
from George Washington Commissioner Norma Torres when she retires in April, is riow
University, and was a fellow · working with Torres to ' learn the ropes ." He said his priorities
in forensic medicine at the in leading the public health agency will be in keeping with ·
Armed Forces In stitute of Torres' agenda. (Brian J. Reed)
Pathology at Walter Reed
Army HosritaL .
Until she reti res in April ,
state and federal regula·
Marshal said Friday he of
tions relating to their housing Torres will work closely with
anticipates few changes in conditions.
Marshall in reviewing some
the daily operation of the
Many of those workers' of the department's 19 grants,
health department. ·.
familie s are also served a paper trail that would intim·
"There won't be any' big through other health depart- idate almost any administracharge~ ." Marshall said .
_ment programs, including tor, and the volumes of regu"The department has a great pre"11llttr!-hq)th care and the lations relating to publ ic
board, and I've had a chance Women. withlhf11nt Children health and sanitation.
to observe, the health depart· food program, Torres said,
"The administrative . posiment staff in action. I can say allowtng the department's tion is a daunti ng one to step
without hesitation that they staff to closely monitor the into," Torres sa id. "That's
are dedicated to serving the workers' living conditions.
why I urged our board to hire
citizens of Meigs County."
She said the department my replacement early . in· the
Both Torres and Marshall was contacted. by workers new year. There are lots of
said an ongoing assessment last summer when one reports and a Jot of paperof health issues is vital to employer failed to provide work to be acquainted with,
effectively administering the adequate toilet facilities.
and l wanted the ne'w health
.• department. Marshall said
"We understand that there's commissioner to be preensuring sanitary and safe a small profit margin
pared."
living conditions for migrant
--'-- ~-- ·--~-----------·-----

--- ·- ...

WWW. MYDAI LY SENT I NE L. COM

TOPS Club
meets
COOLVILLE Tracy
'Chevilier was the weekly
best lo&gt;er ·and received a
certificate and fruit basket
at last week's meeting of
Tops # 20 13 ( Taking Off
Pounds Sensibl y).
Meeting at the Torch
Bapti st Church were 15
members of the group. It
was noted tha t the March
2 meeting will be canceled
du~ to .the primary election . Area Recognition day
was announced for April
17 at Lancaster Hi gh
Scl)ool.
The program was pre sented by . Pat Hall on
shopping strategies . The
group meets every Tuesday
evening. Weigh in begins
at 5:15 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.'
with · the meeting beginning
at 6:30 p.m. Anyone interested should contact Pat
Snedden at 662-2633 or
atte nd a free meeting.

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Anderson's
FURNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET
Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671
'

�.,

]

PageA6

OHIO

.'fhe Da.ily Sentinel

~

Monday, January 19, 2004

.

Car dealership in the cards for Pomeroy
' busmess
.
He purchased the property Musser said a new

Bv J1 MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - A new car
lot cou ld be coming. to
Pomeroy .if Joe Tillis has his
way.
Tillis approached Pomeroy
Village Council last week to
request advice and approval
for a zoning variance which
would allow him to set' up a
car lot n~ar the old Disabled
American Veteran's building
at 129 Butternut Avenue. The
property is zoneo for park
and recreation. ·
,
Tillis wants the property
zoned for commercial use.

nnel

16 months ago and has been
working on it ever since. He
received consent from neighboring property owners'to go
forward with his ambitious
plans.
.
"I believe a variance would
. be beneficial for all parties
involved because I ~auld
develop that lot and start a
facelift for that section of
Butternut which has become
an eyesore," Tillis said.
Council seemed receptive
to the idea and told.Tillis to
contact the Pomeroy Zoning
Board so that it could review
his request. Mayor John

would be good for the village._
"We are certainly .interested in attracting business to
the Pomeroy instead of turning it away," he said.
Tillis has been in the car
business for more than . 7
years. The last six years·, he
has been at Northrup Dodge
in Gallipolis. He grew up in
Rutla11d and currently resides
in Danville.
·
"I want to say that any
upgrades . in that area of
town. in my opinion, would
be a step in the right din~c - ,
tion," said Till is.

Cleveland university l.eads i.n
study of mad .cow-linked germs

Plane crashes near Canadian island in Lake·Erie .
with at least nine on board; No survivors found .
Island, said he made si'x
t1ights during the day before
deciding about 5 .p.m. that the
low cloud cover and freezing
rain had made conditions
unsafe.
"It's nasty," he said by
phone froin Put-In-Bay,
Ohio. "It's freezing drizzle,
kind of bad."
Located in the western
Lake Erie basin between
Cleveland and Detroit, Pelee
Island and Ohio 's Lake Erie
islands are popular summertime destinations but light! y
populated in the offseason.

BY TARA BRAUTIGAM

bmird, but it was unclear
. whether one passenger made
the flight. Ontario Provincial
TORONTO - A single· Police said nine people were
engine plane carrying at least on board., ·
nine people crashed Saturday ·. Mulrooney brushed aside
in snowy weather shortl y suggestions that weather may
after , taking off from a have played a role in the
Canadian island in Lake Erie. crash.
The airline's president said
"It's very capable of flying
there did not appear to be any in this weather," 'he said.
survi vors.
adding that the plane logs
The pilot radioed a frantic 8,000 to 9,000 hours in all
call for help shortly after tak- kinds of weather. "The
ing off about 5 p.m., but con- weather was poor down
trollers then lost contact with there, but from what we
the plane, said U.S. Coast know, it is flyable type of
Guard Lt. j.g. Christopher weather."
Pasciute. An _island resident
M.ulro.oney...did not identify
heard the pTaii'i laboring just the pilot, but said he was
before th&amp;erash, the Ontario experienced-with the Cessna
Provincial Pollee said.
Caravan and had worked for
A helicopter found the Georgian Express for more
wreckage of the Georgian than a year. ,
Express plane at about 7:30
The pilot was from Toronto
p.m. Saturday .about a mile and the passengers were all
west of Ontario's Pelee from southwestern Ontario
Island, Pasciuto said. It was - four from Chatham, two
nose-down in the water with from Windsor and two from
ice around it, airline rresi- Kingsville, the provincial
denrPaul Mulrooney satd. · police said in a wntten state"It doesn't appear there ment. All were men.
have been any survivors,"
The statement said police
Mulrooney said.
• in Windsor and Chatharn
Helicopters were using 'were locating relatives to
searc hli~hts to look for sur- notify them.
vivors m the water, U.S.
A . team of investigators
Coast Guard Chief Petty from Ottawa was to be sent to
Officer Mark Freeman said.
the crash site Sunday morn. The cutter Neah Bay was ing, said John Cottreau, a
headed from the Detrmt area spokesman for the Transport
to join the search, as was a Safety Board of Canada.
.
Canadian Coast Guard ship.
Mulrooney
said
his
·"From what we understand Mississauga, Ontario-based
there is a pretty e'Xtensive · company has flights between
debris field," Sgt. John the island and Windsor up to
Leclerc said from the three times daily.
Canadian search and rescue · "It's only used in the winter
coordination
center
at months when the island is
Base icebound and they can't use
Canadian
Forces
Trenton.
the ferry to get back and
TWo rescue helicopters dis- forth," he said.- .
patched from the base could
The region has been locked
i\ot reach the site because of in bitterly cold weather, with
heavy snow.
temperatures in the 20s
The plane, a Cessna 208 Saturday in northern Ohio .
Caravan, was bound for The water temperature in
Windsor, Ontario, across the Lake Erie, where waves were
border from Detroit, and running 3 feet to 5 feet, was
crashed about 20 miles north about 33 degrees.
.p.f Sandusky, Ohio.
Bob Wernecke, a pilot who
Mu!rooney said I 0 people flies between Ohio's resort
- nme passengers and a islands just south of Pelee
pilot """: may have been on
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND (AP)
Vials of brain tissue and
spinal tluid in a lab could
hold the key to understanding a class of diseases that
has some people wondering
whether they . should eat
beef.
·
The
Case
Western
Reserve . University School
.of ,Medicine is home to
one of world's largest centers devoted to the study
of prions, the proteins that
cause mad cow disease.
The
National
Prion
Disease
Pathology
Surveillance Center, which
receive~ $5.5 million Ill
grants . last year. houses
about 40 scientists working
to understand the proteins
that cause a number of
brain-wasting diseases Ill
humans and animals.
Some
are
studying
whether chronic wasting
disease, a prion disease in
deer and elk, is transmissible to humans. Other
research aims , to · develop
rapid screening tests for

mad cow. Researchers at
the center are also evaluating a possible second
strain of mad cow in Italy.
"From a research standpoint, prions are one of
the most exciting things
you could possibly possible
im agine studying right
now,"
said
Witold
Surewicz, a protein chemist
and biophysicist who has
been
cono ucting
pnon
research at Case since
1996.
I
The center ts the · only
one · in the country fu nded
by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention for
its work diagnosing__ human
pnon diseases. Researchers
examine spinal tluid and
brain. tiss ue to confirm
diagnoses of CreutzfeldiJakob .disease,. a rare condition that causes memory
loss, loss of balance · and
eventually death but that is
tricky to diagnose clinical, ly.
Scientists believe humans
can develop a variant form

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of Creutzfeldt-Jakob by
cons uming beef products
contaminated by a prion
condi tion called bovine
spongiform encephalopathy
- better )mown as mad
cow disease.
Last month, the first U.S.
case of the· disease, which
eats holes in the . cow's
brain and is incurable. was
discovered · in Washington
in a cow born and probabIy infected in Canada.
The center ai Case has
received brain tissue and
spinal
specimens from
1.22 1 individuals since
1997, and researchers have
confirmed Creutzfeldt-Jakob
in 732 cases.
Only one case was the
variant form of the disease,
a Florida woman who contracted it tn Great Britain
after consuming contaminated beef. 'There have
been no human cases
traced to contaminated
American beef.

"Our name' says it all ..."

.

•

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LIMIT QUANTITIES.

'

T~e - Daily

INSIDE
Patriots, Panthers bo!lst defense, Page 82'
Blue Jackets tie Oilers, Page B2
· ·
· .Huggins critiques Bearcats, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page B6
·
'&lt;l;

Bl .

Sentinel

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'

Monday, January 19, 2004 .
'
Redwomen snap
losing streak
wi~h road win
TIFFIN - The University of
Rio Grande Redwomen basketball team snapped a three-game
losing skid on Saturday with a
key 67-58· victory over the
Tiffin Lady Dragons at the
Gillmor Center.
Rio Grande ( 14-5, 3-3 AMC
South) entered the contest
severely hampered by injuries,
but was able to overcome th~
missing players to score a ·
much-needed win.
The Redwomen led 34-26 at
halftime.
Rio placed three players in
double ligures. Junior forward
Alkia Fountain paced the
Redwomen with 21 points. 13
rebounds, three assists. two
blocked shots and a pair of
steals. Freshman -Lauren Fox
played her best-game to date,
adding 14 poims and recording
three rejections.
Junior guard Ange l Allen
chippetl in double ligures for .
the second straight game with
II points. Allen also dished
out, a game-high, live assists. ·
Sophomore post player
Tiffanie Hager returned to the
line-up after missing two
games and . posted six points
and live rebounds in 17 minutes of action off the bench.
Tiffin (5-12, 2.-6 AMC
South) was not able to capitalize on the niomentttm of a victnry earlier in week over Ohio
Dominican.
Heather Hill
scored 20 points to lead the
way for the Lady Dragons. She
fi nished 9-of-12 shooting from
the floor.
Sara Pitson was on the verge
of double ligures for Tiffin as
she added nine points. Brianne
Beaschler was the top rebounder for Tiffin, pu lling down
seven.
Rio Grande shot 42 percent
(28-ol~66) from the -field, and
50 percent (3-ot~6) from the
beyond the three-point line a~
well as 50 percent (8-of- 16)
from tHe free throw stripe.
Tiffin countered with 44 percent (24-of-54) fmm the field,
36 percent' (5-of-14) from
three-point land and 56 percent
(5-of-9) from the foul line. :
• The Redwomen won two
other key statistical categories
in the game, rebounding and
turnover margin. Rio outrebounded the Lady Dragons,
42-34 and was plus live in
fltrnover margin ( 14-1 9).
: With the victory, Rio Gmnde
~rpasses its win total from a
. season ago (13" 18) and stays in
the race for the American
Mideast Conference post-season tournament.
.
Rio will travel to Shawnee
State to face the NAJA
Division II No. 4 Lady Bears
on Tuesday evening at the ,
Rhoads Sports Center in
Portsmouth.

Bobcats down
Northern ·minois
~ ATHENS (AP) -. Thomas
Stephens scored 17 points
and Jaivon Harris added '16
and Ohio pulled away in the
second half to beat Northern
Illinois 80-59 on Saturday.
. The Bobcats {5- I0, · 2-3
Mid-American Conference)
were ahead 42-39 with 16:24
left when James Bridgewater
s'cored on a layup to start a
L0-0 run for Ohio. The
6obcats extended the lead to
80-53 with two minutes left.
: It was the biggest margin of
victory for Ohio· ~ince the
Bobcats beilt Miami of Ohio
85-61 on Jan. 19, 2002.
Perry Smith scored II
points in the first I0 minutes
of the second half for the
Huskies, the only player to
score during that stretch for
Northern Illinois (7-9, 2-4)·.
Smith finished with 21 points.
Ohio made 14-of-28 (50
J2Crcent) from the field in the
second half to just 10-of-29
(35 rercent) for Northern
Jjlinots.
.
• Terren Harbut . scored 15
points and Sonny Troutman
and Delvar Barrett had ll
points apiece for Ohio, which
now has won two straight for
the first time this season.
: Marcus Smallwood scored
tJ points for · Northern
Hlinots.

•

•

-Meigs back on track with win ·over River Valley
" So me
people may
think nonROCKSPRINGS - With · leag,ue wins
. h. d . . . d · h don t mean
tts t tr wm m stx ays, t e anything but
Meigs girls
. · varsity basketball
·
we have' a
team mtght be back on track legitimate
to cont~nd for the league title shot of get·
a_nd a htgh playoffspot come . ting a sectime for the secuonal patr- tional · chamDavis
mgs .
pionship this
On
Saturday,
the y e a r .
Marauders used a strong Anytime you win, when you
defens tve . thtrd quarter, out- go into the sectional draw, it
sconng Rtver Valley 18-2, ~o gives you a better record and
pull away wllh a 57-35 wm a better placement."
o~~r t~e Ratders.
Jaynee Davis had another
. We re r,Jaymg very well impressive outing for the
nght now. satd Metgs head Marauders (8-4) with 19
coach Paul Brannon.

BY B.uTcH

CoOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

points,
15
rebounds
and
four
steals.
In addition,
Sam
Pier ce
scored
15
poi nis along
with
five
assists while
.Dowler
Justine
Dowler net·
ted II points and grabbed six
boards ..
"Justine Dowler stepped UP.
tremendously for us tonight, '
said Brannon.
Beth'Payne led the Raiders
(2-9) with II points, while

Leslie Ward
scored nine
points and
Kristina
Naylor
hauled down
six rebounds.
R i v e r
Val l ey
entered the
game with
Pierce
a ss ista nt
c o a c h
Christen Baird taking over
the reigns as acting head
coach with Harvey Brown
serving a two-game suspension after bring ejected
Thursday at Chesapeake.
"We were tlat-foo ted on

dffense and defense," said
Baird. "We were throwing
lazy passes and norgoing to
them and out shots were just
not falling."
A basket by Davis with six
seconds left in the opening
half gave the Marauders a 2923 halftime advantagt:.;_
Meigs then proceeded to
score 16 straight points to
open the second half. nine by
Pierce, as the Marauders took
a 22 point lead .
··we made some adjustments defensively and otfensive ly at halftime: · said
Brannon. ''They came out

Please see Meigs, B:Z

It's Official: Panthers vs Patriots -in Super Bowl

The Carolina Panthers ' celebrate in the locker room after defeating the
Philadelphia · Eagles in the NFC Championship game Sunday, at Lincoln
Financial Field in Philadelphia. (AP)

New England Patriots linebacke r Willie McGinest hoist the Lamar Hunt '(rophy
after beating the Indianapolis Colts 24-14 during their AFC Championship
game in · Foxboro, Mass., s unday. The Patriots advance to the Super Bowl.
(AP)
,

Panthers down Eagle~ to Patriots ground Ma~ning
earn Sup.er Bowl berth to. move on to Houston
througho ut the game and the ternAssociated Press
perature was right around freezing .'
But it didn 't bother the Patnots.
·who have won big games before in
FOXBORO, Mass - The" New fo ul weather. They are now 16-2
England Patriots didn't need snow and have won 14 straight games.
td ruin Peyton Manning 's perfect
With the victory, coac h Bill
postseason. Their defense did it all. Belichick is 5-0 in the postseason
Ty Law had three interceptions, with the Patriots. who won the •
Rodney Harrison added another NFL championship two years ago
and forced a fumble . and the by beat ing St. Louis .
Patriot s beat the Colts 24-14 to
The Pats took the openi ng kickadvance tO their second Super off rig ht down the fie ld for a touchBowl in three seasons . Jarvis down on the pass. from Brady to
Green had three .o f the team's four Givens . It was 15-0 at the half on
sacks as the co nstant pressure two of Adam Vinatieri·s five field
.made the NFL's co-MVP look very goa ls pl us the safety ·on the
average.
botched punt.
Manning had thrown eight touchThe Colts ( 14-5) cut -it 15-7 on
downs and no interceptions. ami Edgerrin James' 2-yard TO run at
the Colts had scored 79 -points in the start of the third quarter. But
wins over Denver and Kansas City. Brady led New England td two
But Indianapolis could never get more short field goals and the
going on Sunday. Things were so defense took it from there .
bad that when the Colts fmally had Indianapolis scored with 2:27 le.ft
.to punt for the first time in the on a 7-yaro 'rD pass to Marcus
playoffs, the snap went over the Pollard, makjng it 21-14.
punter 's head and resulted m a
But Christian Fauria recovered
safety.
the ensuing onside kick for the
Tom Brady, meanwhile, was Patriots. The Colts got the ball'
,almost as good in the cold weather back on downs, but the Patriots
as Manning had been in his first defen se held them .
two games. He finished 22-of-36
Vinatieri enped up kicking. hi s
for 227 yards and a 7-yard TO pass· fifth field goal from 3.4 yards with
to David Givens on the first drive 50 seqmds lett
of the game . He did , jlowever,
Manning finished 23-of-47 for
throw his first interception in I 0 237 yards, with one touchdown and
hoine games . early in the fourth feur interceptions.
quarter:
.
The Patriots dominated the first
The weather was far from the half, forcing th ~ee early- turnovers .
perfect colilditions. enjoyed by the Two of them stopped potential
Colts during the,ir first two playoff scores by the Colts and the third
games. A light but steady snow fell led to a field goal.
BY

1975.
BY BARRY WtLNER
Just two seasons back, the
Assoc.iated Press
Panthers were the NFL's worst
team with a 1-15 record. John Fox
PHILADELPHIA ,
Sorry, was hired as-coach and engineered
Eagles. Not this time, either. The one of the most impressive turn,
surprising Carolina Panthers are arou nds in league history. They
Super Bowl-bound instead.
beat Dallas handily at home in the
The Panthers once again showed wild-card round, then won the
no. fear on the road, s h oc~i n g thri Her at the Rams.
Phtladelphta 14-3 Sunday_ nt~ht
Fox's opportuni stic defense
and handing the Eagles thetr thtrd made the difference Su nday, led by
stratght NFC champtonshtp game a fierce pass rush and third-round
defeat. .
,
.
· draft pick Manning. who tied an
Rookte Rtcky_ Man~tng Jr. , a NFC championship game record
hero last week _wtth an !nterceptton with his three pickoffs. The
to set up the wmmng touchdown at Panthers hurt McNabb's ribs in the
St. .Louis, picked. &lt;?ff three passes second quarter. then destroyed
agamst an atltng Qonovan Philadelphia' ~ chance for its first
McNabb . .
.
.
Super Bowl trip since 1981 with a
· Etght days after endtn)! the powerful display in the third periRams' _14-game home . wtnmng od.
· ·
streak tn double overttme, the
By the final quarter McNabb
Panthers marched ~nto ' The Line was out of the game and,the Eagles
·
and ·grabbed thetr ftrst c~nferen~e were out of options.
crown. T~ey'd .gotten thts far tn
Manning's third interception 1996, thetr second s~aso.n, but lost off a deflection when receiver
·to Green Bay. Thts ttme!· they James Thrash was hit hard by Mike
extend~d th~ a~gst-filled 'watt fora · Mipter- and his 17 -yard return
champtonshtp tn Phtladelphta and was critical. So was the inability of
wtll head to Hou~ton to meet the the Eagles' secondary to make the
New En g l a~d Patnpts on Feb. I. . same kind of plays.
Lito Sheppard's 14-yard interferThe Pat~tots · beat lndtanapohs
~4-14 earher Sunday for the AFC ence penalty against Stev(\ Smith
. tttle.
put Carolina at the l . D~Shaun
For Philadelphia, it is ~ow 20 full Foster then powered through four
seasons wtth?ut a~y kmd of pr~ tacklers for a 14-3 lead with 4: II
sports oh~mptons~tp. The Eagles left in the third quart~r.
last NFL _tttle was m 1960, and they
In the first half, despite qouble
a_re the ftrst team to h!'st c&lt;!nsecu- coverage, Muhsin . Muhammad
uve confer~nce ,champ!onshtps. and -made a 24-yard touchdown catch
lose both smce game sties ongmal- for a 7-0 lead
ly were determined by record in
·

DAVE GOLDBERG

.,

�Page B2 • The Daily Se,ntinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

. Monday, January 19, 2004

Monday, J~nuary 19, 2004

Carolina's Jake Delhomme wants
a good nj,ght's sleep qefore thinking
about the New England defense.
·Tom Brady probably feels the same
way about the Panthers.
A big task awaits both quarterbacks in the surpri si ng Super Bowl
matchup between the Panthers and
Patriots on Feb. 1 iJt Houston: Hpw
will they score enough points : to
win'
"I'm going to trv not 10 think
'
·
about the Patriots toni ght so I can at
least get some sleep," Delhomrr\e
said. " I don ' t want to think about

New England
Patriots
catche~ for 19 yards.
They have won

•
14 stra ight,

becoming the first team since the
unbeaten 1972 Dolphins to win 14
games in a row in one season and are
early seven-poi nt favorites to beat
Carolina.
·
But the Panthers have been over-

looked throughout the playoffs. Just
two seasons removed from tinishing
·
I- (5. they beat St. Louis on the road
that defense just yet."
New England and Carolina madt in the divisional round. Then went
the NFL champiouship game thank~
to strong defensive play. · The, into Philadelphia and stymied star
uarterback Donovan McNabb and
Patriots shut down co-MYP· Peyton
Manning in the AFC titl e game,, e Eagles 14-3.
.
beating the Colts 24-14 on Sunday' . McNabb .left the game .early Wi th
nee to their second Super bruised nbs. Ricky Mannmg Jr. also
10 ad
Bowl~~~ three years. ·
\ had three int~rceptio~s. for the
"
T Law had three interceptions. ramhers, who had live sacks..
y
·
d M· ·
. "We were so phy&gt;Ical out there.
and the . Patnots .sacke
.ummg s~fety Mike Minter said. "We do it
four limes. They also held All -Pro . II th t'
"
~
receiver Marvin Harrison to three ~ . e une.
1

:h

So do the Patriots, proyiding a
Super Bowl matchup that could be
one of the lowest scoring yet.
Neither team is known for theit
offe.nse. though they have some
standout players.
The Patriots don't have mu ch of a
running ga me. Instead, they rely on
Brady and the short-passing game .
Brady has become one of the most
clutch quarterbacks in the league,
even if he does not put up numbers
like Peyton Manning.
.
He's u ~defeated in five playoff
appearahces, and 39-12 in his 51
starts . Brady helped the Patriots beat
the Rams 20-17 ·in the Super Bowl
two years ago after replacing Drew
81edsoe midway through the season .

C LAS'S I F I E D

The only players to make the Pr?
Bowl from the Patriots a're o~
defense: Ri~hard Seymour, Law an()
Willie McG inest, who was added a~
an. injury replacement at linebacker:
They always find a way to create
turnovers. They pad 41 in the regu-·
lar se-ason. tying Baltimore for second in. 'the league. That included
league-high 29 interceptions.
•
The feat is remarkable considering ·
they had to overcome the loss · of
team captain Lawyer Milloy and
several other top players to injuries
.
early on. .
Carolina. known most ly for its off~
field problems before this season,
has a little hi story with the Panthers.
They closed their 1-15 campaign
with an embarrassing 38-6 loss to
New England in front of a nearly
empty stadium on Jan . 6, 2002 the last regular-seaso n matc hup
between the two.
George Seifert was tired the nex:t
day. Enter Fox , who engineered ab
amazing turnarou nd in two seasons;
"We have a bunch of strong-willed
guys, and they keep swinging their
sworp until they get it done," Fo~
said,
..

Associ!lted f'ress

u

'Tom Brady is the greatest winner
in football right now,'' Law said.
The Panthers, meanwhile, rely on
their
running
game
while
Delhomme steadies the way.
Offseason acquisition Stephen Davis
has made the biggest difference,.finishing third in the NFC with I ,444
yards rushing.
.
But · it all comes back to the
defense. The Panthers have one of
. the best lines in the league with ends
Mike Rucker and Julius Peppers,
and tackles Kris Jenkins and
Brentson Buckner, thanks to defens.ive-minded coach John Fox.
"We know theY've. got a great
defense. especially their fron t seven.
They've got some very dynamic
players up front," Patriots coach Bill
Belie hick said. "We've got our work
cut out for us."

CJUt. Cou.11ty, OH

COLUMBUS
It 's
becoming an even t when
Rick Nash only scores once.
The
Columbus
Blue
Jackets' secorrd-year star
.scored hi s NHL-I eading
28th goal - and came close
to netting at least another
goal or two - to help the
Columbus Blue Jackets tie
the Edmonton Oilers 4-4 on
Sunday night.
" I thought we should have
won the game 7-3 or 7 -4,"
interim Blue Jackets coach
Gerard Gallant said. "The y
had so me luck tonight and
we didn ' t."
Hidde n in his coaches'
words ·is the thought that
Nash might just have picked
up the maJori ty of those
extra goals .
"I don't enj oy th e 0-0
games ," Nash said with a
grin. "I find it exciting and
it's exciting for the fans. A

lot of people are saying the
game doesn't have enough
o ffe nse and when you · see
games like thi s, it's fun to
watch and I'm sure that the
fans love it. And, obviously,
the players love playing
those type s of game."
Nash was featured in the
curre.nt Sports Illu strated as
o ne of the NHL's budding
stars.
The puck was behind
Nash after he took a pass
from David Vyborny a
minute in to the third period.
Nash regained control by
tapping the ' puck back
between his skates with a
defense man draped on · hi s
back before j4mming it past
goa ltende r Ty Conklin to
give Columbus a 4-3 lead.
" It was a nice play by
Vyborny and I just had to try
to bring it up on my fore hand," Nash said when a
reporter marveled at the
play. "Everybody can do it
in th e NHL. It 's just a quick
move up to your foreha nd.

It's really not that hard. '.'
The Oilers' Eric Brewer
scored hi s second goal of
the season 5:45 into the
third to tie it. '
Even Brewer came. away
impr~sse d with Nash.
"He 's a heck of a player,"
he said. " He's obviously'
found where he ·can play
welL He's in front of the net
all the time which makes a
huge difference. He's a big
body that' skates welL"
There were plenty of
prime scoring chances the
rest of the. way - the best
coming when Nash fed fellow ·19-year-old Nikolai
Zherdev and hi s shot was
just wide with 41 seconds
left in overtime.
Mike York, Etha n Moreau
and Brad Isbister also had
goals for Edmonton, while
Steve Staios matched hi s
career high with three points
and Radek Dvorak added
two assists.
Vyborny als.o tied a career
hi gh with three points on a

goa l and two assists.
Zherdev 'added his sixth
goal and Tyler Wright had
his third of the season for
the Blue Jac kets.
Goal.s came in bunche s
throughout the game, the
teams trading goals in little
over a minute of the opening
period.
Vyborny got hi s 13th' goal
off a centering pass from
behind the goal line from
Nash. York then circled
arounq the net and slipped a
backhander past Columbus
goaltende r Marc Denis for
his 15th of the season.
The Blue Jackets built a 31 lead on goals by Wright
and Zherdev's sixth - the
latter coming on a fiye-onthree ..
The Oilers pulled eve n
with tw o goals within 15

seconds later in the period.
Moreau redirec ted a shot in
the slot for hi s ninth goal
before Isbister scored a
quick goal on Dvorak's pretty no-look , behind-the-back
feed from behind the net.
''I'll take the point,':
Edmonton coach . Craig
MacTavish said . "We fought
back and it's a big point
after bei ng down 3-1."
The Blue Jackets had I :38
with a two-man advant age
in the second period, then
started the third with another five-on-three on which
'Nash scored.
Brewer 's one-timer from
the right dot after a cross- ice
pass fro m Ale s He mslw
evenep it for the fina l time .
Nash 's driv.e from just
inside the blue line evaded
Conklin but hit the· far post

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

(,,.

..

ca~:;~::v

with I 0:08 left in regulatiOfl.
" It 's been a long time for n
19-year-old kid to play like
th at,'' Columbu s vete ra n
Tyler Wright sa id . · " It's
exciting to watch these g uys
and what they do, what they
try, the 'confidence that they
have to be ab le to try thes~
things. Being an o lder player, it's just a treat."
~
Notes:
Columbus
D
Darryl Sydor was slammed
into the boards midway
throu gh the third period and
needed help to leave the i c~ .
... It was the sixth se llout of
th e seaso n for the Blue
Jacket s.
Edmonton
remained winless in the sec"
ond .game of back-to-backs
Zherdev
(0 -4-2- 1).
ex tended his points streak to .
four games (3-3-6).

~.,.r__ _NAI_·~_.~II110
PtiRso_
.

from Page B1
and just did it. We did the
same thin~ at Nelsonville (a
S3-S I Me1gs witi Thursday) .
"This team's great about
executing."

'

I

District

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2 bo1h

2br. References &amp; deposit-. ,.
NO Pets. (3P4)675~5 16.2
3 bedroom . 1 112 ·bath, near
Holzer. $700/mo., Deposit,
reference . (740)446-0885

I

ances, must be moved,
evenings (740)949·2446
97 mobile home reduc8d to
sell14x80 3 br.,2 ba. , Ac, all
appliances, · W/0, ready to

M~~IE'i

I

electric heat. s/c $250. a
Middleport, Norlh 4th Ave., 2
month+ut llltlles, no pets or
br furnished apt., dep. &amp; ref.,
FOF1" SALE asking $3000 no p8ts. (740)992·0165
flrin (304}675·4874

2 bedroom mobile home tor
Newly nimodel8"d .
MH l'ark 274·1833. or 304·
Ambelslde Drive. Kerr. $275
261·3818
mon th ,
$200
deposit.
f
References required . Now
Fleetwood mobl It home or
••1. 2 br C/A Pore ~ out aveilable (740)388·8070.
'
·
'
'
bid, take over payments 304• 2 Bedroom mobile home in
875-3~46
Racine area . NO PETS.

move 11"1 Lot 24 Fai'nlly Pride rent

w/ attached garage, on 1
acri, St At 124 out of
RUtland. Cloae to new
echool.
$48,000.00
Ntw 3 bedroom 2 bath. Only
(740)e92·31&amp;4
Slliia5 down end only
3 bedroom. remodeled $194.36 per month, Call
2003, new heat pump, Karena 740·385·7871 .
plumbing, electrical, carpt~ Vtry clean used 3· bed·
hardwood flool'l . Middleport.
roornl2 ba1h, $9995.00. Will
(7 40)992·2321
(7 40)41 6·
he!p whh delivery, Call Nikki,
0815
74().385•9948.
4br, 2 112Ba.localad at 2906
Anniston Or. Pt. Plea.
$79,500
(304)617·
2380/(304)617·9922

s

Pt Pleasant , large 4 br., 1
1/2 ba., very pri\l~te, tenced
yard, lease, relerences &amp;
sec. dep. required $550. a
man ., no pets ~ (304)674.·
6146.

r:

n-;;Ho=p--.
CLASSIF.IEDS
FOR
2·
BARGAINS
L----.--:-'

8 rm Raneh , lull basement.
'3 bedroom, 2-1/2 baths,

1/2 acres , F.A.. covered
deck $99 900 no land con·
1ac1s: (740)4.6·2196.

, --

::.(7.:.40::19:::9::2..:·5::85:::8::__~2 bedroom mobile home.
Spring
Valley
ares
$300/rent + $250/deoslt.
Call
(740)441·6954
t74016 7S·2llOO

or

2 Bedroom. all electric, In
county. (740)742·2014 ·

Couch &amp; Love seat tor sale
1 yr. old e ~ cellen t cond1t1on
576·2663
Delu~e queen head boa rdw/
mirrors &amp; w: dra wers
$350.00 call alter 2prn. 304·
593·0630

Used Furntture Store 13,0
Bulaville P1ke. mattresses,
dressers .
couches.
bunkbeds: rechnms . wha tnots . Gra ve monumenls
(740 )446-4 782 Gall ipO li S
OH . Hrs 10-4 (M ·S) St.Jn
by appt.
SI~lR'l1'(;
(~MillS

New Haven , 1 br. furnished NWTF Knighl In ltne Mt.Jzzle
apt .. dep. &amp; rer .;_ oo . oeJs, LoadinQ Shol Gun New 1n
(740)992· 0~65
' boX . $400
firm
Call
740 245·5047
Slngte
bedroom
apt.
Gallipolis.
Washer-dryer
hook· up. Appliances, ofl·
streat pa"rKing. Water paid.
no pet!l, deposit. $270 Buy or
sell
A1ver 1ne
month . Atter · Elpm 74d·446· Antiques , 1124 Ei!Sf Mam
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
4043: Day 740·339·3063.
992·2526 . Russ Moore,
Tara
Townhouse owner
Apartments, Very Spacious,
_MISCEU ,AI\l·:OU~
2 Bedroom~.. 2 Floors. CA, 1
MEROHSllN·:
112 Bath, Newly carpeted.
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
cash
gr_anll·
Patio. Start $"385/Mo. No $25,000
US
Pets, Lease Plus Security GUARANTEE D I All
Deposit . Required , Days : residents quali"fy' Mo11ey lo1
740-446·3481 ; Evenings. b1lls. bus 1 ne ~s. schoo• etc ..
Call 1·800-363-5222 e~o: t
74().367: 0502.

2000 Oakwood
(1'10bl le
home. 14XBO 3 bedroom, 2
·Iia1h, total eleclric , central
air. Asking 521 .500.00. Can
move or rent lot for $100 Twin Rivers·Tower is accept·
Call (740)992·9263
ing applications lor walling
Trailer lor rent, Ideal for one ltsf for Hud·Subslzed, ~ • Or.
or two people. No pets, ref· ap8rtment, call 675·6679
EHO
orencos. (740)441·0181

'

(740).388-0416

Good UseQ Appliances
Recondi tioned
and
Guaranteea
Washers .
Dryers ,
Ranges
ana
Aefrigera10rs. Some star! at
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Vine St .. {740)446·7398
BUDGET
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT JACKSON Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Chapel Road. Poner Oh10
Drive from $344 · to 5442. (740)44 6·7 444 1·817·830·
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Ca ll 9162 Free Estn nates. Easy
740·446·2568.
Equal liriancing. 90 days same as
Housin g Opportunity.
~ casll. Vis a/ r.ta ster Caret
- - - - - - - , . . , - Drive· a· little save a!ot
CONVENIENT~Y LOCAT· - -- - - - - ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Sears stereo. LX I se r1es
Townhouse
apartme.nts. $150. rad10. CD &amp; spea kers
hOuses &amp; mobile homes record player. cassett e
FOR RE NT. Ca ll (740)44 1'·' sears
26 .6
CI.J
ft
111t for applica tion &amp; inlor- refr1g/freezer S400 Maytag
mation.
gas range. S200. Zen1th tv·
21 in. $1 00. Maytag washer
Oelightf.I.JI. 1 &amp; 2 BA uni ts &amp; dr"er. $250 . Che1rv cotfee
.
1
1
near Holzer. CIA high etf1· table &amp; (2) end tables s 100
ciency gas furnaces. Quiet sec tional sofa w/Ot.Jeen
location , $359 to $485 sleeper. $175 . Hollywood
(
4 95
740}4 &amp;-2 7.
bed .. $50. dresser. 550.
-~-~---- Record cab1net w,records.
For Lease: 2 floor, spacious. $50. desk. 525. Ipat iO !abl e
totally remodeled. 2 bed· &amp; cha1rs wt umt:H D1mng
rooms. 1 1l2 baths~ unlur· ·room tab le wlch;:urs . S125
··
·
nished apt. New HVAC and Call (74 0)446·2030 leave
applia11ces .
$600/monlh . message w111 rell... rn call
plus utilities. Downtown
Gallipolis. Security and Key Thompsons Applianc e &amp;
deposit required. No pets Repalr·675·738S For sale
Relerences
. required re·cond1t1o ned · a.Jtomatic
(740)446·6882, 8:00 to 5:00 washers &amp; dryers. relnge ra
ga s and elec t11 C ·
tors.
Furnished one bedroom Apt ranges, a1r co nd1!10ners. a11d
clean. no pets. Must be will· wringer wftshe rs Wil! do
ing to give . references.. repairs on rna1 01 brands 1n
Phone. (304)675·1386
shop or at your home

Home. with 3 Acres in West
Columbia
across
from
&amp;allfield .
Priced
below
appraisa l.
$45,000.
(304)n3-5343
Two 2BA . 18th homes,
Kingsbury
Rd .
near
MOBILE HOMR'i
Hafrlsonville. Both relativelY
~
fURSALE
• new. $400 per month plus
utilities,
security. Ut[lity Gracious llvinQ, 1 and 2 bed·
1995 Redman, 2 bedroom, 2 deposits required . No pets.
room 8partments at Village
balh·3·ton heal pump. Front no smoking, (740)742·3033
Manor
and
Riverside
wrap-around deck &amp; back
Apartments in Middleport
dock.Ca11 (7A0)245·5071 ·
From .$295·5444 . Cal l 740·
992·5064 . Equal Housing
2003 1exeo Oakwood, 3 - Opportt.JnltiE!s
bedroom, 2 bath, w/appiF- · 1977 12x60 Oak Wood 2br.

i

FOR AU

238 1/2 1st Ave. 2 br. 1 bath ,
furnished kitchen. of! street
parking. No pets. $355/mo.
plus . utll1ties. Deposit and
relerence (740}446-4926.

$9,900. for listings call
1·800-7 19-3001 ext f144

1-888·582-3345

OMESS

2 BR water/trash paid, no
pets , references &amp; deposit
reqt.Jired, near porter 3~81100.

s

27 in. Mitsu01Sh1 color t 11.
picture 1n p1cture. Excellent
cond1t1on .
S150
Call

238 l si Ave . large upstairs
in apt. furn ished kitchen, no
pets, 2 br. 1 bath , $365/mo.
mo.
plus utilities. Deppsit and
references (740)446-4926

4 roo ms·. ~ 1 bth, stove,
refridg., AJC furnished. No
13
pe ts. 260 late t. , 50 per
mo., $350 dep. Renter pays
~ util, Ref. required. (740)446·
~-:::::::::~;;:~ 0076.
•
· For Rent: 2 bed rOom hous.e
FORECLOSURE'
4 bed 4 bath house only
'(740 )992 -64 45

TURNED O,OWN GN

H

house

ino. (740)441 ·0194 .

knOwingly accept
advel11umanta for real
..estate which lai n
I Ion o I 1,•-I
vIoat
.. aw. 0 ur
reade... arehareby
Informed thatall
dwelling• advertised In
this newapaper are
avallllble on an equal
opportunity baaea.

SOCIAL SECURITY /881'1'
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

riO

bed room

"2 bedroom in town, $375

rh1 1 new~paper will not

,I

r

kitchen , bedroom, &amp; bath.
$275.· each all utilitie s paid
except electric. (304)675·
1365

HousE&gt;

' G!JIIipolis.
$550
' 1740)441·0194.

Fair Hou-'ng Act 011 D&amp;B
wh~ makea II Illegal to
advertise "arty
prefarence, limitation Dr
diacrimlnallon bated on
raCe, color, religion, aex
familial atalus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination."

L,~IJIII------.-1

1 3 bedroom

Qalllpcilla CafHr Colltgl
(Careers Close To Home) ·
Coli Todoyl 740.446·4387,
1-800·214-0452
www.gaNipoiiiiCiratfColt.Qt.oom

rr176 .. M....-- • ..._....~
n~..uw.uAAJ.:t

lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business with peo
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
all until you have ·lnvesti
ated the O"fferln .

2

All real estate advertlalng
In thle newapaper 11
aubject to the Federal

a

c§allipoli' Jeailp utribune
. 67-5-1333

Woodland Centers, Inc. Ia
not-for~ protlt
prtvate
conimuntty mental health
center a&amp;r\llng Gallla,
Jackaon
and
Melga
Countlea.
Competitive
Selarlaa •l'ld
benetltl
package Including paid
vacation and alck time, 13
paid holldaye, retirement
plan, health, IHe and dis~
ablltty lneurance of'tared.
Posltlona will be filled
contingent upon funding.
Plllll lind RIIUmll to
Sherry Gordon, Man11111er
or Human A11ourc11,
Woodland Centere, Inc.
308e State Route 180

I r,o

FOR RENr

800-234-5982

'

.

mR Rr\T

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom mob1lt
hohie incl~es water, sewe.r.
trash, .no pets, starting at
$300 per month, call
(740)992-2 167

Land for sa le· 90 acres
development larid along SA
143 near Harrisonville (high
2 bedroom apt St. "At. 160·
&amp; dey), (740)742·3033
past Holzer $475 mo
Nice mobile hom e sites
(740)441 -0194.
avai lable $115 per month,
includes waier, S!=lwer, trash. · - - - ' - - - - 2 Furnished small apartmenls lor rent. Living room.
call (740 }992 "2167

2004 by NEA, Inc.

WANTED

i

Preview

L&lt;m&amp;

Ul \ I \I "i

a

· Older us ed ·school band
mu.sica f instruments. Also
Wanting. older baseball
ca"rds, 1975 and before.
]740)388·8692.

AI'AHT\IE:'Ioi"I'S

FORRENr

Winter Sale
Stock # 0.308 44X28
3 bedroom 2 bath
Delivered .and set up on
A fi\le coarse foundation
- ~ ith heal pump
only S39,9oo.OO
COle's Mobile Homes
15266 US 50 E
Athens. Ohio 45701
(740)592·1972
Get Your
"Where You
Money's Worth"

EMT'slParall]edics
Life Ambulance,
Gatlia
county station, is currently
hiring. Please apply with in.
(740)446·7930
::_::.:.:._::_=::__ __
Fast growing business.
Cashiers and cooks needed
for all shitts. Full and part·
lim e. Send resume to Daily
Sentii"1el.
PO Box 729·8,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

FORSALE

Two 2 bed room apt s. lor rent
in Syracuse. 5200 depos1{
$330 per month . rent Include
watet. sewe r &amp; tra sh sutt1·
cient incom e requ1red to
quality for ren t 740·378·
Ve ry nice 3 bedroom i n 6111
Fairland &amp; South Gallia - - -- , - - - - school district. $350/mo Upstairs
one bedroorn
plus · deposit, No pets. apartment at 65 1 2nd Ave
(740)256· 1686
Gallipolis Re ht 5350 pe r
month &amp; 5350 depos1t
APARTMENTS
req1.ured . 6 mos 1ease :
FOR Rt:NT
water!tra sn · pa1d .
Call
De~e or Judy '11 1740 14'461 &amp;2 br. apt in downtown Pl. 7323Tt::tt.lrary) .
ACREAGE
Pleasant no pels &amp; sec dep
\II R( 11 \NDlSI:
For Sale: 79. 106 Acres. requirBd 740·446·2200
ilO
AiWH view, producing oil &amp;
gas wells . $ 125,000. 304·
529·7106 after Spm.

Sales

M~nager. (Full 'time position)
Responsibilities
include
recruiting and training of carriers. .customer service and
meeting sa l ~s goals. ll you
have a positive attitude. are
a self-starter, a team player

r ·

Losr AND
FOUND

:jijj' MOBILE HoM~

MOBILE HOME";

..

APPLICATION EXAMINA- we would lik:Ei to talk to you.
TION INFORMATION . FED· Must1:le dependable and
.__ _ _ _ _ __.~ "EAAL BENEFI TS . .1·800· have reliable transportation .
892-5549 EXT. 92, 7 DAYS. Position offers all company
.C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
bene fits incl uding health,
for sale, Chester Township, --u.s. POSTAL JOBs~· dental, vision and lite msur1Jleigs County, send letters PUBLIC
ANNOUNCE- ance, 401k, paid vacation,
of interest to: The Daily MENT- U9PS1SLD. UP TO and personal days. Please
·sentinel, PO Box 729·20, 529.16 PER HOURS. FREE send resume to:
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
CALL I A P PLICA T I 0 N ·
Paul Barker
INFORMATION. NOW HIR·
Circulation Manager
GIVF.AWAY
lNG 2003! FEDERA L HIRE·
Ohio Valley Publishing
-FULL
BENEFIT,
PAID
B25 Third Ave.
TRAINING. 1-8~892·51 44
Gallipolis, Ot1io 45631
Giveaway to a good home. 7 EXT 94
'month old Chocolate Lab. - - · -· -- - - - - Or " email to pbarker@my
An Excellent way to earn
daily tribune.com
740 446-2 141.

sma ll
male
Found
Oa chshund has co llar, no
]'ame on it at 11 07 5th St

Race tor the Nextel

Now you t:ari have borders and graphics
~
added to your clas.sified ads
{I:~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

pjsplay Ads

ANNouNCEMENTS

BY JoE KAY

Meigs

lhuWANrm

Oetullfir~

Dally In - Column : 1 :00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper
.
Sunday Jn-C61umn : 1:00 p.m .
friday For Sundaylll Paper

HELPW,ooHJ·

female.
age
60-75. 9. UP TO $54,48 1 YEAR.
"Everyone needs Somebody! NOW HIRING SELECT
-call 740 245-5778.
AREAS ." FREE
CALL-

("'

Meigs travels to t'ederal
The Raiders didn't score
their first {':&lt;lints of the third Hocking Monday, while
quarter unttlthe I :02 mark on 'lljver Valley,entertains South
a long jumper by Ashley Point.
Caldwell. ·
·
River Valley won the junior
But, by then it was too late. varsity contest, 26-1'7, as
"We just got out there and Ashley Neville led the
it seems like we fo~et what Raiders with 15 ·points.
we· were doing," said Baird Meghan Clelland led Meigs
of the third quarter.
with ·eight points.

I \11'1 0\ \II' I
1..11{\1&lt;1"&gt;

Homeowner, wnue mala ·
age 73 (looks 60), Weight .. GOV'T POSTAL JOBS..
170, 5'7'. Looking for white ANNOUNCEMENTtPS2 47

Huggins unhappy with Bearcats

•

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads Wllh A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • ln&lt;:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should· Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

~165 .

Then, they went the final
Associated Press
7:53 without a field goal, getting outscored 13-4.
CINCINNATI
Bob
"We just got sloppy," said
Eric Hicks, shrugging off his
Huggins is warning his team.
Sure , the Bearcats are .
coach's' concerns. ''Anyti me
unbeaten a nd climbing .
you' re up by a lot, you don't
They're also easing up _ the
exec ut~ like you should."
one thing their perfectionist
It wasn't just the way they
coach can't stand.
ran plays. Huggins also was
put off by the.ir show boating.
No. 10 Ci ncinnati overcame a lethargic start and an
The Bearcats mi ssed a dunk,
and guard Tony Bobbitt celeugly e nding Saturday, beating
TCU 85-57 for a victory that
brated a basket by acknowl edging the crowd instead of
was ~ far from sati sfyi ng.
Huggins didn 't care for the
covering hi s man.
"Tony khits a1s hot and his
officiating and couldn ' t toler- haven , I. put anyt h'mg toget hman rna es a ayup because
ate his team's lack of foc us. • "
"If we don ' t start playing er.Actua ll y, it would have he's talking to people in th e
the wh~le ga".'~· we are .g~mg been a surprise if the Bearcats stands," Huggins sa id . fum to fall , he sa1? emphaticall y. were at their best agains t ing. "That was the most asiThey haven t even tottered TCU (6 _9 , 2_2 ), which repre- nine thing I've ever seen."
yet.
sented a buffer between
Huggins also vented at the
The Bearcats (13-0, 4.-0 .Cincinnati's two biggest officials over a loosely called
Conference :USA)
have games so far.
game
that '
favored
The Beartats beat No 21 CincinRati 's
physical
matched the thi rd-best start m
school hi story. Ci ncinnati Marquette on · the road · last defense . With 56 seconds left, ·
went 15-0 m . 1998-99, ~nd Wednesday, ~nocking off the he wa lked onto t])e court and
the 1962-?3 Fmal. Four team team that passed them by last screamed at official J.B.
opened with 19 wms.
season. This Wednesday, they Caldwe ll, "That was awfu l'
This one ts runm':lg teams travel to Loui sville to play You were terrible!"
off t~e court with Its depth the eighth-ranked Cardinals
Huggins got a technical
and Its full -court press. Ten in a matchup of th e confer- fo4L
pl ~yers a~e~age at l ~ast 13 ence's top teams.
Even though the Bearcats
Under the circumstances, it didn ' t play very we ll at times.
mmutes, giVIng Huggms a lot
.of opti?ns;
was no surprise that the their depth once again pulled
He d1dn t like· any ohh~m Bearcats came " out flat them through, allowing them
at the outset Saturday, Saturday and trailed TCU 20- to press until the other team
be~ommg so disgusted that 17 with 8:20 )eft in the first cracked.
he used a walk-on guard for half.
,. ·
"What happened to us is
Jason Maxiell, who left the probably what happens to a
three mmutes to send a mesgame with a twisted ankle in lo.t .of l?~,ople who play
sage to the rest of the team.
Huggins couldn't stand to the opening minutes, returned Cmcmna!I, TCU coach Net!
watch the ending, either, and and had two emphatic dunk~ougherty said. "Once you
closed out the garpe with a tha.t got the Be.arcats revved get deep into your bench, you
After spending halftime wi
start to f~ll apart."
technical foul. ·
"They thought it was going thei r unhappy head coa~h.
That's what separates . the
to be easy," Huggins fumed . they came out and pulled Bearcats from everyone
"The 11cary thing fs, we really ahead by 37 points.
they've played so far.
-

.F--~~--~----------~

Monday t"'ru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN. AD

1\eg.lster

(7o4r0Fa)x""o4&lt;
· J304) 675-1333
, 74406&gt;4-4s-2a3ooa42 (740)
Or Fax To992~2156
(740) 992-2157

Otfftee llo""~

Blue Jackets skate to 4-4 tie with Edmonton Oliers.

Bv RusTY MtLLER
Associated Press

Daily Sentinel\ Page 83 '

m:·rtbune - Sentinel -

D~fense anyone?·.Patriots,-rParithers sure to provide it.
BY .ANDREA ADELSON

Th~

www.mydallysentinel.com

837.
Dell Dimension 4400 PC lo
many
details
to
list.
$1000.00
304·593·0930
•
call alter 2 pm

�•

•

Page 84 •· The Daily Sentinel

Englander pellet burning
stove heat up to 2200 sq. ft .
· buill In ·alrwash &amp;- -blower
system brass louve rs &amp; win(low trim. comer !itand &amp;
exhaust system $650 call

458-2552

'

~~~

ACROSS

Phillip

FORSAIE

-

Kre\1 antique grand piano in
good condition $1000 dollars.
5
yr
old
thoroughbred/quater horse
r- $500 895·3943

PATEL CLINIC

I \1(\1 .._l 1'1 '111 .._
,\ 11\l ... l t H"

~------ ~

F~1
r.IO....EQUIPMENT
..

Promotion for Classic Brands
will be games , prizes and
.lots of fun
(Special on Budweiser Products)

or
an
ushel Manure Spreader
9Chanically good shape.
1 ,300. 740 245-0465.

Sunday. (740)446-7300

BUJWING

r

$600.00
740 742-3802

SumJ~

$1,500.00
.

10 .

A UTOS
llJR SAI .E

1965 Chevy Impala. Black, 2
100. 5x5 rou nd bales ol door, 283 Power glide.
clover hay. Call (740)25"6- power
steering.
Rally
6011
wheels. $2.200. (740)379·

9036.
born in liHer, 6 weeks o ld. 1- For sale; Square bales of
male 1-femal e. (740) 256- alfalfa and orchard grass. 1.989 BMW excellint condi(740)949·2657
tion 567-2663
1997

(740)698-6049
CKC

Spaniel

registe red

pu ppies.

Cocker

Tails

docked and dew claws
removed , First shots and
wormed . Ask in·g $250.00

(740)742·2525
Full-blooded Maltess, vet
checked on 1-1 3·03, 5/years
old. House broken. Very well

mannered.

080.(740)446-4326

$1-0 0

Hay Auctions held 1116104
flem jngsburg KY. 1124104
AA Iryc~ Stop In lewis
County KY and 217104

1989 Chevy Truck, V/8, auto.
$2,495; Two 1996 and 1999
Saturn , .Starting $2,495;
1995. Cors1ca,
52 .195
MavsV!!!e KY Buy an d Sell Others in Stock, We Take
Hay or Straw by the square Trades.
bale or roll in various lot COOK MOTORS
sizes. Auctions begin at
(740)446·0 103
noon . rain or shine. Contact
Buick j..esabre,
Auction Manager Jim Grant 1995
tor more de.tails 606-883- 148,000 miles, runs great,
$12.00, (740)742-2803 1eave
3289 OR 608-584·0143.
message.
Hay for sale: Large round
1998 Dodge Neon. 75,000
bales, 74o-992-7015.
miles, cruise, lilt. air, $1,850
Hay for Sale: Round and 0 80. 740-256·903 1 or 740Square bales. Barn kept. 256-1 233.

9044.

j

FOR SAI.Jo:

l'i!::--(•~)~---6

r

H

Ir-,

30

7 4 0) ~46 -931 7.

160N

( 74~4 46 _ 6665

~~~

60

'

1992 Chevy Silverado, short
bed. 2 wheel drive. loaded. ~ 92 Ford Bronco, full 'size,
4 wo, $2000,

740-742·2420

99 Otds Silhouene, premier
au1o, $4,500.(740)256·1618 2001 Chevy S- 10, 15,000 packag e. flip down TV. VC A &lt;:all , 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, - Rogers Basement

91 Dodg e Dynasty, runs
good,
$400.00
OBO

(740)992-2563

Can

be

seen Browneli .Apt 12

IJllles. Call (740)446·0864.

loaded. 90,000 miles. wh ite

$6,795.00 (740)742·3802

r

40
.

Waterproofing.

I

Superior
Home
MuroRCYO.I:';
Maintenance. We do all
repairs on homes, plumbing,
2003 Arlie Ca1 400 $4500 . ~a rp entry, etc. water tanks.

740-985·4384

Stop In and scc

304-773-5098

Salcs

•

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:"&lt;&lt;lorth

t&lt;:as l

3".,..

t'ass
PaNs
P a s!'!

2 •
aA
3 NT

Pasb
Pa"·"
f'ctss

J"'a ss

Pus s

Pu s~

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5 ¥

P ass

Puss

Pas ~&gt;

4 f'O 'T
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32 ~~~"'~n
33 .smoking or

P as~o;

34
35
36
39
.40

Db I.

Op ening lead : • 4

Rcprescntatin~

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST

LARRY SCHEY

The closing drama
in Monte Carlo

/cHiVRO,~T/

41
42
45

shockers

12 Skulk
around

LEM
39 Tightens
18 Border on · a corset
20 Caesar's 21 41 Sheet
22 Advance,
of plywood
as money
42 "Pow! "
23 ,- lu
43 Dad's sister
24 By and by 44 Obtains
25 - colada 45 Volcono
(rum drink)
shape
26 Galumph
46 Coffee

3 Bank dep.
4 Not llal
- ?
\Wen! by
27 Hero 's tale
brewers
bike
German
28 Went under 47 Bombay
name part 6 Saun Marie, Mich. 29 Very,
alflre
Trig function
50 Pull hard
7 Meditation · to Pierre
Knotty
31 Statefirmly 52 1914
guide
Defeats
35 ,fine
headline
Royal
8 love,
pronoun
lo Claudius
sedim.ent
Sidekick
9 Genlle one 37 Aussie
jumper
Kid's cart 11 Artilicial
38 The Lin
Spiny plan!
person

Last November included the most drama tic fin ish to a Bermuda Bowl final. Arguably
Jhe four best pairs' in the world were pitted
against each other. There were Norberta
Bacchi • Giorgio Duboin and lorenzo
Lauria - Alfredo Versace from Italy. and

750 East State Street Phone (740)!i93-667tl
Athens, Ohio

Bob Hamman . Paul Soloway and Jell
Meckstroth - Eric Rodwell from the United

Stales
Wi1h 15 of 128 deals 10 play. lhe U.S 1eam "

i'tachlne Quilting· Regulated 6tltch
18 Patterns Available
Connie Cu'rnutt
895-391:1! 5hop
owner/operator
895-351:1! nome

led by 27 intern atiOnal match points
(imps): 27 1-244. There were six big
swings in th1s sess1on, which w!ll be fea tured during this week.
First, the second deal of the set. Boochi

BARNEY
WELL, AT LEAST,
C'MON IN!!

C'MON IN OUTTA TH'
RAIN,
NEY ,!!

b--1.,.-+-

and Duboin , holding the North-Soulh
cards for Italy, stopped in four spades.
Bacchi, the declarer, had no difficulty
holding his losers to one trick in each
major suit for plus 450. ·
This was the U.S. auction. Two cl ubs was
either natural or a three-card spade raise

wilh 10·12 points. The two-spade rebid

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used ,
4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

THE BORN LOSER
,.-TI·\1-.T /'IIJ'¥.E.~ ~E GCXJO DI'.Y.,
11\1 1\ ROW 1

1-800-822-0417

·,

"W.V' s #1 Ch evy. Pontiac. Buick . Olds
&amp; Cu stom Van Dealer"'

1740)446-2605.

"I feel like

promised e)(tra values and at least a fivecard suit. Two no-tru mp was natu ral and
game-forcing. Three clubs was arttfi cial
but South forgot. Th1nkmg it was natural.
he spent the rest of the auction believi ng
clubs was the agreed suit, whereas North
thought spades were going to be trumps
Complicated systems req uire both players
to remember perlectly, else disaster" usually_strikes. Here, the eventual six-club
contract was almost hopeless. Declarer
(Hamman) got out for one down by running his spade queen and discarding his
heart loser on dummy's spade ace. Bul
Italy had gained 11 imps, now down by

t6.

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce!et."rly C.pher cryptogr ~ms

a•e crellte-d 11 om quolat•ons 0)' lam.Ju5 peop e i)i!St ·and r:--esent
Each ~tte1 1n the crphe1 stands for anolhe1

To¢Jy"s clue: H equals M

NZTOZZV

" PSNCTCLW
TFLXIZ

TLX

FZLOA ,

AF Z

AFZ

OZVAOLCX

HLOACX

WSAFZO

H L U

RSA

XJ A
AFZU

F Z L 0 A ·w Z V V . "

M C XI

PO .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ ' I've gol1his preoccupalion with ord,nary people
pu rsued by la rge forces." - S!even Spielberg
(c) 2004 by NEA, Inc

1-17

I'm out

2719.

on a limb!"

. Wrap•

Freeze.

For only

45

1
requests must be
sent
to:
Hearing
Clerk,
Ohio

Envlronmental
Protection Agency,
P.O.
Bo•
1049,
Columbus,
Ohio
4 3 2 1 6 • 1 0 4 9
(Telepho.ne: 614-6442129). "Final Actions:
ere actions of the
director which are
effective
upon
Issuance or a stated
' effective
date.
Pursuanl to Ohio
Revised
, Code
Section 3745.04, a
final acllon may be
appealed
to
the
Env I ro nme nI aI
Review
Appeals
Commission (ERAC)
(Formerly Known As
The Environmental
Board Of Review) by
a parson who was a
party to a prC)ceedlng
before the director by
filing in appeal wllhln
30 days of notice of
the
final
acllon.
Pursuanl to Ohio
Revised
Code
Section 3745.07, a
final action Issuing,
denying, modifying,
revokln.g, !)r.renewlng
a permit, license, or
variance which Is not
preceded by a proposed action, may be
appealed lo the ERAC
by filing an appeal
within -30 days of
. Issuance of the final
action. ERAC appeals
.muat be flied rtlth :
E n .v I ron m e n t a I
Review
Appeals
Commlulon,
309
South Fourth Street,
Room
222,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215. A copy of the
appeal
illult
be
served
on
the
Dlraclor within 3 daya
after filing ihe appeal
with the ERAC.
Draft
NPDES
Permit- SubJect to
Revlelon
Pomeroy WTP
500 CarroH Sl.
SyracuM, OH
Public Notice Date
0111412004
Receiving
Waters:
Unnamed Tributary to
Ohio River Facility
Description:
Iron
&amp;MG Removal WTP
Permit
No.
OIV00102"AD
(1) 19

t'

~

t'

Jl!j

Q lle onong e

l&amp;ttea ol iht
lour scrOmbled word:. be
!ow !o lorm lnu1 Y~o" ards

BIG NATE

HNotme!
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
ond Financial Services.
Box 189, Middleport. OH
Phone: 843-5264 ."

Skin, Cut.

UBLIC
·NOTICES
part of the premises northeast corner and rods to the .north line Mid-America, FLCA
SHERIFF'S SALE
United States of to Which access ·was 8 acres out of the of
said
section; (1) 19, 26, (2) 2
America vs. Tammy S.
readily available. The northwest
corner.
lhence East 29 rods 4
Bable, et al.
·
appraisers assume Also, a place of land
le.et to' the place of
County no responsibility for, 20 feet wide for the beginning containing
Public Notice
Malga
Common Pleas Case and give no weight to, purpose of a road or 10 acres, 59 .square
unknown legal mat~ outlet 'from lhe 90
rods, ex~eptlng a PUBLIC NOTICE
No. 03 CV 021 .,
In pursuance of an
tars, Including, but acre lot former-ly right of way herelo· County: Meigs
not limited to, con- owned
by
John lore granted to J,C.
order Issued from
following
The
Pleas cealed
or latent German, deceased ,- Ross.
appllcallons and/or
Common
PARCEL. NO. 5:
verified complaints
Court, within end lor defects, · and/or the ud sltualed In lhe
the County" of Meigs, presence of harmful southwest one-forth Being the Easl 50 were received and lhe
In
the following draft; proState of Ohio, on lhe or toxic chemicals, of Section 33, Town 3, acres
Range tt , said road · Northeast Quarter of posed,
23rd day of May 2003, pollutants, or gases.
or
final·
and to me· directed, I Terms of Sale; Ten to begin at the east Section 34, Town 3, actions were Issued,
11, · Ohio by
will offer for sale at Percent (1 0%) day of side of said 90 · acre Range
lhe
Ohio
Public Auction on sale, balance wllhln lot and running In a Company's Purchase, EnvIronment a I
southeaslerly direc- saving and excepting Prolectlon Agency
Friday, February 6, 30 days.
·
2004
In
the Ralph E. Trussell , tion along a ridge to therefrom 44 · 3/4 (OEPA) lest week.
of Meigs Intersect the county acres heretofore con- "Actions" Include the
Courthouse al 100 E. Sheriff
road near a home forveyed.
2nd Street, Pomeroy, County, Ohio
adoption, modlflcaOhio at 10:30 of said Stephen D. Miles, merly owned and
Being the same lion, .or repeal of
day, the following Anorney
occupied by John real estate described orders (other than
18 wast Monument German.
Real Estate, to-wit:
in deed from Pamela emergency orders);
Situated In lhe Avenue
Proffit, nka Pamela the Issuance, denial,
PARCEL NO. 2:
County of Meigs, In
Dayton, Ohio 45402
Being In S.ecllon 34, Burdine, and Robe;t modification or revoTown 3, Range t1 , E. Burdine, her hus- cation of licenses,
the State of Ohio and (1) 5, 12, 19
In the , Township of
company's band, 10 Pamela permits, leases, varl·
Ohio
Purchase. Beginning Burdine and Robert ances, or certificates;
Sutton: The following
Public Notice
real estate being In
at the norlheast cor· E. Burdine, recorded and the approval or
ner of the Southwesl in Volume 318, Page disapproval of plans
the
village
of
SALE- Quarter of said sec- · 587, Deed Recorda of and speclilcatlons.
Syracuse,
Sutton SHERIFF'S
lion; lhence south on Meigs Counly, Ohio.
Meigs REALESTATE
"Drafl Acllons" are
Townahlp,.
CASE NUMBER
lhe line between said PARCEL 1.0. NOS: 06· wriUen slatements of
County, Ohio and In
German and Park, 100 00021; OS.00022; 06- the
100 Acre Lot No. 297, 02·CV.Q64
Director
of
described as follows: FARM CREDIT SER· rods to a North tOO 00023: AND 06.()0024
E n v I r o n m e n 1a I
ll&lt;iglnnlng at the VICES OF MID-AMER· rods to a post; thence Said premises have P r o t e c I I o n ' s
East 17 rods and 9 been appraised at (Director's)
Intersection of 1ha ICA, FLCA ~~ al
Intent
links to the place of $110,000.00 and must , with respect to the
centerline of College
VS
ROBERT E BURDINE beginning, containing not be sold for less lseuance, denial, etc.
and
Fifth
Slreet
tO acres.
t~an two thirds of
Street: Thence South eta I
of a permit, license,
PARCEL NO 3; said amount
3 degrees 18' East Court of Common
order, etc. Interested
Pleas, Meigs Counly, Beginning at the Terms of Sala-10 par- persons may submll
151.75 feet along lha
northeast corner of cent down by cash, wrlnen comments or
Ohio
extension of the cen·
Northwest certified check, or request
In pursuant to an the
ter line of College
a public
silas order of sale to Quarter of Secllon 33, bank check (no per- meeting
regarding ·
·street to a pipe, the
place of beginning for me directed from said Town 3, Range 11, sonal checks will be draft
acllons.
Company's accepted) on the day Comments or public
deecrlptlon: · Court In the above Ohio
this
thence of the sale with lhe meeting
Thence South 85 enlhled action, t will PurchaSe;
raquesls
degrees Eaal 158.68 e•poae 10 sale at pub· West 30 rods to a balance due upon must. be submitted
lie auction on the · stake; thence South confirmation by the wllhln 30 days of
feel to a pipe; Thence
atepa of the Melga 122 rods to a corner, Court and deliVery of notice of the draft
South·34 degree• 40'
Weet 149.85 feet to a County Court House, !hence East 30 rods lhe Dead.
action .
" Proposed
100 East Second to a corner ; thence The full purchase actions" are written
pipe, 20 feet from the
Street; Pomeroy, OH NorJh 122 rods lo the f!lust be paid wllhln
center line of - State
statements of the
Route
No.
124; 45769, on February place of beginning, 30 days of the date of director's Intent with
20, 2004 at 10:30 conlalnlng 23 acres, the sale; otherwise reapec:t
Thence North 5&amp;
10
the
Clegreea Weet 81 .58
o'cloc;k a.m. of sa.. more
or
lees. lhe Purchaser ahall tsauance,
denial,
1M! along the · North day, the following E•ceptlng I 0 acres be adJudged to be In modification, revocadescribed real ealate: heretofore sold to Contempt of Court.
aida of aald Stale
lion, or renewal of a
Route, 20 feet North
In
the w.c. Orr off the aoutti
THIS SHERIFF'S permit, license, or
Situate
of end, and except a SALE
of the center line to a Townahlp
OPERATED variance .
Written
pipe; Thence North 3 Lebanon , County of right of way hereto- UNDER THE DOC· comments
and
dagraas 18' West 91 .5 Malgl and Stale of fore deeded ' to J.C. TRINE OF CAVEAT requeeta for a public
feet to 1 plpa, the
Ohio:
Rosa by the window EMPTOR, THE MEIGS meeting regarding a
place of beginning, PARCEL
NO.
1: and helrt of John COUNTY SHERIFF proposed action may
contelnlng .30 Acre, Beginning el the German, daceued.
MAKES NO GU/IRAN· be submitted within
or
laaa. aoulheaat corner of
mora
PARCEL NO. 4: TEE AS TO STATUS 30 daya of notice of
Excepting all coal, oil tha
Soulhwaat Beginning 30 rods OF TITLE PRIOR TO the prop(!aed aetlon.
.
snd giS, whiCh have Quarter of Secllon 34, Well of the norlhealt SALE.
An adJudication hear•
been
pravloualy Town 3, Range 11, corner
of
the Ralph Trussell, Sheriff lng may be held on a
reaarwd. Parcel 120- Ohio
Compan,y 'a Northwest Quarter of Meigs County, Ohio
proposed action If a
6o5so.ooo
Purcheae;
.thence Section 33, Town 3, John E. Bowers (No. hearing request or
Slid property haa Norlh
166 rode; .=tange
objection 11 received
11 , Ohio 0021415)
been appraised at lhenco West 86. rode; Company ' s 233
North
Courl by the OEPA within 30
143,000 and cannot lhence South 166 Purchase;
'days of Issuance of
thence Street
Ohio lhe proposed action.
Mil lor ' " ' than two- Rods; lhonco East to South 56 112 rods; Circleville;
lhlrde ol appraise· the place or , begin· thence Weal 29 rode 4 43113
Written commenti,
menL Thla appraiHI nlng, containing 90 feet
477-1361
requests for public
to , Harrison (740)
Ia biNd upon 1 vlau· acraa excepting 10 Darst's east llnoi; Attorney . lor Farm
meetings; and adjudl·
at lnapactlon of that · acres out ol the thence North 56 112 Credit Services ol cation
hearing

f7 :! 2

South

'""

Steve Riffle

~'~''to .1tl'xso•'
, .,, .
'

111411 mo. pd

.I !I 4 :1

z•

]C SIJfl!jS'x10'
Hours
7:00AM- 8:00.PM

•

•

• v

Dc aiCI·: Nor lh
Vulne rable: East-West

9 miles from Pt. Pleasant
on Sand Hill Road.

,.~

K

.... /\I U 8711i

J# buy quilt tops

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45 771
740·949·2217

•

~

Let me clo it for youl

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.

9317

II

Q

.. A 3
.
K.IH75

PAIN
out of PAINTING!

BASEMENT

4x4 . $24,000 . Call (740)446-

7

A

Suulh

Ta~e the

Hill's Self
Storage

J 9 R

cylinders..

ask for Terry @

·

·r'o

•

CALLT&amp;D HYDRAULICS,

I' F;berglass Truck Topper for 8

ft . bed. Dar~ blue, excell fint
condi tion
$300,
ca ll
02 Honda Odessy Ex. ~
740 245 _5047 _ .
1Q,500 miles. Excellent con·
1989 GMC S- 15 4WD diti on.
$24,000 .
Cal l
longbed, 4.3 V-6 , mileage (740 )245 •92 14 _
139.ooo·· price
$2,soo. _________________
Phone: (7 40) 446-25 19 or 2000 S-5SO Diesel. 4 door.

TRUCKS
.......
;.
l
llliRiioiiSiiiAiiiLEii
".._.l
-,

(740)709·1 66\

re~air

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

AlJfO I'&lt;IJITS &amp;
AC"&lt;.'l..'iSORII:';

K !J -1

.Call for detail

New Home s • Vinyl
Sidi ng • New Garages

liNDA1 PAINnNG

to a

•

As -a lways we still ha ve hydraulic hoses, oil and

BUILDERS InC.

740-992-7599

•

11:ast

¥

And••. ~ M~y Ferguson Tracto rs. ·

BISSEll

FREE ESTIMATES

..

.L....-------.J

S1.000.

B&amp; D Au1o Sales
Hwy. 160 N.
7 4 0 4 46 665
..- - - - ,

All Your Needs

: MONTY

11 1 lllll-1

AJ1087!i

Wes t
• K fl •I

bladeS utility trailen, goosenecks, and more.

Windows • Rooli ng

-Pomeroy Auto Parts
Maddne Shop Servic~
95 Dodge 4x 4 PU, $ 4.600:
lt9WSecondSt.
98 Ford F-150 . $ 5,200 : 98
Ran ger 4 x4. s3,600 : 97
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Mazda PU. $2 .350 : 00
(740) 992-2139
Chevy 5 _10 PU S3\SOO : 88
Chevy Silverado, $2,850; 93
Niss en PU , $l ,500; 93
BoATS &amp; Morons
Ranger auto $2 ,000; 98
lllRSALE
Ford Windstar, $2, 600; 95
Ford F· l 50 PU , $2,500 : 95
79 Bass Trucker Boat. 16 ..tt.
Chevy PU, 55,000 miles,
Trolling Motor &amp; F1sh F1nd~r.
$4 00
,5 .
with
trailer.
$1,400.
8 &amp;0 Auto Sales

A

Each h.a s full 1 }'ear .warranty on· parts and labor.
Priced from $5,000 &amp; $13,000 wlopllons available.
Also Nnt Hawkllne Brnshogs, bo:.: blades, grader

SFRE

, Come To Us For

TRUCKS

Nor t h

Now Available al T&amp;D Hydraulics
• Form Pro Troctors
20 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
3o Hp 4 Wheel Drive

• Replacement

door, 30,000 miles. CD,

99 Chevy Monte Carlo·Z34.
Black. wlblack leather interior, sunroof. on-star, handsfree phone-system, fully
loaded, 67K miles, e)l,c611ent
Chocolate and Black. Call $3.00 per bale. (740)245- condition. $8 ,000, (740)379-

(740)367-7566.

Chevy Malibu; 00 Dodge
Neon. $3. 400: 97 Mere
Sable, $2 .500; 97 Buick.
Skylark. $2 .000; 98 Olds
Ach1eva, 52.000: 98 Ford
Escort, $2 ,800; 99 Cavalier,
52.800; 1-96 Gran Ams @
52000:95 Pont. Gran Prix,
$ 1;800: 96 Chevy Lumina,
51 .800; 93 Buick. $1,500; 96
Cavalier. $2,1 00; 94 Ford
Probe. $1,800; 89 Cadillac,
$895 ; 93 Eagle Talon,
.
s 1.295: 97 ..l"i'lerc.. ..
ov.ySIIC,

Ph: 304·675-1743 or 740·
S4 995
(740)682·75 12
2001 Pontiac Sunfire. 2 (evenmgs).
446- 1104.

German short hair AKC pup·
pies. 11 weeks old. Call for Round bales $12.50 Square
appo intment
(740)441 - bales 2nd-cutting grass
$2.50. Ear co rn $2.50 a
8826.
bushel Ground ear corn
Purebred female Bassett $4 .50 for 100 pounds.
Hound 2yrs old not regis- (740)992·2623
tered . e)(cellent breede r,
beautiful markings moving Round bales of hay. Phone
must sell $150. (304)675- (740)388·8823.
6606 '
Square bal es for sale. 1st
Registered Lab Puppies. and 2nd cutting. $2.00 and

Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
.Bonanza Gel

heart's tender touch and warmth of
tears and smiles along with the cutting
edge care, well. you can count on us!

99 Olds Alero, $4,600; 99
eu;ck Cen1vry, $4,500; 00

(740)~45-504 7 .

Beautiful miniature collie, 6
month old, AKC Sheltie
male, .iable &amp; whi te, good
bloodline, price reduCed for
quick ,...sale, Plea se call

6:3(1

Suite C
Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone: (740) 592-5918
Office Houts: 8am-5pm ( Mon-Fri)

10

II&lt;\ \'-11'111{ I \I Ill\

$500!. Hondas.
Chevys .
GRo\IN •
Jeeps. etc
POLICE
Block, brick, sewer pipes. · ........,;;iiiioiiii....,.l IMPOUNDS Cars from
windows. lintels, etc. Claude 1,000 lb. Round bale of $500. For lisllngs·1:800-719Winte rs, Rio" Grande. OH mixed grass· hay. $15. Call 3001 ext 3901

2 Rat te rrier puppies. 6nly 2.

Early birds start

Ir medical care .is all about caring with

Rw&amp;

Call740-245· 5 1~ 1 .

Doors Open 4:30

530 West Union Street

LIV~·UCK

7 Horses very g~ ntle. kid
safe. healthy. had all shots.

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology

January 21st
Good Times is from
5pm - 7pm
Wayne's Place 7 pm - 9 pm

3 beater
Silhage Wagon on 10 ton
NH Gear. $2,900. excellent
cohdition. (740)643-2285.

BINGO 2171

Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP

Wayne's Place

NEW AND USED STEEL New Holland
S\eel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Arigle,
Channel, Flat · Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Dra ins.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesdcty, Wednesday · &amp;
Friday, 8am:4:30pm. Closed
Thursday.
Satu r(!a.y
&amp;

Pomeroy Eagles

48 Color
49 In full

agreemen1
1 Deepwater
(2 wds .)
4 Paycheck
abbr. -~
51. Uncooked
53 Aardvark
7 8 pis .
prey
10 Brieflime
11 Fracases
54 Old Norse
13 Thurman
Inscriptions
ol filmdom 55 Sharp·
shooter's.
14 Affection
org .
15 Bygone
16 Male gypsy 56 Geograph·
17 Evenical abbr.
57 Firm up
tempered
58 Edmund
19 Bedroom
Hilla,.Y ·s
communit y
21 Son
II lie
22 Careless
·23 Ruined
DOWN
26 Slowest
1 JFK visitor,
30 Part
31 Tuscaonce
2 UnderWater
loosa's st,

Alder

•
•
•

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Tht; Daily Sentinel • Page BS

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Mor:tday, January 19, 2004
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By.Bernice Bede

OFF ' Sc/'\50&gt;1, M'(

0

YOUNG'S

Tueada~Jan.20 , 2004

AFTER A LONG

1&gt;A~"TI

l '

1

•

EIGH1U.N
TO

WIN

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - In order to
succeed today you must fi rst visualize
yourself as successfu l regardless of what
is occurring around you. Once sell-doubt
·seeps in, it will deprive you of any chances
for victo ry.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Don't th1nk
your friemts won·t get miffed at you today if
you at1empt to rearrange the group's plans
at the last minute in order to satisfy your
purposes while ignori ng their needs.
ARIE S (Marc h 21-April 1 9) - In importam
"work-related matters today, be par ticularl y
careful with·whom you team up or take into
your confidence. The perso n cou ld be
secretly jealous ol you and wo rk aga1nst
you.
TAURU S (Ap ri l 20-May 20) - Yo u could
have great opportunitie s to dcr'somelh1ng
fun today. t:lut don't tak e time away from
performing your duties and responsibilities
in order to do so. Keep your ptiorii1es in
order.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- ll"s possible
for you to be eilher a shrewd hOrse !radar
or JUSt plain lucky today in acquinng something of value. Once achi eved. however.
don"t foolishly gamble It away again .
CANYER (June 21-Juty 22 J - Take. the
commitments you make to oth ers today
seriously, even if something betler comes
along that you'd rather do. If you don't
deliver on what you promise. you could
lose a frie nd.
'
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -' Materi al rewards
are likely to come your way today. but they
might not turn out to be as grand as you
had hop9d . Keep m mind the old adage
that "a half a loaf is better th an nc;me."
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22 ) - Ac1ivlties in
which you par ticipate today (that don't cos!
you an arm and a leg) should turn out to be
the most fun, so don't teet that you have to
be pari ol son'lethmg expensive in order to
have a good lime.
LIBRA' (Sept 23-0ct . 23) - Some th1ng
you start out doing today w1 th a numoer of
assistants might have to even tually ~e
completed atone. but don"t let the lo!:ls of
participants ca use you to scrap the project
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)"- la dy Luck
may treat you kindly today. but she wlll
expect you to share your benefits with oth·
ers. If you're,. selfish with your holdings.
she'll begin !O be stingy With you as well.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Your.
possibilities lor material gains look exceptionally hopelullodiy. However, timi[IQ will
be Important and you'll have to mal&lt;e ha~
wtti1e the sun sh.ines. Sy dusk. It'll all be
over.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . ' 1 9) .._
Ventures you originate and personally
dlrecl have the best cham:es for success
today. Take care, however. that you don't
wall on others before gentng elarted. tt ~ll be

I
0
I j' j j ;~
I.'--'--'---'-...J..-'

WL
~
The new fall lineup ol new
f--'rD-'R
-'r:-,r"-.--1 -~ . TV programs d1dn"t seem to in·

RE K N0 B

lerest Gra ndpa He figu res that
the· cunent prog rams are jusl

I

prev iews o f comi~g.- •• - -.

If---r:~~~r,-TI-'-rl-'---rl:-~_'--1. ()
L --1..__L.-

.1.._._..__- --'-'--'

~ ou

Comol ere lhe chocl le ovored
.by ldl1ng 1n lht

m1~lln CJ 'words

develop h om step No

.3 be low.

fJ PRINl
NUMI!REO llll£1~ IN
THE SE
SOU~RES

€) UNICi~Mill

AIOYI l!ITIRS

TO GEl ANSWfR

SCRAM-LETS

ANSWfltS

Stolid- Nudg{t.- Irate - Ponder . DON'T do IT

'I

no

really believe· there is
fun in having nothing to
do,· gramps told me. ·The real fun comes when you have
plenty to do and DON'T do IT •
· '

ARLO &amp; JANIS

\
'

too late.

SOUP TO NUTZ.
1· saw a coMMeRc1aL
Wl-l.e~

l H1S Gl.)'r GLIJI.A D
HIS He..8D 10 .::~ HeU&lt;PF"J"eR.

:.'ltJ ~

wan nt\ Gw e

1H1S LIJ:3f)R0 He.e D BeCk
O r'\ ~ t-10'-1 Fl ~ ~ 001""

�.
.

'

'

.

Baldwln-Wa!laoe 69, Muaklngum Sol, OT
Capkal88 , Heidelberg 54
John Csrroll;72,· Otterbein 69
Ohio Nortnern 69, Mount Union 66
Wilmington, Ohio 91 , Marietta 87, OT
H6rth Coa1t Conference
Denison 92, Wabash 86
Hiram 64, Oberlin 62, OT
Kenyon 73. Earlham 63
Ohio Wesleyan 79, Allegheny 63
Wittenberg 72, Wooster 62
Heartland Conference
Oellance 71 . Mount St. Joseph 58
Transylvania 92. Blutft9n 63
American Mideast Confer41!nCI
Cedarville 93. Walsh.65
Malone n . Shawnee St. 70, OT
Notre Dame, Ohio 96 . Seton Hill 92. OT
Ohio Dominican at Wilber10tce , ppd.,
weather
Rio Grande 65, Tiffin 61
Urbana 81 , Mt. Vernon Nazarene 78
Allegheny. Mountain Conference
Pin.-Greensburg 72. lake .Erie 70

Melga 57, River Valley 35
RIVer Valley 16 7 2 10 Meigs
17 12 18 10 -

.

OhiO~nco

·Prep Basketball
35
57

RIVER VALLEY {2·9) - Knstina Na~lor 3
7, Beth Payne 5 ()-0 11 . L~slie Ward 3
2·2 9. Ashley CaldweH 2 0·2 4, Booky
Lyons 1 ().() 2, Kyta Adkins Q o-o~_O , Letea
McAvena 1
2, Jessica Murphy 0 0·0 a.
TOTALS - 15 2-4 35.
MEIGS {8-4)- Ronae Bailey 2 0.2 4, Joey

o-o

o-o

Haning 1 1·2 3, Justibne Dowler 2 7·9 11 .

Sam Pierce.6 2-3 15, Ang el Harter 1 1·2 3.
, Jaynee Davis 9 1·2 19. Chnssv Miller 1 o2 2, Brittany HussEiill 0 .Q.O 0. TOTALS - 22
12-22 57
3-pQinl goals - RV 3 _(Nayloo. Payne,
Ward), Meigs 1 (Pierce).

.NCAA Basketball

•

Mkf..Amerlcen Conference
Eaet
Conference All Games
W L Pel. W L Pet.
Kent 51.
' 4 1 .800 10 3 ,769
Miami (Ohio) 3 2 .600 7 6 .538
3 3 .500 6 7 '. 462
Marshall
1 4 .200 7 6 .538
Akron
2 3 · .400 5 10 333
Ohio
1 5 .167 5 9 357
~utlalo
West
W. Michigan
5 0 1.000 12 1 .923
Toledo
5 1 .633 11 3 769
Ball St
4 1 .800 7 6 786
Bowliflg Green 4 2 .667 · a B 500
N. Illinois
2 4 .333 7 9 438
E. Michigan
1 4 .200 6 7 .462
Cent. Michigan 0 5 .000 3 12 200

Pro Basketball
National Ellsketball
Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
WLPotGB
N8w Jersey
21 17, .553
Boston
20 23 .465 3 112
Philadelphia
18 22 .450 4
18 24 .429 5
New York
Miami
16 25 .390 6 112
. 11 28 282
10 1/2
Washington
Orlando
10 31 .244 12 1/2
Central Division
W .L
Pet
GB
Indiana
3 1 1i .738
Detroit
28 13 .683 2 1/2
New Or)eans
23 1.7 .575 7
Milwaukee
22 18 .550 8
Toronto
20 18 .526 9
Cleveland
·13 27 . 325 17 ·
Chicago
12 28 .300 18
Atlanta
12 29 293 18 112
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Dlvtslon
WLPctGB
Minnesota
26 12 .684
San Anton io
27 14 .659
112
24 16 c600 3
Dallas
Houston 1
23 16 .59d 3 112
Denver
24 18 57 1 4
21 18 .538 5 112
Memphis
21 16 538 5 1/2
Utah
Pacific Qivislon
WLP&lt;IGB
Sacramento
28 9
757
L.A. Lakecs
25 12 .676 3
19 19 .600 9112
Seattle
L.A. Clippers
16 21 .432 12
16 23 .410 13
Golden State
16 23 . .4 10 13
Portland
· Phoenilc
15 26 .366 15

Saturday's Reeulta
Ball St. 56, Miami, Ohio 50
Marshall 86, Buffalo 74
Ohio so. N. Illinois 59
Toledo 87. Akron 79
W. Michigan 72, E. Mic.higan 63
Sunday's Rnult
Bowling Green 86, Cent Michigan 61
Monday's Gilme
Toledo at E. Michigan
Tuesday's Games
N . Illinois at Ball St.
Ohio al Akron
Wedneadajia Games
' Miami (Ohio) at Cant. Michigan
W. MIChigan at Kent St.
Non-conference
Marshall vs. West Virginia, at Charl~slon
Thursday's Game
Bowling Green at Toledo

.Ohio Men's College
Baaketbell Scorel
Sunday's Resulta
Mid-American Conference
Bowling Green as: Cent. Michigan 61
University Athletic Association
Washington, Mo. 89, Case Aes.~rve 73
TOURNAMENT
MLK Claaslc
Central St. 105. Wilberforce 82
Saturday'a Reaultl
Atlantic 10
Davton 75, Fordham 56
Saint Joseph's 81. Xavier 73

Saturday's Games
Memphis 91. Philadelphia 87
Houston 95. Minnesota 76
Atlanta 75, Toronto 70
Washington 99, Seanle 84
New Orleans 91, Orlando 90
Indiana 90. New Jersey 84
New York 101 . Chicago 96
Detroit 99, Milwaukee 94
Cleveland 102. Utah 96. OT
Dallas t06. Portland 104
L.A. Lakers 91. LA. Clippers 89
Sunday's Gamee
San Antonio 109, Boston 92
Phoenbt 96, Portland 92
Denver 88, Miami 80
. Monday's Games
Chicago at Washington, 1 p.m.
Toronto at New York, 1 p.m.
Indiana at Atlanta, ·2 p.m.
S~ttle at Philadelphia , 2 p.m.
Milwaukee at Orlando. 3 p.m.

Big Ton
Ohio St. 73, Minnesota 62
Conference US!l
crncinnati 85, Tc'u 57
Uld·Amertcari Conference
Ball St. 56, Miami, Ohio 50
bhio 80, N. Illinois 59TOledo 87, Akron 79
HorWJn League
· III.·Chicago 83, Cleveland 51. 66
· Wright St. 63, Loyola of Chicago 68
Great Lakel Conference
Findlay 94; Saginaw Valley St. 69

PageB6 ·

'ScoREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

New Jeraev 2, Wuhlngton 1, OT
·Ottawa 4, Boaton o
N.V. Rangers 2. Montreal2, tie

New Orleans at ~ lnnesota, 6 p.m.
Houston at Memphis, 7;30 p.m.
Utah at Golden State,. tO p.m.

N.Y. Islanders 4, Buffalo 2

Phoenix at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Tuaaday'1 'Game•
Detroit at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Seattle at Clfr.'eland . 7 p.m
· Boston at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Dallas.•,8:30 p.m.
Denver at Utah, 9 p.m.
Portland at Sacramento. 10 p.m.

J

Continental Basketball
Association
W L
o'akota
18 B
Idaho
20 6
SiOl.!)( Fall s
13 13
Gary
15 13
Rockford
• 12 14
Great Lakes 11 18
Yakima
6
21

OW
61 .0
5.9.5
s7.o
55.5
48.5

PTS
1Q
15.0
11 9.5
96.0
100.5
84.5

AVG
4 .4
4.3
3.7
3.6
3.3

51 .5 84.5 2.9
47.0 65.0 · 2.4

Teams receive.._three points for a
point for each quarter won and
fOf' any quarter tied. No p01n1s
during overti,me.
·

win. one
112 point
awarded
'

Saturday's Game
Gar'y 114, Sioux ~ails 100 (5.5.. 1.5)
. Sunday's Games
· Rockford 120. Dakota 115 (5, 2)
Great Lakes 98, Yak1ma 92. OT (5. 2)
Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Game
AII·Star Game at Yak•ma

Coumblo 7, Florence 4

270

'Toledo 5, Dayton 2
Louisiana .c, Taxaa 3

Brendan Pappas, $78,800 87-69·89-68 -

Phlladeiptlia 4, Toronto 0
Florid~ 2, Tampa Bay 1
Minnesota 2. St. Louis 2. tie
Nashville 2, Edmonton 1
San Jose 2. Cotorado 1 ·
Dallas 3, Calgary 2
Anaheim 2., Vancouver 1
•
Sundey'a Games
Atlanta 5, Carrnina 2
Washington 4 , Pittsburgh 3
Edmonton 4 , Columbus 4, tie
Los Angeles 2, Chicago 1
Monctay'a Gamea
.Qnswa at N.Y. Islanders. Noon
N.V. Rangers at Boston. 1 p.m.
Sl. Louis at Florida. 5 p.m .
ColOrado at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at San Jose. 8 p.m.
Calgary at Anarieim, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Nashville. 8 p.m.
Dallas at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Tuesday 's Games
Onawa at Carolina. 7 p.m.
Boston at N.Y. Rangers. 7 p.m.
Montre...- at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Atlanta,. 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Pittsburgb. 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Toronto. 7:30p.m.
Dallas at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Calgary at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

Hockey
National Hockey Leagul!
EASTERN CONFERENC!
'Atlantic Division
W L T OLP1aGFGA
Philadelphia 22 10 10 5 59 128105
New Jersey 22 11 10 1 55 10282
N.Y. Rangers 18 16 7 4 47 122 118
N.Yislanders 21 194 1 47 129117
Pittsburgh
11 28 5 3 30 91 169
Northeast Dlvl•ion
W L T bLP1aGFGA
Toronto
24 12 8 3 59 128 116
24 11 7 3 56 14790
Onawa
Boston
20 12 10 4 54 110110
Montreal
23 16 6 2 54 118101
Buffalo
18 235 1 42 111122
Southeast Division
W L T OLPtaGFGA
Tampa Bay
2i 16 6 1 49 10695
Atlanta
20 21 4 2 46 134142
Florida ·
15 19 1·0 2 · 42 98 121
Carolina
15 20 9 2 41 86 112
Washington
14 26 5 2 35 11 4 146
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Dlvlalon·
W L T OLP1sGFGA
Detroit
27 13 5 2 61 153107
St. Louis
24 13 6 1 55 115106
Nashville
22166 2 52 111116
12 24 7 3 34 93 127
Columbus
Chicago
11247 5 34 96137
Northwest Division
W L T OLPIBGFGA
Colorado
25 11 7 2 59 13698
Vancouver
25 13 7 2 59 133105
Calgary
22 15 4 3 51 10392
Minnesota
16 17 14 0 46 104101
Edmonton
16 208 1 45 117124
Pacific Division
W L T OLP1aGFGA
San Jose '
20 11 11 4 55 11299
Los Angeles 17 1410 5 49 116116
Dallas
20 19 8 0 48 94 105
Phoenht '
16 1413 2 47 114117
Anaheim
14 207 5 40 93 118

Jasper Parnev l~. S76,8,PO 65-66·70-66-

271

t

Wild-card Playoffs
Saturday, Jan. 3
Tennessee 20, Ballimore 17
Carolina 29, Dallas 10 Sunday, Jan. 4
Green Bay 33. Sea111e 27. OT
Indianapolis -41 , Denver 10
Olvlelonal Playoff&amp;

NOTE: Two points are awarded tor a win.
Overtime and shootout losses earn one
point and are referred to as ties.
, Saturday's Games
Atlantic City 4. Charlotte 0
Reading 4, Trenton 1
Florida 6. Roanoke 2
Columbus 8, Greenville 0
Greensboro 3, Augusta 2

Saturday, Jon. to
Carolina 29, St. Louis 23. 20T
NeW England 17, Tennessee 14
Sunday, ·Jan. 11
Indianapolis 38. Kansas City 31
Philadelphia 20. Green Bay 17.'0T
Conference Championships
Sunday,Jan.18
AFC ChampiOnship
New England 24, Indianapolis 14
NFC Championship
Carolina 14, Philadelphia 3

Super Bowl
Sunday, Feb. 1
At Houalon
New England vs. Carolina, 6:25p.m. (CBS)

Golf
Sony Open Scores
,

Sunday
At Welalae cc
·Honolulu
Pura~~;

Craig Bowden, $76,800 70·64-69-68 271
•
Bo Van Pall, $76, 600 71-65·67-68 - 271
Joe Durant, $50,057.15 70-61X}9-67 272
.
Chris" Riley. $50.057.15, 69·69·67-67 272
Shaun Michael, $50,057 .14 72-64-68-68
-272
.
Luke Donald, $50.057.14 66·66·71-69272
Carlos Franco. $50,057.14 63- 72 -68~69
- 272
Michael Allen, $50,057.14 66·69·65·70272

••

$4.8 million

Yardage: 7,060; Par 70
Final Round
x-won on third playoH hole
x-Ernie E!s, $864,()()() 67-64-66-65-262
. Harrison Frazar. $518,400 67·63-66 1 66 -

262
Davis Love Ill, $326,400 70·65-63-67 265
Frank Uckliler 11.$230.400 71 ·62·65·68 266
Jerry Kelly, $182,400 68·65-69·65- 267
Briny Baird, $182,400 68-66-66-67-267
John Rlegger. $160,600 66-66·67-67 286
'
Stephen Ames, $144,000 66·70·65-68269
Craig Barlow, $144,000 66·69-66-68 269
Omar Uresti, $110,40072·66-67·65- 270
Vii•Y SJngh, $11 o,400 69-68-67-66 - 270
John Huston, $110,400 67-67-69-67 270
Retief Goosen, $110,400 67·69·65·69270
Paul Azinger. $110,400 67-66-66-71

, ! I l l "\JI...,~\t~l .

BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON REO ~OX-Agreed to l!rms with
RHP Scott Williamson on a one-year con- .
tract
National League
MONTREAL EXPOS-Agreed to terms
with RHP Rocky Biddle.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS-Signed F Ronald
Dupree to a se&lt;:ond 10-day contract
DENVER NUGGETS-Placed G Jeff
Trepagnier on lhe injured list. Activated F
Mark Pope from the injured list.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES-Signed
G Anthony Goldwire to a second 10-day
contract
~
NEW ORLEANS HOANET8-Piaced G
David Wesley on the injured list
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DALlAS COWBOYS-Named Todd Haley
wide receivers coach.
..,
DETROIT LION5-Named Dick Jauron
defensive coordinator.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Placed OL
Dilmian Woody on injured reserve.
Activated WA J.J. Stokes.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-signed CB
Joselio Hanson.
f
HOCKEY
National ttockey League
DALLAS STARS-Activated C Mike
Moda!io from injured reserve.
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Recalled D Lukas
Krajicek from San Antonio of the AHL
Exercised their option on the contract of
Rick Dudley, general manager, for the
2004-05 season.
·
·
PHOENIX COYOTE$-Acquired Q Todd
Reirden from Anaheim for future consider·
ations and assigned him to Springfield of
th8 AHL Assigned C Krystofer Ko!anos to
Springlleld.
ST. LOUIS BLUES-Recalled D Aris
Brimanis from Worcester of the AHL.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Recalled D
Carlo Colaiacovo from St. John's of the
AHL
,
VANCOUVER CANUCK8-Traded
Stegr to Boston tor future consld&lt;&gt;_ca~~ns.
Recalled G Johan Hedberg and F Ryan
Kesler from Manitoba of the AHL. Assigned
G Alex Auld to Manitoba.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS- Recalled D
Josef Boumedienne and AW Ivan Ciernik
hom Portland of.the AHL
COLLEGE
MEMPHIS-Agreed to terms with John
. Calipari, men's basketball coach, on a
three-year contract extension H)rough
2010.

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Happy Valentine's Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, ond

INSIDE

WEATHER .

~alltpolis

Brother...
Thanks far belnq such

Gene Lyons, EMS director, chairs a local donation program for the American Red Cross. All funds
contributed will go into a special fund for Meigs County fire or disaster victims. (Cha~ene Hoefiich)

71Batlp m:rtbune

•.

Joint_Jlea,ant Jlegt,ter
The Dail

a Qrealfamlly!
I Lave You Very Much!

{APPROXIMATELY.60 WORDS)

21NCHAD ... $l0.00

'

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

MY nvi'ILI

2004.

To.advertise
in ·this §pecial

Writing this love

message gives me the.
opportunity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
husband. l know
I sometimes don't
It but l
do.
Valentines

INDEX
l1 SECilONS- lll PAGES

Retirement
Edition
contact yolk

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

A(jvertising .

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Write your Me1sage Below:

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Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

~

Bt

weather

A6

Racine Mayor Scott Hill, Vernon Harrison and Tom Wolfe raise a
flag in support of friends . family and loved ones who are serving in the military Sunday at the American Legion Post in Racine.
Bv J.

MILES

lAYTON

JLAYTDN®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - More than 60
people attend~d a rally sp~m·
sored by the Endurmg
Freedom Support Group to
honor t·he troop s serving ·
abroad Sunday in Racine .
The group meets to write letters and send small tokens of

esteem to soldiers everyWhere,
Two special flags were
rai sed at both the Racine Fire
Department
and
the
American Legion Post 602.
The red, white and blue flags
state in bold .lettering, "We
·
·
·
Please .s ee Soldiers, AS

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Mall Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

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The Daity·sentinel

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Sunday, February 1, 2004 • 2 PM •· HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

Ill Court·Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Nam~=------------------------­
. A d d r e s s : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -- Size of Valentine::_·---'-"'-:--~--__;.--'-----.,.------'­
Total Amount Enclosed:'---~-~---------------

-·-·-·-·-·-------------·---------

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A3

Enduring Freedom Support
Group honors soldiers

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Dear Abby

vices.
. Lyons explained that over
the past years American
Red Cross volunteers fmm ·
here and , other cou nties
along with employees have
· provided Meigs Countians
with help after home, fires
tota ling over $ 10,000,
along with staffing shelters,
providing damage assessment and family service
workers when floods and
win~er S!orms have ravaged
the area.
"The Red Cross .is not .a
government agency and
relies on the generous assistance of people like you to
. continue to provide our
emergency response and
safety training to the residents ·of Meigs County."
Lyons said. All donations
will stay in Meigs County,"
she added.
Donations can be mailed
· to American Red Cross for
Meigs County. Post Office
Box 100, Pomeroy, Oh10
· 45769.

Please see Chase, AS

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th·e Xthens Chapter, to get
the program off the ground.
"Letters have been sent
P,9MEROY While out and some contributions
Meigs County hasn 't had have come in," said Shirey
an American Red Cross. noting lhat ' so far $385
chapter for more than a have been added to a spcdozen
·years,
Meigs cia! fund for Meigs County
Countians still receive ser- residents.
vices from the Red Cross.
"That money will be used
"Meigs .County has had to help families after fires.
to rely on Athens- qnd This is a first step," 'she
Gallia Counties," said Gene added.
Lyons, Emergency Medical · Plans are to form a group
Services director and Red in the county not' only to
· Cross volunteer. how head- raise money, but to assist in
ing up a local donation pro- disasters. "Training classes
gram.
are already being held ."
"It's important· now that said Lyons noting that just
we do something about pro, recently 13 members of the
viding for our own," said M~igs County Hoine~and
Lyons who ·recently sent Security team were tramed
out letters asking for contri- to open American Red
butions to a fund which Cross shelters for local peewould provide help for pie when disasters strike.
Shirey said that there is
Meigs County fire victims
;md others who need assis- no plan to open a new
chapter · here because the
taqce.
Lyons, .a Red Cross vol- Red Cross is more interestunteer, is working with ed in neighbors linking
. Sandy Shirey, director of together to provide serBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

panic. possessing criminal
tools. felony vandalism,
felony resisting arrest and
assault on a police officer. He
also faces charges from the
Pomeroy Pol ice Department
and the Ravenswood Police
Department. the Meigs
County S~eriff's Department
said alcohol or drugs was a
factor in the incident. Neff is
in Middleport Jail awaiting
arraignment from the Meigs
County Court.
The chase began at 3:25
p.m. Saturday along State
Route 68 when Ravenswood
Police Officer Darrell Lott
attempted to stop Neff for a
routine traffic violation.
When Neff saw the flashing
lights frorn the police cruiser,
Lott said Neff immediately
sped away. Lott turned on his
sirens. but Neff, who has
'warrants outstanding, wasn't
stopping as he crossed the

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Comics

~ •oo4 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

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POMEROY - A two-stat~
car chase that resulted in an
accident, assault and an arrest
ended at 4:25 p.m. Saturday
in Pomeroy.
While being pursued at
high speeds··•by various law
enforcement ~gencies , Roy J.
Neff, 42, of Ravenswood ,
W.Va .. failed to negotiate aturn from Nye Avenue onto
East Main Street toward
Pomeroy and crashed into
Catherine Robinson, 28, of
Beverly, who was waiting at
the traffic light. Robin son
was transported . to Holzer
M~dical Center in Gallipolis
where she was treated and
later released.
After a struggle which
injured a Meigs County
Sheriff's deputy, Neff was
charged wnh aggravated
vehicular a~sault, inducing

• Anticipating a mission to
Mars. See Page A2

Happy

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

mayor's post due to the resignation of Mayor Dewey
"Mack" Horton. Later that
RUTLAND -"Unti l I year, she surpri sed many
sat in the mayor's chair for when she won an election on
the first time, I had no idea her own merits as a write-in
what the job involved."
candidate. She was (e-electFor Middleport Mayor ed last November.
Sandy Jannarelll , the last five
Burke. meanwhile, is a
years on the job have been a political newcomer- one of
constant learning process. several new village officials
Her ·new colleague in elected in Meigs County
Rutland, April Burke, has towns last fall, defeating
just begun a similar learning Mayor Dick Fetty. Since the
experience, and will learn, new year, she has conducted
· Ianilarelli said, to rely on her first meeting of the vilreams of regulations, other lage council, and finds the
mayors, state and local agen- members to be cooperative
cies. members of village and ready to "get the job
council, and citizens. to do done."
tile job right. . ·
·
That's vital, she said.
Iannarelli was serving her because she will rely on the
first term as president of experience around the counMiddleport Village Council cil table to help hef learn the
in 1999 when she was sudMiddleport Mayor Sanpy lannarelli shares some of the resources she relies on with new
Please see Job, AS
. denly appointed to the
Rutland Mayor April Burke. (Brian J. Reed)

Page AS
• Luella Fick

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

.

.

J.

BRIAN
REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES

{APPROXIMATELY lO WORDS)

terrible Fight.
A Sentinel love message
was a. good Idea.
To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

-~

•BY

Saturday'a Game•

111: INCH AD .. $7.50

• • • u l. ~th - •. , , ,,,,, J , , ~~.

.

-

Two points for a win, one point for a lie and
overtime loss.

I INCH AD ..... $5.00

n\\ 1\

Bv J. MILES lAYTON

Examples ofSizes and Prices

When we had that

:.! O .:! tJCLl

"
_. J i

With A Sentinel Love Message! ·

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 6,

..

Ohio

~" JJ ~ . . IJ ~ I/ -'--- /lJ , "' . wo·stat~ car chase_ends
v~~AMtL~rvv~~ 1n arrest 1n Pomeroy ·

--Your Way-- On February 13th --

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
· straight and true,
In brlnglng this. thought
oflove to you.
I'm sdrry about the
other night.

tl ISI)\\ . 1\'\l \1{\

.

• Cavaliers could be
LeBron-less for now. See
Page 81

Tell Som~one You Love Them
ln A Special Way

J INCH AD ... $15.00

q -

P~meroy,

e

lannarelli to Burke: Learn the job on the job

SPORTS

It's Valen-timei

1st Valentine's Day
Tessa!
... Mommy &amp; Daddy

J. -4 '\o

en

Middleport •

.-

Transactions

NFL Playoff Glance

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Northern Division
WL T PtsGF GA
Wheeling
28 10 2 58 '145 110
Atlantic City
26 10 1 53 122 68
Peoria
22 10 7 51 117 97
Johnstown
21 14 4 46 101 98
Reading
20 12 6 46 108 91
Cincinnati
16 19 2 38 101 106
Toledo
16 18 4 36 102 119
Trenton
16 15 3 35 94 89
Dayton
14 22 3 31 98 146
Southern Dtvlslon
W L T Pis GF QA
Columbia
25 12 4 54 165 128
Florida
22 12 7 51 145 133
Greensboro
24 17 1 49 151 139
SouthCarCilina 21 14 2 44 109 100
Roanoke
20 17 2 42 126 138
Charlotte
18 16 5 41 1'17 121
Florence
14 19 5 33 108 134
Greenville
6 29 3 1.5 95 '163
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
WL T PtaGF GA
Louisiana
26 10 2 54 127 97
Mississippi
24 11 6 '54 154 115
Gwinnett
23 13 3 49 126 107
Columbus
21 18 3 45 114 113
Pensacola
19 14 5 43 126 131
Augusta
17 18 4 38 105 125
Texas
12 25 4 26 107 163
Pacific Dlvlalon ·
WL T PtaGF GA
Idaho
25 11 4 54 126 107
Las Vegas
23 11 5 51 115 101
San Diego
23 10 3 49 109 ' 93
Alaska
22 14 3 47 127 104
Bakersliel~
11 1'9 6 26 98 114
Long Beach
12 23 2 . 26 90 136
Fresno
11 22 4 26 103 147

•·

University's keeper
of music reachesmilestone, A6

up,Bt

Aaron Baddeley, $76,800 66·72·67·66-

27t

Football

ECHL

O'Brien never sure·which
·Buckeyes team will show

271

Wheeling 5. CinclnnaiiA
Peoria 1, Johnstown 0. SO
GwinneH 4,'South Carolina 3, SO
San Diego 4, Alaska 2
Idaho 7. Fresno 2
Las Vegas 3, Bakersfield 2
Sundly'l ·Games
Greensboro 4, Columbia 2
Whee ling 1, Atlantic City 0
Cincinnati 2, TOI~ 1
Louisia.ne 8, Pensacola 2
San Diego 2. Alaska 1
Long Beach 3. Idaho 2. SO
Monday'a Game•
No .gaffies scheduled
Tuelday'a Gamea
No games scheduled
Wedntaday's Game
AU-Star Game at Peoria

...

.

'

··.

•

Monday, January 19, 2004

..

San Antonio at Detroit, 3 p.m.
Sacramento at J-.A. Clippers, 3:30p.m.

.

'

)
'

.

I

~allipolis

Speakers: Michael Lewis, MD, Cardiologist, and
Karen Stocker, RD, LD, Registered Dietitian

.. ,

ll9ail!' t!I:ribune Daily Sentinel

740-446-2342

740-992-2156

Light Lunch Served • Health "Information Provided • Bring a Friend!
.
Please RSVP for this event at (74'01 446·5055.

304-675~ 1333
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