<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5315" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5315?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T01:03:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15243">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8184c0a7f074636d88523786be4351a7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d1f9321994dbde2131ae6a499dd4e550</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18061">
                  <text>iunbap liM ·ittttintl

HousE OF THE WEEK

PageD6

Patriots win seCond
Super Bowl in

Sunday,Februaryt,2004

Remem~
Columbia, Aa

~years,Bt

A style suitable for
all neighborhoods

-·I

•

"This design packs a lot of features in a
modest space. The primary living
spaces are spread throughout the first
floor. I am particularly fond of the columnar exterior entryway. The half-octagonal
windows in the reading alcove and
breakfast nook add extra light. " Douglas Wells, Wells Kastner Schipper

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

"

SPORTS

I

A. NAntAN
Ahighlight of Plan APWB.Associated Press
142 is its upper tloor. with an
- - - - - - - - - - - angular master bedroom and a
deck. lt has more square
footage than the main leveL The staitway is lined with book·
shelves.
It is the main floor of Plan APWB-142, however, that fea tures pizazz. The columned entry hallway narrows slightly at
the rear of the home to convey a sense of depth. A fireplace
opens on three sides to the lil'ing and dining rooms and reading alcove.
A large kitch~n with ~ pantry joins the family room and
bump-out breakfast nook.
.
Outside, a vine-friendly trellised colonnade in the Greek
Revival Doric style hides the garage doors.
BY BRUCE

.

• LeBron scores 38 in ·
Cavs' win over Washington.
See Page B6

.
.s ...

••

......... ' :.., . ,..,

-'·

'i . . .

.. . ..'

'- ~ --~

'

DESIGN DETAILS
Architectural style: Greek Revival Total: 3,364 sq. ft.
Main level: 1,587 sq. ft. Upper level: 1,777 sq. ft. Garage:
4-car attached Overall width: 56 ft. Overall depth: 66 ft.
Recommended lot size: 70ft. wide, 140ft. deep Bedrooms:
4 Baths: 2-112 Laundry: main level Exterior material(s):.
cement plaster or EFIS Foundation: full basement Brick
columns 2 in. x 6 in. stud exterior walls Roof material:
asphalt shingles Attic: yes

'
Called the National Style because of their widespread popularity, Greek Revival designs feature columns, gabled or h1p roof
lines and porch roofs with wide trim bands . (AP Photosj AP Hou se of the Week)
·

Tax bills could hit mail this week
Bv

BRtAN

J.

REED

tax bills cou ld arrive in the both real estate and !railer
While Frank sai d hi s was delayed because of a
county this week .
luxes, but we don't know otl!ce ta n accept payments three-cou nty joinl vocalionThe mailing of tax bill s when the books wi ll open.
POMEROY Meigs · has been .de layed at the bee au se we don 'I know on real estate laxes without al schoo l asses,;me nt shared
County Treasurer Howard computer company . wHich when lhe bills will arri ve." a printed bill. he discour- wi th Athens and Vinton
aged ta xpayers from doing
Frank said Friday he is prints them , Frank said last
Frank said the bi'lls could so, and sa id time has been counties. Because the comunsure of when the tax month, and Mei gs must ·arrive al his o!Tice as early as
allowed for the delay in pany which prints the tax
books will open for the "wait in line" behind other mid-week, but said hi s staff receiviiig the bills in the bills on behalf of the coun collectien of real estate counties waiting for the must then assemble and preestablishment of the lax ly did not receive the needtaxes, but said the books bills to be printed.
pare 26.000 bills . represent- payment deadline.
ed information from !hose
will close on March 19.
"We know the books will ing each parcel of laxabl e
Frank believes the print- countie"i, the printing \vas
Meanwhile , long-awaited close on March 19, for real estate in the county.
ing and delivery of the bills delayed.
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Who_will be the lucky
winner
.

ESTIMATED COST OF CONSTRUCTION
(excludes ·lot)

Northeast
Southeast
Midwest
Northwest
Southwest

$336,000-$363,000
$278,000-$305,000
$293,000-$321,000
$340,000-$368,000
$298,000-$329,000

Bv J.

• -· - -

--t

ARCHITECTURAL GLOSS&gt;\RY
Cornice lines: Wide bands of trim beneath the cornice of
the main roof. Typical of Greek Revival houses.

10116-1562, cal! (877~ 22S.2954, or order at APHooseoftheweek.com. Be sure to
include the plan number. For downloadable study plans and construction blueprints of
House of the week betore April 2003, see houseoftheweek.com.

The columned entry hallway narrows slightly at the rear of
the home to convey a sense of depth. A fireplace opens on
three sides to the living and dining rooms and reading
alcove. (AP Photos/AP House of the Week)

With an angular master bedroom and a deck the upper floor has
more square footage than the main level. Jhe · stairway is lined
with bookshelves. (AP PhotosjAP House of the Week)

OBITUARIES
Page AS
· ·Mabie Hersman Cox
'

'

INSIDE
• Community calendar.
See Page A3
• Soldier rejected office
job to serve in combat zone.
See Page A6
Gifts valued at more than $600 fill this Valentine 's Day "Sweetheart Basket" to be awarded to some lucky local shopper who
name IS drawn on Feb. 13. (Charlene Hoeflich)

WEATIIER

Bv CHARLENE HoEFUCH

HOEFLICH@MVOAJLYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - One lucky
shopper at a Meigs County
business will be the winner
of a Valentine :s Day basket
to remember.
The basket is filled with
g ifts and gift certificates valued at more than $600. All
anyone has to do to be eligi-

Details on Paco AS

ble to win is to sign up a1 one
of the participating local
businesses.
The Daily Sentinel and 27
local merchants have joined
together for the "Sweetheart
Basket'' give-away.
The basket and its conlents
will be awarded through a
drawing on Friday, Feb. 13.
The winner will be contacted
by The Sentinel to schedule

a promotional pho1o which die in a crock and a coffee
will be taken at the business cup from
Rocksprin~s
which appears on the win- Rehabilitation Center 111
ning entry.
Pomeroy, a Longeberger
The rule s spec ify that basket from the Crafl Shack
those registering must be at of Pomeroy; a jewelry box
least 18 and that their name. from Ingels in Middleporl, a
phone number and name of gold chain and heart pendanl
the business musl appear on from
Acquisitions
of
the entry form. No purchase Middleport; a candle from
is necessary to participate.
Please see Winner, AS
The basket contains a can-

i.

Winter weather stalks people. in Meigs, Gallia Counties
'.

.INDEX

Bv J.

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Inpatient

Reha~llitatlon

MtLES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

____ L__ -

For a study plan of this house, send $5 to House of the Week, Box. 1562. New York, NY

National
Honor Society ·
sponsors
blood drive at
Southern
High School

Unit -

740-446·

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

The ,Holzer Medical Center Inpatient Rehabilitation Unit

Dear Abby

provides rehabilitation services for patients who have

Editorials

experienced strokes, joint replacements, .hip •fractures,

Obituaries

A3
A4
.A5

amputations, traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries,

Sports

B1

arthritis, respiratory Insufliciency and other orthopedic

Weather

A6

and neurological conditions. Our goal is to help you retum

© 2:004 Ohio Valley Publi.~Jhing Co.

MtLES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - With temperatures dipping below 10
degrees this week, people all
over are bundling up and
bracing for the cold weather.
For some people, this
means turning tip the thermostat. For others, it means
suffering through one of the
coldest winters in years.
Sandy Edwards, director of
emergency
services at
Gallia/Meigs Community
. Action, said many senior citizens living on fixed

incomes can not afford to than I , I 00 people si nce
pay high heating costs. They November. Edwards said a
must choose daily belween lot people have already used
medicine, food or utilities.
thetr one-time emergency
"There are people oul allotment for heati ng in
there that are freezing," said November. They are eligible
Edwards . ''These last two for one inore grant to help
years have been lhe coldest I with heating from the state,
have ever seen in my 23 bul ' lhere is at least a two
years
at
Communily month turnaround time on
Action."
this money.
Community Action proEdwards said the people
vides a one"time 11rant to she helps have substandard
help with heating btll assis- heating and live in drafl y
tance for people lhat qualify. ho uses. For instance. there
Commumty Action ha., spent was an old woman, well imo
well over $200,000 for more her 70s'. living on a fixed

income in · an old drafty
home ·oul in the country.
Edward's said the house had
heal, if that whal you call
small kerosene heaters and a
gas furnace that worked
when it felt like it. With
snow on the ground and icy
temperatures bealing at the
door, Edwards said lhe furnace died.
"The cold is very dangerous to senior citizens." said
Edwards.
Workers al Communit y
Action went to lhe lady's
Please see Winter, AS

RACINE - Adding 10 a
critically low blood supply,
the potentiallo collect at least
100 units of blood in the area
was lust due to recent snow
storms keeping donors at
home.
According to the Red
Cross, blood collections
across the country have been
low sometimes with an
inventory of less than a day 's
supply of many blood types.'
This is cause for greal concern. said Dr. Thomas
tighlfoot, Medical Officer
for the Greater Alleghenies
Region , as regional blood
inventories are currenlly at ·
alarmingly low levels.
"The storm is really a dou- .
ble-,dged sword." said Dr.
Lightfoot. 'Travel on icy
roads increases lhe potential
for accidents, which means
more people may need blood . .
Unfortunately, it also prevents many donors from
coming oul to give blood."
The . ·National
Honor
Socieiy at Southern High
School is sponsoring a blood
drive belween 10 p.m . to 2
p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 4 in
the gymnasium.
Cody Davis, National
Honor Society member and
vice presidem of her Senior
Class, plans lo give blood.
Davis has given blood before
and knows how important it
is especially with supplies as
low as they are.
"I am goi ng to give blood
because it is the righl thing to
do." said the graduating
senior with a perfect grade
poinl average who plans to
attend Ohio University in the
fall. "It's something we all
should do because it might be
a friend or loved one who
needs blood one day."
Like many high schools in
the area, Soulhern High
School sponsors several
blood drives each year.
Cherly Ger~ely, Red Cross
spokesperson. said hi gh
school students and college
age students provide between
15 to 17 percent of the y-early
blood collections.
Eastern High School is
leading the pack thi s year
with two blood drives netting
Please see Qrlve, AS

home as quickly and indepenclenUy as possible.
The HMC Diabetes Support Group will meet S..nd~ February 8 from
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm at tho HMC French 500 Room . .
Guest Speaker - Billie Toothman from Perdue Phormoceulicols
Diobeles Se!f.Management Proaram - February 23, 24 and 25 • 4 PM · 7 PM
HMC Educa~on &amp; Conference Center Room B
Please b1ing.o list of home meciiOOticns lo ck.ss and have proJCripfioo from your phy•icion 1o ottencl.

HEALTH SYSTEMS
~--~~~--~---~
JACKSON

QlALLIJ30LlS

Flllromyalgia Support Group
This FREE support'grotJp is sponsorecl by the Arthrifis Founclation and Holzer Medical Center
Tuesday, February 10 • 5:30PM - 8:00 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Cenler Room A
Topics diKuswtd will include...pain conlrOI, exercise, relaxation, fatigue , depression end doctor/ FXJfient ; elatiomhip,

MEDICAL CENTER
Discovel' the Holzel' D({fel'ence

,www.holzer.org

For more information,' or to register, call Missi Ross al (740)446-SI 21 or 1·800.8 I6·5131
j .

•.

)

i

-"

''

.-

�•

,Jhe Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION •WORLD

:R emembering Columbia

Monday, February 2, 2004

FITNESS
out harder or just smarter,"
said Danielle Brown, of
personal trainers Ashburn, Va., who exercises under the guidance of
may not be
Michael De Luca at a
worth ·the money health club in Reston. De
Luca made her movements
BY IRA DREYFUSS
more effective
for
. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
· instance. relieving her knee
pain
by
making her
WASHINGTON
A straighten up on leg exerpersonal trainer will keep CISeS.
an eye on your Iunges an d
Brown does not plan to·
squats for $15, or 10 times stay with De Luca, howev-·
as much. But experts warn . er. At $540 for 12 ~essions,
the higher payments don't it's too expensive for a lifenecessarily get you a better time commitment'.
workout.
No· matter what the price,
The cost of an hourlong
personal trainers have the session can range from $15
same purpose. They help to
$150,
said
Mike
national
clients work toward goals, Niede rpruem ,
such as weight loss or director for certificatipn at
achievement
in
sports. the American College of
Trainers judge where clients Sports Medicine, an organineed help, tailor exercise zation of specialists in
programs to meet those exercise physiology.
needs, and make sure the
With that wide a range,
clients do the workouts questions of quality and
with correct form. Trainers value for money arise.
also offer encouragement
"You can buy an automo- for instance, driving a bile for $10,000 to $15,000,
dedicated athlete to push · or $50,000 to $80.000, and
for one last lift or telephon- both do a great job of geting an undedicated newbie ling you from Point A to
. with a reminder to show Point B," Niederpruem said.
up.
At first glance, the higher
Even at the lowest price, fee should be hard to justiclients should expect a fy because the exercisers'
trainer to be certified by a legs do the same lunge or
recognized accrediting orga- squat no matter how much
nization .
Certification, they pay. However, like
which requires a trainer to cars, some trainers may be
pass an examination, is more reliable - or at least
insurance against bad train- offer clients a wider range
ing advice that can lead to of options.
injury:· Among the best
"You don 't do one leg
regarded certifications are lift, you do many things,"
those from the American
Niederpruem said. " It can
College of Sports Medicine, get very sophisticated very
the American Council on
Exercise and the National quickly." Clients can expect
Strength and Conditioning to pay more for an experiAssociation.
enced trainer, and should
Unlike physical therapists, expect the trainer's experiwho design workouts based · ence to help them get a
on doctors ' orders for better workout~ he said.
patients, personal trainers
However,
Niederpruem
rarely interact with doctors knew of no researc h to
because their clients are show that consumers who
generally healthy. A thera- paid more for experienced
pist might help a patient trainers got better results.
Prices are also defined by
come back from a knee
injury; a trainer would help what the market will bear
to keep uninjured knees and location
cities
strong.
where the cost of living is
"I don't know if I work higher.

Shuttle workers, debris searchers pause to remember Columbia's fall More expensive
i

BY MARCIA DUNN
'

AP AEROSPACE WRITER ·

CAPE
CANAVERAL,
Fla. - One year &lt;liter
Columbia broke apart and
fell in flaming streaks from
'the Texas sky, NASA workers who launched the shuttle
and its seven astronauts and
· then gathered up the
Temains stood united in sorrow Sunday at the precise
moment of destruction.
The first anniversary of
the catastrophe was a time
for everyone - rocket engineers, debris ·searchers,
school
children,
space
.enthusiasts, even football
to pause and
.fans remember.
"One year ago, at this
·.very hour, the unthinkable
occurred," Kennedy Space
Center's
director,
Jim
Kennedy, told the crowd of
·a· few hundred who gathered
·on a gray, drizzly morning
·at
NASA's
astronauts
memorial.
Kennedy quietly recited.
the names of the Columbia
astronauts, carved into the
·black granite monument
behind him: Commander
Rick · Husband, co-pilot
·William McCool, Michae'l
Anderson, David Brown,
Kalpana Chawla, Laurel
Clark and Israel's first
astronaut, llan Ramon.
·'They were our friends.
-They are our heroes. Their
loss will not be in vain. We
will come back bigger, bet. ter and stronger than ever
• : before, and I can assure you
· that crew and their .beloved
: families will never, ever be
forgotten," Kennedy said.
Almost all of the mourners held a lon~-stemmed
: rose. After the bnef outdoor
: ceremony, they tucked the·
· red, yellow, peach and
· ivory-colored roses into the
white fence surrounding the
memorial.
Many wiped away tears.
The ceremony began at 9
: a.m. EST, the instant NASA
: lost communication with
· Columbia over Texas on
: Feb. I, 2003.
It ended at 9: 16 a.m., the
time the spacecraft should
have landed on the Kennedy
. Space Center runway. By
: then, Columbia had shat: tered into tens of thousands
· of pieces that crashed down
on Texas and Louisiana.
A piece of fuel-tank foam
insulation l!ad tom a hole in
· Columbia's left wing during
: the mid-January liftoff and
· allowed hot atmospheric
gases to enter during atmospheric re-entry.
Knowing the astronauts
well made the anniversary
all the more painful for
Arthur Willett, a shuttle
recovery worker who spent
three weeks in Texas picking up the pieces. "Even
though working in this program day to day, you realize those things can l)appen
. - until they do, it's hard to
· take that burden on," he
::said, gripping a rose. ·
·• Tributes also were held in
:many of the East Texas
:towns where the wreckage
·:fell. The husbands of the
:•two women who died
:•aboard Columbia attended a
:·memorial in Hemphill, in a
:packed Veterans of Foreign
·Wars
hall. The memorial
•

ail Columbia

Columbia preservation team member Amy Mangiacapra shows some of the hatches off the
orbiter in the Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla.
. This is ttie perma~et repository for the recovered Columbia debris.(AP Photo/Peter Cosgrove)
ended more ·than an hour
later with a 21-gun salute.
Jean-Pierre Harrison said
he wanted to thank the people who recovered . the
remains of his wife,
Kalpana Chawla. "You are
among the best America has
to offer," he said.
Dr. Jon Clark, a NASA
neurologist who was married to astronaut Laurel
Clark, said going to East
Texas was "like coming
home."
"This is where the crew ,
came home and this is
where 1· wanted to be,"
Clark told the grieving
crowd.
In Houston, where the
Columbia astronauts lived
and Mission Control is
located, the biggest salute
of all was saved for last the Super Bowl. The
Columbia astronauts' families were invited to the
football game, along with
NASA's top officials.
The heartfelt remembrances stretched around the
planet.
In northern Israel near the
Sea of Galilee, Ramon 's
widow. four cnildren and
80-year-old father gathered
with friends and relatives at
his grave and placed white
cyclamen flowers and carnations on his tombstone.
Youngsters in Karnal.
India, Chawla's hometown,
recited prayers at the high
school where she studied
three decades earlier.
The anguish also reached
beyond Earth. From the
international space station,
astronaut Michael Foale
said not a day goes by that
he doesn't think about his
colleague~ who died.
At Cape Canaveral, 18
students from the Fort Hall
Indian Reservation in Idaho
conducted a healing ceremony following the NASA
observance.
They
had
worked on a paint experiment that flew aboard
Columbia, and spent the
past year planning Sunday's
tribute.
The youngsters from the
Shoshone-Bannock tribes

Visitors to the Space Mirror Memorial place flowers after ceremonies at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape ca·naveral, Fla.
The ceremony, on the anniversary of the space shuttle
Columbia tragedy, honors all astronauts -whose lives have
been lost in the line of duty .(AP Photo/Peter Cosgrove)
chanted traditional tribal
songs to drumbeats to honor
the dead. At about the same
time in Syracuse, N.Y., students and teachers from
Fowler High School, which
had an ant experiment
aboard Columbia, gathered
in the snow for a moment
of silence.
"Today we're one," said
Ed Galindo, the Fort Hall
science teacher who organized the student experiment and trip. "We're all
brothers and sisters for one
mission, to remember the
crew and remember the
lesson s and go on."
The rain held off during
the NASA ceremony and
the dark clouds parted. But
shortly afterward, as the
Indian tribute was wrapping
up, it poured as if in a spiritual renewal.
"This is the place where
we leave the face of the
Earth," said NASA's first
American Indian astronaut
John Herrington, who flew
on shuttle Endeavour I 1/2
months before Columbia's
doomed
mtsston. :' But
there's one gtoup who didn' t return - and they' re
still on their journey."

The Daily Sentinel's

. :
1

Voters have come to rely on The Daily Sentinel for
information about local election races and issues, and
our 2004 Primary Election Voter's Guide is an excellent
opportunity to reach over 5,000 potential Meigs County
voters wi.th your campaign message! Competitive rates
for this special publication make it an outstanding
choice for candidates.

immediately for comment.
Santa Barbara County
sheriff's ' spokesman Sgt.
Chris Pappas declined to
say whether a search warrant was executed, citing a
gag order issued in the
case .
Jackson has pleaded not
guilty to seven counts ·of
lewd or lascivious acts
with ·a child under 14 and ..
two counts of giving ~the
child
an
"intoxicating
agent," reportedly wine. He
is free on $3 million bail.

•

~ Dave Harris-at 992-2155 ext. 15
Subscribe today • 992-2155 .

'

I

or Brenda Davis at 992-2155 ext. 16
for more information.

..

't

Public meetings
Monday, Feb. 2
CARPENTER
Columbia
Township
Trustees will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the fire station .
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m ..
with appropriations meeting
followed by regular meeting
for approval. office building.
SALEM CENTER
Salem Towhship Trustees
will meet at 6 p.m. at the
Salem .firehouse on State
Route 124. Cecil Johnson is
board president. Meetings
are held the la s~ Monday of
eai::h month .
RACINE
Racine
Vil1;1ge Council will meet i1i
regular session, 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.
SYRACUSE · Sutton
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. at
Syracuse
Vi II age hall.
Tuesday, Feb. 3
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
clerk Osie Follrod.
Wednesday, Feb. 4
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustee s will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
township hall.
Thursday, Feb, 5
POMEROY - Salisbury

Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. township build·
ing at Rock Springs.

Friday, Feb. 6
POMEROY - PERI No.
74 to meet at Meigs Senior
Center, luncheon at noon
with meeting following.
DEAR ABBY: I am
James Fuller of Snyder, engaged to be married on
Fuller, Porter and Associates Valentine 's Day. He is a wonto speak about "GQlden derful man; we have been
·Opportunities."
together for three years. It
will be the second marriage
for both.
I really like this man. He's
funny, witty and kind. He
Thesday, Feb. 3
POMEROY - The Meigs loves me and my children,
County Health Department and they love him very much.
My problem is I do not feel
will have a childhood
that
we 're soul mates. Is this
immunization clinic from I
just
a fantasy? What if I'm
to 7 p.m. at . the clinic .'
Children are to be accompa- making another mistake? I
nied by parent or legal don 'I want to hurt anyone,
guardian. Take child's shot but I can't help feeling that
records and medical cards, if since I don't feel butterflies
after being with him for more
applicable.
than three years, something is
missing.
Am I being silly.or looking
for something that does not
Monday, Feb. 2
exist? - STILL LONELY IN
GALLIPOLIS - A surgi- THE MIDWEST
cal weight loss· informationDEAR STILL LONELY:
al meeting will take place
thing about "butterflies"
from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m .. at is, if you don't catch them
the Holzer Medical Center and mount them, they tend to
Education and Conference fly away. I often suspect that
Center Room AB. For more when people talk about butinformation call 1-866-821- terflies, they are describing a
4541.
mixture of anxiety and
excitement otherwise known
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer as infatuation - which isn't
Center for comprehensive permanent.
However, if you truly feel
weight loss support group,
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the lonely when you're with this
Holzer Medical Center funny, witty, kind and likable
Education and Conference man, after three years of datCenter Rooms AB. For more ing, then he isn'tthe life partinformation call 740-446- ner for you. Let him go. It
wouldn't be much of a mar5825.
ria~e if you felt you were in
sohtary confinement.
DEAR ABBY: I'm getting
death . And underlying it all
is the question about how
the hostage situation will
end. Negotiations go on and
on during those months, but
without much resolution
SANDUSKY
(AP) since the terrorists do not
Nick
Spadaccini
used to
have the hostage they
strike out when trying to
thought they could use as- a find a place to donate his
bargaining ~hip to bring the spare bowling ·trophies.
incident to an end.
After being turned down
Since one of the main by Goodwill, the Salvation
characters of "Bel Canto" Army and local bowling
.was the opera star, the roll alleys over the past two
call response was to name years, a fellow bowler sugthe
Sandusky
one's favorite singer. The gested
next meeting will be Feb. 4 Recreation Department.
Three weeks ago, the
at the home of Ida Diehl in Sandusky City Commission
Pomeroy.
Olita Heighton accepted the 23 trophies,
will review "Master of the two plaques, one medal
Senate" by Robert A. Caro. and two pins. The award
This book won the Pulitzer plates will be changed, and
Prize for biography in 2003. the trophies will be .prizes·

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will be
hosting an open door meeting with restdents to listen
to any proposals for changing the street names in the
village at 6 p.m. in Council
chambers with a Council
meeting following at 7 p.m:

POMEROY - The award
winning novel , "Bel Canto"
by Anne Patchett was
by
Dana
reviewed
Kessinger at a recent meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club at the home
of Sara Owen.
·
Patchett's most recent
awards
include
the
Pen/Faulkner Award, the
National Books Critics
Circle Award, and the prestigious Orange Prize which
. honors and celebrates fiction written by women and
publi shed in the United
Kingdom. It was noted that
one of her books was
adapted into a television
. movie for CBS.
The book is based loosely
on a true incident that took
place in 1996 in Peru when
a band of terrorists took
over the Japanese Embassy,

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
between . Dec. 6 and Jan. 25
are as follows: Kyle G.
Counts, Coolville, display
plates/valid sticker, $20 and
· costs; Frederick W. Cowans,
Reynoldsburg, speeding, $30
and costs; Timothy J. Cox,
Gallipolis, speeding, $50 and
costs; Anna M. Cozart,
Portland, assured clear dis·
tance. $20 and costs; Nicky
L. Craycraft, Pomeroy,
firearms/motor vehicle, $100
and
costs;
John
M.
Cremeans. Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and costs; James L.
.Critchley, Toledo, seatbelt,
$30 and costs;
Matthew L. Crockett,
speeding , $30 and costs; Bill
Curry, . Lancaster, speeding,
$30 and costs; Travi s S.
Curtis, Pomeroy, seatbelt,
$30 and costs; John E.
· Custer, St. Petersburg, Pa.,
speed ing, $30 and costs;
Kevin D. Oalton, Albany,
drug abuse, $1 00 and costs,
use/possession drug paraphenalia, $100 and costs, no
drivers license , $100 and
costs, driving . .in ·marked
lanes, $100 and costs; Gerald
A. Danes, · Rossford, .speeding, $30 and costs; Yvonne
Darst .. Pomeroy. passing bad
cliecks, $2S an·d costs;

Thesday, Feb. 10
POMEROY - The Meigs
Counry Agricultural Society
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
office.

Clubs and
Organizations
1\Jesday, Feb. 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM. will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
All lodge officers and members to attend for a preinspection meeting with district deputy.

Support Groups

The

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Assoc., 8:30 a.m., Peoples
Bank.
Thursday, Feb. 5
POMEROY Holzer
Hospice Meigs County "dinner with friends" 6 p.m. at
Crow's Resta.urant. Call
992-7463 for more information.

holding their hostages for
months.
However, "Bel
Canto" is pure fiction and
the characters are not the
ones from the news story.
According to Kessinger;
the book revolves around a
number of themes: South
American
terrorists,
Japanese businessmen ,' a
reverse
Stockholm
Syndrome, and opera. It
deals with the failure of terrorists to take captive the
president they wanted, how
they ended up with 200
hostages they didn't want,
the release of some, the
weeks that turned into
months, the comfort zoned
they enjoyed, the strange
but friendly domestic relations which evolved, and
the romance that took place.
It explores music, friendship, romance, and even

.. .... ... ...... . .......
~·

"

~

... ....,.....,. '

'

married in the summer.
. Everything is great except for
one issue that is about to
explode. I have two nieces, 3
and 8, who will be flower
girls along with a third girl.
My fiancee wants the girls to
be taken to another room
with a baby sitter after the
ceremony and cocktail hour.
. I fear an ugly scene
because my older niece and I
have a special relationship,
and she loves weddings. My
family would like her to stay
for the reception.
It's the bride's day, of
course, and I want her to have
trni wedding of her dreams.
How should I handle this'1 GROOM -TO-BE
WHO
NEEDS HELP
DEAR GROOM-TO-BE:
Handle it firmly. The wedding is not only the bride's
day, it is also your day. While
I understand the wisdom of
the small children being
entertained separately, the 8year-old .should be mature
enough to behave prqperly at
the celebration. Since you
want her there, she should not
be excluded.

DEAR ABBY: My 10year-old. son is extremely
sensitive . The kid s in hi s
class know it and love to pick
on him . I've talked to his
teacher, but she can' t seem to
catch them in the act.
I don't know what else to
do. He is becoming,depressed
and eati ng less and le" . rm
worried abo ut him . but I
don't know what to tell him
to make him feel better. How
can I help him ? - CAR ING
MOTHER IN GEORGIA
DEAR MOTHER ; Get
your son involved in outside
activitie s and give him a
chance to cultivate new
friends who haven 't been
intluenced by his classmate s.
Thi s will also give him a
chance to excel at somethi ng
that interests him. Being bul lied is something that can
affect a pe;son's se lf-image
for many years. Some sessions with a counselor to help
him build self-esteem may
also be in order.
P:s. Most important . notify
the school principal. who can
and should implement a
"zero tolerance" policy
toward bullying.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and wa s founded by her
mother. Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440. Los Angeles. CA
90069.

Man finally finds place
for his bowling trophies

under suspension/revocation,
costs only, failure to control,
costs only;
Thomas
A.
Devore,
Columbus, speeding, $30 and
costs; Michael E. Dixon,
Albany, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Judy M. Dressel,
Gallipolis, speeding, $30 and
. costs; John B. Duffy,
Corning, speeding, $30 and
costs; David E. Durbin,
Coolville, no operators
license, $50 and costs, seatbelt-passenger, $20 and
costs; Michael A. Durnell,
Belpre, improper passing ,
$20 and casts; Ralph C.
Easter, Ripley, W.Va., speeding, $30 and costs; David
Elkins, Pomeroy, disorderly
conduct. $50 and costs;
Patricia A. Elliott, Bidwell.
seatbelt, $30 arid costs;
Robert D. Ellis, Racine, passing bad checks, costs only;
Oliver H. Enoch, Given,
W.Va., speeding, $50 and
costs; Constance R. Enslen,
Racine. . $30 and costs;
Thomas E. Eslocker, Athens,
seatbelt. $3o and costs;
Penny Evans, Middleport,
passi ng bad checks, $25 and
costs;
Stephanie
J. Eo,:ener,
Charleston, W.Va., speeding,
$30 and costs; Ree A.
Facemyer, Coolville, speeding, $30 and costs: Terry E. .
Farren, Proctorville, seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Natalie , J.
New Haven, W.Va.,
'sp&lt;~edmg. $30 and costs;

Pomeroy, left of center,
House, W.Va .• seatbelt, $30
and costs: Edna G. Davis.
costs;
Michael
A.
Ferree,
Rutland, vio-staiting/backirig, and
. $20 and costs; Sonny J . Parkersburg, W.Va., speed~ Davis, Minford, seatbelt; $30
ing, $25 and costs; Joshua D.
and costs; Keith ~:. Day, Fogle, Tuppers Plains, u~reaMiddleport, open contamer m sonable speed for condtllOns,
motor vehicle, $25 and costs, $25 and costs; Jason N.
DWI and or drugs of abuse, Foley, Coolville, reckless
$350 and costs, endangering • ~~[s~tion of vehicle, $20 and
' children, costs onl~, driving

Dear
Abby

Other events

Literary Club members hear review of "Bel Canto"

.

'
• ..

Monday, February 2, 2004

Community Calendar--

Cases heard in
Meigs County Court

:jMichael Jackson music producer
and 4 in the afternoon,
said John Caffrey, a deputy
with the Los Angeles .
County sheriff's department. The home is in Los
Angeles County.
Schaffel, who produced
"What
Jackson 's
song
More Can I Give" two
years ago, was not at
home during the . search,
"Entertainment
Tonight" reported on its Web site.
The producer has an
unlisted telephone number
and could not be reached

BY THE -BEND
Bride has second thoughts
about second time around

Court News

. ~Authorities search home of former
• LOS ANGELES (AP) :Authorities ' searched. the
.·home of one of Mtchael
::Jackson's former music
::producers for an hour
·:Saturday but refused to
:·disclose how or even if the
·:search was connected to
:the sex abuse .charges the ·
1·
:entertainer is facing.
Sheriff's
investigators
_ _ ;.;from_
·Santa ___ Barbara
---· ;.County, where Jacksor!'s
,
:.case is unfolding, searched
·:the Calabasas residence of
·:Marc Schaffel between 3 .

·PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

r',

.

at the city's summer bowling camp.
"I just wanted to find a
place where they could go
to use," said the 77-yearold Spadaccini, who has
been bowling since high
school. "I was getting to
the point where I was
going to put them at the
recycling place."
Sue Skinner-Martin, the
city's recreation director,
said her department usually
doesn't
get
donations
unless it asks for them.
"We usually do ribbons or
medals, but with the budget
being so tight this year, we
probably wouldn't have
done anything," she said.

Keeping .
Meigs
informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992·2155

il

··~::

••

Valentine's Loan
•,

*FREE
** PENSION
**** '
1} .

·.

·
1.f Do you have questions about your pensiOn

* benefits? Receive'FREE ·penslon
*
* aingservice
from the .Ohio Pension Rights Project, w
of Pro Seniors, Inc. you are anlll

If
Ohio {esident and have quesUons-regardor__Qtber_n:tirement J!e_netit~, · .
calll-800-488-6070 between 8:30a.m. and iJf
'k
4:30p.m., Monday-Friday, to schedule a 1f
..!)...
..!)...
H
free-telephone appointment with one of H
..!)...
p
'd
.·
*:
W our attorneys. ro Seniors also pro VI es · .
ltree legal advice regardin-g other issues for
.
Ohioans age 60 &amp; over.

~

'•

Ji.\1

..!)...

* };} ···

Borrow as little as

..!)...

counsel~

lfr-

Credit X press wants this to be your best Valentine's
Day ever, so we're offering a special "Biing Sling
· Thing" Valentine's Loan until February 13th.
Everyone's sweetheart is wishing for a ring or
something special, so here's your opportunity.

lt ~ lt ,._ :=:!.l'J

'""'41f'"'..,.
Wm 3 dozen roses!
.If you're one of the first dozen people who qualify tor tlli• loan
you tzel a-dozen roses. We're' alilo holding a coniCS! in which o~c
lucky ·winner-will-wln-three-do:~en-rosesc-lusl~send-u..-a- letter­
e~plaining the most romantic thing yoo've ever done for your
sweetie or have had done ·ror you. l..eners may be mailed,
e-mailed. or delivered to
office in Pomeroy.

oor

W7n'Credit ·

Call today'

~!:.!li~~~ 992-177i
E~mail: credit@creditxpress.com

124 W. Main St. • Pomeroy, Ohio
I•

�•

OPINION

-The Daily Sentinel

·

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller' lnterim Publisher

PageA4
Monday, February 2,

•

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishmeut of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceablJ' to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
DID YOU FINISH

THE TEST?

ALMOST... I

DIDN'T GIVE
MYSELF ENOU6H
TIME TO

PRAY.

' We were mi sled - misled not only in the intelligence. but mi sled in the way
that the president look us to
war .. . I think there's been an
enormous amount of exaggerati on. stretching, deception.' - John Kerry, the
Democrat who came in first
in the New Hampshire primary
'The administration did
cook the books.' - Howard
Dean. the Democrat who
came in second in the New
Hampshire primary
We were mi s led~ The
Bush administration cooked
the books?
•
Welcome to the ugliest,
n;tstiest
policy
serum
Americans have ever had to
ret'eree in a presidential election year. Rather than hearing a philosophical or strategic alternative to the Bush
foreign policy, we are, being
asked to vote Democrat
because leading Democrats
charge that the incumbent
Republican administration
wi llfull y
' misled '
the
American people into war exaggerating, stretching, and
deceiving - with a scheme
to 'cook the books.' Are
these heinous accusations
true?
To be sure, inspectors in
lr~q
ha ven't found the
weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) Presiden~ Bush and
Vice President Cheney
warned against. This comes
as a shock to us all, including Bill Clinton, Tom
Daschle, the Carnegie
Endowment for International
Peace,
Ted
Kennedy,
Jacques Chirac, AI Gore,
German intelligence, Bob

Even
Ket ry-boos1ing,
Bush-bashing Ted Kennedy
got on the record about
Saddam Hussein and his
WMD. And in fall of 2002.
AI Gore said, ' We . know
Diana
(Sauuam Hussein ) has stored
West
secret supplies of biological
and che1:n ical
weapons
throughout his country.· ·
Simi lar talk has come
from the Bush administraGraham, the United Nations, tion . wilh one enormous difMadeleine Albright, Hans ference. While George W.
Blix, even John Kerry Bush recognized the same
just some of the subscribers threal his predecessors recto the old Saddam-equals- ognit.ed. he alone has been
WMD theory that inspired commilled ll1 acting against
former President Clinton to it. Others were content to
warn against 'the threat describe the 1h1:eat. to rail
posed by Iraq's weapons of against it and do nothing. As
mass destruction program· Colin Powell said recently.
six yeaFS-&lt;lgo. (As recently as 'The president took the case
last October, Clinton told the to the international commuprime minister of Portugal ntly ami said: For 12 years,
he believed Saddam Hussein you have been de lled. What
possessed WMD until the are you going lo do now? It's
end of the dictator's regime.) time for u ~ to act. ·
Think of it (thanks to
II "'"' I2 years of inaction.
columnist Wi Iliam Rusher. just
., uch as any illicit
who compiled the following wea1 11s programs. that
set of quotations ): It was challenged the rule of law
then-Secretary of State and I he- peace of the world.
Madeleine Albright , not Durin g thai same period .
nr even Islamic
terrori o;ts drew
Condi Rice George W. Bush - who in strength from perceived
1998 said, 'The risk that the American weakness. planleaders (of Iraq) will use ning and executing attacks
nuclear, chemical or biologi- that culminated in the catacal weapons against us or clysm of Sept. II . Not only
our allies is the greatest is the world a safer place
wit hout
security risk we face.' That now
Saddam
same year, Democratic sena- Hussein and hi s terroristtors including Tom Daschle, haven nation, it is also a
Carl Levin and current pres- safer place because the Bush
idential front-runller John administration showed thai _
Kerry urged Clinton ' to· the United States is as good
respond effectively to the as its word.
threat posed by Iraq's refusal
Forme r chief . weapons
to end its weapons of mass inspector David Kay doesn't
destruction programs.'
believe inspecto)'S will ever

Arizona girl, 3, spends five
days alone after car wreck
that killed her mother
PHOENIX
- As Sgt.
Daye Wander's patrol truck
rolled along the dirt shoulder of a rural highway, he
spotted a wrecked ·green
sedan entangled in a tree,
its windows pierced by
branches.
The officer parked his
truck and climbed 20 feet
down an embankment, thinking that whoever wa.' in that
car pro;,bably hadn't survived.
Wander saw a woman's
body, but as he got closer,
he saw something that
stunned him: a dark-haired
little. girl emerging from
under a blanket.
Three-year-old
Angel
Emery-Wade - damp and
shivering with a smal l bump
over her right eye - was
curled up next to her mother,
who is believed to have died
on impact live days earlier.
''The little girl was chattering away looking up -out the
window toward me," Wander
said during a media briefing
after the Jan. 26 rescue. "She
came right to me. She was
very, very friendly."
Angel was thirsty and cold
but escaped serious injury,
even though the temperature
in Globe, about 80 miles ea.'t
of Phoenix, had dipped to 28
degrees and rain fell through
the shattered windows.
The girl apparently had
crackers to eat, and authorities found an empty water
bottle in the back seat.
Police said Angel was
suffering from frostbite
when ·she was tlown to
. Mari copa Medical ,Center in
Phoenix, but hospital offi-

intelligence · agencies were

blind to lr:1q's unravelin g in
the 1990s, when Kay
believes
that
nation
stopped trying to mass-produ ce WMD. Western intel ligence also failed to reco gnize the advanced state of
both Libya's and Iran's
nuclear programs. ' I think
Ba g hdad was ac tu ally
becomin g more dangerou s

in the la st twn years than
even we reali1.ed.' Kay told
Tom
Brokaw.
NBC' s
·saddam was not controlling the society any longer.
In rhe marketplace of terrorism ;md of WMD. Iraq
could wei I have been thai
supplier if the war had nol
intervened .'
Nothing misleading about
that.
( Dimlll West is a columnist
for Tile Washington Times.
She C(lll he co ntacted l'ia

dianaii'H' @\'eri:ott.llet.)

Tutoring
canceled

E
0

u
~

tl

~

E
0

u
~

t;fAAL~~·

~
~

Letters to the editor are ~velcome. They should
: b~ less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
:editing and must be signed and include addre.~s
:and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
: addressing issues, iwt personalities.
• The opinions expressed in the column are the
:consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishin"g Co. s.
editorial board, unless othetwise noted.

The·Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon,
Our malri concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, I 11 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Slreel. Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, calllhe newsroom al (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The. Daily Sentinel, 111
Department extensions are: Cowt Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
News
Subscription Rates

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14

By carrier or motor route

Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext 13

Advertising
Sates: Dave.l)arris, Ext 15CiaosJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

. -Outllde

Circulation
• District Mgr.: TBA, Ext 17

--

One month . . .. .. .. ... . .'9.95
One year ............'119.40
Dally ...................so•
Senior Citizen rates
One month ... ~ ......... '8.95
One year ............ ....'96.70
Subscribers should remit in
, advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subscription by mail
perrilitted in areas where home
carrier serVicels available.

-

Mall Subscription
Inside M-gs c;ounty
13 Weeks . . . . ........ 1 30.15
26 Weeks ............. '60.00
52 Weeks .. . ...... . . .'118.80

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
•
•

.•

POMEROY - Tutoring
classes to be held at the
Meigs Elementary School
Monday .have ~een canceled.
They wi II be rescheduled at a
later date.

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

. LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

E-mail:
newsOmydailysenlinel.com

Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ............ ' 50.05
26 Weeks . . . .. ....... '100.10
52 We~ks ... : , . .. . . . .'200.20

Web:

www.mydailysentinel.com

For this Dean supporter, it's personal

~

. -- . .

cials said she was released
two days later without losing any fingers or toes.
The girl's ordeal began Jan.
2 I when she and her mother,
Patty Marie Wade, 44,
embarked midday on a mad
trip from their Phoenix home
to visit relatives in Show
Lnw, about 170 miles away.
The car spun off the mad,
hit a large tree and stopped
just over a small dry creek
bed, according to Depanment
of Public Safety Officer Tom .
Gamboa. Tree branches broke
through, the windows. obscuring the wreckage.
Patty Wade's family had
driven the route after the
disappearance looking for
her car, but came up empty.
Only a tall truck and a
perfectly timed glance out
the side window led to discovery of the wreckage by
an anonymou~ driver, who .
notified police .
Had it not been for that
driver, "we wouldn't have
found her, or well, eventually
we would have. But it may
have been too late," Gamboa
said. "She broke every odd
possible, I'm telling you."
Angel was likely lying
down on the se~t behind her
mother at the time of the
crash, which probably saved
her life, Gamboa said.
"If she would have been
in the child restraint seat,
she would have been hurt.
In I8 years of doing this,
that 's the first time I could
say that," he said.
After Wander plucked Angel
fmm the mangled sedan. she
sat in his· patrol truck shivering
and drinking water from a
thennos, he said.
She said something about
water and the bump on her
head and was able to give
Wander her mother's name.
She seemed most interested in getting moce water.
Every time she finished a
cupful , she pointed and
asked for more.
When nurse Bryan Ross
came to take her aboard a
Native Air medical helicopter, she was willing to go
but resisted giving up the
cup. "Nol no, I want water,,
Ross recalls her saying.
Rea'iSUI"OO thai she would get
more wdler and f&lt;XXI, she boarded the heliOO(Er wide-eyed and
lalkative, with Ross' jacket over
her light animal-print ~ama tqJ
and pwple pajama bottoms. She
had no shoes on, and she was
still shivering,
HallWay throogh the 50-minute
rire to the ha;pilal with the rem
crdllked and thetmal IXk' I.IIXH
her arms, she tell ~Angel's
relatives
have
. declined
media
interview
llX(tieSts but released a statement
calling her "our mimcle ruby."
"Angel's
recovery
is
great. She is walking, talking and being the wonderful child that she is," said
Angel's aunt, Linda Emery.
"Our goal now is to rut
her first, shower her with
love and bring normalqy to
this tragic situation."

Arlyn Serber looked from
began working on the cam- speculating. Serber's . candithe binder to the stenciled
paign after watching Dean at date is done .
number on the curb, trying to
Serber is unbowed.
a rally.
figure out whether the house
·I was praclically getting
'When I heard him say,
was on her canvassing list.
'You have the power,' I just spit on at the gym (after
from Page A1
She had never gone door-towent, 'l do, I do.' I never felt Dean's speech),' Serber said,
Joan
door for anything, and now
that way before ,' she said. as we walked back to her car.
75 pints of blood . With only
here she was on a gray
Ryan
Her closest brush with poli- 'People would see my button
blood drive each so far this
Saturday morning in an unfatics betore that had been and say. 'Oh, l used to be fur
year,
Gergely said students
miliar San Rafae l, Calif. ,
wearing a Kchnedy button in him. But he's too angry.' Too
and
staff
at Meigs High
neighborhood.
1960.
·
angry'? I'm the one who's
have
donated 48 pints
School
'I'm amazed I'm doing Barbara Barnes' house in San
Dressed in sneakers. jeans angry - angry about the
whereas .students/staff at
thi•s,' she said. 'But I said I'd Rafael, Calif., recently to anp a pink cotton sweater direc1ion this country is
Southern
have donated 29
do thi s because I'm even canvass nearby neighbor- over a pink turtleneck, Serber going.·
pints.
Last
year Southern
worse on the phone.'
hoods. One woman research- drove to a nearby street and
Serber dro~e back to
High
School
gave the most
Since May, the 59-year-old es • transportation at UC began knocking on doors.
Barnes' house to drop off the
blood at 89 pints, decimating
has been showing up at meet- Berkeley. Another is a real
' Have you decided yet on a binder. She would be writing
the
competition at both
ups, handing out bumper estate appraiser. A paralegal candidate? ' Serber asked letters this week to voters in
70 rints, and Meigs,
Easterh,
stickers and buttons, and who had just finished a 60- after introducing herself as a upcoming primaries around
54 pints - Meigs only had
writing dozens of letters to hour work week showed up Dean campaign worker.
the country. She would be
blood drive.
one
voters in states with upcom- with her 9-year-old son.
'I'm Kerry all the way,' one back next Saturday for more
"We
really depend on
ing primaries on behalf . of Barnes is an office manager woman said. ' Dean just canvassing. ·
young
donors
to support the
her candidate, .Howard Dean. for
the
Alzheimer's doesn'r appear to be a balFor Serber and others,
needs of patients in area hosThat's how she phrases it: my Association.
anced person. Oh, r'!JY God , their candidmes are more
pitals," said Gergely.
candidate.
·
Serber is a mother of two he's nuts.'
than politicians aspiring for
So when Dean finished grown children who moved
' OK , thank you,' Serber higher office . They are prox third in Iowa last Monday from Cleveland 35 years a~o replied. marking "the woman ies. playing out in public
with just 18 percent of the as a self-described hippte. down in her binder as a '4.' their followers' personal
vote, and was then merciless- ·But as I tell my children, I meaning a voter who is sup- hopes, pass ions. frustra!y ridiculed for his frenzied always kept my shoes on,' porting a ditlerent candidate. tions. sense of justice. Dean
speech afterward, 'it felt very she said. She worked in
Block after block, Serber is unlikely ever to meet
from Page A1
personal,' Serber said.
advertising, then at a juvenile rang bells, talked to nervous Serber or even know her
For her, it is personal. The hall near Auburn for several old ladies t hrough kitchen name . But she has given
· d
dd
1
1
home and provided a new
second place finish in New years. For the past decade, wm
ows, pette ogs, apo o- over 1er ni ght s and weekwall furnace. Edwards said
Hampshire with 26 percent she has been helping her car- gized for waking the baby, ends and even tak en time
of the vote is personal. mechanic husband promote a apologized for not noticin~ away from her husband's car
within hours , a very collt
Despite big-money contribu- new kind of front car seat he the 'No Soliciti ng' sign, left seats on her candidate's
house became warm again.-·
"We take it for granted that
tions, despite widespread patented to minimize injuries Dean information sheets on behalf, believin g that by
·
·
'
w
e
can walk into our homes
cynicism about the political in an accident. ('We've been doorknobs and recorded all reaching the voters orr'
·
and
turn on thermostat u~ if
process .. Se'r ber and thou- knocking on Detroit's door the information in her binder. Thyme and Tamarack and
we are cold," she said. " ut
Most of the registered vo.t- Tanbark streets , she can
sands like her ·Still believe · f()r a long time,' she said.)
what if you .don't have that
.. -that knocking on ·somebooy's · She· gives ·her -friends and · ers on Serber's Jist had_not - 1nove him an inch -ur · two
door en Tamarack Street-en-a family · a collection of her made up therr- minds:-;\-fter-- duseno-th-e-wtr\te House . ~----option .Jhere are__.man.)'.J::hil'Sometimes 1 think, 'Gee,
dren and seniors that are ·
Saturday morning can inllu- poems as Chri stmas gifts. 90 minutes of canvassing.
she
had
identified
only
two
after
he
wins.
what
will
1
going to go to bed tonight
ence who becomes our next ' Everybody knows . I don't
Dean
supporters.
.
·
do?'
Serber
said.
'This
has
cold.
Would you like that to
president.
have any money,' she said,
Perhaps Dean's so-called 'I become so much a part of my
be your child or mother."
'Bequse it's a .reaf person laughing.
Edwards said a mother and
speaking to them and not a . Serber decided on Dean Have a Scream' speech life.'
scared
some
people
away.
(Juan
Rwm
is
a
columnist
her
three young children
sou nd bite, people will listen last May, when , intent on
were co ping with the cold
and then they'll go tell peo- getting President .Bush out of .Perhaps that one regrettable for th e S1w Francisco
until
the
temperatures.
ple, and that's h?w things the White House, she read moment knocked the legs out Chronicle . Smd com 11 wn(s 10
from
under
everything
Iter
in
care
of
tlt'
i
s
lt
ews(laper
dropped
in.
t~e
last few
happen,: Serber satd.
tlirough the position papers
weeks. The turnac.e was broSerber was one of six peo- of all the Democratic ·candi- Serber has been working for. or send her e-mail at joanken and there was no money
ple who showed-. up · at dates_ on the Internet. She Perhaps. as some pundits are ryan@~fclmmic/e. com)

Drive

Winter

,..,. '

'·'

' 'talent show
produces
future stars
at Southern
Elementary

GALLIIPOLIS - Mable Hersman Cox, 84, Gallipolis,
died Sunday, Feb. I. 2004. in the Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. Funeral services will be held at ll a.m.
Tuesday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. The
Rev. Bob Hersman will officiate. Burial will be in the
Mina Cemetery in Green Township. Friends may call from
6 to 8 p.m. Monday at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

Bv MICHELLE RUSHLO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Local Briefs

School News

Mable Hersman Cox
find warehouses ful I of
newl y-m inted WMD
althouoh he also says that
becau~ of 1he looting that
took place durin~ the ~nva-_
sion. and the Iraqi trunster ol
unspecified cargoes to Syria.
any complete reckoning of
Iraqi stockpiles is impossi ble. Si~ni fie ant discovenes
to date mclude an lraqt elforl
circa 20Q."l 10 produce biological weaponry using the
poison ri cin . and evide1KC
that Iraq tried to revive its_
nuclear weupons program in
2001 and ~ 001. According to
Kay, Iraq ·' nuclear program
ne ver gol as far as those of
Libva or Iran .
Which i&gt; probably the
biggcsl bqmhshe ll nf all.
Ju st as lhe CIA and other

to fix it. Edwards said times
w,ere hard for this family and
many others because of the
high unemployment rate
stalking the region. During
the past year, Meigs County
alone boasted a double digtt
unemployment rate usually
topping 14 percent.
Workers with Community
Action came knocking at the
door where the mother an d
her three children lived and
installe~ a new furna~e for
the famt-ly. ~dwards satd the
~~man-was g~;ateful-for thee~~mtnunity Action helped
more than 3,000 people last
vear with heating weather&lt;
.
.
1zat10n
an d ot h'er tssues.
\Yhile there are .success. stones, Edwards satd. there IS so
much more she wtshes could
be
and people that could
be done
helned
" ·

.,...._. _., .,.. ____ v_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _._....,._ _ _

The Daily Sentinel•.Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Obituaries

2004

As ·nasty ~ it gets

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Monday; February 2,

~_....:,

RACINE
Southern
Elementary sponsored a talent search
recently with
dozens of bqys and girls in
grades
. kindergarden
through fourth grades participating.
The "Star Search" directed by Amy Roush included
singers. dancers, magicians
and a puppet show with 29
acts
being
presented
before over 200 people.
Winners of the search
were Dimitrous Lamm.
first; Jacob Hoback, sec ond; and Darien Diddle
and Lacey Hupp, third.
. In April the winners will
compete against the winners of the fifth through
eighth grade Southem "Star
Search" competition scheduled for Feb. 19.

Nationwide ACT
test is
April 3 for
college-bound ·
students
Registration deadline
Feb. 27
POMEROY
Collegebound liigh school students
can
take
the
ACT
Assessment on April 3, the
next nationwide test date.
The registration postmark
deadline is Feb 27. Late
registration postmark deadline is March 12 but an
additional fee is required
for late registration) .
For more information.
including registration forms
and test locations. contact
your high school guidance
counselor or register online
on ACT's
website
http://www.act.org
The
website . also has helpful
information, sample tests
and the opportunity to
order test prep materials.
The test fee is $26 .
ACT scores are accepted
by virtually all colleges
and universities in the
nation, including all Ivy
League schools. Colleges
use ACT scores. along with
a student's high school
GPA, high school courses
taken, extracurricular activities and other information
to help determine admissions and ·the appropriate
course placement for new
students.
The ACT Assessment is
an achievement test in
English, reading, · math and
science. It measures what
student s have learned in
high school. and the skills
required for success in college. It is not an aptitude
test.
·
Some students find it
more comfortable than an
aptitude test because it
reflects their high school
curriculum.
Students
who
have
already. taken the ACT can
take it again and try for a
higher score. Juniors can
use their scores to examine
academic weaknesses, take
courses to correct those
wealsnesses and re-take the
exam as seniors. Students
who take the exam more
than once can report only
their highest composite
score to prospective col leges if they choose.

Washington
State plans
open house
MARIETTA
Washington
State
Community College invites
prospective studenls and
interested individuals to
attend the next open house
showcasing business and
public service technologies.
The program. set
for Tuesday, Feb. I0. at 6
p.m., provides the opportunity for anyone to learn
more about the college and
·
its programs.
The business and public
service technologies open
house
will
focus
on
Washington State majors
that lead to a variety of
career opportunities, including computer and informatior
technology.
Information will be available on accounting . business administration transfer,
business ominagement , ecommerce marketing. real
estate , computer systems,
computer support technician, programming and languages. computer graphics,
mass media-broadcasting .
digital media, medical transcription, medical administrative assistant, and executive administrative assistant,
as well as social services
and early childhood development.
The evening also features
tours of labs and classrooms. Student Services
representatives
will
be
available to discuss admissions,financial aid, and
more .
To register for the open
house call the Student
Services office at 740-3748716. or email admissions@wscc.edu.

Interactive ·
distance
learning
courses offered
'

MARIETTA
Interactive distance learning
courses from
Otterbein
College's graduate nursing
program are available at
Washington
State
Community College
in
Marietta. March 4, I to 3
and 4 to 6 p.m.
Using an interactive compressed video (ICY) system , Otterbein's nursing
faculty can teach graduate
courses in classroom sessions at various campuses,
with opportunities for oncampus and off-campus
student interaction.
Distance Learning classrooms are equipped with a
broadcast camera, microphones and a television
monitor that allows students to view lectures.
videotapes and computer
displays. In addition. students can see other students enrolled in the course
at other distance learning
locations.· The classroom is
designed to facilitate discussions and student presentations at distant sites.
For more information
about the program, call
(614) 823-3210 or 1-888749-8550.

Ohio 124 opens

Dance
classes resume

HOCKINGPORT - Ohio
124. approximately one
mi Ie north of Hockingport.
has a one- lane. signalized
closure in place to allow for
the replacement of a box
culvert . A 14-foot width
restri clion 'is in effect for
the open lane.. It was
expected that the project
would be delayed by one
week
due
to
recent
inclement
weather.
but
recently-poured concrete has
cured well thereby allowing
the Ohio Department of
Transportation to open the
route to traffic with no
restrictron by late Friday.
There will still be a full
closure on I 24 approximately I .5 miles south of
Hockingport
in
Meigs
County beginning Tuesday.
It is a separate project at a
nearby but separate location .

POMEROY
The
Tuesday evening Civil War
dance classes held in preparation for last year's reenactment will resume on
the first Tu esday of the
in
month
beginning·
February and continuing
through June.
Anyone interested in coming out and having an
enjoyable evening is welcome to attend, regardless
of whether th'ey earlier took
the classes or whether they
have a costume.
Classes will again be
called by "Ms Rosebud ".
The
and Gerald Powell.
first class is scheduled for
Tuesday, 7:30 toiO p.m. at
the
Meigs
Elementary
School , Rutland
Each class fee which covers expen ses will be $3 per
person. Thi s family activity
is sponsored by the Chester
Shade
Historical
Association. For more intormation contact Pat Hnlter.
992 -7261 or Mary Powell.
992-2622.

Association
meets
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association
will
meet
Tuesday at R:30 &lt;~.m. at
Peoples Bank.

Legal Briefs
Marriage license

Divorce

POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued by
Meigs County Probat; Court
Judge L. Scolt Powell to
Wesley Buckley. 23. · and
Stephanie Barber. 2 I. both of
Coolville .

POMEROY - An action
for divorce has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Cour1 by Raymond E.
Proffitt. Racine . . against
Patricia A. Proffitt. Pomeroy.

·Disaster recovery
centers open Monday
COLUMBUS (AP)
hit
hard
by
·Ohioan s
January's se vere weather
can seek assistance slarting
Monday at three relief centers run hy federal and state
officials.
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency is
operating disaster recovery
centers in Grove Ci ty in
central Ohio. Dillonvale in
eastern Ohio and Marietta in
southeastem Ohio.
Available aid includes
grants for temporary housing and home repairs and
low-cost loans to cover
uninsured property losses.
The centers will al so offer
advice for reducing future
disaster risks and referrals
to federal and state assistance programs.
The U.S. Small Bu sine ss

Administration wi ll tle available at the ··enters to assist
victoms with low -interest
busine" loan applications.
Residents of Franklin.
Jefferson, Licking , Morgan.
Ross.
Tuscarawas
and
Wa shington co untie s who
have damaged homes or
businesses can ca ll 1-800621-3362 to apply for assistance before visiting a
recovery center.
President Bush declared a
disaster on Janu;ory 27 in
those counties. making federal assistance available to
families and individuals
copi ng wit h storm. flood.
mudslide and lands!ide damage. Local governments in
several olhcr counties also
arc receiving assistance w
repair disaster-damaged public facilities.

Celebrating special dti}'S ·
with you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-992-2155

'.

c..

·•

• •

I

• a
""'"'
~11111-~.

',.

.'

"

WI. nner

Nails by Pam of Middleport.
and Added Touch of
Middleport.
from Page A1
There is a $10 gift certificate from McClure's Family
H
fl
f
R
f p
d
estaurants o omeroy an
earts Ag1ow ; a ag rom
Two. on the T's Middleport Middleport, a $25 tanning
Department Store and Sue's certificate from Melissa Style
S7lectables of Middleport.. a . and Tan of Pomeroy, a gift
ptctu_re frame from OffiG~-- basket from - MTddleporr
Servtce
Supply
of
Middleport and a · $20 ' gift Flowe[ · Shop, hand towels
certificate from Judy Kay 's · from The Fabnc Shop of
.of Middleport.Pomeroy, a bas\cet from
_ Also included are_ a box_gf__ H&lt;trtwell Hou ~e of Pomeroy,
Russell Stover candy and dinner for two .from Crow's
bear from Swisher and Lohse Family Restaurant, a signaof Pomeroy; a bear from the_ tu~e bag from Curves of
Pomeroy Flowaker fShop hot Mtddleport, dmmond earPomeroy,
e rom
·
from Cl ark •.s Jewe1ry, .a
D
. Q a cfM"dd
l rtt e. nngs
crat!f'al u~e:s~ fr~m ep~&amp;~ Boyd's Bear from Francis '
Je~elers of . Pomeroy; $20 Florist of Pomeroy, and a
gift certificate . from Millie's Cal's Meqw Collectible from
Restauran
.
1 of Bradb ury, the . Anderson's. Furniture of
Wild Horse Cafe of Pomeroy, Pomeroy.
c

Serta Perfect Sleeper

Firm Support or Pillow lloll .
10 v••
o~

,$6.9 9"

Warr•ntr

..•.
Set ...

Twin set

lf.ull set

King aet

'549

'659

'959

- Serta Pillow Soft

-(Serta
·-.__/

---

We Make The ~orlds
Best Mattresses."'

$10.00 Down
$10.00 Per Month
~APR For
12 Months

c

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __

_

.;_

_ . . L __ _ _ _

.

' I

�PageA6

OHIO
Soldier rejected office job
to serve in combat zone

The Daily Sentinel

-

Monday, February 2
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
24 - 38 E 5-10 mph
Temperatures·will rise to 38
with today's low of 24 occurring around 6:00am. Skies
will be partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 to lO MPH
winds from the east.
Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 40 - 44 E-SE 5-l 0
mph
·
It's going to be a cloudy
afternoon. There is a slim
chance ·that it could rain.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 41 with today's high
of 44 occurring around

2:00pm. Winds will be 5 to 10
MPH from the east turning
from the southeast as· the
afternoon progresses.
Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 39 - 40 SE 10-15
mph
lt should remain cloudy.
. Moderate rain is expected.
The rain is predicted to start
near 8:00pm. Anticipate rain
accumulations of 0.36 inches
for
this
evening.
Temperatures will linger at
39. Winds will be lO to 15
MPH from the southeast.
Overnight
(1:OOam6:00am) 38 - 39 SE 5-15 mph

It will continue to be cloudy.

Some raindrops are in the forecast. Expect accumulations of
0.02 inches. Temperatures will
hover at 38. Winds will be 5 to
15 MPH from the southeast.
Thesday, February 3
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
40-4 1 S-SW 5 mph
It will be a cloudy morning.
Light rain is expected. Expect
0.12 inches of rain by the end
of this morning. Temperatures
will remain around 40. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the south
turning from the southwest as
the morning progresses.

List of Ohio casualties in Iraq
Here is a list of Ohio soldiers killed in Iraq:
- Army Staff Sgt. Sean
Landrus, 31, of Thompson
Township in Geauga County.
Assigned to the l st Engineer
Battalion of th'e l st Infantry
Division, Landrus was killed
when a roadside bomb
exploded as he wa~ driving a
truck near Khalidiyah.
- Army Staff Sgt. Lester
0. Kinney II, 27, of
Zanesville. A paratrooper
with the 2nd Battalion of the
505th Infantry, Kinney was
killed when a roadside bomb
exploded west of Baghdad.
- Army Spc. Todd M. .
Bates, 20, of Bellaire. · He
was on a river patrol on the
Tigris River south of
Baghdad when hi s squad
leader fell overboard. Bates
dived into the water and did
not surface. Bates' body later
was recovered and his status
changed to deceased. He was
assigned to the !35th
Military Police Company,
Army National Guard in
Brook Park.
- Arniy Pfc. Kenneth C.
Sousliu, 21, of Mansfield. He
died of non-combat related
lUJ unes
at
Baghdad
International Airport. He. was
assigned to the 440th Signal
Company, 22nd Signal
V
Corps,
Brigade,
Darmstadt, Germany.
Army
National
Guardsman Staff Sgt, Aaron
Reese, 31, of Reynoldsburg.
He died after falling from a
patrol boat into the Tigris
River. He was the first Ohio
Guardsman to die in Iraq .
- Army Sgt. Steven D.
Conover, 21, of Wilmington .
He was among 16 Americans
killed in a missile attack on a

helicopter near Fallujah, Battalion. He w~s killed in a
Iraq. as it carried troops multi-yehicle traffic accident
bound for two weeks' leave. ncar Safwan, lraq.
- Army Spc. James E.
- Army Chief Warrant ·
Powell II, 26, of Columbus.
He was killed when his Officer Brian K. Van Dusen,
Bradley armored vehicle of Columbus, with the 571 st
struck a land mine near Beiji, Air . Medical Company.
30 miles north of Tikrit, During the rescue of a
Saddam Hussein 's home- wounded Iraqi child, hi s
town.
- James C. Wright, 27, of Black Hawk medical heliDelhi Township in suburban copter snagged a power wire
Cincinnati, with the Fourth during takeoff and flipped
Infantry. He was killed in an over into the Tigris River.
ambush near Tikrit when his The child was in another
vehicle was hit with rockethelicopter.
propelled grenades.
Army Pfc. Marlin
- Army Spc. Brett T.
Christian of North Royalton, Rockhold, 23, of Hamilton,
with the lO l st Airborne with the , 3rd Infantry
Division. He was killed in Division. He was shot by a
Mosul when his convoy
came under attack by rocket sniper while directing traffic
at a bridge in Baghdad.
propelled grenades.
- . Marine Pfc. Christian
- Army Pfc. Kevin C. Ott,
27, of Orient, with the 18th Daniel Gurtner, 19, of Ohio
Field Artillery Regiment. City, ·with the 3rd Light
The bodies of Ott and anoth- Armored
Reconnaissance
er soldier were found 20
miles northwest of Baghdad Battalion. He was killed
three days after they failed to when his gun accidentally
respond to a radio check.
went off.
- Army Pfc. Gavin L.
- Army Pvt. Brandon
Neighbor, 20, of Somerset, Sloan, 19, of Bedford
with the 82nd Airborne
Division. He was off work Heights, with the 507th
from guard duty in Baghdad Maintenance Company. . He
and had been resting on a bus was killed after Iraqi forces
when a rocket , propelled ambushed a supply convoy
grenade round was fired near Nasiriyah. Originally
from a nearby house.
- Army Pfc. Branden F. listed as missing until eight
Oberleitner,
20,
of bodi~s were found in the resWorthington, with the lO I st cue of an American POW.
Airborne Div'ision. He was
Army Master Sgt.
killed in Fallujah, Iraq, after Robert J. Dowdy, 38, of
his unit was tired upon by a Cleveland, with the 507th
rifle-propelled grenade.
- Army Lt. Col. Dominic Maintenance Company. He
R. Baragona. 42, of Niles, · was killed in the same
with
19th Maintenance ambush as Sloa119

'

.

. n~~~,~ ;f)t

a

u

a

a

a

a

a

a

Prep Standings
Boys basketball
SEOAL
lellm
Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Jackson
Warren
Athens
Point Pleasant

Team
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
Fairland
South Point
Coal Grove

Team
Fairland
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
South Point
River Valley
Coal Grove

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
. TOGETHER!

2004.

MY HONE.Y

Wrl~ng

this love
.
message gives me the ·
oppori!Jnity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
I sometimes don't
show It but I
do.
Valentines
!

•In:IJI• fri·Stlte

m'.C
5-1
4-2
3-3
3-3
2-4
0-6

,I

\

ALL
16-0
10-5
12-4
9-8
3-12
3-13

m

9-6
8-8
5-8
5-9
3-11
7-7

m
15-1

9-4
11-4
6-5
2-14

Boys

asketball

River Valley at Rock Hill

Ohio 'V'alley Chri stian at Teays Valley

•

Eastern

p~ts

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

played."
Caldwell's' crew ran its
conference mark to 5-l, one
game back of league-leading
Trimble, and 10-5 overall.
Cody Dill led a balanced
scoring attack for Eastern
with 12 points, he al so collected l0 rebounds to complete the double-double.
Teammates Nathan Grubb
and Alex · Simpson also
reached double-digit scoring
with I 0 apiece.
Waterford placed just one
player in double figures ,
Matt Townsend with 13,
nine of those coming from
beyond the 3-point arc.
But scoring wasdefinitely
at a premium for Waterford.
who amassed just 14 points
through three quarters of
play. Most of those offensive woes were a result of
some tough Eagle defense,
both on the perimeter and in
the paint.
Caldwell said one of his
team's ,goals was to hold
Waterford to unde'r 38 Eastern 's Adam Dillard (22) applies the defensive pressure
points.
to Waterford's Jared Sampson (12) during the first half of
Saturday's boys basketball contest Eastern defeated
Please see Eastern, Bl
Waterford 70.33. (Brad Sherman)

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern scored 19 points in
the
opening
quarter
Saturday, Waterford did not
reach that total until the
fourth.
As one might guess, the
host Eagles cruised to a 7033 Tri-Valley Conference
boys basketball victory.
Waterford (0-15) remains
the only winless team in the
Hocking Division after six
chances. Eastern did not
take the Wildcats lightly,
however, as it jumped out to
a fast l0-5 advantage and
led by double ligures by the
tirst turn.
Eastern coach Howie
Caldwell said he was
pleased with what he saw.
"We wanted to make sure
that we didn't do things that
were uncharacteristic, we
wanted to make sure that we .
did the things that we've
worked on," he explained.
"For the most part, I thought
we did. Overall, I was
pleased by the way we

Wellston at Meigs

HOUSTON (AP) Back and forth it went.
The Patriots were ahead.
The Panthers were
ahead.
The Patriots were ahead,
then the Panthers tied it.
• And then came the most
reliable foot in ,the football.
Adam Vinatieri won the
Super Bowl for New
England for the second
time in three years with a
41-yard field goal with 4
seconds left to beat
Carolina 32-29 on Sunday
night.
.
"Nobody makes all of
them. But ifyou've.got to
have one kick with everything on the line, he's the
one you want kicking it,"
New England coach Bill
,Belichick said. "lt was an
awesome kick. It was a
great kick. That 's the
game. That's what Adam's
here for."
Vinatieri earlier missed a
field goal and another was
blocked. But as he did in
2002 when he kicked the
winning field goal to beat
St. Louis on the final play
of the Super Bowl, he
proved he is perhaps the
NFL's best clutch kicker.
For a contest that was .
scoreless for a record 27
minutes, this game was
one of the greatest offensive shows between two of
the league 's best defenses. Carolina Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme (17) fumbles as he is hit by New England
Patriots linebacker Mike Vrabel (50) during the second quarter of Super Bowl XXXVII I in
Please see Patriots, Bl Houston, Sunday. (AP)

Rio Grande crushes Walsh
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - On the
35th anniversary of the first
game played in the Lyne
Center (now known as the
Newt Oliver Arena), the
University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketball team
played one of their better
games, rolling the Walsh
Cavaliers, 91-65, Saturday
MARJETTA (AP) - Matt
night.
Hines scored 17 and Cody
Rio Grande (15-7, 9-2
Lane added 14 points to lead
AMC South), ranked No. 21
Marietta to a 59-54 win over
in the NAJA Division II Top
Wilmington Saturday,
25 poll , jumped out to a 20Hines .hit six of his ll field
. 8 lead with 12:34 remaining
goal attempts, including 2-of-·
in t)le first half thanks In part
4 shooting from 3c-point range.
to the hot shooting of junior
Scott Laslo also had 12 points
guard Cain Vandall. Vandall
for Marietta (8-11, 3-9 Ohio
·dropped in three trifectas in
1\thlet'k Conference)., ·and
the first half to spark- the
Ryan Wilkinson scored ro.
Redmen to the early advanWilmington ( 1- 18, 1-ll),
tage.
which led 32-29 at halftime
Rio pushed to the lead to
on 55 percent shooting from . 25-10 at the 10:59 mark of
the tloor, hit just · under 30
the first half on a triple by
pe~cent of its shots in the secsor.homore guard KriS
ond half. Deon Short led the
Wtlson. Wilson had his best
Quakers with . 25 points,
game as a Redmen player,
While David Guy had 17.
notching five three-pointers
Both teams hit 40 percent of
on his way to, a game-high,
21 points._ .
· '
their field goals for the game .
Eastern at Southern

Poca at Point Pleasant
Girls Basketball
.Ohio Valley Chri stian at TeayS Valley
Christian

I

I

I

_,,i._

clamps on Wildcats Meigs

Patriots win second Super Bowl in three years

Christian '

•

-·-·•·-·-···-·-·•·-···-·-·-·-·-·-

AU.
12-5
12-4
5-12
9-7
2-12
1-11

Tuesdats games

Name: _____________________________________________________

.

ovc

Marietta tops
Wilmington

Address: ---------'-------------~--------------------------Size of Valentlne: _________'~--------------------------------TotaiAmounl Enclosed: _ _~-----------------

14-1
12-4
13-4
8-10
7-9
4-12
0-12

Girls Bas etball
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Coal Grove
South Gallia at Symmes Valley
Eastern at Meigs
Southern at Weilstoo
Calhoun County at Wahama

The Daily Sentinel
1

9-0
7-2
8-3
4-6
3-7
2-7
0-8

Today's eames

Mail Your Love Message and Totai.Amounll&gt;ue To:
'

.sfQ ·m

Prep schedule

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

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

ALL
7-5
6-5
5-6
2-9
. 2-10

Others
I\1ll.m
Oak Hill
Hannan
Wa_hama
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia

2 INCH AD ... $10.00

.

ALL
13·1
9'4
3-10
6-8
6-8
5-8

5-t
4-1
3-3
2-3
2-3
0-5

DLQ
lellm
Belpre
7-1
Alexander
6-3
Vinton County
5-4
Meigs
4-4
Nelsonvitle'York
2-6
Wellston
1-7
Hocking Division
Team
TVC
9-0
Trimble
Eastern
.6-3
5-4
Southern
Waterford
5-4
Federal Hocking
1-7
Miller
0-8

(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow is
straight and true,
In bringing this thought
of love to you.
I'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that
· terrible fight.
ASentinel love message
was a good Idea.
To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

ALL
11-3
10-5
9-5
7·6
2-13
0-14

TVC
Ohio Division

ExampleMI#Jf Sizes and Prices
l INCH AD ..... $5.00
l 1/1 INCH AD .. $7.50

31NCH AD ••• $15.00

3-1~

m'.Q

Team
Warren
Jackson
Marietta
Logan
Galtia Academy
Athens
Point Pleasant

With A Sentinel Loye Message!

Happy Valentine's Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, and
Brother...
Thanks for being such
a great family!
I Love You Very Muehl

AU.
11-3
11-3
9-4
9-5 .
5-10

Girls basketball
SEOAL

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

Happy
I st Valentine's Day
Tessa!
~Mammy &amp; Daddy

m

11-3
11-4
9-5
5-9
5-9
4-9
3-11

ovc

Others
· Team
South Gallia
Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan
Wahama
Oak Hill

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

8-1
8-1
6-2
3-6
2-6
2-7
1-7

lellm
DLQ
Alexander
4-1
Vinton County
4-1
Belpre
3-2
Meigs
2-3
Wellston
2-4
Nelsonville-York
1-5
Hocking Division
IYQ
lellm
Trimble
6-0
·Eastern
5-1
Southern
3-2
Federal Hocking
2-3
Miller
1-5
Waterford
0-6

a

(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

.sfQ

TVC
Ohio Division

It's Valen-timel

1

,,

a

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

..

~onday,February2,2004

I

'.

to ......

J

CHARDON · (AP) - An
Ohio soldier who died in
lraq was a ~ompetitive
"sparkplug" who loved his .
family and hated to be
behind a desk, his mother
said.
" Army Staff Sgt. Sean
Landrus died Thursday
from wounds he suffered
when a roadside . bomb
exploded two days earlier
as he was driving a truck
near Khalidiyah, the military said on Saturday.
Landrus' mother said her
son declined an oftlce job
to serve in a combat zone.
"Sean died doing what he
wanted to do.' ' his mother,
Betty Landrus said early
Sunday.
"They
had
approached him to do a
desk job. but he just hated
being behind a desk. His
wife talked to him the
week
before he
was
injured. and she said he
sounded the best he had in
The Landrus family of Thompson Township, Ohio, are shown in
· a long time."
Landrus. his wife. Chris. this 2003 family portrait. · Army Staff Sgt. Sean Landrus, top
and three children made left, with his wife , Chris, daughter, Khrista , 12, top, son.
their home in Geauga Kenneth, 4, and newborn. Kennedy. Sean Landrus, 31, died
County's
Thompson Thursday, from wounds he suffered when a roadside bomb
"Township, about 40 miles exploded two days earlier as he was driving a truck near
east of Cleveland. His Khalidiyah, Iraq , the military said on Saturday. (AP
youngest child, Kennedy, is Photo/Family photo via The Plain Dea ler)
5 months old·. Landrus left well-known' for his compet- month later.
for Iraq when she was just itive spirit.
Landru s had been staa few weeks old.
"He hated to be taken tioned at Fort Riley, Kan.
Betty Landrus said her out of a game or anything He didn't want to leave his
son was fami ly oriented.
when he was playing family behind, but was
"He did like the military sports. If he got an injury excited about using his
life, but he was not plan- or anything, he 'd bug the training to build roads · and
ning on re-enlisting because coach to send him back out bridges in Iraq as part of
he had a family. He had there," she said. "One of an en.gi neer battalion in the
been
deployed
several the managers said the team lst Infantry Division.
·
times and didn't want to be just didn't ' play the same
"He was upbeat and
away from his family any without Sean because he happy," Betty Landrus said.
longer."
was the sparkplug."
Chris Landrus and the
Sean Landrus, 31, was
He worked · and attended children returned to Geauga
the youngest of six children Kent
State
University County the day Sean" left
in his family, He graduated before enlisting in the for Iraq.
from
Le.dgemont
High Army .. He married Chris,
Betty Landrus said Sean 's
School in 1991 , excelling his high school sweetheart, remains hadn't arrived in
at football , basketball and in December 1995, and Ohio and that funeral
track. his mother said.
went to. boot camp one arrangements were pending.
His mother said he was

a

Bl

The Daiiy Sentinel
•

: ·

'

"G})f~e~ f~ ~ f5
'

· Prep scoreboaid, Page B2 .
LeBron score 38 In Cava' win over
Washington, Page B6 ·

r-·-·-·-·----------------------------------·
Write your Message Below:
:

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

I'

INSIDE

Monday, February 2, 2004

Vernon. OH) handed out six over Wal sh with the win.
assists.
The Redm'en edge the
Walsh (9-16, 4-9 AMC Cavaliers, 57-54, Dec. 16 in
South) was led by Randy
Sistrunk 's double -double Canton.
effort of 17 points and, 11
With the victory. Rio's
Rio then ran off nine unan- rebOunds. Jason Farkas winning streak climbs to
swered points to up the added 16 ·poiJ~ts and Chris four games. The Rcdmen
advantage to 34-10 at the Wmesburg chipped 10 _13. stayed tied in the loss col 6:43 mark and the lead · Jake Steuer d1shed out live
· 11e cava1·1ers.
umn with
would reach 30-points ass1·sts tort
. Cedarville in ..the
before halftime at 44-14
The Redmen bhstered the race for the Amencan
with 3:40 showing on the nets ata 54.5 percen~ (36-of- - Mideast Conference ·South
clock.
66) cilp from the held, 43 Divi sion crown. Neither
Rio would take a 47-25 percent l 9-ot- 2 l) . from team is blinking ri ght now
lead at halftime.
beyond the three-pomt arc and look to be headed on a
In the second half it was and 67 percent ( 10-of-15)
troll] th• foul lme Wal sh co llision course for the outmore of the same as the h-d - "·f-1~·· 1 ~-· d·. 'h.
· . h d 30
a ul 1cu ty m mg t e right title to be decided
Re.d men ag. .am
reac e a . - range all game long as they when tl1e two schools tangle ,
point.lead
. at. 74 -44 With 9 ·25 c'losed out the contest shoot=
remammg m the game and ing 36 percent ( 24 _0f_ 67 ) Feb. 17 .in Cedarvill e.
.
the lead would get as h1gh as from the field, 23 percent (6However. there · 1s sll li
33.
..
.
' -of-26rfrom the three-point p lenty of basketba.ll to be
In addt!JOn tob WVdsodn s· line and 48 percent ( 11 -of- played and the Red men will
Iong range born s, an a11 23) from the line.
.
. ·
.
added 13 points and· Sean
Rio won the battle of the begm play m February hos tPlummer chipped in 13 off boards, 46-37 although mg W1lberforce on Tuesday
the bench.
Walsh gained more offen- night at "the Newt ". Game
Dawayne Mcintosh and sive caroms. 18-15. Both time is set for 8 p.m. followJeromy Dishman were the squads took good care of the ing the women's game.
top rebounders for the basketball as Rio posted 12
Rio
slipped
by
Redmen with eight and turnOvers to only II for the
seven respectively. Junior Cavaliers.
Wilberfo rce, 58-52· last
Rio takes the season series . Thursday on the road.
guard Brandon Hess (Mount

tops
Southern
Bv Scon WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS-Playing
before a packed house. the
Meigs Marauders overcame
an early Southern Tornado
storm to defeat the visiting
Whirlwinds 57-53 in a hardfought boys· Tri-Valley
Conference lnter-di visional
contest in Meigs' Larry R.
Morrison
gymnasium
Saturday night . Meigs is now
9-5 and Southern fall s to 9-5.
Twenty four years ago
Meigs mentor Carl Wolfe,
then coach at Southern, was
sending in plays via his hu stling point guard and defensive standout Jonathan Rees.
That February in 1980 was"in
preparation for what would
later be Southernfs first visit
to the state tournament.
Friday the two stood courtside as rivals .
"We played well enough to
win ;md that 's about all you
can say," said Meigs Coach
Carl Wolfe. "Obviously, this
is a good win and a gutsy
game for our kids. They
were under a lot of pressure
to do well tonight.
We
accomplished what we wanted to do ... all we wanted was
to get out of here with a win."
Wolfe also ci ted hi s team's
second half post play as a key
to the gam\!. Dewitt had
twelve of his fourteen points
in the second half, grabbing
nine reboun&lt;:ls overall . Ty
Ault grabbed eight rebounds,
five which came in the sec. ond half. Ault and Dewitt
outrebounded the entire
Southern team. which collected only 15 for the game.
Southern mentor Jonathan
Rees said, "Y0\1 arenft going
to win many games with 15
rebounds." Southern was
outrebounded 37- 15. for the
game.
"Aaron Sellers was the key

I

I

Please see Meigs. 86

Redwomen
fall to
Walsh
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYTRIB UNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - A 19-0
run by NAJA Division II
No. 25 Walsh midway
through the first half triggered a key 70-5 7 victory
for the Lady Cavali ers over
the University of Rio
Grande
Redwomen
in
American
Mideast
Conference South Division
women's basketball action.
Saturday at the · Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grande (16-8. 5-6
AMC S.outh) led 13- 12
before the Lady Cavali ers
ripped off 19 unan swered
points over a 5:30 stretch of
the first half to swing the
game their favor. Freshman
Lauren Fox produced a
career-high wit h 28 points
( 18 in the second hal f) and
nailed five three-pointers.
shooting 11 -of- 16 from the
field . Sophomore ce nter
Tiffanie Hage r was the only
, other Rio Grande pl ayer in
double fi gure s with 13
point s. Hager also pulled
down seven reboul)ds .
Junior
forward · Alkia
Fountain led the Redwomeo
with eight rebounds . but
was held w only four points
on 1-of-8 shooting from the
field.
. Freshman Jamie King had
her first signifi ca nt playing ..
time of the season and
hauled down five rebounds
and had five steals in . ll
minute s. Freshman Carlesha
Chambers dished · out, a
team-high, five assists.
Wal sh ( 17-6 . 6-5 AMC
South) placed four players
in · double figures led by

Please see Redwomen, Bl

.

. I

�Monday, February 2,

2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 82

Monday, February 2, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'.

- ~ Prep scoreboaret
·

Eettem 70, Waterford 33

Watertord 6
8
0
19 33
Eastern
19 19 18 14 10
, WATERFORD (0.14 C&gt;-6) - Mk::hael
. Klintworth 0 ()..() O, Jared Sampson 1 1-2 3,
; Matt Townsend 4 2-2 13, Caleb Snyder 2
,4·8 8 Kyle K1nca•d 1 0-0 2. Catt1n Ball 0 0.o 0, Craig Simms o o-2 O, Matt ScnoH 2 1·2 7 TOTALS- 10 8-14 33
: EASTERN (1G-5, 5-1)- Derek Baum 2
0-o 5. Nathan Grubb 4 1 1 10, Alex
Simpson 5 0-0 10, Adam Dillard 3 2-2 g
Alex McGrath 0.2-2 2 Mark Guess 0 Q-3 o.
Chn~ Carroll 3 o-o 7, Chns Myers 3 0-1 7....,.

Derek Roush 1 0-o 2. Robert Cross 2 2-2

6, Cody D1U 6 0-0 12 TOTALS- 29 7·11

10

· 3-polnt goals - W 5 (Townsend 3 and
"Schott 2), E 5 (Baum Grubb Dillard
Carroli and Myers)
Meigs 57, Southern 53
Southern 14 t t 13 t5 -53
Me•gs
13 17 12 15 - 57
Southern Derek Teaford 2 0·0 5 A'aron
Sellers 1 o-o 2 Cra1g Randolph 11 3-4 29, •
,Jeremy Yeauger 0 0-0 o, Was Burrows 52
..2 15, Josh Sm11h 0 o-o O, Oann Teaford 1
"C)-() 2, Jake Nease 0 0 1 0 Totals 20 5., 53
: Three Ptnnr Goals E•ght-Randolph four
Burrows three, Derek Teaford one
. Me1gs Jon Bobb 6 7-10 19 Jeremy
. Bla~ston 1 1·2 3, Carl Wolfe 3 2·3 8 Ty
•J.ult 0 5·8 5 Adam SnOwden 2 0 0 4
.Dakota Dew1tt 4 6-6 14 Ryan Hannan 2 O·
-o 4 Totals 18 21-29 57 Three Po1nt
•Goals none
'
Ohio Hjgh School

·I

..

Boys s-asketball

Saturdays Results
Akr Buchtel 74, Akr Ellet 63
Akr Central-Hewer 75 Akr Garf1eld 53
Akr E 53, Akr F1restone 44
Akr Hoban 78 Cle John Marshall 41
Akr Kenmore 85, Akr N 74
• Akr SVSM 78 Warren Hardmg 62
Albany Alexander 65, Stewart Federal
-.Hockmg 60
Apple Creek Waynedale 58, Mansfield
Temple Chr1st1an 45
• Archbold 60 Van Wert 59
Baltimore Ltberty Un1on 54 Grandvtew
45
BataVIa Amelia 65 Clermont NE 34
Bedford Chanel 78. Mentor La~e Cath
47
Bellville Clear Fork 66 Mansfield
,Mad1son 50
Beverly Fl Frye 81 Belpre 55
Bryan 47, Pauld1ng 43
Bucyrus 53 New A1egel 45
Bucyrus Wyntord 64 Morral Ridgedale
53
Byesv1Ue Meadowbrook 44 New
Concord John Glenn 41
Caldwell49, Hanmbal A1ver 39
cambridge 56 Manetta 54
Can Hentage Chnst1an 101 , Thompson
Ledgemont 20
Can S 68, Can Cent Cath 65
Can Timken 60 Uniontown Lake 54
Canal W•nchester 61, BI00'1]·Carroll 53
Castalia Margaretta 71 Sandusky
Perkms 54
Celina 42 Coldwater 36
Chtlhcothe Umoto 66 Chillicothe
Huntington Ross 48
Cm Aiken 68, Oay Col White 63
Cm Anderson 45 C1n Turpm 27
C1n F1nneytown 63 Cm Summtt
Country Day 49
.. Cm lnd1an Htll 45, Ham•lton Ross 31
Cm LaSalle 71, MadiSOI) Central (Ky)
47
Cm Sycamore 62 Ryle (Ky) 47

Eastern
from Page 81
"If we held them lo 38 or
under, that would get us
under 50 (pomts allowed
average) for the year. Four
out of the six teams we've
had here at Eastern, we • ve
given up 50 or less points.
"I think our kids are priding them se lves more on

Patriots
from Page 81
There were a record 37
· points scored in the fourth
quarter alone, and Tom
Brady, who led New England
on its wmning dnve, was 32of-48 for 354 yards and three
touchdowns The 32 completiOns were also a Super Bow I
.record.
Brady
was
voted
the
game's MVP for the second
time
in
three
seasons.
although he did throw a sec·ond-half mterceptlon that
prevented New England from
• wmmng more eastly.
, "You know you might have
a chance at the end of the
game to win it," Vinalleri
said .
"I looked up and it was
going nght down the middle ."
Before the game, played m
the c1ty that 1s home to the
nation 's space program, there
was a tribute to NASA and
the crew of the shuttle
Columbia. which broke up
over Texas exactly one year
ago.
And before the second-half
ktckoff, Juslm Timberlake
tore off
part
of Janet
Jackson's top, exposmg her
breast during the halftime
show, and a streaker was
. tackled on the field.
It made fans wonder what
was in store for the second
half. The teams didn't disappoint.
-Carohna- had tied- the game
at 29 with· its thtrd fourthquarter TD on a 12-yard pass
from Jake Delhomme to
Ricky Proehl wtth I 08 left.
Then John Kasay k1cked the
ball out of bounds to g1ve
New England field position
at its own 40.
Brady moved the Patriots
37 yards in six plays, hitting
Deion Branch to set up

l'

Cm Tafi 72 C1n Hughes 57
Cln Withrow 66 Day Belmont 56
Cin Wyommg 72 C1n Shroder Pa•de•a 49
C1rcl811dle 34 Ashville Teays Valley 31
Carclevllle Logan Elm 73 CoiS Hamilton
Twp 47
Cle Hts Lutheran E 86 Austinburg
Grand A1ver 64
Clyde 77 Milan Ed1son 48
Cols Beechcroft 66 Worthmgton
Kilbourne 62
Cols Bexley 72, Gahanna Cols
Academy 48
Cols OeSales 61 , Marysv1ne 5S OT

Cols Tree of Life 88 Li berty Chns!lan 42
Continental 72, Col~mbus Grove 59
Gory-Rawson 56 Fostona St Wendelm 49
Crown City S Gal~a 59 Hemlock M•ller 48
.. Day Cham•nade-Juhenne, 57 Kettenng
Alter 50
Day Dunbar 75, C1n Mt Healthy 43
Day Meadowdale 82 G1n Woodward 81
Day Oakwood 56', Day Stebbins 47
Cola Hardin Northern 67 Ada 49
Doylestown Chippewa 61 , Mass illon
Tuslaw 48
Dubhn Sc1oto 68, Mt Vernon 51
E Cle Shaw 72 Bedford 48
E Palestme 66, Sahnev1lle Southern 58
Elyna Open Door 38 Cuyahoga Hts 31
Evangel Chnsllan 66, Fa1rf1eld Chnst1an 58
Fa•rl•eld 62, Cm NW 57
F-tndlay 70, Sandusky 53
F1sher Cath 49 Summ1t StatiOn Llckmg
Hts 42
Fostor1a 74 Old Fort 42
Frankfort Adena 69, Ba1nbndge Pa1nt
Valley 47
Gahanna 59. Gols St Charles 56
Gatt1po1•s Gall•a 48 Jac~son 45
Germantown Valley V1ew 66, W
Carrollton 62
Gorham Fayette 59 Paulding 41
Granville 74, Heath 52
Grove C1ty 70 Ph1lo 44
Grove C1ty Chnsllan 67 S•dney
Christian 45
Havtlancl Wayne Trace 6B Fl Recovery 57
Hilliard Da'Yidson 62 "Lewis Center
Olentangy 41
Holland Spnng 76 Napoleon 73
Ironton 77, Cheshtre R1ver Valley 36
Kidron Cent ChriStian 78 Smithville 36
La~ewood St Edward 67 Cle VASJ 57
Lancaster Fa1rf1eld Un•on 48 Amanda
Clearcreek 34
Leavittsburg laBrae 75 G1rard 54
Le•pstc 43, Kal1da 38
Lewisburg Tn County N 57 Eaton 52
L1 ma Cent Cath 69 Wapakoneta 46
Lima Shawnee 97 "{ol Woodward 47
L1ma Sr 57 Fremont Ross 35
Lisbon 58 Hanoverton United 57
LoutSVIIie 78 , Akr Spnng 43
Mansfield Chnstlan 63 Gal100 Northmor 51
Mansfield Sr 64, Cols Independence 57
Mansfield St Peters 75 Tiffm Calvert 70
Mansheld Temple Chnst1an 63, Gahan
Northmor 51
Mana Stem Manon Local 62, Anna 32
Manon Elg1n 67 M1llord Center
Fa1rbanks 57
Manon Hardtng 71 Olenlangy Ltberty 49
Manon Pleasant 74 Caledoma R1ver
Valley 50
Massillon Jackson 60 Youngs Ursuline
47
Mayfield 58 Chardon 57, OT
McArthur Vtnlon County 65 Nelsonville·
York 56
Millersport 62, Cols Harvest Prep 59
M11ton-Un1on 60 Newton 48
Minford 93, Portsmouth W 96
M1nster 64 Botkms 33
New Albany 48, Hebron Lakewood 46
New Boston Glenwood 58 Portsmouth

defense than what they d1d
earlier m the year They don ' t
want people to score on

them "
And that was exactly the
case in the third quarter when
Eastern pitched a shutout, 180, to put the game far out of
reach. The Eagles led by as
many as 42 pomts at one
pomt
Waterford s hot a freezing
21 percent from the field ( 1047) for the game and committed 22 turnovers

Vinatierj's wmning kick,
which prevented the Super
Bowl from going into overtime for the tirst time eYer. It
also gave New England its
15th straighl v1ctory
The Patnots led 14-10 al
the half, and after a scoreless
third quarter, they made 1121 10 on the second play of the
fourth on a 2-yard run by
Antowain
Smith.
That
capped an eight-play, 71-yard
dnve featuring a 33-yard pass
from Brady to ught end
Dame) Graham
Carolina wasn't about to
g1ve up , though , scormg on
DeShaun Foster's 33 - yard
run on a stx-play, 8l -ya1d
drive. But the 2-point conversion pass was behind Muhsin
Muhammad and it was 2 116 The dectsion to go for 2
would come back to haunt
coach John Fox
The Patnots seemed ready
to pul the game away when
they got the ball back, but
Brady made a rare mi ,take ~
throwing an off-balance pass
that Regg1e Howard mtercepted m the end zone.
Two plays later, Delhomme
found Muhammad behind the
New England defense for an
85-yard score, the longest
play from scnmmage in
Super Bowl h1story, to gtve
the Panthers a 22-2 1 lead
with 6 .53 lefl Fox again
went for the 2 - point conversion and failed .
It was the first lime since
Nov. 23 that New England
trailed. The last time was also
in Houston. when the Patriots
rallted from 20-13 down in
the fourth quarter· to beat the
Texans 23-20 in overtime on,
what else, a tield goal by
Vinaueri.
The Panthers' lead d1dn' t
last long, e1ther.
Brady came back w1th a
TD pass to linebacker M 1ke
Vrabel With 2.51 remaming,
and Kevin Faulk ran in for
the 2-point convers ion to
give New England a 29-22

(

Grand times for Federer in Australia
Notre Dame 37
New Bremen 68 P1tsburg FranklinMonroe 48
New Knoxv1lle 63 Ft Jenmngs 60
New London 66 Oberltn F•rerands 51
New Mad•son Tn·V•IIage 75 Randolph
(lnd) Southern 39
New Matamoras Frontier 63 Old
WaShington Buc~eye Tratl 60
New Middletown Spnng 80 N L1ma Sr
Range 53
New Wash1ng ton auckeye Cent 73
Monroeville 43
Newark Cath 92 Sugar Grove Berne
Un1on 79
Newark Licking Valley 79 Whitehall·
Yearlmg 61
Northside Chnst1an 55 Maranatha
Chnstlan 35
NorWalk 62 Verm•llon 43
• Olmsted Falls 75 Cle St lgnattus 71
Pepper Pike Unwerslty 53 Cle
Benecllctine 52
P1cker~ngto n N 72 london 70, OT
Ptketon 54, A•chmond Oale SE 32
Point Pleasant (W Va ) 52 Athens 48
Pomeroy Ma1gs 57, Rac1ne Southern 53
Port Clinton 64 Huron 52
Portsmoulh Clay 62, Sc1oto McDermott
NW47
Pretie Shawnee 50, New Lebanon Di111B 44
Reedsville Eastern 70 Waterford 33
A1ttman 55 Medma Buckeye 40
S Webster 67 Waverly 42
Sandusky St Mary's 74, Oak Harbor 49
Seaman N Adams 78 Beaver Eastern 49
Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 53, Stryker 41
Stdney Lehman 65 Sprtng Cath 42
Spnng Emmanuel Chnshan 68
Oomtmon Academy 53
Spnng Kenton Atdge 54, Lew•stown
lnd1an Lake 53
Spnng N 72, Chillicothe 55
Spnng Shawnee 59 Spnng Greenon 46
St Marys Memonal 51, Delphos St
Johns 49
St Pans Graham 66, New Carlisle
Tecumseh 53
T1pp O•ty 8ethel49 Troy Chnsttan 41
Tal Cent Cath 66 Dehance 63
Tol Maumee Valley 95 Bettsville 69
Tal W811e 55 Maumee 53
Trotwood Chnst1an 49 Central Chnsuan
46
Tuscarawas Cent Cath 53 Magnolia
Sandy Valley 48
Urbana 62 Casstown M1am1 E 54
Van Buren 57 Bascom Hopewell·
Loudon 49
Van Wert Lmcolnv•ew 69 Rockford
Parkway 51
Vanlue 78 Atttca Seneca E 54
V1enna Mathews 63, McDonald 54
Wauseon 55, Defiance Ttnora 40
Waynesv111e 57 C1n Jacobs 45
Westerville S 62, CQis Watterson 61
Wheelersburg (W Va) 81 Manchester
49
Wheeling Park (W Va) 58 Zanesville 55
Willard 69 Lex1ngton 53
Williamsport Westfall 51, Chillicothe
Zane Trace 36
WillOughby S 55 Jefferson 54
Wilm•ngton 58 Washmgton C H 52
Woodsfteld Monroe Cent 56 Sarahsville
Shenandoah 52
Worthrngton Chns!lan 70 Fredencktown
50
Xema Chnsllan 74 Day Chnsllan 40
Xema Nazarene 58 M1am1 Valley 43
Yellow Spnngs 69 Ridgeville Chnst1an
4t
Zanesville Rosecrans 47, Thornville
Shendan 44
Zanesville
W
Musk1ngum
59
CrookSVIlle 55 OT

Eastern fa1red much betler,
connecting on 29 of 55 floor
s hots for 53 percent, and had
10 m1s c ues .
Easlern IS at Southern
Tuesday for part lwo of the
Meigs County , nvalry II is
also a matchup between the
second and third place teams
in the Hocking Dtvision.
" Going to Racine, its
a lway s difficult to play
there," commented Caldwell .
"The nms are JUSt a httle btl
t1ghter than what they are at

lead .
About two minutes later,
Delhomme
and
Proehl
hooked up to tie the score,
g1v1ng
Vinaticn
another
chance to be a hero
"I thought he kept us m the
game," Carolina coach John
Fox
sa1d,
refernng
to
Delhomme, who rebounded
from a 1-of-9 start to throw
for 323 yards. "They kept
battling back. Unfortunately
they had the ball last."
After the scoring drought
to open the game, the Patriots
and Panthers fmally got
gomg 24 pomts m the
fmal 3 ·OS of the llrsl hall that
left New England w1th a 1410 lead.
The Patriots domma ted that
dormant period and ftnall y
took a 7-0 lead on the first of
two 5-yard TD passes by
Brady
The
quarterback
found Branch after Vrabel
had sacked Delhomme, forcmg a tumble and giVI ng New
E n g land the ball at the
Ca101ina 20
At that point, New England
had outgained Carolina 125
yards
to
minus-7,
and
Del hom me was 1-of-9 for I
yard and had been sacked
three times
But the Patriol s' touchdown seemed to wake up the
Panlhers
Delhomme led
Carolina on a 95- yard dnve,
t1ed for second longest m
Super Bowl h1story, capping
11 With a 39-yard TD pass to
Steve
Smith,
who
beat
Tyrone Poole in single coverage. Thai tied .it at 7-7 with
I : 14 left m the half.
Brady came nght back, hitling Branch for 52 yards
behtnd Ricky Manmng Jr to
set up the second 5-yard TD
pass , th1s lime lo Give n s.
Caro lin a wasn ' t fm1shed,
either
V111a11eri
squibbed
the
kickoff and Kris Mangum
relurned 1t i 2 yards to his
own '47 With 12 seconds and
a timeout left, the Panthers
I

MELBOURNE. Australia
(AP)
Roger Federer
sk1pped the subbmg th1s
lime He is , after all, gettmg
familiar with the honor.
Grand
Slam
tournament
champion.
Play mg s hrewd a nd confident tennis that has left h1m
at No I , Federer won the
Australian Open 7-6 (3), 6-4,
6 - 2 Sunday againsl a weary
and frustrated Marat Safin.
Federer has captured two
of the las t three maJOrs following his Wimbledon triumph.
"I feel like I'm livmg the
game when I'm out there,"
the Sw1ss star smd "When a
a guy is gomg to h11 the ball ,
I know exactly the angles
and the spms. I Jus I feel that
I've got that tigured out."
It was enough to end
Safm's
great
run.
The
unseeded Russian beat topseeded Andy Roddick in the
quarterfinals, then stopped
defendmg c hamp10n Andre
Agass1 's 26-malc h wmmng
streak at the Australian Open
in the sem1s
But after more than 18
hours and 27 sets m six
rounds, Safin had little left
Federer clearly was fresher,
havmg spent JUSt more than
I 0 hours on court and losmg
only two sets.
When
Federer
won
Wimbledon last summer, he
responded with sobs of
relief. At Melbourne Park, he
was moved, bur far more
composed and controlled
" What a great start to the
year lor me, to win the
Australian Open ami become
No I 111 the world," Federer
sa td "It means a lot to me."
A day earlier, Justine
Henin-Hardenne
added
another title, winning a
third all-Belgian Grand
Slam final against Kim
CliJsters to remain No. I.
The 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 victory
was her thtrd major m eight
months.
Federer, seeded second,
was already ensured the top

other places

And Southern

has always had a tremendous
fan following, and a proud
tradttion ."
Waterford plays

ranking by beating thirdseeded Juan Carlos Ferrero
in the sem1fmals. Roddick's
loss m the quarlerfmals
ended the U S. Open champion ' s stay No I .
In addition to h1s two
major titles , Federer also
won
the
season-end1ng
Masters Cup at Houston .
'
" When Jl gets important, I
feel hke I can ra1se my
game ," he smd.
He sure ly did that agamst
Safm. The Russ1an slammed
h1s racket to the courl and
drew a code VIOlation when
he smashed a racket after a
double-fault . He talked to
h1mself and 10 the crowd; he
shook his h ead and shrugged
after most of hts 41 unforced
errors.
Against Agasst, one of the
best serve returners m the
game, Satin had 31 aces and
no double-faults Agamst
Federer, the balls kept coming back
Federer chased overheads
and forehands dpwn the line
that had the look of wmners
Safm, the 2000 U S. Open
champiOn
down,
was
drained.
"I was out of energy, my
le gs were jusl too Ured," h e
satd "'l was a little too t1red
to keep up w11h hun I felt
that I was nliSsmg JUSt•a little
b1t. Agamst Roger, you have
to do better than that. I'm not
playing a yo-yo."
Safm lost hi s last six
matches in 2003, a rough
year m which he struggled
w1th an ailing wmt. He
entered the tournament ar
No 86 11nd wtll 1mprove to
the low 30s on Monday.
"I'm aciUall y very g lad lo

be m finals agam," he said.
"I'm really g lad to play m y
be s t tenm s after lhe lnJunes I
had last year.''
He d1d ge t one reward for
IllS marathon effort m
Melbourne , m&lt;~tchm g Harold
Solomon 's record of 30 sets
for a Grand Slam tournament
s~t m the 1976 French Open
Hemn-H arde nne.
w1th
three Grand Slams. wants a
fourth - on grass.
"Wimbledon this year, for
sure, 1s gm ng to be another
goal ," she smd after addmg
the Australian lo her wms at
the French and U S Open
last year.
She 's proved too good for
Clijsters tn the1r last three
meelmgs in ma.tors followmg a stretch 111 wh1ch the
Williams sisters dommated
" I still have to 1mprove my
game on grass, especmlly
againsl the strong players
like
Venus 01
Serena,'"
Hemn-Hardenne sa1d. " I
always lost against them
over there because they ' re so
powerful ··
In Melbourne, she dtdn't
have to lace Venus Williams,
who was upser in the th1rd
round by Lisa Raymond.
Williams was seeded th1rd
even though her ranking droppmg to No II during her s1x
months of mac iiVIty because
of an abdommal strum She
w11l drop to No 14
Serena didn't tully recover
from August knee surgery to
defend her Australian title .
Commg into a Grand Slam
tom nament seeded No. I
was a new expenence for
Hemn -H arde nn e

among the...

~

host to

Scott Hock and Seth Deem
apiece

Our Special Page(s)

for

Waterford

"For Pets Only"

crossed up the Patriots by
handing the ball to Stephen
Davis, who rushed 21 yards
to the New England 32
After a timeout, Kasay
ktcked a 50-yard field goal to
close the halt
New England looked as if
it might get off to a quick
start, s hutting down the
Panthers on their first possession, then moving to the
Carolma
13
after Troy
Brown's 28-yard punt return
But Vmahen's 31-yard
held-goal altempt was wide
right It was only the thud
time he had missed indoors in
34 auempts, all of them m
Houston .
The Patriots continued to
keep the Panthers backed up.
Carolina got 1ts firsl first
down with JUSt over 2 mlllutes left in the first quarter on
a ' holdmg penalty on New
England's
Law but had to
punt
three
plays
later.
Carolina's defense held up Jts
end W11l Witherspoon
ended another Patnols threat
by dumping Brown for a 10yard loss on a reverse to take
New England out of fieldgoal range.
With just under 9 mmutes
left m the second quarter, the
Patnots reached lhe Carolina
38 Brady's third-down s neak
was barely stopped, then
Antowam Smith barely go t
the 6 inches on lourth down,
a spot that was upheld on
replay
The Patriots reached the
18, but Vmatieri 's 36-yard
attempt was blocked by
Shane Burton.
Three plays later, Vrabel
stripped
Delhomme
and
Richard Seymour recovered
On third-and- 7, Brady, the
se lf-descnbed "s lowesl quarterback
in the
leag ue ,"
scrambled up the m1ddle to
the 5. On the next play, he
found Branch in the end zone
for the game's first score.

TY

Offte~ 1ft,~~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.rn. to 5:00 p.rn.
~~~01 ~(I \II ~

t

will be published

ANNOUNCEMI':NTS

.......

l.o&lt;;l ANil

FouNt&gt;
Found female W01maraner
Bald Knob/Ba sllan area
594·8388 day (740)949·
2207 n~ght

~

Found Hu s~y m1x dog G1ve
descnptton when cal li ng
(740)709·0302
Lost
Female
cat,
grayfblac,k./whtle stnpped
wtth wh1te chesl and feet
Rewardl (740)388-1594
Lost Female Blue Healer
on Bethel Ad near bnck
house (304)675·3927
Reward Attard
l::r~--:-:W~A-NTh-'"--"1
. IU BUY
~

Absolute Top Dollar U S
S1lver
Gold Co1ns
Proofse ts Dtamonds Gold
A1ngs
U S Currency·
M T S Co1n Shop 1S t
Second Avenue, Galhpohs,
740-446 2842

.....~

•

.~•

Old&amp;r used school band
musical mstr uments Also
wanting olct~r baseball
cards 1975 and before
(740)388 8692
Want to buy Junk VehiCles
Steel or AlummUim Atms
Wllhoutlf•res Eng1nes &amp;
Alumm1 um
AutomatiC
TransmiSSIOns
Call for
pnces (304)773 5343 or
(304)773 5033
I \II'IIH \II '\I

~
•. •
...
.~...

'I· I{\ I( t'
~~~~~~~~

...

~

Pre~ Paid~

Help Wanted

...

Tessa The Cat

~

...
...•...

~

~
..•

\;
...J

· ~~

Valentine Pets c/o-:rhe Dally-Sentinel,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
For more info: 992-2155

VALE~TI~E PETS

~~ Pet's Name:

The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company
is seeking a highly motivated
individual who is interested in an
"ADVERTISING
SALES CAREER",
with unlimited earning pot~ntial!
Interested??

\'1

·~

....

O
_w_n_e_r-'s-N-am_e_:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

~.
'•
~\

,',).

~
~

•.,.
~

~

-II

1\).

~· Address:

~...

.a. Amount Enclosed:

~

~ City/State/Zip:

*J~

~9

~\
I\P
~? . ""~. ~~ •• ., ... ~)'.,?/ ~...-......J?-~·......
For

Pictures at $8.00 each.

Help Wanted

A Great
\
Opportunity Awaits! /.

~
*f -~a';l ~r-~rl~; I~ ;h~.-e~t~-f~r~-w~t~ ;o:,;;a;~e~;t~:- %
~

Dally Jn-Colun~n: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•v-Frlday for Jn•ertlon
Xn Next Day~e Paper

All Dl•play: 12 Noon z
Bu•ln••• Day• Prior To

sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Friday For Sunday• Paper

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thur•day for Sund•v•

Publication

• All ada must be prepaid"

Counter Sales person need·
ed lo r local electric dlstnbutor Electncal background ,
and good commumcatiOn
sR1IIs preferred EOE Send
resume to HA Department,
P:O Box 6668, Huntmgton
wv 25773-6668

'

~.,t_•M•~•R•s•~~~~E•ME';··.-JI

.,-

-

Wf NffD TO TAlK!
• Salary Plus Commission
• Great Working Environment
• Monday
• Friday Sam·Spm
I
Send your resume to: Ohio Valley Publishing,
200 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
No Phone Calls Please

e a JO
We are h1nng!
You could earn up
to $8lhour plus bonuses
We also offer pa1d
tramtng, holidays
and vacations
Full or part t1me
sh1fts ava1labte
Call today
1·877-463-8247 oJCt. 2458

()
0

1. . t.-

r

~

!:&gt; 2004 by NEA, Inc.

OLD COMPANY
, NEWSTORE
90 Year old company has
new locat1on In GallipoliS
area Need 12 people to fill
several different poSitions
Everythmg from sales, set·
up and d1splay, servtce and
clencal

CHECK THESE
BENEFITS TO
THOSE WHO
QUALIFY
•Pa1d vacat1ons
·extra ho urs for e11tra
1ncome
•Incentive bonuses
•management training

FOR SALE

Baste mend1ng &amp; alteratiOns
For
mformetton
call
(740)446·8602. If no answer
leave a message
Bookkeeping m my home
Phone (304)675·3304

rut eetate edvertlelng
In thl• neweptper I•
•ub)ect to the Federal
Felr Ho.,.lng Act of 1868
which m~~kee It illegal to

All

Chlldcare State l•censed
Focus helping low mcome
1am11 1es obtam chtldcare
With 8hrs sleep time for
non·trad1t1onal sh1fts as Q£W
of your BIGHTS 740-245·
9242

adverti11 "any

prefe,..nce, llmltetlbn or
dl~~erlmlnation baled on
rece, color, religion, aex
femfllel e..tue or national
origin, or any Intention to
mllke any 1uch
prelerence, llmlletlon or
dlecrlmlnetlon "

Georges Portable Sawmtll
don't haul your logs to the
m11t JUSI call304·675-1957
W111 do II{Jht housekeeping
or m•sc (304)675-7070

For mterv1ew contact per
sonnet MONDAY ONLY,
lrom 108m·5pm (740)446
158t

1

LOCAL VENDING ROUTEI
60 vending machlneel
excellent locatlone
Paid aaelgnment1 tor fig·
all for $1 O,lltS 800-234ure and art modele tor
8982
taateful poatert .. Muet be
18 or older . nationally
publlahed photographer
$500/dar plue expenses. lNG CO recommends tha
no experience nece~aary..
au do bu~ness w11h pao
see www.Jaguared.com.
1e you know and NOT 1
apply to Ed Gardner, P 0. end money through th
Box 389, Charleston, WV
atl unltl you ha11e 1nvestl
25322 or a-mall tygard· ated the otfenn
ner@hotmall.com.
~~~~~::==~
h
PRo~n~~.u.
rL:JruV~vu..
--------SF.RVJCFli
Part t1 me
pos1t1on ~l.o--lliiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.r
clencaVbackhOe experience
helpful, located close to
TURNED DOWN ON
Me1gs Co Fatrground s area SOCIAL SECURITY !SSt?
(7401992_9504
No Fee Unless We Wml
1·888·582·3345

i

I~ I

\I I " I \ II

HOMES
FOR SALE
1600 Sq tt 3 year old Ranch
style home 2 1/2 car
garage 3 bedroom large
kitchen, dlnmng room ll¥1ng
room 2 112 baths, laundry
room front porch, all custom
oak trim doors and cabmets
AU electriC Very welt layed
out beaut•ful intenor on 1
1/2 acres 1348 Prospect
Church Road Won't last
C811
long at only $ 1 15·000
140-448-4514 0&lt; 740·448·
32_48_a_fie_r_5_p_m_ __._
3 bedroom, 2 baths .on 4 3
acres Must Sellll Call
(740)709·1166

Thla n.wapaper will not
knowingly accept
edvertieernenlt for reel
e1tate which 11 In
vtoletlon ot the lew Our
reecMre are hereby
Informed thlt all
dwelling• advertiHd In
thla MWapaper are
evalleble on 1n llqUII
opportunity baaes

.

For Lease
Beaut•lully
restored unfurntshed two
bedroom apartment over·
loOking the Ctty Par~ and
Rtver All new appliances 1
1/2
baths
$600/mo
depoSit
Secunty
References requ1red No
pets Call 740·446·2325 or
740·448·4425
Furn•shed one bedroom Apt
clean no pets Must be w1ll
1ng to g1ve references
Phone (304)675 1386

Sears stereo LXI senes
$150 rad1o CD &amp; spea~ers
record player cassette
Sears
26 6
cu
It
relr1g/lreezer $400 Maytag
gas range $200 Zentth tv
21 1n $100 Maytag washer
&amp; dryer $250 Cherry coffee
table &amp; (2) end tables $ 100
sectional sofa w/Queen
sleeper $175 Hollywood
bed $50 dresser $50~
Record cab1ne1 wtrecords
$50 desk $25 (pat•o lable
&amp; oha1rs w/umb) Ommg
room table w/chaus $125
Call {740)446 2030 leave
message wt ll return ca ll
Used Furf111ure Slore 130
Bulavllle Pt~e Mattresses
dressers
couches
bunkbeds recl•ners whal
no1s Grave Monuments
(740)446-4782 Gallipolis
OH Hrs 10·4 (M S) Sunday
by appomtment
'

r

ANllQUF.~

Buy or sell R1ve11ne
Grac1ous liv•ng 1 and 2 bed Ant1ques 1124 East Ma1n
room apartments at V•tlage on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·
Manor and
A1vers1de 992-2526 Russ Moore
Apartments 1n Middleport
From $295·$444 Call 740Ntce levf!l lot, 90 x200
992-5064 Equal Housmg
located at 201 Alrlme Road
Opportunities
1n the Porter area Pnced at
$15.000 Call (740)446 New Haven 1 br furnished $25,000 cash grants4514 or after 5pm call apt, de)J &amp; ref no pets GUARANTEED• All US
(740)446·3248
(740)992-0 165
reside nts qual1fy1 Money for
billS busmess school etc
N1ce mobile home Sites
Townhouse Gall 1-800-363·5222 exl
available $115 per month Tara
637
Includes waler, sewer. trash, Apartments Very Spac1ous
2
Bedrooms
2
FloOrs
CA
1
call (740)992·2167
1986 lnt9rnat•onal D1esel
1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted Dump Truck 4cyl Gas A1r
I{ I '\ I \I ...,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool Compressor w/Jackhammer
Pat1o Start $385/Mo No Phone (304)895-3796
Pets, Lease Plus Secunty
10
HOliSES
Depos•t Reqwed Days
JET
AERATION MOTORS
·--l"OiiiilliiiRENTiiiiiioo-~ 740-446 3481 Evemngs
Aepa1red New &amp; Rebuilt In
'
740·367·0502
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
2 bedroom house $300 plus
uttlittes Call (740)446-431 3 Twm R1vers Tower IS accept- 800 537 ·9528
Ing apphcaMns for wa1t1ng
2 BA water/trash patd no list for Hud subs1zed 1 br
pets references &amp; deposit apartment call 675 6679 NEW AND USEO STEEL
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
reqUired near Porter 388· EHO
For
Concrete
Angle
1100
Channel
Flat
Ba
r
Steel
Two 2 bedroom apts for rent
For
Ora •ns
238 1/2 1st Ave 2 br 1 bath tn Syracuse $200 depos•t Gratmg
furnished ktlchen oil street $330 per month rent Include Dnveways &amp; Wal~way s LB.L
parkmg No pets $355fmo water sewer &amp; trash sultl· Scrap Me!als Open Monday
plus ut1l1t1es Deposit and ctent tncome requ•red to Tuesday Wednesday a.
reference (740)446 4926
quality lor rent 740-378 Fnday Sam 4 30pm Closed
Thu rsday
Saturday &amp;
6111
Sunday
(740)446-7300
3 bedroom house tn
Middleport
no
pets
Solid woOd butcher block
(740)992·5858
r10
kitchen ISland wtth drawers
HOUSEHOLD
&amp; shelves 441124 excellent
M~
LEn'.!..~rrm; •j .....
oiGooiiiiiill'iiiio. ..r cond1t1on $350 l a·Z'-boy
rv nr.J"~
•
overs•ze chau &amp; half w1th
3 year old GE washer &amp;
sleeper bed and storage
16~80 3 t?edroom 2 baths dryer $200, Wh1rlpool set
ottoman excellent cond1110n
really clean no pets $425 $150, Wht rlpool washer $500 (740)992·5082
month + depoSit
$75, All white Call after
14x70 2 bedroom really 6 DOpm (740)446-9066
BLIIIJ)I~('
SUI,, IF.'i
clean no pets $350 mon th , - - - , - - - - , - + deposit Call (740)2,~6 81ssell Can1ster Carpet
1664
Scrubber Eleclnc Range
Block bnck seNer p1pes
Phone (304)895-3796
wmdows
hfltels elc Claude
2 Bedroom mobtle home m
Wmters
R•o Grande OH
Aacme area NO PETS GoOd Used Appl ta nces Call740·245·5
t21
(740)9~-5858
ReconditiOned
and
Washers Pole Bu1ld1ng Spec1al
2 Bedroom mobile home m Guaranteed
Rang9s
and 30x48x9 1·3 entry 1·14x9
Rac1ne $325 00 per month Dryers
Refngeralors
Some
start
at s hd1ng door pa1nted steel
ana $325 00 deposit 1 year
lease No pets No calls after $95 Skaggs Appliances 76 gu tte r erected 58189 00
Vme St, (740)446·7398
24x32x9 4· 1 3 entry 2
9 00 PM (740)992·5039
10 )(8 Insulated overheadsj
Beautiful nver v•ew Ideal for Good washers &amp; drye rs $95 12' overhang gutters pa1nt
one or two people No pets &amp; up Washer &amp; dryer sets ed steel roof &amp; walls msulat·
references (740)441-0181
S275 &amp; up Ranges $95 &amp; ed erected $9247 00
up Frost free Aefngeralor 30x40x9 4 1 3 enlry 2
NICe 2 or 3 bedroom mobile
$125 &amp; up Couch &amp; cha1r 10118 non-•nsulaled pamt
home mcludes water sewer
$100 Overstuffed cha1rs ed steel 12 overhang 1nsu
trash no pets starling at
$20 &amp; up__, N1ce full s •ze bed rated roo1 gutter erected
$300 per month , call
Vllth bo~ sprmgs &amp; mattress pnce $10 157 00
(740)992·2167
$75 Queen s•ze mattress &amp; 740-742 401 l
box spnngs $t25 &amp; up Full BOO 396 3026
APAli'IMI'NfS
SIZB b011 spnngs &amp; mattress
FOR Rm"t
$150
Skaggs Appliances
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
76 Vme Street
ments furmshed and unfur·
11401446·7398 -n week old Eng11sh Setter
ffished sec;untv depos 1t
reqUired no pel;, 740-992 - - - - - - - - pupptes 1·female 5-males
K1tchen table and 4 cha•rs Have papers have had 1st
2218
good shape $75 (304)675 &amp; 2nd shots $300 each
_ _bed_roo
_ m- ap_a_rt_m_e-nl_ $_3_2_5 6983
2
(740)256 1671 '
per month plus depostt
HUD approved 740-992· Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark. 4 Sare Green Wmg BabY
Gnape l Roa d:-POrteC Oh1o Macaws $i 200 ' each ~ -::::--001 5 17401928.4941
_ _:...:..__:__ _ _ _ _ (740)446-7444 1-877-830· hand/ ra1sed (304)743-3870
2 bedroom apt St At 160 9162 Free Est•mates Easy
past Holzer $475 mo ftnanc•ng, 90 days same as AKC Mm P1nscher male
(740)441-0194
cash V1sa/ Master Card blkltan 2 112 yrs old $225
cash Call (740)245 9497
3 bedroorh apartment $400 DrJ¥e· a- little save a lot
AKC Reg S•bertan Husky
a month plus depoSit &amp; utili·
t1es HUD approved, 3rd Thompsons Appliance &amp; pups 15 wkslold 1/male
Street Racine {740)247· Repair 675-7388 For sale 1/female grey/while With
re cond1t10ned automahc blue/eyes S200 (304 )7~3
4292
washers &amp; dryers refngera 5130
Dellght1ul 1 &amp; 2 BR umts lors, Qas and electnc
near Holzer, CIA high effi- ranges, air conditiOners and Cockapoo Pupp1es $225
2 s hots &amp;
c~&amp;ncy gas furnaces, Quiet wringe r washers W111 do each cash
location, $359 to $485 repa1rs on ma1or brands m wormed (740)596-2121
(Will meet)
(740)446·2957
shop or eo your home

--=-====::-- _j
FORECLOSURE!
4 bed 4 bath house only
$9 900 for liStings call
i-800-719·3001 e~t f144

Gallipolis
Close
to
townlhospttal 3BA, 2BA
View
photos/Information
online www orvb com, code
60303 or ca ll (740)446·
3032
---------Hgme sate m C1tv 3 bed
room, 2 full baths mea &amp;
clean iiJreat locat1on m C1ty
Vmyl s1dtng Pnce to sale
now Phone (7401446-9539
House for Sate Sandhill
Road 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
$1l5,000 (304)675-2507
Hous.e w/ 3 aores In country
has 2 yr old garage 28x32
has 7 rooms $45 000 pnce
neg 2. m•les from Mason
Walmart 304-n3-5343
Older 4BA 1 5 bath
Pomeroy, Ohio VIew photoS/ihlormatiOn
online
www orvb com code 80603
or call (740)992·3650
- ---..,.-----

Ranch, 3BR New Haven
WVa VIew photosl~nlorma
t1on online www orvb com
784 State Route 588 Cape code 111503 or call
Cod. asking $135 000 3 or 4 (304)882-2770
. ,. .
bedrooms,
2 5 baths
MOBILE
HOMES
Truck Drivers needed lo' :..
(7_4:..
0)_44_1_.0c.504_'_·-~-FOR.,,.,~
vaM &amp; flatbeds Long haul- Quality brick bulld home In _
~
•
1ng, 2 years e~perlence ,
good dr1vmg record Pay ~:!!lenent ~e~~~~;;o;:d 1980 Liberty homes 14x70
30% uuck gross (740)388· Ala Grande Spacious Jbr, 3SD, 1BA MAs ts" appraisal
_9~16!1'2-~~----, 2112 bath, featur•s updated $BODO Must be moved
~1141
B·'ll!Bl1'.'CC
kitchen with tile floors, family o.t~ulycluar~kin~e~gi~Sul:t~l~
~~.~ . u~
room w1th fireplace, over·
..,.__,;TiwNtNGiiiliiiiiiili-_.1 Sized 1-car garage This Is Debbie (7400«6 2451
A Must See
$120,000
3 bedroom new bathroom &amp;
Gallipolis Career College (740 )441 •1237
112 bath, new furnace, wrap
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740·446·4367 For lease or sale- nice 2 atound deck, appliances
bedroom house, $25.000 or Included, some furniture ,
1·800·214·0452
www geftlpollscareercollege com trade for hunttng land, very good condition 74Q992·5267 or (740)247·21 t 3
(740)898·7244
Reg ,90·05·12748

"-""==---:----'

1

Goolli

r

For Sate House on 2nd
Aile ' brick, 1 112 story Call
(740)446-3478

i

A~~E

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE'
Townhouse apartments
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 1111
for appt•cat1on &amp; 1nforma1ton

Huusmow

For Sale 79 106 Acres
A1ver VIeW prOdUCing Oil &amp;
ges wells $125 000 304
529-7106 after 5pm

HOME'&gt;

WANTID
To Do

...,.,..,....,....,=,...,==
"

Extendlcara Haaith
Servtc81, Inc
EOE

Wmter Sale
Stock N 0·308 44X28
3 bedroom 2 bath
Delivered and set up on
A l1ve coarse toundat•on
with heat pump
only $39 900 00
Coles Mobile Homes
15266 US 50 E
A1hens, Oh10 45701
1740)592·1972
'Where You Get Your
Money's Worth"

0

PAAT·TIME TELLER· Local
bank IS accepting appllca
NORRIS NORTHUP
lions for part t1me leiter and
DODGE
customer servtce pos11ions
Full Time Sales Pe111on
Must exh1b11 profeSSIOnalLOCATION 252 UPPER
ISm, attent•on to detail and
AIVEA AD
en1oy prov•dlng exceptiOnal
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
customer ser111ce Prevtous
UNLIMITED INCOME
expenence 1n customer
POTENTIAL
serv•ce and cash handling
NO EXPERIENCE
preferred Knowledge of
REQUIRED
computers a plus Must be
Must poses good people available Man through Sat
sk1lls amb1tlous altitude Please submtt resumes to
and the destre to succeed
The Da1ly Senttnel, PO Box
729·34 Pomeroy, Oh•o
Now Hmng fu ll and part 45769 E 0 E
time
McClure's
Restau rants In Gallrpol1s
Middleport and Pomeroy
Apply
Monday
th ru
Saturday 10·11 am
Therap•st
OTR
PAN
OpportunitieS
PT GT &amp; SlPI
-Arbors at Ga llipolis IS
seeking a par111me OT
10 JOin our e11cept1onal
1n-house rehab team!
Great part lima benefits
Please contract Beth
Carlson, ProStep Recru•ter,
at t -866·368· 7620 Fax
8 t 3-926-6874
Ema11
bcarlson@extendicare com

Very clean used 3 bed·
room/2 bath $9995 00 W1ll
help w1th del1very, Call Ntkkl,
740·385·9946

10

FORRml

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call
New 3 bedrOom 2 bath Only 740·446-2568
Equal
S995 down and on ly Housmg Opportuntty
$194 36 per month Call
Karena 740-385-7671
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT-

/·-o.
0

r

APARThiF.NTS

70-72 mobtle home 2 bdr 1
bath, electnc heat, setttng
on 50x200 lot has one star·
age bulldmg
$15 000
(740)742·4011

EMT s/Paramedlcs

Ambulance
Gall1a
county stallon, IS currentty
Addressers wanted tmmed!· hmng Please apply With m
ately' No expenence neces- 1740)446 7930
sary Work at home Call
Experienced auto body
405-447·6397
man, must have own tools
An E11cellent way to earn
Apply at Larry"s Body Shop
money Lets 1alk the
or send resume 2046
NEW AVON
Add1son P1~e Gallipolis
Calf Manlyn 304-882-2645 OhKJ
Joyce 304·675·6919
ave you ever
oug
Apnl304·882·3630
bout help•ng a ch1ld who 1
n trouble and m1ght need
AS SEEN ON tv
lace to stay for a couple o
LEARN TO DRIVE
ays? The M•lestone
TRACTOR· TRAILER
Foster Care Agency IS look
NEW PROGRAM
ng tor providers 1n Galli
No Expenence Needed
ounty to do shorl-te r
Placement Dept
are
for homeless-runawa
Flnanc•ng Ava•labte
htldren
ages 0-18 Foste
CDUTram•ng
ome hcensmg 1s required
ALLIANCE
e1 mbersement IS mcluded
Tractor·Tra1ler
lease call 1 888 823 753
Tra1n1ng Centers
or more 1nlormat1on
Wytheville, VA
Call Toll Free
Kawasaki
.._ Suzukt
1·800-334-1203
Motorsports 1n Gallipolis has
openmgs 1n the foiiOwtng
AS SEEN ON TV
areas parts expenenced
LEARN TO DRIVE
mechan1c sales, and man
TRACTOR- TRAILER
agement Knowledge of
NEW PROGRAM
product and ability to multi
No Expertence Needed
task
essent1al
Send
Placement Dept
Resume to
F1nancmg Available
Kawasaki Suzuki
CDLJTra1nmg
fvtotorsports Center
ALLIANCE
4367 State Route 160
Tractor-Tra1ler
Gallipolis, Ohto 45631
Tra1n1ng Centers
Wytheville, VA
Ma~e 50% selltng Avon
Call Toll Free
Limited
11 me
ONLY
1-800·334· t 203
(740)446 3358
Asphalt
Expenence
Expanding company needs Make your own schedule
labors operators and dump Need 4-PT Sates Reps Tn ~
truck dnvers 8eg1ns April County area We Will tram
(877)559·0441
1st Resume to
PO Box 3073
~I 'CI~I
Huntington WV 25702
NEEDED for busy salon
SCISSORS
Auto detail person needed ~ASSV
(740)441·1880
0
Expertence and references
requtred Salary based on 740)256·6336
expenence Send refer· Med1 Home Health Agency
enceslresume The Dally Inc seeking a luiHtme AN
Sentmel
for the Gallipolis OhiO area
PO Box 729·32 , Pomeroy , Must be licensed both m
_O_
h,_o_45_7_69__________ Oh10 and West V1rg•ma We
offer a competitive salary
AWESOMECAREER
beneflls package and 401 K
FOR2004
E 0 E Please send resume
Postal Pos1110ns
to 352 Second Avenue
$14 80·$36 00+/hr .
Gallipolis OH 45631 Attn
Federal hire-full benefits
D1ana Harless, Clm1cal
Call 7 am · 7 pm CST
Manager
1-80~51-7024 Ext. 2072.

WE NEED TO
""TALK" TO YOU!!

...it

~

9 UP TO $54 481 YEAR
NOW HIRING SELECT
AREAS
FREE GALL·
APPLICATION EXAMINA·
TION INFORMATION FED·
ERAL BENEFITS 1·800·
892·5549 EXT 92. 7 DAYS

110
HEU•WAN"rnl
1.
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~
'
$$$ UP TO $529 WEEKLY'
Ma1lmg letters from home
Easy• Any Hours• Full/Part·
11me No expenence neces
sary U S D1gest 1-888 389
Elderly Chnst1an lady (non
1790 24 hours
smoker) requ1res 11va 1n help
(hmtted)
Room/board
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or offered Senous 1nqutrles
Sell Shirley $pears, 304- only 9am-9pm (740)446·
09t0
.
675·1429

.......~

Per Picture tl

I ANNOUNCEMENT.PS247
.. GOV'T POSTAL JPBS'"

Br11tany m1x small female
dog Found on Mobley Rd
Gtve to
good home
740 446-9476

tJ;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

D)sp)ay Ads

mat call (740}985 3307

....

.111

Oeatl~irec

lwrlght(!!loc net

3 dnvers With COL &amp; hez- Life

9

l

Word Ads

(304) 675-1333

IIELPWANTID

GIVEAWAY

Friday
••
Februar¥ 13th
~
.
in The Daily Sentinel ••
Also a special section is available
for In Memory Valentine Pets

ro

I'

C- 1 Beer Carry Out perm•t
for sale Chester To . .mshlp
Me1gs County send leners
of Interest to The Da11y
Sentmet PO Bm: 729 20
Ohio 45769

.

wmners whtle

l\egt~ter

Sentinel

992-2156
Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To {740) 992-2157

9

Sion. Ju stin Browning scored

seven

Your Ad.

...

varsity game by a 52-23 deci-

m:ribune

To Place

~

Eastern also won the junior

had

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

~ Pet Valentines!~:
~

i~ter

c.u.. C11unly OH

~ Pieture s»our pet ::

::

el-

CLASSIFIED

•••• ,;::?,r ••• Go ~~ • • • • ~~ •••· l?"''t:--:0

M1ller, also on Tuesday.

22 for the

m:rtbutte .- Sen

I

11

r

I

�~

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

====~====~====~==~~
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help ~anted

'

SaVSun (Rotates)
Requirements : High School Dc~rec,
valid driver's license and good driving
record.
Salary: $7.00/hou r.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Communit y Services
P.O. Box604
Jacksnn, OH 45640
Attn: Cecilia. Deadline 213/04.
Equal Opportunit)' Employer

r. __.tl).~-~--.-....,.~1 r

ltw&amp;
GRAIN

Full blooded Rat Terrier Hay lor Sale: Round and
Square bales. Barn kep1.
Ph· 304-675-1743 or 740Golden Retriever Puppies 446-1 104.

puppy. Call (740)367·7468

AKC $225 each cash lirst Round bales $12 .50 Square
shots &amp; wormed (740)596- bales 2nd-culling grass
-e121 (will meet)
$2.50. Ear .corn $2.50 a
bushel.
Ground ear corn
I \I(\ I...,, 1'1'1 II s
$4.50 for 100 pounds
,\ I 1\ I "iII H h

10

At.mliii

j9.96

John Deere Back hoe L.oo-lllliFUiliiiHiiSiii
'Aiil.iiEiooo_.l
..S.x4 and Ext Hoe. 4000/hrs. '
]740)446-8044 .
$500!.Hondas,
Chevys,
~~=-~~=- Jeeps, etc t POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars from
or a e: ew o an
ushel Manure Spreader. $500. For listings 1-800-719echanically good shape. 300 1 ext 3901
~1~
,3;;00::;.·.:7.;;40~24;:.:5-;.:0:;;4;;85;:;,._.

r

,.
.'

l,IVE'&gt;TOCK

30 bred Angus Maineanjau
cross and Simmental cross.
easy calling AI bred starts
calf In Feb or March also 20
mature cows 14 of them AI

bred (304)576·2890
Holstein Bull calves Farm
frest1 . Call (740)245-9557

'.

r

ltw&amp;
GRAIN

I.B
Trucking _

rested nursing as~istanl .

1111111

• Excellent Pay
• Mileage Reimbursement
- Flexible Schc&lt;iullng
- One Weekend per Month
- One Holiday per Year
• Primarily Days

Applicatinns \viii be

•limestone ·

a~:n:p tcd

M - F at 1011 Viand Street. p,}int Pleasant, WV

_appointments can he ~dlL'Jul~d on February
1.1lh and February 27lh from 9:30a. m. - II :30
a.m. at our Middleport lt)L&lt;aliun by calling J046 75-7 404 or 1 -Koo- 99~ -69 1 6. Applicanl s may
abo i.:onl;.Kt this numhl'r for «.j U C~-tions or to
t im ~:

.........

Y a.rn. - 3 p.m.

to apply.

r~

r:

IUILDfRS InC.

&amp;

Doors Open 4:30

Windows • Roofing

Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get ·
5 .' REE

FREE ESTIMATES

7 40-992-7599

Seph1a- $3.995; 98 Breeze$3,195: 99 Lumi na- $3,695:
98 Neon- $ 2,995; 95
Camaro$2,995;
96
Con tour$2,695 :
96
Cavalier$2.89 5;
95
Cavalier- $2.495. Over 50
vehicles 1n stock.
Rome Auto Sales
{? 40)8BG- I J 43
_ __:;-.:.:.:.-'----'--:--:1999 Olds Intrigue GLS
Black
w/gray
Leather
AT,PW, PL,PW/Moonroof
79,000 miles asking $7500
1304)895-3417- leave mes·
sage

catlo'"'s for the truck

'

'

bid can be picked up
at the Tuppers Plain~·
Chester
Water
District's main office
'located on SR 7, 3
·miles
south
of
Tuppers Plains. The
mailing address is
39561 Bar '30 Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772.
We will also mail or
fax a copy of the
specification sheet to
anyone calling.
The phone number
1·740·985·33t5.
Is
Bids will be opened
. Thursday, February 5,
. 2004, at 10:00 a.m. at
the Dlstrlcl's main
"Office. The District
reserves the right 1o
waive any lntormallty
and reject any and all
bids.
By Howard Caldwell
President
of the
Board of Directors
(I) 23, 26, (2) 2

, .

Early birds slart

6:30

How Available at T&amp;O Hydrault~s
• Form Pro Tractors
20 Hp .2 Wheet ,Drlve
25 Hp 2- Wheel D~lv·~e~-- ~·30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive

1
5
8
12
13

bux hladt&gt;S,

~rader

blades utilit y trailers. KOoscnei,'ks. and mo'l't".

And ..• ~ Mas.."t')' Ferguson Tradnrs.
;;tlwa~· ~

we still h&lt;t\'l' h~· draulit.· hn.. es, •1il and
n'llUir t:ylindc,rs.
CA LL T&amp;D HYDR AU LI CS.
ask for Terry @ 740-985-4384

r

SAI.E

01 Monte Carlo, $8.500: 00
Chevy Malibu . $3,900: 00
Dodge Neon, $3,495: 99
Buick Century, S3.995: 98
Olds Achieva. $2 ,395 : 97
Ford Probe. $2.200: 94
Probe. $1 ,800; 01 Cavalier:
99 Cavalier. $2.900: 95
Monte Carlo, $2 .500: 96
Chevy Lumin a. $2,000: 98
Ply 8reez~ . $2 ,500: 96

BoATh &amp; MO'IUHS

92 Chevy Corsica power
n&gt;R SALE
loc~sll il t
wheel/air/cruise ....,.lllliioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiooo_.l
control, V-6 (304)675-5752 2000 ~Model Sea-Ray 180
00 (304 )576 '3153
OB 3.0 Alpha I 98hrs, I 977.

. '

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Norris

Bass

Boal

(740)446·6865

air,

$ 2 ·200

,

Let me do it for youl

call after 5:00 P.M .

~
~7~40~)2~4-7~
-2~02~8------~ ~54
!72ll
TRUCKS
-------

Wrap around Brush Guard
2 Chevy Celebrity Stati on 95 Chevy PU, $4,200; 98 for ZR2 S10. $350. ca ll
Wagons 87 &amp; 89 Both run, Ford Ranger. 4x4, $3.700;
(740)441-0751.
one for parts $600 both 95 Ford F150, $2.800; 88
(304)773-5357
Chevy PU. $2.800: 90

Shop the
Classifipds!

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

45771
740·949-2217

ed. $6.500 080. (740)256· $2,300; 94 Ranger, $2,000;
1233.
. 98 Ford Windstar, S2,600;

E. Burdine, her hus-

Hours
7:00. AM • 8:00 PM

ing· therein, on the
2nd day of March,
2004, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the len mill
llmltallon, for the ben·
eflt
ol
Salisbury
Township Ini:Iudlng
and
Middleport
Pomeroy Villages lor
the purpose of main·
talnlng and operating
cemeteries.

Said tax being an
additional tax of 0.5
mIll at a · rate not
exceeding 0.5 mills
for each otte dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ten cents
($0.05) lor each one
hundred dollars of
.valuation lor live (5)
years.
The Polls lor said
wlll
be
Election
opened
at
6:30
o'clock a.m. and

West

North

East

I•

Pass

2•

All pass

34
35
36
38

Opening lead: • A

39

The deuce can
send messages too

Moteletalfer
Handed out
Adventurer,
often
Bedouin
attire
Place
List detail
Mae West
role
London
str!"'tcar
Army maal
Belief
Kennel noise

againsl
22 Use a
Bikini half
whelstone
lecher
23 Dl.et no-no
Pull down
24 Hwys.
Fire25 Like some
breathers
bath rugs
Old tale
26 Beauy and
Take it easy
Rorem
FBI acronym 27 Strong as
Open,
as a drain
28 Ripped
Catch
apsrt
red-handed 30 Hawaiian
" By Jove!"
carving
(2 wds.)
32 Sorrowful
"- Te
34 Tart
Ching"
35 Professors
Conjunction 37 Math
lor Hans
statements
Lean
38 RCA

prod~cts

DOWN

40 Church

reading
41 Ration out

42 Hera's son
43 Wading
bird
44 Patrick's
domain
45 Contract
46 Thai guy
47 "Tho
Greatest•
49 Strike caller

Which is the mo$1 important card in a
suit? Obviously, the ace. But all cards are
useful. The vi rtue of the two - especially
on 02102- 1s its lac~ of ambiguity.

South , on you r right, opens one sp8de,
and North raises to two spades. ending
the auction. You lead the heart ace and

1nspecl the dummy (North). Whal would
you do at trick' two if partner s1gnats with

(a) the heart eighl, or (bl lhe hear1 two?
Some auth orities dictate that if yo ur

BARNEY
INEY WUZ DEAD
HOW'D YA
A NEW r----r WIN HER
OVER'?

740-992-lm

r----:;:::r;::.~::--7~1;-G~O~T;:-A;;:--;W-:-;A;;:'IY-:::;1

\NQRDS

, opponents stop at the two-level in a

known eighl·card or better lit, you musl
balance. Thai advice is usually sound.
but this West hand is so unappealing that
only a kn ig ht or a lemming - the choic~
of noun being dependent upon the t~sult

Stop &amp; Compare

- would balance wilh a lakeout double.
II Easl plays lhe hear! eighl, il IS high and
encouraging. COntinue with the heart

2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser Chevy. 4&gt;4. PU. $2.500: 97
Limited . 25,000 miles, 5 Olds BraVada: 97 Mazda
speed. loaded. Needs paint- PU , $2,400; 95 Ranger,

MILL LIMITATION.
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,' 5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the
Village Council of the
Village of Pomeroy,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
passed on the 3rd
day of December,
2003, there will be
submitted a vote of
the people of said
subdivision at a PRI·
MARY ELECTION to
be held In the Village
of Pomeroy, Ohio, at
the regular places of
voting therein, on the
2nd day of March,
2004, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess ollhe ten mlll
limitation, lor the ben·
of
Pomeroy
alit
Village lor the pur·
pose of lire protec-

31
33

40 Plastic pipe

. 41
Multiplied 43
Gator Bowl 46
st.
Element
47
Thunder
Fine, to an 48
astronaut
50
51
(hyph.)
Moonshot
people
52
Faint glow
Meadow
53
sound
54
HI or bye
55
Swallow up
Partner
Individual
Cable
1
I
network
Palm leal
3
a-y candy 4
Off-road
vehicles
5
Camper's
6
need
7
CPA's forte 8
Orange
pekoe, e.g. 9
Helper
Knock - - 10
loop
Casual wear 1t
Put a s1raln
on
19
Roman
dozen
20

On today's deal, look at lhe Wesl hand.

• New Hom es
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

[7401 992-3194
992-6635

30

10 8 2

I

CONSTRUCDON

(1 O'xl 0' 6 1O'x20']

18
20
21
22
23
26
29

South

1~'---"'"""'---

ROBERT
BISSElf-

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

negotiable, boat must sell call (304)675-

(304)675·6278 $9000.

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

l.j

'

•

750 East State Street PJJone(74tl )S93-6671
Athens, Ohio
A Belfer War. Ererr Dt~r

751"1p

liON. SAl£
94 Stratos bass boat, 120hp
-------1985 SS Monte Carlo 1 '--llllioiiiiiiliiiii-_.1 trol ling motor, fish finder &amp;
trailer. $6800 firm . (740)742 owner excellenl shape
2000 Dodge Dakota, 4x4,V6 4011
$4000 call (304)773-6076
5 speed, Matching fiberglass/topper
52,000 miles
1997 Chrysler Sebring JXI,
under
warranty.
Fully loaded {304)675-2868 Still

l

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

lfo A Q J 3

'

IMPRoVEMENfS

on
SAVINGS

•

17

7 2
Q8 2
9 6 5 2

Dealer' South
Vulnerable: East-West

1,-,.;;;iioiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiorl

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references lurF350 Power Stroke. nist1ed. Esta blishe d 1975.
96
1
Diesel.
121 .000 miles. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers ' Basement
mR SALE
PhOne (740)245·0331.
Waterproofing.
96 Escort, 4 dr., 4 cyl., auto, 97 Mercury Villager Van.
new ti res, fuel pump, brakes. 11 1,000 miles. good condi- r--:---:--:--;----,
engine has been replaced. tion. $4,500 or best oHer.
Call (740)446-3744.
$1150. (740)742·40 11

•

•

I ~~~u~~H~~~~~

1998 Dodge Grand -Caravan
Sport, factory loaded, excellent condition. 72,000 mites,
asking $6.800, (740)949·

•

South
.AQ J94
• 10 5 3
• AK

Call f'or dNail

As

15
16

East

West
• 10 a s
• A KH
t J as
• 9 54

Each has full 1 year warranty on parts and labor.
Priced rrom $5,000 &amp; $13,000 w/options available.
Also~ Ua~· kline Hru s ho~s.

14

... K 7 6

~1.o• . ..-A•L•
~~.o. ..-A•u•1•us•·-..r~
mn . I•l~.·._~ · L

road near a home for· band, lo Pamela
merly owned and Burdine and Robert
occupied by John E. Burdine, recorded
in Volume 318, Page
German.
PARCEL NO. 2: 587, Deed Records of
Being In Section 34, Meigs County, Ohio.
Town 3, Range t 1, PARCEL I.D. NOS: 06·
Ohio
company's 00021; 06-(10022; 06·
Purchase. Beginning 00023: AND 06-(10024
al the norlheast cor- Said .premises have
ner of the Southwest been appraised at
Quarter of said sec- $110,000.00 and must
tlon; thence south on not be sold for less
the line between said than two thirds of
German ·and Park, 100 said amount.
rods lo a North 100 Terms of Sale· tO perPublic Notice
rods to a post; therlce cent down by cash,
East 17 rods and 9 certified check, or
SHERIFF'S
SALE· links to the place of bank check (no perbeginning, containing sonal checks wlll be
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
10 acres.
accepted) on the day
02.CV-o64
PARCEL NO 3; of the sal3 with the
FARM CREDIT SER· Beginning at the balance due upon
VICES OF MID·AMER· northeast corner of confirmation by the
ICA, FLCA at al
the
Northwest Court and delivery of
vs
Quarter of Section 33, the Deed.
ROBERT E BURDINE Town 3, l'!ange 11, The lull purchase
et al
Ohio
Company's must be paid within
.: Court of Common Purchase ;
thence 30 days of the date of
~ Pleas, Meigs County,
West 30 rods to a the sale; otherwise
Ohio
stake; thence South 1he Purchaser shall
In pursuant lo an 122 rods to a corner, be adjudged to be In
alias order of sale to thence East 30 rods Contempt of Court.
THIS SHERIFF'S
me directed from said to a corner: thence
Court In the above North 122 rods to the SALE · OPERATED
entitled .action, I will place of beginning, UNDER THE DOC·
exposelo sale at pub- containing 23 acres, TRINE OF CAVEAT
lie auction ·on the more
or
less. EMPTOR, THE MEIGS
steps of the Melga Excepting 10 acres COUNTY
SHERIFF
. County· Court House, heretofore sold to MAKES NO GUARAN·
- 100 East SecOnd W.C. Orr olf.Jhe §Outh TEE AS TO STATUS
~ ·.street, Pomeroy, OH - end , and except ·a OF TITLE PRIOR TO
45769, on February right of way hereto- SALE.
'20, 2004 at 10:30 lore deeded. to J.C. Ralph Trussell, Sheriff
o'clock a.m. of aale Ross by the window Meigs Cdunty, Ohio
day, the following
and heirs of John John E. Bowers (No.
0021415)
described real estate: German, deceased.
--~Situate In ·'" ·the- ~PARCEL ·NO. · ~ : ''· 233 North · ''Court
of · Begl'l.n lng 30 rods Streei
Township
Lebonon, County of . West altha northeaat Circleville,
Ohio
of
the 43113
Meigs and S.t ale of corner
Ohio:
Northwest Quarter or (740)
477-1361
PARCEL
NO.
t : Section 33, Town 3, Attorney . tor Farm
Beginning at the Range
11 ,
Ohio. Credit Services ol
sauthaaat corner ol C o m p a n y ' s Mid-America, FLCA
the
Southwest Purchase;
thence (I) 19, 26, (2) 2
Quarter ol Section 34, South 56 112 rods :
Town 3, Range 11 , thenceWest29tods4
Ohio
Company's . feet
to
Harrison
Public Notice
Purchaae ;
thence Darot'a · east line;
North
166
rods ~
thence North 56 1/2 NOTICE OF ELEC·
thence Weal 86 rods; rods to the north line TION ON TAX LEVY IN
thence South 188 of
said
section; EXCESS OF THE TEN

(

ACROSS

Norib
02-lr2 ·04
• K 6 5
• J 9 s·
• Q 10 7 4

4037 or 740·992·5082.

Rods; thence East to thence East 29 rods 4
the place of begin· feet to the place of
ning, containing 90 beginning containing
acres excepting tO 10 acres, 59 square
acres out of the rods, excepting a
northeast comer and right ot way herelo8 acres out of the lore granted to J.C.
northwest
corner. Ross.
PARC!;L NO. 5:
Also, a piece of land
20 feet wide for the Being the East 50
purpose of a road or acres
in
the
outlet from the 90 Northeast Quarlar of
acre lot formerly Sacllon 34, Town 3,
own ad
by
John Ranga
11 ,
Ohio
German , deceased, Company's Purchase,
and situated In the saving and axcapling
southwest one-forth theralrom ·44 314
of Section 33, Town 3, , acres heretofore conRange 11 , said road veyed.
to begin at the east
Being the same
side of said 90 acre real estate described
lot and running in a in deed from Pamela
southeasterly dirac· Proffit, nka · Pamela
lion along a ridge to Burdine, and Robert
intersect the county

&lt;.

rn.v...

"i t H\ It I s

91 Ford Explorer, $800;
1995
Buick
Lesabre ,
For Sale: Hay, $2.00 a bale.
148.000 miles, runs great, 94 Mazda MX-6, 5 sp., sunB&amp;D Auto Sales
About 1500 bales. Call
$1200, (740)742·2803 leave roof, V-6, AM/FM CD, cruise,
Hwy 160 N.
(740)446-7857.
call (740)992·6293
(740)446-6865
message .

Notice to Bidders
Bid lor Truck
(Legal Ad)
· The
Tuppers
•Plains-Chester Water
· District Is Inviting
bids lor a one-ton
Cab.
and
. 2004
'Chassis. All specifi·

Su~tday

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
COMMERC.IAL and
RESIDENTIAL

•SIId•Din
140-985-3564

(lf

mTi.tngc a spt.:~.:ilic

BISSELL

Pomeroy Eagles
· BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

NEA Crossword Puzzle ·.·

BRIDGE

Alder
,.,,

Grand Am . 52.000: 89 96 TarUs. V·G. 4 door, auto, Evenrud, fish Iinder, depth
Iinder. trolling .motor. nice

97 Monte Carlo· $4, 195; 00

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Phillip

Plcasam Valley Private Duty is accepting
applications for nursing assistants to provide
home care tu clients residing in Meigs. Mason,
Gallia and Athcn~ Counties. Applicant~ should
ha ve m'rc:-ycar e,-.~X""ri~m.: c or received a nursing
assistant l'Crtilicare o f trainin g or be a state-

00 Tauru s- $4,095 : 96 Cadillac;:. $800
B&amp;D Auto Sates
John Deere 2550 4x4 245 Windstar- $2.495: 00 Neon$4.395:
98
Sun
fire$3.495:
Hwy 160 N.
J.-oader ne~ motor, clu tch

.$14.000 call (304)593-0794

www.lflydailysentinel.com

NURSING ASSISTANTS

(7 40)992·2623

I R \ '\SI'OI&lt;I \110\

'IIIE

0

• a community group home for
1) 18hrs: llpm • 7am SaUSun;
2) 18hrs: llpm • 7am Fri!Sat:
2) 18hrs: 7am. Jpm or 3 • II pm

f1tJOZ."( T.-..ce a:,: "TO
lt au&gt; T~ ON llOI.F'S

&gt;Cf!VITies OUI!!NG

Wanted:
Part-time positions available at
•· people with mental retardation
m the Athens area:

Monday, February 2, 2004
ALLEY OOP

Monday, February 2, 2004

($0.05) lor each one
hundred dollars of
valuation lor live (5)
years.
The Polls lor said .
Election
will
be
opened
at
6:30
o'clock a.m. and
remain

open

740-992· 7953
pd 1 mo

until

7:30 o'clock a.m. of
said day.
By ordar of the
Board of Elections, of
Meigs County, Ohio

Dated

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

January

2,

2004
John
N.
lhle,
Chairperson
D.
Smith,
Rita
Director
(2) 2, 9, 16 &amp; 23

Advertise
-in this
space for $1 00
per month.

t~UST SI\W t'\'1 ~

IF H\C: GROVf'\Df\OG'"'!

Sf:£S filS Sr\1-.00W
TODI\'1, IT'S Sl )(.
t'\Ori.. W~ OF

':&gt;f-\~DOW .

II'S SIX t'\011£
WE.C:KS OF
DR . P...TKii'IS 1

WINi(~l

keep him. II he would play the eighl. lhink
about visiti ng the transfer market.

"lfeellike
, I'm out

"Not mel
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial ServiCes,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843·5264."

us COOkiES!

0/licl-

. . See ·,, ,,
'· ~(.)cky ;:R~"
&lt;·'·· 'Hupp &lt;~ ·
'

'

'

PEANUTS

&lt;. ,,

1

VES, MAAM,I D LiKE
PERMISSION TO LEAVE
EARL't' ..MV D06 IS
EXPECTIN6 ME HOME

IMPORTS

992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Vears Local

NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
remain open until
MILL LIMITAnON.
7:30 o'clock a.m. of Revised
Code,
tion.
Sections 3501. t 1(G),
said day.
Bryan Reeves
Said lax being a
By order of the . 5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
renewal of an existing Board of Elections, of
New Homes,
tax of 1 mil at 11 rate Meigs County, Ohio
given that In purRoom Additions,
of
. a
not exceeding 1.0 · Dated January 2, suance
Garages, Pole
.
Resolution ol the
mills lor each one 2004
' dollar of valuation, John
N.
lhle, Board of Township
Bl!ildlngs, Roofs,
ol
the · Siding, Decks,
Trustees
which amounts to ten Chairperson
Smith, Township of Sutton,
cents ($0.10) for each Rita
D.
Kitchens, Drywall
, one hundred dollars Director .
Racine, Ohio, passed
' &amp; More
.of valuation lor five (2) 2, 9, 16 &amp; 23
on the 1st day of
(5) years.
December,
2003, · FREE ESTIMATES!
there will be submit·
The Polls for said
740-742-341
·Public Notice
ted a vote ol the peabe
Election
will
opened
at
6:30
pie of said eubdlvl·
o'clock
NOTICE OF ELEC· slon at a PRIMARY
a.m. and remain open TION ON TAX LEVY IN ELECTION to be held
until 7:30 o'clock P.M. EXCESS OF THE TEN In the Township of
of said day. · ·
MILL LIMITATION.
Sutton, Ohio, at the
Code, regular places ol VOl·
By order of th.e Revised
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Bo'ard of Elections, of · Sections 3501 .t1(G), Ing therein, on the
Ph 740•992·0933
5705.19,5705.25
2nd day of March,
Meigs County, Ohio
NOTICE Is hereby 2004, the question of Cell740-591·1073
Dated January 2,
given that In pur- levying a lax, In
2004
lhle, auance
of
a excess ol the ten mill
John
N.
Resolution of the limitation, lor the ben·
Chairperson
Smith, Board of Township ellt
of
Sutton
Rita
D.
Trustees
of
the Township for the purDirector
.Township of Scipio, pose ol lira protec·
(2) 2, 9, 16 &amp; 23
Pomeroy,
Ohio, lion.
passed on the 15th
Said tax being a
Public Notice
day of December, replacement lax ol 1
2003, there will be mil at a rate not
. NOTICE OF ELEC· submitted a vote of exceeding 1.0 milia
nON QNTAX LEVY IN the people of said for each one dollar of
EXCESS· OF THE TE.!i subdivision at a PRI· valuation,
which
33795 Hiland Rd.
MILL LIMITATION. .
MARY ELECTION to amounts to ten cents
Pomeroy, Ohio
· Revised
Code, be held In the ($0.1 0) lor each one
Sections 3501 .11 (G), Township of Scipio, hundred dollars · of
5705.19, 5705.25.
Ohio, at the regular valuati;:,n lor live (5)
·
NOTICE Is hereby places of voting years.
. The Poll• lor said
given that In .. pur· therein, on the 2nd
will ·c-bs· auan&lt;!e
of ~ a - day-'of March, 2004, Ele~tlon
at
6:30
Resolution ol . the the question of levy- · opened
Board of Trusteea of .lng a tax, In exceaa of o'clock a.m. · and
the Township of the tan mill limitation, remain open unlll
Salisbury, Pomeroy, for the benellt of 7:30 o'clock a.m. of
Ohio, passed on the Scipio Township lor said d•Y·
By order ol the
16th
day
of the purpose of main2003, . talnlng and operating Board of Electlona, of
December,
Melgtl County, Ohio
there will be aubmlt- cemeteries.
ted i vote of the ,peO:
Said tax being a Date~ January 2,
pie of said subdlvl· replacement tax of 2004
N.
lhle,
slon at a PRIMARY 0.5 mil at a · rate not John
ELECTION to be held exceeding 0.5 mills Chairperson
D.
Smith,
In · the Township of for each one dollar of Rita
Salisbury, Ohio, at the valuation,
which Director
regular places of vot- . amounts to ten cents (2) 2, 9, 18 &amp; 23
d' mo

SOMETIMES HE
HAS BAD DREAMS
AND NEEDS
l
COMFORTING ...

WHAT DID SHE SAV,
CHARLIE BROWN?

Athens

Sunset Home
construction

J&amp;L
Eledric

~~~

High Bl Dry.
Self-Storage

740,-992-5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

740·992·7953

C1pller cryptogrit'lls ile creatf'd lrom qoolahons by I~'TIOLIS people past iW'id present
Each letter rn the crliler staMs tcr anolhff
-

TodJV s clue. A equ&lt;Jis M

" WKO ' S

OH

AWO

LGKOR

LHXO

SPGXG

WKO'S

LG

IWO

WCHKZ

WCGXWRG ,
OH

AWO

LJS
RHS

SH

IHAAHO ."
BGXHD

" YWSIPGB "

PREVIOUS SO LUTION

~

NWKRil

"I dream lor a living.' - Steven Spielberg

"Being a movie star-is what I do for a job .~- Sigourney Weaver

(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc

0

Tuesda~Feb.3,2004

By Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead, Lady Luck will be work ing hard to get you those lhings you desire
thai have been denied you so far. With her
as your teamma te , Your chances for
acquiring your heart's desires are possi-

1·31

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

BETTY

1-800-822.- 0417
·w.v·s # 1 Ch evy, Pont
. Cu stom Van

Sfanlcy f11yyim.;
and Jrcc Jrimminy
•Timber Harvesting
and Management
• Residential Tree
'l'rinuning and .
Removal
• Free Estimates

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

GARFIELD
iHAi'S RII#HT. WE'RE
Vl:Rl,l MYS-TERIOUS

.. PATEL CLINIC
Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP

WELL, SHE STARTED OFF 81(
SAVING 50MET~IN6 ABOUT ''IN
ALL HER YEARS OF TEACII!N6," AND
I MISSED TilE LAST PART ...

AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - A project
that you've believed would yield you a rea sonable return could lurn ou t to be far bigger than you thought, as Ieday's even ts
might reveal.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Friends
and companions Will lind you a delightlul
person to be around today. so get out and
spread your sunshine around. Find ti me to
be with those whose company you enJoy.
AR IES (March 21-April 19)- An important personal obiective can be achieved
today w1th the help of a little tuck. Not Ihat
you won 't have to do your share. but with
this added ingredient. yOur path will be
much easier.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You'll be
well-received by all you encounter today,
but it's apl to be members of the opposite
gender who'll find you the most a!lractive
Keep your eye open for Cupid 's arrows.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - If there is
someth i.ng prolitable you 'd like to achieve.
go after it today. You're likely to be lar luckier at thi s time than you w1ll be to morrow.
so don't delay your input on the matter
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Because
you're apt to view life today from a positive
perspective, thi ngs will run much smoother
lor you at this time. Your attitude wi ll
·encourage others to jump on your bandwagon .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 ) - This could be a
red-letter day for you where money is concerned. tf you're working on something big
that could add to your holdings, Qive it all
your altenlion today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Concentrate
on importa nt assignments or personal
objec tives today. Under your direction. and
with your special touch, all your undertakings should be very successful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Events co uld
work. out Jar belter tor you today if you take
a backseat and flow with the tide. Lady "
Luck is trying to make good things occur
tor you, bu t you mighl have Ia get out ol
her way.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOv 22) - Be sure to
get out and m1ng1e today and accept all
and any inllitations to social events you
might receive. because something pa~tic u­
larly lucky co uld happen for you at onl:! ol
the galherings.
'SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -It's too
bad you can 'l see yoursett through the
"eyes of others today, because you would
be well pleased by the image you proJect .
They're not handi~~ you r limited
view ol you rself.

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) -

GRIZZWELLS :___ '

-Internal M~d,icine
Medical Oncology ·

.6U~n.tERI!

530 West Union Street
Suite C
Athens, Ohio 4S701
Phone: (740) 592-5918
Office Hours: 8am-5pm (Mon-Fri)

I

If medical care i s all about caring with
heart's tender touch and warmth of
tears and smiles along with the culling
edge care, well, you can count '.In us!

. '
I .

L E

~ T AD

I' r I I r
pUETA

I

My sister was fishing for a
. .. compliment on how well she
16 1
1
had organized the local bazaar.
. . . ~ .
Mom says that, "Compliments
,---:---:-:-:-:::---, cost nothing, but you may have
G A V 0 YE
to .•.•••••• for them. •

r

I

N=:

I
If--r,-ro[a'l"'l-.,r.--i 0

Complere

the chuckle (;lucted

_
.
.
.
_
_
by l oll.ng rn thi!' mi~srng word1
' - - ' - - ' - - ' - - ' - - ' - - - ' ycv de~elop from srep No. J below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
1 -l o- C4
Parody· Bushy· Fatty· Nodule· YOUR DAY

Ajl evenmg long I had ranted about whal had gone
wrong w1th my day . Finally granny slopped me by an·
nouncmg, "Don't waste your evening regrellmg YOUR
DAYI"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Any

req uests you make oJ others today have
bener than average ,chances of being luifilled. Th1s Is ~ecause. when you turn on
the cr1atm. you'll b'e impossible .to- resist

SOUP TO NUTZ
11-\E G'IOI..JNO\-\OG Cc::fV\e$
Ot..lT aND SE(;;S HIS St·ra~.
THeRe'S Sl:&lt; MORe WEEkS ct=
\(JII\JTeR'...

I

~ecrrcnge l ett~q of · ~Me
lour scrambled words be ·

law •o fo rm fc •J r .,.crds

ble.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Reduced Winter Rates

by Luis Campos
Cel~bnry

qt,ur 'lllrlhd'l)' :

SHE 'LL BE S~ILtNcr.
ALL THE ,;t' IME!
.&gt;HE LL. PLAY I'\ US I C.
IN CLASS ANP BI'..KE

YOUNG'S
• Roam Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Elec!rlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks '

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AstroGraph

~~ onalimb!"

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Public Notice

THE BORN LOSER

king and another heart
But when partne r drops the discouraging
two, he is asking you lo shift. Clearly,
clubs look much more promising than
diamonds. So, switch to the club nme. the
high ca rd deny1ng an honor in the suit.
Here. partner wins with the jack, puts you
back in with the hea rt king, and you play
anqther club to generate SIX defensive
tricks: three hearts and three clubs. (Note
that if you continue hearts at trick two.
declarer makes his co ntract in spades
and diamonds. )
Of course, you must be able to trust your
partner to signa'! correctly. On this deal. if
he would drop the heart two at trick one,

Trla"T 1He HOu.:.
11-&lt;e [:R'r('R Vel'i1" ?

�Monday, February 2, 2004

www
.mydailysentinel.com
•

The Daily Sentinel • P3ge B6

LeBron scores 38 in Cavs' Brady wins second
win over Washington
Super Bowl·MVP trophy·
·.

i

iI
i

I

WASHINGTON (AP) LeBron James had his own
Super Sunday.
The Cleveland Cavaliers'
No . I overall draft pick did it
all, good and bad . He scored
a career-high 38 points and
got his first NBA technical
foul in Sunday's I 04- 100
victory over the Washington
Wizards.
" I was feeling it," he said.
"My teammates kept feeding
me the ball, and I was able to
get the shots I wanted ."
James' line in the box score
was a mouthful. He went 14for-27 from the field , 9-forII from the free-throw line
and had six rebounds, four
assists, two blocks and six
turnovers. He also committed
three offensive fu.ub and
made four three-point plays.
iocluding three during IllS
19-.point third quarter when
the Cleveland took the lead
for good.
"He carried· the load,"
Washington coach Eddie
Jordan said. "He is one heck
of a phi.yer. and that 's what
this league is made of - star
players carrying their team ."
James' technical came with
3:02 to play , and the
Cavaliers leading comfortably. He looked unhappy
when he didn't draw a foul
while trying to put back an
offensive rebound, then flung
hi s headband into the crowd.
"I didn ' t say nothing·,"
James said. "! ·just threw my
headband into the crowd, and
he gave me aT."
Carlos Boozer's game was

nearly as impressive . He had
21 points, 14 rebounds, five
assists and four steals for the
Cavaliers, who improved to
5-2G on the road and have
won six of eight. Cleveland
got its 18th victory: surpassing its win total from last
season, despite committing
24 tdrnovers.
Washington 's
Jerry
St&lt;lckhuuse, activated from
. the injured list , scored 13
pc&gt;ints on 5-for-14 shooting
- including a pair of · air
balls - in his first game this
season . Stackhouse had knee
surgery Oct. 21.
Rookie
Jarvi s
Hayes
scored 20 points to lead the
Wi7.ards, who fell to 2-3 in a
seven-game
homestand .
Jordan re~ponded with some
of his mo.st criti cal renJarks
of the season, sayi ng hi s
players
didn't
mat ch
Cleveland 's hard work and
grit.
"We ' re trying to change a
losing culture here. and it's
not easy," Jordan said.
"We're taking baby steps.
We ' re having setback s, and
we're going to keep plugging
it. "
Jordan said change is needed "everywhere:· in a franchise that hasn 't won a playoffgamein 16years.
"The people have to
change, or you have to
change the people," Jordan
said.
The talk of both locker
rooms was James. and the
calls he did and didn't get.
He was fortunate not to get a

fourth offensive foul when he
stuck his right arm in
Stackhouse ';; chest on a drive
early in the fourth quarter.
Stackhouse was called . for
the foul, and · an incensed
Jordan was quickly on the
court, drawing a technical.
After that, the ca ll s seem to
go against James .
"This is a man's league .
and sometimes yo u ain't
going to get the foul ,"
Cle..,eland coach Paul Silas
said. "I know we've got a
teenager playing in it, but.
hey. you see his body and
you ' ll think he's a man. "
Added James : "We are professionals here. Hopefull y
I' II keep getting respect. I
know my rookie year I'm
going to get a little bit. But I
keep gaini ng it, keep playing
my basketball, and keep winning."
James led the Cavaliers to
a 14-point lead going into the
fourth quarter. The Wizards
. never got closer than double
digits until .the game's final
minute, when a stream of
turnovers - in cluding a bad
pass by James - helped
Washington finish the game
with a 20-9 run.
James made seven of 10
shots in the third quarter, giving him another chance to
co mpare
himse lf
with
Michael Jordan.
" I wear No. 23 for a reason," James said, "so I gue ss
that's what. he felt like when
he used to heat up."

Meigs as the frame closed at Burrows countered with a
14-13. Southern.
baseline driver, 3R-35, then
Southern's inside game Dewitt hit a follow-up
plan was proving to be effec- jumper for a 40-35 Meigs
from Page 81
tive. but early in the second advantage.
The on-court exchanges
to my defense tonight," said period Aaron Sellers picked
Coach Jonathan Rees. "With up his third foul. That left kept the game exciting with
Aaron on the floor Dewitt Southern frantically search- Randolph hitting a threewas scoreless the first quarter ing for someone to fill pointer to pull Southern to its
mark at 40 - 38 ·
and had just two at the half. Sellers;' vo1'd on defens·e Wl.th closest
· ·
Just one minute into the third Burrows moving into the Southern's Sellers ,who
quar.ter Aaron picked up his middle, where he too did an despite four fouls, came back
fourth foul and without him excellent job. That left the into the ·game and shored up
on ihe floor, that took us out right flank of the Southern the SHS defense. Sellers
defense. however, scram- grabbed the next defe ns1ve
·
of our game plan."
Dewitt had eight points the bling to fix the hole in the board and strea ked down
court where he was stripped
rest of the third quarter and dike.
Carl Wolfe (Jr.) tied the of the ball, setting the stage
four in the finale.
: Rees continued, "We had score at 14-14 before for a Bobb-to-Wolfe-tot'our of our starters in foul Jonathan Bobb found the Dewitt old 'fashioned fast
trouble, and that was another hole in the Tornado defense break as time expired on a
'factor we had to overcome. and summoned a tidal wave 42-38 third period.
However, I did think the of offense to attack the weakAlthough Southern stayed
The
Bobb-led •within striking distance,
bench came in to do a great ness.
· was we II 10
· contro I of
job. Despite the loss this was Marauders went on a 6-0 run Me1gs
4
a good game for us. It had a to take a 20-! advantage by the game. Adam Snowden
Southern came off the bench for a coutournament atmosphere, the mid-quarter.
stands were packed, both regrouped amid two Meigs pie key scores as he teamed
teams played hard. and it was mi sses and a turnover. getting with Bobb and Dewitt in
a good clean g·ame. I am a score from freshman Darin pus h'mg the score to 52-44.
most impressed though that Teaford and two from Following Bobb free throws,
my kids never gave up."
Randolph to tie the game at · Burrows hit a three for a 5420
-20 ·
Despite mostly playing a
47 tally. Ault hit a foul shot
zone defense Southern was · · Ault on two separate occa- at the I :54 mark and Teaford
whistled for 23 fouls , while sions hit three free throws for hit a trey at the 35 second
themselves going to the line a 23 -20 Meigs lead, but a mark for Southern, the score
to hit 5-7 compared the Randolph tri -fecta tied it 54 _50 _
Meigs' foul"ish feast which again at 23 -23 · Bobb gave
Time was on Meigs' side as
gobbled up twenty-one Meigs the two-up on a base- Bobb hit his last pair of free
points in a 21-29 stint at the line driver, qut Randolph throws at the 14 second mark
line
again knotted up the score at 10 secure a· 57 _53 after
: Meigs was led by the dou- · 25 -25 as by thb time the fan Randolph hit a tri-fecta to
ble digit scoring of Jon Bobb bases from both sides were encl SHS scoring. ·
with 19 points and a solid " 0scallyhimo thbe game.
Meigs hit 18-37 on twois
floor game; and Dakota
h out ern. ecame h some- for 49 percent, hitting 0-4 on
Dewitt with 14 points. w at unpatlent on t e next threes, and 18-41 overall.
Dewittls inside presence also Possession as Ryan Hannan The Marauders hit 21-29 at
. . wh'l
Was. a ket 1·ntluence in the pulled down a defensive the 1me,
1 e grabbing 37
added re boun d an d threw a 50-foot " b
game.
arl Wol 'e
''
f b 11
·d
·
re
9, Ault 8).
M ounds
. h d(Dewitt
.
et.ght pol'nts and a good pass- oot a pass to w1 ·e-rece;ver
h
d
·
ff
e1
gs
a
s1x
steals
(Ault 2),
Bo bb ' who fiIll IS e Ito
I 5 turnovers, four assists, and
l·ng game, Ty Ault added five, Jon
·
h
1
·
0
h
Adam Snowden and Ryan Wit a ay-111 .
n I e next 15 ~ 1
Hannan four each, and possession Jeremy Rlackston . S~~h~rn was 21 -53 overall
benefited from a steal and f
fi
Jeremy Black..ston three.
·t
·
1
·
2
'9
25
M
·
rom
the
1eld, hitting 12-35
d
Southern was led by
rove I m or a e1gs
twois, and 8-13 threeis, while
marathon
man
Craig Iea d that held to the haIf.
.
d
f
M
·
connecting
on 5-7 at fhe line.
In th e th 1r rame, e1gs
Randolph, who despite takSouthern
grabbed
15.
ing a beating and surving two wen t up ear IY34-29 on goa Is
badly sprained ankles never bY Dew1'tt aft er Sou th ern 1m·d rebounds (Nease 6), had J·ust
· zone 1·or near 1y nine t'urnovers, nine assists
missed a beat in a 29-point bac k ·111 1ts
arne.
Additionally, two minutes and the (Randolph 6), . 12 steals
andolph had six assists. Marauders con tent to s1·t on (Randolph 4), four charges
Wes Burrows netted 15 what was then a four point (Randolph, Yeauger, Nease,
·
d'1ate1y as Darin Teaford). and 23 fouls.
points, Derek Teaford live, Iea d. AI n10s t 1mme
Southern dropped · the
Aaron Sellers two,. and Darin soon as Southern extended its
Teaford two · ao only · five zone, Sellers drew his fourth reserve game 49-40. Meigs
Tornadoes broke into the foul and the Tornadoes were was led by Eric Vanmeter
scoring column.
once again left searching for with twenty-seven points and .
·
David Poole had nine.
Le d most Iy by C ralg an. answer.
.
.
. I
Soutnern was led by R.J .
Randolph, Southern slowly
One key factor in. thej~hird.
emerged as the dominant frame was the great reb'-\und- Harmon with twenty-two
1
team in · the. first · q.uatler. ing of Ty Ault. Ault spaiked points, and Buddy Young
E xcept f or a . coup Ie ear Iy sev.era l Meigs fa~t br aks. with seven.
,·
scores by Meigs Souihern led . with a good night in the pst.
As . part of a triple header,
most of the first frame, comA Burrows and Rand Iph · Southern s'tarted the night otT
pliments of eight Randolph bucket' cut the score bac~ to with a46-45 overtime victory
points and two three pointers 34-29. After a Meigs iss over the Meigs freshmen.
from Wes Burrows. ·
Southern had a chance to Weston Counts led the
Southern led by as much as slice away at the gap, ~ut Tornadoes with IS points,
. five !.oints in the opening Carl Wolfe ~rabbed a st~.al Jesse McKnight added 14,
roun , but two goals by Ryan and drove it 111 fqr tbe sco~~b. and Jacob Hunter eight..
Hannan tied the score at 12- 36-29. Burrows and Der
Meigs was led by Dakota
12 before Southern went up Teaford once again hit goa t Smith wit h nine, and Dan
14-12 on a .Randolph jumper for Southern to · shorten thrr- Bookman
and
Casey
inside the three point line. gap at 36-33, but De Wi
Richardson with seven each.
Ault hit a free throw . for went untouched to the baske ·
Southern hosts Eastern
on a great feed from Wolfe. Tuesday.

Meigs

~

1

1

HOUSTON (AP) - Tom throws to Branch and David
Brady is getting quite a collec- Givens and a 1-yarder to, of all
tion of playoff wins and Super people. linebacker Mike
· Bowl MVP trophies.
Vrabel , who reponed as a tight
The New England quaner- end.
back has won all six of his
It was a more masterly perpostsea.~on games. including formance than in 2002. when
two Super Bowls in three Brady, then.a f1rst-year starter.
years. He threw for 354 yards helped New England upset St.
and three touchdowns Sunday Louis 20-17. Vinatieri also
night in leading the Patriots won that game on a late field
past the Carolina Panthers 32- goal. from 48 yards.
29.
"Maybe it was a little deja
Brady also made up lor ~ vu of two years ago," Vinatieri
critical interception in the said. "Tom did it again, he's
Carolina end zone by guiding amazing. Tt.is supporting ca.~t
the Patriots to a go-ahead score did it again and gave me a
with 2:5 1 remaining.
chance."
And just as against the
"We realized we had done it
so many times this year," Rams. Brady made clutch
Brady said of comi11g back. throws throughout the final
"We knew we could come up quaner in taking New England
with the plays."
to its 15tb straight victory.
When the scrappy Panthers
"I think each game is differcame back to tie it. Bmdy engi- ent," Brady said. "To win this
neered a 37-yard drive in the the way we did is incredible,
final minute. His 17-yard com- unbelievable. A great allpletion to Deion Branch on around game.
third down- against a shosk"I don't know how I do it."
ingly soli defensive alignment
But he does it.
-set up Adam Vinatieri's 41"In this day in the NFL;'
yard field goal to win it with 4 offensive coordinator Charlie
seconds remaining.
Weis said, "who else would
In all, Brady completed a you want throwing the' ball?
Super Bowl recond 32 of 48 -I' ll take Tom Brady 10 times
passes, with 5-yard touchdown out of 10."

q

1

'

Wedge not
promising patience
with Lawton, B2

'

Brady made sure the mter·
ception by Reggie Howard
with 7:38 to go did not cost
'New England the championship. Carolina turned that
pickoff into an 85-yard touchdown pa~s from Jake
Delhomme
to
Muhsm
Muhammad, the longest play
in Super Bowl history.
With Carolina on top 22-21,
Brady went 6-for-8 on a 68yard drive. He convened two
third downs on the series with
perfect passes, then found
Vrabel in the f~ont ponion of
the end zone.
"Tom just put it iri there."
Vrabel said, with his son seated on his lap at an interview
podium. I just thought. 'Don't
drop it. treat it like it's your
kid."'
After Delhomme rallied
Carolina again and the first ·
overtime in Super Bowl history loomed, -Brady and New
England got a break. John
Kasay's kickoff sailed out of
bounds, giving the Patriots the
ball at their 40 with I :08 left.
Brady had two 13-yard completions to Brown, leading to
tbe 17-yarder to Branch when
the Panthers played a conservative defense.

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,~ ,ti "-..J'-'1 • \ ,,)

, j

'\1 1

11 •' •

II 1 "-. 1•\\

-

• Lady Eagles down
Meigs: See Page. B1

STAFF SGT. ROGER CLINTON TURNER JR.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Easter Louise Brown
• Shirley June Johnson
• Alice Mills
• Ralph Koker, Jr.
• Pi rl Burris
• Sylvia M. Wolfe

. - .. -.. -.;,
W EATIIEft.

Detallo on Page A&amp;

LO'I'l'ERIES
\

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-8-1
Pick 4 day: 3-4-7-4
Pick 3 night: 7-8-0
Pick 4 night: 1-6-3-1
Buckeye 5: 5-13-14-15-24

West Vll'ginia
Dally 3: 5-6-6
Dally 4: 9-0-4-2
Cash 25: 5-7-8-11-13-16

Fe ruarv 13, 2004
INDEX

~allipoliiS -Jaailp tltribunt
446-2342

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Joint Jlea~ant 1\.egi~te·r

Dear Abby

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

675-1333

•

The· Daily·Sentinel
992·2156
· Don't miss out on this great opportunity ·
to have your business included!
Advertising Deadline is February 4, 2004

© 2004 Ohio Valley Puhlitthln!f Co.

-

'' " ' '

' ' " " ''''' • 1• ! ,, .. , ,

,

POMEROY With a
mother's intuition. Dottie
Turner felt a sense of dread
when she got a call from the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Sunday night.
The tight-lipped deputies
told her a man from the U.S.
Army had some news for her.
Moments later. Sgt. Dale
Clifford arrived in his dress
uniform bearing news no
,. mother ever wants to hear.
Her son, Staff Sgt. Roger
Clinton· Thrner Jr. , 37, was
killed in a rocket attack
Sunday on an army hase in
cen tral
Iraq.
Clinton ,
Turner's on ly son, is the first
casualty from Meigs County
to die in 1he war. He leaves
behind a five -year-old daughter, Tabitha, a 14-year-.old

son, Steven, and a wife.
Teresa.
''I knew right then and
there that something had happened," said Turner. "'I s.lid to
him (Sgt. Clifford). you don 't
have to tell me . I already
know."
Clinton had been in the
military for 19 years and had
served in the De sert Storm
during the lirst Gulf War. He
had been in Iraq since the war
began and was due to come
home within a few short
weeks. Ever si nce the war
started, Turner has been
· watching television for news
of her son, who was serving
in the 4th Infantry Division
as a supervisor for an
armored tank repair unit.
Turner felt that her son
might be a little safer from
attat:k because his job did not
take him into active combat.

Clinton was stationed inside
a logistics support base in
Balad, 50 miles south of the
division's headquarters in
Tikrit. an army statement
said. Tikrit. the hometown of
Saddam Hussein. is part of
1he Sunni Triangle, where
must of the anti-U.S. insurgency has taken place.
"I watched the war constantly on television :· said
Turner. "A cold chill would
run all over me whenever I
saw someone die."
Twelve other soldiers were
wounded in the attack. that
killed Clinton . The death toll
raised to 523 U.S . soldiers
killed in the contlict in Iraq.
Despite everything. Turner
still supports the war effort.
"Even though he got killed,
I still think it is a just war ...
Please see Country. AS

·Coffee shop blends caffeine with·Christianity
BY J. MILES LAYTON
JLAYTON®MYOAILYSENTI&gt;IEL.COM

POMEROY - A cotTee
shop unlike any other has
opened
in
downtown
Pomeroy.
Common
Grounds
Coffee
Shop
blends
Chri~tianity with a good
cup of cotfee in a relaxing
atmosphere. The house
specialty is French vanilla
cappuccino.
"I wanted to get people
together in an informal
setting to teach the
Gospel ," said Pastor Les
Hayman, who opened. the
shop at 202 East Main in
early January.
Hayman, a native of
Meigs County, said the
idea behind the shop,
which doubles as a church
and mission, is to open up
Christianity to the community. He hopes to attract
people ignored or discriminated against by mainstream
Christianity.
Hayman's church, comespresso·
plete
with
machine, is not about the
tight boundaries of religion, but about learning
about God in a relaxing
setting . There are no
pressed suits or boring
hymns, but instead jeans
and a drum set.
"We are trying to teach
to a different crowd here,"
said Hayman . 'The people
that think the church is

about money . are nol
goi ng to find that here.
. This is a faith based orga-.
nization. We are not in
. competition with other
churches. We are just here
to serve a need."
Hayman said he had a
wild youth filled with
drugs and al.cohol. He ran
away from home and was
living in a cave, litera lly a
cave in Millersburg. when
someone tricked him into
going to a C~ristian
revival in 1977 when he
was 18 years old. Jesus
was the answer instead of
alcohol or dru gs. A short
time
later,
he
was
ordained a minister and
traveled the world serving
God.
"I found what I was
looking for," he said. "The
traditional church never
reached me as a child."
Hayman, 45, walks the
walk and talks the talk.
He said he is more of
,teacher than preacher no sermons on Sundays or
collection plates. Hayman
said hi s goal in ten years
is to spread the ideals
behind the coffee shop to
nearby states so that other ·
people have a refuge
where they can learn
about Christianity without
a bitter aftertaste, Services
are at I 0 a.m. on Sundays. ·
" I serve because I want Pastor Les Hayman serves a healthy portion of Christianity with tasty cup of Frenctr vanilla
to." said Hayman . "I serve at the Common Grounds located on 202 East Main Street in Pomeroy. (J. Miles Layton)
God out of gratitude."

I

a

$250K grant improves emergency communication system

2 SErnoNs- 12 PAGEs

Editorials

:/ fll~!

BV J. MILES LAYTON

BENGINE&amp;...

Race lor the Nextel Cup freview

t

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSE NTI NEL. COM

-

It's Time To

l l l t Hl \H'

Native son gives ultimate sacrifice for co~ntry .

SPORTS

R~dwomen

cent (27-of-56) from the floor, 43 Jlercent
(3-of-7) from lon g range and 68 percent
( 13-of- 19) from the foul line.
from Page 81
Rio Grande out -rebo unded Walsh 3'7-34.
With the victory, the Lady Cavaliers
senior post player Ash.ley Norman's 19 move ahead of the Redwomen into fifth
point s. Emily Mongillo added 12 points, place all by their lonesome. The fifth
Kerri Tolvay tossed in II with five place team earns the final spot in the AMC
rebounds and six assists. Ingrid Brainard Tournament , held at the end of February.
Walsh pushed the lead to as hi gh as 30chipped in I 0 points.
"'
Walsh led 41-2 I at halftime. The 19- points in the second half and' Fox brought
point first half run was keyed by reserve the Redwomen to within 15. Rio
outscored Walsh 36-29 in the second 20forward J e~sy Fye with eight points.
Rio Grande could not overcome a co ld minutes of play.
The loss snaps a brief two-ga me winshooting first half and had trouble taking
care of the basketball. The Redwomen ning streak for Rio Grande.
ended the game, shooing 35 percent (20Walsh avenges the 69-66 defeat Rio
fo-57) from the field. 41 percent (5-of-12) Grande hung on them, Jan . 3 in Canton.
from three-point land and 92 percent ( 12Rio Grande will return to the court on
of-13) from the free throw line. Rio Tuesday night when the y host Wilberforce
Grande also registered 28 turno ve rs ( 1.6 in ' at 6 p.m. It will be the second match-up in
the first half) .
less than a week between the two schools.
After 53 percent shooting in the first Rio knocked off Wilberforce, last
half, Walsh closed out the game at 48 per- Thursday, 63-49 in Wilberforce.

Burnt-out city
church reopens·
after five years, A6

BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
HOEFLI CH@MYDA.Il YS ENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - With more
than $250,000 in grants from
the
Department
of
Homeland Security, Bob
Byer, director of the Meigs
County
Emergency
Management office , ·says
. progress is .being made
toward improving the. overall
system of commumcat1ons
with law enforcement, .highway and fire departments.
"Our main concern right

now is to have a comrimnications setup between agencies
· where everybody will be
able to talk. to everybody else·
on the same system," said
Byer.
"It's goin~;~ to take time to
do that and 1t's a ways down
the road , but that's our goal
and eventually we ' ll get
there."
Byer said that right now
he's looking at the first
responders
- · the fire
departments who are the
"first out" - in the event of

a disaster. and tryi ng to get
COITI I'\IUnications equipment
and personal protective gear,
along with search. and rescue
n-laterials , for them.
He said money has come
from the Department of
Justice and the . Federal
Emergency
Management
Agen cy in addition to
Homeland Security to help
with the commun ications
setup, mlding that he's now
working on 200&gt;1· grant
monies, one of which could
be · 9ver $ 100,000 from

Homeland Security.
Some radius ha ve already
been purchased , said Byer.
noting also that some
"repeater sites" have already
been set up. "As you talk. it
goes through a relay station
and rebroadcasts out to others," said the director.
He also said he has been
assist in ~ with plan s for a
state-w1de lrequency network which will have secure
frequencie s for use in the
event of major disasters.
Byer sa id he has put

.

.G

I

together a power point presentation to show to organi ;
zations about the Homeland
Security communications
· system and other facets of
local protective services for
citizens.
Lots of training remains to
be done, said Byer. in order
fur the county to get to a
place of readiness . He said
that is difficult since most of
the volunteers work at other
jobs and have ·a hard time

Pltese see Grent. AS

I'
I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="488">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9939">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18063">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18062">
              <text>February 2, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="369">
      <name>cox</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2066">
      <name>hersman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
