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                  <text>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

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•

NATION • WORLD

":- The Daily Sentinel

Bv ANDREW BRIDGES
PASADENA , Calif.
NASA's twin rovers reached
out their robotic arms to
. touch the surface .of Mars on
Monday, marking the. first
day of the joint $820 million
mission that both spacecraft
· were in full swing.
Opportunity and Spirit.
6,600 miles apart on opposite
sides of the pl~net. began the
workweek gearing up for indepth analyses of the soil and
rocks beneath their wheels.
Opportunity 'rplled onto the
· martian ground on SaiUrday.
a week after it landed. Spirit
arrived Jan. 3 but broke off
its science work nearly two '
weeks ago after software
. prpblems crippled the vehicle.
·on Monday, mission manager Jennifer Trosper said
Spirit had joined Opportunity
back at work, even as engineers worked out the last
kinks in its solhvare.
··we have two operational
rovers on Mars,'' Trosper
said
at
NASA's
Jet
•
Propulsion Laboratory.
Also, NASA unveiled the
first
360-degree
color
panoramic image taken by
· Opportunity of its landing
site. The rover touched down
in one of the tlattest,
smoothest regions on· Mars
. but ultimately came to rest
inside a crater 72 feet across.
"It provides us with a real
: sense of 'you are there," '
· said scientist Jeff Johnson of
the U.S. Geological Survey
office in Flagstaff. Ariz.
Johnson likened the mosaic
. image to the overlapping
: snapshots tourists often take
· of the Grand Canyon to cap: ture its full sweep.
· Opportunity stretched out
its robotic arrn and photographed in detail each of
• the four instruments it carries. The arm - formally
· known as an "instrument

.#·- /

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,·

NASA unveiled this photograph of the Mars rover Opportunity's robotic arm as it stretched over
the surface ~f Mars. NASA's Opportunity and its twin Spirit reached out their complex robotic
arms to touch the surface of Mars on Monday, marking the first day of the joint $820 million
mission when both unmanned spacecraft were in ful l swing. (AP Photo/NASA, JPL)
deployment device" - is the
most complex mechanism on
eac h rover and was reported
to be working well.
Spirit resumed use of its
own arm, picking up where it
left off. NASA planned for it
to brush the dust off a volcanic
rock
dubbed
Adirondack. allowing the
rover's to photograph it in
extreme close-up.

NASA launc hed the pair of
vehicles to find geological
evidence of past water attiv"
ity on Mars. That could show
the pla~et was hospitable to
life perhaps billions of years
ago.
It appears Opportunity has
not had to venture far to find
such evidence: It has al ready
discovered an iro1Hich mineral called gray hematite, and

eral Los Angeles-area counties, among others and
account for more than 35
million people, according to
Smolka, a political science
professor
emeritus
at
American Unjversity.
Few who retired would
acknowledge directly that
they left because of the
2000 election . . But many
say it's been a driving factor for others who've left.
·"The administration of
elections is becoming so
complicated, and so risky
for one's reputation and
one's integrity, I think
we've seen a lot of people
leave for those· reasons,"
said Ern ie Hawkins, the
registrar in Sacramento
County, Calif., who retired
last year after 39 ·years with
the county.
Hawkins · said he retired
because of a new boost to
his retirement package. Now
he's helping his old deputy
prepare for this election,
JUSt on a contractual basis.
At the local level, elections are administered in a
various
ways.
Around
Houston. for example, elect:
ed clerks are in charge. but
the eleciio ns are actually
run by hired admin.istrators;
in , some areas, commissions
hire admi nistrators; and in
Florida, administrators are
elected directly.
Pam Iorio, who oversaw
the 2000 elections· in
Florida's
Hillsborough
County -~- but -left in 2002
when she was elected
Tampa 's mayor said
elections always have their
difficulties. But the last .
presidenti!ll race, when the
outcome in Florida was in
doubt for ' more than a
month, dram.a tiqlly raised
the pressure.

"I do think the 2000 presidential
election
just
c han ~ed the whole focus of
election
administration,"
Iorio said. "The media has a
different take on it. The
·public has a different take
of what they're going to
accept and not accept."
For instance, more than a
quarter of Florida's county
election supervisors who
served in November 2000
- or 18 of 67 - have
since left office, · according
to state records.
Local officials also have
complained for months that
electoral reform money
promised from the federal
government has been slow
to arrive. That leaves local
adm inistrators on the hook
to make changes without
the resources to do it,
Smolka said.
"It's, not a pleasant place
to . be · right now," said
Smolka, who writes a
newsletter · for
election
administrators.
He says that many of the
new officials have solid
experience as deputy administrators or &lt;IS top officials
elsewhere. But others say
the turnover will Oflly create
more problems, as new officials come to grips with rising expectations for the voting system .
" I think it will get worse
before it gets better,'' said
Hawkins, in Sacramento.
The pressure isn 't easing
up, ·he said, .·noting that• his ·
county has had a very difficult time finding a new
chief deputy since promot-·
ing . his former deputy to th~
top post.
"People just don 't want
the. job," he said . "They just
don't want the responsibility
for the job."

preliminary measurements
suggest it is of a variety that
forms in liquid water.
Spirit, in contrast, may
have to drive hundreds of
yards, to a nearby crater
called Bonneville, to uncover
similar geologic proof.
"Spirit is the driving mission. We are already theorizing how to drive far and
fast," Trosper said.
·

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applications
being taken
POMEROY
Applications are heing taken
by the Meigs County Health
Department for participation
in the WIC (women. infants
and children) program. The
program is geured to provide
- nutritious foods lor families
where the mother i ~ pre~nant,
breastfeeding or haschtldren
aged less than fi ve years old .
For more informaton call
740-992-0392. WIC is part of
: the Help Me Grow campaign.

(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

(APPROXIMATELY JO WORDS)

Happy

·Mommy &amp; Daddy

31NCH AD ... $15.00
(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

21NCH AD ... $10.00
Happy Valentine's Day

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

MAY WE ALWAYS

HAVE A

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

MY HGriJEY

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

2004.

Writing this love
message gives me the
opportunity 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

WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

•

r-·---·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·---------·-·---··----~•
Write,your Message Below:
'I

Mall Yo~r Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

Church services
Saturday, Feb. 8
ST IV ERSV ILLE - The

DEXTER
Joshua
Bass, son of John Bass of
Dexter. graduated Jun . I()
from
the
Motorcycle
Me chanics
Institute
of
Orlando. Fla. He majored
in the Harley-Davidson pro-

Other events
Tuesday, Feb. 3
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will ha ve ,j chi ldhood immtl nization clinic from I to 7
p.m. at the clinic. Children
are to · be accompanied by
parent or legal guardian . Take
chi ld 's shot records and medical c&lt;trds. if applicable. ·

Birthdays
Tuesday, Feb. 10
POMEROY Frances
Carleton wi II observe he r
79th birthday on Feb.. I0.
Cards may be sent to her at
32741
Rosehill
Road.
Pomeroy. 45769.

bration or his 20th birthday
shared 'with hi s uncle . Dave

Court News

~

.,.

Monday, Feb. 9
RUTL AN D. Revi val
servic·c s will be held &lt;tt the
Rutland FreeWill Baptist
Church. 7 p.m. through Feb.
1-1. Tim Simpson and Ronn ie
warrens will be the evangeli sts. There will be special
singing eac h night. Pastor
. Jamie Fortner invites the
puhlic

Bass. A family dinner was
held in nbservam:e of their
birthdays at the home of
the ir moth er and grandg ram.
Ora
Bass
on
Bass returend home in mother.
time for the Jlln. 23 cclc- College Road, Syrm:use . .

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in . the Meigs
SHADE - Lindsey K. and County Cou rt of Judge
: George Allan Tolley of 42780 Steve Story between Dec. 6
: Gilkey Ridge Road. Shade. and Jan . 25 are as follows :
C.
Ford .
· announce the birth of a son. James
Killian Allan Tolley. on Jan. Pickerington. speeding , $30
21
at
the 0' Bleness und costs, seatbelt , $30 amJ
: Memorial Hospital in Athens . costs ; -Mary E. Fowler,
-Syracuse, seatbelt. $ .~0 ami
costs; Ron D. Frame, Little
: Coshocton County Hocking , speeding, $30 and
BrcnJa Freeman ,
· announces plans costs;
Albany, $30 and costs;
for state's first
Ellen
M.
Freeman ,
Gallipolis, speeding , $30
_ethanol plant
••• (AP) A power company and costs ; Michelle .1.
French; usc of unauthorized
• based in Washington state plates, costs on ly; Angela
: plans to build Ohio's first D. Frye, Griffi(hvi lle, W. V&lt;i ..
· ethanol plant, a county speeding, $20 and cost s.
development
official tinted glass, $20 and cos.ts :
Troy A. Gantt. Pomeroy,
. announced · Monday.
speeding,
$30 and costs ;
• Nordic Biofuels plans to
John
K:
Garrett,
Athen s.
• build and operate the $50
; million plant in Coshocton speeding, $30 and costs;
Terry L. George , Rttlland,
: County in central . Ohio,
failure
to register, $20 and
· said Ed Flynn, executive
costs. failed to yield, $20
director of the Coshocton and costs; Gary L. Gibbs,
. Port Authority. .
Racine, seatbelt , $30 and
• Ohio is the. nation's sev- costs; Harry A. Gibbs, West
: enth largest corn grower Palm Beach, Fla., no oper- but is the only state in the ating li cense, costs onl y.
: Midwest withou t a plant seatbelt. $30 and costs :
that turns corn into the Michelle
R.
Gi lmore .
gasoline additive.
Cheshire, speeding, $30 and
The plant would be wei- costs;
Earle A. Goode. Raciltc .
. ; come . n·ews for Tanners
; who 'would have another non-support of dependents.
$1.07\) in costs; Derek L.
~ buyer. for their corn crops.
; The ethanol plant also Graham, Columbus. $50
~ would create about
I00 and costs ; Richard · T.
Grinstead, Racine, speeding.
: jobs .
· Nordic Biofuels, a sub- · $30 and costs; Nathan L.
Tuppers Plains,
i sidiary of Nordic Energy · Grubb,
speeding,
$30 and costs;
; Group,
is
based
in
Grueser, Syracuse,
; Vancouver, Wash. It also is Melissa
passing bad checks, $25 and
; developing an ethanol plant costs ; Delvin C. Guthrie,
in Nebraska.
Albany,
on
operators
Et hanoi comes from the license, $50 and costs, left
_: ferment ation of sugars from of center, costs only;
; corn and other crops and . James . W. Hall. Cross
: burns el eanor than other Lanes W.Va., speeding. $30
: fuels. Additives are blended and costs; Randy D. Hall ,
with gasoline · to help ~eet Dalmatia, Pa .. speeding. $30
federal clean a1r regulattons and costs; Woodrow W.
Hall, Coolville, seatbelt. $30
and impliPve performance.

.

Stive r'l·ilk
Comtmmity
Church will be havi ng a·twoni ght reviva l with Harry
B ~s h nf Florida spe~ kin g .
Services will he held at · 6
p.m. Pas tor Way ne Jewel
in-vites the public.

Bass graduates

: of their son

Happy Valentine's D.av
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, and
Brother...
Thanks for being such
a grealfamlly!
I Love You Very Much!

Ist Valentine's Day .
Tessa!

Wednesday, Feb. 4
RA C INE
Southern
Athletic Boosters. 6 p.m. m
the hi gh school .cafeteria .

Cases heard
in Meigs
:Tolley
announced birth County Court

Examples ofSizes and Prices

Address: :---:----------------------"------ - - - ---------Size of Valentine:-:-~----------------------:--------------I

:w1c

With A Sentinel Love Message!

Name: ______________________________~------------------

~:Sul:5sc;ribe today~ 992~2155

Tuesday, Feb. 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Lodge
363
F&amp;A M. wi II meet at 7:30

,..,Your Way ,.., On February 13th ,..,
1'/l INCH AD .. $7.50

MIDDL EPORT
Middleport
Community
Assoc. , R:30 a.m.. Peoples
Bank.
·

Clubs and
Organizations

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

liNCH AD ..... $5.00

p.m. at thr Ma,onic Temple.
All lodge ufficers and members to uttend for a -preinspection meeting wi th di strict deputy.

Thursday, Feb. 5
POMEROY
Hol zer
. Hospice Mei gs County "'dinThursday, Feb. 5
ner with friends" 6 p.m. at
POM EROY - Sali shury Crow 's Restaurant. Call
Township Trustees wi ll meet 992· 7463 for more ini(Jrmaat 6:30 p.m. township huild- tion .
ing at Rock Springs.
TUPPERS PLAINS SYRACUSE - Syracuse The Tuppers . Plains VFW
Village Counci l wi ll be 9053 wi II meet at 7 p.m·. at
hosting an open door the hnll.
meeting with residents to
li sten to an y proposa l ~ for
.Friday, Feb. 6
changing th e street names
POMEROY
PERl
in ·the village at 6 p.m. in No . 74 to meet at Mei gs
Counc il chambers with a Senior Center , luncheon
Counci l meeting followin g at noon wi th meetin g fol at 7 p.m.
lowin g . Jam es Ful ler of
Snyder. Fuller. Port e r
Tuesday, Feb, 10
and Associate s to speak
"Go lden
POMEROY - fhe Meigs about
Opportunities
...
County Agricu ltural Society
will meet at 7 p.m. at the ·
Monday, Feb. 9
office.
CHESTER
Mei gs
County Republican Party
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.

It's Valen-timel

lll Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. ..

Wednesday, Feb. 4
PAGEVILL E Scipio
l'ownship Trustees will meet
at 6 :30 p.m. at the Paoeville
' .
0
townslitp
hall.

Sunday
Times· Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

,,

POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. at the town h~ll. ·

Keeping
· Meigs
informed.

:Toll of 2000 election turmoil: Big
turnover for top election administrators
. (AP) Turnover amo·ng
: election administrators in
: the nation's largest counties
: since the 2000 presidential
· stalemate has been unusual ly high with, by one
eKpert's count, at least 20
· top .officials leaving office. ·
- While individuals have
: cited ·various reasons for
' departing, many 'have faced
: greater scrutiny because of
· the 2000 race and new
· demands to fix long-standing problems, but haven't
: been given the resources to
~ make effective· changes, said
: Ri chard Smolka, an election
· expert who compiled the
. list.
The elections director in
· Ohio's Cuyaho~a County
. (Cleveland) quit m a dispute
· over buying new voting
_ machines; the elections
: superintendent in King
· County, Wash. , (Seattle) was
fired over missing absentee
ballots. Others just retired.
'Tve heard supervisors
tell me ·that 'I don't need
. this. I'm not going to put
· up with this anymore.' It's
· kmd
of
dis couraging
because of what we do and
how much we love it," said
· Kurt Brownin~, the election
· supervisor
tn
Florida's
· . Pasco County, who has
:. stayed in his post.
:· Some officials also worry
that turmoil at the top could
_ make new problems more
likely this November, si nce
local administrators are the
ones responsible_for. making
" sure balloting run smooth ly
·; on Election Day.
; · The 20 jurisdictions where
. administrators have left
., include New York, City, and ·
. counties that encompass
:; Houston,
Seattle,
·the
~ Chicago suburbs . (though
: ~ot · the city itself) and sev-

Tuesday, Feb. 3
Orange
ALFRED
Townshtp Trustees wi II meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the horne of
clerk Osic Follrod.

Tuesday, February 3,

2004

"

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Page A:J _

BYTHE ·BEND

2004

REDWOOD CITY, Calif tion would begin .
Geragos al so dropped his
(AP) - The judge overseeing Scott Peterson's trial on initial insistence that another
Monday baimed cameras judge handle th~ trial.
from the courtroom, ruling Outside court. he told
that jurors and ·witnesses reporters he now think s
Delucchi "is even-handed, is
would "get antsy."
Judge Alfred A. Delucchi fair and that 's all we ' re askby ing for."
rejected
arguments
Left undecided was the
lawyers representing the
news media who argued that possible sequestration of
the public has a right to see jurors.
photographs of the trial.
Peterson, 31. cou ld face the
"Jurors get antsy when death penalty if he is convict there's cameras in the court. ed of two. munts of murder
Witnesses
get
.antsy," for the deaths of Laci
Delucchi said during the 20- Peterson and th~ couple's
minute hearing. "The print unborn son. In April, the
media is welcome. This is not remains of mother and chi ld
going to be a secret trial.''
washed ashore along San
Attorney Karl Olson, who Francisco Bay. two mil es
represented several newspa- from the spot where Scott
pers, told the judge that cov- Peterson said he was fishing
erage of the trial would be on Christmas Eve 2002 ,
improved with photographs when his wife vanished.
~j u st as front-page pictures
enhan ced coverage of the
Super Bowl.
. The judge berated Olson:
"This isn't the Super Bowl."
Prosecutors agreed with
Peterson's lawyer, Mark
Geragos, who argued that incourt cameras would only
make the trial "a bigger zoo
than it already is."
The day saw little of the
frenzy the sensational case is
expected to generate - just
10 of the 25 seats available to
local citizens were filled.
The judge also agreed to
delay the trial because
Peterson's lawyer is defending another murder suspect in
Southern California.
Peter·son appeared 'i n court
for the first time since the
case · was moved from his
•
hometown of Modesto to this
Meigs • 992-2155
bedroom community south of
San Francisco. He told the
judge he accepted as "a
regrettable necessit y" .hi s
attorney's request to post\
pone the start of the trial.
Prosecutors had asked
that the trial start Feb. 17,
but after Monday 's delay
neither side was willing io
speculate when jury selec -

Mars mission enters full swing as both rovers reach out to touch ground
AP SCIENCE WRITER

Tuesday, February 3,

The Daily Sentinel

Judge in Peterson trial bars
cameras from courtroom

Mission to Mars

•

PageA2

•

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and costs. no child restraint,
$20 and costs; Phillip A.
Hamm . Concord , N.C..
speeding. $30 and costs ;
Timothy .
A.
Harper,
Ga ll ipolis Ferry. W.Va., driving in marked lanes. $20
and costs; Paul J. Hatfield,
Middleport. left of center..
$20 and cost.s:
Judy L. Hawley. Racine,
failttrc/stoplpublic
safety
vehicle s, $20 and costs;
Tara L. Hawl ey, Pomeroy.
scatbclt, $30 and costs;
Joshu.a
E.
Heck,
Jackson ville , N.C. , speeding. $50 and costs; David
Heighton , Midd leport . stopsign. $.20 and .costs: David
E. Hcnt\ricks. Pomeroy.
hunting wlout valid NR
li cense , $ 100 and costs.
improper tagging· of deer.
$100 and costs , illegally
taking deer. $ 100 and costs:
Nathan
A.
Hensler.
. Rac:inc. failure ttl regist~·.
$20 and costs ; Beli nda M.
Henson . Faycqe villc, N .C.,
DWI -with intnx over . I0,
$350 and cost': Michael J.
Hill. Racine. failure to register. $20 and cost s: Dustin
L.
Hoff.
Mt1rray sville,
W.Va., speeding. S30 and
costs, seatbelt. $30 and
costs; Karanetta N. Hoover.
Marietta, consumption in
motor vehi cle, $50 and
costs, drug abu se. $50 lind
costs;
Clinton
L.
Horn,
Coolville . speedin g, $30 and
costs: Don ald R. Huck,
Huntington , W.Va.; ~ pee d ­
ing. $30 and costs: Anthony
D. Hudson. Pomeroy, failure
to control. cos ts only:
GerulJine
' R. .
Huff.
Chesapeak e, spced.ing, $30
and costs: Michael W. Hughes, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va .,
speedin g, $250 and costs;
Patrick . A.
Hughes,
Proctorvill.c. speeding, $30
and co sts: Nguyen T.
Huynh. Logansport: In'd.,
speeding. $50 and costs,
seatbelt, $30 and ·· costs:
James
M.
!hie,
Ra ven swood. W.Va .: seat-.
belt, · $30
and
costs;
Chri stopher.
Imboden ,
Middl eport. seatbelt, $30
and costs.

'

.

-Threats may lead to violence
if boyfriend is left unchecked
DEAR ABBY:
ra n't
stop thinking about the letter from the gir l whose
boyfriend threatened In kill
her parents if she breah up
with him.
Wilen my cousin was 14.
her pa,rents forced her to ·
break up with a boy who
was too old fo r her. His
solution was to shoot her
and himself. She survi ved
but was left a paraplegic.
Your ad vice to that girl
was right on . You advi sed
her to tell her pare n1 s
immediately. That way. they
can .take the necessary precautions . Th e girl should
not assurne that her own
life is safe . Logk bas nothing to do with obsession.
and that boy is ~ lcarly
obsessetl . - CONCERNED
IN CANTON , GA .
DEAR
CONCERNED:
When I printcd that letter, I
thought it wa s unusual. To
my dismay, I have a bushel
of mail and e-mail on my
desk that proves otherwi se.
Read 0 11 for a sample:
DEAR
ABBY:
Your
advice to '·Anonymous in
Fort Myers, Fla .'' was correct. When I wils a teen.
my best fri end was also
dating a controlling guy her
parents weren't too sure
about. He raped her, but she
stayed with him anyway.
When ·she· became pregnant, he beat her almost to
death. She lost the baby
and very nearly her Iife .
Please let that girl know
how important it is for that
guy to be out of her . and
her family\ li ves. - LORI
IN FORT BELVOIR, VA.
DEAR
LORI: You're
right. If the youn g man
wmtld threaten the li ves of
her 'mrenls becau~e he wa sn' t getting his way, it doesn' t take a large leap of
logic to nmclude thut at
some point. he cou ld turn
on her. Read on :
DEAR ABBY: Lifelong
sufferers of dom estic violence -often begin thut sad
jmtrney as teenagers, tolerating violent behavior from
boyfriends. The boy in that

Dear
Abby

letter isn' t the onl y on e
who has ment al problems.
So does the girl. If her fiTst
seriou s relat ionship is with
a boy as psychotic '" thai
one and her pmhlems are
not addressed . she will continue to think that kind of
bchnvior is normal.
LONGTIME READER IN
KANSAS
LJEAR .
LONGTIME
READER : Good point.
Furthermore. the girl 's first
priority must be to protect
he r family.
DEAR ABBY: I was 17
when I tried to hrell k oil
With a jealous and control ling boy like that one. He
hinted that our house would
not be safe. but I to ld no
one. If I had turned him in .
many li ves wou ld have
turned out better.
About I0 years l t~cr. my
mom saw him on television
in a ja il interview. He had
rapeu more than 50 young
women.

"Anonymm1s'. should also
tell her school coun selor
Nt•w! Tht• l.atcsl Digital

and the po li ce about hi s
threats in case his ange r
turns tow ard her. Hi s parents al so need to be told so
they can ge t him the help
he need.s. - SAN DI EGO
READER
DEAR RE AD.ER: I agree
with that.
DEAK ABBY: I was in
her shoes betwee n the ages
of 16 and I R. My boyfriend
told me if I didn 't move in
with him.. he' d kill my parents. So I moved in. It was
pure hell . He brok e my
'wrist . cracked my ribs.
bruised · me frequently - for
the rest of my life. I'll have
scars as p&lt;~inful daily _
reminders.
She cannot change him.
He may say he 'd never hurt
her. but she shou ld listen to
the threats he i.s already
making . She mu st get him
out of her Life. I le&lt;trnecl
thi s firsthanc.l . My former
boyfriend is now in pri son
for killing hi s 9-mon th- oiJ
daughter.
ST ILL
RECOVERING IN OHIO
Dear Abbr. is ll'rillen II\'.
Ahigail Va" Bure". also
knrmn as Jeanne Pl•illips,
and 11'11.1' .finmded by Iter
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OPINION

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the G~vernmet1tjor a redress of grievances:
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

OUR

VIEW

In memory
Local soldier dies in Iraq ·
'

Page A4

'

We wish to ex tend the deepest sympathy to the famil y of
Staff Sgt. Roger Clinton Turner Jr.
Turner. a Meigs County nati ve, was killed Sunday while
serv ing his country. Anti-American insurgents ki lled thi s thirty-seven year old father of two in a roc ket attack on an Army
base in central Iraq where Turner was stationed.
He is the first Meigs Coum y nati ve to die in the ongoing
. ,war in Iraq .
• Turner had served this country for 19-years, having also
fought in Desert Storm . He leaves behind parents. siblings, his
wife, Teresa; a fi ve-year-old daughter, Tabitha: and a 14-yearold son, Steven.
We hope that in the coming days, our community will
•
extend its help and prayers to this fa mily.

Tuesday, February 3,

2004

Bush should welcome intel probe
Under pressure. President
Bush has agreed to an independent inquiry into intelligence failures' prior to the lmq .
war. That's good - if the
probe is wmprehensive.
The need for an independent
panel is clear.
JJush' f;t~:es a massive credibility crisis because of . the
apparent failure into his evidently false assertions that lra4
had weupons of mass dest!11ction.
Ju st as British Prime
Minister Tony Blair assisted
- and was -exonerated by an independent inquiry into
his weapons claims, Bush may
be vi ndicated from suspicions
abotlt his assertions.
Fon11er weapons inspector
David Kay's report last week
that Iraq almost certainly had
no WMD stockpiles mises all
sorts of grave questions about
the quali ty of U.S. intelligence
and the. uses put to it by the
Bush administration in arguing for the war.
Kay tcstitied - and I
believe that Saddam
Hussein presented 'a grave
and gathering threat' and
intended to· rebuild his WMD
when international sanctions
were lifted. Still, Bush's case
fq1 war has been badly undermined and his conduct needs
serious examination.
The panel Bush appoints
needs to look into not only
failures at the CIA. but his
own use of the intelligence.
Democrats put a bevy of
nefarious interpretations on
the evidence: (a) Bush and his
aides llatly lied about the
threat to get the United States
into war. possibly for partisan
political reasons: (b) to make
their case, they exaggerated
whut the intelligence community told them; (c) they "cher-

Morton
Kondracke

ry-picked' evidence, ignoring
contrary facts and dissents: or
(d) they muscled the intelligence commu nity into report- ·
ing what they wanted to hear.
There is another option and
it's a grave possibility. too: (e)
a massive intelligence failure
occt1rred and Bush was innocently relying on misinfonnation when he claimed that
Hussei n had chemical and biological arsenals and an active
nuclear program.
, Various Bush aides maintain
that (f) Hussein did have
WMD and either they will be
found in Iraq or were moved
to Syria. But Kay's findingswhich the administration itself
declared would be definitive
- make this highly unlikely.
Whatever the tmth is, the.
nation needs to know it. And if
Bush didn't cook the intelligence books - as Kay testified last week he did not then the new commission's
mandate should include
Bush's role.
Bush should ft~ce the fact
that, tmless clear action is
taken, no one will tnJst any
assertion he makes about
potential threats from North
Knrea, Iran, Syria, China or
any other potential adversary.
It's no excuse to say that
· Blitish, French and Gennan
intelligence and the Clinton
administration got things
wrong. The United States
needs an intelligence service

that gets things right.
'r~e f~ct that Bush only
reluctantly agreed to an independent panel miscs questions
about the thoroughness of the
study to wme.
According to Rep. Jane
Harman, D-Calif.. ranking
member on the House
Intelligence
Committee.
there's no evidence that Bush
or the intelligence community
itself is taking steps to avoid
systemic errors.
'They're in denial,' she said
in an interview, refen·i ~,~g to the
top eche(on of the CIA'. "They
don't' admit there's a problem.
They don't think there's anything wrong.
'They're in a tough situation
because the culture above
them includes policy-makers
who continue to say things
that aren't stipported by the
intelligence.'
The most recent e·xample is
Vice President Cheney's assertion ' ' "muary that mobile
bioi&lt;' d \veapons factories
had l.cen disco vered in Iraq
since the war. proving 'conclusively' that WMD existed.
Kay sai d the conse nsus uf
inspectors is that the vehicles invo lved we ren't binlabs. Cheney's offi ce maintain s that there's still a di spute on the point. And there
certainly is an internal dispute ove r wh'ether there was
a connect ion between
Saddam Hussein 's regime
and AI Qaeda.
The Weekl y Standard's
Steve Hayes has publi shed
compel! ing &lt;U1icles on repealed contacts over two decades
between AI Qaeda operatives
and Iraqi intelligence. but
Hmman said her committee's
examinatio n of CIA docu. menb indi cates that there was
' no operational relationship'

IT~

between the two.
One of the fairest-minded of
all Democrats, Hannan concludes from examining 17 voltlmes of C!A data thai 'the
intelligence products were
llawed. based on inadequate
sources and ·~ro upthink '
analysis.'
'We over-rei ied on circumstantial evidence, defectors
and old sto1ies and the analysts
accepted a tautology - the
failure io prove tllat something
(WMD) was destroyed was
proof that it cxbted.'
She thi r' ..' that Bush &amp; Co.
·cherry-picked' the data given
them and that the intelligence
community failed to insist that
policy-makers stale the intelligence m..:curately.

Did top otlicials push intelligence oflici &lt;tls to report what
they . wanted ancVor deceive
Congress and the public''
Hannan said. 'That chm·ge is
out there. I would love to
believe it not to be true. My
view is that the president
should want to get to the hottom of this.'
She believes that investigating and refonning the intelligence community is the constitutional responsibility of the
House and Senate intelligence
comm inees.
Thiii:S emphaticall y true.
Blil lately they ha ve proved
themselves so riven by partisanship that an outside panel
needed to be appointed. It
probably won't tini sh its work
before the 2004 election. but
that's OK. If Bush willfully
lied - which I doubt - m1icles of impcachmem could be
tiled. The real purpose here is
to make sure U.S. intelli gence
is the best in the world.
(Monon Konrlracke is rxecrllil 'l' t'diror of' Roll Call, the
fi i'IV!&gt;JWI'l'f of'Cllf&gt;itol Hill.)

A LAST-DITCH

. ATTfMPT TO GET
JANET JACKSON
FAN VOTES.

Moderately Conf~sed
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·Obituaries

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Easter Louise Brown

Business owners strive
to
please consumers
ASHLAND, KY - Easter Louise Brown, 77. of Ashland,
because their satisfaction
Ky. , dted Sunday, Feb. I 2004 at her residence.
can
develop into customer
Born on Nov. 6, )926 in Boyd County, Ky., she was the
Even though it is
loyalty.
daughter of the late bhver and Bessie Lemaster Blanton. She
less expensive to keep
was a homemaker.
clients
happy so they will
She is survived b~ her husband, Roger Dale Brown· four
·
return,
many businesspeo·
daughters and sons-m-law, Patricia and Denny Sexto~ of
pie spend far more time,
Grayson, Ky., Sharon and Ed Dixon of Westwood Ky
money
and energy on tryBre~da and Matt ~eborde of Grayson, Ky., and Robin ~d Jay
ing
to
attract
new patrons.
Swam ~f Reedsville, seven grandchildren and four greatIf a business can keep five
grand~htldren ; and a sister, Esther Ruth 'Blanton of Ironton.
Bes.Jdes her parents she was preceded in death by a son, more percent of their customers, their proti ts will
Denme Eugene Foster.
almost double . With this
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 4.
2004 at the ~azear Funeral Home Chapel in Ashland. Ky: much at stake, companies
should make consumer
Rev. Eddte W1ler w1ll officiate and burial will be in Golden
Oaks Memonal Gardens. Friends may call at the Lazear allegiance one of their top
priorities.
Funeral Home from 6 to 8 p.IJI. on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2004.
Many people who have
not established an affiliation
with a particular brand or
company will switch to
VINCENT - Shirley June 'Johnson, 67, of Vincent, died competitors only to see
0
Jan . 31 2004 at Overbrook Center of Middleport.
what products and serv1ces
.She was born 111 Drakesboro. Ky., July 25, 1936, a daughter they offer. Because of thi s
()f the late Lee and Sarah B. Roberts McFarland.
consumer behavior, it is
. Sh.e was a ho~,e health nurse for 25 .years and enjoyed car- particularly important for a
mg lor her fa mdy and others.
.
company to market to its
She is survived by three daughters, Trennia Harris and her own customers. This can
husband R.obert of Long Bottom, Kim Johnson of Houston be accomplished by mailing
Texas. Shtrley Dene se Riffle and her husband Mark of thank you notes after purHillsboro: three s~ms, Reggie Johnson and his wife Salley of chases, Christmas cards
Little Hockmg. R1ck John son and his wife Candy of Vincent,
Perry Johnson and h1 s w1fe Kim of Frankfort, Ky. ; nine grand- during the holiday season,
children, thr~e great grandchildren. and one brother Don announcements of upcoming special. sales events, or
McFarland of Memphis, Tenn .
. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by one newsletters and paper clippings · describing business
s1ster. Nelda Reynolds.
activities.
Sending followA memorial service will be at I p.m. Friday at the Decatur
up
reminders
when the serU!11ted Methodist Church w1th Pastor Dewayne Stutler officiatmg. Bunal w1ll be at the church cemetery. Visitation will be vice or the product wi II
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at the Tatman Funeral need to be purchased again
Home, Main St., Belpre.

Shirley June Johnson

On Dec. 9, the Supreme
national law and should not be
Court - over the strong
treated as a precedent.'
objections of the Bush adininMoreover, Solicitor General
Theodore Olson, in tbe govistration - · agreed to hear a
crucial test of .the !?resident's
emment's brief to the Supreme
power to tmpnson an
Court, emphasized that the
Amelican citizen as an enemy
Nat
administration does not agree
combatant indefinitely, wi\hHentoff
that it has any obligation to let
out charges, and without conHamdi see a lawyer. .It said it
tinuing access to a lawyer. No
made an exception this time
action by . the government in
because it had finished questhe war on terrorism has crealtioning him.
ed more criticism across pol it- three judges · harshly rebuked
I expect, therefore, that the
ical lines - including from the administration, signaling Supreme Court will see
former Circuit Courts of that the panel would find that through the government's ·
Appeals judges appointed by the president does not have the stratagem to let a lawyer slide
both
Republican
and constitutional authority into the Navy brig only by the
Democratic presidents.
without the approval of sufferance of the govemment.
The citizen, Yaser Hamdi, Congress - to lock Hamdi up
What the justices -.yilt have
was captured in Afghanistan under these conditions., The to deal with are the tindings of
by bounty hunters in the Secorid Circuit's Dec. 18 actu- the majority of the Second
Northern Alliance, allegedly a! decision stated exactly that Circuit Court of Appeals. First,
caught fighting fortheTaliban,
Significantly,· although the in 1971. in .reacuon to the
and turned over to American third judge on the · Second shameful herding of Japaneseforces. A federal district judge Circuit · panel supported the Americans into detentioo
111led that the evidence against president's position, he did camps during World War II,
Hamdi has not been fully agree with the majolity that Congress passed the Nonproved. but the Fourth Circuit the president, though acting as Detention Act, which declares
Court of Appeals, in an 8-4 commander-in-chief in a mili- unambiguously that ·no cili. decision; ruled that the presi- tary decision, did not have the zen shall be ... detained by the
dent has enough basis to hold authority to deny Hamdi the · United States except pursuant
Hamdi. indefinitely without light to see&gt;hi~ lawyer (whor\1 to an Act of Cong'ress.'
charges and .wi_thout ~rY Hamdi needed in order to helf
But the admi nistrmion
prospect of a triaL
. cor test the government's cas
claims tllat the Congressional
· Hamdi. in a Navy brig for against him).
· . Authorization · for Use of
two yeafl' on American soil ,
Accordingly. the govern- Military Force, passed in
had ·been denied any access to . ment's ·abrupt decision to let\ September 200 t . . gives the
his . lawyer. .Sut suddenly, on Hamdi see his attorney \ president that unilateral·
Dec. 2,
the
Defense : seemed to be a transparent authority in order to go after
Department annoJJnced that he . attempt to improve its position \ the terrorists who. committed
would be able to see his attor- before the Supreme Court. the Sept II attacks, and COI)ney - just a day before the However, the ni~e justices will ·tinue to operate worldwide.
Justice Department was still have to confront the Sixth However, the Second Circuit
required to tile a brief before Amendment question of this ·held that this post-Sept. II resthe Supreme Court ,regarding citizen's right to counsel, I olution does not, in any way,
Hwndi .
.
· because . the
D_efense \ authm~ze the president, solely
In November, dunng oral · Department has made 1t clear pil h1 s S&lt;\y-so, to detam
argt1ments on Hamdi's, cas~ that giving· H3!I1di acc~~s to a Ameli can citi7.ens -:- le~ alone
.before the · Second Ctrcu1t lawyer at th1s lime IS not f ithout charg&lt;;\s, mdeftmtely.
~ourt of Appeals •. two of the required by domestic or inter- , , a\d with no constitutinnally
1

I

guaranteed access to a lawyer.
Neal Sonnet, chair of the
Amelican Bar Association's
task force on enemy combat•
ants,
said on
A"BC's
'Nightline' on Jan. 9 about the
administration's insistence that
the courts must defer io it in
these matters: 'the administration has gone beyond the
hounds. They have an·ogated
power to themselves that has
never been done before in the
history of thi s country. '
Actually. Abraham Lincoln
did Just that during the Civil
War, suspending habeas corpus and herding dissenters
before military tribunals .
However, in 1866, the
Supreme Coun ruled that 'the .
Constitution of the United
States is a, law for rulers and
people, equally in wm· and
peace. and covers with the
shield of it s protection all
classes of men, at all times.
and ·under all circumstances.'
. Lincoln, on his own .say-so.
had detied the Constitution .
George W. Bush, too. has.
denied citizen Yaser Hamdi
the most fundamental due
process rights at the very con: '
of our rule of law. Will the
Constitution sur'vive high
noon at the Suprerr•e Couri? .
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renown£•d autlwril\' on the

Firs/ Amendmem and the Bill
of' Righrs and intthor &lt;!{.fevera/ /JOoks, itJChuliflg his cw'rent .
work .. '11w War Oil '"" Bill ()/
Rig/lis and Jhe Gathering
Re.1·istance' (Sevei1 Stories
Press, 2()()3 ).

is also a good idea.
To help achieve customer
sati sfaction that will re sult
in repeat bu siness. companies need to train their staff
to be professional and personable in their client relationships . Research shows
that 70% of consumers who
take their business to a
competitor do so because of
apathy and a lack of courtesy by employees. Only
20% go el~e where because
of product quality or price.
There are said to be two
kinds of unhappy customers
- the "talkers" who complain (45% complai n to
front-line staff: 5% compl ain to management), and
the "walkers" who don't
complain - they just walk
away and never come back.
But they do talk - to their ·
famil y and friends - about
their disappointing experience.
When there are complaints, company policy
should emphasize that they
be handled immediately.
For those problems that are
selll ed within 24 hours,
96% Qf' the clients return.
However, there is a I0%
loss of patronage for each
additional day in which the
problem is unresolved .
Managers need to designate a specific sale sperson,
and even more importantly,

Becky
Baer

.a particular customer service or tec hnical support
associate to conti·nuou sly
work wi th an individual
client or account. so the
customer wi II look to the
employee as their own personal li aison. It develops
the kind of rapport that
"wait for the next available
representative" does not
generate.
Essentially. the
non-sales. statf are the ones
"selling" repeat bu siness.
Business owners shou ld
"grarit employees the power
to help consumers. This
may seem like a basic business principle, but if company policies and proce dures limit what employees
can do to keep clients
happy. customers will take
their patronage elsewhere.
Employees who go out of
their way or slight ly bend
the rules to accommodate
clients have far-reachin g
effects• that can broaden
their customer base. · Their

•

value-added extras can
tremendously help , build
bu s.iness/customer relation ships, resulting in free positive word-of-mouth adverti sing 'for the company.
It also· helps if company
personnel can internally
take care of an un satisfactory situation, instead of
referri ng the cl ient to
. another department.
For
instance, if there is a problem with a bill, the customer may call the person
who sold the product The
salesperson shou ld talk to
billing to resolve the discrepancy, mther than transferri ng the consumer to the
financi;,t! department. Thi s
avoids the impression that
the custml!er is being given
the run -around .
After the problem is corrected. staff should prompt ly contac t the client with a
phone . call or a question naire to make sure that
everything was taken care
of according to the consum er's
expectations.
Companies have found that
even Jhough there was an
issue with the product or
service ini tially, because of
the quick and satisfactory
response. the custo mer is
mote likely to repeat business with that co mpan y
than the patron who had no
grievance .

Routines

Alice Mills
MIDDL EPORT - Alice Mill s, 88, Middleport died
Monday, Feb. 2. 2004 at the Holzer Medical Center
Galliopolis. Arrangements are being handled by Fishe;
Funeral Home 111 M1ddleport and w11l be announced when
completed.

Tournament
slated

TUPPERS PLAINS - a
basketball tournament will
be hell)? Feb. 27, 28 and
•
29 at Eastern Elementary
ATHENS - Ralph Koker, Jr., 70, of Athens, died Monday sponsored by the Eastern
High School junor class.
Feb. 2. 2004, at 0 ' Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
There will be three diviBorn July 4. 1933, he was the son of the late Ralph, Sr. and
sions, sixth grade boy s,
Martha Pinkerton Koker.
Ralph was a local bu si ne ssman as the former owner of fifth grade boys, and fifth
Buckye Potato Chips. KoktO;r's Sporting Goods, K&amp;K Coffee, and sixth grade girls. It
and The Mme Tavern. He was a lifetime member of the will be a single elimination
Athens VFW, Post 3477. and AmVets Post 76; a member of event. The entry fee is
American Legion Post 21 ,. .the Ea!lles. Elks and Moose LQ,d~c . $50. For information call
He 1s surv1ved by h1s w1fe, Martlyn F1ggms Koker, whom1he 740-985-330 I or 985-4319.
marned August 6, 1983; five sons, Mike Koker of Vancou~er, Team members must attend
Wash:, Joe Koker of Louisville, Ky: , Tim Koker of Nelsonville, the same schooL
Joe F1ggms of Athens, and Mark F1ggms of Hurow a daugh er
Kim (Ri~k) Nihiser of L~gan; three brothers, Ke~neth (Fai(hJ
Koker ot Powell, Tenn., R1chard (Barb) Koker of Syracuse, ahd
Gerald Koker of Vancouver, Wash.; and nine ~randchildreh,
RACINE
God 's
M1chael Joesph Koker, Chase Edward Koker, Kristan, Brittanrr
.. and Danm Nthtser, Jacob, Hannah; Zackary, and Rileyofiggins.
.. Be~.tdes h1s parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Paul
P.O. F1ggms.
. .
Ser~ices will be held Thursday, at I :30 pm , at Hughes
Mo9um Funeral Home, Athens, with John Mucha officiating.\
from PageA1
Bunal w11l be at Greenlawn Cemetery, where military ser·
vices will be conducted by the Athens VFW Post 3477 and the \
1
•
..
•
Athens American Legion Post 21.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 1 JU~! do, she .satd.
.
Wednesday, and fro~ noon until time of service on Thursday. \ r ~ ~ton
Mwas ~ornt a~d
Online messages ot sympathy may be sent to the family on the at e 111 elgS 0 .un Y· e
funeral home website at, www.hughesmoquinfuneralhome.com . \tlwasta
en atpoMp~lar,HmtehiiStgehnt
e1gs tg c oos1tu.
) "Everyone liked him," said
his younger sister, Charmele
Spradling. "He was a class
MASON , W.VA.- Pirl Burri s, 83, of Mason, W.Va., died clown, anything for a laugh."
While Clinton was in high
Monday, Feb. 2, 2004 at the Pleasant Valley HospitaL
school,
he was active in the
He was the owner and operator of Burris Farms and a
drama club and starred in the
founder of the West Virginia State. Farm Museum .
Born on April 22, 1920 at Mason, he was the son of the late lead in many productions. He
Pirl Burri s, Sr. and Edna Roush Burris.
He is . survived by sons, Larry and Rick Burris, both of
Mason, yv. Va., a daughter and son-i'n-law, Penny and Steve
K1dd of Parkersburg, W. Va.;l four grandchldren, David
(Nicole) Burris, Cody Burris, Carrie Kidd, and Adam Kidd,
and a lifelong friend, Jack Johnson of Mason, W. Va.
from PageA1
He was preceded in death by his wife, Velma Gerlach Burris.
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, at
the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home. Pastor George Weirick working in training sessions. ,
will officiate and burial will be in Graham Cemetery, New "Everyone around the state is
havin~ the same problem ,"
Haven, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 he sat d. "because volunteer
firemen just don't have the
p.m. Wednesday.
time to.get trained at the level
Homeland Security wants."
Byer said he .continues to

Ralph Koker, Jr.

l

.--......, 1,...:..:...,

I

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

www.mydailyseritinel.com

2004

Parish has sale

IONS

r--____,, r

_· Tuesday, February 3 ,

Tickets on sale
POMEROY
The
annual Lincoln Day dinner
of the Meigs County
Republican Party will be
held on Feb. II in the
Meigs High School cafeteria. Tickets are on sale for
$12 and may be purchased
from executive members,
the Farmers Bank, Peoples
Bank, and Racine Home
National Bank. Auditor of
State · Betty Montgomery
will be the speaker.

Coming Thursday in the'Sentinel ...

"&lt;f}faceJ (19
Thirngr$ (19
Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the Tri-State

Country

was Ebenezer Scrooge in a
"Christmas Carol" and Ralph
Malph in " Happy Days."
Celia McCoy, who has taught
at Meigs High School for 30
years. had Clinton in several
classe s. She said he was
never concerned about popularity and was his own person, and this made him a
favorite to many students and
teachers alike .
"He was definitely a character," she said. ''He had a
very good sense of humor,
was a good student, and a
very bright young man."
As the drama teacher.
McCoy said she remembers

when Clinton took on the
lead as Sam Smalley in
"Crosspatch." McCoy said
Smalley was a difficult role
to perform because the character was a beast, a foul mouthed uncivilized man
completely unlike Clinton or
anyone else for that matter.
"A lot of high school stu dent s would have been intim idated to play this role. hut
not him :· said McCoy.
Cl inton co llected several
awa rds for his performances before he gradu ated
in 19~4 and went to Ohio
University lo stud y theat er.
Whil e there , he joined th e

Nati onal Guard. After a
stint in the U.S. Navy during the first Gulf War,
Clinton joined the arm y
wllere he ha s bee n ever
since. He had bee n sta tion ed in many locales
including Germany. Prior to
the war, he and hi s family
were stationed in Fort
Hood. Tex as.
Turner said the arrangements for the fun eral are still
pending. but one thing is certai n. Clinton will be buried in
his native Meigs County.
"He was very proud to be
soldi er &lt;md serve his country,'' she said.

Grant

work with the Retired Senior
Volunteers in getting them
ready to run shelters. and is
trying to stock the basi c
necessities in\ the event of a
disaster, but that his main
concern is getting radio
equipment in place.
The 200 d\saster kits prepared recently1 by the RSVP
team are temworarily stored
at
Veterans\ Memorial
Hospital but will be moved to
the Mulberry C~ mmunity

Center once the building renovation is co mpleted .
Plans are also be in~ made·
to build storage buildings
near shelters. Ri ~ hl now th e
only two co nfirm ed shelters
are
the
Racin e Fire
and
the
Depa rtm ent
Mulb erry
Comm unit y
Center, aiJhough seve ral
other locati ons ha ve been
offered, according to Byer.
He also said that several
loc al organi zations and

churches along with the
Reel Cross are ready to han ·
die the needs of those who
might have to go to shel-

Pirl Burris

Sylvia M. Wolfe

RACINE -. · Sylvia M. Wolfe, 86, of Racine, passed away
at 7:45a.m. Monday, Feb. 2, 2004 in the St. Joseph 's Hospital
in Parkersburg, W. Vu.
Born May 15, 1917 in Letart Township of Meigs County
she was the daughter of the late Wheeler and Ethel Pickens
Sarson. She was a homemaker and a member of the Racine
First j'laptist Church and the Meigs County Senior Citizens.Surviving are nine children, Juanita Justice of Belpre;·
Drusilla Hart of New Haven, Davey D. (Catherine) Wolfe of
Ra~ jne, George E: Wolfe of Rat:ine, Joan (Bill) Pickens of
Racine. Wil son (Anna) Wolfe of Racine, Sharon (Okey who
was a speeial son-in-law) Meadows of Pomeroy, Tom·(Rose)
Wolfe of 'Racine, and Ray Wolfe of Rutland. .
.. Also s~~iving are. 25 grandchildren. and special caregiver and
adopt.ed g ran~daughter, Teresa Bamnger, an~ special caregiver; El1zabeth 0 Conner; several gteat'grandeh1lch:ert and greatgreat-grandchildren, and an aunt, Mildred Parsons of Racine.
She was preceded in death by her h11sband,. Wilson M.
Wolfe in October, 1980; a daughter, Emogene Wolfe, two
grandsons, Randy Wolfe and Th~rill Randolph, Jr.,; two sisters, LoUise Meredith and V1rg1e Ours, and four . brothers, ·
Harold Sarson who was killed durin~ World War II, Ralph
Sarson. Bud Sarson, and Charles Lew1s Sarson.
Funeral services will.be held at I p.m Wednesday, Feb. 4, in
the Cremej!ns Funeral home, Ra~ine. Officiating will be the
Rev. Rrck Rule. lntennent Will be m the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call from ' 5· to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral IJpme.
·
j;:asket'bearers will be sons and grandsons. .
, ' · .J

Clothing Parish on Third
Street in Racine is . having
a 10-cent sale on all items
throughout the month of
February. The store is open
II tun. to 2 p.m. Monday
through Friday.

Keepfng
.·Meigs:·,
. informed
. . ·
.....'

I

ters.

. "Ri ght now we·re just t(y111 )! to work both ends - to
ha ve shelte rs for an y type of
emergency and arrangements
to take care of the people , and
to get prepared for homel and
security and ha ve the special
gear we need for whut that
might involve ." said Byer.

dEl...

Here's the.·
AJllt)'la of carpet are included: .
USY PIYIEIIT PW'
Buy you~ . ca pet 8ERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET, $1DDDWII·$1DPEnem
from us and e'll TRACKLESSCARPET,SHAGCARPET, ·fORONEJEIR .
give you the pad
LEVEL LOOP CARPET and
. ·susTWFMIIIIIII

. . SCULPTURED.CARPET.
FRE.EII•• ·. · .No enra
Cbat&amp;e lor movtn&amp; furniture or
removing old carpet.

Call aa or ltOp ln.
We'll cOme tO JOur
home and mealure
for I free DO

!tltUpdon quo~.

Pom~roy,

OH .. 992·3671

�PageA6

OHIO

·The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 3,

2004

Burnt-out city church reopens after five years

Tuesday, February 3
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
40- 43 S-SW 5-10 mph
lt will be a cloudy morning.
You will see light rain. The
rainfall is expected to end
around rJ :OOam. The rain
should reach 0.09 inches by
this morning. Temperatures
will hold steady around 41.
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
from the south turning from
the southwest as the morning
progresses.
Afternoon
(1:00pm-

6:00pm) 32 - 43 W 10-15
mph
lt will remain cloudy.
Today's high of 43 will occur
around l 2:00pm as temperatures diminish to 32 by late
afternoon. Winds will be I0 tO
15 MPH from the west.
Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 25- 30 W 10 mph
lt should continue to be cloudy.
Expect a few snowflakes here
and there. Temperatures will
linger at 27. Winds will be 10
MPH from the west.

Overnight
(1:00am6:00am) 25- 25 W 5-10 mph
There will be nothing more
than a few flurries . The snow
is predicted to start near
5:00am . The snow should
stop by 6:00am with total
accumulations for this event
of less than an one inch.
Temperatures will hover at 25
with tqday's low of 25 occurring around 6:00am. Skies
·will 6e1 partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the west.

ADAY.. ON WAll. STREET

.........

.... lfd

Proud to be apart ofyour life.

.......
.....,
!FirJf·-

CLEVELAND (AP) After five years of meeting
in congregants' li ving rooms.
a church so poor it had gone
without insurance to pay its
heating bills has rebuilt from
a devastating fire.
When a house fire in the.
summer of 1998 spread next
door to the Mount Lebanon ·
Baptist Church in the city's
Fairfax neighborhood, its
small Baptist congregation
lost its place of worship.
But the congregation which began meeting in its
pastor's relatives' houses vowed to rebuild so its place
in the blighted neighborhood
wouldn't become another
empty lot.
On Sunday, the church
reopened to spontaneous
applause and shouts of
"Alleluia, Alleluia," following a blessing by the Rev.
Robert L. Weaver Jr.
"To me, it's a rebirth. The
fire of the spirit . of God ·
could not be quenclit;d . It
could not be stopped," mem- Anna Kennedy, right, kisses Edna Williams before a service at
Mount Lebanon Baptist Church in Cleveland. After five -years of
ber Curtis Mattox, 42. said.
The serv ice represented meeting in congregants' living rooms, a church so poor it had
the culmination of a process gone without insurance to pay its heating bills has rebuilt from
that began soon after the ftre a devastating fire. On SundCIY. the church reopened to sponta·
ripped through the church on neous applause and shouts of "Alle lUia, Alleluia," follow111g a
July 2, 1998. burning it blessing by the Rev. Robert L.' Weaver Jr. (AP Photo/The Plain
Dealer, Mike Levy)
nearly to the ground.
A year and a half ago, the
Kennedy's pastor father,
church merged with Balm in ping and singing of "Great
and
Mighty
is
the
Lord
Our
Grant, had devoted his life
Gilead Missionary .· Baptist
God."
to the small church , often
Church, a somewhat larger
Weaver,
pastor
of
the
new
paying for beat nut of hi s
church that also needed a
church, t_hanked God for own pocket when the ·co llecnew home.
,
Members of the congrega- uniting the two communities tion plate wouldn ' t sustain
the furnace. He died la st
tions pooled their resources, "to bring about a dream."
The
Rev.
Ivan
Kennedy.
May
waiting for the church
the
Mount
rebuilding
cif
Mount
Lebanon
's
forson
to reopen.
Lebanon church at the site in
mer
pastor,
is
an
assistant
Ivan Kennedy couldn't
the Fairfax neighborhood
at
the
new
church.
He
pastor
the tears from !lowing
stop
and retaining Balm in
said rebuilding was impor- as he approached his fa1h er's
Gilead's name.
tant for the community.
house of worship Sunday.
The congregatim) of less
"That's what the Gospel is
"Thi s is a day that I
than I00 gathered Sunday on all about, providing hope."
dreamed about for &lt;t lot of
simple wooden pews in the he said. "If they don't see
years," he told the congregachurch's white-walled sanc- stability anywhere else, they
tion from the pulpit. "This is
tuary. They shook the small should see it in the church." awesome. ''
building with spirited clap-

.,

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499

... ] ••
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t
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IEF1EI..,
~~!!!!!!!:' u'~ ~~

8-1
8·1
6·2
3·6
2·6
2-7
1·7

11-3
11·4
9·5
5·9
5-9
4-9
3·11

TVC
Team
Alexander
Vinton County
Belpre
·
Meigs
Wellslon
Nelsonville-York

:mm

Local Stocks

TVC AU.
4·1. 11·3
4·1 11·3
3-2 9·4
. 2·3 . 9-5
2·4 5-10
1·5 3·10
~&amp;

!&gt;·0

Trimble
Eastern
Southern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Waterford
Team
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
Fairland
South Point
Coal Grove

11 ·3
10-5
9·5
7·6
2·13
0·14

5-1
3·2
2·3
1-5
0·6

ovc

Q'LQ ALL

5·1
4·1
3-3
2-3
2·3
0-5

13-1
9·4
3·10
6-8
6·8
5-8

Others

:mm

AU
7·5
6-6
6·6
2·10
2,10

South Gallia
Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan
Wahama
Oak Hill

· Girls basketball

SEOAL

Team

.sfQ ALL

9·0
7·2
8·3
4·6
4-7
2-7
0·9

Warren

Jackson
Marietta
Logan
Gallia Academy
Athens
Point Pleasant

15·1
13·4
13·5
8·10
8·9
4-12
0·13

Ohio Division

TVC
7' 1
6·3
5·4
4-4
2-6
1·7

ALL
12-6
13·4
5·13
9·8
2-13
1-12

M

9·0
6·3
5'4
5·4
1-7
0·8

ovc

ALL
16·1
11·5
13·4
9·8
4-12
3-13

QllQ ALL

6·1
4·3
4-3
. 3-4
2·5
1-6

10·6
8·9
6-10
5·10
3-12
9-7

Others
Gannett - 85.95
General Electric- 33.63
GKNLY -4.90
Harley Davidson- 50.96
Kmart- 27.47
Kroger- 18.76
Ltd.- 18.74,
NSC - 21.90
Oak Hill Financial - 33.28
Bank One - 50.79
OVB-28.50
Peoples - 28.94
Pepsico- 47.94
Premier- 9.10

Ieam
OakHill
Wahama
Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia

Rocky Boots- 25.30
AD Shell- 47.46
Rockwell ~ 31 .26
Sears - 44.05
SBC -26.46
AT&amp;T - 19.53
·use- 28.57
Wendy's- 38.20
Wat-Mart- 54.69
Worthington- 16.25 .
Daily stock reports .are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes of the prfiVious day's
transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest In~ . ot Gallipolis.

Medina County Juvenile emergency call Saturday
Court Judge John Lohn afternoon about an_ injured
ordered 'Rowe held in juve- person outside the GenFed
nile detention to await anoth-: Credit Union branch.
A weapon that may have
er court hearing Thursday.
No -plea was entered.
been used in the stabbing
Prosecutor Dean Holman was found, police Sgt. ·
declined to comment on the Randy Reinke said.
Wadsworth High - School
evidence but said the investi:
gatiQn . showed . the death . Principal Roger Cramer said
students were offered the
wasn't intentional.
Twigg was discovered . chance to meet with counafter police received an selors on Monday.

Al.L.
16·1
12·4
9-5
· 7-5
2-16

Prep schedule
Today's games
Boys Basketball .
River Valley at Rock Hill
Ohio Valley Christi an at Teays Valley
Christian
Weflston at Meigs
E;;tstern at Southern
Poca at Point Pleasant
Girt&amp; Basketball
Oh.io Valley 1 Christie!') at Teays Valley
Christian

Teen charged with involuntary
manslaughter in another teen's death

VIKING

899

8

·~·-,,

&lt;tv&gt;~

Double the comloPt
but·pay lor only one
recliner I

Wednesday's games
Boys Baak8tball
Wahama at River ValleY
.wrestling
· River Valley at Ohio Valley Conference
meet (at Fairl cind)
Thursday's .games
Girls Basketball
Jackson at Gall1a Academy
Chesapeake a:t River Valley --:
Meigs at Wellston
Trimble 81 Easte rn
Southern at Federal Hocking
Athens at Point Pleasant ·
·Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic
Frlday'a games
Soya Baaketball
Gallia ~ademy at Ja·ckson_·
Fairland at River Valley ·
.South Gama vs. Ohio Va!ley Ch~iStiein (a t
Rio G"rande) .
Vinton County at Meigs·
· Trimble at Southern
Point Pleasant at Athens
Wa hama at Grace Christian
Girls Basketball
South Gallia· vs. Ohio Valley Christian {at
Rio Grarlde)

Saturday's games

tOday¥ ·. .
.,

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'··

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.

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.

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' STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Hocking Division

Fairland
Chesapeake
South Point
Rock Hill
River Valley
Coal Grove

'= - -

.,

.sfQ ALL

Ohio Division

:mm

n • 1
•1"47 _::.._ .
t!!£1:
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... , I' UllltM.SIZI!

. WADSWORTH (AP) A 16-year-old was charged
with involuntary maifSlaugh:
ter Monday in the weekend
stabbing death. of a IS·yearold in a parking lot of this
Akron suburb.
· jeffrey
Rowe
of
Wadsworth also .was charged
.. wilh evidence tall)pering in
· ·• the d~aih of Matthew TWigg,
a freshman at Wadsworth
High .School. ·

SEOAL

Team
Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Jackson
'Warren
Athens
PointPieasant ·

Hocking Division

...:',..

ACI-27.06
AEP - 32.62
Akzo- 40.10
Ashland Inc.- 45.73
BBT ~37.56
BLI-14.20
Bob Evans- 31.65
BorgWarner- 91.93
City Holding- 34.90
Champion - 4.81
· Charming Shops- 6.00
Col-33.42
DuPont - 43.80
DG-22.10

Southern
downs
Wellston;
Wolfe wins
100th game

Boys basketball

Ilrnm
Trimble
Eastern
Soulhern
Waterford
Federal Hocking
Miller

'·m .._.._.

'·•

Tuesday, February 3, 2004

Prep Standings

Belpre
Alexander
V1nton County
Meigs
Nelsonville-York
Wellston

8

!fllllll.tif

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

•

:mm

SIREN

-~

Ptep scoreboai'Q, Page B2
Wedge not prorrilslng patience with LaWton,
Page 82 ·
Clt~veland sbldlums get new deal, Page 82

TVC

Subscribe today1 • ·99ri~'2155

_, .atJs~­

INSIDE

Boyo Basketball
Wheelers burg at Gatlia Academy
South Galli a at Cross Lanes Christian
Girls Basketball
River Valley at Eastern

Wrestling

Ga'ti~,Academy, Point Pleasant at SEOAL

mee'f(at Mari9tta)

Eastern's Morgan Weber (with ball ) pulls down a rel&gt;ound in front of Meigs' Jaynee Davis (30) and Justine Dowler (15) during the second half of Monday's TVC interdivisional contest: (Brad Sherman)
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCKSPRINGS - Eastern is quite
comfortable playing bigger schools.
and it showed Monday.
The visiting Lady Eagles used a
strOTig defensive outing to defeat
Division II county rival Meig s. 44-32.
in Tri· Valley Conference interdivi sion
girls basketball action.
"When you play county rivalries.
you're gonna expect io play," ·said
Eastern coach Riel\ Edw.ards. ''Our
girls, this is a big game for them. It 's
like a big sister, little sister game."
Eastern, a Division IV school, now
owns a 3-1 record against Division II
opponent§ this season. Its lone loss
was to Gallia Academy by just two
points.
The win improved Eastern to 11 -5
overall on the season.
The Lady Marauders, who have now
lost four straight, fell to 9-8 with the
setback.
The II points scored by Meigs in the

opening quarter, was its biggesl out put
of the night. Coach Paul Brannnn's
club scored just four [JOin Is in the sec ond quarter and 17 in Ihe whole seconil
half.
"Defensively, when you hold a team
to 44 points, you ought to be in the
ball game," said Brannon. "We ran into
some trouble scoring. and they scored
when they needed to."
"I thought (Eastern) shot the ball
well. we couldn't contain (Morgan)
Weber. I thought that's what hurt us."
Eastern shot over 50 percent from
the field. meshing 19 of 37 tloor shots.
Morgan Weber scored 17 poinls of
her team 's points the night. the senior
also grabbed five rebounds tind handed
out three assists. Her sister, freshman
Erin Weber. led the way in rhe
rebounding category with six.
Jennifer Hayman added eight points
to the winning effort.
Jaynee Davi s led Meigs and all scar·
ers with 18 points, the next highe st
scorer was Sammy Pierce with only
five.
·

Davis , who routinely reaches double
figure , in rebounding , had just four to
led her 1eam Monday. In fact, the entire
Lady Marauder team combined for I0
rebounds. that compared lo 22 for the
Lady Eagles .
Eastern only led 12- 11 after one
quaner of play. but held its host s to
only lour points in the second frame,
while posting nine . The lead was 2115 in Eastern's favor at the break.
The Lady Eagles methodically built
ils lead to double digits by the start of
t)1e fourth t]Uarler. and never allowed
Meigs to make a dent.
Eastern plays host to this year's
Hocking Division champion. Trimble.
on Thursday. Meigs resumes Ohio
Division ' play . at Well ston. also on
Thursday.
Eastern won the junior varsity contest bv a 28-25 count. Tony a Barber led
the wlllners with 10 point s while Hallie
Brooks added eight.
Cayla Lee and Meghan Clelland
scored I0 and seven respectively for
the Lady Marauders.

1

SEODAB releases tourney pairings·
BY BRAD SHERMAN .
BSHERM~N@MYDAILYTRIBUNE . CO M

JACKSON - As the 2003-04 girls
basketball regular season nears completion, 68 teams from the Southeast
District · received their postseason
roadmaps.
The Southeast Ohio District Athletic
Board held its annual tournament draw
Saturday .at Jackson High School' and
determined the pairings for girls sec·
tiona! tournaments later this month .
Division II at U. of Rio Grande
In Division ll, Warren ( 14-1 ) took
· the no. I seed at the sectionals being
held at the University ·Of Rio Grande.
while fellow Southeastern Ohio
Athleti c League member Jackson was
seeded no.2.
·
·
Those top two seeds will meet the
winners of "play-in games," played on
Feb. 16. Rock Hill (5-9) and Vinton
County (5-12) will meet at 6:15 p.m.
forthe right to challenge Warren. while
the 8 o'clock gam't pits Waverly .(6-11 )

against River Valley (3- 11 ), the vi.:tor
fa ces Jackson.
The other two match-ups at · Rin
Grande have third -seeded Fairland (96) playing the six-seed Athen s (4-12).
and perhaps the best firsl-round game.
fourth-seed Gallia Academy (7-9) ver·
sus fifth -seeded Meigs (9-7). Those
games are being played on Feb. l9 at 8
p.m. and,6: 1.5 p,m. respectively.
Four teams out of the Rio sec tiona is
advance to the District tourname'nt a1
Chillicothe High School, along with
four teams. from the sectionals held at
Adena H.S.
Division II at Adena H.S.
The situation is the same at Aden;t,
whereas the top two teams face win ners of games played on tlie 16th.
. Thornville Sheridan ( 15-1) is the top
seed, and Chillicothe Unioto 114~3) is
no.2 .
Th.e Greenfield McClain (S-9) v.
Washington Court Hou se (3-13) win 1Jer takes on Sheridan. and Unioto will
get the winner of Logan Eh-&lt;1 (6- 11)

and Hill sboro ( 1- 12).
The two already determined games
sees no.3 Miami Trace ( 13-3) taking
on no.6 SciOio Northwest l7·Rl, and .
no.4 Fairfield Union (8-8) challenging
no.5 Circ lev ille ( 10· 7). ·
. Division IV at Vinton County H.S.
In Division IV sectionals at Vinton
Count y. fi ve teams get free passes to
the secti6nal final. with three of those
play_i ng a yet to be determined opponent . ·
,
Trimble ( 16-0). the and six th ranked
team in the state. earned the top spot
and will face the winner of the no.8
Green (4- 11 ) versus no .9 Miller (3-13)
contest, which will be played Fefi . 16
al'7 p.m.
Richmond D~ Southeastern ( 13-4)
is the no .2 seb~ imd will lind out it s
opposition on Feb . 16 in the(&gt;: 15 p.m. .
gare between no .7 Crooksville (5- 10) .
an no.! 0 Ironton St. Joseph (4-6).
. nd Southern ( 12-4), wi II al so be kept
1

Please see SEODAB. Bl

WELLSTON - Behind a
26-point fourth period explosion, the Southern Lady
Tornadoe s
posted a 5936 girls TriValley
Conference
interdi visional victo·
ry over the
Wellston
L a d y
R o c k e t· s
Monday
Wolfe
night
at
Well ston High School.
ll1e win was the IOOth win
· for Southem coach Scott Wolfe,
who is 46-17 at Southern since
transfening from Eastern.
Wolfe has won two
Sectional titles at both
Eastern and South~rn. and
has won a Trl· Valley
Conference title at both
schools. Hi s 1995 Eastern
team went to the Regional
Tourtiament at Vandalia
where it lost to state champion Jackson Center.
Southern was led by the
21-point effort of senior
Katie Sayre, who drew double teams for most of the
first half before tearing loose
for 'I 6 fourth quarter points.
Brooke. K;ser added eight
points . Deana Pullins and
Ashley Rou sh notched six
points each. Jessica Hill and
Ashley Dunn tallied five
apiece, and Joanne Pickens
and Kristiina Williams each
scored four.
. Ashley Dunn had eight
rebounds, four blocks and
seven steals to lead the Lady
Tornadoes in a spirited
Susan
defensive effort.
Brauer also came in to grab
some key rebounds and put
forth a good defen sive effort.
Well stan was led by Leah
Bunnell with 13 points, Kim
Cremeans added nine. Cassie
Bunnell six and four each
from Kim Stabler and Hilarv
Patrick.
•
Southern stumbled miserably in the fir st quarter,
mi ssing numerou s layin s and
short jumpers. The penalty
of the poor shooting and
poor defense put Southern in
the hole at 8-7 after one
round .
Southern's Sayre had three
points in the first quarter. but
in the second the Well ston
defense/ completely bottled
her up ,and held her scoreless. Ashley Dunn's defense,
her imensity on the press ancl
the fmtr\ points she delivered .
helped ~ck Southern up in
the se~'\nd round. Rou sh
also had ~ big 3-pointer.
Senior [HiH also gave the
Tornadoe ~ a lift when· she hit
a short j ~mper and drilled a
long 3-po\nter from the point
to give th e Tornadoes some
momentul\1. Hill also had
two key a~ sists to Dunn in ·
the post as Southern rolled to
a 22-8 lea~ at the half after
holding W~l!ston scoreless
the second ·ame.
Southern c me out stale in
the tllird q arter. Wellston
dosed the ; p to 33-25 at
the quarter's end.
Southern. behind coach
Wolfe's urging. finally came
out of it and blitzed the
Rockets" in the final round,
outscoring the hosts 26- 11
for the 59-36 finale.
Southem hit 20-52 twos.
2-14 threes. and 17-26 at the
line.• Southern had 18
rebounds (Dunn 8). 18 steals
(Dunn 6. Sayre 5). 6 assists
(Hill 2). 12 turnovers, and 11
fouls.
Wellston hit 12-47 twos, 28 treys. and was 6- 15 at the
line.
Wellston had · 37
rebounds (Cremean s 10, L.
Bunnell l 1.. .C. Bunnell 8), _
1l steals (H. Patrick 4 ), three
assists , 28 turnovers. and 20
fouls.
,
Southern goes to Federal
Hocking Thursday.

'

�..

Tuesday, February 3. 2004

;·Prep scorebpard
;
Soutl)ern 59, Wellston 36
• Southern
7
15 11 26 -59
: Wellston
e 0 17 11 - 36
• SOUTHERN (13-4)- Ashley Dunn 2 1• 2 5 Jessica H1ll 2 0 0 5 Deana Pullins 1
• 4-8 6 Katte Sayre 8 5-7 21 Susan Brauer
o o 0 0 Brooke KJser 3 2 2 ~. Joanne
PIQ;ens 1 2-2 4, Ashley Roush 1 3-5 6,
· Knslnna Williams 2 0-0 4 TOTALS- 20
' 17-26 59
: WELLSTON (1·12)- Katte Stabler 2 0·
• 0 4 Ktm Cremeans 3 1-2 9 Melinda
• Btshop 0 0·2 0 Lacte Patnck 0 0 0 0
: Hilary Patrick 1 2 2 4 Enca McManaway o
• 0·0 0 Leah Bunnell 5 3-4 13 Sarah Davy
• 0 0 0 0 Brtttany Perkms 0 0 0 0 CaSSie
~ Bunnell3 0-5 6 TOTALS- 14 6 15 36
3 point goals - S 2 (Roush and Hill} W
2 (Cremeans)
•

Eastern

44, Meigs 32

... Me•gs

11

·4

.. Eastern

12

9

•

f,lEIGS (9·8) -

9

8

-

13

10

- 44

32

Cayla Lee 0 0·0 0

: Renee Ba1ley 1 0 0 2 Joey Hamng 2 0 0

... 4 Jushne Dowler 1 1 2 3, Sammy P1erce 2
1-1 5 Angel Harter o 0-0 o Jaynee Dav•s
7 4-6 18 Chnssy M1ller 0 0·0 0 TOTALS
- 136 932

EASTERN (11 ·5)- Alyssa Holle' 2 0·0
5 Knsta White 1 1 2 3 Morgan Weber 7 1

2 17 Janna Hupp 0 1 2 1 Jess1e Hupp 2
: 0·2 4 Halley Brooks 1 0-0 2 Enn Weber 2
• 0 0 4 Jennifer Hayman 4 0 0 8 TOTALS

• - 19 3·10 44
•

3 pomt goals - M (none) E 3 (M Weber

: 2 and Holter)

Ohio High School Girls Basketball

Monday's Results
Akr Centrai-Hower 61 Akr Ellet 59
Akr

Coventry 48

Cuyahoga Valley

, Chnst•an Academy 45
Akr Firestone 78 Akr N 33

: Akr
Manchester
68
Zomolle
., Tuscarawas Valley 38
•• Albany Ale~tander 43 Mtnford 42
Andover Pymatumng Vall 50 BriS!OI'o'ltle

Bnstol43
50
Hopewell Lo udon
Bascom
Northwood 31
Beaver Eastern 49 Portsmouth Clay 47
~
Beverly Ft Frye 52 Sarahsville
~ Shenandoah 46
Bluffton 71 Ft Jenn1ngs 64
Brookfield 47 Cortland Lake\MW 40
Canal Fulton NW 39 Navarre Farless 30
Canton Cent Cafh 57 Canton S 46
Chrllrcothe Zane Trace 68 Batnbndge
Pamt Valley 58
Cln Glen Este 46 l&lt;mgs M•lls l&lt;rngs 42
C•n Summ1t Country Day 47 Cm
Shrader Paldela 41
Cleveland S 84 Cle Lutheran E 58
Cots OeSales 30 Htlhard Oa'o'rdson 22
Cots Ohro Deaf 71, Muskrngum
Chrtst~an 26
Cots Watterson 63, Cots Northland 37
Columbiana 60 Hanoverton United 44
Col umb1ana Crestvrew 64 Sebnng
McKrnley 43
Cortland Maplewood 61 South ngton
Chalker 31
Coshocton 41 Zanesv•lle Rosecrans 24
E Canton 61 Magnolia Sandy Valley 27
Gallipolis Galha Academy 60 Pt
Pleasant, W Va 36
Gtrard 70 Leavittsburg LaBree 31
Granv1lle Chrrstran 50 Cots Torah

The Daily Sentinel • Page 82

www .mydailysentinel.com

. Tuesday, February 3, 2004

'QJ:ribune - Sentinel - l\e ster
C L A S S I F· I E D
We,COVef''-7

Cleveland stadiums get new deal

Acadomy 24
Hrll ~boro 30 Leesburg Fatrfteld 27
Hu~ard 60 Newton Falls 46
lro nlon 70 Portsmouth 22
Jackson 70 McArthur Vinton County 52
1&lt;1nsfan Badger 37 \Yarren Lordstown
27
Lucasville Valley 72 West Unron 29
Mansfleld 66 F1ndlay 61
Man sh~ld Temple Chnshan 45 Evangel
Chnstlan 34
Manon \ CathOliC 55 Ltma Temple
Chrtslian ~0
Massi! tor Chns 35 Medma Chns 20
Masstllo~ Tuslaw 45, W Salem NW 32
Masslllo~Washmgton 61 Allrance 46
• McOonal 55 N Lrma S Range 49
Mecl'la n• sburg
42
Jamestown
Greenevie 41
Metamora Evergreen 57 Tot Rogers 37
Mowrystown WhiteOak 53 Manchester
47
Mt Orab Western Brown 62 Batavra 28
N Jackson Jackson-Milton 58 M1ne1al
A dge 27
N Lewisburg Tnad 64 A1dgeway
R1dgemont 45
N Middletown Spnnglteld 56 Lowellville
47
N Aldgevrlle Lake R1dge 54 Greater
Cleveland Chnstran 21
New Manchester W Va Oak Glen 4 7
R•chmond Ed•son 35
Norwalk 50 Vermrlron 38
Not re Oame~Cathedral Latm 66 Elyna
Catholrc 36
Peebles 63 Latham Western 51
Proctorvrlle Far rland 32 Chesapeake 29
OT
Ractne Southem 59 Wellston 36
Rayland Buckeye Local 57 Wellsburg
Brooke W Va 39
Reedsville Eastern 44 Pomeroy Mergs
32
s Pmm 44 Ironton Rock Hill 41
S Webster 48 Frankhn Furnace Green
27
Seaman Noeth Adems so. A'pley 36
Spnng N 67 Hube' H1S Weyna 47
Stewart Federal Hocktng 67 Nelsonvrllevo,k 30
•
,
Suga'
c,eek
Gacaway
55
Newcome"town 54
Thompson Ledgemont 26, Bloomfield 23
Tot Ch'"""n 65 N Batt•mo'e 55
Toronto 55 Wellsville 51
Tcoy 51 Spnng Shawnee 33
Vienna Mathews 46 Berlin Center
wes1em Aesen~e 41
v~ncent warren 57 Belpre 45
w Carrollton 48 Trenton Edgewood 37
w
La layette
Rtdgewood
53
Gnadenhutten lnd•an Valley 41
Wapakonela 53 L'ma Cen1 Cath 31
Wa rren 57 Betp'e 45
Warren Ha,dmg 50 Ashtabula LekaS&gt; de
39
warren JFK 54 campbell Memonal 10
WIIm lngton 81 Ctermon1 Norrheaslem
50
Young Boardman 57 Poland Semmary
31
5
34

~~~~~ 2~~~ty ~7 Y~;,~.~~·h~";,~~on
~~~~;v~~s~~n~:~~eit~u;g

7

Cha ney 6
ZaneSVIlle MaySVIlle 50 GlousterTrrmble
37
Zanes'Vrlle
w Muskrngu m 82

McConnellsvtlle Morgan 38
Ohio High SChool Boys Basketball

Monday's ResUita
Belmont u~ on Local 60 Cad1z Hamson
d
Cent 54
C1n Coleram 67 M1llord 62
Crn Tart 102 Cm Chrlsttan 36
Cle South 83 Cle L1ncoln-West 73
Cols Torah Academy 49 Granville
Chnst1an 35
Gro11e C ly Ch rrstran 80 Maranatha
Chnsllan 48
Lorarn Southview ~5 Shaker His 52
Malvern SO Bowerston Conotton Valley
71
Mass1lron Chrrs 59 Medtna Chrrs 51
M•llersport 43 Granctvrew 42
Mogadore Chrrsttan 39 MentOf Chns 36
Muskmgum Chnstlan 55 Cols Oh1o
Deal 38

New Matamoras Fronller 73 St Mary s
wva 30
Archmond
Hts
91
Thompson
Ledgemont 39
Rootstown 80 Mogadore F1eld 48
Slippery Rock Pa 63 Young Aayen 43
Unrversrty Hts Fuchs Mrzracht 71
Cuyahoga His 64
Young Liberty 57 Brookfield 54
'YI Va prep basketball scores
Monday's Results
Girts
Burch 42, Cross Lanes Chnshan 24
Capttal 60 Huntington 59
Charleston Catholrc 51 St Albans 26
East Fa1rmo n1 70 Preston 58
East Hardy 46 Shenandoah Valley Va
25
Elkins 63 Fatrmont Semor 59
Galltpolls Oh1o 60 Pornt Pleasant 36
Hancock Md 63 Berkeley Spnngs 60 OT
Harman 68 'Umon 43
Hundred 70 Clay·Battelle 54
Hurncane 74 Poca 67
Logan 44 scott 35
Meadow Bndge 42, V~lley Fayette 29
Me"er Chnsuan 6 7 PtkeVtew 47
Notre Dame 64 !='aden Ctty 55
Oak Glen 47 . Ed,son Oh•o 35
Oak Htll59. Aochwood 32
Packe,sbu'g South 51 John Ma"hall 41
Paw Paw 38 Brshop Walsh, Md 30
R1ver OhiO 39 Tyter eonsohdated 27
Soulh Hamson 51 Lincoln 32
Sl Cla,sv,lle, OhiO 66 Magnoha 5B OT
St Joseph 64 Duval 40
Tucke' county 64, Ph,hp aa,bour 56
van 55 BuHalo 44
Wahama 51, Calhoun Coun1y 40
We" 44 Madonna 36
W~nlteld 70 Tug Valley 53
Wyoming Eas1 74. Independence 26
Boys
Bu~alo 95 Van 58
Chacteston Cathotoc 63. Teays Valley
Chnstian 36
Fronlter Ohio 10 S• Marys 30
Gilbert 73, laage r 62
Haf1'nan 4B Oh1o Valley Chnsllan 46
He,be'' Hoove' 43 Lew•s Coun1y 26

~;~~n 7J~YKt~.' :o~,:~ame 40
=~:~~~~~h;~~~~~ ~u~~~~i

Baptist
RIChwood 9~ Pocahontas County 77
St Josep h 13 Duval 43
To!s1a 81 Wahama 31

47

CLEVELAND (A P) The nonprofit group that
owns Gund Arena and
Jacobs F1eld has negotiated
new deals with Cleveland's
s ports teams to escape the
constant thteat of bankruptcy
The Gateway EconomiC
Development Corp. board
approved new I 0-year deals
on Monday that free the
organization from covenng
minor repairs and routine
mamtenance at the homes of
the Cleveland Cavaliers and
Cleveland Indians.
The teams· rent payments
w1ll no longer be tied to tick·
et sales Ins tead, Gateway
wtll submit tts annual budget to the teams by midNovember and the teams
w1ll dectde how to diVIde the
expenses.
That w11l be about $4.9
million th1s year, and the

Indians will cover 57 percent
"The term s of the leases
are very fa1r to us and the
two teams," sa1d ' Wilham
Reedy, Gateway 's board
chaiFman " We should be
grateful to the two teams "
Gateway was created m
1990 to build and run the
sports
fac1lities.
Board
members are appomted by
Cleveland and Cuyahoga
County.
The Indians ' success in the
las t half of the I 990s, when
more than 3 ,milhon tickets
were sold each year, kept
Gateway solvent miually
Gateway got a portion, ranging from 75 cents to $1 25,
of every Ind1ans t1cket sold,
as long as I 85 m1lhon were
sold
Gateway rece1ved no ttcket revenue last year because
the lndtans sold only I 73

m1lljon tickets
In
the
case
of
the
Cavaliers. Gateway got "
percentage of loge and c lub
seat revenues !rom basket ball games, and was supposed to recetve a port1on ot
t1cket sales for nongame
events a t Gund Arena. such
as concerts and ice s h ow&gt;.
but only if more than I 85
milhon ticke t s
to
such
events were sold
The arena n ever sold that
many ticket&gt;
Gateway also was res pon sible for capital repa1rs at
Gund Arena. wh1ch mcluded
everythmg from new copy
machmes to redomg the ter razzo floors, and ended up
owmg th e Cavahers money
the team spe nt tor mamte nance Under th e n ew agree
menl, Gateway w11l pay only
tor ttem s cost1ng mme than
$500,000

(AP)-

period to tie the game at 2

David Vybomy scored on a
penalty shot and had an assist,
and Anders Eriksson added
1
h
th
two
goa s
to
elp
e
Columbus Blue Jackets pick
up a rare M,mt m Phoenix with
3 3
da
h
a - t1e
on Y mg t
Brian Boucher stopped 25
shots tor Phoenix, I.:adislav
N
d J
Hrd
had
agy an
an
ma
a
goal and an assist each, and
Mike Sllli!lger scored a goah d 0 a1 10 th th d
· Od
ea 1?&gt;
e
If pen
·
But It wasn't enough for the
Coyotes to end the1r four1
treak (0 3 1)
game wm ess s
- - ·
They were O-for·6 on the
power play and contmued the
)
1 th t arked th
soppy P ~y
a m
err
three previOUS losses.

G•lh1 Count y OH

In One Week With Us
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PLUS YOUR AD
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Or Fax TQ (740) 992-2157

Offtee 11o~~

all~~~~g aths:o~:'r~nai;~

105

8 remwmn g
Th1s 11me. Vyborny. who
scored twtce on JJenalty shots

only two goals coming in and
16 m his 382-game career, let
fly with a one-timer high m

in 2000-0 I to beco m e the lirs l
rookie to do so, ued It at 2
agatnst Boucher I 23 mto the
second penod
Referee Stephane Auger
awarded the free s hot a fter

Columbus, which has the
NHL's worst road record (315-4-2) but IS 2-4-3-0 away

Coyotes captam Shane Doan
tnpped Vyborny as he bore Ill
on Boucher on a s hort-handed

from home since .Gerard
Gallant became intenm coach
on Jan. 1 The Blue Jackets are

breakaway. Vyborny skated
nght, then curled left across the
crease before s hootmg back

0-4-3-0 overall m Phoemx.

past Bouc her on the short stde

shot goal tn four games. :\
Vybomy scored on the penal- ~""'
ty shot at I 43 of the second .'VP
6

--W~d~~t~~. . ~~t_~~~
.th
~
L-~
~-~

~~ •

~~ • •

p te
• t ure
• • •

• •

V

pet

r

Lost
Female
cat
gray/blacklwh•te str pped
wtth white chest and teet
Aeward 1(740)388 1594

'\\

~

c'~"'~~A.~--~ndta~~~mlslng pa lenc~s7w-~,, .,,. "~ on ~ Pet ValentinesI ~

fielder Matt Lawton 1s gotng to have
to put up or su down

"(Last) Apnl is not what we ' re
lookmg for and he understands that,"

•
6
'\\

lnd1an s manager Enc Wedge said
Monday that he won't be as pa(lent
1 w11h h1s young club as he was a year
ago. And that goes for rook1es, second-year players and established vet ;

Wedge said.
The Indians' payroll has been
tnmmed to $45 mtlhon th1s season
wllh Lawton due $7 mtlhon Wedge
said Lawton' s contract will not be a

'\~

erans hke Lawton
Just a few weeks aw,ty I rom open mg h1s second spnng trammg camp as
" Cleveland's lll.ilnager, Wedge said

factor, meaning he ' II only get playmg
lime 1f he earns II
"We're gomg to have the best team
out there," Wedge .said. "If he comes

Lawton 1s not a lock to be m the starting lineup and the 32-year-pld outflelder could fmd h1mselt on the

m and plays the way he can play, then
he'll be out there There are no excuses. He understands that. "

bench 1f he doesn't perform .
"The ball 1s m h1s court," Wedge

With Jody Gerut and Millon Bradley
already
penctled
as
outfield
111

Lawton isn ' t the only player Wedge
1s expectmg more from m '04

sa1d
t.awton has been hampered by
injuries during two seasons stnce JOinmg the lnd1ans , who acqu1red h1m m a

s tarters, Lawton may have to beat out
Coco Crisp, Alex Escobar and Ryan
Ludwtck th 1s spnng for a startmg JOb
Wedge could always change hi S

The Indians are coming "off their
worst season since 1991 It was a 162game grind that left many of the
club 's young players phy s 1cally and

2001 trade from the New York Met s
and signed h1m to a four-y ear. $27
milhon contract before the 2002 sea-

mtnd , but for now, he 's saying Lawton
w 111 only play if he w 1ns a starting JOb
as Cleveland's every day left fielder

mentally dramed at the fmtsh
Wedge, though. is counting on some
of last year's pamful lessons reaping

son
Wedge hmted that tt's 11me Lawton

" He ts gotng to hav e to step up 10
lett held because DH ts s poken tor,"

rewards
"Last year, our young guys didn't

s tarted earnmg 1t.
"He's going to have to come mto
camp healthy and ready to go. It 's
pretty cut and dry," Wedge satd at

sa td Wedge, who plan s to have Ben
Brou ssard and Trav1s Hafner spill the
at - bats between first base and DH
Wedge satd h e has s pok e n to

know what tomorrow was," Wedge
sa1d "'They were JUSt trymg to find
the1r way 1n Apnl and try10g to hang
on m September. Everythmg should

Jacobs

be gan

Lawton th1 s wmter .tnd expressed to

be better the second time around."

thetr wmter press tour.
Lawton played 111 jUst 14 games fol _ lowmg the All-Star game m 2003 after
di s locating h1 s nght m1ddle linger
while swingmg a bat in a July II

hnn that he need s to be more ltke the
player who batted .3 05 for Minnesota
10 2000 than the one who has been a
disappomtment
s 1nce
comtng
to
Cleveland tn an e1ght-player de,tl

Gerut was arguably the best thing
about Cleveland last season, battmg
279 and betommg the f1rst rookie to
lead the club in homers and RB! s in
23 years.

game.
He had knee surgery 111
September
It was the second st rm g ht season
Lawton had ended prematurely by
injury • .In 2002, Lawton played as
long as he could with a separated n g ht
shoulder before undergo111g surgery tn
September

L1wton gol ott to a n awful start las t
year, b a tting
185 ( 15 - for·S I) wtth
three home rs and II RBis tn Apnl He
found h1 s sw m g and batt e d 2 70 over
h1 s fm a l 72 ga mes , but h1 s lac k of producllon iJUrl the rebutldm g lnd1ans ,
who u sed 25 rook1es the seco nd mos t 111 maJor league baseball s mce

Gerut, too , expects better thmgs for
the lndmn s, who w11l benefit · from
playmg m the weak AL Central.
" Last year was d1fficult for a lot rea son s," he satd "But we 've got a lot of
young talented guys here who have
been through it and believe in themse lves ••

F1eld

as

the

Indtans

SEODAB
from Page 81
in suspense for a while, the
Lady Tornadoes face either
no 6 Symmes Valley (5-10) or
no II South Galha (2- 15). The
play-m game wtll take place
on Feb. 18 at 8:00 p m , wh1le
the sectional title tilt w1ll be on
the 21st at2:45 p.m.
The only secuonal championship that is already set pits
no.4 Eastern (10-5) agwnst
fellow Tri- Valley Conference
~. Hocking Divis1on foe no 5
: :Waterford (9·8). That game
• takes place Feb. 19 at 8 p.m.
Four teams out of the
Vinton County H.S. secuonals advance to the District
tournament at Wellston H .S ,
along with four teams from
the sectionals held at Piketon
HS

'

seeds awa1t the outcomes of
earher games
Sctotovtlle
Community
(Portsmo uth East) took the
no I seed after boastmg a
sohd 12-4 , record thus tar.
wh1le
1ts
netghbor
Ports mouth Clay
1-41 was
dubbed no .2. South Webster
(9-6) got the three and
Eastern P1ke (9-5) was seeded fourth·
The no 8 Pamt Valley ( 8- 7)
v
no 9 Manchester ('6-9)
game moves on to face topseed Sciotov1lle East, n o.7
1
Wh1teoak (9·6) and no.lO
Valley (2· 13) plays for the
right to challenge Clay; n o.6
Fairfield meets no. 11 New
Boston, with the victor taking
on South Webster; ancl no 5
Western (I 0·5) must get past
wtnless no . l2 Notre Dame
(0·15) to advance and battle,
Eastern . •

n

Division mat We&amp;ton HS.

Division IV at Piketon H.S.

Oak Hill (16·1 ), the sev·

At P1keton , the top four

Ven th ranked team m the state,

is the top seed at the secuonals being held at Wellston
H S Zane Trace ( 13-3) got
the second seed
Oak Hill faces the wmner
ot the no 8 Alexander ( 12·4)
versu s no.9 Federal Hocking
(3·12) game. while Zane
Trace get s e1ther no. 7 Belpre
( 12-5) or no 10 P1}&lt;:eton ( 116)
Thtrd-stileded Westfall (79)
and
the
fourth-seed
Mmford (9-7) also earned
first round byes. Westfall
takes
on
ellher
no 6
Huntington
or
no.ll
Nelsonv1lle· York,
and
Mmfor~ w1ll take on the wmner between no.5 Adena (710)
and
no . l2
New
Lexmgton (1-15).
Four teams o ut of the
Wellston
H .S
sectwnal s
adva nce to the D1str1ct tournament at Waverly H S ,
a long with four teams from
the
sectwna l s ) held
at

Lucasv11le Valley H.S .

Division mat Valley HS.
Lynchburg Clay ( 15 · 1 ~ IS

...
••

....
.

.
~•..
~
••
..
Our Special Page(s)
~•. "For Pets Only" ....
••
~
will be published
Friday
~•
February 13th .
. •.
~
..
in The Daily Sentinel ..
~• Also a special section is available
• for In Memory V
Pets
~
••

wmner

of

the

.

Chesapeake (8-8) v.

no .7
no.IO

North Adams (7 ·8) contest.
lronton (12-4) gets the wmner of no.6 Peebles • no. II
Portsmouth West.
Two other games in the
secllonal

are.already set, no.4

Wheelersburg

(15-2)

w11l

play no 13 Wellston ( 1-11 ),
and no.5 Portsmouth
challenges

no.12

(I 0-4)
West

Uiuon. The winners of those
two contest w1ll face off for
the nght to advance to the
districts .

Want to buy Junk Veh1cles
Steel or Alumtnurm R1ms
wrthout/t rr es Eng1nes &amp;
Alum nru m
Aulomatrc
Trans miSSions
Ca ll fo r
pnces (304)773-5343 or
1304)773 5033

..9
9

9

9

I \11'1 0\ \II' I

"11\IIIS

.

110

HH.I' Wt\N"J"FJ)

9

..

99
9

~

.

..9
9

•«
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..~

~·
•.
••

9

..9

~

Cat

or no .9
Eastern

Older used school band
mus1ca·1 rn struments Also
wantrng older baseball
cards 1975 and betore
1740)388 B692

9

South Pomt (5·1 0).
Second-seeded

Abso lute Top Dollar U S
Gold Coms
S tiver
Proofsets Otamonds Gold
Rrng s
U S Currency
M T S Coin Shop
151
Second Avenue Ga ll pairs
740 446 2842

'!:;,

a ls, and wtll face e1ther no.8

Brown (12-3) take s on the

Lo51 Female Slue Healer
on Bethel Ad nea r bnck
house (304)675 3927
Reward Atford

~

the lop seed at Valley sectwnCoal Grove (8-7)

I

ACT NOW

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Valentine Pets c/o The Dally Sentinel,
111 Court Straet, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
For more Info: 992·2155

VALENTIN£ PETS
Pet's Name:

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~

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19

·~-()-w--n-er_'_s_N_a_m
__e_:~----------~~------------ ~~

••~----------------------------------- '
~:Address:
~ City/State/Zip:
6 Amount Enclosed:
For
6~
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Pictures at $8.00 each.

..,p&amp;-'."' •• ~&amp;-";. ;. "' ::p..;&gt;';,.,

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~

•..,.....&amp;-"'&amp;--"41"•.

$$$ UP TO $529 WE EKLY!
Ma11ing lette rs from home
Easy! Any Hours' Full/Part
hme No expe rrence neces
sary US D1gest 1 888 389
1790 24 hO urs

Auto deta11 person needed
E)(penence and references
reqUired Sa lary based on
experrence Send refer
ences/resume The Oatly
Sentinel
PO BO)( 729 32 Pomeroy
OhiO 45769
Help Wanted

Display Ads

Dally In- Column . 1:00 p . m .

All Display

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Business Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday In-Column

1·00 p.m.

Frlld•'Y For Sundays Paper

Sund~y

12 Noon 2

Display

1:00 p.m.

Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

INTERVIEW
TODAY ONLY!

AWESOME CAREER
FOR 2004
Postal Pos1110ns
$14 80 $36 OO+Ihr
Federal hue lull benefits
Crill 7 am 7 pm CST
1·800~ 651 -7 024 Ext 2072
Counte r Sates person need
ed for local eleclnc dr stnbu
tor , Electncal background
and good communiCi:ll•on
s ktlls prele rred EOE Send
resume to HR Department
PO Box 6668 Huntmgto n
wv 25773 6668

Elderly Chrrst an lady (non
smoker) requ1res live 1n help
Room /board
Expandrng local company (llm 1led)
has 17 1rarnm g postl ons offered Senous •nqwnes
ava1lable lor set up and dts only 9am 9pm {740)446
play and customer servrce 0910
AppliCants selected by 1nter
v1ew rather than past expen
EMTs/Paramedrcs
Ambulance
Ga llla
ence Must be able to start
1mmedratety Complete tram· county stati on IS currently
mg pr0111ded $ 1 500 per hlnng Please app ly w•th 1n
month to start Apply at the (740)446 7930
Holiday Inn 577 St At 7
from 12pm Spm ask for Mr
Expe nenced a uto body
Ross
man must have own tools
Addressers wanted lmmedr Apply at Larry s Body Shop
atelyl No expenence neces or send resume 2046
sary Work at home Call Add1son P1ke Ga lilpol•s
405 44 ].6397
Ohro
ave you ever
oug
An Excellent way to earn
bout helprng a child who 1
money Lets talk the
n trouble and m ght need
NEW AVON
lace to slay for a couple a
Call Manlyn 304~882-2645
ays? The M lestone
Joyce 304 675-6919
Foster Care Agency rs look
Apnt 304-882 3630
ng lor prov1ders m Galli
ounty to do short term
AS SEEN ON TV
are for homeless runawa
LEARN TO DRIVE
hlldren ages a 18 Foste
TRACTOR· TRAILER
ome llcensrng rs reqUired
NEW PROGRAM
re1mbersement IS rncluded
No Expenence Needed
Please call 1 888 823 753
Placement Oepl
or more rnformatton
F1nancmg A11allable
CDUTrarmng
Kawa s ak
Suwk1
ALLIANCE
Motorsports m Gallipolis has
Tractor Trailer
openmgs m the lollowu1g
Tratntng Centers
areas parts expenenced
Wythevrlle VA
mechan1c sales and man
Call Toll Free
agement
Kn owledg e ot
1 BOO 334· 1203
product ancl abtlity to mullr
E1Cpenence task
Asphalt
essen 11a1
Send
Expanding company needs Resume to
labors operators .and dump
Kawasaki Suzuki
truck dnvers Beg1ns Apnl
Molorsports Center
1st Resume to
4367 State Route 160
PO Box 3073
~ Gallipolis Oh•o 45631
Huntington WV 25702
AVON' All Areasl To Buy or Make 50% sellrn g Avon
Sell Sh1rley Spears 304 L•mr ted
t1me
ONLY
(740)446 335B
675 1429
Make your own schedule
Need 4--PT Sales Reps Tn
Councy area We w1ll trarn
(B77)559-044 t
Help Wanted

WE NEEV TO
"TALK" TO YOU!!
AGreat
Opportunity Awaits!
The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company
is seeking a highly motivated
individual who is interested in an
"ADVERTISING
SALES CAR~ER",
with unlimited earning potential!
Interested??

WE NEED TO TALK!
• Salary Plus Commission
• Great Working Environment
• Monday - Friday 8am-5pm
Send your resume to: Ohio Valley Publishing,
200 Main Stree~ Point Pleasan~ WV 25550
No Phone Calls Please

NEEDED for busy salon
ASSY
SCISSOR
0
(740)44 1 1880
740 256 6336
Med Home Health Agency
Inc seekmg a full-t1me AN
lor the Gallipolis Qh10 area
Must be licensed both 1n
Oh10 and West Vrrgmra We
offer a compe111rve sala ry
benefrts pacKage a nd 401 K
,E 0 E Please send resume
to 352 Second Ave 1ue
Gall ipOliS OH 45631 Attn
01a na Har less Cltn1cal
Manager

TURNED DOWN ON
Paid ass ig nments lor l•gure and art models tor SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wml
tasteful posters.. Must be
18 or older nationally
1 B8B 5B2 3345
published photographer
IH \I I"' \II·
$500/day plus expenses
no exper•ence necessary 310
HI0~1K~
sae www Jaguared com
tuR S.ILt.
apply to Ed Gardner, P 0
Box 389 Charlestbn, WV
25322 or e mall tygard 1600 Sq It 3 ~ear old Ranch
style hon'le 2 1/2 ca1
ner@hotma rl com
garage 3 bedroom large
krtchen d nnmg room llvrng
Part t1m e
pos,t1on room 2 112 baths laundry
cler•callbackhoe expe1 1ence room front porch all cus tom
helplul located close to oak trrr11 doors and cabmets
Me gs Co Farrground s a rea All electric Very well layed
1740)992 9504
out beautiful rntenor on 1
1348 Prospect
1/2 acres
PARr TIME TELLER Local Church Road Won I last
bank rs accepting applica long at only $1 15 000 Call
11ons for part 11me teller and 740 446-4514 or 740 446
customer se1Y1ce pos1hons 3248 after 5pm
Must e~Ch•b•l profess1onal
1sm atteniiOn lo dela1l and 3 bedroom 2 baths on 4 3
entoy prov1d1ng except1onal ac res Must Sellll Call
customer serv1ce Prev1ous (740)709 1166
expenence m customer
serv ce al1d cash handlmg 784 State Route 588 Ca pe
pre ferr ed Knowledge of Cod askrng$135000 3or4
25
baths
computers a plus Mus! be bedrooms
averlab te Mon throug h Sat 1740)44 1 0504
Please subm•t resumes to
The Datly Sentrnel PO Box A 2000 Oakwood manulac729-34
Pomeroy Oh1o tu red home bearrng senal
nu mber HONC05532122
45769 E 0 E
w1ll be sold at publ c auct on
on Tuesday February 24
2004 at 1 OOpm At 3t9
Oua11 Creek ~t45 Galhpolrs
OH 45631 startrng mtntmum
b•d prrce of $16 500 terms
cash lo the highest btdder
The manufactured home rs
T1uck Dnvers needed for available to the pubhc lor
vans &amp; flatbeds Long haul 1nspec11on at lhe above
rng 2 years expenence address dunng regular bus•
good drrv 1ng record Pay ness hours The manulac
30% truck gross (740)388 lured home IS be1ng sold
9162
under the terms of a
Securrty
Agreement
150
between
Elizabeth
Garnes
Sc. Ill X ll ·'
3 19 Ouatt Creek 1145
INS'I Rl l t'IIO~
Gall tpolls OH 45631 and
Gallipolis Career College the unders igned Oakwood
(Careers Close To Home) Act,;eptance Corp 2225 S
Holden Ad Greensboro NC
Call Today' 740 446 4367
27407
18002140452
WWW gall poti SCBree rcoll!'!ge com
Accred IOd

MombP.r

Atcmdll 119

lrdcpRlrJcnl Collegos
11 0 So.:hools 127M3
17
MI~H I ANI:fllJS

C llUIIC II

lu

All

NORRIS NORTHUP
DODGE ,
Full Time Salea Person
LOCATION 252 UPPER
RIVER AD
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
UNLIMITED INCOME
POTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE
REQUIRED
Must poses good people
skills ambrl1ous att1tude
and the des1re to succeed
Now Hiring lull and part
McClure s
time
Restaurants In Gallipo lis
Middleport and Pomeroy
Apply
Monday
thru
Saturday lQ-11 am

real estate advertising

Frrewood $25 00 prck up
load
(you
p•ck
up)
740 992 9263
180
W.IN"Illl

In th1s newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fatr Hous1ng Act of 1969
which makes II Illegal to

To

Bas1c mendtng &amp; allera!IOns
For
1ntorma110n
call
(740)446 8602 tl no answer
leave a messago

preference llm1taUon or
drscrlmlnatton based on
race color, religion, sex
lamihal status or national
origin, or any Intenti on to
make any such
pre ference tlmltatron or
discrimination

Bookkoep11g m my home
Phone (304)67 5 3304

This newspaper will not

advertise any

no

Ch ldcare State licensed
Focus help1ng low mcome
tamr lres obta n c h ldcare
W1fh 8hrs sleep lrme tor
non-tradrtiOnal shtlts as Qilll
of your ElliiHT..S 740 245
9242

ee a JO
We are hrring'
You could earn up
to $8/hour plus bonuses
We also offer pard
trarnmg hohdays
and vacat1ons
Full ot pari t1me
shifts avarlable
Call today
1 ~877·463-6247 ext 2458

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

£•..

POliCIES Ohio Vallfly Pubhshmg reserve• lhe righl to edit rej~M:t or cancel anv ad 1!11 any time Errors mus1 be reported on the hral day of
Tribune Sentinel-Register will~ responsible tor no more than ths cost of the space occupied by th e error and only the first msert1on We
any loes or expense that reeulls from the publication or om1ulon ot an advert1samant Correcllon will be made In the first available editi o n
are always conl1deniHII • Current rate card applies • All real estate Mllle!Jisemenla are sub1ect to the Federal Fatr HoU1s1ng Act of 1968
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE etandarda We will not1mowlngty accept any advertising In violat ion ot the law

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prtce • Avoid Abbreviations

Ho~t~.~

mRSAII

..__ _ _
FtiioiiiiiUNtiil)_ _,., 3 dnvers wrth COL &amp; haz
·
mal call (7 40)9B5 3307
Found Husky m•x dog G ve
descnpiiOn when call rng
17 40)709 0302

99

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

10

ANNOUNCEMENTS
I
. " GOV"T POSTAL JOBS"
I
ANNOUNCEMENT#PS247
C 1 Bee~ Carry Out permit 9 UP TO $54 481 ¥EAR
for sale Chesler TownshiP NOW HIRING SELECT
Me1gs County send letters AREAS
FREE CALL
of rnterest to The Oa1ly APPLICATION E)(AMI NA
Sentmel PO Box 729-20 TION INFORMAT ION FED
~~~;;:O;,::h~o,;;4;;:,57:..6:,::9~_, EAAL BENEFI TS 1 BOO
LOST ANil
892·5549 EXT. 92 7 DAYS
~

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oea.rltire.J&gt;

110

1\\0l \1 I \II \I.'

,.....\)

amo~ilie...

~

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

~~ • &lt;&gt; • • ~~ •

~,·"ur

J

HOW I0 WRITE M

2

the slot, and the puck drifted
over Boucher's nght shoulder
Marc Denis had 29 saves for

• • • •

-

beat the oyotes wtlh a penal
ty-shot ~oal on Jan 27, scor agatnst Sean Burke With

nega
Silhnger's score 1·20
mto the final period
The defenseman, who had

Word Ads

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

Calg:t's Shean Donovan

Eriksson scored both goals
w1th 6 . 11 left in the frrst and
thirdte!1nods. His second

Mll.'tp Co11nty OH

Melgs.f Gallla;
-And Mason
Countl• Like
Noone
EJse Can!

Blue Jackets, Coyotes
skate
to
3-3
tie
'
GLENDALE, Ariz.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

knowingly accept
ad\lertt!u!lments tor real
eatate wh1ch Is In
violation of the law Our

readers are hereby
Informed thai all
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper are
•wallable on an equal

opportunity baus

Georges Portable Sawmrll
don t haul your logs to the For tease or sate n1ce 2
bedroom house $25 000 or
m1ll JUSt call304 675 1957
trade tor hunhng land
Will do babys1ttrng •n my (740)698-7244
home Full or pari t• me Non
smok•ng C~ll (740)367- Fof Sale Ho use on 2nd
Ave , br1ck 1 112 stor"y Call
0429
(740)446·347B
Will do light housekeeprng
FORECLOSURE!
or mrsc (304)675-7070
4 bed 4 bath house only
II~\" III
$9 900 for lrstrngs call
1·B00·719·3001 ••11144
10
8lSINFXS
Gallrpol s
Close
to
OI'I'ORltJNITY
town/hospita l 3BA 2BA
LOCAL VENDING ~OUTEI V•ew
photos/tnfarmatmn
60 vending machines I &lt;llfnllne www orvb co m code
excellent locations
~0303 or call (740)446
3032
all1or $10,995 OOD-234·
6982
--~-----Home sale 1n C1ty 3 bedroom 2 lull baths l'tlce &amp;
"'
cc
HIO VALLEY PUBLI SH ~lean great locahon 1n C1ty
lNG CE) recommends tha Vmyt s1drng Pnce to sale
ou do busmess W!lh pea now Phone 1710\446 9539
te you know and NOT I
end money through lh House for Sale Sandhdl
nail unt1l you have tnvestr Road 3 Bedroom 1 Balh
$B5 000 (304)675·2507
ated u·,e otterrn

i

Houst.~

lOR

MtSCEI I ANEOL!i

Rt N"l

Mt:NC:HANIJL~f

3 bedroom hou se m Two 2 bedroom apts lor rent
Middleport
no
pets m Syracuse $200 depos1t
(740)992 5858
S330 per mon th ren11nclude
water sewer &amp; !rash suff1
4 n:lom house appliances c1811t mcome reqUired to
furn• shed
washer/d ryer qual1 fy lor ren t 740 378
Oual ly bnck bUild home 1n hook up $250 month + 6111
great
ne1ghborhood depoSit. Call {740)446 0974
Conv1enent to Holzers and
\11-.1!1 II I'I&gt;ISI20 Momt.r Ho;u·~\
R1o Grande Spactous Jb1
510
2112 bat h features updated
m~ R&gt; Nt
Huus1 1101 H
k !chen wrth tr le fl oors tamrly
Goon;
room wrth frreptace over 2 Bedroom mob1le home n
s zed 1 oar garage ThiS Is Rar.; ne area NO PETS
3 year old GE nasher &amp;
A Must See
$ 120 000 (740199 2 5B58
dryer $200 Whrrlpool set
1740)44 1 1237
$150 Wh rlpool washer
Ranch 3BR New HaJen 2 Bedroom mob11e home n $7 5 All wh1le Ca ll after
W Va V1ew phOtoslmlorma Rae ne $325 00 per mon th 6 OOpm (7401446 9066
hon on lm e wvJW or'l(b com and S325 00 depos1t t year
lease No pets No calls alter 8 PC 01nnmg Room set mce
code 11 1503 or call
9 00 PM (740) 992 5039
wood $800 Queen Brass
(3041882 2770
Bedroom sel $500 A1mo1re
fJ20 l\1onn .. HoMt:~ Beautiful r1ver v1ew •deal lor $150
(304)675 4004
FOH. Sr\1 ..
one or two people No pets (304)675 1315
·--ioiiiiioiiiiii;;,.-,1 references (740)d4t 0181
1980 L berty homes t4x70 N1cc 2 or 3 bedroom mob te B•sseU Can ster Carpet
380 1BA As Is app ra1sal home tncludes water sewer Scrubber Elec triC Range
$8000
Mus! be mov ed trash no pets slartmg a t Phone (304)895 3796
Only ask1ng $4999 Solid $300 per mo nth
call Good Us ed App lrances
structure Well rnsulated (7 40)992 2167
Recond itiO ned
and
Debbte (7400446 2451
Gu a ranteed
washers
L\.P\1{1!\ILNI~
Dryers
Ra nges
an d
2000 Oakwood mob le
HJR Rl N"l
Refr•ge1ators Some star! at
home 14X80 3 bedroom 2
S95 Skaggs Appli ances 76
bath Total electric Askrng
$21 500 00 (740)992 9263 I and 2 bed room apart V1ne St (740)446 7398
ments lurmshed and unfur
3 bed room new bathroom &amp; ntshcd sccurrty deposit Good washers &amp; dryers $95
112 bath new furnace w1ap requ red no pets 740 992 &amp; up Washer &amp; dryer sets
around deck appliances 2218
$275 &amp; up Ranges $95 &amp;
rncluded some lurnrture
up Frost free Refn gerato r
very good condrhon 740 2 bedroom apartment $325 $125 &amp; up Couch &amp; chaH
992 5267 or (740 )247 2113 per month plus deposit $100 Overstulled chatrs
HUD approved 740 992 S20 &amp; up N•ce lull s1ze bed
70·72 mobrie home 2 bdr 1 0015 (740)928 4941
w1!h box sprmgs &amp; mattress
bath electnr. heat sett1ng
$75 Queen' s•ze l'nallress &amp;
on 50x200 tot has one stor 2 bedroom apt S! At 160
age burld1ng
$15 000 past Holzer $475 mo boiC spr1ngs $125 &amp; up Full
stze box spr ngs &amp; mattress
(740)742 40 1'
1740)441 0194
$150
Skaggs Appli ances
New 3 bedroom 2 bath Only
3 bedroom apa rtment $400
76 Vrns Street
$995 down and only
a month plus depos11 &amp; u111
(740)446 739B
$194 36 per month Call Ires HUD a pproved 3rd
Karen e 740 385 767 1
Street Ractne 1740)247 KitChen !able and 4 cha1rs
4292
Very clean used 3 bed
good shape $7~ (304)675
room/2 bath $9995 00 W1ll
6983
APART·
help w1lh del1very Cal! N1kk1 BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Mollohan Carpel 202 Clark
740 3B5 9948
PRICES AT JACKSON Chapel Road Porter Oh10
ZERO MONEY DOWN
ESTATES 52 WestwoOLt (7d0) 446 74 44 I 877 830
To quallfred buye rs stop rn Drrve !rom $344 to $442 9162 Free Est•mates Easy
today and check w th Enue Walk to shop &amp; mo111es Call fmancmg 90 days same as
01 Lynn
740 446 2568
Equal cash V sa/ Master Card
Coles Mobile Homes
Housrng Opporlun •ty
Onve a little save alot
15266 U S 50 East
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT~ Sears ste reo LX! senes
Athens Oh10 45701
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(740)592 1972
$150 rad o CO &amp; speakers
Town!10use
a partments record playe 1 casse11e
Whore You Get YO UI
and/or small houses FOR Sea rs
Moneys Worth
26 6
cu
It
RENT Call (740)441 1111 refr gtlreezer $400 MA~ tag
for apphcatJon &amp; rnformalron gas range $200 Zen1th tv
21 n SlOO Maytag washer
Oehghtlul 1 &amp; 2 BR untts &amp; dryer $250 Cherry colfee
Spnngtleld Arms Ultra nA81 Holzer C A h!Qil eJ!1 table &amp; (2) end tables $100
Compact 45 w/2 elttra chp ctency gas fw naccs OUJr.t seciiOnal sola w/Oueen
Mt;CO!nliCk
clip
$500 1ocat1on S359 to $485 sleepe, $175 Hollywood
1140)446 2957
304 675 5066
bed $50 dresser $50
Rec01d Cflhtnet wtr ecord s
lAm&lt;&amp;
For Lease
Beaut•lull y $50 desk S25 {pat•o table
At.:Rb-\t.J.
rest01ed unturn 1shed twn &amp; chans 'h fumb) Dm ng
ber:troom apartment over room table w charrs $125
1 6 acres wooded flat spot lookmg the Crty Park and Call (740)446 2030 leave
10x 12 bu1ldmg waler scp Rlv Gr All new appliances 1 rnessage will return call
baths
$600/mo
trc eloctrrc al re ady on land 112
Secunty
depos11 -Th_o_m_p-so_n_s_A_p-pl-,.-n-ce__&amp;_
$15 000 (74013B4 4341
References reqUired No Aopcur 675 7388 For sa te
For Sale 79 106 Acres pets Call 740·446 2325 or
re condrtrot:~ed au tom at c
Aver v1ew p1oduc1ng o I &amp; 740 446 d425
washers &amp; dryers rofnger&lt;1
gas wells $125 000 304
tors • gas and eleclr c
529 7106 alter 5pm
Furn rshid one bedroom Apt
ra 1ges an cond•IIOners and
clean no pets Must be w1ll
Nt c:e level lot 90 x200 mg to g ve 1eferences wrmge r washers W1 ll do
repa1rs on maJOr brands u,
located at 20 1 A1rhne Road Phon EJ (304)675 1366
shop 01 at your home
n th e Porter area Pnced at
$15 000
Call (740)446 Grac10us hvrng 1 a nd 2 bed
Used Furn1ture Store 130
4514 or alter 5pm call room apartments at Vtllage
Bulav11le P1Ke Mattresses
(740)446·3248
Man or
and
Rrvers1de
d1essers
C:)uches
Nrce ~ mobtle hOme Sites Apa11me nts 1n M1ddlepo rt bunkbeds recl1ners what
avarlab!e $115 per month F10rn $295 $444 Call 740 nots Gralle Monum@nts
rncludes water sewer trash 992 5064 Equa l Hous1ng (740)446 47B:C: Galltpohs
Opportun tres
call (740)992·2167
OH Hrs 10 4 (M S) Sunday
by apporn tmen t
IH "\I \I...,
New Haven 1 br lurmshed
11!~.;.,-----...,
apt dep &amp; ref no pets
1740)992·0165
ANTIQUE:S
---------:--~ ~.,_,.._ _ _ _ __.
Housrs
Tara
Townhouse
ffiRRENI
Buy or sell
RNerme
Apartman's Very Spacrous
B
d
2
Fl
CA
Ant1ques
1124
East
Ma1n
1
2 bedroom house $300 plus 2 6 rooms
oors
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740
utrlrtres Call (740)446-4313 112 Bath Newly Carpeted 992 2526 Russ Moore
~Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patro Star! $365/ Mo No oji!w~n~"'~------,
MIS« FJ I MIEOl'-'
2 bedroom 1 balh stove/ Pets lease Plus Se6/n1y
MF H:f1 ..,\:\ll1Sf
relrrgerator
furn ished Depo~11 Req w ed Days
Evenrn gs
Laundry room no pels ref 740 446 3481
erences
and
depos •t 740 367 0502
525 ,000 cash grams reqwed (740)992-5181
GU ARANTEED • All U S
Twrn A1vers Towe r IS accept- res1dents qualify Money tor
2 SA waler/lrash patcl no Ing applications fo r wS!Img brlls busrness schOol etc
pels references &amp; depos•t hst for Hud sub5rzed 1 bt Call 1;t100·363~5222 sxt
required near Porter 388· apartment ca ll 675·6679 637
EHO
1100
Older 48R 1 5 bath
PomeiQy Oh10 V1ew pho
tosllnformat• on
online
www orvb com code 80603
or call (740)992·3650

r

r

.

7

•

10

I

1986 Int ernatio nal Dtesel
Dump TrucK 4cyl Gas Arr
Compress01 wtJackhamme1
Phone (304)895 3796
48 b1g screen TV excellent
r:ond•t on call (740)992
6530.
Drum set $265 eleclnc and
accusllc gwtars (740)256
11 02 ask lor Jr
J ET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; Reburl t In
Stock Call Ron Evar.s 1
BOO 537 952B
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
For
Concrete
An gle
Cha nnel Flat Bar Steel
For
01ams
G1a!mg
Drrveways &amp; Wa lkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metal s Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Fnday 8am 4 30pm Closed
Thursday
Sa1urday &amp;
Sunday (740)446-7300
Sol d wood butche1 block
k1tchen stand w1th drawers
&amp; shelves 441C24 e)(cell enl
cond1t on S350 La z boy
overs1ze cha r &amp; hall w•lh
s leep er bed and storage
ottoman e1&lt;ce11ent cond1!10n
$5.00 1740)992 50B2
Wood fr glass top coffee
table 6 couch w/malchmg
chatr Elec sew1ng machrne
27 Zenrth color TV 5 w1de
X6 hrgh Hutch
Call
1740)446·0971

Bloc I&lt; brrck sews r orp es
wmdows lmlels etc Claude
W nters R1o Grande OH
Call 740 245 5121
Pole Bu ld ng SpeCial
30x48x9 1 3 entry I 14x9
slidmg door pa nted steel
guller erected 58189 00
24x32x9 4 t 3 ent ry --2
10 x8 1nsutated overheads
12 overh ang gu11ers pa1n1
ed s!eel 1001 &amp; walls lflSulat
ed erected $9247 00
30x40x9 4 1·3 en try 2
10 x8 non msulated patnt
ed ste el 12 overhang msu
lated root guller e recte d
pnce $10 15 7 00
740 742 40~ I
BOO 396 3026

r

11 week old Er:a11sh Sette1
pupp1es 1 temale 5 mates
Have papers have had 1s1
&amp; 2nd sho\s $300 each
(740 )256 1671
4 Sale Green Wmg Baby
Ma caws $1 200 each 2
hand/ ra1sed (304)743 3870
AKC M n Pmsc~er male
bl!(/tan 2 112 yrs old $225
cash Call (740 1245 9497
AKC Reg S be nan HusKy
pups 15 wks/old 1/male
1/temale gray/while w th
blue/eyes $200 (3041773
5730
Cockapoo Pupp es $225
each cash 2 shOts &amp;
wormed (740)596 2121
(Will meet)
Full blooded Aal Tetrrer
puppy Call (7 40)367 7468
Gold~n Retr evEU Pupptes
AKC SZ25 each cash frrst
shots &amp;. wormed (740)596
2121 (wtll meet)

Pitt bull pups 1 weeks 2
male 1 female Maylerll':l
bloodline $100 740-441·
1275 or 740·645-1162
1 \ln l...,t 1'1 '111 . .,
~li- 11\I .., I(HI,

°

16 1

FARM
EQUIPMFNf

1996 John Deere Backhoe
4x4 and EICt Hoe 4000/hrs
_17_•_oi_4_46__
Bo_•_•________
3000 Ford Tracto r looks
good runs good $3 800
Call 1740)379·2860

�-

'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
www.m.y dailysentinel.com
~------------~------------------------------

Tuesday, February 3, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, February 3, 2004
ALLEY. OOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle
BRIDGE
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

•

I

R.B

ftiSSEll

BUILDERS IDC.

Trucking

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

Hauling ·
•llmastene
•Sind•Din

~an~')"XJ :

• HI:VI MOfl 11\et9V

........

• aa more •lert
• tmprov• memory
~,

• Replacement
Wi11dows • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

140·915~564

IPo,otage. supplieS provkled~ Rush Self
IJIA&lt;ldn&gt;SSE&lt;l Stamped En,oklpo! GICD

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

PIIIIIIJ,Iblo

Pomeroy Eagles
8tNG02171
Every Thursday
·&amp; Sunday
Doors Opeti 4:311
Early birds start

6:30
Last Tbursday nf

North

Now Available ol T&amp;D Hydraulics
• Farm Pro Tro,~:lors

+

.20 Hp .2 Wheel Drive
.25 Hp .2 Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive

0

Eal'h has full ·I year warrant)' on parts ~md labor.
Prked fn1m $5,000 &amp; $13.000 " /o ptions ;n·ailable.
Also~

West
• 9
• AK 2

MONTY

STUFFING ENVELOPES
$50 Cash Hiru1Q Bonusll
Guaranteed In Writing !!

oloQ 14

ask l'or Terry @ 7441-985-4384

Dealer; Soulh
Vulnerable ; Both

.,
.,
.••'

Free Estimates

Allllli

.• ..
-- · '

NURSING ASSISTANTS

Amu;

TRUCKS

t'OHSALE

t'OHSALE

1 John Deere 2550 4x4 245 00 Taurus· $4,095 ; 96 1991 Chevy S-1 0 pickup, 2000 Dodge Dakota, 4x4,V6
new motor. clutch Windstar- $2.495; 00 Neon- auto. ps, $1.900 060 5 speed, Matching fi ber; $14,000 call (304)593-0794 $4.395; 98 Sunlire- $3.495; (304)675·5253
glass/topper 52,000 miles.
97 Monte Carlo· $4,195; 00
under
warranty.
Still
Sephia· $3,995: 98 Bree:ze- 1995
Buick
Lesabre, (304)675-6278 $9000.
. LIVISIOCK
$3,195: 99 Lumina- $3,695; 148,000 miles, ru ns greqt,
• 98 Neon· $ 2,995: 95 $1200, (740)742-2803 lea&lt;e 95 Chevy PU, $4,200: 98
$2 ,995;
96 message.
.
.
CamaraFord Ranger, 4x4, $3,700;
30 bre d, An~ us Mameanjau
Con tour$2,695;
96
95 Ford F150. $2,800; 88
cross and S1mmen tal cross/ Cavalier$ 2 ,895 :
95 1997 Chrysler Sebring JXI, Chevy PU. $2.800; 90

! ~Loader

I.

:~~n c:~~n~r ~a~~~dal!~~~

Fully loaded (304)675-2888 Chevy. 4x4 , PU , $2,500; 97

Cavalier· $2,495. Over 50
call after 5:00 P.M .
mature cows 14 of them AI vehicles in stock.
Rome Auto Sales
bred (304)576-2890
_
2 Chevy Celebrity Station
17401886 1343
Wagons 87 &amp; 89 Both run ,
Ml
HAY&amp;
GRAIN
01 Monte C_aJIO, $8.SOO; 00 one for parts $600 both
·--..iiiriiiiiii--,.1 Chevy Malibu. $3,900; 00 (304)773-5357
Far Sale: Hay, $2.00 a bale. Dodge Neon. $3.495: 99
2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser
About 1500 bales. Call Buick Cen tur y, $3,995: 98
Olcls Achieva. $2,395; 97 Limited. 25,000 miles, 5
(740)446-7857.
Forc::l Probe, $2,200: 94 speed. loaded. Needs paint-

Round bales $12.5(] Square
bales 2nd-cuning grass
$2.50. Ear ' corn $2.50 a
bushel . Ground ear corn
$4 .50 for 10Q pounds.

(740)992-2623
I HI " I'OIU I Ill"
10

AllfO&gt;l
llJR SAI.E

$500I.Hondas.
Chevys.
•Jeeps, elc 1 POLICE
·.IMPOUNDS Cars , fro m
·$500. For listings 1-800·7193001 ext 3901

1999 Olds lntngue GLS
,Black

wlgray

Leather

..AT,PW,PL,PW/Moonroof

79.000

Let me do it for you!

®

~ r~;'"10--F.Qu·F·~-~.
, ~.· ~ co
•

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING'

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Probe. $1 .800: 01 Cavalier:
99 Cavalier. $2.900: 95
Monte Carlo, $2.500: 96
Chevy Lumina. $2,000: 98
Ply Bree ze, $2,500; 96
Grand Am . $2,000; 89
Cadillac. $800.
B&amp;D Auto Sales
Hwy 160 N.

Olds Bravada: 97 Mazda
PU, $2,400; 95 Ranger,

$2,300; 94 Ranger, $2,000;
98 Forc:l Winc:lstar, $2.600:
91 Ford Explorer. $800;
B&amp;O Auto Sates
Hwv 160 N.

(740)446-6865
VANS

ed. $6 ,500 060. (740)256-

&amp;

4-WDs

1233.

1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
86 Escor t, 4 dr., 4 cyl., auto,
Sport, factory loaded, excel·
new tires. fuel pump, brakes.
lent conditiOn, 72,000 miles.
engine has been replaced,
asking $6,800, (740)949$11 50, (740)742-4011
4037 or 740-992-5082.

Pleasant Valley Plivate Duty is accepting
applications for nursing assistants . to provide
home care to clients residing in Meigs. Mason •
Gallia and Athen!'i CoUIHic~. Applicants should
have one-year experience or received a nursi ng
tested nursing assistant:

• Mileage Reimbursement

I·

•

)40-992-1611

MYST~IC:Y ANI&gt;

ROBERT
BISSELl
·New Homes
• Garages

• Complete

t.tG~NI&gt;.

..

.,

•

BARNEY

Stop. &amp; Compare

Applications will

h~.:

accepted 9 a.m. - 3 p.rn.

M -F at 10 1I Viand Street. Po i nl Pleasant , WV

or appointments ~a n he sched.uled on Fel)ruary
13th and February 271h from 9;30 a.m. - II ;30
a.m. at our Middleport location by calling 304675-7404 or 1-866-992-69 16. Applican&lt;s may

also contm.:t thi ~ number for questions or to
arran ge a specific time to apply.
SIR\I(IS

10

Advertise
in this
spacefor$100
per month.

HOMI:
IMI'ROVEMENfS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncOnditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

. 'Slits 5'x10'
w; tcf,
,o•,(ao·
". J·&lt;,
•. ;
:'~·. ·~'

' c:0t~,

Hours

THE BORN LOSER
,..

""l

Tf\1:, 1:, ~ f\OI..DUI'! J-l.~t:&gt; QV(.!Z
Vf\ll)i-.\'&gt;Lt..:'&gt; 1

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
111411 mo. pd

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

"Ifeellike
I'm out
on a limb!"

Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Sy,stems,
Water and Utilities

"·

-.. -....

of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohto
Dated January 2,
2004
John
N.
lhle,
Chairperson
o.
Smllh,
Rita
Director
(2) 3, 10, 17,24

---------

l~lght

to

East

2 ,.
4•

Pass
All pass

uNot me!
-.. ._
My money IS with ·~·""··
Rocky Hupp Insurance

YUP, tT'S OFFICIAL '
t1F..S (,ODFREY IS
BACK . Tt1EF!E'S HER
CI&gt;R IN THE

and Financial Services,

740-992-7953

, Box 189, Middleport, OH ,·
Phone 843-5264 ."

PI\RKING

Kno""~

Public.· NoUccs in Ne"""spapers~
Dcllve•·cd •·tl~ht In Your Door~

YES. THEilE'S HEfl..
Ft END! SH (HAII,tOT

Public Notice

MEIGS, OHIO
Rita D. Smith
Director
(2) 3, 10, 17,24

2004
John
N.
lhle,
Chairperson
Rita
D.
Smith,
Director
(2) 3, 10, 17,24

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION.
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given thai In pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the
Village Council of the
Village of Racine,
Racine, Ohio, passed
on the 1st day of
December,
2003,
there will be submllted a vote of the people ol said subdivision at a PRIMARY
ELECTION to be held
In the Village of.
Rapine, Ohio, at the
regular places of votIng therein, on the
2nd day ol March,
2004, the question ol
levying a tax, In
excess ol lhe ten mill
limitation, for the benalii of Racine Village
for the purpose of
Fire Protecllon .
Said tax being a
replacement tax of
0.7 mil at a rate not
exceeding 0:7 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation,
which

NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION
Notice Is hereby
given that pursuant
to a resolution adoptad by the Board .ol
Education ol the
Meigs Local School
District, County of
Meigs, Ohio, on the
3rd day of December,
2003, t.here will be
submitted to the qualIliad electors ol said
school district at lhe
election to be held on
the 2nd day ol March,
2004, at the regular
places ol voting
therein, lhe question
of levying a tax outside ol the ton-mill
constitutional limitetlon lor the benefit of
the
Meigs
Local
School District lor the
purpose of providing
books and school
buses and other necoasary permanent at
a rate of three (3.0)
mille lor each one
dollar ~$1.00) of tax
valuation,
which amounts to seVen
amounts to thirty cents ($0.07) for each
cents. ($0.30) lor each one hundred dollars
of valuation lor five •
on~ hundred dollar•
($100.00) of lax valua- (5) years.
Tho Polio for· said .
lion, lor s Jierlod ol
will
be
live (5) years, com- Election
rrienclng with tax year • opened
at
6;30
2004, collection year o'clock a.m. and
2005. •
r!Jmaln open until.
The polls · will be 7:30 o"clock a.m. and
open from 6:30 a.m. remain open until .
7:30 o'clock P.M. ol
to 7;30 p.m. on sold
· date.
·
aald day.
By order of tha
BY ORDER OF THE
BOARD OF ELEC· Board ol Elections, of
Melga County, Ohio
TIONS ·
-OF THE COUNTY OF Dated January . 2,

Public Notice

·,r

'1"E5, MA'AM .. A''DOG BREAK'' 15
WHEN YOLI 6ET TO 60 HOME TO
SEE IF YOUR !106 MISSES YOU
OR NEEDS '(OU FOR. AN'&lt;THiN6 ...

IMPORTS
Athens

22 Years Local

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Roam Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

SeD-Storage

740-992-5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General
Homes Garages,
Concrete Work
All types

.

PEANUTS

·..

992-6215
'Pomeroy, Ohio

~~~
High&amp; Dry

213 ·

.See .

Rocky "RJ" ,
'"' Hupp " .

Reduced Winter Rates

J&amp;L
Eledric

740-992·7953

by Luis Campos

Today's due . WequaJs P

·

" VTLXDI ' Z

OXKIZ

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.

BETTY

VIDRIDL

1-800-822·0417
·w.v·s #I

Chevy. Pontiac , Buick .
&amp; Custom Van

SlanleiJ .ftJfJfJinfJ
and Jrcc JrimminfJ
•Timber Harvesting
and Management
• Residential Tree
Trimming and
Removal
• Free Estimates
( 'all ;

&lt;.an .S1 .1nh·.\

17-IUI7-t2 -22'lJ

~

Olds

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50/per
month

PATEL CLINIC ~
Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP
Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology
530 West Union Street
Suite C
Athens, Ohio 45701
PhOne: (740) 592-5918

Office Hours: 8am-5pm !Mon-Fri)
.If medical

care is all about caring with
heart's tender touch ond warmth of
tears and smiles along with the cutting
· edge care, lj'ell, ypu can count on us!

GARFIELD
t,IOU L-OOK

171FFE.RE.Ni

0

1
l
I•

0

VG

" IULFVOL
AXOL

ZWIVOID
FZ

EGDIPID . "

RIYFOZOVAI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Arn'l no man can avo~ being born
· there ain't no man got to be common." - Leroy "Satchel" Paige

average , bul

(c)2004 by NEA, Inc. 2·3

0

~eo rrcn10 8 le iter!
of tke
iou~ tcrombled Wcrds be Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2004
. · low to fcrm four words .
By Bernice Bede Osal
WOFI.DS 'FIE.NDtSH
Your chances ol experiencing gre ater harCHARI OT OF EVIL"
mony and balance In importanl areas oi
~AVE e.EEN USED To
your life in the year ahead are quite good
DESCRI!!.E A POWDEJZ.- Order and groWth w1ll prevail in spheres
BLUE MINIVAN.
where frustration had previously -exi sted.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20.-Feb. 19) ~ It you're
smarl you will keep pace with your duties
and respqnsibilities today. Anything you
neglect or se t asi de now could requi re
lwlce as much work laler" IO complete 11
properly. '
'' My eldtorlv
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) ~ Be on
your best behavior socially today. if you
nopolizes
any conversaS~'IUPM
act coolly just because you don't know
lion.Gramps says he knows
someon e too well. you could be sorry later
why she la lks so much. He
when this person turns out to be an impor·
tan! entity in your group.
says it's because il takes more
ARIES (March ' 21·April 19) - Although
~ energy to shut a mouth than to
you may have yo ur excuses ready tor not
willingly accepting art assignment somef--rl-,.1;---rl-,1;-6-,r--I;,;.~Cc~Oie•e the d'lv&lt;~le Quoted
one is trying to foist upon you today.
W by l1l lmg m The m"ilr'IQ words
· chances are they'll nol be readily swalL..L_j__J,_ _L_JL-..J .,.cu de11elop from st ep No 3 below
lowed. Try another ploy
TAU RLJS (April 20-May 20) ~ Usually
you're a pretty pleasant person to be
amund, but today others may lind you in a
foul mood and difficult to please. Don 't
take things out on th em if you feel a bll
temperame ntal.
GEMIN I (May 21-June 20) - Unless you
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
kaep a tight rein on your expenditures
Elated- Yours- Taupe - Voyage -PAY DEARLY
today, they could quickly get out of hand
My sisterwas fishing for a compliment on how well she
(especially the smaller ones) and unbal·
had
organized !he local bazaar. Mom says that. "Compliance any budget you were trying to live
by
ments cost nothing. bul you rnay have to PAY OEARLY
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - 11 you're
fnr th~m "
slovenly about what you afllx your signa·
lure to today. you're likely to sign sOme·
thing you'll regret. Carefully double-check
AR~O
SO, lli~Y lS lT 6ruiNG?
any documents or a'greements, especially
the fi ne print.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) ~ indecisivene ss
can be your worst enemy at work today.
It's good to evaluate th ings before start1ng
a job. but too much introspect1on could
give you a case of paralysis !rom over'
. ana ly sis
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - Normally
you're a very secure and sell-sufficient
person , but today, when with hotshots.
you cou ld unrealiStically see yourself as
not being on the1r level and underestimate
your wor th
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - Th ere's a
stron g possibility that someone who
engages you today has uttenor motives
r---.:...----:--=~:-::=-::::~ and may try to manipulate you at your
eKpense in order to better his or her posi·
lion. Don't be a patsy.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Play to win
today. but don't make it all-important to
the poinl that you may be tempted to 1.1se
methods or means that are not In accord
with your high standards and ideals.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) - You
could be unus·ually susCeptible to sales
pressure today, and it you're not careful
you could be the victim ol a good pitch
that would entice you to purchase an
exp"enslve item you don't need.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) -ln situ·
a1ions where give-and -take is involved. be
sure each p,arty understands In advance
What is exp!!tCied of him or hf!lr. Otherw1s~.
most of the burden could be placed on
your shoulder&amp; .

I

I

L

HE0T0 M
5

&amp; JANIS

Ripley, WV 25271

VTPI

IUOIWLFGVZ ."

I

• Room Add11ions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pe inllng
• Patio and Porch Decks

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRoBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS, PROBATE COURT
740-742-341
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OIHO
Accounts
a'nd
vouchers ol the following• named fiduciary haa been filed In
\
the Probate Court,
Melg~
Cqunty,Ohlo
Licensed i/. Bonded
for approval and aetPh 740·912-0953
tlemenl.
Cell740-591·1073
ESTATE NO. 32093
-The Second Account
ol William D. Durst,
Guardian of the person and estate of
tlawaln Dale Durst, an
alleged Incompetent.
Unless exceptions
are flied thereto, said
account will be set for
hearing before said
Court on the 3rd day
ol March, 2004, at
33795 Hiland Rd.
which
time
said
account will be conPomeroy, Ohio
sidered and contln·
ued from day to clay
until finally dlspooed
of.
.
.
Any peraon Interested may file written .
exception to ,.ld
account or.to maHers
pertaining to the execution ol the truat,
Contracting
not lesa than live
days prior to the date
1
sat lor hearing.
L.S. Powell Judge
Common
Pleaa
Court,
Probate
Roofing •
Division
Meigs County, Ohio .

.

r'TONA

OF EVIL .

LOT

41 Kind ol confrontatlon
(hyph.t
43 Uprf)lrs
45 C~rus
product
46 Trap
48 Blurt out
49 Butterfly
stage
50 Kid
51 Move
quickly
52 Dawn
goddess
53 Groove
55 "GrandOpoy"

Celebrity Ciphe rcryptograms are created from Q1J:Jta11ons 'JY 1a1nous people. past and present
Eat:ll lel\ef tn the ctpll!ll' stan~s !or anolher

0 FER

-V.C, YOUNG Ill
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of the Board
of Elecllons, of Meigs
County, Ohio
Dated January 2,
2004
Rita
D.
Smith,
Director ·
- (2) 3, 10, 17, 24

-.r&lt;JIIrthday:

13 Matador's
foe
t 8 Postal
meter unit
20 Frat leiter
23 Go kaput
24 Weal CoaS1
sch.
26 Brlclalaltlre
27 Tien Shan
range
28 Minor dent
30 Impatient
chuck
31 Koppel of
" Nightline"
32 Swift horse
33 Butterbean
35 Following
40 Common
ailment

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AstroGraph

THAT 1"\AY e.E
THE FtF!ST TIME THE.

~ow

pd 1 mo

Last year, 1 did a telephone ttansfer at my
bank. After completing it, an electronic
message came back, '"Your transfer has
been completed .on Monday, Nov. 31st."
Hmm - this year or ne;.:t?
Good bridge players do a lot of counting
and rarely make a mi stake. Weaker play·
e1s rare ly count and make lots of errors .
But it is just a matter of being willing to
make the effort, not being lazy.
look only at the North and East hands.
You -are East. defending against four
spades after South opened in tile suil
and rebid it on round two. Your partner
leads the heart ace. First, count the higticard points. Then. decide witll which
heart you would signal.
You have seven points, partner presum·
ably has at least seven (the· ace-king of
hearts), and dummy contains 13. That
le aves only 13 points m is ~ing. Since you
can see all lour jacks. declarer, who
op&amp;ned, must have the spade ace -king.
diamqnd ace and club queen.
At trick one, you should make an altitude
signal. Here, you want partner to continua hearts , so 'drop the nine, the highest
card you can afford.
Partner cashes th e heart k1ng. the n plays
a third heart lo you r queen, ctec larer lotlowing th.roughout What would you lead
at tnck four?
From the point-count, you know thai your
side cannot win anoth er side-suit trick.
Therefore. lead your last heart.
Here. West ruffs in with the critical spade
nine , which eH~cts an upperc ut and generates a trump trick for you~ the foyrth
winner for your partnership.
When you have taken all possible side·
suit tricks, concede a ruff-and-sluff.

~

BIG NATE
(

Some errors
are strange

~
~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Yutu·

North

Pass
Pass

. ... .

YOUNG'S

NOTICE OF ELECPublic Notice
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
NOTICE OF ELECMILL LIMITATION.
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
Revised
Code,
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Sections 3501 .11(G), MILL LIMITATION.
5705.19, 5705.25
Revised
Code,
NOTICE Is hereby
Sections 3501.1 -1(G),
given that In pur- 5705.19, 5705.25
suance
of
a
NOTICE Is hereby
Resolution ol lhe ; given that In purBoard of Trustees of suance
of
a
the
Township
of Resolution ' of lho
Lebanon,
Portland
Board ol Township
Ohio, passed on the Trusteei
ol
the
15th
day
ol Township of Letart,
December,
2003,
Racine, Ohio, passed
there will be submit- on the 15th day of
2003,
ted a vote of the peo- December,
ple ol said subdivi- !here will be submitsion at a PRIMARY ted a vote of'lhe peoELECTION to be held pie of ·said subdlvlIn the Township ol slon at a PRIMARY
Lebanon, Ohio, altha ELECTION to be held
regUlar places of vot~ In the Townhlp ol
lng therein, on the . Letart, Ohio, at the
2nd day ol March, regular places ol vot2004, the question ol lng therein, on the
levying a tax, In 2nd day of March,
excess 'cil the ten mill 20Q4, the question ol
limitation, lor the be'n- leyylng a tax, In
eflt
of
·Lebanon excess ollhe ten mill
Township lor the pur- llmllallon,.for the ben·
pose
ol
Fire ell1 . of
Letart
Protection .
:rownahlp for tl!e pur· Said tax being a pose ol fire protecreplacement tax of 1 lion.
mllll at a rate not
Said tax being a
exceeding 1 mills }or !eplacament tax ol 1
each one dollar of mil at a rate . not
· valuation,
which exceeding 1.0 mills
~ amounts ·to tencents
tor each one dollar of
($0.07) lor each one. ·v aluation,
which
hundred dollars ol amounts to ten cants
valuation lor 5 yeara:
($0.10) lor eech one
Tho Polls for ,.Jd hundred dollars of
Election
will
be valuation for five (5)
opened at 6:30 a.m. years.
and remain open until
The Polls for said
.7:30 o'clock a.m. and · Election
will
be ·
remain · open until opened at 6:30 a.m.
' der of deed.
.
Sheriff
of M•l;e 7:30 o'clock P.M. of and remain open until
laid clay.
7:30 o'clock a.m. and
• 1County, OH
,
·F111nk· a WoOldridge By order ot the Board remain open until

.

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

45771
740-949-2217

60

UEILIC
NOTICE

AI.:&gt;

Remodeling

Racine, Ohio

$4000 call (304)773-6076

:ss,ooo.oo

[10'1110' 6 10'1120')

29670 Bashan Road

- Flexible Scheduling
-One Weekend·per Month
- One Holiday per Year
- Primarily Days

5131.

Public Notice

CONSTRUCTION

Hill's Self
Storage

- Excellent l'ay

Allro PAR'I~ &amp;
94 Mazda MX -6, 5 sp .. ~u n ­
96
F350 Power Stroke ,
A&lt;.CI1iSOR!l'S
rOof,
V-6.
AM/FM
CO.
cruise.
(740)446-6865
Diesel ,
121 :ooo
miles.
call (7401992·6293
Phone (740)245·0331 .
1965 Mustang 200, 6 cy'l,
Original 2.9 Ford Engine,
auto, very restorable, $700 96 Tarus, V-6, 4 door, auto,
$500.00 FlAM, Fiberglass
[750 BoA'rs &amp; MOTO~ toppei".
firm : 1999 Yamaha 350. 740- air. $2 ,200 negotiable ,
Ford Ranger short
mRSAU£
(740)247-2028
843-11 68.
bed, $100.00 (304)576·
2806 after 6 PM
1979 Ponti ac Bonneville, 99 Pontiac Grand Prix ~ Red 94 Stratos bass boa·t, 120hp - - - - - - - - 301, auto, needs minor 3800 engine, 30 miles to trolling molar, fish finder &amp; Wrap around Brush Guard
repairs , $400. 50 H.P. gallon, exc. shape, garage trailer, $6800 firm, (740)742· for ZA2 S10. $350 , call
Mercury outboard anc.l eKtra kept (304)675·3986
4011
~740)441·0751 .
parts. runs. $250. (304)675-

Co., L.P.A.
Attorneys lor Plaintiff
600
Souht
Pearl
Street
.
Columbus, OH 43206
(614)221-1662.
(1) 20, 27, (2) 3, 10, 17

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

rt-ltM IN

assistant ccrlificate of training or be a state-

miles asking $7500
.·(304)895-3417 - · leave mes- 1985 SS . Mont'e Carlo 1
owner excellent shape
; sBge

Sheriff's Sale of
Real Estate
; The State of Ohio,
, Meigs County
Beneficial of Ohio,
: · Inc. dba Benellclal
Mortgage Co. of Ohio
• · Plaintiff
vs.
Richard A. Adkins ,
at. al.
.
Defendants
Case No. 03CV111
In pursuance of an
order of sale In the
above entitled action .
I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the
C!:ourthouse
In
1 Pomeroy, Ohio In the
above named County,
on the 12th day of
March 2004 at t 0:00
· a.m ., the following
described real estate
· to wit:
Baing lots Number
Three (3), Five (5),
Seven (7) arid Nine (9)
of ·
Turner's
Subdivision Number
1 as the same Is des·
lgnated and delineated on the recorded
Plat !hereof, In Plat
Book 4, Page 4,
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio.
EKceptlng 35 , feet
off from the South
portion of lot 3 that
Joins lot one which
1 haa been · previously
qonveyed to TahnseeJohnoon.
• Parcel Nos.: 12. ' 00009-000, 12-Q001 0. 000, 12-00011-DOO ...
· 12-110012-1100.
Stkl preml..a locat•ed atee Neloon Roed,
rutland, Ohio 45n5.
Said
Pramloes
, :J:I'ralled
at
·'
,000.00 and can: : not be eold lor leaa
, tluin h!lo-lhlrde ol
, that amount.
' • TERMSOFSALE :
dD'Iofn,
~,..,alnder upon ten-

TA~E Tti~St
fiGU~ES, fli:~E,L~.
ANI&gt; S"tl~i:OlJI&gt;

750 East State Street Phone (740)593-667t
Athens, Ohio
·
A Berrer Wa l'. £ 1•err Dm·

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

FOR SALE

West

l•
2 ;.

Opening lead; • A -""

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

MaRing Our Sales Brochures•
.Free Supplies, Postaget
Slar1 Immediately!
Uve Operators 2417
For Free Information,
Call Toll Free·
1-800-357-1170

10

South

Tree Service

Calll-888-590-9379

7 4
Q J 10 8

+A

CALL T&amp;D HYDRA ULICS,

JONES'

No ExP Necessartl

•

olo J 2
South
4AK164 3
• 6 53

olo8 63

PO. Box 1438, Antioch. Tn.
1-1 438. Start Immediately!

• Q9

+976 542

Hawklinc Hr:ush~s. hux hl&lt;1des. r.:n•der

blades utilir~· trailt•rs. guo.~enrl'k.&lt;rii, and IIIOrl'.
i\nd ...~ Massey fergusori TrHl'lur.....
Call for detail
As ulwa\s \\' l " still tunc hnlraulic huses. uil and
·
rcpllir ,.~· l.indcr."'.

every month
All pack $5.tKI
Bring this coupon
Ruy$5.00
Hommz~i Get
5 FREE

02 -0:1.(]4

• .Q 52
• J 10 8
K3
olo AK1095
East
• J 10 8

40 Hasty
departure
1 Combine
42 Phoenician
4 Whodunit
deity
name
44 Electric fish
8 Carry on a 47 Add sound
trade effects
11 Fighter pilot 49 Siner hirer
12 Hula-dance 51 Goose egg,
• fete ·
In s~rts
13 London art 54 Garosh
gallery
56 Merry month
14 Jewelry
57 Promises
nern
to pay
15 Eros,
58 Dog-food
in Rome
brand
16 Bookie 's
59 Sitcom
figures
planet
17 Pries
60 Calli. hours
19 Above,
61 Fava or soy
to poets
62 Born as
21 Lions' prey
22 Haa~h food
DOWN
25 LakeMead's
stalll
1 Travel
29 Go on stage
guidas
31 Bath
2 Frosting
powder
3 Kin of neon
34 Cotton gin
4 Slip by
name
5 Jamaican
35 Feels ill
exports
36 NewYork
6 Thai
canal
neighbor
37 GoJief
7 Lira
- Woosnam
successor
38 Strong
8 Walk softly
opposition 9 Soho co .
39 Hoover, e.g. 10 Affirmative

SOUP TO NUTZ
HeY, ANt1f!:e.W...Tf"at::e.
% I.!Ha"'&gt;ICR

fWffiirncil~R

l

You

G&lt;f];.

�.

.

Tuesday, February 3, 2004.

www.myd~llysentinel.com

Page 86 • The_Dally Sentinel

.Rio's 'second platoon' Marauders run
gets the job done, Bt down Rockets, Bt

News About.. Senior Citizens
In Meigs ~ounty
.

EVENING MEALS
The Meigs County Senior the meal is S5.00

Take out

THURSDAY
3

5

Baked Steak
Mas hed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Mixed Vegetables
Spice Cake
Biscuit

Broccoli Soup
Ham &amp; Cheese Sandwich
Waldorf Salad
Brownies
10

.

Lincoln Logs

White or Brown Bread

Baked Pori&lt; Chop
Augratin Potatoes
Peas
Stewed Apples
Roll

26

Sadie Hawkin's Soup Beans
&amp; Ham Dinner
Garden Cottage Cheese Salad
Apple Pie
Cornbread

Blush1ng Pears

Roll

Wh1te or Brown aread
Cook's Choice

Chars Salad

Cook's Choice

Work&amp;

Fresh Oren go

R1ce

Spaghalli &amp; Meal Sauce
Bullered Italian Vegetables
Applesauce

13aked Steak
Potatoes a Ia Cupid
Love Apples
Sweett1eart Cak~
Roll
Grilled Chicken Salad

Cnsp Baked Chicken
Baked Sweet Potato
Seasdned lirna tw.ans

Middleport • Pom~roy, Ohio

• Wildcats don't know
what to expect from OSU.
See Page86

Roil

Cook'o

Ham Loaf

Johnnie Mar.::etti

Creamed Po1atoes
spinacJ1

PerfeCtion Salad
· Apple Juice

Purple Grapes
Roll

Garlic Bread

Cook's Choice

HQt DQQ With Sauce

Bishop

r.&lt;:~ke

Cook's Choice

Sloppy Joe
Cheese Potatoes
But!Bred Mixed Vegetables
Pineapple Rings
Hot Ham Croissant

r·························--·······················~
Your paid membership to the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc. is a mea~ure of s~pport for the :
1 Multipurpose Senior Center and the services provided to older adults res1dmg '" Me1gs_County·
1
1 Each paid membership received verifies to regional, state and nat1onal fundmg agenctes that the 1
1
1
Multipurpose Senior Center is providing needed senior programs.
I

1
1

•

1

.Red Hat

. What started a~ group of
friends, inspired by 'lhe_eoem
entitled "Warning" by Jenny
Joseph, has grown to in(:lude
llroups of women nationwide
who are embracing ag ing. with
warmth and humor. II is a SISterhood similar to the "Ya-Ya"
girls, only w1th a dress code.
After years of caring for others.
r)lembers see this group as a
rime to have fun and enjoy
~hemselves. A line from the Red
aat Society theme so ng by Mike
Harline says, "All my life, I' ve
done for you. Now it 's my turn
to do for me."
· Women over the age of SO
wear red hats and purple outf1ts.
while those who have not yet
ae lebrateil THE BIRTHDAY
wear pink hats and lavender
clothing . Red and purple anire is
not required. but is suggested. At
this first meeting, it is acceptable to come in reg~lar clothes,
as we will be gening organized
and some will just want to check
out the group before deciding to
jo,in . .
'The first meeting was held
with 23 Ladies in attendance .

•

\
Th~ next meeting is sc heduled
for Tuesday, February 17 at 6:30
p.m. at the Meigs Senior Center.
The meeting time was changed
from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m . to
enable others to participate that
are unable to come so early in
the evening. So, if you couldn't
make it to the first meeting, plan .
on attending February 17.
There will be a luncheon at the
Center on February 27 ""all of
yo u '·Red Hat Ladies' • "! ho can
anend : Lunch will be served at
nmm . Call Beth Shaver at 9922l6 1formoreinformation. '
Fall and Winter hours for serving will be from 4:00p.m.- 4:45
p.m.

Membership

City/State/Zip Code•- -- - - - - - - -- -

Regular Bingo will be held on
February 19atll :OO a.m.

Health screening

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

Vision
rehabilitation

Lifeline Screening will be at
the Center on Friday, February
Dr. Sus&lt;m Quinn, an optome13. Watch the Daily Sentmel for
all of the details about this trist from Athens, wi II be at the
Center on Thursday, February
event
26 at ll :00 a.m. She will speak
on eye care and will be ac_co mpanied by an o~cupat10nal
Paint classes arc held· each
Friday morning from 9:00 to therapist
II :00 at the Center. The instrucDr. Quinn is a spec ialist in
tor is Michelle Garretson vis ion rehabiliwtion and has
Musser. If you are interested in

Paint class

joining, stop by any Friday to
see what you need to g~t started.

bee n an ·educator on lo\\' vision

Thursday evening, February
26 we will host a Sadie Hawkins
Part y in honor of Leap Year.
Come in your "Dogpatch"
clothes ror a real down-home,
country good time. The party
will begin at5:00 p.m. followin g
the Evening Dinner.

until noon.

All ages ore invited to attend
the activities sc heduled. Join us
for lunch and select what you
want from the ala carte menu, or
you can enjoy the regu lar meal.
Ala carte items are individually
priced. The suggested .donation
for the noon meal is $2.00 for
those 60 or older.

~(/
We appreciate the financial support received from the
followin_g churches, organizations, and indi viduals: ·
Olive Orange Memorial Post Bingo Fund
Racine Baptist S. S. Class ff4
Rocksprings United Methodist Women
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
Racine United Methodist Church
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
In Memory of David Sayre
- Dorothy Sayre
In Memory of Ray &amp; Rose McDade
- Robert &amp;
Wilson

member of the MCCoA you will
receive u 50% discount on the
cost of the classes.
Ciuss size is limited, so please
regi ster early by contacting
Ta111 my Queen at 992-2161 .

Library ladies

Wendy and Amanda will be
.cuming nn February 10 al 10:30

On February 12 we will hold a a.m. for th eir regular monthly
combined Valentine and ·l;rafl session.
Birthday party for the February
sweethearts. All par11es begm at
11:00 a.m. Come and joi n in the
1
fun .
Representatives from the
Athens Social Sec urity Office
will be at .th e Meigs Se mor
Ce nter 1o a"ist pwple with
S,&gt;c ial Secu!lt'y pmblems and to

Social Security

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Pauline Rife, 93
• Alice Mills, 88

State auditor to
address Meigs

• Lyle B. Baker, 74

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Inflammation marker
might signal colon cancer
risk. See Page A2
• Bush orders new
measures to protect food
supply from terrorist
attack. See Page A2
• Sons of Union Veterans
install officers. See Page
A3
• Holzer sets heart fair
for Valentine's Day. See
Page A3

WEATHER

10:00 a.,m. - II :00 a.m.

--

Support Groups
The Cari ng and Sharing
Support Group meets on the
fourth Thursday of each month
at the Meigs Multipurpose
Center at I :00 p.m. The meeting
date is February 26.
Contact Lenora Leifheit at
992-2161 for more information .

ENJOY
ALL THE
ACTIVITIES
AT YOUR
SENIOR
CENTER

Detail•

on Page AS

INDEX
SECfiONS- 12 PAGES
Calendars
A3
2

Classifieds
Comics

HEAP
The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is one of several programs alTered by the Ohio Department of Development
(ODOD) to help low-i ncome Ohioans pay their ·utility bills.
Households may be eligible for assistance if the household 's
income is at or below the 150% federal poverty guidelines.
Below are·guidelines for the 2003-2004 HEAP program :
Size ofl-lousehold .... Total Gross Household Income
1.... .-.: .... ,..... up to$ 13,470
2 ........ :........ upto$18,180
3: ................. up 10 $"22,890
4 .................. up to$ 27,600
5 .................. up to$ 32.3 10
6 .................. up to$ 37.020
7 .................. up to$ 41,730
8 .. ................ up to$ 46.440
For households with more than 8 members , add $ 4,710 per
member.
If you -need more information ab&lt;;&gt;u tthe I-lEAP Program , contact Kathy Goble at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center at
740-992-216 I. !f you need assistance with completing a HEAP
application, please· call to sc heq,ulc an appointment. Kathy is
also avai lable to make home visits for individuals that are d1S·
abled or homebound. _.

~&amp;Oit5'
.'Q'J~~elen,
J 212 EAST MAINInc.
ST.
POMEROY, OH

992-3785

WE HONOR

l~l

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

BOWMAN'S

Weather

B1-2, 6

A6

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
State
Auditor Betty Montgomery
will be the keynote speaker
. at the annual Lincoln Day
dinner of the Meigs Cdunty
Republican Party to be h,eld
at 6:30 p.m. on Feb. II in
the Meigs High School
cafeteria.
Others at the meeting who
will be speaking briefly will
be Damn Klinger, executive director for the
Bush/Cheney ticket in
Ohio, Kristen Stapleton
with U.S Sen. George
Yoinvoich 's office,
and
Jonathan Gramley, who
represents the southern
region of Ohio for the
Republican Party.
Montgomery 's background is filled with activities which have focused on
protectin~ Ohio's most vulnerable cttizens.
·
She has prosecuted criminals, helped victims, protected taxpayers, reshaped
Ohitt law, and continues to
provide professional services to local government
agencies as Ohio's first
woman state auditor.
Sworn in as Ohio's 30th
state auditor in January

OXYGEN

~on
~sqtns -hole,

Betty Montgomery

2003, Montgomery has also
served the public as a criminal prosecutor and state
senator.
Montgomery is
dedicated to meeting the
commitments she has made
to the people of Ohio to
serve as a watchdog of public funds by aggressively
rooting our fraud and_waste
of public dollars and to provide taxpayers with the
highest level of professionalism, serv'ice and accountability.
Tickj!ts for the dinner are
$12 and can he purchased
County
from
Meigs
Republican Party executive
committee members or at
Farmers Bank, Peoples
Bank or Racine National
Home Bank .
'

whereat)$~~· will
I~,S&lt;ecr•~t;· and d(i!J:ed at
l'~~~b;;d holes in ke they
I'·
as eight to 10 inches
mormng. ·
said the ice ' was
strong enough to hold
two 'men, even an automobile,
if necessary..
.
S~aff~r satd the sec~et to. Jce
fishmg ts to fmd the nght spot
~n the lake becaus~ fish travel
m schools. He satd a ,fisherman could drill seve~! holes
all day and catch nothmg, but
a, couple of holes drilled in the
nght spot could keep someone
busy.
fior the first hour or so, neither Shaffer no~.~g_ner had
any luck. The ~. crappie and bass. were snug below
in the near-freezing waters,
probably watching Spongebob
Squarepants oil television and
!.!~!~~~~at the two fisherman
above.
· s !I good year for ice,
good year for ·fishsaid Shaffer.

p

a

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department was busy with
one wreck and two structure
fires during the past week. ·
There was a single car
accident a.t around 9 p.m.
Monday night on Ohio 325.
Fire Chief Dave Davis said
the car struck a tree and two
passengers were transported
to Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis. They were later
released.
The names of the two passengers have not been

lations re gardtng pnvacy.
Ill two hours.
The State Highway Patrol
In late January, Davis said
is investigating the cause of a tire destroyed a two-story
the accident. Davis said a!co- garage owned by Joe Grueser
_hoi was not ~ factor. The on Depot Street. Units from
Salem
Volunteer
Fire Rutland,
Middleport ,
Department assisted with the Pomeroy,
and . Scipio
inctdent.
responded to the tire. · ·
A trailer fire at 6 p.m.
No one was hun and the
Saturday on Loop Road incident is still under in vestibrought both Rutl and and the galion.
Scipio Township Volunteer·
Davis said his depa11ment,
Fire Department to the scene. , which has betwee n 30 to 3'5
Davis said tire and smoke . members. has been very busy
destroyed the home. The fire these last few weeks. He said
department is investigating it takes less than three p1inthe cause of the fire. No one utes to respond to a .call for
was home at the time and the help.

I

.

·

CO~UMBUS- ·Ohio's
Governor's
Office
of
Appalachia will receive a
portion of the $66 million
appropriated by the federal
govern ment to support ceonomic and community development
in Ohio's 29
Appalachian counties.
Officials welcomed representati ves 'of the Appalac hian
Regional
Comm ission
(A RC), who traveled to Ohio
Monday for a1i annoulicement on federal funding to

I

help create economic opportunities in Appalachia.
The ARC chose to make
the announcement at the
Dollar-Ge11eral Distribution
Facility in Zanesville. citing.
the stale's et'fol1 s to create
jobs in Appalachia.
"Securing good jobs in all
parts of Ohio is our number
one priority," said Ohio
Development Director Bruce
John son "That the ARC

Please see ARC, AS

•

Dining with ·Diabetes in Meigs

• HOSPITAL BEDS

A special three-class series for those with diabetes

February 12, 19 and 26

• CPAP MACHINES . • WHEELCHAIRS

~

• NEBULIZERS ·

Fortunately, the
was warm enough so
maggots the
using for bait
be warmed _
up
before
that fateful
swim with
fishes.
"A bad day
ing is better than
. good day at work "
Wagner.
'
At first the
were uni~pressed
the line they were
offered but sooner or
every 'fisherman has his ·,·
day. Something nibbled at
Wagner's rod. A bluegill
took the bait. By walking
on water the men had out- .
witted th~ fish and brought
home dinner.
"If you hit it right,
can pull one right in
the other " said Shaffer.
'
After drilling at
17 holes,
enced angler
wagner Qiltches
fish of the day, a ulut•Kl"•
Despite the wind, the
and raln, Wagner and his
ing partner Don Shaffer would
go on to catch several fish
Tuesday morning: (J. Miles

.R~,~~~~fire~~~!~~.~!~,.?~,!,~~JI.~- At0RC.dfu~dbing
COtlJling
Q/ JO c·rea IOn

"We Care For Yo11 Like FaiiJily"
~HOME

ngo

GOP Feb. 11

prnvide information . The dates
are February II &amp; 25 frnm

for over twenty years.

Computer classes available

Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.

Birthday ~nd ·
holiday parties

Evenlng
· d'lnner act'1Vl't1'es

Fall and Winter hours !'or
serving will be from 4:00p.m . 4:45p.m.
We will cel'ebrale Mardi Gras
on Tuesday, February 24 at 5:00
p.m. after the Evening Dinner.
"Make and Take Craft We will have traditional New
Workshops" will be held on Orleans rood. games and prizes.
February 5 at 10:30 a.m. _in the
Center Room. ,
Co me and make something
you can take home with you.
February S &amp; 12 at 10:00 a.m .
Beth Shaver, Activity Director,
- Excel Basics. This is a two-day
will be the instructor.
class where you will learn th e
basics of creating a spreadsheet
The cost is $15.00 for both days.
NOTE: If you are a 2004

Craft classes

1.
1

2004

Address -------------------------:---

ACTIVITY SCHEDULE
The Meigs Multipurpose
Center is open Monday through
Friday from 8:00a.m . until 4:30
p.m. Regularly sc heduled activities held throughout the week
include sewing. quilting. bingo,
checkers, and games.
Dance team practice is held
eac.h Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knining Circle meets on

The cost for each membership is $5.00. You may purchase your membership at the Senior
Center or by mailing to: Meigs County Senior Center, 112 East Memonal Dnve , P.0. Box 721,
Pomeroy, OH 45769. If possible, please Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope ..so that we
can forward your membership card to you. Thank you for your support. .--~------,
Name _______________________________

BINGO

·Chapter ·

MIDDLEPORT -- The
Middleport
Community
Association may revive its
annual block party.
In discussing 2004 events at
Tuesday morning's monthly
meeting at Peoples Bank.
association
membership
appointed an events committee, made up of Vice President
Tom Dooley, Secretary Sue
Stone, Treasurer Dick Owen,
Brenda Merritt, Susan Baker
and Jane Harris, to proceed
with a number of seasonal
promotions.
The committee was asked
to consider revt vmg the
block part~ m its old

September time slot.
town shopping district.
The block party was an
Other upcoming events
annual event for several discussed Tuesday include
years in the 1980s and '90's, the Bunny Hop Bake Sale.
and centered around th e to be held in conjunction
downtown shopping distri&lt;;L with Easter, and the annual
It featured bands, contests Yellow Flag Yard Sale,
and other el)tertainment and which has traditionally been
concessions.
planned for the tirst weekSeveral other festival-type end in A pri I in cooperation
events have failed to draw with
· the
Pomeroy
significant community sup- Merchants Association .
port, incluqin g a Catfi sh
Members discussed holdFestival, which replaced the ing sidewalk sales for the
block party, and a Honey Bunny Hop Bake Sale.
Bear Festival held in Dave which provides an opportuDiles Park in August of 2000 nity for local or~anizations Poochie Brewer, one of the Middleport Commun1ty Association's
and 200 I.
to hold tund•ratsJng bake ,individua l members, renewed her membeship dues with
Treasurer Dick Owen at Locker 219. The association hopes all
The association hopes a sales on the village streets.
revived block party mi ght
A costumed Easter Bunny 40 of last year's members renew their members hip ior 2004,
serve as another means to
and that new members interested in the community will also join
draw traffic into the down- Please se!! Association, AS and participate in association· ac$iv1ties. (Brian J. Reed )

•

Thare•u Marcinko

I

•

REED

'

If $2.00 . For lngredlimt
Info-rmation, Contact
Belfndo Wellington Or

Blood Pressure Check Feb.24 3:30-4:00
I
Mardi Gras Party Feb. 24 5 OQ·?
Sadie Hawkins Party Feb. 26 5:100-?

•

J,

Suggeated Donation Per Meal

\

•

BY BRIAN

BR£ED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Thank You for Your Oonationti

1

•

Association may revive Middleport biQck party

SPORTS

Banana

Cheese Sandwich
Tomato CeJer; Soup
Orange Wedges
Chocolate Chip Cookie

Pfz.za

Ham Loaf
Sweei-Potato Casserole
Green Beans
Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Roll

Mardi Gras Dinner
Jambalaya
ColeSlaw
King Cake

Cheett

,seasoned Babf Peas

Sliood R&lt;J~sl 8eef
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Grll!en Beans

Chicken a Ia King

Garlic Bread

Washington's Chilled Cherries

19

24

Peanut Butter Sandwich
Tropical Fruit

First President Carrot Coins

Buttered Peas
Whole Grain Bread
Lemon Lush

BBQ Chicken
Baked Beans
Potato Salad
· Blac~berry Cobbler
Roll

Beef Vegetable Soup

Scalloped Chicken
Mashed Po!aloes I Gravy
Pickled Beets
Roll
Fish Sandwich

12

17

Taco Salad

Whi1e or Brown Bread
Cook's Choic:e

Tangelo

Salmon Patty
Twiced Baked Potato

Lasagna
Tossed Salad
Hot Fudge Sundae
Garlic Bread

8iscu1l

Slioed Peac~e s

Thursday. Fall and Winter hour&lt; to eat at the Center. Stop in
for serving are from 4:00-4:45 between 4:00p.m. and 4:45p.m ...
p.m. A suggested donation for and a;k for a take-out meal.

en

Menu IS Subject to Cha111,1e

LO

Ham Salad
Potato Soup
Carrot Penny Salad
Green Grapeo

Be6f &amp; Noodles
Monroe Coumy Broct:oll

Ci ti zens Center evening meaL is meals arc availab le for those
served on Tuesday and evenings when you ca nnot stay

TUESDAY

February 2004

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Daily at 12:00
!F~o~r~~~ia1~t Information contact 6etlnda

.

6:30 PM · 8:30 PM

• OXIMETRY

OSU _Extension Office, Meigs County

24 llotlr Emergency Service • Free Delil•ery

$15.00 fee for the series

Health prafessionals will be present for questions qnd
a. variety of foods will be orl hand for sampling.
To

call

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holze:r.org

Boer ot (7401 992·6696.

4K E. Slim"illn ,\ vc.·.
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