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                  <text>Wednesday, February 4. 2004

Prep notebook

Two coach·es hit 500
mark in career wins
Br RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

It's one thing to last a long time in a profession. It's quite another to be successful for
decades.
Tom Eibel collected his SOOth career win in
ihe Wel'lington 's boys' 71 -34 victory over
Brookside. Eibel began coaching at Mayfield
in 1961 and made five more stops before taking over two years ago for his son, Jim.
"My son had been the coach here , and when
he got the princip&lt;il joh at New London, he
told me what a great group of kids we have
here ," said Eibel, who coached at New
London for 12 years and Western Reserve for
four before taking over the Dukes. .. As long as
the young people respond well, I' II keep
going. My family doesn 't believe me when I
say I' m going to retire . One thing that keeps
me going is the dream of taking a team to the
, final four ...
Also, with a 59-34 win at Oregon Clay,
Sylvania Northview girls coach Jerry Sigler
became the fourth coach in Ohio girls basketball history to record 500 victories. In his 28th
season with the Wildcats, Sigler is 500-131.
BROTHER ACTS: Freshman John Diebler
scored 49 points to tie a Fostoria school
record and older brother Jake added 33 in a
I03-89 win over Willard: and twins Tim and
Eric Pollitz combined to score OttawaGlandorf's final 26 points in a 55-5 I overtime
win against Van Wert.
BIG POINTS: East Liverpool's 6-foot-7
Brian Kreefer scored 17 of his career-high 39
points in the first quarter of the Potters' 89-70
wil) at Massillon Washington ; East Palestine's
Brett Young had 33 points in an 88-58 win
over Leetonia; 5-foot-5 point guard Katie
Coon ran her string of 30-plus point games to
three in Plymouth's 81-4 7 win over New
London, finishing with 34 points, I0 rebounds
and six steals; and Jeromesville Hillsdale's
Chelsea Jones went for 32 points and II
rebounds in a 68-43 win at Dalton.
HEAT WAVE: Findlay; the leading 3-point
shooting team in its conference, didn't make a
shot behind- the arc against Sandusky · but

made 75 percent of its 2-poi nters (30 of 40) in
a 70-53 win: after winning thre.: games last
season, Tiffin Columbian has won four in a
row under first-year coach Derek Lewis; and
the Beloit West Branch girls have won their
sixth straight league title.
After taking almost two weeks off, Tiffin
Calven scored a school-record 123 points' in a
123-42 win over Bettsville. Six Calvert players swred in double figures. The Senecas hit
55 of 88 (63 percent) from the field and made
33 layups.
.•• AND A COLD FRONT: When
Columbus Mifflin played Brookhaven's girls
last week, Brookhaven held the ball for almost
the entire first half. Mifflin led 4-2 at the end
of the first quarter and neither team scored in
the second quarter. Mifflin ended up winning
24-21 ro"remain unbeaten.
STORK TIME: While Amherst Steele
coach Mitch Gillam and his wife, Beth,
brought their third child, Trevor Mitchell, into
the world , assistant coach AI McConihe
brought home a 53-46 over the visiting
Fairview. By the way, the baby was born at
Fairview General Hospital.
NOTEWORTHY: Mansfield Senior's
Jonathon Avery is 71 of I00 from the field this
season; Lisbon David Anderson's Meg han
Brammer hit a school-record six 3-pointers
and finished with 23 points in a 71-63, double-overtime loss to Columbiana; Lill);!l
Shawnee's Jamar Butler had 26 points and 19
assists - II assists coming in the first quarter
- of a 97-47 win over Toledo Woodward;
Van Buren's Tyler Faine became the .school's
all-time girls scoring leader, scoring 26 poil)ts
and grabbing 17 rebounds in a 62-53 win over
North Baltimore to give her 1,339 eareer
points; after winning their 46th consecutive
league game, the • New Middletown
Springfield boys have lost five of their last
seven conference games; and St. Bernard
Roger Bacon upset Cincinnati McNicholas
53-51 behind Ben Haarman 's two f~ee throws
with 9.4 seconds left.

Arlington jumps ahead in
Division IV AP boys poll

COLUMBUS (AP) - .
Ohio State's stunning upset
of No. 2-r Purdue could start
a trend or it might just be a
peak leading to another precipitous fall.
It takes more than one game
to make a turrraround, and no
one knows that more than the
Buckeyes' Jim O'Brien, who
has weathered 22 seasons as a
college head coach.
So while 0' Brien remains
·hopeful that his · team has
turned a corner, he also is
hesitant to jump to conclusions based on the 65-59 victory over the Boilermakers
on Saturday.
"Prior to that game, whenever things started to turn
against us we really didn't
respond in a favorable fashion," O'Brien said. "If this is
a sign, hopefully, of some
mflturity and that we are getting better, then that's a good
thing. But we really will not
know that until we · play a
few more games."
•
The next gut check for the
Buckeyes (I 0-10, 2-5 Big
Ten) comes Wednesday night
at
home
against
Northwestern (8-1 0, 3-4).
Historically, the Wildcats
are just a speed bump for
Ohio· State. They' ve lost the
last nine meetings regardless
of location and haven't left
Columbus with a win since
1977- a string of 24 conm O'Brien instructs his team from the
secutive defeats.
Then again, this is not a bench during a game against Maryland-Baltimore County,
typical season. Northwestern Dec. 30, 2003, in Columbus. Although O'Brien remains hopehas made inroads as it has fu l that his team has turned a corner, he is hesitant to ·jump
grown accustomed to fourth- to conclusions based on their upset victory over Purdue on
year coach Bill Carmody 's . Saturday. (AP)
backdoor-layup-and-3-pointYoung is averaging 18.5 age. The ups and downs of
er offense~ . The Wildcats points a game with 6-foot-8 for- thi s are unbelievable. I guess
opened the Big Ten with a ward Vedran Vukusic scoring I'm feeling a little bit better
nine-point win at Iowa and a 14 a game.
just because we' re winning a
10-point win over in-state
Like O' Brien, Carmody is couple of games and that's
rival Illinois, servin,g notice withholding J'udgment on his better than six weeks ago or
that these are not the
Mildcats of old.
team until it has performed two months ago."
Carmody doesn't really
. No one is taking the over the long haul.
know
which Ohio State wi)l
Wildcats lightly these days.
"I'm a little pessimistic by
That goes double for an Ohio nature," Carmody said. show up - the one that dis"
State team that lost three "We're going through some played little persevemnce and
consecutive games by a com- stretches where we're play- almost no cohesion early in
bined 34 points before van- ing pretty well then at other January, or the tough and scraptimes we're just very aver- PY Buckeyes in West Lafayette.
quishing Purdue.

Kentucky tops Florida
from the foul line, but made didn't score tlie rest of the way.
two of his last four to finish Anthony Roberson led Florida
Kentucky 's comeback from with 19 points, but missed .a
an ll-point deficit in the sec- layul? that would . have
ond half.
reclrumed the lead before rnisThe victory' was Kentucky 's firing on a tou~h 3-pointer that
fifth straight in a series that could have ~1ven the Gators
has developed into one of the the lead in the. closing seconds.
fiercest rivalries in the SEC in
Gerald Fitch. scored I0
recent seasons. Florida (13-6,- points and Hawkins finished
4-4) hasn't beaten ihe with nine for Kentucky.
Wildcats since March 2001 , Matt Walsh scored' 16
when they daimed a share· of points 'for · Florida, but the
. the S.EC Eastern Division Gators ht:ipes to force overchampionship, but none of the time with a· desperation shot
losses were more disappoint- ended when he stepped out of
ing than this one.
· ·
bounds trying to get the ball
The Gators led 65-57 with to midcourt on Florida's final
just over 6 minutes to go, but possessio.n.

•.

"Gj?fae~ f&amp; ~ f?

WildCats don't know what to
expect from up-and-down OSU

COLUMBUS (AP)
Boys AP poll
Arlington took its unbeaten
record to the top of the heap COLUMBUS - How a state panel of ' 13, Wauseon 18. 14, Poland 17. 15, Cols.
sports writers and broadcasters rates Beechcrott 16. 16 (lie), Canal Fult01'1 NW.
in Division IV of the latest Ohio
high school boys basketball teams in Cin. ·Taft 13. 18 (tie), Lisbon Beaver.
weekly Associated Press the fourth weekly Associated Press poll of Cambridge 12.
by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost
DIVISION Ill
boys Ohio high school bas- · 2004,
record and total points (first-place votes in 1, Cin. N. College Hill (24) 13·0
31i
ketball
poll
released parentheses):
2, Versailles (5~ 13·0
283
,
DIVISION
I
3,
Johnstown-Monroe
14.()
229
Tuesday.
1, Cin.LaSa11e(24)14·0
317
4,Akr. Marlcnester(1)11 ·1
201
302
5, Loudonville 11·2
131
The Red Devils, from 2. N. Can. Hoover (9) 14-0
3, Cin. Moeller 14·2
245
6, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 12·1 ""
116
Hancock County, climbed 4,Troy 13·1
197 7, Day. Oakwood 13·2
85
152
8, 'Findlay ·liberty-Benton 12·2
62
two spots to take over the 5, COis. Brookhaven 13--2
6,Can.M
cKinleyt2·2
.
141
9.L.oUsVMeStTlmlas~(1)13-2 51
No. I position from Sebring 7, Lakewood St. Edward 11 ·3
130
10, Bellaire 11·4
40
8 , Wadsworth 11 ·1
93
McKinley.
Clayton Northmont 13·2
59
Others receiving 12 or more po in ~s: 11,
: Arlington joitis Cin\innati 9,
10.Spring.S.11 ·2
42
MiddletoWn Fen..W:k 37. 12, Archbold 25.
13, Chesapeake 23. 14, Ironton 22. 15,
·LaSalle,
LaGrange
'K - t
d c· .
t' Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Youngs. Mooney 18. 16, Coshocton 15. 17,
· eys one . an
1nc1nna I WeslervilleS.19.12,Hamilton18.13(1ie), Bedford Chanel13 .
·
North College Hill as the Dubhn Scioto. Warren Harding, Wooster .
DIVISION IV
1. Arlington (I 5) I 5·0
282
top teams in the fourth bal- 12 ·
DIVISION 11
2. New Wash. Buckeye Cent. (7) 12·1 261
Joting by a State media 1. LaGrangeKeystone(19) 15·0 292 3. Sebring McKinley (5) 12·1
222
273
4, Ft. Loramie {3) 12-1
220
ne]
2,
Akr.
SVSM
(10)
12·3
Pa ·
237 s. BerlinHiland (1) 10·2
182
3. onawa ·Giando~ 12·2
225
6, Cols. Tree of life 13-1
110
The Red Devils , have 4, Newark Licking Valley 121 9·0
214
7, Mansfield St. Peter's 11 -3
92
climbed steadily in the poll ~: g~.. r~~;~::·i 3 . 2
128
8, Lakeside Danbury 12·2
80
since debuting at No. 8 in 7, Port Clinton 13·2
11 2
9, S. Charleston SE 13-2
67
67
10, Russia 11-4
48
the first weekly voting . · 8. Shelby 12·2
9, Day. Chaminade·Julienne 9·6
36
They own a 21-point edge to. Circleville Logan Elm t3-1
32 Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Heritage Christian 20. 12 (tie), New
over No. 2 New Washington Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Can.
MatafTlQras Frontier, Mins1er 13. ' 14,
Buckeye Central, with Akr. Cent.--Hower 29. 12, Akr. Buchtel 21 . Mogadore 12
Sebring McKinley falling to
third. Fort Loramie and win over crosstown rival Johnstown-Monroe
was ·
Berlin Hiland rounded out Canton McKinley last week. again
third,
Akron
the top five in the small- Another Cincinnati school, Manchest~r fourth and
school division.
Moeller, was No. 3, fol- Loudonville fifth.
lowed
by Troy and defendThe two 'Cincinnati No. Is
Undefeated Keystone's
state
champion lead moved from 12 · to 19
LaSalle and North ing
Brookhaven. points ·over Akron St.
College Hill - tied for the Columbus
McKinley
dropped
two Vincent-St.
most first-place votes (24)
Mary , in
and the highest point totals spots to sixth.
Division II - which also
(317) in the voting.
In Division III. North had the same teams ranked
LaSalle's lead in Division College Hill expanded its in the same top five spots as
I melt.ed away, from 53 lead to 34 points (II more they were in the third poll.
-poipts a week ago over than a week ago) over Ottawa,Giandorf, Newark
Nofth Canton Hoover to just Versailles as the top five Licking Valley and Dover
13 points. That was due in teams retained the same filled up the rest of the top
large part to Hoover's 70-63 spots as a week ago. , contenders.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)
- Erik Daniels scored 22
points and Cliff Hawkins had
a crucial steal and scored four
points in an 11-0 game-endmg run that gave No. 9
Kentucky a 68-65 victory
over No. 21 Florida on
Thesday ni~ht.
Hawkins poor · free throw
shooting kept the outcome in
doubt until Florida turned the
ball' over with I second to go,
but the guard's steal and
layup gave the Wildcats ( 153,
5-2
Southeastern
Conference) the lead for good
in the final minute.
· · HaWkins Was just 4~of- 11

The Daily Sentinel • Page 86

www .mydailysentinel.com

Teen charged with
ftrst-degJ;ee murder in
killing of classmate in

T/tJ»9c$ f&amp; 3/i),/', B6

Florida school, As

,.

a1
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
j UC

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nn,l a ih '- •t~IHHI, ., n,

SPORTS
• Stockman leads Buckeyes
past Northwestern. See
PageBl

·,

INSIDE

•

• Local Ice Bowl raises food
for needy See Page A2
• Mass. court rules civil
unions .aren't enough,
gay couples entitled to
marriage. See Page AS
• Stopped at sea in a
1950's Buick. See Page
AS
• Judge grants stay of
execution to Texas man
with history of erratic
courtroom behavior.
See Page AS

WEATHER

It's Valen-timel

BY

J. MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A Rutland
man has bcun charged with
se_tting fire to an ui10ccupied
home at 8: I :1 p.m. Tuesday
at 236 Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy.
Shawn J. Ratcliff. 20.
confessed ·to Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
and to agents with the state
tire marshal's office to starting this fire and two other
recent fires in the Rutland
area.
Ratcliff has been charged
with aggravated arson and
burglary, botli felonies, and
will be arraigned in Meigs
Counly Court I his week. He
is currentl y in custody in the
·Middleport jail.
Firefighters
fro m
Pomeroy. Middleport and
Syracuse responded wilhin
three minutes to a hlaze in
Pomeroy that witnesses said
engulfed the house owned
by Mark A. Clark of
Middleport.
,
The house was unoccupied and used l,)lainly for
storage ~tt the time .
Firefighters battled the
blaze for seve ral hours
before it was contained. No
. one was injured.
,
Proffitt said Ratcliff was
at the scene of the tire anti
offered to help. Authorities
were suspici ous then and
Proffitt detained Ratcliff
early Wednesday for questioning.
Rutland Fire Chief Dave
Davis said one of 1he fires
Ralcliff confessed In nearly

Police Chief Mark Proffitt

resulted in the injury of an
elderly woman.
He said the woman was
asleep in her hDu.se wl1en
she awoke to the 'lllell nf
and
narrow Iy
smoke
escaped injury. Davis saiu
lhe other fire involved a
storage trailer which '""
desp·oyed.
Proffitt said he will ask
the Meigs Cmnity ·prosecutor's office to sec k the
stiffest penalty be..:ause the
fires put people's li ves at
stake.
The Pomeroy ~a li ce
Department arrested
Shawn J. Ratol iff. 20, of
Rutland. who confessed to
starting a fire Tu esday at
236 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
(J . Miles Layton )

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

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Happy
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Happy Valentine's Day
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Mom, Dad, Sister, and

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Thanks for being such
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MAY WE ALWAYS
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Page

A6

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Happy Valentlne's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
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In brlngfng this thought
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I'm sorry about the
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A Sentlnellove message
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INDEX
2 SElTIONS -

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B6

Sports
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Write your Message Below:

12 PAGES

Weather

.61-2
A6

© 2004·0hio Valley Publishing Co.

· As her groceries were being
out
at Vaughan's by Dawna Parsons. Linda
Peterson of Rutland, left, was advised that today is "Food Che.ck-Out Day." That means the
average American family has .made enough ll)Oney since Jan. 1 to pay for the entire year's food.
(Charlene Hoeflich)

FOOD CHECK-OUT DAY 1~1
Four adu lts and two young children were traveltng down Anne
S E R V E S A S .R E 'M J N D E R aStreet
in Pomeroy when their vehicle slid off the icy road into
ditCh that trapped them inside at
a.m. Wednesday. Within
10

By Charlene Hoeflich
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Today
is being celebrated as "Food
Check-Out Day" - the time
when-the average American
family · has earned enough
income to pay for all its food
for the enttre year.

While 36-days' wages efit from the ciTicicncy ami two minutes, the Pomeroy, Fire Department and emergency
seems little to pay for a productivily of agricultttrc crews responded to the scene. Dana Lee Bunch, his wife
year's food suppl y for a and the enlirc food produc- Mary, their daughter Colleen Bryd1e. and 11er 11usband
family, the Ohio Farm tion svste m:· · said Pat Lawrence and their two ch ildren. Lawrence and Tavian. were
Bureau Federa~on (OFBF) PetLel. ·oFBFs director of inside t11e vehicle. Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar ,and fire·
fighters pulled the vehicle closer to the hill and opened doors
claims it 's because food is promotion and eduGHion.
"America's- ·
greatest.
She said. food is aciUally on .both the driver's side and the passenger side so the famiresource and its greatest bar- becoming less . ex pensive ly trapped inside .could exit. No one appeared to be hurt. Mary
gain."
·
whcn , its price is compared Bunch was transported to Holzer Medical Center and later
"As consumers we all benreleased. (J. Miles Layton)
Please see.Food, AS

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Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Name:- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - Address: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - " - - Size ofValentine: _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _~.:._TotaiAmount Endosed:_ _ _ _ _-:--------,-------~-

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For more information, please cal/.(i40] 446-5679

�.

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

'

Chamber plans business 1luncheon for Tuesday
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - As p;.t.rt of
the Meigs _County Chamber
of Commerce Bus iness lun·
cheon se ries. Scott St. Clair.
a business consultant for the
Oh10 Bureau of Workman's
C&lt;!mpensation. will speak at
noon Tuesday. Feb. I0 at the
Wild Horse Cafe in Pomeroy.
St. Clair l1as worked with
· the BWC lor I0 years. He
began as a clerk in provider
enrollment. moved to d aims
and proceeded to employer

Page-A2

serv ices in 1997 .
As a bus iness consultant.
St. Cla ir works cl ose ly with
retrospec ti vely rated employ ers to hel p them establi sh
luss cont ro l systems and initiate cost control strateg_ies
·des igned to redu ce costs.
He part ners with the chamber of commerce and business associatio ns til help
educate employe rs on compensatiun iss ues and to promote business retention in
Ohi o.
St. Chlir also works closely wi th the govern or's

Thursday, February 5, 2004

Local lee Bowl raises food for needy

reg ional economic developThe entry fee is $ 15 and a
BY BRIAN J. REED
all good at the gmne.
ment · offices which assists
BREED@MYDA ILYS ENTI NEL.COM
The count y boasts its own food .. do nat iOil. with prowith bu siness expansion in
disc gul f associ ation and a ·ceecb be nefiting the Second
Ohio.
REEDS VI LLE "No sc·enic course at the local Harl"est
Foodbank
of
He is a graduate of Ohio wimps and no whiners" is a park.
Southeaste rn Ohio . Sign-u ps
State University with a bac h- nece.&gt;Sary and cardinal ru le
The Meigs Cou nt y Disc be~ i n at 9· a.m.
elor of science degree in of · Ice Bowl. a disc go lf Golf Associat ion will preChili and hot dogs will be
'
~
human ecology.
tournametll (lesigned to raise sent the local fund-raiser. served to those mtendi ng
"Thi s will be good fo r money and donated food fur but those who wish to try · t h~ Ice Bow l as anot her
Meigs County becau se he charit y.
·
thei r froze n hand at a rou nd means of collect ing fu nds
will he ve ry informative
Thi s yea r. a loca l Ice and those who wish onl y to -for food.
Donat ions of nun -peri stiabout workmen's compensa- Bowl wi II be staged by participate are encouraged
tion issues. which is a cor- lo&lt;:al di sc golf enthusias ts at to' turn out. and to bring abk food itctl)S for the food
nerstone of doin g . business the unu sual disc gulf course cas h or food ite ms tq help bank tnay be dropped ofT at
'the group picni c area near
wit h the fundraising event.
today:· said Jenny Smith, at Forked Run State Park .
Whiners
will
bo:
charged
park entrance
on
the
The
lctJ
Bowl
will
begin
direc tor of the Meigs cham$
1
per
annoying
outburst.
after a I0 a.m. playe rs Sa tu rda y.
ber.
Another cardinal event meeting. and will consist of
Th e fi rst disc go lf ke
rule : "Under no circum- two ro unds of 18 holes - a Bowl was held, in 5 in.: hes
stances may an Ice Bowl be ·singles roun d and a doubles of snow. in 1987 111
postponed roUJld .
Mi ssouri to encourage coldcance led
or
becau se of weather condiPri zes will be awarded to wea!her dis'c go lf in the
Stewart. James Story.
tions." an idea which makes first-pi &lt;Ke singles. doubles dead of winter. Last year \
a ga me of di sc. golf not onl y and· the overall best com- nationwide fun d- rai ser genpotentiall y invigorming. but bined S(;Ore. The first 25 to erated almost $75 .00fl in
Meigs High School
Freshman : Krystal Bailey. challenging for even those sign up for the eve nt wi ll .:ash fm cha riti es in the
Danie l Bookman , Cory Dill, who consider themselves at rece ive a free T-s hirt .
event arcus .
,,
Dane Eichinge r, Kayla.
Gruve r. Kedah Jacks, David
Poole. Dru Reed. Whitney
Srn itll . Michelle Weaver.
Sophomore:
Miranda
POMEROY
Cases Pomeroy. speeding. $30 and $ ~0 and costs: Jesse L. Pollard.
Beha. Sherman Buckley.
resolved
in
the
Meigs
County
costs: Laura P. Noel. Albany, Pearisburg. Va.. seatbe lt-pas- ·
Trav is
Butcher,
Shade
Caldwell . Samantha Cole, Court of Judge Steve Story reckless operation. $1 00 and senger. $20 and costs:
Sa mu el
Pos tl ew ait.
Ashley Cook, James Fife. between Dec. 6 and Jan. 25 costs. driving in marked lanes.
are
as
follow
s:
Jerrod
R.
Ra
ve
nswood.
W.Va
.. seat costs
onl
y:
Jamie
L.
Norvi
lle.
Carita
Gardner,
Ty son
George. Brittney Jacks. Mills. Racine. DWI and/or Racine. failure to control. $25 be lt -passe nge r. $20 and
Nathan
Jeffers .
Julia drugs of abu se, $350 and costs: Elizabeth D. cost s: Ni ckole R. Pri ce.
Jollnson . Jacob Kennedy, fine/$290 in costs. drivin g O' Connor. Reedsv ille. speed: Charleston. W.Va .. speeding.
Jos hu a Kerm edy, Meghan under suspension/revocation. ing. $30 and costs: Norman J. $50 and. costs: Dav id Priddv.
Les lie.
Kayla\McCarthy, $100 fine and costs; David Ogilvie. Lancaster, equipment Rutland. dri ving under susAutumn
McLaughlin, K. Mitchell, Junction City. violation, $20 and costs: pension/re vocatio n. $200 and
M.
· Ooten. costs. $30 and costs: Jenn ifer
Brooke O'Bryant. Courtney speeding. $30 and costs: Chri stina
L. Priddy. Rut land. pass ing
Jaime
D.
Reedsvi
Moles.
Cheshire.
lle.
expired
operators
Parsons, Rebecca Rader,
bad checks. $fi ne 25 and
speedin
g.
$30
and
costs;
license.
costs
only.
failed
10
Adrean Reese. · Whitney
Thoene.
Chri stopher James D. · Moody, West yield. $25 and costs: Jessie L. $ 103 .'92 in co&gt;ts : Roger T.
VanReeth, Jacob Venoy. Columbia, W.Va .. speeding. Parham. Marion. Ind .. seat- Pu ll ins. Coolville. Newark.
$30 and costs;
belt-passenger. $20 and costs: speed ing. assured clear disJoshua Venoy.
David A. Park. Middleport,,. ta nce. $20 and costs:
Juni or:
Grant Arnold. · Debra L. Morarity, Rac ine.
St acey
D.
Pull ins,
$20
and
costs:
seat
belt. $~0 and costs: George
stop
sign,
Emtly Ashley, Renee Bailey.
Althea
G.
Morgan.
Albany.
Middlcpon.
speeding.
$30
and
A.
Parker.
Pomeroy.
stop
si0
1
.
Jeffrey Baughman, Jeremy
Blackston . Jenny Bowles. disorderly conduct. $50 ;uid $20 and costs: Charlotte J.. costs: John A. Rankin. Tuppers
Tyler Brower. Jennifer Cade, costs : David C. Morgan. Patrick . Gallipoli s. di splay Plains. overload. $240 and
Raymond Colwe ll, Eric Chauncey. speeding. $30 and plates/valid sticker. $20 and L'osts: Anita N. Raymond.
Cullum s, Miranda Davis. costs; Randall G. Murray, costs; Alli son K. Pcccook. Portland, speedi ng, S.\0 ami
Rosanna
Dillard,
Jodi Cary. N.C .. speedin g, $30 Huron, speeding, S30 and costs: Jill L. Redin ger.
Donohue . Patrick Dowell, and costs; Kara M. Musser. costs: Ni&lt;:holas J. Pelfrey. Parkersburg. W.Va.. specct'[ng.
Eddie Fife, Brandon Grover, Rutland. speeding. S30 and Bidwell. seatbelt. $30 and $30 and costs: Dan ial A.
Randy
Hart,
Andrew costs: Kevin T. Mutchle r. costs. failed to yield. $25 and Redmond . Rac ine. seatbeltHenderson, Tiflany King. Lincoln. Neb. , $30 and costs: costs: Gene F Perry. Athens. passe nger. 520 and costs;
Madison King, Cassie Lee. Shirley L. Myers, Reedsville. failure to contro l. $ 15 and_ Danny S. Reese. Athens. scatMegan Mayes, Samantha failure to control. $20 and costs; Mi.chael A. Pen-y. Akron. belt. $30 and costs: Norian G.
Pierce , Katie Reed, Anna costs: Wayne M. Neff. speeding, $30 and costs: Robet1 Rhodes. Ri pley. W.Va .. traftic
Sayre. B.W. Smallwood, Middleport , reckless dpcra- C. Peterson. Boone, N.C.. contldev/signs. $20 and costs:
D.
Ri chmond,
Adam
Snowde n, . Ruth tion. $ 100 and costs: Eric M. speeding, $50 and costs: John Crystal
Neuberger.
Athens
,
tinted
Pomcrov.
scar
bel
t.
$30 ;md
R.
Philson,
Syracuse.
speeding.
Snyder, Nichole Varian ,
$30 and costs; Velcssa D. costs: Steven A. Ril'll e. Racine.
Brooke Venoy. Nicki Wilson. glass, $20 and costs;
Donald
R.
N
ickeb,
Pickens. Syrac use. speeding. seatbdt. $30 and costs.
Carl M. Wolfe, Jennianne
Young, Jillianne 'Young.
Walid Zahraii .
Senior: David Barnes,
Donald Barnett. David Boyd.
Page
Bradbury.
Kara
Brandyn
Buffington.
Bunigardner, Alisia Burton,
Kevin
Butcher,
Kerbi
Buzzard , Jaynee Davis,
Justin DeMoss, Doug Dill,
Maegan Dodson , Andrea
Fetty,
Kelly · Freeman.
Juliane Glomm , Nicole
Harper, Raymond Hess,
Jessica Howell. Randall
Hudson, Lindsey Jeffers,
Aubrie Kopec, Jonathan
Larkins, Sarah Lee , Aira
Little, Steven Major, Tiffany
Voters have come to ~ely on The Daily Sentinel for
Manley, William Marnhout,
Vinso n Martin, Sheena.
information about local election races and issues, and
Morri s,
Bobbi
Napper,
Megan O'Neal, Christina
our 2004 Primary Election Voter's Guide is an excellent
Pauley, Erica Poole, Brittany
Powers, Amanda Priddy,
opportunity to reach over 5,000 potential Meigs County
Hollie Rose, Jessie Sargent,
voters with your campaign message! Competitive rates
Michael Seagraves, Robert
Stamper, Mimda Stewart,
for this .speci~l publication make it an outstandi_ng
Rya n Stohart. Jordan Stotts,
Corey
Vaughan , Carrie
choice for candidates.
Walker, Holley Williatils,
Jordan Williams.
:

·Meigs Local lists honor roll students
POMEROY - Swdews in
il1e Meigs Local Sdwol
District making 11 ~rode of' /J
or alwl'e in all llu~r s11hjel'l.\
for the · secum/. niu e ~ w el'i\..s
.grading period hm •e hem
· named to the honor mil.
They include:

\

Meigs Intermediate
School
Grade 3: Casi Arnold .
Di lion Boye r. ·Matthew
.Casci,
Chri stopher
Cl emente. Al yssa Cremeans.
Brittany Cremean s. Mega n
Haley
Engli sh.
D ye r,
Brittany Ey non, Kendra
,Hanin g, Ju stin Hettinge r.
Ashley Jeffers. Hannah
Meranda
King.
Kin g,
Shawnella Patterson. Emma
Perrin. Tess Phelps. Devin
Price , Tyler Pri ce . Keana
Robin son.. As hle igh Sayre.
Kenzie Shuler, Magg ie
·Smith. Bethany Spaun , Kyrie
Swann , Willi am Taylor.
M adelyn Thomas. Dustin
Ulbrich. Autumn William s.
Jared Williamson. Bradley
Wills and Haley \Viii.
· Grade
4:
Chevenne
:Bea ver, barienne Be-tzing,
-Bruno Casci . Oli via Cleek.
:Dani elle Cullums, Cory
·Curtis, Michael Davis, Wes
·Davis. Chelsey Eads. Andy
Fairc hild , Emalee Glass ,
:Catherine
Grady, .Karl
:Gue ltig, Ronald Harting.
.Cody Hanning, Michelle
:Hil yard, Stephanie Hoalcraft,
:Marlee Holl man , Cassidy
Hood. Willi am
Hyse ll ,
Taylor Jones, Steven Mahr.
·cody
Mattox,
Tani sha
Mc Kinney.
Tiffany
Kassandra
McKinney,
Mullin s, Brady Norville.
Timothy Pursons. Ben Reed.
Jennifer Robinson, Nathan
Roth ge b, Jeffrey Rou sh,
Zac h Say re, Zac Sh eets,
Emma
Swige r, · Ti·avis
Tackett, Sharaya White, Tori
Wolfe.
Grade 5: Alex Ackerman,
Alaine Arnold,
Hannah
Arnold, Shellie Bailey.
Kastle Balser, Shannon Bare.
Ashley Bateman -Lee, Olivia
Bevan , Cameron Bolin ,
lessa
Chabot ,
Hannah
Cleek, T. J. Conlin. Bethan y
Cunnin gham,
Heath
Dettwiller. Ashl ey Edwards,
Amber Ey non, Josh Fett y,
Nate
Gilke y,
Miranda
:Grueser, Hope Hajivandi ,
:Angela Hilyard, Morga n
. Ho ward, Nichol as Inge ls,
. Ja mie Jeffers, Kyle Johnson,
Shelby Johnson . Angela
Keesee, Julia Lantz, Marissa
McAn ~ u s ,
Shannon
:McLaughlin, Tyson Morris.
) \mber Nichol s. Chelsea
·Patterson. Bo-Dara Powe ll.
:Braden Prater, Garrett Riftle,

Aaro n
Roberts.
Kasey
Rous h. Austin Sayre. C arle~
Smith . Bre nton Southe rn l
Chandra St,tlll ev. Connor
Swart z. Tannet: Tack ett .
Sarah
Thomas.
Bobby
Whee ler. Jose Whitlatc h.
Christian Woods. Mi chael
Yo un g.
Meigs Middle School
Grade 6: Tyler Andrews.
Jeremy Ask Lauren Bames.
Charit y Barthelmas. Dawn
Bi sse ll , Joseph Blackston .
ian
Bullington , Asl1l ey
_C arey. Justin Cotterill , Caleb
Davi s.
Kristine Davis.
Jess ic a
Doud.
Megan
Dunfee.
Jacob
Dunn .
Autumn Ebersbach. Kristen
Eblin. Dale Ellis. Contessa
Fi sh, Churl s Fitchpatrick ,
Joseph
Foley,
Darby
Gilmore, Kayla Gtaharn ,
Al yss
Gree n,
Veron ica
Grinim . Mcgann . Hall ey.
Sha wn Hawley. Charles
Ha yes . Benjamin Hood,
Bradley Hood. Holly Jeffe rs,
Ryan Jeffers. Alexandria
Jones.
Scott
Kennedy.
Pamila Kessinge r, Trinity
Kimes, Anni sha Kopec,
Cody Lee, Ashle y Mayes,
Parsons,
Erin
Britany
Patterson. Jennft Payne ..
Corey ReitmiM Joacob
Smith,
Riffl e,
Ashley
Shanalle Smith, C11ssandra
Smith, Latricia Smith, Cayla
Taylor. Rya n Vani~atre. Men
Vanmeter Ashley Walke r
Jacob Well , Michael Wills.
Grade 7: Jamie Bailey,
Wyatt Ball , Clayton Bohn ,
Adrian BolinC:had, Bonnett,
Virginia Bric 'les. Megan
Bu sh.
Ri cky · Colburn.
Crockett Crow. Le'Anna
Davis. Kenneth Delon g.
Jennifer Fife. Laura Gheen.
Amanda Gilkey, James
Greene, Tisha Hart Amber
Hockman , Lian Hoffman ,
Jessica Holliday, Sarah
Hubbard. Lilly Jacks, Terry
Jewe ll , Morgan Kennedy,
Morgan Lentes , Courtney
Mayes, Mason Metts, Jason
Morri s. Lindsey Myers,
Andrew O'Bryant; April
Oiler.
Aaron
Oliphant,
Ra ymund
Paterson ,
Al exandri a Paterson , Erin
Perkins, Calee Reeves. Erin
Reitrai re, · Mega n Smith.
Me nssa Snyder, Caitlin
Swartz. ~imberly Swi sher,
Jeremy
Tess
Thomas.
Ti eme yer, Jod Vanmeter.
Jessica Wagner, Cati e Wolfe.
Grade 8:
Jacob Barnes, Amy Barr,
Tal isha
Beha,
Rebecca.
Hanstine, Bruce Hunter
Bradley Jo nes. Kyle Kinnan.
-Kirk Legar Shane Milhoan,
Chelsey
Noel , Brittany
Prcast, Jon Pullins, Steven

.Third Ave. crash
tesults in injuries
BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL
MRUSSELL@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Cases heard in Meigs County Coulf

1

T.h e Daily Sentinel's

Routines
Officers elected

C HEST ER
Elmer
Newell was elected presithe
Cheste r
south bound on Third Ave nue dent · of
Board
of
when he struck the cru iser at Township
Trustees, Alan Holter was
the intersection. Callihan then
elected vice president and
struck the Ohio Valley
Blair Windon is the third
Visitor's Bureau buildin g at 63 member of .the board:
'
Court St.. authorit ies said.
Reg ul ar monthl y meetcausing heavy damage to the ings will be held at 7 p.m.
front of the l:tuilding.
on the second Tuesday at
Both · vehicles sustained the Chester Town HaiL
heavy damage.
Th ~ trustees will hold
Callihan and two passengers the ir regularl y monthl y
from his vehicle were trans- mee ti~ g at 7 p.m. on
ported . to Holzer Medical , · Tues_day, Feb. I0 at the
Center by GaII .ta County EMS. Chester Town Hall.

GALLIPOLI S
A
:oallipolis City police oftice\
·was cited for fai lure to yield
from a· stop ~ign following a
two-vehicle accident at the
intersection of Third Ave nue
and Court Street Monday.
According to the 'Oallipolis
. Police Department, Patrolman
:Lonnie McGuire was eastbound on Court Street at
around 8:30 p.m. when his
.. cruiser was struck by a vehicle
:driven by James G. Call ihan,
They were treated and
:37, Jeffers Road, Patriot.
~ Callihan was traveling released, authorities said.

Board meets

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Proud"to.be apart of your life.

1'

, Subscribe tQday • 992-2155

'.

POMEROY
- Meigs
Count y Board of Elections
wi ll meet at 8:30 a.m. on
Tuesday fo r a reg ul ar
mon thl y meeting at· the
board office:

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rJtursday, February 5, 2004

Community Calendar
--~~------------------

Clubs a~d
Organizations

Public meetings

'

Other events

.

.

Birthdays

Family·Medicine
Two
types of
D
'short-leg
syndrome'
require
different
treatments
'

Question : I went to ·the
doctor becau se my back
hurt. and he told me that I
had a short leg that was.
causing my back pain . I
have never noticed that my
legs are short. What does
that ha ve 10 do with my
back hut1ing'' Can this be
fi xed' '
.Answer: There are two
types of leg length discrepailcy - true and fun ctional. Botl1 problems are
sometimes called "short-leg
syndrome." Your treatment
depends on which type you
have . Let me tell you
itbout
them.
A true leg length di screpancy is cau sed when
one leg does n't grow
enough or one leg grows
too much. When the legs
are measured from one
fi xed body point to another
fi xed point, there is a difference in the measurements. The problem can be
in either of the major
bones of the leg. That is,
either the femur - commonl y call ed the thigh
bone, or the tibia
-known as the shi.n· bone in
ordinary parlance - may
be shorter tha n the corresponding bone on the other

.
'

•

Dear
Abby

leg. Problems with your
back can" develop with a
difference of as little as a ·
· fo urth of an inch. Injury to
a growth plate or infection
in a bone can cause this
type of growth discrepancy.
Usually, however. no
specific cause can be iden ·tified , and you just have to
chalk it up to "the way
you are bui It," and perhaps. genetics. There is a
tendency for short-leg syn drome to run in families.
On the other hand. a fun ctional leg length discrepancy does not involve legs of
unequ&lt;fl length ; rather, this
of form short-leg syndrome
has an underlying biomechanical cause. While the
legs when measured
from fixed points are
the same length . one leg
may appear shorter when
the patient is evaluated in
a laying or sitting plisition.
Thi s is usually cau sed by a
tilt. in the pel vic bone, or a
hip or sacroiliac joint.
Both types of short-leg
syndrome can present as
back pain. True leg length
di screpanci es can be the
underlying cause of scoliosis. A true leg length problem is treated witli a heel
li ft or prosthetic device to
correct the short side. If
the length di fference is
very large, surgical intervention is son\etimes needed.
A functional leg length
. problem is treated by fi xing the w1derlying biomechanical
problem .
Osteopathic manipulative
treatment can correct many

'

.

Sherman's pare nts.
During the 30-minute service. they sat OJ\ vari ous people's lap, _ kicked the hack of
the pew in front of them.
shrieked. and loud Iy asked
question s abo ut what wa s
go ing on. They turned an
intimat e~ pri vate affair into a
CirCUS.
Now my two brothers and
sisters-in-la w won' t s p~ ak 10
me because they think I
favo re d Sherma n's fami ly
over my own . Other g ues t~s
with older and betterbe ha ved children are &lt;t lso
upset because I told them
onl y my children would be
.
there.
I haven't slept u full ni ght
since becau se nf thi s. Today
Sherman co nfron ted hi s
mother. She said ller grandchildren are famil y. and she
wasn't about to exclude
them. and if my broth ers
were upset, they should have
brou ~ l their children. too.
I am at my wit's end .
Sherman full y suppmb me in
this. I don't want a fractured
relationship with Sherman 's
mother. but I have never had ·

O i ~,l~gw-c.J

my

es.

Your mot he r-in-law w'"
determined to ge t her wa)
re ga rdless of whom it oflended. I don' t bl ame vu u for
want ing to distance yo urself.
Under the circumstan;:e ,.
yo ur fee lin gs are understandable. Unless you li ve in a
very small town. you don ' t
have to move to another
commu nity to avoid yo ur
husband's mother. Sec her
onl y when absol utely necessary. That ru de . self-centere d
woman is no thing but troubl e.
..
Dear Ahb r is HTillm br
Ahigail V&lt;1;1 Buren. als~&gt;
kn o10·n as Jeanne Phillips.
and .,-as _f(l!lnded IH· her
motlt e&gt;: Pauline Ph illips.
Writ e
Dl'll r
Abbr
at
\1'\\'H'. D i!orAhh r.com

r;r

problems in !he pelvic. hip
and. sacroiliac regions, thus
re lieving your back pain .
Osteopathic
manipulative
treatments can also be used
to relieve pain caused by a
true le g length problem
while the body is adjusting
to a lift that e levates the
shorter leg to its correct
position.
All in all , you must
know the correct diagnosis
be fore you can get the correct treatment. That's why
I'd rec o~J~mend that yqu
return to your doctor and
ask what type of short-leg
sy ndrome · you have and
what the recommended
treatnietltl would be in your
case. If your doctor doesn't
feel · comfortable treating
thi s condition . ask for a
re ferral to an orthopedist
or a podiatri st.
Fwmlv Medicine® is a
ll'eeklr colwmt. To · .\'1/bmit
&lt;llfestions, write to Martha
A. Simpson. D.O., M.B.A. ,
Ohio Univ ersity College of
Osteopathic Medicin e, PO.
Box 110. Athens, Ohio
457() i. Medii:al in(omwtion
in this colwnn ' is puw ided
as an educatimwl service
onl v. It dol'S not replace
th e judgnient '!( your perwh o
sonal
physician,
should he rdiet! m1 to
diag 11 0se and ren&gt;mmend
treatment fo r any mcdh·al
conditirms. Pas r columns
are available (!llline ar
ww w.jh radio. ot:f!.(fjn.

.

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
·www.ff!.ydailysentinel.com

PO.

Box 6 9-N O. Ltis Angeles. CA
90069.

Sunday limes-Sentinel

740-992-2155

BUlSTER

599

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VIKING

899

8

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but pay tor only one
recliner I

UALITY FURNITURE PLUS

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wi ~ he~

with such elfunless. aplomb in ·
my life. I no longer Want to
,-isit her. spend hol idays wilh
her or do anyth ing with her at
'all. It bothers me that she has
set a precedent of what she
'
says. goes.
What can I reasonably do
other tryan pack up my fa mil y
and move to another swte or
country·?- MAD AS A HORNET IN N.C.
DEA R MAD AS A HORNET: Tell yo ur siblin gs and
th ~ i r spouses - in writin g if
necessary '- that what your
mother- in- la w did was
again st your expre"ed wish-

Celebrating speciol days
with you!

'

Dave Harris at 992-2155 ext. 15
or Brenda Davis at 992-2155 ext. '16
for more information.

anyone

Church services

.PROUD ·TO ·aE-·A,_PARl
OF-YOUR·LIFE. ·
. .

{3aJt

Mother-in-law's disregard
doesn't bode well for ,future

HARRI SONVILLE
Harri&gt;
onvill e Lodge 411
Thursday, Feb. 5
meets at 7:30p.m. at temple.
POMEROY - Salisbury
.with
practice for inspection
DEAR ABBY: I am upset
Tow nshi p Trustees wi llp1eet
.
Thursday,
Feb.
5
on
Feb.
27.
Offcers
are
asked
about wh at my mother-inat 6:30 p.m. township huildPO~EROY - A Leading ·· to attend. Refreshments.
law did at my wedding last
mg at Rock Springs.
Creek Wate rshed meeting
Sawrday. This is my second
Monday, Feb. 9
will 'be he ld at 6:30 p.m.
marri age and my husband.
SYR ACUSE
C
HESTER
Meigs
"Sherman's." fi rs t. lnsread of
Syracu se .V ill age Co un ci l Thursday at the· Megs Soi I
County
Republican
Party
will
a
nd
Water
conserv
ation
eloping, we chose to have a
wi ll be hos tin g an o pe n
meet
at
7:30
p.m.
at
the
offi
ce.
Jim
Freeman
will
be
wedding wi th family, close
doo r mee tin g 1vith res iChester
Courthouse
.
guest
speaker
and
will
be
the
frie nds and onl y my children.
d e nt s t o li ste n to a ny
di
scussing
projects
that
have
who are 8 and II. No other
p rop\lsa ls fo r c ban gi ng
been
done
10
restore
Leading
children
were invited.
th e str ee t nam es in th e
Creek.
For
more
information
We made arrange ments at a
.vill a'g c at 6 p.m . 111
hotel
to provide supervised
C oun'c i l cha mh ers with ,; contact Cynthia Bauers at the
. S~turday, Feb. 8
ivi
ti
es and snacks for the
act
C oun ci l meet ing fo ll ow - Meigs SWCD otlice, 992 STIVERSYILLE - The
4282 .
·'
in g a t 7 p.ni . ~
Community children. One of my brothe rs
Stive rsville
Church will be having a two- refu sed to attend because he
Holzer night revival with Harry Bush was unwilli ng to leave his
POMEROY
REE DSVILLE - · Olive
Meigs
County
"din - of florida speaking. Services son with someone he didn ' t
Hospice
Townshi p Trustees ll(ill hold
ner
wi•.h
friends"
6
p.m.
at will be held at 6 p.m. Pastor know. My other brother went
their appropriat ions meeting ·
Crow'
s
Restaurant
..
Call
992at 6:30 p.m. un Thursday. at
Wayne Jewel invites the public. to great lengths to find a sit7463
for
more
information.
ter of hi s own .ch oosin ~ .
the to wn ship building on
My
mother-in -law
Joppa Rd .. with the reg ular
Monday, Feb. 9
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
meeting to follow.
RUTLAND - Revival ser- informed us before the wedTuppers Plains YFW 905 3 vices will be held at the ...ding that she wanted to bring
Au xiliary will meet at 7 p.m. Rutland FreeWi II Baptist her daughter's 3- and 4-yearThesday, Feb. 10
at
the hall .
POM EROY - The Meig(
Church. 7 p.m. through Feb. old cllildren. We clearly stal Count y Agricultural Society
14. Tim Simpson and Ronnie ed that no children other than
Friday, Feb. 6
warrens will be the evangelists. my own were in vi ted and
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY - PERl No. There will be special singing oft'ered to include her grandoffi ce.
74 to mee t m Mei gs Senior each night . Pastor Jamie children at the hotel with the
CHESTE R Che ster Center, luncheon at noon Fortner invites the public.
other children. She dec lined
with
meeting
followin
g.
Town ship Board ot' Trustees
the offer and assured us that
meet 7 p.m.. Chester Town James Fuller of Sn yder.
the little ones would be taken
Fuller, Porter and Associ ates
Hall.
care of by a friend of their
to speak about "Golden
father' s.
· Saturday, Feb. 7
Opportunities."
RUTLAND
The
Fifteen minutes before the
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Rutl and Town ship tru stees
ceremony.
those little ones
Coun_ty Humane Society free
Saturday, Feh. 7
will meet at 5 p.m. at the
were
out
of
control , waving
straw giveaway for pet boxes.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Rutland Fire Station.
plastic machine guns and runTuppers Plains baseball and I0 a.m to 2 p.m. behind the ning wild throu gh the church.
Thrift Shop in Middleport
POM EROY
Meigs softball first signup, 9 to
I asked that they be dri ven to .
the
Eastern
Count y Board of Elections, noon , at
the hotel immedi ately. They
re gular monthl y meeting . Elementary Scllool.
di sappeared. and I assumed
8:30a.m .. board office.
that's where they went. When
SALEM CE NTER - Star
Thesday, Feb. 10
the ceremony began , they
'Grange 778 nd Star Junor · POMEROY - · Frances were in the second row with
Wednesday, Feb. 11
POM EROY - The Meigs Grange 878 will meet in reg- Carleton will observe .her
County Board of Health will ular session, 7:30 p.m. A 79th birthday on · Feb. 10.
meet ails p.m. in the depart~ potluck supper will be held at Cards may be sent to ller at
Rosehill
Road,
ment 's conference room, 112 6: 30 p.m. The degree team 32741
will
practice.
Pomeroy,
45769.
E. Memorial Drive.

.

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Page A3

The Daily Sentinel

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�PageA4

·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 5,

The.Dai,ly Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflicfi

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
. establishmwt ofreligion, or prohibiting the
· free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceabl}' to assemble, and to petition
the Govem ment for a redress of grievances. ·
-The First Amen(lment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
rm GOING
BALD!

OPINION
Bush should welcome intel probe

-AGING

ISWT AN
ILLNESS.

Under pressure, President
Bush has agreed to an independent inquiry into intelligence failures prior to 'the lntq
war. That's good - if the
probe is comprehensive.
The need for an independent
panel is clear.
Bush faces a massive credibil ity crisis because of the
apparent failure into his evidently !itlse assertions that lmq
had weaporis of mass destntction.
Just as British Prime
Minister Tony Blair assisted
- and was exonerdted by an independent inquiry into
his weapons claims, Bush may
be vindicated from suspicions
about his assertions.
Fonner weapons inspector
David Kay's report last week
that Iraq almost certainly had
no WMO stockpiles raises all
sons of grave questions about
the quality of U.S. intelligence
and the uses put to it by the
Bush administration in arguing for the war.
and I
Kay testified believe that Saddam
Hussein presented 'a grave
and gathering threat' and
intended to rebuild his WMO
when international sanctions
were lifted. Still, Bush's case
for war has been badly undermined ;md 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 flatly lied about the
threat to get the United States
into war, possibly for partisan
political reasons; (b) to make
their case, they exaggerated
what the intelligence community told them; (c) they 'cher-

2004

.. ..

,

~AHu:R

€\THE CINCI!IINAll PDSi

GET SOME

7.C&lt;J'l

JANET

JACKSON

JEWELRY?

2120

() 0

9\AH(E.R. © 2004 by NEA. Inc.

,.

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:addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 's
:editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The Daily Sentinel
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correction Polley

(USPs 213-960)
, Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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I

I

Middleport Council unprepared for task
In the summer of 1999,
Jean Craig and some friends
took a boat ride along the
Ohio River shore in
Middleport. They were on a
mi ssion, but they still
weren' t prepared for what
they saw: Syringes, sanita ry
napkins, paper towels, and
raw sewage discharged
directly into the Ohio River
by way of the village 's Park
Street sewer outflow.
'I wa~ sickened by what I
saw,' Craig told me this week.
It was then that · Craig .
began investigating water
quality •in Middleport. and
just before she discovered ·
the village's water supply
was contaminated with
trichlorethylene, a volatile
organic compound whose
source is still unknown.
Craig's ensuing investigation revealed a number of
problems with Middleport's
water and sewer systems,
and all fingers pointed to a
village administrator, supervised at least in theory by
.&gt; .
·
village council.
Water wasn' t be'ing chlorinated as it should have been:,
the chlorine pump on Ash
Street was out of service.
Households reportedly used
for water testing had never
tieen entered by a village
employee, and many water
samples submitted for testing actually came from a tap
in village hall.
At horne, in front of the
then-mayor and three council membe(s, Craig confronted an EPA official; who
· responded to her findings by

'·

Brian

Reed
imposing a 60-day deadline
for addressing the issues.
That gut Village Council's
altentiun. Threats, in writing, from the EPA will do
that. Faced with an EPA
mandate, an angry mob of
residents and looming million-dollar
construction
bill s, council couldn'-t pass
&lt;iff the problem fast enough.
Before the ink on the EPA's
letterhead had dried, Craig,
Don Stivers and Myron
Duffield were app.ointed.to a
new Board of Public Affairs
and directed tq fix the problem.
Hands washed of the
whole affair, so to speak,
council moved on to other
things.
Since then, the BPA has
supervised the mandaied
repairs to the village's sewer
and water systems, installed
a new chlorinating system,
and overseen testing of the
water .for contamination.
(Mysteriously, the .presence
of trichlorethylene diminished from the village' s
water · supplies, · and now
tests at levels below detection. ) Stivers, Tom Anderson
an~ Bernard Gilke)i recently
at
purchased. · ,. acreage

Hobson for a new well field ,
They' re not quite sure how
and have proceeded with they can afford it, but then
plans to design and build a again, they don't really
new treatment plant.
know how much it will cost.
Craig has always asserted Questions about salaries,
that important EPA direc- benefits, contracts and other
tives regarding lhe systems' messy business have drawn
poor operations languished blank stares, shrugged
unopened in a village desk shoulders and muttered estidrawe'r, but she maintains mates from all around the
five years later that village table. It appears that counci I
officials knew of the prob- members who favor a return
lems, . and did nothing to to the good old days stopped
address them - until she their deliberations where
blew the whistle.
they should have started
' I couldn't understand them - at the bottom Iine .
how I knew about the probThis is. the same village
lems, and yet nobody sttting council forced to borrow
at the council table knew thousands and thousands of
about them,' Craig told me dollars just to make payroll
this week. ' But of course, for its own employees in the
they did know.'
waning months of 2003. And
Three of six members of now, they ' re only two weeks
the 1999 village council still away from controlling your
hold their seats, and a fourth water supply, how it's treatmember is now mayor. ed and delivered to yeur
They 've experienced a dra- home, and how much you
matJc change of, heart, and pay for it. Think. al:lout that .
why not? The biggest part of
Like the mayor and memthe mess has been cleanecl up, bers of counci I, members of
if the Ohio River bank at Park . the board of public affairs
Street is any indication. They · were elected to their posiseem to have decided · that · tions. They were elected to
water and sewer operations .. protect the health and safety
are best left in their capable of Middleport people. It
. hands, or, technically, those appears that they have done
of a village administrator · so, while council has done
whom they will hire and little to convince the public
that . they a re prepared to
supervise. Sound familiar?
Council mernb.ers are not again ass.urne authority over
actUally interested in testing the village's water and sewer
wate( samples and •digging systems.
(Brian J. Reed is a staff
wells, you know. They want
control of tl\e village's water writer for The Daily Sentinel,
and sewer systems - . and, and reports on Middleport
of course, control of the public affairs. He can be
money that ~s along with reached by e-mail at
.them. ,
'
breed{Wmydai(ysentinel.com) .

'•

Mass. court rules civil unions Stopped at sea in a 1950's Buick
·aren't enough,.gay couples
e·ntitled to marriage
.
•

-

BOSTO N (AP ) - The
Massachu setts hi gh court
declared Wednesday that gays
are entttled lo n'Othing less
than marriage and that
Vermont-style civil unions
will not suffice. setting the
• stage for the nation 's first
legall y sanctioned same-sex
weddmgs by the spring.
· The ~ourt isstied the advisory opinion at the request of
legislators who want ed to
know whether civil unions
would be enough to satis fy
~e court after its November
ruling that said gay couples
are ent itled to all the ri ghts of
marri age. That uecision had
been writte n in such a way
that it ten open the possibility
that civil unions might be
allowed .
But Wednesday\ opinion
by the Supreme Judicial
Court !crt no do ubt: Only
marriage would pass constitutional muster.
"The history of our nat ion
has demonstrated that separate is seldom. if ever, eq ual."
four justices wrote. "For nn
rational reason the marriage
laws of the com mon wea lth
discriminate against a de tined ·
class: no amount of tinkering
with li.IIH!.Uaue wdl eradicate
that stait1. 'l'he (c ivil unions)
bill would have the effect of

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Mary Bonauto, the attorney for the pla intiffs in the The U.S . Coast Guard is seen mtercept1ng a group of Cuban migrants sailing towards the
Massachu setts gay marriage laws uit, speaks during a news Florida Straits on a modified 1959 Buick . The pilots were the same two men who tried to satI
confere nce in Boston , Wednesday, to disc uss the advisory a co nverter 1951 Chevy flatbed truck to the U.S. last year. Ntne other migrants. including wive s
opinion issued by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and child ren. (AP Photo/ photo re leased by CBS4 1
on Wednesday. The court tssued the opinion that only full .
pu , hed it ~li on~ ~ ~~ ahuu t H ' ~n "afc ."
Bv JOHN PAIN
equal marriage rights for gay couples, rather than civil unions.
ASSOCIATED
PR
ESS
WRI
TER
mph .
He s&lt;~id the othe1 s on board
would meet the edict of its Novembe r 2003 decision. in
1
0 11 M1llld&lt;1\ . t h e tli LII ..,L'l
response to an advisory request from the state Senate.- From
we re L 1i' Grass' wife and
MIAMI - Eleven Cuban' (1Lll :l!.!~lil l. ,\·it h lolJr nth~ r """ t\brcic l 13asanta\ wife
left to nght, background, are plaintiffs Julte and Hill ary
l
ry
iJ lg to ~ai l lu FloriUa i,n c1 aduih' and fi,~ cltil drc·ll. rel a- anu the ir twll L'iltluren: ;\nd a
Goodridge, Ellen Wade, Robert Compton and Davtd Wil son.
1950s Buick conve rt ed into a ti,·e, ' aid. Til~ ('""'I Guard thirJ m uplc with two chi l·
(AP Photo/ Chitose Suzuki)
tailfin ncd boat were itHCI'· int ern:ph.:d til l: ~n\ up Ltll' dren.
ceptcd al .sea hy the Coa't Tu e -..da\ L'll rout._· tu thL·
The Bu ic k·, doors had
Massachusetts OKs same-sex marriage
Guard and wil l he sent ha,·k Florida · Kl'~ "- fl iL'klll~ th l'lll hl 'L'Il ... c:i\cd to kt'l' p water ou t
The.Massadlusetts high court ruled '11\?dnesda·l,- f'l at ci&gt;AI unions
to t"hc ir homeland . L'xi lc up oil i\ LirC~ tl wn . ah,&gt;u t l)()
'"1d it "a' I'''" cred hy ih
ammg go.y rou J)es a-en~ enough - th.;t only t.JII , eqml n'ldrriage
ac ti vists· _,aid WcJne,da v.
mill:~ 'o utiJ\, l'"t u! \ li am i.
ort ~it J; tl
V-X motor. sJ id
rights are constitJ1i:mal . The staP SenaP had requested the
Marcie! 13asa nta Lop,·; iiL· ti\ j..,[ r\rturo CuhP -., ,tid.
rourrs o ~nion before ne m: lll?ek 's ronsituion&lt;l oomen'ion •11'1ich
l'o:"l (lllcllJ ul fi ci;M ' hlu.t rdo Perc; Grass. who
and Lui' Gra ss RodriguL' /.
wa:-- ~ lnHll l t-' tlln ~c on the ear IIi II consider an amendment f'lat de~nes marriage as a union
t he t \ Vll men \V ho tu rn ~d l h ~ l"l'rli '.L' d Ill Cnlliinll \hL' fl11~ 1 1
lier at tempt to reach the
~tl.ot!en a man o.nd a lOOman .
cl ~t.~sil' car into · a flo at i n ~
i n !.! c. tr '., 'tatU\. hut Coho
United St;~tc, .
ve"~l. Hi ed a sii'nila r ' tllllt s;~ld the Buid \;nil-..
D StlPs wit.
IZ2l Stltes ut.ere D Stal?s f'l .; t h.;ve
··f\·1\' L·, nt -.. i n i:...n't c razv: He
"!Vly uncle j.., 'l'r&gt; hra\1.'.
la "l s umme r and !lO t
nE&gt;if'ler Ia ll.5 &gt;fOhi ti1ng
laws f'lat &gt;fOhitit go&gt;.ernment
w;u
ll ; \o hL' !·I:L'l' ... Ba~,Jnta" s
cau g ht: lhc- y ~c l ou t ·l·ur f-Ie j.., IH 11 , i iT L''&gt;fllllhibk.''
maintaining and fosterin g a
recogni'ion of · ernJ)oyers oft:r same-se" rnaffiage -•nd
Florida in a l'l'i I Ch,·v y Cdua rdu i&gt;l'rL' / ( it ;t-..... a u tu -.i n Kiria l Lopel. who
marriage ~tween dorresic ~rtler do not ofu.r domestic
stigma of exclusion that the
~rtler
l;oeneits
for
sarre- se~co u J)e s ~neit:s
pi.: kup with po ntoon s made n~,.·ph c \v 11f Lui" (i ra-..-.. ....;ud 111 li' c' in l..tk c Worth. to ld The
Const itution prohibits."
'go&gt;.ernment
emJ)•l\O?E'S
llltl
or empt) ~'i -g a l lo n ll;t \ ·;.\lla . ··TIILT L' i:-- 110 dall ~L' I \ li ami Herald . "That \ how
Pau l Mart inek. ed itor of
L'f;l/\' il L' j.; ,"
i drums :llld a prnpclk r that to the chiltlrL' ll . Th ,· car i'
~-..........___,...--!~
....,
Lawyers Weekl y USA. said
that the blunt opinion erases
any confusion.
"The fat lady has sung and
she's si nging the wedding
march ." Martinek said . " It 's
clear frn m read ing the ma jority opi nion that' there 's· no
Bv CORALIE. CARLSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
basi s 011 which the (COlll1 )
. will OK anything other than
PALM ETTO BAY. Fl a.
marriage."
- A 1-t-ye.ar-ol d ho y was
The much-anticipated op incha rged wi th murder in the
ion came a week hefure next
~ la y ing of a cl assma te. a
Wednesday's Const ituti onal
mu sician ~llld hasd1 &lt;(11 pl ayConve nti on,
where
the
er
who YJas ro und hkedin g
Legi slat ure will consider an
to
dea
th in a middle sc huo l
am-endment
bac ked
by
bat h mom.
NOTE :C ~Itfl1~. H~IMI.&amp;n.j N&lt;e- R .kri-&lt;e-\lf t.: &lt;• '1111'!- OOmt t-1( ~~mt rill~ ;. . .'trm.:o n1
Republican
Gov.
M.itl
rt~o:oo;~nb:tt- d -.II unlmt.
'
The two l1oy s "kn ew .c.i.:h
Romney that would deftne
ve ry wel l. " said C hief
other
AP
marriage as a union betwee n a
Pete .Cuccaro of the Miami man and a womilll.
·civil un io n· is not innocuou s: Daue
troubling."
Pol icc
S.:hools
· But the soonest a constituit is a cons idered cho ice of Department. He refused to
judges
cont
inue
to
"Activi
st
tio nal amendment could end
lan nLW l'e that re fl ects a L"lahorale un th c: ir rel;ttion·up on the ballot wou ld be seek to redefine marriage by
" "
demonstwblc
ass ignin g of ship
2006. meaning that unt il then. colll't order wi thout regard for
Jaime Rodri gll Gough-. 1-t.
the high court's deci sion wi ll the wi ll of the people," said sam e-sex. large ly homoscxu,
presidenti
&gt;
tl
spokesman
Scott
a!.
coupl
es
to
secnnd
-c
lass
was
found early Tuesday al
be Massachusetts law. Gay
status:· the justice s wrote.
Smtthwood Middlc Sc ho,, l.
couples could get' marri ed in McClellan.
The
legal
batt_l
e
111
At least one aspect of the a magnet sc hool spccia li l.'
Massachusetts as .soon as
May: the Llcadline set by the Massachusetts began in 200 I . case may still he subject to ing in visua l and perform · when sev"e n gay couples we nt debate: Wo uld marriages in in g arts. a u thori t i e~ s·i.lid .
court last fall .
• ··we ' re going tn ha ve -to to their city and town halls to tv1as_...,ad1llsetts have to be rec- Hi s neck had been slashed.
Michae l H cr n &lt;~ nd c; . 1-+.
stan looking for a lxu'1d," sa id obtain marriage li ce nses. All ogni zed in other states''
signed a slalcmcnl :llltlli tEd Balmelli. who put down a were deni ed. leading them to
Coi1servati ve leaders sa iu tinu he killed the hoy and
sue
the
state.
deposi t for a wedding arter
they wo uld redou ble th ei r th.:' knife used in th.: :tl lac k
The Supreme Judici al
· the opinion .
effort s to pa" the clln st itu - was J'ound in his hackpac·k .
The case re pre sents a CoLtrt ruled in November that tional ban on sa me-sex mar- Miam i-Dalle C11un1y .pnl icc
significant mil es to ne in a gay couples have a constitu- n age. . .
De tecti ve R;111tl y Ross nwn
year tha t has see n broad tional ri ght to marry. and gave
Daisy
Flores
.
left.
and
ldelsa
Benalver
rush to fi nd their kids
said Wc dne,dav. Pnli L·c had
'"Th
is
now
put'
the
pressure
the
Leg
islat
ure
six
months
to
new recogni ti ons of gay
obtained a ,,;trch \\'atTcllll as clltldren are re leased from Soutllwood Middle School in
ri ght s in Ame ri ca. Ca nada chan ge state laws to make it ba.:·k on the Lcgi , lature to dn
M1a111i. afte r a :14-yea r-old boy was found dead in a bathroom
their job lo protect and dek nd for the badpa.:k .
and a broad, includ ing a happen .
Hc rnand c t. was charged at the school. (AP Pllolo/ Mi am i Herald. M Di az )
The stute Senate then asked marriage for the citilens of
Jun e U.S. Supre me Cou rt
South\\' ood
pupi ls
dec ision ' trikin g down a for more gLtidanee from the the sl ate to allo w them 1&lt;1 wilh fir st· dc gn:c ~nurd c r \\ C~IJ1U il.
ThL· ' cllllul" di d 1101 h :~ , · e a rcturn.:d to the _,choo l
vote ... sai d Ron Crew ~. presi- late Tuc.' lla y. po lice ' aid. !\
court.
Tex as ban ·o n gay sex. ·
courl
app
~
aran
cc
wa~
~ct
hi
ston
ol 1·ioknc c. Mi~llni ­ \Vcdtll' . ., Jay t11 urn ing. and
'T he dissi milit ude between dent of the Massac husetts
The White House ca ll ed. the
for
Wednesday
afte
rn
oon
.
l)ade
·
Sc
i11Hd sp &lt;•k~ ' n Jall ~r i c f 'c(nm ..,e lors \V eJ;e . made
Massachusetts ruling "deeply the terms 'civ il marriage · and Fami ly Instit ute.
··we h;tve sttiTicicnl · in I'm- Ma \'co Vi ll af~ 11 U ' aid.
it\ ailahk .
La ri ..,hea
Biven~ .
an
mallo n ... to churge him
.~11 1 Uilin
( i \l l\ !.!11.
\\ ' IHI
wi th f ind -dc!.!rce murder. iden tified hims.:ft"· "' ti lL' cic ht h Uradcr '"·lm sa iJ she
which wnu ld ' i ndi ct~&lt;: we - \'il·tiln\ ll lll'k. :-.&lt;l id '-L'huul ll ~ld kn;m n .l .1ime for fi ve
\ca rs. -..a id llc \.Va~ a shy
m c diLlli&lt;~n ." s,lid Mi ami - lltl jL· i;tl s 111Jd thL' f~ ll lliJ)' til :tt
Dade p11 licc ' P"k ~'lll:lll .l:ii 111 e had hc&lt;:~ l ' tahhcd . ho\ \\ lw \\':I" urtl'n targe te d
Clnll gh ..,,tid lli.., th.'jl ill' \\. \\ i.l"' h1 · hullic's.
1
he llipped a coi n to dectde told The Associated Press. '" I .lu;tll De!Ca, till o.
Bv MICHAEL GRACZYK
""
lk
"""
ni
l'e.
~ mart. hul
Ju
ve
11
ik
'
c li ar ~ ed 11 i1h :I ~lHHl ..,(LH.lclll \\ h\l p L t ~ L'd
an
whe ther a potential juror 0''Uarantec you 1he '1!LIV\
AsSOCIATED PRESS WRt"FER
•
fi1:st-de grec
llll ~!"llcr
in ),,::,eiJ;ill. lhl' 1i11lin ;111d flulc' tilL \ li"L'd to ptL' k un him a
actor.··
should be seated on the panel.
Florid
a
arc
L'
llargl'd
a-..
and '' ;1\ tHll " trouhklll.t~ L·r. )lit.'' "lid \3i\\' ll S. J.+.
'Panel ti \ suppo11crs said thai
HUNTSVILLE. Texas - A He .tried to subpoena Jesus and
\l&lt;t1·.: than 1.5110 ' ludenh
"TilL· ~ Il l ' il;~H' !11 . ,1\l tll
before his arrest. he had been adult s.
federal judge Wed nesday John F. Kennedy.
;tltcnd
S11utlmood. P;~lmettu
Miami -Dillk
P11li cc what lnappcnL·d ll) him ...
Gilles pie Count y Sheriff hospitalized fnr mental illness
blocked the execution of a con.
ILt
\
i~
&lt;l!\l' tl f Miam i-Dade
Direc tor t'dl'!os i\1\· ~ trc; sai~l (i&lt;tu ~ h " 'id " I , till ,·an·l
victed killer whose erratic Milton Jung said a court 14 times.
(',l·Unty \ \\L' a lthi L· ~ t cities .
But the sherill' 'aid lllOSt or aulhmi lics foun d 1l1c murder hel iC,c thi-.. c; 111 h;q1JlL' I1 ..
behavior at trial included already determined Pancni
dressing li ke a cbw boy and try- was competent when he was those in,lanccs were 10 '"dry
allowed to stand trial. "He\ out" from alcohol or urug
ing to subpoena Jesus Chnsl.
Act ing a day before Scott the best &lt;tctur there is.'' Jung abuse.
r..0 \
Panetti was set to die by injec-.....i:t .:11.~
tion, U.S. District Judge Sam
fmnilv is cft"ic'ient at produ cSparks granted a 60-day stay
ing food and consumers are
so that a state judge cat ·_recon:
the beneficiaries of ou r modsider whether Panettt IS too
ern fo od production." added
from Page A1
mentall y il l to be executed.
Petzel. "We 'li ke to talk about
Sparks said evidence preus all. consumers and furrners
sented by Panetti 's attorney to peoples' income, and gave alike . havin g an investment
indicates Panetti is "delusional these statistics to prove that in our food pro~ u ctio n sysand misunderstands whether it 's true.
tem . Affordable food is the
and why he will be executed."
In 1960. food costs took an payoff for our investment .''
Panetti, 45, was sentenced to average of 17.5 percent of a
While Food CheC'k-Out
death for the 1992 slayings of fami ly's income. In 1990. it Oa~ is a nati ona l ~ve n t ,
his estranged-wife's parents. '· . was II .6 percent , and tod;~y it Ohioans have special cause
During his trial_, he fired ht s is about I 0 percent, accord- to take note of its importance
attorney and insisted on repre- · ing to OFBF's spokeswoman . , said Petzel.
senting himself. Panettt wore
" In our s.ta te, not only do ·
"We have the American
cowboy attire du~ng, the pro- farmer to thank," said Petzel , farmers feed us. but they al so .
ceedings, mtmickmg the who explained that only 19 provide rn11ny of us-with jobs.
Ringo Kid, the Jo~n Wayne cents out of every doll ar we One out of every seven jobs
character tn the classtc Western spend d!! food goes back to in Ohio is in some way tied to
''Stagecoach.!'
·
·.
the farmer, dow n from 31 ·the products being grow11 by
Panetti blamed·the shOQtmgs cents in 1980.
the state's farn1 familie s," she
on "Sarge," one of his per~on­
91 Mill St.
"Today's modern farm reported.
cilities. Dt,tring jury selec.uon,

Teen charged with 1irst-degree murder
in killing of classmate in Miami school

1

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
:he less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to

The Daily Sentinel • Page As .

www.mydailysentinel.cOJll

2004

.•

needs an intelligence service between the two.
One of the fairest-minded of
that gets things right.
The fac t that Bush only all Democrats, Harman conreluctantly agreed to an inde- cludes from examining 17 volpendent panel raises questions umes of CIA data that 'the
about the thoroughness of the intelligence products were
flawed, based on inadequate
study to come.
According to Rep. Jane sources and 'gruupthink'
Harman, D-Calif. , ranking analysis.'
·we over-relied on circummember on the House
Intelligence
Committee, stantial evidence, defectors
there's no evidence that Bush and old stories and the analysts
ry-picked' evidence, ignoring or the intelligence community accepted a tautology - the
contrary facts and dissents: or itself is taking steps to avoid fai lure to prove that something
(d) they muscled the intelli- systemic enors.
(WMO) was destroyed was
'They're in denial,' she said proof that it existed.'
gence community into reporting what they wanted to hear. in an interview, refening to the
She thinks that Bush &amp; Co.
There is another option and top echelon of the CIA. 'They ·cherry-picked' the data given .
it's a grave possibility, too: (e) don't admit there's a problem. them and that the intelligence
a massive intelligence fai lure They don't think there's any- community failed to insist that
occuned and Bush was inno- thing wronllpolicy-makers state the intellicently relying on misinfonna'They're m a tough situation gence accurately.
·
tion when he claimed that because the cultu re above
Did top oftkials p~ s h intelliHussein had chemical and bio- them includes policy-makers gence ofticials to repon what
logical arsenals and an active who continue to say things they wanted and/or deceive
nuclear progrdlll.
that are n't supponed by the Congress and the public?
Ham1an said, ' That charge is
Various Bush aides maintain intelligence.'
that (f) Hussein did have
ll1e most recent example is out there. I would love to
WMO and either they will be Vic~ · 'dent Cheney's asser- believe it not to be tme. My
found in Iraq or were moved tion
January . ~1at mobile view is that the president
to Syria. But Kay's findings biological weapons factories should want to get to the botwhich the administration itself had been discovered in Iraq tom of this. '
She believes that investigatdeclared would be definitive since the war, proving 'con- make this highly unlikely.
clusively ' that WMD existed. , ing and refunning the intelliWhatever the truth is, the
Kay said the consensus of gence community is the connation needs to know it. And if inspectors is that the vehicles stitutional responsibility of the
Bush didn't cook the intelli- invol ved weren't bio-labs. House and Senate intelligence
genc'e book&gt; - as Kay testi- Cheney's otlice maintains that committees.
fied last week he did not there's still a dispute on the
That' s emphatically tnte.
then the new commission's point. And there certai nly is an But lately they have proved
mandate should include internal dispute over whether themselves so riven by partiBush's role.
there was a connection sanship that an outside panel
Bush should face the fact between Saddam Hussein's needed to .be_ appointed. It
that. unless clear -action is regime and AI Qaecta. ·
probably won't finish its work
The Weekly Standard's before the 2004 election, but
taken. no one will tmst any
asse rtion he makes about Steve Hayes has published that's OK. If Bush willfully
potential threats from North compelling articles on repeat- lied - which I doubt - artiKorea, Iran, Syria, China or ed contacts over two decades cles of impeachment could be
any other potential adversary. between AI Qaeda opemtives tiled. The real purpose here is
It's no excuse to say that and Iraqi intelligence, but to make sure U.S. intelligence
British, French and Gennan ' Harman said her committee's is the best in the world.
intelligence and the Clinton examination of CIA docu ~
(Morton Krmdmcke is execadmini stration. got things ments indica4:es that there was r~tive editor of Roll Call, the
wrong . The United States 'no operational relationship' "'' ~~'-'l"'fllV of Capitol Hill.)

CAN I

Thursday, February 5,

Judge grants stay of execution to Texas man
with history of erratic courtroom behavior

Food

v1ng a1e W

consolidating with

'10% OH

Shlre~ttide .

~!~r

e are
r ·Gallipolis store!

Seiecled
Cases
50%

n,w

FINE jEWELRY

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I
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tlH 6eJI
Seiecli11n I

�The Daily Sentinel

.~

'. :-.

p age A6

-~ .t
~

;(

.......

INSIDE ·

Thursday, February 5! 20~4

"""

Buckeyes accept 23 signatures, Page 82
Ohio Division I football slgnees, Page B2

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
·.

Safe mail for laWinakers
Congress testing ways to-electronically
deliver mail to lawmakers

NewsChannel

Thursday, Fehruary5,2004

Prep Standings

Phone records say Clarett benefactor was betting on sports

Boys basketball .
SEOAL
Team
~ ALL
Gallia Academy
8-1 11-4
Marietta
8-1 11 -4
Logan
6-2 9-5
Jackson
3-'6 5·9
Warren
2-6 5-9
Athens
2-7 5-9
1-7 . 3-1 2
Point Pleasant

.I

COLUMB US (A P) - The be nefactor whose improper paymerts led
to the .suspension of Oh io State's
Maurice Clurett was making calls to
an offshore gambling number while
he was speaking o n a daily basis with
ESPN .com
re ported
C larett,
Wednesday.
Cell phone reco rd s show that
Bobby Dellimuti made 27 calls during the Buckeyes' nation al ti tle sea~
son in 2002 to a prominent sport sbook in Costa Rica, SBG Global. Ten
of those call s were made in the three
weeks leadin g up to Ohio State's
Fi es ta Bowl victory over Miami ,
ESPN .com reported. The records do
not show what type of. gambling
activit y took place, including
whether Dellimuti was betting on
Ohio State games . .
Ohio State · coach Jim Tressel
declined to address the allegations al
a news conference on Wednesday at
which he trumpeted his rec ruii ing

TVC
Ohio Divis_ion
Team
TVC
Alexande r
5-1
Vinton County
5-1
Meigs
3-3
Belpre
3-3
' 2-5
Wellston
Nelsonville-York
1-6
Hocking Division
TVC
~
Trimble
7-0
Eastern
6-1
Southern
3-3
Federal Hockin g
2-4
Miller
2-5
0-7
Watertord

ovc
Thursday, February 5
Afternoon (I :00pm-6:00pm )
It will continue to he
cloudy. Some raindrops are in
the forecast. The rain should
start by 6 :00pm . The rain
should reach 0.04 inches by
thi s aftern oo n. Temperatures
will hold stead y around 4ll
Winds will be I0 to 15 MPH
from the east.

Evening il:OOpm-Midnight)
A breezy a nd clou dy'
even ing. Light rain is forecasted. The ra in shou ld reach
0.33 inc hes by this eve ning.
Te mpe rat ures will clim b
fro m 37 to 46 by la te thi s
eve nin g. Winds will be 15 to
20 MPH fro m th e so utheast
turn ing fro m th e so uth as the
eve n1ng progresses.

Overnight
( I :OOa m6: 00am )
It's going !0 be a vety windy.
wet and cloudy ovcmigl u. Light
~:ti n is fonxasted. l11e rain fa ll
should read1 0.23 inche' by this
overni ght, TcmJx:rature.s will
linger at 47 witl1tnda: \h igh nf4'J

Iflam
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
RivE.r Valley
South Point
Fairland
Coal Grove

Ho use Administrati on Committee Chairma n Rep. Bob Ney. R-Ohio. left, and legis lative aide Brian
Petersen read dig ital mail in Ney's Capitol Hill office . Acongressio nal pilot proj ect that scans
letters, pictures and eve ~ dfawings by ch ildren and deli vers them e lectronically to lawmakers
could soon make opening ma il on Capitol Hill a thing of the past. Tlie expe rimental progra m was
started in a dozen House offices after anthrax-tai nted powder found in letters sent to two senato rs in 2001 s hut down Capito l Hill office buildi ngs fo r days. (AP Photo/Stephen J. Boitano)

Others
Team
South Gallia
Hannan
Ohio Val ley Christian
Wahama·
Oak Hill

Bv MALIA RULON

Ney an d the la wmake rs in ing a prefe rence ·::"for recei vhi s pilot project were able to ing th eir mail in hardcopy
will be 20 MPH from the soutl1.
read the ir mail.
form .
WAS HINGTO N
A
"I' ve sure they have got to
"They wanted to have their
ptlot proj ec t start ed by an he talkin g about it ," Ney
mail phys ical ly in front of
Ohio congress man
th at said. "With digital mail , the
de li ve rs letters, pictures and stuff doesn't co me into the the m a nd · th o ught the y
eve n draw ings by childre n bui ldi ng. so it' s another co m- were n' t saving time:· said
Ho use
Admini st ration
electro ni ca ll y· to lawmakers fort Jeve l. ..
spokes
ma
n
Bri an Walsh.
co uld soo n make ope ni ng
Since the _anthrax att ac k, Na mes of the lawmakers
mail on Capi tol Hill a thin g all
ma il destined
ro r who had dropped out were
of th e past
Congress and federal agenIll) ! immediitt ely a va ilable.
The ex pe rim ental prog ram
c ies is irradiated at a J'e mote
The new syste m Jogs the
was started in a dozen House
Jocatin1; before being deli votfi c~s aft er anthrax- tainted
e red to congressiunal offices. name and add ress of senders,
pow der found in letters se nt
It ofte n arrives more th an a and it deli ve rs the scanned
to twn senators in 2001 shut
wee k late and sometimes dis- mail direc tl y into each lawdo wn Capitol Hill ollice
. maker 's constitue nt mail syscolored and brittle.
buildings for days.
With d igital mail . le tt ers tem. If the la wmaker wants
Thi s week, as the Se nate
a re se nt to a fac ili ty in the hardcopy. th ey still can .
fa ced . its second at tack
get th ai del ive red later.
invo lvi ng a , de adl y tox in. Leesb urg, Va., and th e Wal sh said .
law maker.s foc used on the process is shortened to a few
Robe rt Hahn, wh o heads
days with mail arri ving as
con gress ional ma il system.
"We may have to chan ge scam1 ed images via "pdf' go vernm ent solution s serdrasticall y the way we corre- fil es - electroni c documents vices for Pi tney Bowes Inc.,
spo nd with our constitue nts." that can be e- mailed. which was hired to operate ·
said __ Se n. Pat Robert s, R- searched by key words or the pi lot proje ct, says corpoprinted out.
rate de mand for electronic
Kan.
"Our
staff
has
been
raving
mail ·- call ed "d-Mail" The House Admini stration
it,"
said
Helen
Hardin
.
about
has more than doubl ed since
Committee .. which oversees
Democratic Presidential hopeful U.S. Re p. De nnis Ku cinich. D- the electroni c mail project, chief of staff for Re~1 . Zach the 200 I anthrax attacks .
Ohio, s hows th at there are no s trings attac hed to him or hi s plan s to ex pand it to 25 law- Wamp. R-Tenn . " We get ou r
·' II significantl y improves
ca mpaign while addressing vote rs on the eve of the Arizona makers by March . usi·ng - mail faster, we ge t it be tter the security in a situation
primary at a rall y in Phoe nix. (AP Photo/C harles Krupa)
improved .so ft ware !hat and we a re able to respo nd to where the doc ument may be
makes it easier tn sn11 the the constituent s thai we serve at risk for contaminati on,"
In other T uesday pri - has two, one fro m an
in a muc h qui c ker way."
Hahn said. '·A nother vi11ue
maries, Ku cinich received endorsement by Rep. Lyn n mai l, said Bob Ney, R-Ohio.
Dero n
Robe rso n,
cha
irman
o
f
the
cnm
miHt'e.
3 percent of vo te~ in North Woolsey of Calil'orn ia and
of thi s is that it speeds up
·' It \ anothe r second step of spokes ma n for Re p. Julia d is tribu tion, an d it make·s
Dakota, 2
pe rcent
in anot her fro m an endorsesecurity," Ney said . "We do it Carson. D-lnd .. said the sysAri zona and I percent in ment by himse lf.
storage and arc hi ving of the
Mi sso uri. Okl ahom a and
Of the delegates a cand i- oursd ves, digital mail , in our tem al so makes it easier to doc ument much easier."
Delaware. He collected less date needs to wi n, so me perso nal ortice. so I fell very get rid o f junk trmi l. "We can
No plans ha ve bee n made
than one percent of vo tes come fro m winning primaty co nfidant hav ing people com- j ust delete it." he said .
to
ta-ke the pilot project
·
The vo lunta ry program ,
in · South Carolin a. None of contests ;md others come ing in to my ofticc.'·
Unope ned mail was bein g which has cost. an estimated Congress-wide. but Ney said
hi s totals we re enou gh to li-0111 endorseme nts by memguarantee him one of the bers nl Congress or dele- co ll ec ted throu ghout tile $5 million to date, st arted in the di scovery of 'ricin in the
269 pledged de legates at gate' tn the De mpcrati c Capitol
co mpl ex
on · February 2003 wi th 12 law- Se nate o n Tuesday could
stake Tue~day.
National Conventi'on.
Wednesday by in vesti gators makers who received their change that.
A cand idate needs 2, 162
He pledged to st ay in searchin g for letters th at day's mai l delivery via a
" It make~ the di sc ussion of
delegates to win the nomi- the race fo r the remai ni ng cou ld he cont aminated with hand-deli vered CD-ROM . digital mail pop ri ght up to
nation and so rar Kucinich elect ions in 42 states.
~ the deadly poison ricin . Onl y Fou r offi ces dro pped out, cit- the top," he said .
occuni 1.1g around h:(Xkun. Wi nd\

ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

Kudnich says he's still got 42 presidential primaty contests to go
BY MALIA RULON
WASHINGTON
Fresh off his strongest primary showing, long-shot
Democratic
presidential
candidate Dennis . Kucinich
said Wednesday he is staying in the race to get out
hi s (Tlessage on Iraq . _
_ The con gressman _from
Cleveland, who picked up
5 percent of votes Tue~day
in the t,~ew Mexico election, saii:l he stands out in
the
race
because
he
" repeatedly. over and over"
called on the Bush administration prove that Saddam
Hussein possessed weapons
of mass destruction.
"Incredibly, you have
Bush runnin g for re -election on Iraq, which i ~ the
very issue that I can defeat
him on." Kucinich told
The Associated Pre~s. "I'm
going to pose this question :
Wh y
trade
a
Republican war for a
Democratic war''"
Former C IA weapo ns
inspector David Kay h~ s
said he doubts that Huss.ein
· pos se ssed
such
ever
weapons. Bush agreed this
week to an independe nt
commi ss ion to investi gate
whether the United States
used faulty intellige nce
information when it decided to go to war: in Iraq .

ALL
12-3
11-5
9·6
7-7
3-13
O-t5

ave
Ieam

Q1!Q

Fairland
Chesapeake
South Point
Rock Hill
River Valley
Coal Grove

6-t
4-3
4-3
3-4
2-5
Hl

Ieam

l
'

l

Today's games
Girls Basketball
JacKson at Gatlia Academy
ChesapElake at Rive r Va lley
M eigs at Wellston
Trimble at Eastern
Southern at Federal Hocking

Glrl1 Baeketball
South Galtia vs. OVCS (at Rio Grande)

Saturday's games
Boys Basketball

Wheelersburg at Gallia Academy
South Gallia at Cross lanes Ch ristian

Glrl1 Basketball •
River Valley at Eastern
Wrestling
Gallla Academy, Poinl Pleasanl al SEOAL
meet (at Marie11a)

· targeted to women ages 40 to 60, the titite when a woman's risk of heart dise~ begins to 'increase.
r

'·.

~

Glrla Basketball
River Valley Gallla Academy
Easlern at South Ge.llla ,
Federal Hocking at Ohio Valley Christian
Wahama at Southern
Teays Valley at Hannan

at

•

The campaign warns women about heart disease and provides tools to help them take action against its risk
•

factors. Its message is paired witb an arrestmg visual - the Red Dress - that serveS as the national symbol for
'
.
. '
women and heart d-isease awareness'.'A simple red dress works as a visual red alert to get the message heard loud

Meigs seventh
grade girls win

and clear: "Heart Disease Doesn't Care What You Wear. It's the #.1Killer ofWomen."

WELLSTON
The
M e i~gs seventh grade girl s
bas ~ etba ll team defeated
Wellsto n, 28- 14.
Emi ly Fie lds led the
Maraudyrs wi th I0 poi~t s.

'

.r

To schedule ''The Heart Tru'th''.(or yo\Jr group or organization, please call the Community Relations
'

Department at .(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326 .6t tiJeP\r,H Patient . S'e~ices Representative at £xt. 115 1.

'
---

-

..

---~

.

--

_,

'' -

about.
O'Neal returned from a onegame suspension and scored a

se,Nm-hi gh .17 points to lead
tht' Los Angeles Lakers to a
111- 106 ove nime victory over
the Cle l'eland Cavaliers on
Wednesday ni ght.
Gary Payton added a seaso n-hig h 30 poi nts as the
Lak ers impro ved to 2- 1 on a
sel'e n-ga me road trip - th e
c lub's longes t si nce 1992.
O' Neal was bac k aft er
ser
. v in ;::-n a onC- tlame NBA
suspension for profanely crit\

......

,.,., ........'\.•...

·t
-~-

I"- '

~

i ci; i n~ n tTic ial o, Juring a l ive

Ohio State's Tony Stockman (10 ) beats Northweste rn' s Vedran Vukusic. bottom right, to a loose ball during the second
half Wednesday, in Columbus . Ohio State won 72-64. (AP )

Stockman leads Buckeyes
past Northwestern
I'

COL UMBUS (AP)
c o:tch. ~im O ' Brien appa~­
ently goFTony Stockman s
att ention.
Teu days afte r 0 ' Brien
banning him from a team
tri(J becau se of hi s attitude,
Stockman piled up his sec ond good game in a row to
lead Ohi o St ate to a 72-64
victory over Northwestern
on Wednesd ay ni ght.
"For two game&gt; in a row
he's bee n mag nificent ,"
0 ' Brien said . "He hit big
shots and he certainl y controlled the game for us: He
wa s absolutely te rrifi c
again.''
Stockman had 22 points,
five assists and six steal. In

a slllnning 65-59 upset of si nce 1977 - a stri ng of 25 rchoun ds. wi1l1 Brandon
No . 21 o n Saturda y. he ha d
17 point s. five assists a nd
two steals .
" He played a hec k of a
game ,' ' Northwestern coac h
Bill Carmody said. " I'm
. thinkin g of suspendin g a
coupl e of my guys. beca use
it see ms li ~e it \ worked
pretty we ll for that guy."
The Bu c ~e yes t 11 - 10. 3-5
Big Te n) mad e just 4 of 15
free throws in the first W
minutes . out we re 6 of 6 in
th e last 60 seconds.
Ohio State has wo n the
last
I 0 ga mes
w ith
The
Northwes tern .
Wildcats
&lt;8- 11 .
3-5 I
ha ve n' t won in Co lumbu;

t'o nscc ul ivc

lo s:-.c~.

Stockman. a jun ior transfe r from Cle mson, made H
of 12 shms from th e field
including (i of 10 .1-poi nt crs
tel' le ad the Buck eye s to
their bes t ; hoot ing ni ght of
the seaso n. They hit 57 .4
pe rce nt . mak ing n of 47
rro m the fic lu and X of 17
L1c hi nd the arc.
"] fel t li ke I had a ni ce li ttle rhvt hm." Stoc km an said.
.. , w a~' 1·cry co nri dc nt in Ill )
shot."
Th e 22 poin ts was
Stoc kman \ hi gh at Ohi o
State . Tc rc twc' Dials an d
Ve limi r Radino vic eac h
added 14 J1ni nt s and c i ~ hl
I.

Fuss-C heath a m scori ng II
poi nt,.
"When Tony's hot like
that, they have to res pect.,
him ." D1al s sa id. " It re~ ill y
clears up the lane a lot. We
~ nt a lot of 1-on - 1s and it
~la k es it hart! to dmlbktc am .
1

Yedra n Yu ku, ic 'Co red
2-1 poi nts - hit ting 6 o l X
3-pointcrs
10 lead
Nort hwes tern . .l itim You n ~
midcd I :1 poi nts anZI
Mohamed Hac had had II .
Stockman scored th e first
eight points of the. second
half tt&gt; give O hio State ;1

Please see Stockman. Bl

'

Wahama at Grace Ch ristian

Monday 's games
'', /

i ng to co mplain or curse

&amp;
10-6
8-9
6·10
5-10
3-12
9-7

Friday's gamaa
Boys Basketball
Gall Ia Academy at Jackson
Fairlan d at River Va lley
South Gall Ia vs. OVCS (at Rio Grande)
Ylnto n County at Meig s
Trimble at Southern
Point Pleasant at Athens

presentation is a red alert· to take heart disease in women seriously. "T~e Heqrt Truth" campaign is primarily
'

CLE V E L A~D l AP) Shaquille 0 '\Jeal had noth -

&amp;
16-1
11 -5
13-4
9-8
4-12
3-13

Prep schedule

I

program, "The Heart Truth," to churches, civic_organizations and community groups. The free, hour-long

•

" e\·er u:-.cU info rm ati on Q. !eaneU f ro m

Tressel said he h;Js. ' till 11ol climi - Claret! lt&gt; he t on Ohi o St ate ~ am es.
nated ,t he po" ibilit y th at Clare t!
"That's tlic mos t ridtc u lo~t s thin g
A message was left seeki ng com m ent cou ld retur n to play for the Buckeye' 1'1c eve r hc;ml itJ mv lile ... he said.

ALL
12-6
13-4
5-13
9-8
2-13
1-12

&amp;
t 6-1
12-5
8-5
9-6
2-16

Oak Hill
Wahama
Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan
South Gallia

In an effort to educate the general public on heart disease in women, Pleasant Valley Hospital is offering the

•

season.

LeBron
scores 32
in OT loss
to Lakers

Others

,

'

'- '

TVC

"Tiie Jfeart Trutli"
r

~'

ALL
7-5
6-6
6-7
2-1 0
2-11

Ohio Division
Team
TVC
Belpre
7-1
Alexander
6-3
Vinton County
5-4
Meigs
4-4
Nelsonville-York
2-6
Wellston
1-7
Hocking Division
IYQ
Illllm
9-0
Trimble
Eastern
6-3
5-4
Southern
Waterford
~ 5-4
Federal Hock1ng
1-7
Miller
0-8

THE RED DRESS PROJECT
I

\

th is se;tstm. Ye t Clarett i' not attending conditi oning sessio ns with hi s
former •eammates. It i' no t know n if
Cl.trett 1s atten ding cla;ses at Ohi o
State.
Clare ll 's fede ral lawsu it challenues
tlw 1\FL's draft ru b wh ich cu rrct1tl y
'tate th at~~ college pla)cr must be out
of high school three years hefore he
cctn he eligible for -the draft. ·
Dc ll imuti. 38. told ES PN.com th at
he had bel o n foo thall . but not Ohi o
Stale games: ES PN.cum used a pub-·
li t: record s req uest to ob tain th e
phone r e~ord' fro m Ohio Stat e.
whi ch recei 1-ed I hem J urin g th e
NCAA's in ve.stigati on of Dt:ll imuti 's
re lati ons hi p wi th Claret! .
"heryone gam bl es... De llim uii
said... E,·eryone plays football."
But he bristled 11-hen asked if he

&amp;
14-1
9-5
4-10
7-8
6-9
5-9

Athens at Point Pleasant
Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic

·l

c'

from Dcll imu ti at his caterin~ husiness in Warre n. A message afso was
left wi th Dc ll imuti' s attorney. Ja mes
E. S:~ml ers of Warren.
•
Messages we re also left ,ceki n ~
comment from the lawyer who represemed Clarctt du ring th e NCAA
in quiry and the lawye r wh(&gt; is reprcsentin g CJ.are!l in hi s challenge to
NFL eligi hili ty rules.
Dell imuti has .sa id he wa.s on ly trying to he lp a poo r lon d kid by giving
hini money from ti me to ti me.
Claret! was a fo rmer Mr. Football
in Ohio who .was also named th e
nat ional oiTcnstve playe r o f the ye ar
by USA r oday._He we nt to Ohio State
and set fres hm an records for ru,hin g
( I ,237 yards) and touch tJnw ns ( 16) a.s
the Buckeyes we nt 14-0c and wo n
their first nati onal title since the Jl)(iS

Girls basketball
SEOAL
Team
SEQ ALL
Warren
9-0 15-1.
7-2 13-4
Jackson
Marietta
8-3 13-5
Logan
4-6 8-1 0
Gallia Academy
4-7 8-9
Athens
2'7 4-12
Point Pleasant
0-9 0-13

Kucinich staying in race
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Q1!Q

6-1
4-2
4-3
3-3
2-4
0-6

ALL
t2-3
t2-3
10-5
9-5
5-11 .
3·11

class .
"We ha ve read
ESP N.com's story
and are obviouslv
conce rned with the •
1ss ues it raises, II.
Ohio State athl eti c
director Geige1" said
in a sta te ment iss ued
immediate ly afte r
Tressel's news conference .
" Res t
Clarett
assured, we w iII look
into thi s lll&lt;lller and will support and
cooperate with an y and all invest igati ons."
Clarett · wa s suspended last fall lo r
accepting money fmm Dellimu ti. a
caterer who call s himse lf a famil y
fri end . Oh io Slate offic ia ls said that
Clarctt al so lied to uni ve rsit y an d
NCAA in vesti gat or.&gt;.
Clarett could not he reached at hi s
mother's home in Youn gstow n. O hio.

South's Gum among Marshall signees
C HARL ES tO N, W.Va.
.( AP) - B'e n Gum 's heroics
in th e state , hi gh school
c hampionship ga me helped
ea rn him a Divi sion 1-A
football sc h ol ~ r s hip . ~-- __ _
Two months afte r -th e
Park ersburg · South sta r
ru shed ,for 232 .yards in the
C lass AAA titl e win in
Wheeling, G um sig ned a face fo ll owing th e Patriots·
binding letter-of-i nte nt wi th 26-20
w1n
over
, Marshall on Wedne sda y.
Martinsburg. In the second
" I think th at helped ," ha lf, 'the f~ llb ack scored
Gu m said .."The main thi ng three to uchdow ns and ran
coach (Bob) Pruett liked
fo r 18 1 yards . and o n
about me was my pesire to
win and how I was always defe nse he in te rct! pted a
pass with 2:30 left in th e
around the ball."
That he was, as wa.s e vi - ga me.
Gum decided no\ to play
denced by .his mud.caked

basketbal l ' this wi nter fo r foo l. 225-pound Gum·, w l ~
Marshall .
th e defe nding state champi- wi ll - be at
on ~. in ... tcaLI co nce n tr at ing Ru nning bach coach Em ic
Pu rn sley would 1"-.·e w
o n his foo tball worl&lt;nu ls.
"I think I · worl&lt; ed hard have him carry th e ba ll .
enough that I was goi ng to whi le coaches on the other
ca tc h some D- l's eve. " side want h r use his talents
Gum sa id. " I knew· the &lt;II outs ide ·linebacke r. He
wor k wa; going to pay nil won the Sam Hu ll Award'"
the state's top defender thi s
sonne r or Ia t ~r."
Unt il _rece ntly. Gum llad past ·season.
Gum grew up in a housein teres t- from
received
ril irmo nl
State 'ilnU hold that rooted for Ohio
Co ncord.
He · visited Stale. and lw hatl hoped tt&gt;
play someday in Columbu,,
Ma rshall last week~nd .
"They've got a win ning Ohio. Nnvi' he'll get tl1at
Marsh&lt;il l wi ll
traditio n. That'; wlH\1 drew chance
me· there," Gum saitl. "It\ !&lt;ike on the Buckeyes nc\1
j ust footba~ l country d\iwn :-.ea~on.
there and I love it _...
Please see Herd, ~l
It 's . unclear what the 6.I

TV Interv iew follo wi ng a-win
at To ront o on Sund ay:
Bu't he had no qualm s with
til cse officials as he was ab le
to foul out both of
Clevel and 's 7-fon t centers.
Zydruna s ll gau;; kas and
DcSagan a Diop. and attempted 20 free throws.
o· Neal fini shed 9-of-20
from th e line. and the rest of
th e Lakers we ren·t mul' h.bet . te r. mal&lt;ing ju st 26-o f-40 162
percen t). Bcit when it cu unt ed
most. O 'Ne~il an d hi s teammates ste pped up ;,nd drilled
thei r foul shoLs.
Los Angeles scored its fin al
I() pninh nn l·rce thro w, _
sinkin g th eir fi nal eight tri e~
whil e ou tscorin g th e Ca vs
19- 1-1 in ove rt ime.
LeBron J&lt;tllle s scnred 32
po int s - inc ludin g three 3po'int crs in OT - but shot an
:~ ir ball frnm 2 1 feet wi th a
chann· ·to win it al the end of
r~gu l at i o n .

Ca rl os Boozer had 25
poi nt &gt; and 16 rebou nds and
Eric Williams 'cored all 20 of
hi' poi nt\ aft er ha lftim e for
the Ca1·s. 11 ho tJesp it c th e
loss arc 7-.1 s\nce Jan. 17.
Lcadin ~ bv tw o. the CavS
decided t~&gt; eln ploy tile " Hack
;1 Shaq" strategy an d fouled
O'Nea l ll'it h .\2.9 second s
remai t1 i11~ .in r~gu l a tiu n.

But

L.As):itg nwn dropped in twll
knudlchall s to ti ~ it 92-92 :
Jeff Mctnnis missed a runner in the !;me wi tll 14 ,e,·onds left. hut B&lt;Jn/cr tipped
the 'ball had. ntll to gi1e the
C.t\·s a !'ina! chance.
0 'Neal sc·n red _Ul\de rn e;l[ h
to open ove rt ime, and aft er
the Cavs mis&lt;ed their firs!
three shors - all from th e
perimete r - Payton 's j-um pe r
put the La kers up by six.
James tric&lt;( to ra lly the Cavs
wit h his .1s. but the Laker'
. closed it out at the line.
Roo'k ie Maurice Carter.
playing in just his second
game sitKe being signed as a
free ·agelit hy the Lakers last
11eek. made five free throws i.n
the final 5~ seconds to ice it. :
.. I

�•

'

Thursday, February s,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

TI1e Dail} Senhnel • Page B2

Thursday, February 5, 2004

'

\Ohio Division I football signees
A 1st o f play ers s1gn ng wth or verba lly
Comm1ttmg to Oh1o s 0 v•s•on I football programs

; COLUMBU S ( AP) -

OHIO STATE
"Nader Abdallah dl 6 5 185 Rummel HS M eta~r~e (La )
A lex Barrow.. de 6 4 255 Collman HS Oubhn (Oh•o)
).!bert Du~es wr 6 1 185 Central HS Belle Glade (Fia l
~arcus Freeman lb 6 2 240 Wayne HS Huber His (Oh o)
·red Gum Jr db 6 1 170 Glenv•lle HS C eveland
Vernon Gholston de 6 3 240 Cass Tech -HS Detro1t
.Cr k Haw tb 5 11 210 Independence HS Columbus (Oh•o)
thad Hoobler te 6 5 220 Carrotlton (Oh •O l HS
-0 ante Johnson rb 5 11 225 Eastmoor Acad Columbus tOh•o)
Oenns Kennedy rb 5 11 190 StranahanHS Ft Lauderdae (Fia 1
.Shaun Lane db 5 11 175 Hub:bard (Oh•o) HS
Clevon Lyons wr 6 2 205 Woodland H Its HS Prttsburgh
'Kyle MitChum ol 6 5 275 McOowe I HS Ene (Pa)
.flory N1co te 6 5 250 Beaver j Pa ) HS
N •ck Patterson db 6 2 2 15 Central HS Haze wo od (Mo )
.Sen Person ol 6 4 295 Xema (OhiO) HS
Tony P ttman tb 5 1 1 195 Buc htel HS Akron {Oh10)
S teve Rehnng ol 6-8 320 LakOta West HS West Chester (Oh•o)
tlon Skmner ol 6 5 280 Mt Carmel (Pa ) HS
):.\randon Sm1th lb 6 2 235 Euc lid (OhiO) H S
~u rt1s Terry b 6 2 205 Glenv11e HS C eve land
~ J Trapasso p 6 1 2 15 Central HS P1ckenng1on (Oh1o)
'Brandon Underwood db 6 1 175 Ham 1on (Oh1o) HS
S 1rto Welch db 5 11 180 Beechcroft HS Co umbus [Oh o)

•

AKRON
J~sse

Ar ntz ell 6 6 260 Perry HS Massillor 10~ 10)
mall Be nJamm b 6 1 210 G env1ll8 HS Cleveland (OhiO)
..Garrell Brewster ol d 6 4 270 Franklin HS Harn sv1lle (Pa I
~hns Brown db 5-9 200 St FranciS peSales HS Westerv1lle (OhiO)
~ared Cecc he~fl ol/dl 6 2 258 Kane (Pa ) HS
'Oon te Cloud lb 5 10 195 Glenv lie H S Clevelar d (Ohro)
Doug F1 fe le 6 5 230 Pete1 s Tow nsh rp HS Venet1a (Pa }
B r~an Flaherty qb 6 5 215 Munroe Falls HS Stow (Otuo )
Gary Fr~sby wr 6 0 165 Grand Blanc (MIChl) HS
:Siephon Fuqua db 6 1 205 GlerWIIte HS Cleve and (Oh•o r
l&lt;evrn G1ant lb 6 2 230 Herndon (Va ) HS
.C. J Gruber ol 6 5 310 Mercersbwg Academy Steelton (Pa )
:Jama1l Jackson rb 5 11 215 0•1 C ty {Pa ) HS
&lt;E nc L vely te/de 6 2 255 DeMa tha HS Gambr.lts (Mel)
"Johnny Long wr 6 1 170 Pr ncelon HS Cmc1nnat• (Oh iO)
Joe MeDa me! b 5 11 2 10 Woodland H1lls HS Tur!le Creek !Pa )
Kurt Shoema ker qb 6 3 200 Anderson HS Cmc nnat (Oh o)
Ren aldo S1ter b 6 1 220 Perry HS Canton Oh o)
B non Stokes b 511 2 15 Da..,1d Outler HS Chalo ne (N C )
-Andre Walker rb 5- 10 185 Reynoldsburg 10hro) HS
Brandon Williams wr 6 1 170 Chamberla•n HS Tampa (FI 1
Doug W lt1ams dl 6 2 241 Chamber Ian HS Ta mpa (FI )

!JEt

BOWLING GREEN
0 1yral Br1ggs de 6 4 200 Mt Healthy (OhiO) HS
Brandon Cu rt1s ol 6 3 292 Soulh HS Spnngf1eld (Oh1 o)
N chatas Dav•s dl 6 3 280 Colerain H S C1ncmnat1(Oh o)
Errque Ooz •er db 6 t 195 Garfeld HS Akro n (Oh1o)
J eff F1nk ol 6 5 255 Sou th HS Willoughby (Oh1o)
Scott Goodw1n db 6 3 200 Menlor (Oh1o) HS
John Hanel ne lb 6 2 225 St tgnat1us HS N Olmsted tOh1o )
Edwin Hoo d rb 5 t O 185 Wh tmer H S Toledo (Ohro)
.Aaro n Kent ot 6 6 270 Zanesv He (Oh1o) HS
Corey Parr dge db 5 11 180 Loveland (Oh o) HS
Josepll Schaefer lb de 6 4 250 Bened ct1ne HS Parma His (Ohio)
Anth ony Tum er qb 6 3 2 19 Charrunade Julien 1e HS Dayton
(OhiO)

CINCINNATI
Butler Benton rb 6 1 210 Martm Luther K•ng HS Detro1t
Brad Bury 1b 6 1 245 M anon (Oh o) Hard1ng HS
Trevor Canf1eld ol Western H1 lls HS C nc nna t1
Jon Carpenter rb 5 11 2 t 5 Lancaste r (Oh•o) HS
Khalil El Am•n ol 6 5 3 10 Pu rcell Manan HS Cincm nat•
Bradley Glatthaa r rb 5 11 2 15 Elder HS C1 ncmna11
Du slm Grutza qb 53 200 Mason County HS Maysville (Ky)
Anthony Hoke lb 6 t 235 Hard•ng HS Warre n (Oh•o)
Adam Hoppel dt 52 254 Beaver Local H S lisbon (Ohio)
Earnest Jackson qb 5 3 200 SOulhl1eld (M1c h) Country Day
TYJuan Jones db 6 3 210 Trotwood Mad1 s011 HS Dayton (OhiO)
Haruk Nakamura wr/db 5 10 180 Lakewood (Oh o) St Edward HS
LamontA Nelm s db 6 3 210 Rav onna (OhiO) HS
DeAngelo Sm th db 6-o 180 Co IJmbus (Oh10 ) lndcpoodEmce H S
K L Smrth db 6 0 170 Copl ey (Oh10) HS
Ma rcus Wmsto n lb 6 2 225 Lans•ng (M1ch ) Sexton

KENT STATE
Derek Burrell lb 6 2 225 Hargrave Acad R•chmo ncl (Va )
Dan Coleman ot 6 7 260 Canfi eld (Oh o ) HS
Shawn Donaldson ot 6 5 270 Dover (Ohto ) HS
Dav1d F11ipp1 lb 6 4 220 Dover ~ Oh to) H S

Herd
from Page 81
' Th.ll would be .omdzmg, Gum s,ud
Pruetl s.ud Wednesd.oy he couldn t comment spec olic,olly on Gum because
Marshall h,l&lt;J not recel\cll ho s pape rwork
yet
M,orshall also so gnell one htgh-prold e
wtde recetvet and lost the ch.once dl .moth
er
Jermatne Ftl er ol CledrWdlcr, Fl,o
ptcked the Thunde11ng Herd over K.msas
State F1le• whose 111ckn.ome ts 'Smoke ,"
caught 37 passes lot 858 yards and 12
touchllowns last se,oson .mel scored three
more TDs on defense
Eddt e Royal ol Ch.ontdly, Vd , the broth er of Marshall kt ck returne r Chns Roydl ,
s1gned wtth Y1rgmJ.t Tech Eddte Royal' s
leam won the state champ10nshop .omong
'Vtrgmt.o's large st school s
Marshall's lone otf enSJ ve Ime recrun ts a
dandy - 6 3, 308 pound Dott g Legmsky

Stockman
from Page 81
39-28 lead
' In the second half we c.ome out ll.ot '
Vukustc sa1d 'We th otJght the onl y w.oy o l
makmg It up w.os tf we ,,II st.trted makm g
•some 1s '
Wh,n grew to become a I S pOllll lead
melted to so x ,lit er bt g men Vuku stc .tnd
Vtnce Scou c .o ~: h htl 1- pmnters lrom the
top of th e cn cle to cut the lead to 50-44
With 7 29 re m,nnmg
• Stoekman que lled tlldt rall y by hilling 3pomters from eac h corn er o n Oh10 St.Uc's
,next two possess tOils but the WJidcats
came b.rck - th ank s rn part to lh e
Buckeyes' hornllc lree- throw shoolm g
1'hey miS sed seve n con sec utr ve free
throws 111 a 3- mmule span m the m1ddle of
.
-

.

Guy Har t lb 6 1 220 McKeesport tPa ) Area HS
Fr.tz Jacques db 6-0 180 Lety HS Naples (Fia )
linwood Jenk•n s wr 6 2 185 WoOdside HS Chester (Pa)
Prrshod Koonce dl 6 4 265 Chester (Pa) HS
Cednck Mallwelt b 5 1 1 215 Tampa Bay Tech HS Tampa (Fia )
Trav•s ~raw ol 6-6 315 Hargrave Acad (Va ) Sliver Spt1ng (Md )
Ph1l McNeal dt 6 0 294 Hard1ng HS Wanen (Ohro)
Dahrn Meornl
64 295 Parl&lt;srntu'IJ Soul!l HS Washngton
Joshua Pastore rb 5 11 2 10 Beaver Local HS Sall nev lie (Oh1o)

dl

Cf'/Va 1

MIAMI (OHIO)
Branden Arn strong ol 6 7 258 Northmont HS Englewood (OhiO)
J1mmy Calhoun b 6 0 195 Middle town (Ohrol HS
James Case dl 6 2 242 Hamson HS Acworth (Ga)
Joe Con• gh o Jb 6 2 220 Boy an HS Rockford (Ill )
Tom Crabtree te 6 5 2 10 Bloom Carroll HS Carroll (Ohio)
Nicholas De Barto lo fb 6 t 235 Upper St Clair HS Ptltf burgh
Dave D1Franco te 6 4 255 M•dvrew HS LaGrange (Oh•ol
Jared ElliOtt qb 6 5 2 10 Page HS Franklin (Tenn)
Ben Huddle dl 6 4 240 Sctoto HS Dublin (OhiO)
Chns Hud&amp;on lb/de 6 2 2 15 Bowte HS Arlington (TelCas)
Dave Koval wr 5 11 175 Sem nary HS Poland (Oh10)
Matt McKeown ol 6 4 250 Sycamore HS C1ncmnat1(Ohto)
Sean McVay ath 5 10 175 Mar1st HS Maretta (Ga )
Clayton Mullin s lb 6 2 215 Fa rborn (Oh10) HS
Jake 0 Connell wri te 6 4 220 Gull Coast HS Naples (Fa )
Jon Pere•ro ol 6 3 275 Sandburg HS Orland Pa rk (II )
Ryan Redman dl 6 4 2 70 LICk ng Valley HS Newark (Oh o)
Bryan Roland db 5 10 185 UD Jesu t HS Deho t
Josh Sa ttenhwa t te /dl 6 4 245 Lasstter HS Roswell (Ga )
Pa t Shepard wrfte 6 4 2 15 Upper St Cia r H S P1Usbur gh
Chr s Shula lb 5 11 198 Aqutnas HS Coope r C tty (Fa )
Steve Sutter te 6 1 230 St Henry (Oh•o) HS
Robb •e W1 son db 6 0 195 Chr st1an Aca demy HS C nc1nnal1
Dust1n Woods wr 5 I 1 175 Purcell M ar an HS Cmc nnat1

OHIO
Joshua Abrams rb/db 6 0 182 Dunwoody (Ga} HS
Au stin Add•ngton Strapp b 6 1 225 St Franc1s DeSates HS
FehlC Adeyeye wr 6 3 190 Gahanna (Oh•o) L•ncoln HS
M chael Brown lb 6 2 205 Elder HS Cmc nnat1 (OhiO)
Jell Brownmg d.l 6 5 280 Hamson {OhiO) HS
Bryson Bush olidl 6 4 320 St Thomas H S Canton (O hio)
Dave Cody te 6 4 240 S1erra Co lege Aub urn (Cal!r)
Lan don Co hen dl 6 3 252 Spartantlurg (S C ) HS
M1ke Eynon ol 6 3 285 St lgant•us HS Westlake (9h•o)
Chr S Hall db 6 1 195 Ba lla rq HS LOUI SVIlle (Ky )
Zac h K•esch dl 6 6 265 Fullerto n JC M nneapo IS (Min n )
Todd Koemg rb/db 6 2 195 B shop Ca rroll HS Nanty Go (Pa )
Steve M1lle r ol 6 5 275 St lgn at us Bay V1Uage (Oh1o)
M1ke 0 Bruba fbllb 6 3 240 Boardman HS Bo ardman (Oh1o)
Mark Petru z•ello qb 6 2 2 10 Lake Ca tho lic HS Mentor (Oh•o)
8rooks Rossman pk 6-1 165 Los Alamitos HS Seal Beach (Cahf )
Scott Rouse ol 6 4 295 St Xav1er H S Cmc mnat1 (Oh a)
Rudy Sylvan te/de 6 4 250 So ano College SuiSan City (Caltl )
Dushn Tatum db 5 11 175 St Thomas More Lafayette (La )
Wesley Will ta ms dl 6 1 245 P1onerr HS Ann Arbor (M1ch )
Jacob W•lhamson dlllb 6 3 263 Etowah HS Aeworth (Ga )

TOLEDO
Brandor1 AlelC ander db 6 1 190 Howland HS N les (Ohi O)
Andre Bou:ln dl 6-4 310 For\I.UnooM1tary Academy AnnAIOOr(wt.:h)
Clint Cochran qb 6 3 200 Wadsworth (Oh•o) HS
Rtchard Davts rb 6-Q 200 Hardmg HS Warren (Qtuo )
Patnck Daw son ol 6 3 300 Central Catho ~c HS Greensburg (Pa )
Andrew Decker o 6 3 270 St John s HS Toledo (Ohio)
Bernard Fa11hfu ell 6 3 225 K•ng HS Oetro11 (Mrc h)
De Veon Harns Is 6 0 200 Blanche E y HS Ft Lauderdale (FI }
Gabnel Hatchett wr 6-3 195 Sacramento Ory College M1rden (Nev)
Gre g Hay fs 6 2 2 15 Wes1ern H S Wa led Lake (M•ch )
Tyrrell Herbert db 6 2 180 Penn H1ls HS Verona (Pa)
Bren Kern p 6 3 185 Grand Isla nd (NY ) HS
Ntck. Lawre nce dl 6 2 225 BenediCtine HS DetrOit {M•ch)
Greg Lun a ol 6 7 3 18 Yuba (Calli ) CC Spokane (Wa sh )
Alfred Martin ot/dl 6 5 265 Brus h HS South Euclid (Oh io )
N ck Moo re wr 6 4 190 Westerv1l e (OH) South HS
Steven Morn so n lb 6 2 200 Chr st the Kmg HS Queens (NY )
Ja en Parmele rb 6 0 2 10 Dow HS Midland (M 1ch)
Andre Redd wr 5 11 185 Chrtst the Kmg HS Jama ca (NY)
B•lly Aeltord db 5 10 180 Washington HS Mass illon (Ohro)
Trumatn e S m1th wr 6 3 180 Warrens1111le He1ghts (Oh1o) HS
Rayb1n W1ll1ams d 6 6 240 Blanche Ely HS Pompan o Beach (FI )
Sea n Zab1nskl ol 6 7 290 Albany (NY ) HS

YOUNGSTOWN STATE
Tyler Booth ol 6 6 300 Tuscarawa s Valley HS Zoa rville (OhiO) HS
Justin Decker ol 6 4 285 Struthers (Oh1o) HS
V•nce GdaUa qb 6 1 205 Central Calhohc HS Canton (Ohto)
Chns Kenney te 6 3 220 Howland HS Warre n {Ohio)
Bnan Palmer plo; 6 0 165 Mm eral R1dge (Oht o) HS
Brad Sa msa ol 6 3 25 0 Howland HS Warren (OhiO)

ol Woodrow Wil son won lhe Hunt Awa1d
as the slate 's lop ltneman
Des pite losm g four offenSive lmemen
110m l.ost year s leam, Pruelt wasn't warli ed abmtt th e lack ot oltenstve lme
Jecnllt s A year .ogo , M.orsh.oll s1gned sever.d of them ,md also Y.elcomed Mo.tmt of
Ohto tr,mster Zac Elccss, who JS ellgrble
next se(tson
The Thundeomg Herd's other 111 slate
Signee JS Morgantown Htgh light end Joe
Br.tgg
'We' •e re.d exc oted about the 111 state
gu) s They II play hard for the Herd,'
Po uett s,ud
Also stgned "'·" runmng b.ock Marcus
FJtzger,old. brother ot Hetsnwn Trophy
lonallst Lany Fttzgerald ot Pittsburgh
M.orcus FmgeJ.dd on gm.dly st gned w1th
Matshalllast year but dod nut gam elogobrl tty He Js elo gtble now and wtll parttctpdle
111 spt ong pr.octJces
Meanwhrle Marshall outsJde lmebacker
Fernando Durden , d sophomore who d1d
not rec o1d ,, t&lt;~c kl e thts pdst se.1Son ,has
tJ anslerred to Murr.1y State
lhe second IMII
We we1 e ge nm g on each other .r little
bll ' S•ockm.on s.ud 'We could ha\e pul tt
.ow.oy .1 couple ol t11nes tf we h&lt;1d m.rde our
fre e thtows '
Vukustc htt three 3-potnters 111 a row and
Scott ddded anolher to cut the lead to 6 1
58 wrth 2 52 left but agarn Stockm"n
,on swered the surge with .1 1-potnter Alt er
" turnover by the Buckeyes. Scott hrt
,o nother 1 to make Jt 61 ~5X .111d Stoc k.JJldll
latc t add ed .mothet 1
Fu ss-C he.otham, Radtn o vJ e dnd Dt als
c,ot h hoi two free throws 111 the IJn,ol mu1ute
lo p1 cscrvc the lead
" I thou ght tht s was a cnll ca l game lor
us ' {) ' Bnen saod • Wtlh Penn- SI.tte losmg, we co uld JUmp up two spois We fU Sl
don ' t w.r11t a nybody lo run ,Jw,ty tromtJS I
belteve we' re m,oktn g progress Were ge ttm g bettet We needed to w111 thts g.o me"

.·

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Sub1cnbe todav
992-2 155

1

\!r:ribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Buckeyes a~cept 23 signatures
while rest of state also stocks up
COLUMB US (APl
Alter los mg lhe heart and soul
ol the na110nal ch.omptonshtp
leam lrom 2002 Oh10 S t • t ~
co.och J11n Tressel pocked up
numenc,ll repl.1cement s - 21
of them, wolh two mm e on the
w.oy 111 M.orc h - Wednesd,o)
on the hrst ci.Jy lor the SJgnmg
of nauonal le tters ol llli Cnt
We lost a large se11101 cl.1ss
so there we1e a number ol
spot s to ItII .md needs to t.oke
c.11 e of ·Tressel s,ud of the 26
de p.Jrttng semors that lollo wed up the n.tt1onal mle
wtth an 11 -2 1eco rd .md
another FJesta Bowl vtctot y
mcluded
The rec ruots
.occlauned detensrve b,Jck Ted
Gum lr ol Cl eve l,ond s
Glenvtlle Ht gh Scl1ool along
with tv.o runntng b,ocks, one
quarterb&lt;~ck and lmn pl ,rycrs
trom Pcnnsylvano a
Oh10 State loses Its top two
quwterbacks (Cra~ g Krcnzel
,md Scott McMullen), top two
recco vers (rvfich,oel Jcnkms and
Ben Hartsock) .mq a loldl ol SIX
starters on offense .md SI X 011
dete11se hom the bow l g,une
Gmn selected .os US&lt;\
Today s top dcl enSJve pl .oyer Ill
lhc n.otton. ts .obo " lldck st.or
woth burmng speed The two
runnmg back s .ue Enk Hdw ol
Columbus Independence .mel
Flonda
nall\ e
Dermos
Kenned). and lhe qu,u1eJb.~ek
tS a holdovet hom last ye.u 's
Jecrutllng
class
Todd
Boeckman ot Sl Henry
'We feel thrs os an outstandmg group. ' Tressel s.ud
"Where Will tl qe ranked? We
don ' t put .1 whole bunch of
nme a11d effort IIIlO lhmktng
IIllO th.ot "
The tour players taken mtt
of Penns)lvama were the lu st
SlllCC 1995
Tressel sa1d he expected

Dt~ntonJo " dH.I

I hd1e\L'

\\ C

pl.1ye1 ~ IIH..:I ud111g tl11 ee ] Uil l lll
college tr.mslet s .oml I 0 pl.ly-

ers fwm Ohto
Ke 11t State g t&lt;~U lld t e d onl )
14 scnull"' "-ll co.1c h De.tn
Pees st gned onl) IJ ne\\
lwo other playets to comnut teu ults
to the team Oh10 State app.or
Th1 ~ \'tdS .1 t:l.ts-. w h e l l ' we
e ntl y wothd rew sc holarshi p JUSt ncclled to ltll some
otlers to two othe• pl.oyeos holes Pees s.ud We h.1d
w1de teceJvets D.o Ju.on some s p c&lt;..:I I K needs and we
Motg.m of P.olm Be.och Fl.t tc.ll ly Ieel lo ke we d1cl ,, gre,u
and Myles Wdlt.oms of 1oh o l ltllmg those needs
Yo un gstoY.n
Austin tow n
Toledo stg ncll 21 pl.oye rs
Fnch - m recent wee ks
lllclud tng louo lt om Ne"
Me,mwhde, the oest ol Yo1 k dlld tv. o Jllll tor college
Oh10 s Do vtsoon I lootb,oll pl,oyc" ltom C.ololmnt,l
teams Y.ere stock ong up on
We II go .onyiV Ilere to ltnd
pl.oyets
,m o utst.llldmg luoi b.t ll pl.l)
Fo11ncJ Ohoo St.otc dclcn- et u hKh Tom Amst ut z s.tt d
coord111.otor
M.11 k Tht&gt; lO ill ll lU C'd :-.LIClCSS .llld
" ve
D.mtomo pulled u1 16 pl .ovcos tl.I IIO !t.tl ptcsc n ce ol o ut pto111 ht s ltrst Jc cru Jtlng d .tss d s g l ,un hI S he•ipcd LI S ! Cl: l Ult
the he,od COdch .ot CnJU lllJ.lll
llllJOn oil) Evcoy pl,l)Ct \I C
Stnce 11 e gm otl Ill such ,, stg ncd tod l) h.os h.td m.my
l.nc st.trt 0111 emph.osrs w.os oppo1 !li111Ues to sec us pl tiy on
fmutng the best looth.ll l pl ,,y- 1-SPN OICI the p.osl lcY. )CdiS
crs we could ge t teg.ud less n l
Tnlcdo h " pl .oyeu on ESP N
posltton and I .om h.oppv with L'lt! ht ttm cs 111 Am-,tutz s tht ee
out res ult s s.ud LJ.ontonJo se:ISlll lS ciS he ..HJ l O.I C h W ill
who bec.omc UC s cn.och 111 nm g two cham ptonshtps tt nd
l.ote Dccc mbcJ
.1 ppc.mng 111 l\\O howl g~tm es
In " sl1ght switch lrom hrs
Ml .t lll t s '\ tgnees tndud e d
predecessor, the Be,ucats dtd 12 hom Ohtn three lto m
n' t stgn " JllntOJ coll ege pl ,l) Genrg11 two I tom Flo11d.o
e1 .md 12 ot the 16 tec•uJts .t tc lll11llm md Penns) IV.Illt d .md
from Ohm
l)ne ~ .J&lt;..: h !ro m Mll:ht g.m
The top SJgnee mtght be Tennessee .mu Icx.os
LJUat terb.tck Dustm G1ut t.t
Th1 s I S .111 ou tSt.tndlll !..!,
lrom Maysville. Ky D.mto1110 cl. oss cn.och Tet ry Hocppn ~r
called htm the 'quarterbd ck s.ud It ' 1 b t~ u1d .uhl ellc
ol the luture
lor th e grou p V\1~:. \\e1C .t L.tst te.un
Be.orcats
tilts p " ' )C,u .ond we lce l ltkc
'We wanted to build,, gtc.t t we added to th.u v. tth speed
tound.otlon lor our p10gr.tm to .md sktll es pcu.lll y ,u the
gtve us somethmg to build on pnso twns v.e tc.lll y t,ugctcd
o\ er the next se1cr,rl )ediS. ~ ollcnsovc lmc de lcllSl\C
.md to do thts we w.onteu In lmc ,md hneb,ockco

Br.mdon Btown " '" lOth mthc
60 lllCIC l d.ISh (717)
Rao Grande w.1s .tmong e 1g ht
lc,uns 11 the meet 11\e ol wh1ch
were Nt AA Dl\ JSJOn I s4U.1ds
iOhto Sl.lte Ohoo lJomeJSH)
M 11 sh oil lndJ.lll.l Ill mots Sidle)
one
Nt A A Dl\ tston II
(U ni\CtsllV of lndJ.on opol os )
squ.od .md rvl.olone ,oiOllJ v. llh Rto
m,m GastJn Green w,os lOth 111 Gt .mde represented the NAIA
the shot put, sophomore
R1o Gt.onde \1111 Jetutn to
Mtch.Jel Conger Wds lOth m the Ouerbetn on F11d.oy 101 ns
long JUmp and sophomore nex t meet

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Buy a Greeting Card 81.
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Htl J•WANrHJ _.
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old vet checked well ! amed $$S UP TO $529 WE EKLY
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POLICIES Oh1o Va!ley Publla hmg reserv-lhe r ght to edtt reject or canc el ant" ad at any t1mo En ort muat be repon ed on the l lrt t day ol
1 1
Tr1bune-Sentrnel Reg11ter w1ll be reapansible tar na more than the cot! of the t pace occup eel by the error and on ly the hr t t maert on We shall no t be h 1
any loea or expenae thai reaulla from the publu::at1on or om nlon ol an advet11aement Correction w1ll be made t/'1 lh a hr sta ~ar l a bl e edltton • Bo• number
are always conhdanhai • Current rate card apphea • All real eatat1 adYertlaementa ar e subject to the Federal Fan" Hous1ng Act ol1968 • Thrt ,.,,..,.,,.
accapta only help wamed ada meet1ng EOE atandarda We will nat knowingly ac cept any advertising 111 vlo at on ol the taw

AI'\Kt:\U 1\ifS
toK RINJ

lwnght@1c net

•

70 72 mob• e Mme 2 bdr 1
IJ'ath electr ic; heat sfln ng
on 50x200 lot has o le s1or
age
bwl d ng
$15 000
(740)742 4011

HOME HEALTH AIDES
CERTIFIED NURSE
ASSISTANT

New 3 bedroom 2 bath Only
$995 down
and
only
$ 194 36 per mon th Call
Ka rena 740 385 7671
Ve ry clean used 3 bed
room/2 bath $9995 00 W II
help w111 delve y Call N kk•
740 385 9948

110

WANlHl

foDo
W1l do babys1t1 1ng 1n my
hOme Full or par i t•me Non
smok mg Call (740)367
0429

II\\\( Ill
10

RUsiNI:!-..'
Ol"'t'ORil. Nln

~:~~:;;.;~
Ul
PUBLI SH
lNG CO recomme nds tha

Pl«Jt"F.~ION \I

~---Siiii:ORO.\;.:r;;;t:::;t·';;,.-

Pomeroy pol ce d ep artme nt
IS see kmg par t lime d1s
pa tcher avail able fo r a
sh•lts contact Tammy Sm th
Monday thru Fnday 9am
2pm (7401992 6411 E 0 E

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee un ess We W1n 1
1 888 582 3345
Ill \I I
IO

Sl Ill

Ho~J~s
HlK SILf

1600 Sq It 3 yea r old Ranch
s tyle home 2 112 ca r
- - - - - -- - garage 3 bed 10o r'n la rge
M ake 50% sellin g Avon
k Iehan d1nnrng room liv ng
Lrm ted
t1m e
ON LY
roo m 2 112 baths laundry
Tr1.1ck D nvers needed for room front porch all custom
(7 40144 6 3358
vans &amp; flatOeds Long haul oak t 11 m doors and cabmets
1ng 2 years e11penence All electr iC Very we layed
NEE DE D tor b1.1 sy salon
good dnvmg reco rd Pay out beaut•ful mtenor on 1
ASSY
SCISSOR
30°o truck gross (740)388 112 acres
t 348 Prospect
(740)4 41 1880
0
9 162
Chur ch Road Wont last
(740 256 6336
long at only $ 11 5 000 Call
150
740 446 45 14 o r 7404 46
Med• Home Health Agenc y
IN,mtuL11oN
3248 after 5pm
Inc seekmg a full hm e RN
for the G alli polis Oh1o area
Galllpollt Career College 2 br Ranch Style House has
Must be licensed both 1n
(Careers Close To H ome)
a 24lC30 detac hed garage
Oh ro and Wes t V1rgm1a We
Ca I Today! 740 446 4367
30lC30 bam on 4 acres on
alter a compel t ve salary
18002i4·0452
C a1 so nRd at M asonas km g
b enel1ts package and40 1K
wwwgallipofllca reerco R&amp;gecom $70 000 (304)773 6 187
E 0 E Please send resu me
Acc reijl lvd Member Ace edit ng
to 352 Second Avenue counc l tor lndependam Colagas 3 bedroom 2 baths on 4 3
Ga llipolis OH 45631 Attn and Schools 12748
ac res Must Sell 11 Call
Otana Harless
Clin1ca 1 711
l.ANEOUS
:17_4_0:._17_09_
11_6_6_-..,_ _
Manager
•
• 784 State Route 588 Cape
Cod asklng$135000 3or4
e a JO
FirewoOd $25 0 0 p ck up bedrooms
bath s
We are hiring•
2 5

St.'HOOJ.s

Ioa d

I

Mlsl'Fl

prek

tJ PI (740)441 0504
740 992 9263
:_..:.:_...:..:....:..:.:___:_____
WANll:O
Oual1ty bnc~ bUild home n
great
ne•ghb orhood
Con11lenent to Holzers a nd
R1o Grande Spac ous 3br
Bookkeep_mg 1n my_ home 2 1/2 bath features updated
Phone (304 )675 3304
IOtc hQ n With tile floors lam11y
room w1th f~r ep ace ove r
C hjld care State hcensed SIZed 1-car ~ar age ThiS IS
Foc us helping low ln&lt;;:ome A Must See
S t 20 000
families o b tain c hlldcare (7401441 1237
Wtlh 8hr s sleep l1me for
Now H iring fuiJ and part
non tradiiiOna shifts as QDJ - , - - - - - , - - - trme
M cClure s of your RIGHTS
740 24 5- N1ce two bedroom apart
Resta urants In Gal lip oli s
2
men1s Large rooms Fully
9 42
eQUiped kitchen C en1ral
Mid dleport an d Pome roy
Apply
Monday
thru Georges Portable Sawmill hea.Ung &amp; coo hng Washer &amp;
S ~ turday 10 11 am
don 1 haul your logs to the dryer hoo kup (304)88 2
2523
m1ll JU St call 304 675 1957
ae ng
peop e oea
ho want 10 eam mone
TaKe care of elderly 23 Homft sale In Ct!y 3 bed
hile losing we ght show
years
expenence Call room 2 full baths niCe &amp;
how
ng
oth ers
Sharon at (740)992 9661 o r cl ean great location In City
nformattonal
OV DIC
(740)992 2659 Leave mes VInyl sid ing Prloe to sale
\/&amp;li able upon request 740
npw phQno 174ffi448 9539
sage
4 1 1984
You could earn up
to S(Yhour plus bonu ses
We also offer pa1d
training holidays
and vacat ons
Full or part 1me
shrfl s eva liable
Now oflenn g a
$200 si gn on bonus
ca n today
1·Bn-463·6247 ext 24158

I you

lo Do

ZE RO MONEY DOWN
To qualified buyers stop 111
today and checK w1th Erl"' e
or Lynn
•
Coles Mo01e Homes
15266 U S so Eas t
Athens Oh•o 4570 1
(740)592 1972
Where You Gel Your
Money s Wor)h

www comtcs com

preferred
Knowl ed ge o f
comput ers a plu s Mu st be
ava lable M on through Sat
Please su bm1t resumes to
The Dally Sen!lne PO Boll
729 34
Po meroy
Ohm
45769EO E
•

1'

10

HolsJ:JiOI u

Goou;

2000 Oakwood
mob1le I and 2 bed room apar t
home 14X80 3 bedroom 2 ments !urn shed and un tu r
bath Tolal electr.c Ask ng n shed
secunly depos1t
$2 1 500 00 (7 40t992 9263
eqwred no pets 740 992
2218
3 bedroom new bathroom &amp;
112 bath new furnace wrap 2 bedroom apt St At 160
5 4?:&gt; no
a ound deck applia nces past Holzer
1nc uded some lurn lu re (740) 441 0194
very good conct 11on 740 BEAUTIFUL
APART
992 5267 o r (7 40\247 2 11 3 MENTS
AT
BUDGET

hlldren ages 0 18 Foste
ome licens ng IS requ•red
e1mberse ment 19 nc udeci
P ease cal 1 88 8 823 753
or more nformat•o n

wee kly
l ast
paced
Ctenca !Agenltor lmmed •ate
H1re M1mmum requ rernent
Excel len1 c ustome1/pho ne
sKill s computer kn owledge
accuracy 1n curr ency and
hg ures w1111ng to l est to
beco me
lice n sed
Ma11
Resume along w•th refe r
ences to PO Box 26 Pt
E)( pe r anced aut o body
man must ha'Je own tools Pleassnt WV 25550

Help Wanted

vNow you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Jr"J',
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
HtLPWANilll

Count er Sa les person need
Absolute Top Dolla r U S ed for loca olect nc d1str1bu
S li ver
Gold
Co ns to r Etectncal backgroun d
Proofsels Dtam onds Gold and goM co mmun cat1on
sk•lls preferred EOE Se nd
R ngs
US Curr ency
MT S Com Sho p
151 resume to HR Department
Second Avenue Galhpo hs PO Box 6668 Huntm gton
2577i 6668
74 0 446 2842

$695

Open Weeknights Till 9 • Fr1endly Service

• All ads

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Day!ll Prior To
Publicati on
Sunday Display 1 00 p m .,.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

I

Carpet

Prescription Ph 992 • 2955
Sun CLOSED
t t 2 East Moln Street
Pomeroy. Ohio Prices good lhrough Tuesday Feb. 10

Dally In - Column 1 • 00 p m
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's PO!tiper
Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Galha County Counctl on
Ag ng (Sen1 or Resou rce
3
Yea r
old
G er man " GOV T POSTAL JOBS"' Center) IS currently acce pt
S heppard
ligh t brow n ANNOUNCEMENUPS247 mg applicatiOns tor par i t1me
lull t1me
(25 30
Answe rer s
to
Baxter 9 UP TO $54 461 YEAR and/or
Cert111 ed
Home
Portland
Road
v 1cmtty NOW HIRING SELECT hours)
Health
A1de
an
d/or
Cert1f1ed
{740)843 5281 Reward
AREAS
FR EE
CAL L
Nursmg
A s s1 ~t a nt
APPLI C ATION EXAMINA
Applicants mu st ~a 11e own
TI ON INFORMATION FED
Fo und l adtes glasses found ER A L BEN EFITS 1 800 tra nsporl al on and w1lin g to
tn front of M ayrtards OUIII 892 5549 EXT 92 7 DAYS tr avel rn Gal a Co unty Job
© 2004 by NEA Inc
descnpt on and apphcat1ons
S hop on Ja ckson P1ke Ca ll
(740)441 9060
3 djwers w1th COL &amp; haz ava llab e at the Sen or
Reso urce Cen ter 1167 St l•1,.,10
.--------.
mat ca ll (740)985 3307
At 160 Ga ll pohs Oh•o
H ..:tl• W\NliD
Lost 2 2 04 Boxer puppy An Excellent way to earn
fr om 800 AM to 400 PM
I ght brown
red col ar money Lets talk the
Mond ay
thr u
Fnd ay
a nswers to G nger Neal Ad NEW AVON
Pos•t ons avai lable 1mmed1 Paid a8&amp;1gnmenls for ftg
b eh1nd
K rodel
Park Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
ately
ure and art models for
REWA RD Sadly m•ssed by Joyce 304 675 69 19
tasteful posters Must be
owner
{304)675 8988
An Equ!ll Oppor1un ty All mil l l~a 18 or older na1tonally
Ap ril 304 682 3630
(304)675 8 163
Acllon Employ!l
published photographer
AS SEEN ON TV
$500/day plus expenses
LEAR N TO DRIVE
no expertence necessary
Lost Car Keys
around
Kawa saki
Su zuki
TRACTOR TRAIL ER
see www jaguared com
M dd lepor t Pome roy area
Motorspotts 1n Gal 1pohs has
NEW PROGRAM
apply
to Ed Gardner P 0
Call (740)992 4103
open1n gs m the follow ng
No Ex p~r ence Needed
areas parts e)( per enced Box 389, Charleston WV
Place ment Dept
25322 or e mail tygard
mec hanic sale s and man
Fma
nc1ng
Allattablb
L os t
Female
cat
ner@hotmall com
agemen t K nowl edge o l
gray/ bl acklwh •te '1 tnppe d C DLJTra n ng
prod uct and ab11ty to mu111
With whtte chest and feet ALL ANCE
PARTTIME TELLER Loca l
task
esse nt at
Se nd
Tractor Trailer
Rewa rd {740)388 1594
ban ~ IS accept1ng ap plica
Resume to
Trammg Ce nte rs
1ons for part t1me teller and
Kawa sa kr Suzuk•
Wyth eville VA
customer ser11 1ce pos1 11o ns
Motorsports Cen ter
Lost Female Blue Hea ler Call Toll Free
Must exh1b1t professtonal
4367 State Rou te 160
on Bethel A d near bnck 1 800 334 t 203
sm auenhon to dela•l and
Gathpo 1s Oh1o 45631
'house ~ 304)675 3927
enJOY prov1dmg exc ept ional
Reward Allard
AVO N' All Arc 01 s 1 To Buy or - -- - - - - - - customer serv1ce Prev iOu s
Sell
Sh1 ley Spears 304 Loca
In surance Age nc y expenence
n cu stomer
W~Nf}Jl
675 1429
seekmg Full T 1me 31 112 hrs ~e rv•ce and cash handling

Reg. $8.99

I

110

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Displav Ads

Descr1pt1on • Include " Price • Avoid Abbre\llatlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Adt Should Run 7 Days

Want to buy JunK VehiC le s .,.,=---,.,.--=~==
ave you ever
oug
Steel or Atu mm Uim A 1ms
bo ut help1ng a child who 1
Engmes &amp; n trouble and m ght need a
C 1 Beer Ca rry Out per m1 t wtthou!Jtrres
for sale Chester Townsh•p Alumm1u m
Autom at c
lac~ to stay lor a couple o
Me1gs Coun ty send leUers Transm1ssron s
Ca ll lor
Th e
Mrlestone
ays?
of mt erest to 1 he Daly pnces (304 )773 5343 o r
o si er Care Agency s look
Sentinel PO Boll 729 20 (304 )773 5033
ng for prov •d ers m Ga ll•
Po mero Oh o 45769
o un ty to do short te rm
I \11'1 0' \II \I
are for homeless run awa

M ovmg must f nd a good
home for 1 21a bl1 2bOlCe r

Word Ads

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oea.d'tlrw

• Stilrt Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete

To Help Get Response ...

Help Wanted

30% Off

Kenneth McCullough, R, Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph,

(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

O ldJH used school band
m uS•cal In stru ments Also Apply at Larry s Body Shop
want ng
o lder
baseba ll o r send resume
2046
cards 1975 an d before Add1 son P1ke Gallrpo lis
Oh1o
[7401388 8692

25

l\egister

Sentinel

. ,___:,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
o_r...,Fa,..x. To (740) 446·3 o!f!l
oa_ _ _ _o~r_F_:a:___x_T_:_o..!..:(7_:4.:.:.0l_:9_:9_:_2·-=2.:...15:___7_.g•
11

14 7/8 oz.

6Months Salle
As cash 1

\!r:ribune

To Place

wv

Whitman's Sampler Heart

StarUnuat

OH

h,l\ C lCU&gt;IllpltshtU lht s
Ohro Ull tWistt} sJgllcd " I

Reg. $1.19 for only 29¢

StarUnaat

M ~•p C our&gt;1y

lmu the best pl.l)c ts .o11u lhc
hest pc·ople W L could get

Rio track sends three to NAIA Meet
COLUMBUS
The
Umversll) of R10 Gr,mde tJdCk
team h.od three competitors
qualtf) tor the NAIA lndoOJ
N.otton.ol Tr.tck and Foeld Meet
thts p.1st weekend wuh soltd
perlorm,mces 111 meet s .It
Fmdlay and Ohoo St.rte
On Fnda) , the Redwomen
h,od three race walkers compete at Fmdlay w1th two
headtng to the nattonal s
Juntor Knsttn Barnett lm
oshed thtrdm the 3,000 meter
race waik wtth a t1me ol
17 39 44 and sophomOJ e
Bolhe Robmson was toullh
Rohmson's
tune
v.as
I H 02 48 Both B.ornett .md
Robmson eatned spots on the
NAIA Indoor Meet
J,ma M.u shall ttntshed
eoghth over.JIItn the race v. tfh
a ume ot 19 53 98
On Sawrday sophomore
Tory lordan was lotu th ove oall 111 the 60-meter ddsh and
quahlted for the nati onal s Ill
the 55-melers wtth a tune ot
7 88 Jord.m htt the NAIA
pro\ISJonal mark lll tl1e 55 dt
the Otterbcrn meet
Other women 's results
lrcshman Sh,mnon Soulsby lmtshcd 19th m the 400-mcter rur1
( I 06 36) ,uld freshman Hope
Jagodzmsk1 timshed 14th 111 the
600 mete1s (I 57 89)
On the men 's so de sophu
more Brad Gliders produced
hJS thud stratght oulst,mdtng
pel forma nee. fthoshm g f11th Ill
lhe 600 meter 1un wtth a toOle
of I 25 31
Jumor B11.111 Molchell was
soxth 111 the 60-meler hurdles
(9 19) ,md 9th m the long JUmp
Other Redmen reqllt s fre sh

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

GQod washers &amp; dryers S9 5
&amp; up Washer &amp; dryer sets
$275 &amp; up Ranges $95 &amp;
up Frost free Ae!ngera tor
5125 &amp; up Cour.;h &amp; cha1r
$ 100 Overstutfed cha•rs
$20 &amp; up N1ce tult s•ze bed
w1tfl bolC sprmgs &amp; mattress
$75 Queen s ze mattress &amp;
box spr ngs $125 &amp; up Full
s ze bo&gt;. sp r ngs &amp; maaress
$
150
PRICES AT J~CKSON
Skaggs Appliances
ESTATES 52 Westl'. ood
76 V ne Street
Dr ve fro m $344 to $442
( 40)446 .,.3!18
Wa lk to shOP &amp; mov•es Ca 1
740 446 2:.l68
Equat ·- - - - - - - - Mollohan C arpet 202 C ark
Housmg Opportun•ty
Ctiape l Road Porter OhiO
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT (740) 44 6 74 44 1 877 830
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE I
9162 Free Estimates Easy
Townhou se
apartments t nanc•nq 90 days same as
and/or small ho uses FOR cash V sa' Ma~ ter C&lt;:trd
RE NT Call (71l0)44 1 11 t I Dr ve a I tile save a ot
lor apphca t•o• &amp; rnt or nat on
Thompsons App ance &amp;
DP.Iightful 1 &amp; 2 BR urul ~ Rep a 675 7388 Fo sale
nea• Holzer CIA I gh elf
re cond1t1 oned
au toma t c
c1ency gas turna ces Ou1et
washers &amp; d )8 s 1efngem
ocat1orl $359 to $485 to•s
gas a d e lectr r.;
(7401 44 6 2957
anges a1r cond1! oner s and
For
Lease
Bea u t fully wnnger washer,. Wrl ao
resto red t 1furn shed two repa rs :m maJor brands ll
bedr oom apart men l over shop o at yo u home

r

l oo ~ mg the C ty Park and
R1ver All new appl a noes 1
112
ba ll s
S6001m0
Secur ty
deposrl
or
sell
RJVerme
Reference s req wre d N o Buy
l..ms &amp;
pets Call 740 446 2325 or Ant qucs 11 24 East Ma1n
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 7 40
AfKl\11
740 446 4425
992 2526
Russ Moore
Furmshed e!t•c ency 3 room owner
1 6 ac res wo oded flat spot\
and b ath All u111 t1es pa1d
10lC 12 btuldmg wate r sep Downsta rs $285 919 2nd
MIS&lt;
"~Ol~
A.ll real ~state advertising
l
•c
e
ec
tnc
already
on
land
~
Rll
LINOL'F.
Ave (740)44 6 39 45
1n this newspaper I&amp;
S15 000 (740) 384 434 1
subject to the Fed~rat
Furn1shed one bedroom Apt
Fair Housmg Aet of 1968
$25 000
cash
grants
at 90 lC200 clean no pe ts Musl be w1l
N•ce leve
whtch maknlt Illegal to
GU ARANTE ED All
US
located at 201 A• rhne Road mg to g 1ve re tere rces
advertise nny
res1dents q ualify Money lor
rn !he Porte r area PncP.d at Phone (304)6 75 1386
preference limltalton or
btl s busmcss school ell,;
discnmlnatlon based on
$ 15 000
Ca l 1740)446
Grac ous lwmg 1 and 2 bed Call 1 800 363 5222 ext
race 'i:: olor religion ux
4 5 14 or alter 5pm ca I
room apartment s at V1l age 637
fam•hat statue or national
(740)446 3248
Manor
and
R•vers de - - - - - - - - ougln or any Intention lo
Apartmen ts 1n Middlepo rt 48 b•g sc reen TV e~tce lent
m!lke any such
N 1c~ mob•l e 110me s• tes
From 5295 $444 Call 740 cono t1on call (7401 992
preference limitation or
ava1l al.le $ 11 5 per mon th
(.,.dlserlminati(m
__53_o_ __ _ _ __
Includes water sewer If ash 992 5064 Equal Hous ng 6
OP.portunrt•es
call (740)992 2 167
Campbell Haussetd mr com
This newspaper w1ll not
New 4 room apt K•lche 1 pre~sor 5hp 26 gallon la nk
knowmgly aeeept
LA 2 BR bath No pets 125 max ps1 r·40 )992
&amp;d\{frtlsement s tor real
(740 )367 774 6 1740)367 6 137
estote which Is m
violat ion ol the law Our
7015 belore Bpm
10
s~s
Drun set 5265 electr c an d
readers are her,by
fOKRrNr
fu rn1shed accust c gu ta s (740)256
Informed that nil
no pots 11 02 rts k for Jr
dwellings !ldllartrsed In
2 bedroom house $300 p us
this newspaper are
JET
available on l')n equal
ulll t1es Call ~740)446 43 1:i
Ta a
Townh ouse
AERATI ON MOTO RS
opportunity base&amp;
Apanme 1ts Ve y Spac1ous Repa re d Ne,., &amp; Rebur 1 In
2 bed oom 1 bath stove
2 BediOOnlS 2 F oars CA 1
Stoc k Call Ron Evans 1
rolr 1gerator
turn shed
112 Bath Ne~~o;l y Carpeted
For lease or sa e n ce 2 Laundry 100m no pets ref
800 537 952{3
Adul! Po o &amp; Baby Pool
bedroom house $25 000 or erences
and
dep os11
Pallo Star! $3651MO No
tradeA&gt; tor hunt ng la,nd requ red (740 )992 518 1
Pets
Le ase Plus Secur•ry NEW AND USED STEEL
(740)698 7244
2 BR water/trash pa•d no Depos t Re qUired Dny s StPe Beams P1pe Reba!
740 446 3 481
Even ngs Fo •
Co crete
Angle
For Sale House on 2nd pets relerences &amp; depos 1
740
367
0502
Channel Ffal Bar Steel
Ave br qk 1 112 story Call requ reel ne ar Porter 388
Gra1 rng
For
Dra1n s
li DO
(740) 446 3476
Twm R vers Tower IS accept
Dnvew&lt;1ys &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
ng appl catiOns 101 wa I ng
Scrap Metals Open Monday
" FORECLOSURE!
li st lor Hud subs1zed 1 b
3
bod 1oom
house
n
Tuesday
Wed nesday &amp;
4 bed 4 Oath house on y
ap artmen t ca ll 6~5 6679
M•dd apor t
no
pets
Fr~day 8am 4 30pm Closed
$9 900 for st1ngs call
EHO
( 7 40 )992 5858
Tlt u sday
Saturday
&amp;
1 BOO 719 300 1 ext 1144
Two 2 tledroo m apts 101 re 1t Su nday (740)446-7 300
4 rou n house appl ances n Syracuse $200 depo ....11
Gall •pol• s
C ose
to t urn1s h ~d
washer/drye r $ ~30 per 0101 lh renl•nc ude Sol d wood bulch er b oclo,
!own/hasp tal 38R 2BA ~ook up $250 month .;.
.... ale sewer &amp; trash sull1 k Iehan sland wrth d awers
V1ew
pho tos mlorm at•on depos 1 Call (740)446 0974
c1en t ncome re qu rod to &amp; shelves 44x 24 e)(cell en t
onli ne www orvb com code
Q 1al11y lor rent 740 378 co nd to n S350 La z boy
60303 or ca l (740)446 Beaut lu! l bedroom co ll age
o&gt;J'ers•ze char &amp; t1a lf w1th
61 11
3032
nestled •n 40 acres of
sleeper bed and storage
\liiU II \"\lliSI
woods N ce s tl ng room lg
Olloma n elCr.ellent comiltlon
House for Sale
Sandhll bat hroom
ut lr ty
room
$500 (740)992 5082
Road 3 Bedroom 1 Bath $400/mo
plus
ut lites
11
Arms
Ultra
Sp r ngl1etd
(61 41595 7773 or 800 798
Com pr1 ct 45 w12 elC tra tlip
·-;
4686
cl p
$500
Oder
4BR
15
bath 1420
__
3 ye ar old GE washer &amp;: M cCotm u~:: kPom eroy .OhiO V ew pho ,..
M(lRII •·
•!\n~ dryet S200 Wh1r!pool se t {304}675 5066
losl ,nformat•on
online ~---&gt;liiliiRiiRii~ii1\i.l;.,_ $ 150 Wh~r poo washer
Wood fr glass top colfee
www orvb co m code 60603
$75 A I wh 11e Call ali e f
lable 6 couch wl ma lch•ng
2
bedroom
m
ob1
le
home
1n
or ca ll (740}992 3650
6 OOpm (740)44iJ 9066
cha Elec sew ng mac h1ne
Mtddl opor t
$275 00 per
Ranch 3B A New H~ven mo nth $275 00 depos t 1 8 PC D1nnlng Room set n ce 2"' ZerHth color TV o:. w1dc
h1gh
Hutch
Ca
No w,.god $800 ~ Que en Brass X6
W Va V1ew photos/mforma year ease No Pets
after
9 00 ...PM BecJroom set $500 Arm o1re 17401446-(]S71
bon onlme www or wb com ca lls

11U

I.

H•~r~.,
mKSM~

.

II

HI

Hm

1510

-$-85~000--(-30_4_16_7_5-25_0_7~

Housmot
GUOIJOi

He

cod e
111 503
(304)882 2770

or

cal

(7 40)992 5039

$ t 50
(3041675 4004
(304)674 t3 15

2 Bedroom mobile home 1n :.::~:__:_:___:_~---­
Racine area NO PETS Good used Appii M ces
MOBil~ HoMJs
(740)992 5858
~
.., Re cond t1onod
and
Guaranl eed 1 W a~hers
Ra nges
and
2 BR Tra ler al elec tnc no Dryers
14x60 11ery clean ready to
Hud on AI a7 $250 a month Rel ngerators Some stan a1
move
tn1o
Furn 1sl1ed
13041895 3561
$95 SkliQQS Appliances 76
1nc tudrng washer/d ryer &amp;
Vme Sl (74 0)44 6 7398
sto rage bu1ld1ng $1 1 000 Beautiful river v1ew 1dea1101
(7401388 0460
one or two peop le No pets Used Furn ture Store 130
Bulav•lle P1ke Matlresses
re ler~nces (740)441 0 181
dressers
couches
1960 L•berty home s 14x70
bunkbeds rechne• s wt1at
3BO 18A As Is app ratsal
not s Grave M onuments
$8000
Must be moved
Only ask ing $4 999 Solid
4782
Gallipo
lis
(740
)44610
OH Hrs
A (M S)
Sunday
a1 rucJure Wall In sulated
by
appOintm
ent
(7400446 2451

f1lRSAI.f

Debbie

"'

' I •

Jlllll lJINI •
ItS

Sur,,

Bl ock brd. sewe r p pes
w1ndows lmte s etc Cl aude
W nters R o Grande OH
Call 740 245 512 1

-=== ==~~.,

r-

l:~~~~~~c.J

�•.

•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanted

·e

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Februaty 5, 2004

Help Wanted

.. Thursday, Februar.y 5, 2004
~ ALLEY OOP
~

www.niydailysentiriel .com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

-

..

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Valley . Priva1c Duly is accepting
applicaLions for nursing assi&amp;1ants to provide

Pleasant

R.B
Jruckino

home care 10 clieQtS residing in Meigs , Mason .
Gallia and Athens Counties. Applicants should
have one-year experie nce nr received a n~rs ing
assistant certificate o( training or be a state·

Broad Run Gun Club
February 8th
12 noon

teH cd nursing assistant.

- Excetlenl l'ay

Hauling
•limestone
•Sand•Din
740·985·3564

12 gauge slug shoot ..
12 gauge X Match &amp; hunting

• Mileage Rtimbur.sement

- Flexible Schedu ling
- One Weekend per Vlonlh
- One Holiday per Year

guns high brass
Al.l proceeas donted to
Wahama
School Band

• Primarily Da)'S

Applicatinns will he accepted 9 a.m . - :\ p.m.

Pomeroy Eagtes 2171

M-F at 1011 Viand Street, Point Pleasant. WV
or appoimmcnls can be scheduled on Fchruary

Band

a.m. at our MidLIIL:port location hy callin g 304-

8-12
I
. Friday &amp; Satur\Jay

also contact th1s number for lJUcstions or to
arr.ange a spcci fie rime to apply.

t

SUI'I'LlfS

Ii

II'Wr---:-~~-,
10
AliiUS

i~----FOR-IIiS•.U•£•---"

Pole ;Buildi ng Special
30x48x9, 1-3' entry, 1-14x9

sliding door, painted steel.
·gutter, erected, $8 189.00
24x32.x9.4", 1-3 ' entry, 2•10 'x8' insulated 011erheads.
:12· overtlang. gutters paint·ed steel. roof &amp; walls insulated. erected. $9247.00
30x40x9.4", 1-3' entry, 210'x8', non-insulated, painted steel, 12" overhang, insulated roof, gutter, erected
-price $10,157.00.
:74Q-742-4011 '
·800-396-3026

\ '\ "I'OR I \110\

•

All You Can Eat For
$6.00
Drinks Are Free
Where: Rutland

$500 t.Hon das,
Chevys,
Jeeps, elc
POLICE
IMPOUNDS ·cars from
$500. FOr listings 1-800-7193001 ext 3901

American legion

When: Feb.8,2004
Time: 'II :00 AM
until 5:00PM

10

New Homes • Vinyl
New Garages
• Replacement
Windows ·• Runfing

Doors Open 4:30

&amp; Sunday

Siding •

Early birds start

6:30
Last Thursday of
every mnnth ·
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
_IBj

Come o11e come all,

wormed (740)596-212 1
L---~~~-.J 2 1 Mitsubishi Mirage, 2_
(will lneet)
do r Coupe, 5-spd. 26,000
- - - - - - - ' - - - - "t500# round ba les Michael mil s, loaded. $5.400 OBO.
Full blooded Rat Terrier ·urke,
_ •
1
8
17401985 4444
puppy. Call (740)367-7468.
Phone: (740)256-1189.
4x4 round bales.
Fullblood Rottweiler pup87 F250, 4x4, Diesel. Call 1 7 Chrysler Sebring JXI,
pies, to a good home, $50
740-256-1206 or 740-446- Fullv loaded (304)675--2888
per pup, 3 males , 5 females ,
"'
0935.
call a1fer 5:00 P.M.
(740)949-2108
For SElle: Hay, $2.00 a bale. 1997 ) Neon Sport, 68K,
Golden Retriever Puppies AbOut tpoo _ bales. Call $2,695; 1995GrandAm, 20,
AKC $225 each cash first {740)446-7857.
99K, 1$2, 495: ~990 Nissan,
shots &amp; wormed (140)596- - - - - - - - - - 4x4, ~1 ,495; other in stock.
2121 {wi11,1meet)
Round bales $12.50 Square WET KE TRADES!
bates 2nd-cutting grass
COOK MOTORS
PiH bull pups, 7 weeks. 2 $2.50. Ear corn $2.50 a
[1~ )
40 446 _0 103
mate, 1 female. Mayfeild bushel. Ground ear corn
bloodline, $100. 740-441- $4.50 for 100 pounds. 96 Sa rn , needs work.
1275 or 7~ 0 -645- 116 2.
(740)992-2623
$1,000
(740)992-7719

-----+-------

r

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI
Let me do ;t for youI

liNDA'S PAIIDNG

B&amp;D Auto Sales
Hwy 16Q. N.
(740)446-6865

I

V4-AWDsNS
&amp;

,
./

1987 Chevy Blazer, auto,
4x4 , new tires, $1,500 ,
740 992 1493
:1_ _ :._1_ _-__ _ _ _ __
1993 Blazer S-10, 4x4 . low
miles, (740)992-6137

"-"'====="---1998 Dodge Grand Caravan

Sport, factory loaded, exceilent condition, 72,000 miles,
asking $6,800, (740)9494037 or 740-992-5082.

Hill's Self
Storage

Fot Illite infonna·

lion, ant1att your

local Ohio Valley
Publishinc office.

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
·45771

. 740-949-2217

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

IF MY t&gt;Ot.LA/l$ All~N'io
TOO ltJSY, .I'D
LI~E TO

w~
poLLA~S

-ro

PIC~ IJP

A HW.

Wof?~

fo~

CIIISTRUCnOII

Yt:JU/

••

• •
-

• New Homes

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

SOMfONf'S

Backhoe, Dozer,
. Foundations,
\Septic Systems,
~ater and Utilities

•

\"H .....VI-F _r 2-5

WE HAD 10 Gil HIM

:TH' EARRINGS

141·992·1611

':/''~""':'~1M""'

Stop &amp; Compare

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

...,

4

WELL, t 1\1"1 1'\011\
KNOW -11·1'\LL!

TIZU:J T rt\E. ·r KNOv-.J 1

' \&gt;ON'IYO\J7
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

DAY!

o

BARNEY

• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

"lfeeUike
.I'm out

A

•

I

1\ l!
(i

.I

1 u l.i

!I .) J

An swer to Prevloua Puzzle

Wt&gt;st
Pass

-1 •

Pass

North
2 .t.

Pass

42 Wes)ol
" Diamond
Lil"
43 Mineral
spring
46 Foremen
48 Gobbled
down
50 Lilerary.
genre
54 'Get
acclimated
55 Happen
again
56 Office
notes
57 Goodygoodies ·

23 Leave a

"' I II 7

South
1•

1 Del1 ght in
6 Ed'g e past
11 li)ecoys
12 Work clay
13 Ranger's
beat
15 Movoc
theater
16 Type
of gasoline
18 Shriver
of tenni s
19 Geisha 's
accessory
21 Place to
sleep
22 Shah 's land

East
3•
P~1 :-.s

Is this a reprise
or a variation?

-10 Party-tray
cheese
14 Dinner

mark

checks

25 Sizzling

DOWN

28 Char
30 Pizarro's
que sf
31 Cen.
fractions
32 Daily
record
33 P..O.
service
35 Inexpensive
3'7 Annapolis
grad
38 Secluded
va lley
40 Kitchen
pests

Politico
- Landon ·
Sonny and
Che"r. once
Bruin ice
great
Dizzy .
Latin I verb
Fishtail
Traveler's ·
stop
Profound
scavenger
"Losl
" 26 Decla im
Horizon"
27 Cookbook
role ·
amts.

2

3
4

5
6
7

8
9

15 Fragrant
wood
17 Message
unscram·
bleis
19 Mytholagi-.
cal hunter
20 Hairslyle
22 Capri or
Wig hl
24 Legendary
bird
25 Ve ldl

29 Unil of work

34 Oversupply
36 Pel in a

cage
39 Famed loch
43 Go to lhe
pool

44 Corn bread
45 Grad
46 Nectar
gatherers
47 Tombstone

deputy
49 To and51 Here.
in Cannes
52 Snug bug's

locale
53 Uh cousi_n s

';l

Two days ago. we saw .a deal renttrrr'"•9 an
uppercut It Ihe decla1er could have drawn
lrurnps. he would have done so 'Ni r, hOL.I
loss. But before he could gam llie lend a
defender rutled 1n w1th a middl1ng trump
Oeclruer was forced to overruli Willi rr. r
honor. and thts spawned a trump trrck tor
!he olher defender
Is lh1s deal another eKampre of OJ dP.IenSIVC trump promotiOn or IS !here a tWISt m
the tadpole's ta1P
Here rs how the play wenl a~ the table~ ~
lour spacle s East won tr1 ck one w ti-t th e
heart 10, casheU lh e hear I aL:e. dflJ cur
tinued with th e hear! k1ng. Sou:l1 ruffoo U8
wi th h1s ln,rmp ace . cashect t'le spade_
queen. and crosse·j to dummy·s spade
kmg . East lhrowmg a heart. Now the
declarer pl ayed a club· to hts queen. bul
lhe finesse lost to West's king Oeclaret
had no optiOn but to co ncede one down
the defenders talung one .spade. two
hearts and one club
Tr~:~e. South was unlucky Spades m1ght
nave d1111ded favorably and East for hiS
three· level overcall. raled to have llw ct\JI!
k1ng. But br1dge - lrke life - rsn't always
fa1r.
II looks as 11 dec l&lt;~ rer walkecl rnlo a tr·ump
promo110n Hm...·ever. 1t 1·e held JUSt paused
to cons1der hiS op11ons. he rn igh t h8 'Je
not1ced that. bar'nng Wes ts 11av' Jr1Q all lou r
trumps. he haLl only th ree losers lwo
hearts and one club. At t11ck tnree. he
shou ld have calmly diSC i'HderJ hlf; c111b
queen
1
If East leads a lourt h heart. declarer can
ruft (or overru!l) 1111he dummy. then d1aw
trumps Without loss
When lhe detense IS try1n9 tor i-'111 uppercut. look lor a loser lo p1tch

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
V. ,.:

t1·

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f

IJr-.a.Js

.~·.,..;;,.~ '·· ·~ l .P :~r ~~, t ,
r;;.:r ~
1 I .~lt••o
t•~ .- · ·~· ~' l 'CS 'O• d PO!hf'•

past a"(J presl!f1t

TM:l,\ s c i(rl'. G f'Qtra's .\.!

" 08

YTEOIEOV

FKTA

B RRS I . B K E N 0 B 0
VKB I VORBVR

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GPVN

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ENR

IEVBSYTS."

IKHR'

\ TYOBRT

G Y TOY

TOHAR ..

PREVIOUS SOL UT!o'N - · Umy.doclor told me I only had SIX minuteS to live.
1I\Ould11 l br ood l d type a l11\le fas1er - Isaac As1mov
iCI ?00~ b) NEA. lnr..

on a limb!"

2-5

1

~al!ipolis ilBailp m:ribunr

(740) 446·2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint ~lrasant ~rgi!iter

(304) 675-1333

I

7~0-992·7953

BIG NATE
'"Not mel
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Finonciol Services,

tW AOVERSARY

Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264 ."

NEMESIS .

11'1"

E.NEM'(.

1 me

\

O ~earr:::1g"

WELL, T HERE's NO USE
PUTTING IT OFF A NY
LONGER . T IME TO GO
IN THE'-RE AND FACE

Box 189,

HE L L O . UMM
JusT A t'\O ME N T
LL GET IT

t1Y

ARCH

NAT£

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roollng &amp; Guuers
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Oec;:ks
Reduced Winter Rates

PEANUTS

I CAtb I-lEAR VOU, MAAM

THE~E'5 AN ECI-W IN I-I ERE ...

OF IN M'&lt; FACE. SIR ...

IMPORTS

Athens

22 Years Local

Your.Righllo Know,lltliveml Righllo

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

740-742-341

J&amp;L
Eledrit
•Ucensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740·!111•0!131
Cell 740·5!11·1 07]

~~'R~
High&amp; Dzy

Dean Hill
BETTY'

New&amp;: Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 2527L

1·800-822-0417
"W.V's #I Chevy. Pontiac, Buick. Olds

Dealer"

Sian ley foqyinq
and Jree Jrimmin
•Timber Harvesting
and Management
• Residential Tree
Trimming and
Removal
• Free Estimates
( . til ·
&lt;..11 ~ Sl.tnln

i7 -lHi 7 -l:! - 22 'JJ

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

GARFIELD

~~~~------~-,,
IS II IRUE IHAI YOU
HAVE NINE L-IVES?

740·992·5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Corllracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing ·All types

740·992·7953

internal Medicine ·
·MediCal Oncology

I.

GRIZZWELLS

'er:en

oi 'th'e

fc,_•r lCfO'Tlbi i!.J worc1 belcw tc l crm f6~r ,...::: r:: s

S

i,

S I r: G

I I' I I r
f-,1._' ,o_r-,
c_r·.--1·

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FICs; dummy . "Whal do !hey
de at a dog !rack~ .. Second
dummv: "Tr.at's where people
go to race.dogs.- First dummy"Do the - -- - - - - T

ARIE S (March 2 1-Apnl 19)- G1ve every
body you mee t tor t!1e l1r st time tOday tl1e
benefit of th e doubt. If y::~ u JUCJge tl1ern •rut
by t11err app earance or who ti1 ey rc wrtt1.
you tlllght meet someone you d rea lly irkc
TAUFl US (Aplll 20-M,'ly ?Ol- Even I you
feel you re the true rnJured pO\r ty 111 a tJngtc
w1th anoH1e1 today. be the peac(!rmrll.er lJy
l1ndrng a way to diSsolve tlr l:l d1 sayreernent
that arose between you and the other per·
son .
GEMINI (~fly 21-June 201 - Thtnk 1mpor
tant mutters over carCtulty today. but do
not use elC Cess v~ cJel lbO rdllun VC~crllatmq
back o:~nrJ torth will onl•t contuse you fwthcr
and 1mparr your 1udgrner·t. not hP.Ij~ 11
CA N CEr~ 1Jun e 21-July ??) - In n s1tua
tron todAy where '{O L. mJ•t be sharmq
sornethmg of value with wnotrrc r. tJe sure
ti1C diVISIOn 15 equa l and fa11 Unlt:Jo.S alii:,
JUS!, hu rt fee lrngs cou ld a1rse that wil l h&lt;Jvc
to be reparrecl
LEO (July ?3-Aug £'::') - Ym(re npt to be
a b1t more su sceptible to t1ot1 ery today
lhan usual Sort1eono who rs aware of ttm..
lact may try to WtdiJ •tou around hrs or her
hnger 111 order to gel somethrng out .of ynu
VIRGO (Aug 23 -S ept ?;..&gt;) - Be parhcu·
lflrly ca1eful ab out diSCiosrng {lny conlldcnhal 1nlonnnt1011 thJI could hurt an ottlet
Talk fra nkly to t11ose you trust but be Gn
guar'd and tn;~ht - lrpped w1\h all other.s
_LIBRA (Sep t 23-0c t 2J, - Your resollie
and se lt-r:11 Scrnllne may stand the test of
tnn e Ieday but 11 you're aw&lt;rre of 11. y:.;. u
should be up tO 1t1e :as., w ll!:lil turnptil\I::Jn
IS strewn over lorb1Ud811 IJ&lt;t lhs
SCORPI O (Oct 2&lt;1-Nov 221
1:. Jl llor1 0I
above persnnal \J flln tocl,ly rt you t1nd VOIII
SOil 111 ll SJ!Uall011 WI1Crc Yl.: U CJL, Irl df:l rV!O
some type ol l&gt;cncf t 11 you wuu l\1 :.nr 1y
IO'.veryour star1Uardsd1Jrl D,Jn t.:.. .lcroll' i
to duce~tron .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov ?:_
1-Der 21) - Gr;. t
past be1ng a procr&lt;~st 1nator today ·aod oe n · ·'
producer lnStP.ad Of SearChing for CJi CUSC!o
as to why somet111ng shouldrr I !Je donA
ta ke stock ,of yourself and meas ure up IO
your worth

c.moc~· '"" ~., ,,_e, ""

oared to st&lt;rnd up lor yo·.H rtqhl "' todd y r 1
.mauers where you feel you J re r1ot UP1n:.")
tr eated tarrh,o Any wrong5 \'Ou belreve &lt;Hr
beirn g perpetr"ted on you . can IJe Pi'l~rly
rectr 11ed

O

rh~ ci'lu:~l@ quoted
~'f I li•ng '" the r•1111on g wo rds
1Qu Ll~·eiop lrorn ~rep No 3 below.

I I I' I I'

(Of'"'!f; :t'rf!

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

Reocat- E&lt;ude- Swepl- Nimble- EXAMPLE
I had q1ven a lor.c. lc:tu re lo my San on how lo acta!
school :u-ncttons.Sm.Ugly my husband rem 1n ded me that

wre n you g1ve ac'"ce

if sr,ould

te by

EXAMPLE.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
~---~~--

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. !:0 Yol.l &lt;7UPR&gt;?£ LIMA i\.jURIVIA\i

\'7

530 West Union Street
C

l

~· t:;~~~~~~t~'-'----'-i..~--

MD,' FACP·

Suit~

II JUSI SEEMS IHAT LON&amp;
WHEN LIVING WIIH 'o'OU

I

PATEL CLINIC
Halesh M. Patel

f

•

I•

Seff-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomerqy, Ohio ·

Feb . 6. 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
A r1umber ot ma1or changes coul d be 1n
store for you 1ri ihe yeilr al1e&lt;1d. ond
cham.es are all wril be of o posrt1ve nature
Each alterat10n you makewr ll be re":&gt;ormsl·
ble f01 unprov1ng your l1f e 111 sn me mAnner
AQUA RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)
Someone
who has your best 1ntcrcsts or heart lllilV
suggest a course ol actrun lor you today ll
you allow your stu bbornness to prevrul.
you m1ght rnsrst on totlowrn g ·"' J)recarrOirS
path
PISCES tFeb 20 March 20J - People
With whom you assoc1a te today may Irave
far more respect and &lt;::~ pprecr a tr on for yow
tal ent s and abilr 1res than you do yourse lf
Frid~'Y•

T hey'r e ng h t , you·re wron:J

VOU!l, NEW &gt;IAIRDO 15 SORT

992-6215

NOTICE
FOR funds lor 30-60-90·
Applications
APPLI.CATION days, 6 months. or 4 should be sealed and
UNDER THE UNI- years is three and one marked "Application
FORM DEPOSITORY half million dollars
under the Uniform
ACT MEIGS COUNTY, ($3,500.000.00). the Depository Act;•
OHIO
estimated aggregate Howard E. Frank
Notice is hereby amount of Interim
Meigs
County
given that applica- funds lor a time·to be Treasurer
tions will be received designated by the (1) 29, (2) 5
1
by the undersigned at
County Treasurer durthe office of the Ing the next four
Board of Meigs coun- years Is One Hundred
Public Notice
ty Commissioners , Thousand
Dollars
Courthouse , ($100,000.00).
BE IT FURTHE.R NOTICE: is hereby
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 12 noon o the RESOLVED,
-that given
that
on
12th day of February notice be given to all Saturday, Febniary 7,
2004, and·opened and banks In said County 2004, at 10:00 a.m., a
read aloud at 1':00 : In such financial Insti- public . sale will be
P.M. o n that date from tutions as may ba held at 4n5o SR 248,
any financial lnstttu- necessary as provid- Long Bottom , Ohio.
tlon . legally eligible ed by law. All appli- The Farmers Bank
which may desire to cants shall submit, In and Savlnga compasubmit a
written writing, their Institu- ny Is selling lor cash
application to be a tion's policy concern- In hand or certified
Public Depository of Ing the following; 1) check the following
the Actlva, Inactive, Charge lor checks; 2) collateral:
and Interim daposlts Service charge; 3) t 986 ClayJon Sun
of puljllc moneys of Minimum
balance Mobile home 40285
4) The The Farmers Bank
said Board' as provid- required;
ed by tha uniform amount of Three and and
Savings
. Act, One Hall
Million Company, Pomeroy.
Depository
section 135 of the Dollars qualified for
Oh lo, reserves the
Ohio Revised Code.
under 30% of total right to bid at this
application non·publlc assets; sale, and to withdraw
Said
shall~ made In con·
(1 0%
Savings
II the above collateral
formlty with the fol- Loans,
non-public prior to sale. Further.
lowing
resolution assets I. Said Board of The Farmers Balik
adopted at a regular c 0 u n t . y and
Savings
mHIIng of the Meigs Commissioners Company reserves
county Board of reserves the right to the right to reJect ay
Commissioners held reject any or all bids. or all bids submitted,
February 3, 2004.
Awards lor the Active,
above
· The
BEITRESOLVED, Inactive,. and Interim described collateral
that the estimated deposita of public wlfl be sold ·"as IsII!Hirageied maximum funds subject to .the . where Ia", with no
amount of public . control of the said expraaaeil or Implied
fUnds subJect to the Board will be made warranty given.·
control
of
sold on Aprll29, 2004, for a
For further InforCounty Treasurer to period of lima com- mation, · or for an
be Active deposits at mencing on tile fat appointment
to
.,y 111111 lima during day of May, 2004. Inspect
collataral,
the next 4 years. Is Each applicant ohall prior to sale dale conth,.. snd one hall lumlsh . a copy of lt'o tact Cyndle Gillilan,
million
dollars most · recent 1t11te.. Diane
Rector, or
Randy Hays 'at 992($3,500,000.00). the ment of condition
ntlmated aggregated signed by It's Ca 0 hlar 2136.
imount of Inactive or autl&gt;orlzed officer.
(2) 4, 5, 6

•

&amp; EARNEST

Puryou~

ROBERT
BISSELL

Pomeroy, Ohio

Publk Nolict5 in~~~~:~~/:~~

•

"- AQ
Ilea let·: South
Vulnerable: Nor th-Soulh

'IOU \"i-\11\\K l'rt\ ""
f\ ~OW- IT· F'L!-,

MAKl

2

SQuth
A .- \QIIIR /.'i
• ~ 3
• A Q J

Phone (7410)~;93-61io7ll
Athens. ltbio.
A Beller

·

V.C. YOUNG Ill

LIC
NOTICES

•
"- KJ !I ·t

750 East Stale Street

tills widely read
sedion to wish
someonea
Happy Blrtllday,
provide a11Iak

I

il

1\~· 7· 4 :.!

FR~NK

aren't ott1y for
bUying or selling
items, you can use

You, alii place an
ad "In Memory"
ola loved otte.

j

Ea"il

:J

CA LL T&amp;D HYDRAULICS,
· ask for Terry @ 740-985-4384

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

r

1979 Pontiac Bonneville,
TRUCKS
AKC Min. Pinscher, male t -.
EQIJJPMF.NT
301 , auto, needs minor
IURSALE
repairs . $400 50 H.P.
blkltan, 2 1/2 yrs_.old _ $225
cas h. Call (740)245-9497
3000 Ford Tractor, looks Mercury oul~oard and extra
good, runs goal:!. $3.800. parts, runs. $250. (304)675· 1991 Chevy S- 10 PiCkup,
AKC registered German Call 740 379-2860.
au to, ps, -$1,900 OBO
5131.
Shepherd , black &amp; tan, 6
(304)675-5253
1986
Mercury
Grand · ' - - ' - - - - - - - wks. old, shots, &amp; wormed,
LMSTOCK
Marquis. auto, V-8, ca ll 95 Chevy PU, $4,200; 98
(740)992-3972 after Spm.
Ford Ranger. 4x4. $3,700;
(740)992-7335
AKC Saint Bernard puppies,
-:::::-::--:-:::--:--:-- 95 Ford F150, $2,800; 88
1 male. 1 female . Ready to 30 bred Angus Maineanjau 1988 Ford Exp. Auto, 4-new Chevy PU, $2,800; 90
"
1ot s o1 Chevy, 4x4, PU , $2 ,5 oo ; 97
got Parents on premises. cross and Simmentat a:oss, 1·1res, new- banery
$300-$350. Call (740)?56- easy calfing AI bred starts goodies. runs good. $300 Olds Bravada; 97 Mazda
calf in Feb or March also 20 q'BO ~ (740)379 •928.5.
PU, $2,400: 95 Range r.
1090.
mature cows 14 of them AI
$2,300 : 94 Ranger, $2,000;
1
1
Cockapoo P,uppies $225
~5 Subaru · lmprez«. 98 Ford Windstar, $2,600;
each cash, 2 , shots &amp;
- ~· ·0 ·· 2 -&lt;loor, auto, $3·150 91 Ford- Explorer, $800;

K li

... 1:\Uj ·~~

rep1:1ir cy linders.

(10'K10' 610'K20')

99 Pontiac Grand Prill, Red
3800 engine . 30 miles to
gallon. exc. shape·. garage
kept (304)675-3986

·-------,.1

.. . J

'I In I&lt; I ..,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur- ·
nished. Es tablished 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basefl'!enl
Waterproofing .

7

•
Wrst

Alllus
IUK Si\I.E

92 Buick Regal power windows and locks, AMIFM
cass. , tilt steering, cruise.
Runs great, good co ndition.
$2 ,000 080 740.245-5295
or 740-339-0426.
1 \ ln l "' l 1'1 ' 1 ''"'
4 Sale Green Wing Baby
~\ 11\I..,I(H"
Macaws $1 ,200 each 2
hand/ raised (304)743·3870 rlO
FARM

.

.MONTY

•

Opening lead: • R

1233. - - - - - 86 Escort, 4 dr., 4 cy l. , auto.
new tires. fuel pump. brakes.
engine has been replaced.
$1150, (740)742-4011

Everyone Welcome!

A K Lt

Alsu ~ Hawkline Urushogs, box bladt's, grader
blades utility 1railers, goosent.'t'ks., and mort'.
And ...Nt,w Masse}' Ferguson Tradors.
Call for detail
As always ~· est ill . han hyd rau lk hoses. oil and

96 F350 Power ·stroke, Wrap around Brush Guard
D1esel,
121,000 miles. for .:..ZR2 S10.. $350 , ca ll
(740)441 -0751
Phone (740}245-0331

94 Stratos bass boat, 120hp
troll ing motor, fish . finde r &amp;
!railer, $6800 ffrm, (740)7421999 Olds Intrigue GLS 4011
Black
wfgray
Leath_~r
60 ' AlfiO PAKIS &amp;
AT. PW. PL. PW/Moonroof
Accr~:uui'S
79.000 miles asking $7500
(304 )895-341 7- leave mesOriginal 2.9 Ford Engine,
sage
$500.00 FIRM. Fiberglass
topper. Ford Ranger short
2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser bed. $100.00 (304)576limited. 25 ,000 rpiles , 5 2806 after 6 PM
..
speed. loaded. Needs painted. $6.500 OBO. (740)256-

II.' +l .i I I~

!\OrJh

....

&amp; Mm-oRs
FORS.U£

II~

BUILDERS IDC.

s•.

BoATS

Announcements

BINGO 2171,
Every Thursday

Now Available at T&amp;D Hvdroullcs
• Form Pro Troctors
20 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
25 Hp :Z Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive
Each has rull J year warranty on par1s and labor.
Prked from $5,000 &amp; $13,000 wfoptions a"ailable.

_.r.Wos.. &amp;..._,JI r...-·AA·~-P.:.urrs&amp;_.l

..,r_,

"Third Shift"

675-7404 or 1 -866-QQ~-69 1 6 A~~licunt.&lt; may

,_ll'lf,lllll

BISSELL

Pomeroy Eagles

60

13th and Fchruary 27th from ~ :3 0 a.m.- ·11 :30

.BUHJJING

41 Great Lakes

cargo

NU RSING ASSISTANTS

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~

~ER ~L

IW"\10 .,

Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone: (740) 59i-5918
Office Hours: 8am-5pm (Mon-Frl)

·,

U medical care is all 11bout caring with
heart's tender touch and warmth of
tears and smites alung with the cutting
edge care, well, yqu cnn ·count onus.!

. d 1 mo

.I

I

,I,

•

•

·;

�-·
Pag_
e 86 • The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Southem falls to
Iancers,Bt

•
\

NFL rescblds Kltna's _.
tlne, B6

en

I
{

Jabali Afrika

I
·Alice's adventures "'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

~in Wonderland~ .

•

(;ALL J!'O LI S - Tickets .111d "L't dcsi~ nl'r.
up( mlling pntOrlktz said. "I ti.•t•l that it's
I ll t! ll CL'
of
'Alice's impurtallt to brin ~ (c hilAdvc i l t llrL'" ~ 11 \V(uJderb tJd,'
drc·n) into the tils'ater

t(H. tiJL'

Ar iel .trl' now on -;ale.

,lt the

beca use

Pc rt(n1m antTs arc 7 p.111.,

W L'

I

~·

I

1

11 \ l f •

SPORTS
• Judge rules Clarett eligible
for NFL draft. See Page 81

ncl'd p L·ople

Fricb y. ' Feb. 27, a 2 p. m. grm~· in g up w ho , love ;md
.S atunb y Fl'h. 2H lll :i'ti n cc c.Jrc about thi&lt; ~ui l din g .111d
and :1 7 p.n1 Saturd.l\·, Feb. \vhat ir ll l l';IIl '\ to the co m 2H l'Vl'llill!; pe r ~i.H tl UllCl'. . lllll ll itv. "
Even ing
JWrti..ln n;!ll CL'.
Tlw play \\ ill include;
p riCL'.; arc $5 lOr adu lt' ;llh..l
$2.5(.1 fo r stude11t's: ma tin t.'l' "0 1\IC lli U'iiL·;d ll ll lllht' rS
p ~.,-r flull LitlLL' pri ce..; :ll:L, S~ :t r r;m~cd hy Hu n.
fiH- ,llh_J!t~ .111d $).50 t(n 'itUBctz, who h,l'i wo rkL·d .IS
dc!l t'\, &lt;;c nio r' :1 nd \ 'L'[l'r:ltl"i. ,111 ,l.,'iJ .;t.n H di rL·cto r o n
T ilL' ~)nlL l l t ctltl l l, dirl'ctcd ll\ :111\' o th er co nl ll ll.l ll lt)'
by Alll.IIJda lktzc is part nf
thL'&lt;lt'-.·r prod uctio n'
111
.111 d ti..)rt ro n .'SlllTL'd Ari L'i
Children's Th t'.ltre .1nd th.c· Ari zona as \\ l'll .IS writing
Ari el PLIYL' I'S .':=- lll t.' lllb er&lt;; :111d di rLT tit lg !Jn O W l\ pby,
of co!lllllllllity intercstL·d in ~.nd slw is pl.mnin g :1 'min produ ci ng pl.1y&lt; in th e tl1l'- im.lli.;tic Sl' t ' w ith · •nwr~
.ltl'r.
co .. ru nJc rhar t Sl' t .
"A rid. Children's T katrt·
Sh~..· s.l id at th e mo lll L' llt
is a pnr n nn of Ari el
Playi.:rs. '' Bt' tz :;~1i d. "It's .;lw pi.J n., to ~ray w ithin the
rh c.nc r ft.)r c hildre n . by I'L' ;] )Jll or ch ildren\ th l'a tL'L .
c hil dre n ~·:•
."1 lp\'e \\'o rk 1ng with.

Kenyan Music Troupe to Perform at"SSU
I' O R TSM ( l UT H As of Ati·i c lll .1rr .llld '\toryrL· lli 11g thn·t.• Jll usii. ian .,, h.lll.:; tl·l)ln
part of this yt&gt;:lr's cdl'brJti{ll l ()(rill' hutl l.\11 . ; pirit. lt j, .thn l(t.· ny.J in 1.:.1~t AfriL·:L
Th t.• Lr io \\ ,\\ p lTI{)rtll ing
of lllac k Hi story Month. '&gt;llllll't iH llg di ffc rc tH rhL· ll t l i wirh
the K cll\ ':111 NJti{)n.li
\'LT,itv
i:
.
doin
~
to
ct
npluslZt'
Shawne e
Sta tt'

University (SSU) is h os t J n ~ :1
free perfo rman ce by th t•
music troupt". j abali Afr ika. o11
Fnday. Feb. (,, i11 the SSU
Vern llifll: Center l(&gt;r the
Art&gt; .
· Jabali, whi ch "
th e

.

'

lll ac k !-I Js llll·s· Mnnrh.
'

"En-ry yc1r dunn g. Bl.t ck

History Mnmh,

\\'l'

ha\'l'. lwl

so nh.·bo d y 111 th t· A ti·icm An wr iL,l ll c nllllllllllity Ull ll L'

w SSU

&lt;pt'Jk on a

to

&lt;u l~c·c· r

they arc no te d fo r, .,:u d
Kiswahili word for "ro(k," is M.itthcws. 11 T h i\ yc.u·; Wt'
a group that tt-arurl' s auniqt! c d l' u ded ro 111 0 \ T ~~ l a di t1i.: rblend of so n ~, dance. .md t.' ll t di rcrt io n , ,l{Jd j etbali
in strum e nts,
In tersp erse d Afrik:1 i\ :111 ,n Jth l'miL·, o ri g l with an exoticcollt'c tion of 11.\l, .1nd di tfcre nt pcrfi.&gt;r11

ha ncc T l~e.:;i trc _tr u upc. hut
.Jft t.T tlh· gmu p ht.·g:ll l to t"t.•t• l
UJJIJ l'LL' \Sa ril y tT n snrcd. the
rhn.' t' pt.· rti.Htll lTS brokt.• :tway

mulr it..:ult ur.d qudcnt .1tl:1i rs .H

SSU snJ&lt;'t' F,·bn 1.1ry 2110! 1, the

T he te.1111 be hind 'Ahc·e' c hildn.: n."

~; nfo n J I .lllCL' is a rL':thz;.HlO ll

cn nsisr..; of Am.m d a lk tz.

of 1he Il l. Ilk H1stmy Month

dirc·cror: · M.1 tthew Abbott,

id eal s.
'' .A.I·i·i ~: ,111 - A111 cr 1l' ,\ 11 s h ;l VL'
1\Lh. k a ~ign ill cu n co ntribu tio n ro th l' h Pao ry of rhis
fi·unl the trn upt· a nd t{nmni
coun tr y. &lt;Jnd. for man y yc;tt~.
Jab. Ji i Aii·ik.J.
tb,H \\ ',1'\ o\'l·rloo kcd. "• '\;lid
''T hi s io.; a tru lv lll t.d t iMatt h c\\'~.
"To
h .1v~
fa ..:t·tcd
hand ."
s.11d
~..·v~..·nt..; like thi~ , tlut c m brac~..·
M atthl·ws. ''Tht·y co111 pose
1\I.J ck hl'l'it,\gl', " tru ly
"iO!l~s, play a \-,,r iery iJf insrru 11l l' ll ts, s in ~ h.umn ni cs. :111d im pon;nlt. and is a n:a li zatiot l
:1\..;o art' ra k ntt.'d d .1 11\_'t.T'\ Jnd ot' rlw drt'.llll th.n Cartn C.

d10 l\'u~ r.1 p h ~r:-.. It i~ .1 ti·;.:~..·. \Vood:-.on h ;~ d wlll' n they
JJ J: liiC L'. T ht.·ir Jllli Si l- is ~o n lt.' ­
Afric-an rh ythms.
Bh c k
1-1 isror y
Matt M.mhews, SSU's thin g rh:1t can be cnjoyc·d by sho\\r, an d t.:vc r yn ll L' can l' ll.J OY SLt r tc d
Mo nth. "
coordinator of Multi cultural ;1ll. .111d it ; d ~ ll lt.· lel,riitt''i o u r
I
For 1hore infi.nJ tl.ltiu n. l;l \1
Ac c llrding- to Matt h L'\\''\.
Stude1it Affa irs, beli evc·s this h n i u~c.' '
combination 1s a cc lehr~Jtiol .l
T he grou p. t um i ., ~ i n g of ,v)w h.t-; hl'L'Il U)()rd m.Hu r of (74!1) .1~ 1 - .V, J il)

s h ~. .· ~a i d.

th i11k til L·y

,1\T

"I ju11t

;IWL''iOilll'.

~fi.) purc h.l'\l' ti c k L't~ or for
di rcnnr; Ktlll
~ra ge
n Lm.tg(.-r : ll\ OI'L' in t(.)r mati o n, pl ease
-146S.1brin :1 Hurt. IIJU51C direc- c.J!I the Arid at (7 ·lli) ...,
tor: J.l.ogcr Cox, pro du cer 27X7.

.l'i'i l'i t.lllf
V:m co.

c; /\ L L I I' 0 L IS kc nh o,HT: CO ll tlt)' sin gl' r,
T iLl ers are now on s.1k t(Jr J&gt;anl W illi a111S; a11 d vcr~a ti k
the Un ircd Way of Gallia pianist. L1Mar Wvsc, :21 11 11County (UWCC:} :1nm"'' 114 UW (; C: Honorary
fu nd ra isL·r.· "H o t Timl' in
( : h,\1 I' Jll ,\) ).
rhe Old TilSsin ."
All pr&lt;Kt' t'cb of the dinT his yea r's event. titkd ,
II

"O p e n Yo u r

H eart.'•

n c r/ thl'a tre tl111d rai se r w ill

is

&lt;r hed ukd for Valent ine'&lt;
J),1y. Satu rday. Febr uary I+.
ar the· Ho liday Inn fi'OJ ll (,
, to ') p.1n. , .111d will lc'.Jtllre
[ h c ,t t r e - i 11 - t h ~: - r o u 11 d
L' ll tc rtai 1111 H.: nr .

lw .dl oc.Ht•d rn th e 12

Un ir,·d Way- fimded ;,gellcil'.; ·th:lt

p rovi d~..·

st: rvi ces

to ht· lp ind iv iduals, families and children in nct·d in

More than 511 pt'IH' Jlt of this arc·,1.
d1L' dinn cr /c ntL· ru inm cnt
T he .(.!;L' IlL' ic..; inclu de:
Th e walls of the Arid
Theatre wiil soon ri ng wit h
the sounds of Wel sh har pi't
Ca trin Finch.
Fin ch, whose new C: l)
C ross i11.~ til&lt;' Stoll&lt;' has rece ntl y
been released by the So ny
C la~sic al Label , will pertlm n
at K p.m., Friday, Feb. 20.
Her appearan ce i ~ mack
possible by T he Yo u n~

211111l. hn d1
was
In
•
appoi nted !loya l Harp i't to
Hi , l{oya l Hi ghn e" 1 T ht·
l'rnll·c nt' W;~k,. She is the
t1r:.;r
ro
I'L'Cl'IVC
a
roya 1

C on ce rt Artists, In c. , in cm1-

R ul·w n

ap p o in tll lL'Il t

sin cL'

Q u ee n

Vic toria ap pointd Wd sh
ln rpist Joh n T ho nus in I H70.
The trad ition cbtc·s back to
th e I Srh Cl'lltmy, " ;h,· n
Ap

Hu w

w as

nec tio n wi th the Madog ;~ ppoi ll( e d by Ed\vard I.
Center fnr Welsh Stu dies and
T icket' art· SI ll for ad ults
th e Arid Theatre. ·
and S.i ti&gt;r ch ildren agt·s 12
Finch has playl'd the harp :m d under. They arc availa hlc·
si Jll.: e she was six. when s h ~. · :lt d w Arie l and the M adog
be .. an kS&lt;o ns with Eli nor
I
t"
( :cntL'r. For
m o re in tl.uma llcnn ctt . She progressl'll at I ll
'
to th e World J-b rp C: on grc·ss (] on, pk.J&lt;c call Jan ll c·rz.
' in Pari ,, and ~ h e n she w;JS 1 J, Ariel dirc'Ctor at (74 11)44(,_
she was th e you ngest membt·r · 27K7 or Kara Lew is, M.1dol(
to perform at ·a IJI! C C:cntrr director at (740)245Pro m cnad e co n cert.

7 1H() .

s u ~:ll l

OBITUARIES
Page A5 .
• Pauline Rife, 93
• Mary Jean Keller, 72
• Clarence A. Bradford, 83
· • Staff Sgt. Roger Clinton, 37

• A Hunger for More.

See Page A2
• Expert vigorously
de.tends the Old
Te~tame"nt's historical

··

reliability. See Page A2

• Law Yc&gt;u can use.
See Page A5
• WOUB-TV bridges
cultural gap with educational programming grant.
See Page A6

WEATHER

eve nin g'~ hu Ht· t

l'll l'llll

of Cuu i lc il )~

.c hl c kt' n

h,r:l!scd

hre,I ~t

Trcc~t rll L' Il t

f alii ily

Community
Serv i Le~; Gallia

with ri ce · pilaf-- .111d the· Co un ty C oun cil o n A ~ ing
(Ill t'it.\ 11 d j 11 h l'll tt' 1'(;1j llllh_' 11 t
(Se 11i m Ce ll[l'l'); Gallia -- sho uiJ pr&lt;')vid e coupk..,
and g ro u ps with a spcLi:~ l
way to ro p o tT rlll'ir

( ;ir! ScotJ ts (Seal
of O hio Cc&gt;JJll Cil In c.);
Vak nti 11 e's Day.
"Cele-br ity waiters, pl us Holzn Hospicl': O utreach
:md
thl' c·hancc for thO\l' Ce nter: l ~e t i r l' d

attc n Jing . t o

great

\-Vj n

~o m c

p rize~. cll'l"' "ll l'l' to

to the
.C\'l'lllll g

CI ~OY lll l'n t

"

ad d

Datatla on P••• A&amp;

Meigs C o·mmumty Action
A~c· nc·y;

SL' n io r Vo h liH L' Cf Prugram ;
Sc n ·nity
H o use;
and

of th l' Woodl a11d Cl'ntl' rs.
l lc ,erv:l tion~

fo r

th e

.J ~..·a n . . Houck. cx~·t· t.t tivc
dirt·c tor. &lt;;mi. "Wt· tru ly "Hot Timt· in th e Old
ap prc'CJ&lt;l tl' the p:mieipa- Tow ri~' eve nt e m be made
tiu n in this eve nt by Elvis by call ing ;14(&gt;- 2442 ur
Imp erso n .Jtor,
D w i ~ht 441&gt;-K41111.

formula funds to design a
museum room. install a security system and replace winPOMEROY -" In a . tirst dow glass at the building,
step toward creating a visi- . which the Southern Local
tors center and museum at Board of Education transthe Buffington Island battle- fered to the coumy when it
field site, Meigs County was vacated three years ago.
Commissioners
have Use of ihe building has been
approved two contracts for granted to a Portland comwork at the Port land munity group as a communiElementary School. ·
ty center, but Commi ssioner
Commi ssioners will use Jeff Thornton said the coun$20,000 in Community ty hopes to access grant
Development Block Grant funds and other money to

J.

INDEX
2 SECfJONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A2, A6

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

DearAbby

A3

Editorials

A4

Faith• Values

A2

Movies

As
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Bt-2, 6
A6

© OOU4.0hlo Valley Publl•hinx Co.

'

228 Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Drive-Thru Window,

'992-5432

,

develop a mu seum and visi - ·tographs and video presenta- co ntract for $9,793 with
tors center at the school sim- tions, and the county will use S&amp;B · Computers
and
itar to that at the Chester a portion of the grant to pur- Security
System s
of
Counhc\u se, which the coun- chase royalty ri ghts to those Ravenswood. W.Va. for the
ty also owns.
photos.
security system at the bu i ld ~
Meeting Thursday afterCommi ss ioners rejected a i ng. Two bids for new safe ty
noon, .
commi sioners portion of the firm 's bid glass were tabled.
·
approved a $4,500 contract whiCh included the purchase
with Fal con Design and , of televi sions and other elecMarketing of Pomeroy ·for tn:mic equipment. however.
the de sign of a museum allowing the Ponland group
In other bu siness. commi sroom . The room will include to purchase .needed equipnew furnishings as well as ment from other sources sioners opened and tabled
graphic di splays using the using CDBG funds . .
firm's copyrighted phoThe board also approved a
Please see Museum, AS

Other business

POMEROY - To commemorate Ohio's bicenten·
nial, a special rifle has been
created honoring Meigs
County.
There will only be 10 of
these rifles made and they
can be purchased from
Investment Arms
Inc.
Modeled
after.
1894
Winchester .45 Colt Rifle ,
these rifles are intricately
crafted with scenes from
Meigs County.
Each individually numbered rifle will be beautifully finished using 24-Karat
Gold and jeweler's grade
Nickel Silver to highlight
the detailed engravings
depicting historic events
and industries in that lent
themselves to the 'making of
Meigs County. On the sides
of the rifle are pictures of
Morgan's Raid, the Ohio
River, salt mining and the
Chester Counhouse. •
These fully- functioning

Turner returns
home Sunday
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Army Staff
Sergeant Roger Clinton
Turner Jr.· will be returned
· home to Meigs County once
more before he is buried in
West Virginia.
Turner, 37. is Meig s
County's first loss in the war
in Iraq. He was one of 12 soldiers killed on Sunday in an
attack in Balad , Iraq.
Met Hancock,
.
The 1984 Meigs High
holds a speciai edition rifle engraved in 24-Karat Gold with School graduate had been in
scenes from Meigs County's history. There wil l only be 10 of
these rifles made. (J. Miles Layton)

Please see Rifles, AS

.Please see Turner, AS

Snow days pile up for EAGLE
Meigs County schools· FOR
J.

MILES LAYTON

POMEROY - It's snowing again and that means
one thing for students all
over Meigs County - snow
· day!
Snow days are both a
blessing and a curse for
many. On the plus . side,
teachers, students and many
others can have the day off.
but not everyone gets to
play in the snow. Principals
and office staff still have to
go to school while everyone
else is taking it easy. .
€ustodial and maintenance
workers need to be present
because the snow is nor
g~ing to shovel itself.
On the minus side, tests,
assignments and . sporting .
· events have to be rescheduled. State law which
allows districts to miss up to
five days without any extra
days added onto the end of
the school year. Meigs
Local has missed seven
days this year for various
reasons including high .
water. Southern Local has
missed four days and
Eastern Local . has missed

six days. These days will
have to be made up at the
end of the year.
After the February snow
storm last year, legislators
discussed the possibility
increasing the amount of
inclement weather days
allowable so that schools
would not have to stay open
well into the summer in
order to make up the days.
"Our responsibility is to
educate our children," said
Deryl Well, Superintendent
at Eastern Local School
District. "The state can not
control the weather. It is not
fair to the students to take
off and not have to make up
these days up if you are
striving to be excellent system.11
Both Meigs Local and
Eastern Local schools dismissed two hours early
Thursday, but this will not be
counted in the total of
missed days, though the districts will have to make up
the missed time. Students at
Southern Local were not so
lucky and had to stay in
school.
"I was hoping .we would

Please see Sno.w. AS

SCOUT CLASS NAMED
LOCAL· VOL·U NTEER

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

1
.POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
-· One of the largest Eagle
Scout classes in the Tri-State
Area Council of the Boy
Scouts of America will be
recognized along with three
adults at a Sunday ceremony
in Huntington .
The class of 2003 , consistmg of 33 members from
troops in West Virginia, Ohio
and Kef!tucky, will be f!amed
for Point Pleasant re sident
Charles "Ticky" Henson, a
council volunteer for more
thall 30 years.
Area Eagle Scouts who will
be recognized in the ceremony include Jonathan Hen son
of Troop 259 ·in Point
Pleasant, Joshua Simpson of
Troop 299 at Hemlock Grove,
·Ohio, Rex McKi'nniss of
. Troop 200 in Gallipolis, and
Jimmi Skidmore of Troop 205
at Patriot. Ohio.
The ceremony is 2 p.m . in
the Experimental Theatre at
the Joan C.
Edwards
Performing Arts Center on the .
campus
of
Marshall
University. A reception · will
folltlw and the council
expects attendance · to be
around 200.

Char Ie s = = - - Henson,

who began
his scouting career
in February
1970 with
Cub Scout
Pack 258
m
Point
Pleasant,
served as a
committee
member ,
den leader
and cubmaster dur·
ing
the: !~:;~~
time
he h
spent
the pack. He
then joined Troop 259 in
Point Pleasant, and served as
committee chairman before
taking over as scoutmaster
until 1988 .
He has served as the BSA's
district commissioner and
Roundtable chairman for the
Meigs-Gallia-Mason District.
In 1994, Henson joined Cub
Scout Pack 262 and served as
den leader and cubmaster for
five years. He reassumed the
posirion of Troop 259 's scoutmaster in 1999 and continues
to serve in that capacity today.
He has been a para-profes-

sional for
the M-G-M
District
both parttime and
full-time
since 1996.
Hen son has
al so served
as advisor
for
the ,-------.,
Thal -Coo Zyo Lodge
457 since ·
1970. and
has been
c a m p

director for
the
pa st iosinta
three years . '
Shn"'10"
Hen s on
has
four
children
and
five
grandchil dren. His
daughter
C a rot yn
was a Gold ~j~~~
Award Girl Rex
Scout, while
son Charles Jr. is an Eagle
Seoul. Daughter Andrea is a
member of Venture Crew 259
and sonionath an is part of the
Eagle Class of 2003.
Please see Scout, AS

NING-

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

I

MILES LAYTON

JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

l C'

m.JSt sirloi n of 'b~ef Jnd Addiction

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY

th e· loc:1 l American Red
Cross:
the
Arth ritis
1 Found.1tion (O hio Valky
Ri ve r Chapter): . !loy
. c. A r","j
I lllHt
"TIt.' l' Sc-cltlt'. (Tn.-.st.1t
,
.COill

Swa tll ,
I .
S;t l l ,

'

First

BY

tickt·t pri ce of$25. per pnson will benefit th me in
need in our com1nunity.
. Denc. l'l'i lq.;mm n a nd
CO -C l;l l!'S,

' '·

JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

'Hot Time h1 the Old
Town' to feature
outstanding talent

11 1 1 •

.Rifles commemorate county's history

1

'

11

2400 Eastern Ave.
(A·cross from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740)-446·1711

·'
· 1·

___

___,,__ ~'-·--

...

- --_.

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