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                  <text>SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Prep Basketball
Eaatern 55, River VaUey 47
River Vall ey

9 10 10 18 - 47

Eastern

11 19 6

19 ·55

Eastern (55) Alyssa Holler 4 4-4 13,
Morgan Weber 6 4-5 16, Jessie Hupp 1 t •
4 3, Jen Hayman 1 0-2 2, Erin Weber 8 t 1 17, Krista White 2 0-Q 4. Totals 22 1Q- 16

55. Three Point Goals: One-Holler one.
River Valley (47) L. McAvooa 1 M 2,
Krist:na Naylor 6 2-2 16, Beth Payne 3 2-2
8, Leslie Ward 1 0-0 2, Ashley Caldwell 4 02 8, Becky Lyons 5 0-3 11 . Totals 20 4· 9
47. Three Point Goals : Three-Naylor two.

Lyons one.

NCAA Basketball
Mid-American Conference
Glance
East
ConterenceAIIGames

Wl Pet WL Pel
10 1 909 16 3 .842
8 3 727 12 7 .632

Kent State
Miami (Ohio)
BuHalo

5 6 455 9 10.473

5 6
4 7
4 8
Akron
West
Western Michigan 101
Toledo
9 3
Ball State
6 5

OhtO
Marshall

Bowling Green
Eastern Michigan
Northern Illinois
Cemral Michigan

455 B 13.381
364 7 12.368
.333 10 10.500
009 17 2 .895

750 15 5 .750
545 9 10.473

5 6 .455
4 7 .364
2 8 200
'0 11 .000

9 12.429
9 10 .473
7 13 350

3 18 143

Saturday's Results
Buffalo 77, Mars hall 58
E. Michigan 77, Akron 54
Kent St. 76. Cent. Michigan 61
Miami (Ohio) 6 1, Toledo 57
Ohio 88, Ball St. 84, OT
.
W. Michigan 88, Bowling Green 73
Monday·a Game
N. Illinois at Cent. Michigan
Wednesday's Games
Buffalo at Kent St
E_Michigan at Marshall
Miami (OhiO) at Akron
N. Illinois at Toledo
Ohio at Bowling Gr.een
W. Michigan at Ball St
Sunday's College Basketball
Major Scores

EAST
Boston College 69, St. John's 61
Dayton 66. Massachusetts 59
Maine 84, Binghamton 51
Manhattan 77. St. Peter's 73
Aider 58 , Loyola , Md. 51
UMBC 72, Stony BrooK 53
Vermont 67. Northeastern 65

SOUTH
Birmingham-Southern 79, N.C.·Asheville

'

No major team scores reportad from the
FAA WEST.

Ohio Men's College Basketball
Scores
Sunday '• Reauttt

Atlantic 10
Dayton 66, Massachusetts 59

Univlfllty Athletic Association
Brandeis 83. Case Reserve 73

Saturday's Results
Atlantic tO
Xa'llier 74 , Fordham 52

Big Ten
MIChigan St. 84, Ohio St. 70
Conference USA
Cinc1nnati 54 , Houston 51
M~d-American Conference
E. Michi gan 77. Akron 54
Kent St. 76. Cent. Mich1gan 61
M1ami. Ohio 61-. Toledo 57
Ohio 88, Ball St. 84 , OT
W. Michigan 88, Bowlmg Green 73
Horlzon.League
Detro1t 77, Cleveland Sl . 55
Wis.-Green Bay 73, Youngstown St. 70. OT
Wis.·Milwaukee 72. Wr1ght St. 66

John Carroll 68. Wi lmington 63
Mount Union 81 . Heidelberg 53
Ohio Northern 76, M uskingum 61
Otterbein 75 , Capital 73
North Coast Conference
Allegheny 74 . Denison 46
Kenyon 67, Oberl1n 57
Ohio Wesleyan 77 . Earlham 60
Wittenberg 75. H1ram 57
Wooster 68, Wabash 45
Great Lakes Intercollegiate
Findlay 81 . Hillsdale 53
He~rlland Conference
Mou nt St Joseph 79 , Defiance 66
Transy lvania 69, Btumon 63

· American Mideast Conference
Cedarv1lle 72, T1tfi n 64
Daemen 87. N otre Dame. Ohio 55
Ohio Domimcan 89. Urbana 81
Rio Grande 76, Malone 70
Alleghttnv Mountain Conference
Pitt -GreensbiJrg 73. Lak e Ene 66
Non--conference
Kentucky St. 68. Central St. 53

Ohio Women's College
Basketball Scores
Sundar's Rasulls
At1antic 10
La Salle 65, Dayton 62 .
Temple 61, Xavier 50

Big Ten
'Purdue 57, Ohio St. 54
Conference USA
Cincinnati 69, UAB 58
Mkt-Amerlcan CQnference
Miami, Ohio 67 , Toledo 65
Amertcan Mideast Conference
Tiffin 70, Walsh 68
Uni&gt;Jersity AthletiC Association
Brandeis 65, Case Reserve 60

Maryland 73, Fl orida St. 62
Troy St. 81 , Mercer 77

MIDWEST
Illinois 79, Minnesota 69
W1chita St. 78, Bradley 57

SOUTHWEST
Texas 66, Oklahoma 37
FAR WEST

Ask Us About Our

Tax Advance
Loans!
Come See Jon,
Shelly or Carolyn

Mid-American Conference
Bowling Green 69. W. Michigan 67
, Kent St. 65, Cent. Michigan 45
Ohio 85. Buffalo 65
Horizon League
Cleveland St. 80, Buller 61
Loyola of Cll ic ago 55, Youngstown St. 54
Wis .-Green Bay 65, Wrigl1t St. 64

F indlay 79, Hillsdale 56
Heartland Conference
Mount St. Joseph 54, (;)efiance 48
Transylvania 75, Bluffton 47
Amefican Mideast Conference
Cedarville 7~ . Tiffin 53
Malone 74. Rio Grande 67
Oh1o Domin1can 70. Urbana 59

Allegheny ~ountltn Conference
Pitt-Greensburg 65 , Lake Erie 47

s&amp;

aa

Smith &amp;
Associates
Accounting

\ToudJ Tone Teller

jFa)

--

L.A . Lakers at Miami, 7:30 p.m .
Detroit at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Sacramento al Milwaukee. 8 p.m.
L. A. Cl ippers at Minnesota , 8 p.m.
Indiana at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
New York at Dallas. 8:30p.m.

Utah at Portland. 10 p.m .
Toronto at Phoen ix. ~0 p.m .
Golden State at Seattle, 10 p.m

National Basketball
Association

Idaho
Siou)( Falls
Rockford

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Gary

28 20 583
24 27 .471
23 29 .442

New Jersey
New York
Boston
Miami
Philadelphia
Washington
Orlando

5 1/2

7

21 30 .41 2 8 1/2
21 30 41 2 8 t /2
16 33 .327 12 1/2
13 40 245 17 112
Central Division
WLPctGB
lnd1ana
37 14 .725
Detro1 t
33 19 .635 4 112
M itwau~ee
27 23 .540 9 t/2
27 24 .529 10
New Orleans
Toronto
23 25 479 12 112
Cleveland
19 32 .373 18
Atlanta
17 35 327 20 112
Chicago
14 37 .275 23
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
WLPciGB
35 14 714
Minnesota
34 18 .654 2 1/2
Sa n Antonio
32 18 640 3 1/2
Dallas
~ 29 21
580 6 1/2
Houston
28 21 571 7
Memphis
29 22 569 7
Denver
25 26 490 11
Utah
Pacific Division

WLPciGB
13 .723

Sacramento

34

L.A. Lakers

30 18 .625 4 1/2
24 25 .490 11
23 25 .479 11 112

Seanle

Portland
L.A. Clippers
Golden Slate
Phoenix

22 26 .458
21 27 .438
18 35 340

Saturday's Games
New York 76, Miami 64
Houston 86, Atlanta 77
Boston 110. Philadelphia
Washington ~ 06. -Cleveland 88
Milwaukee 107, New Orleans 97
Dallas 111. Detroit 108
Utah 96, Phoenix 92
Sunday's Games
L.A. la~ws 98, Orlando 96
Miam1at Indiana , 2:30 p.m.
Seattle at Portland, 3 p .m.
Memphis at Minnesota, 3 :30p.m .

eo

26 10
17 18
18 t7
t B 17
13 23
8 28

Great Lakes
Yakima

Saturday's Games
Rockford 88. Gary 81 (5. 2)
Yakima 1 ~2 . Sioux Falls 109 (5.5, 1.5)
Idaho ~ 09. Great Lakes ~ 04 (5, 2)
Sunday's Game
Rockford 111. Dakota 103 {5.5, 1.5)

Monday's Game
Great Lakes at Yakima

Tuesday's Games
Sioux Falls at Dakota
Rockford at Idaho

The benefits !low from new tax rates
enacted in May, which redut:ed the
rates on capital gains from 20 percent
and 10 percent to 15 percent and 5 percent The changes took effect May 6.
Dividends, previously taxed at the

31157 3 72
2tl 20 5 3 60
19 2015 2 55
22 24 8 1 53
PacHic Division

Vancouver
CalgaryMinnesota

Edmonton

Anaheim

~4

to 1 67
21 5 2 59
24 7 4 51
36 5 3 30
Northeast Olvl1lon

123100
153135
1431 57
109 207

W L T OLPtaGF GA
Toronto

Boston
Ot1awa

19

Montreal
Buffalo

30148 3 71 152131
27 ~411 4 69 142128
28157 4 67180120
28206 2 64139123
23 265 1 52 13214~
Southeast Division

W L T QLP1aGF GA
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
Florida
Carolina

Washington

28
21
18
17
17

St.

St. louis

3
7

68138111
63 118122
60 145139
53 136148
49 119 148

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~7 6
27 6
2311
26 10
31 5

3
2
3
2
2

65
50
50
46
41

147119
150170
122150
105138
129173

Northern Olvlelon
W l T PlsGFGA

Central Division
W l T OLPtsGF GA
31158 2 72 181131
26206 2 60130142
26207160129134

fied for purposes of the new tax structure . Dividends are "qualified dividends" if paid by U.S. corporations and
certain foreign corporations.
Because the tax rates for dividends
were made retroactive to Jan. I, 2003,
taxpayers avoid the confusion of a midyear rate change. But those who purchased dividend-paying stocks during
the year will have to double check that
they held the stock for lhe appropriate
amount of time to qualify for the lower
rate.
·
To be eligible for the lower rate, the
shareholder must hold the stock for
more than 60 days during the 120-day
period that began 60 days before the exdividend date , the first day a stockholder would not qualify for that dividend payment Since the holding period
starts the day afler the purchase date, a
stock bought on the day before the exdividend date cannot meet the morethan-60 day requiremenl for the first
dividend payment 10 qualify foi the
lower tax rate. Generally, a buyer can
obtain the ex-dividend date from a brokerage or a company's investor relations services.

Ther,e's one wrinkle for margin
account holders whose brokerages temporarily lend !heir stock to others, a
practice com mon among brokers. Any
dividends paid oul during the time the
stock is on loan go to the borrowers,
who then reimburse the stock owners.
The payments received by the slock
owne rs technically aren 't dividends.
They're known as a "payments in lieu
of dividends," and they're nol eligible
for the lower rate.
This year, recognizing that some brokers may need more time to ad~pt to the
new law, the IRS is letting taxpayers
who receive Forms I 099-DIV erroneously reporting such payments as dividend income to treat them as dividends,
unless the taxpayer knows that they are
not actual dividends.
All of these complications overlap
when il comes 10 mutual funds , which
may report a mix of capital gain distribulions. dividends and interest
payments.
Taxpayers whose only gains or losses
are the capital gain distributions from
their mutual funds may avoid Schedule
D entirely by using a special worksheet
in the Form I040 or I040A instruction
books. The IRS has revised this worksheet to inc:lude the lower tax rates on
qualified dividends.
In all of these cases, taxpayers can
expect to rely heavily on information
provided by their brokers and financial
institutions, or in IRS Publication 550,
still being updated . Taxpayers should
keep good records themselves,

70 180 t33

Wheeling
Atlantic City

32 11 3 67 155 93

Peoria

26 12 B

Johnstown
Reading

26 15 5
24 15 7

Trenton
Cincinnati

2217 5

60 13511 4
57 126115
55 13811 7
49129115

20 26 3 43 125 133
19 23 5 43 127 147
18 26 4 40 119
Southern Division

Columbia

Greensboro
Florida
South Carolina
Charlene

RoanoKe
Florence
Greenville

W l

T

3D
28
24
27
24
22
t7
7

5

14
20
19
16
19
21
22
34

~

9
2
6
5
6
4

~81

PlsGFGA
65 190 149
57
57
56
54
49
40
18

~ 61
167
1 18
143
167
159
1 ~0 190

170
166
130
150
142
131

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W l T PtsGFGA
louisiana
Mississippi
Gwinnett
Columbus
Pensacola

33 12 2
29 14 6
27 ~6 4
26 19 4
24 16 6

68
64
58
56
54

4

66 ~47114

17 23 6
15 27 3
12 30 5

40 ~30 137
33 110159
29 ~ 24 194

Salurdly't Games
Peoria at Johnstown, ppd .. weather
Atlantic City 5, Reading 2
Gwinnett 4. Greenville 1
Columbia 3 , Augusta 1
Charlotte 3, Roanoke 0
South Caro lina 4, Florida 1
Wheeling· 4, Cincinnati 3, OT
Dayton 4, Toledo 3
Florence 4 , Texas 3

163 ~15
179 137
150 ~29
139 133
156 156

Taxes: New iRS
Help Feature

:;o CL:\TS • \ ol. ,1-l· :\o. 1;11

WASHINGTON (AP) - New tax laws
will make this year's taxes even more
complicated than usual, but the IRS
hopes to lift some of the confusion with a
new feature designed to help taxpayers
find information quickly and easily.
The new information source, called
1040 Central , aims to link taxpayers tu
detailed information aqfl answer their
most common questions. It's available on
the IRS home page, and it gathers items
from throughout the Web site that can
best help individuals filing the common
Form l 040 tax form s.
This year, taxpayers can expect to have
many questions about new tax laws and
tax breaks enacted last summer. Reduced
rates on capital gains and dividends, in .
particular, have added a layer of complexity to forms used by investors.
Most taxpayers get packages' of tax
forms and instructions from the IRS in
early January. The IRS expects to .receive
131 million returns in 2004,60 million of
them tiled electronically.
Taxpayers who filed their taxes through
computer in previous years will not
receive the traditional package. They can
expect to receive a brochure that explains
electronic filing and the identification
program used for paperless filing. Some
taxpayers with simple returns may be
able to file by telephone.
TRS officials say electronic filing, when
combined with the direct deposit of a
refund into a taxpayer's bank account,
speeds refunds to taxpayers in as few as
lO ·days. The average time is about 14
'days. In 2003, more than 44 million
refunds were deposited directly intQ taxpayers' bank accounts . Taxpayers filing
the traditional way can wait up to six
weeks for a refund.
The IRS also can quickly check for
mathematical mistakes and other common errors on electronically filed returns,
reducing the chance your tax return will
be sent back to you 'to fix an error.
For the second ¥ear, the' IRS will make
electronic filing programs ~vailable to
some ·taxpayers free through ltts Web site.
Companies participating in fbe Free File
Alliance set the guidelines for taxpayers
tq use their programs without charge.
The IRS will send 34 milliqn tax packages and nearly 28 million cdp:tputer fil-.
mg brochures this year. The ~ffort costs
$7.5 m'illion to print and $121million to
mail, and average cost of 31 cents per
package.
Taxpayers should use the na\
' e labels
included in the mailed package on their
tax retu'rns. They will have to dd their
Social Security numbers·.

'll ' LSil \).I UIRl '.\R\'

""" ·"'"lail"''"linl'i ,"""

10 . :!00-1

Signs and fences have no place in the state right-of-way

SPORTS
• Lady Eagles drop South
Gallia. See Page 81

place that the public shouldn't see them - in the righl-ofway along Ohio state routes.
As required by law, all
,obstructions found along the
stale right-of-way will be
removed, according to officials
with
the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation.
Signs will be taken to the
local ODOT county garage
and kept for approximalely
two weeks. During this time,

Obstructions
compromise
safety of traveling
public
STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

POMEROY li's an
election year, and political
signs are popping up everywhere .
However, there is one

Wo

Transactions
Weekend Sports Transactions
BASKETBALL

sign owners may retrie ve and bill the property owner
their property from this slor- for the expense,
age site:
"Any obstruction in the
Obstructions such as fenc- state right-of-way is a safety
ing are an added worry hazard for the traveling pubbecause it decreases the li c because of its distraction
width of the "clear zone " - to drivers and its crash
the area where motorists can potential," said ODOT
correcl driver error to avoid District I 0 Deputy Director
an accident. Under Ohio George M. Collins. "Signs
Revised Code, ODOT has are often most prominent at
the aulhority, after notifica- intersection s where drivers
tion of the property owner. should be most attentive to
to remove obstructing fence traffic siluations. With ,afcty

in mind , we cannot condone
this praclice."
A good indication of state
righl-of-way is either the
state fence line or mowing
line. ODOT officials say. If
lhe ri g!Jt-of-way cannot ~.
determined, a visit or phon'e-:.
call should be made ttl the
local ODOT county garage
for clarification. Only those
obstructions located on the
slate right-of-way will be
removed.

Net program

National Basketball AssoclaUon
INDIANA PACERS-Activated F Jonathan
Bender from ttle injured !ist. Placed - C
Primoz Brazee on the injured list.

LOS ANGELES CLIPPER&amp;-Signed F
Matt Barnes for remainder of the season
MIAMI HEAT-Activated F Rasual Butler
from the injured list. Placed C Wang Zhi· Zhi
on the injured list.
UTAH JAZZ-Signed C Mikki Moore to a
second 10-day contract
HOCKEY
NEW YORK ISLANDERS- Named Butch
Goring assistant coach

COLLEGE
MISSISSIPPI STATE-Agreed to terms
with Rick Stansbury. men's basketball
coac h, on a lour-year contract extension
through the 2007·08 season.

'"'\7,; Credit

1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Idaho 3. Saii Diego 2, OT
Lo ng Beach 2. Trenton 0
Bakersfield 4, Fresno 1
Las Vegas 2, Alaska 1, SO
Sunday's Gamet
Florida 3, South Carolina 1
Charlotte 4, Augusta 1
Peoria 3. Toledo 2. SO
Johnstown 5. Cinci nnati 3
Louisiana 3. Florence 1
Pensacola 4, Greensboro 2
Bakersfield 4, Trenton 2
Alaska 3, Las Vegas 2
Monday's Games
Nu game s sc hed uled
Tuesday's Games
Alaska at Bakersfield
Peoria at Cinctnnati
Florence at Columbu s
Roano~e at Greensboro
Columbia at Greenville
Florida at Gwlnnett
Texas at Mississippi
Long Beach at San Di9go

Saturday's Games
No games scheduled
Sunday's Games
AII.Star Game at St. Paul, M inn .. 3 p.m .
Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
San Jose at Buffalo. 7 p.m .
New Jersey at Philadelphia. 7 p.m.
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
St. Louis at Onawa, 7:30p.m
Boston at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m .
Montreal at Florida, 7:30pm .
Los Angeles at Minnesota , 8 p.m.
Atlanta at Calgary, 9 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Colorado, 9 :30 p.m.

Toledo
Dayton

~1

29 14 5 63 149123
28 1.4 5 61 143133
25 15 4 54 ~41116

louisiana 3. Mississippi ~
Greensboro 6. Fl'ensacola 5, OT

2, Calgary 1
San Jose 5. Phoenix D
Friday's Gamea
No games scheduled

34 12 2

31

&gt;

NOTE: Two points are awardeQior a wtn.
Overtime and shootout losses earn one
point arld are referred to as ties

Loui~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Delroil
Nashville

5
0
5

ECHL

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W l T OLPisGF GA
Philadelphia 28 12 11 5 72 158 123

12112 \
13 112

~4 1 144

42 125157

14 30 4 32 126190
Plclflc DIYIIIOn
W L T PtoOFGA

San Diaoo
Las Vegas
Idaho
Alaska
Bakersfield
Long Beach
Fresno

168127
132123
123 ~25

Thursday 's Games
Boston 6, Buffalo 2
Toronto 5, Ottawa 4, OT
Philadel ph ia 5. Atlanta 1
Montreal2, N.Y. Islanders 1
Vancouver 4, New Jersey 0
Detroit 3, Colorado 2. OT
Tampa Bay 5, Nashville 2

National Hockey League

28
26
20
11

26131 1
27 209
21 151 3
1B 1914
17 238

19 24 4

Augusta

Texas

W L T OLPtoGF GA
San Jose
Dallas
Los Angeles
PhOentx

Hockey

Taxes: A Puzzle for Investors
WASHINGTON (AP) - Investors
with cap ital gains or dividend income
from stocks, real estate and other assets
can expect new benefits from lower tax
rales, bui ihey 're also bound to spend
more time poring over paperwork to

75.5153.54.3
76.0127.03.6
67 5122.53.5
65.5 119.53.4
65.0 104.02.9
62.5 66.5 2.4

Teams receive thre&amp; points lor a win , one
point for eac h quarter won an d t /2 point
for any quarter tied . No points awarded
during overtime.

New Jersey
N.Y. Islanders
N.Y. 'Rangers
Pittsburgh

41112153

14 297 5 .0 125163
Norlh-t DMalon
W L T OLPtoQF QA
30119 4 73167123
Colorado

Two points for a win. one point lor a tie and
overtime loss.

W L OW PTS AVG
24 11 83.0155.04.4

Dakota

Atlantic Division
WLPciGB

15288 3

Columbus

Chicago

TUesday' • Gamet

Continental Basketball
'Association

Pro Basketball

investor's ordinary income tax rate, can

til

Memphis at Denver, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Houston. 9:30p.m.

Non-conference
·central St 83. Kentucfty St. 73

also qualify for the 15 percent and 5
percent capital gains rates as of Jan. I,
2003. The change can mean as much as
a 20 percentage point reduction in lhe
Racine 949-2210
dividend tax rate for wealthier
Syracuse 992-6333
taxpayers.
The new tax rates add complications
to this year's calculations for two main
~t::=:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;::==::: reasons. First, the capital gains lax rate
changed midyear, so multiple rates
apply depending when the asset was
sold, Second, not all dividends qualify
for the reduced rate, and the lotal
amount of those that qualify for the
lowered rate may have to be reported
on lhe schedule for c;apital gains and
losses.
Advisers recommend thai taxpayers
who are about to wade into a pile of
paperwork take a few minutes to get
organized, "The first thing I would do
is sort out all of your I 099s," Perlman
Cathy Crow, CPA
said. Separate the_I099-DIV forms for
dividends and distributions from the
1099-B forms for stock sales . Write lhe
, 109 West Second Street
date you purchased the stock or other
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
'
asset on the form.
· These few steps will put all the infor(740) 992-5995 mal ion you need at your fingerlips
when turning your taxes over to a preparer or when filling out the IRS.
Schedule D; Capital Gains and Losses.
To help taxpayers navigate the"'new
rates for capital gains and dividends,
the .IRS revised its forms that report
We'~ Always Here
earnings
in each category.
24 Hours a Day 7 Days a Week
The new forms detailing informalion
reported by finan cial in stitutions and
1-877-447-3617 brok ers. · destined for taxpayers in
January. break out ihe amount of capic
TOLL FREE
tal gains re ported before and afler the
ACCOUNT BALANCES
May 6 date ihe tax rates changed.
TRANSACTION DETAILS
Capital gains qualify for the, new 15
• TRANSFER FUNDS•
percent maximum rate if the assel was
MAKE LOAN PAYMENTS• held for more than a year and sold on
BALANCE CHECKBOOK
or after May 6, 2003. Capital gains
would be taxed at a maximum of 20
AVAILABLE NOW AT...
'
percent if the asset was held more than
one year and sold before'MJiy 6, 2003.
lburBank(M,/i(t!. Capital
gains on assets held one year or
~~k less are taxed at ordinary income tax
rates.
New tax forms also show the total
740/992-2136·
p~~=~IOH
dividends received during the year and
TL
Plolno, OH 7401867-3161
7401446-2265
documenl the amounl declared qualiDalllfJOIIa, OH
MIIIOn,WV
304· n3-e4bo

ft)jj

Monday'e Oarnw
Boston at Cleveland, 7 p.m .
Dallas al Atlanta, 7:30p.m.

GrNt L.lkH Intercollegiate

calculate those savi ngs.

Terms may apply,
See Associates
For Details.

L.A. Cllpport 11Now Yor'&lt;, 7 p,m,
Fl'hlladtlphla at New Jtf'HIJ, 7:30 p.m.
Toronto at Golden State. 9 p.m.

Court upholds
Taft's decision
to close prison, A3

LeBron scores
24 in Cavs' win
over Boston, B1

Monday, February 9, 2004

'

Denver at Sacramento. 7 p.m.

Ohio Conference
Baldwin·Waltaca 62 , Mariet1a41
Heidelberg 79. Mount Unioo 68
Muskingum 82. Ohio Northern 70
Otterbein 81, Capital 68
Wilmington 69, John C8.rroll 55
North Coati Conference
Wittenberg 61 . Hiram 44

Ohio Conference
Baldwin-Wallace 80, Marietta 66

Saturday't Results

52

PageB6

·

dlif/i:.~:.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Kathleen Noble
• Patricia Marie Brown
• Robert D. Camahan
• Easter Louise Brown
• William Joseph Thome
• • Dorothy Elizabeth Reibel

WEATHER

Need ~oney to
pay Taxes?
\'lslt the Problem
Solvers!!
Quick decisions!!
Walk out with
your Check!!

The new Work-Net proliam at the University of 'f!io Grande/Rio
Grande Community College's Meigs Center is designed to help
students with financial needs, but is also an outreach for the ·
community. Donna Hartson of Middleport, pictured here, is the
case manager for the new program, part of Rio Grande
Crossroads. It provides help for those ·needing assistance with
tuition, textbooks and materials, but also helps students build
skills for academic success. Some offerings, li ke the computer
class led by Robert Taggart, pictured, are open to the general
public once program participants are enrolled. Hartson said she
hopes the program will build an open working relationship within the community, including community agencies and faithbased organizations. Amentoring program and tutoring are also
planned. Students interested in the program may contact
Hartson at 992-0010. (Brian J. Reed)

Detalla on Page A2

746-992-1771
BOG-866-1771

LorrERIES

124 west ~aln Street
Pomeroy, on

Middleport Council eliminates BPA Income tax ordinance seeks
·ev BRIAN J.

Ohio
l&gt;lck 3 day: 9-2-5
Pick 4 day: 5-7-0·2
Pick 3 night: 1-1-9
Pick 4 night: 2-5-2-8
Buckeye 5: 1-2-16-25-30

West Vrrginia
Dally 3: 3-Q-3
Dally 4: 8-6-) -5
Cash 25: 7-9·15-21 -22-23

INDEX
2 S~CTIONS -

Ask About
Our On-Line
Banking

12 PAGI!S

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

as

Dear Abby .

A2

Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

BI

Weather

A3

Editorials

;.

REED

BREED@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

© 2004 Ohio Valley· PublishlnR Co.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Council voted
Monday evening to disband
the elected Board of Public
Affairs, and agreed to hire a
village administrator to
oversee the village's water
and sewer operations.
Following two prior readings of an ordinance eliminating the board in favor of a
paid village employee to be
hired and overseen by counci l, members of village
council voted 4-1 -l to
approve the change. Council
President Stephen Houchins
and members Roger Manley,
Robert Robinson and Kathy
Scott voted in favor of the
ordinance, Robert Pooler
voted against it, and Laurie
Reed, who attended her first
meeting last night. abstained
from the vote.
Houchins spoke on behalf
of council members in favor
of the elimination of the
BPA, in response to questions from Jean Craig; who,
in 1999,, brought to light

many of the issues which led
to the BPA's re-creation.
"I have never been for a
Board of Public Affairs,"
Houchins said. "Council
eliminated the position of a
village administrator at a
time when It should have
eliminated an employee ."
'' I have qo complaint
about what the BPA has
done or hasn't done, bull've
always felt we should st ick
with a village administrator.
I recognize the projects that
have been completed under
the BPA, but ihe water we 're
drinking now is the same
water we were drinking
when they were appointed."
Houchins said council will
consider proceeding with
improvement
projects,
including a new water treatment plant, using the month ly $5 water improvemenl fee
charged customers, but said
council will re-evaluate
water and sewer rate
increases proposed by Floyd
Browne Associates, the viilage's engineering firm .
The firm mai,ntains the

increases, using a rate scale
recommended by ihe Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, are, necessary if the
village is to qualify for water
and sewer improvement
grants.
According to Houchin s,
the proposed increases,
which he did not outline, are
based on a monthly usage of
4,500 .gallons per customer,
while the village bills at a
2,000 gallon minimum.
"There could be u minimal
increase or none at all,"
Houchins said.
Council. to date, has nol
revealed what the new viiIage administrator will be
paid, and in voting against
the ordinance, Pooler said he
would not consider supporting it unless the salary is
· specified.
.
Pooler cited past problems
with water and sewer issues
when they were under the
jtirisdiction of village council, including drinking water
contamination, unopened
mail containing EPA man·
Ple~se see BPA. AS

fairness for taxpayers
By

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Village Council look the first
step toward making the
income tax a little fairer for
t&lt;ixpayers.
Village council approved
the first of three readings of
an ordinance which would
change the tax code by closing loopholes and bring the
village in line with other
municipalities. Pomeroy has
a one percent income tax
which applies to anyone who
works in the village.
The ordinance would eliminate a loophole that allows
business losses to be deducled from earned wages. For
instance. if a person made
$50.000 a year as an attorney
but lost $10.000 a 'year in
rental income, !hal person
could deduct those losses
from earned wages and pay
taxes only on $40,000.
If Council approves changing the tax code , that same
attorney would pa'y taxes on

www.oubc.com

earned income ($50,000) and
any gains made from rental
property - no losses would
be deducted .
The ordinance will also
elimina te a loophole 1hat
.allows bu si nesses to carry
fo rward any losses. U nderthe
current mles , if a business
owner has a loss the previous
year (and pays no taxes), that
person can carry the loss over
and use it to offset any gains
made in the present year.
For inslance , a business
owner who declared a net ·
carryover loss of $10,000 last
year can apply to $50,00
, gains made this year - and
be taxed on $40,000. If
approved, the ordinance will .
eliminate thi s carryover loophole so thai ihe business
owner pays ta xes on $50,000.
The ordinance seeks ·a uni form due date for filing tax
returns and changing the due
date from April 15 to April
30.
Finally, the ordinance seeks
Please see Tllx. AS

Training

h)

GET

.

ilrllie.

Rrll .

STUCK
HERE!

,.,.

'--'-·

,.

..

.

- .. ----

..

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PageA2

·'

, The Daily Sentinel

Chu rc h, 7 p.m. through
Feb. 14. Tim Simpson and
Ronnie warrens will be the
1\Jesday, Feb. 10
eva ngelists. There will be
~OMEROY
The special singing each night.
· . Meigs County Agricultural
Pastor Jamie Fortner invites
:: Society will meet at 7 p.m. the public.
~ at the office.

Public meetings

RUTLAND
- Rutland
. Village Council meets at
; · 6:30 p.m.. for regular meet. ; ing, Rutland Civic Center.
. • CHESTER )
Chester
• Township
Board
of
: Trustees meet 7 p.m.,
: Chester Town Hall.
,; RUTLAND
The
:: Rutland Town ship trustees
:; will meet at 5 p.m. at the
' Rutland Fire Station.
Wedn'esday, Feb. II
. POMEROY
The
:: Meig s Count y Board of
;: Health will meet at 5 p.m.
•: in the · departmem's confer. ence room,ll 2 E. Memo~ial
Drive.
~

Thursday, Feb. 12
SYRACUSE Special
meeting
of
Syracuse
Village
Council
and
·'Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Deparment. 2 p.m. at the
municipal building.

. Church services
Thursday, Feb. 12
RUTLAND Revival
services will be held at the
Rutland FreeWill Baptist

Other events

POMEROY ·
Alpha
Iota Masters, II a. m. St.
Lutheran
Chu rc h
Paul
meeti ng and soup luncheon.
TU PPERS PL AIN S VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at
t ~ e hall. Meal at 6:30 p.m.

Social Events

1\Jesday, Feb. 10
1\Jesday, Feb. 10
POM EROY - A childRACINE - Liza Hobbs
hood immuni zation clini c of Durham, N. C.. a pubwill be held from 9 to II li shed author and former
and I to 3 p.m. at l'he Racine teache r, will do a
Meigs
County
Health public reading o~ her poetDepartment. Take child 's ry at 7:30 p.m in the
immun ization record and media center at Southern
medical cards if applicable. High School.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardi an. Donation for service accepted but not
•
1\Jesday, Feb. 10
required.
POMEROY Frances
Carleton will observe her
79th birthday on Feb. I0.
Cards may be sent to her
at 32741 Rosehill Road ,
Pomeroy. 45769.
1\tesday, Feb. 10
HARRI SONVILLE
Thesday, Feb. 17
Harrison ville
Chapter,
POMEROY - Cora Mae
Order of Eastern Star, will
Smith
will observe her
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
82nd
birthday
on Feb. 17 .
Masonic hall. There will be
initiatory work exemplified. Cards may be sent to her
Take homemade valentines. at 36894 Texas Road ,
Pomeroy, 45769.
Wednesday, Feb. II
Monday, Feb. 23
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY - Marjorie
Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in reg- Kapple wi II celebrate her
ular session, 6 p.m. in the 85th birthday Feb. 23 .
Elementary School confer- Cards may be sent to her
at II 0 Maple St., Pomeroy,
ence room.
45769.
Thursday, Feb. 12

Birthdays

Clubs and
Organizations

DEAR ABBY: I read with
interest the letter from the
lady asl(jng how to recycle
her late husband's neckties.
My daughter is a 16-yearold honor student who
teaches Sunday school and
volunteers at our children's
hospital. She wears them as
belts. PROUD MOM,
.CORPUS
CHRISTI,
TEXAS
DEAR PROUD MOM:
Your daughter is an original
thinker. When I printed that
letter, I had no idea there
were so many uses for old
f)eekties. Hundreds of suggestions poured in!. Read on
for a sample:
"I have a friend who
made her prom dress comPletely out of men's ties she .
Goodwill.
bought from
They were sewn together
vertically. It was really
cool." - JOY IN IRVINE,
CALIF.
"She should cut the wide
ends 18. inches to 20 inches
long and sew them together
d
k
t th 1
a e ong e ges 10 rna e a
colorful apron. The tapers
will give it a nice flair, and
the ends can be used for
the waistband at the top and
the strings at the back." CLARENCE B., CLEMSON, S.C.
"Two . ladies in our
church, St. Christopher
Episcopal in League City,
Texas, gathered old ties
from the parish and made
them into beautiful altar
cloths for use during
Father's Day services." O.H .
STELTER
JR .,
HOUSTON
"Old ties can be woven
into . beautiful, one-of-a-kind
area rugs or wall hangings.

.

'

CelebmfJng Spedtll

"740'-992-215 .

Afternoon
(I :00pm6:00pm) 33 - 40 SW-W 5- 15
mph Temperatures will rise
from 38 early' afternoon to the
high tor the da~of 40 at 3:00pm
as they drop ck down to 33
later this afte oon. Skies will
be sunny to mostly cloudy with
5 to IS MPH 'finds from the
southwest turning from the west
as the afternoon progresses.
Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 30 ; 32 W 5- l 0
mph
·
Temperatures will linger at
30. Skies will ran ge from

1\Jesday, February 10
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
31 - 36 SW 5- 10 mph
There will be nothing more
th an a few tlurries. The
snowfall is expected to begin
near 7:OOam. The snow
should stop by 8:00am with
total accumulation s for this
event of less than an one
inch. Temperatures will hold
steady around 32 . Skies will
range from sunny to cloudy
with 5 to 10 MPH winds
from the southwest.

mostly clear to mostly cloudy
with 5 to 10 MPH winds
from the west.
Overnight
(1:00am6:00am) 26-29 W-SW 5- 10
mph
!here is a chance that we
could see a snowflake or two.
Temperatures will hover at
27 with today's low of 26
occurring around 6:00am :
Skies will be clear to mostly
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from ·the west turning
from the southwest as the
overnight progresses.

',

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l

A DAY ON WALL STREET

rrs • ,_!

Market watch
Feb. 9,2004

-------~---

•
•
•
•

··t
I

.

Feb. 9, 2004

10,700

Dow Jones
Industrials

10.250

10,579.03
"""' - - ' -0 .13

DEC

9,250

FEB
· Raco'li high' 11 ,722 .98
10,564.44
Jan. 14 , 2000

.....

High
10.616.51

JAN

Feb. 9, 2004

10,579.03

Nasd:a
compos e

2,06057

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

2,200

'

- I'

1,800

Pet=
hom

-0 .17

"

DEC

NOV

2,060.57

Low

High
.2.074.27

2,060.44

-·rd

JAN

NYSE diary

1,600

FEB

NIIW htgha
293
1,444
O.CIIned:
New lows
158
Unchanged:
7

Advanced:

high ' 5,04862

Marcf1 10. 2000

~---- -

Feb. 9, 2004

1.200

Standard &amp;

1. 150

Poor's 500

Nasdaq diary

1.1 00

Advanced:
O.CIIned:

_:American Legion Post 602 presented
·awards to Dax Holman
RACINE - In apprecia.. Jion of his performance as
. bugler for military funerals ,
.. the
Racine
American
. . Legion Post 602 recently
presented awards to Dax
. Holman, a seventh grader
· at South·ern Elementary
•. School.
"Dax has performed very
well at military services

and has always cheerfully
helped the Post when
·asked," said Vern Harrison,
Post commander.
He was presented a
Southern High School jacket and a monetary award
by the commander.
Harrison al so thanked the
school administration, especially Janette Oldaker, band

'

director who has cooperated
with the Post by providing
buglers tor military funeral .
services and particpating in
other communities activities.
Holman. seventh grader,
is the son of John Holman
of Racine and
Alana
Schulein of Kentucky.

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

:.Benefit slated for Friday
POINT PLEASANT A benefit to
assist Guy and Ellen Thoma with the
funeral expenses of their son Kevin will
, be sponsored by the Point Pleasant Senior
: Center, Itll Second St., from 6 to 10 p.m.
Friday.
: Guy Thoma is the fiddle player in the
: True Country Band.
·: The event, to be held at the senior cen: . ter, will feature country and gospel music
: provided by Fudge Creek , True Country

••

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•

I
I

. I
I

'

:'

••

(•J
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I

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r
.
K~eping fl{eigsinformed

''

DJ-:. \DLI:\1·. FOR \D\

eaJt

· Sunday
Times-Sentinel
.

"

.

_,

••

1,139.21

Volume: 1,736,885,228

AP

Local Stocks
Gannett- 86.19
General Electric - 32.89
GKNLY - 4.85
Harley Davidson - 52.77
Kmart- 28.80
Kroger- 18.74
Ltd.- 18.97
NSC - 22 .49
Oak Hill Financial - 33.65
Bank One- 51 .69
OVB-29.34
Peoples- 29.00
Pepsico - 49.94
Premier- 8.81
Rocky Boots- 22.91

ACI -'- 28.17
AEP- 32.94
Akzo - 39.41
Ashland Inc . - 46 .18
BBT-37.00
BLI- 14.53
Bob Evans- 32.15
BorgWarner- 97.79
City Holding - 34.97
Champion- 5.10
Charming Shops - 5.86
Col - 32.40
DuPont - 44.45
DG - 22 .97
Federal Mogul - .27

I ·. RIISI~C

IS FEBRl \In 20'1'11 .

.

RACINE - Participation
in spring and summer
activitie s were discu ssed
when the Racine Area
Community
Organi zation
met recently at the Star
Mill Park building.
Plans were made for the
annual flower fe stival to . be
· held on April 24, and a
spring yard sale tb be held
at the park on May II , 12
and 13. The annual !lower

AD Shell - 47.53
Rockwell - 31 .70
Sears - 45.54
SBC- 25.65
AT&amp;T -19.50
USB- 27.74
Wendy's - 38.77
Wai-Mart - 57.32
Worthington - 16.38
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day 's
transactions , provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc.
Gallipolis .

of

•

festi val to be held -on April
24. The group voted to
doante $2009 for · the July
4 celebration entertainment
and another $j200 . toward
the tireworks display.
A letter of support for
establishing a community
health center at Veteran s
Memorial Hospital was submitted and thank you cards
were mailed to thos~ who
gave for the Christmas in

the Park celebration.- .
Kathryn Hart, president,•
conducted the meeting with
Libby Fi sher giving prayer
preceding a potluck dinner.
It was noted that RACO
scholarship applications will
be delivered to Souithern
High School in the near
future. Dave Zirkle led in
the pledge to the flag following adjol!rment of the
meeting.
'.

.sunday Times~sentinel
.
.

.

I

-0.26

Unchanged:

JAN
FEB
Record high' 1,527 .46
March 24 . 2000

AP

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

· ~tv1eigs • 99~155

'

.....

High
1,144.46

Racine Area C-ommunity
Organization met recently

·'

.

Pclcha~

"""'p

DEC .,

NOV

1,000

1,767 Newhtgha
215
1,446 New lows
6
260

..

and others, an auction, bake\! goods, crafts
and other donated items. Lon Neal will be
the auctioneer.
For information , call (304) 675-2369
weekdays from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. , and
(740) 367-7607 in the evenings .
Donations wi II be accepted at the door,
or can be sent to Guv and Ellen Thoma,
34049 New Lima Road, Rutland, Ohio
45775. All proceeds will ~go to the
Thomas .

,· ;.

1,139.6t

1,839

Volume: 1,683,410,160

1,050

Holman, seventh
the Post.

Levels of mission.work discussed a_
t meeting

Russell
2000

2,000

: I

Dow Jonas
Industrials

9.750
NOV

Pel chqe

'•

I

· . Vern Harrisonville, Racine post 602, commander, presents awards to
grader at Southern Elementary School, whno plays bugle for military rites

The state is resum ing work
on shutting down an Ohio
prison and moving out the
inmates after an appeals
court ruled on Monday that
Gov. Bob Taft has the authority to close it.
The 3rd Ohi o Di strict
Court of Appeals overturned
a lower court decision that
delayed since last summer
the closing of the Lima
Correctional Institution.
Some pri soners are likely
to be tran sferred to other
facilities this week, and a ll of
them could be moved by the
end of March.
"We're not rushing to transfer
them out today," said Andrea
Dean. spokeswoman tor · the
Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction. "We want to do
it in an orderly fashion."
Taft intended to close the
pri son in northwest Ohio on A state appeals court has ruled that Gov. Bob Taft can move forward
July 12 to save $25 million a · with closing The Lima Corret'tionallnstitution shown in Lima, Oh1o.
year and ensure the state's Taft intended to close the prison on July 12·t o save $25 mi llion a
finances remain in the black. year and ensure the state's finances remain 1n the black . (Af:. __
However, Allen County Photo/The Lima News, Danny Gawlowski)
Common Pleas Court Judge
Ri chard Warren in Allgust - timeline to move prisoners • the judges said legislators do
halted the shutdown, saying out of Lima but that it will be
not retain power over instituthe governor lacked authorit-y done quickly.·
tions they create," he said.
to close the prison.
Th e prisons department
Warren ruled that Taft al so is working on a plan to
The pri'son opened in 1982
overstepped his authority transfer workers and begin and was a state hospital fo r
because the Ohio Legislature
the criminally in sane before
never relinquished control of layoffs.
Veteran
employees
will
be
being turned into a prison .
the pri son it created in 1982.
able
to
tran
sfer
to
othe&gt;
pris-.
The pri s~m js on a site that
The state had started mov ing inmates to other prisons, ons and ."bump" other work- al so
includes
Allen
but Warren's ruling halted the ers out of a job, Dean said.
"Most of those who get Correctional . Institution.
transfer of inmates and the
laid off will not IJe from Oakwood
Correctional
layoff of prison employees.
Lima
but
from
surrounding
Facility, which is the state 's
The pri son, whi ch had
about I ,500 inmates when facilities," she said,
. psychiatric pri son. aryd a
the closing was annoynced a . The Ohio Civil Service community-ba sed correcyear ago, now has 436 pri s- Employees - Association. ·
which represented most of tion ~ facility.
oners and 409 employees.
Closing the prison would be
State prison officials wasted the workers at the state
pri
son,
filed
the
lawsuit
seeka. blow to the city of Lima.
no time after the appeals court
decision on Monday, begin- 'ing to keep the prison open.
which has estima~d that the
The union will decide
ning work on tinding space for
within the next few day~ prison puts about $100 million
the Lima inmates, Dean said.
"We have bed space avail- whether to appeal to the Ohio a year into the local. economy.
able," she said. ''That's what our Supreme Court, said Ron · The city gets · ab.out
staft' is working on right now." · Alexander, the union's presi- $300.000 in income fax a
Ohio's prison population has dent.
year from the pri son .
dropped from 45,600 inmates . "The appeals court ruling
Restaurants and carryouts
was as much a ruling against
at the end of 2002 to 43,861.
Taft spokesman Orest the state legislature as it was a near the facility say their
Holubec said there was no ruling against the union in that business would suffer.
~

\

·sun~ay Tlmes-Se,ntinel

Tuesday, February 10, 2004

NewsChannel

LONGVIEW, TEXAS
"Discarded neckties can
be used to make pot holders, tabl e runners, teddy
bears, pocketbooks, tote
bags and more." - HENDear
NIE C .. SPARTANBURG,
Abby
S.C.
"How about using them
to make Chri stmas tree
skirts? Stitch them together
in a circle with the points
Incorporated in!o clothing, facing
outward ."
they can become wearable CAROL P., SPARTAN~~~THERNJEA~~~R~s .' BURG, S.C.
"I use my husband's castN.C.
off ties to make cases for
"My aunt owned a gor- my jewelry. Working with
geous mandarin-style jacket, the wide ends, I cut them in
which she informed me was 3-inch, · 4-inch and 5-inch
made entirely from old silk lengths and stitch,J.bem_J p -~
neckties. They were laid form pouches. Tfien I fold
side by side. sewn together, the triangle . tip down like
then fini shed off with
embroidery overstitching ." the flap on an envelope and
put a snap on the other
DEBE,
WILLOW side. Voila!" ANNA
GLEN, CALIF.
S
,
SILVER
MARIA
"She should use them to
SPRING, MD.
make a quilted Christmas
DEAR ANNA MARIA
wreath . It will become a AND THE HUNDREDS
family heirloom." - GINI OF WONDERFUL PEOM. , OSHKOSH, WIS .
"One of the most precious PLE WHO WROTE TO
gifts I ever received was a OFFER IDEAS : The dear
Christmas stocking made lady who wrote asking for
for my 6-month-old daugh- ideas is sure to be over"
ter when her grandfather whelmed with your clever
died. A very special cousin uses for ties. (I certainly
made it from some of his was.) And if she isn't handy
ties for her first Christmas. · with a needle and thread,
she can sell them on eBay
It's a family treasure." SHARON IN NEWBERRY or donate them to a thrift
shop·, a homeless shelter or
PARK, CALIF.
"Here's an idea: With that college theater department.
Dear Abby is written by
·
h • bo d
.many ties, s e s
un to Abigail Van Buren, also
have a picture of Grandpa
wearing some of them . known as Jeanne Phillips.
Why not mount a picture of and was founded by her
Grandpa wearing the tie in mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abby
ar
a frame along with the tie? Write
It would make a wdnderful www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
keepsake." -· DAYNA IN Box 69440, Los Angeles.
CA 90069.

.

OHIO
Appeals co.urt upholds Taft's
decision to close prison

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,Februaryt0,2004

;Community Calendar

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BYTHEBE-ND
Readers offer ways to give
new life to old neckties

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TUPPERS PLAINS -·
school of Christi~n Mi ssion.
Levels of mission work were which will be held the last
discussed at a recent meet- week in July' at Ohio
ing of the St. Paul United Northorn University. She
Methodist Women held at will bring· brochures on the
the Tuppers Plains Church. , school to a meeting.
It was n&lt;Jted that the
Judy Kennedy after openCommunity
ing the meeting with a Mulberry
prayer followed by the Center is scheduling volunUMW litany and purpose in . teer days on Tuesdays and
unson by the members, Saturdays . for people who
shared · information about would like to assist in. the
mi ssion projects of the work being done there . Area
Forest Run and Barlow- churches are providing lunch
UMW's.
.
for the volunteers. St. Paul
Pastor Jane Beattie noted is scheduled to furni sh lunch
that the mission work levels on March 27. The member.s
of area churches ,are local, approved the date and decidregional, national and inter- ed to discuss details at the
next meeting.
national.
It was reported by JoAnna
Anna Ric e thanked the
Weaver thai a patriotic. bul- group for the service recogletin board is n'ow up and · nition pin she received at a
·
worship
ready for items . about local Sunday
men and women serving in service. Terri Soulsby read a
the military.
card to order information
Kennedy shared an invita- about putting together a
tion to attend a pool party at church cookbook. The memthe
Albany
M ethodist bers decided to send for tbe
Church. Beattie discussed a information to see if the pro-

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ject would be so methin ~
they were interested in.
' Cards were sent to Ralph
Parker. Shelly Caldwell and
· family; Mildred Brooks. and
Louise Ch&lt;tffee.
Connie Rankin had .a program on her TOPS expenence and her journey of personal weight loss. She read a
letter she had wrinen about
how she lost Wl! ight and
began walking with ·God's
help and support from man y
people . The group sang
"Stepping in the· Light" to
close the program and joined
··hands for a closing prayer ·
by kennedy.
Refreshments were served .· ·
The next meeting will be
March I at 7 p.m. with
Soulsby having the program
and Kennedv and Tere sa
Lemon s . servin g _refre shments. Attendin g were· those
. named and Bettv Chev alier.
Mary R a nkin~·
JoAnna
Weaver. Barb Rou sh. and
Sharon Louks ,

Icy roads
blamed in death
BY KANDY BoYCE
KBOYCE@MYDAI LYR.EGISTER .COM

ASHTON, W.Va. - Icy
roads were at fault for the
death of arh area 'woman
~u st before 8 p.m. Saturday
near Ashton , according to
the Cabell County, W.Va. ,
Sheriff's Department.
Lt. T.W lylcCQ)llas said
that Judy · Holland. 53 ,
Ashton, was driving . north
on W.Va. -2 in her 1998
Chevrolet Cavalier ')'hen
she hit an icy patch i(f the
road, which caused her car
10 spin and go left of center.
.
Holland's car was hit· by
a truck and a car coming
from the opposite direc~ion ,
McComas said. ../
David Rollins, 25 , Point
and
t\ngela
Pleasant,
Warner, 19, Ashton, . were

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headed soutH on W.Va. 2
when the accident occurred .
Rollins and Warner were
injured in the accident.
with Rollins transported to
Cabell Huntington Hospital ,
where he wa ~ treated and
rel eased. Warner was transported . to
St . Mary 's
Medical Center, where she
was treated and released.
Holland was pronounced
dead at the scene of the
accident.
Hollai1d was a long.time
employee
·of
M&amp;G
Polymers in Apple Grove
and graduated . from Hannan
Hi gh School jn 1968. S~e
was preceded in death by
her husband, Roger.

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t Meigs

iiforrned:.
Sunday :
Times-Sentinel:
, _Meigs • 992-2155
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OPINION

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Cbngress shall make no law respecting atl
. establishment of religion, or prohibiting tlte
free e-xerCise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tlte press; or the right of tlte
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governme11t for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·Moderately Confused
.

15 THIS

~UFFANY

THE BESt.,
ZERO

GOOD?

Tuesday, February 10,

Tuesday,Februaryt0,2004

20~4

CARBS.

President Bush richl y
deserves the · sudden plunge
taken by his poll mtings last
week. But his numbers are
likely to tum around once his
re-election campaign ge ts
st;u1ed.
Fur the tirst time evet, the
Gallup poll showed Bush's
approval rating at under 50
percent - 49. to be exact an 11 -poi nt drop trom early
January.
Moreover, he trailed in a
head-to-head matchup with
ihe likely Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John
Kerry. D-Mass .. 53 percent to
46 percent, a 19-point reversal
fro m Bush's 12-point leud less
than a month ago.
How to account for this? It's
been long predicted by chief
Bush polling
strategist
Matthew Duwd that the presidem would fall behind as
attention focuse.s on the
Democratic rdce and as voters
mainly hear anti-Bush rheloric
in the media.
· But there's more to Jhe drop
in his appro0.dl rating than just
that. His State of the Union
speech was lackluster and ideologically tilted. In early
January, fourth-quarter 2003
economic growth was reported as a weaker-than-expected
4 percent. and only I ,000 new
jobs· were created
in
December. (More recently, the
Labor Department revised the
jobs number to 16,000.)
· Huge misstatements were
revealed in the cost of Bush's
Medicare prescription drug
program, and.weapons inspector David Kay reported that
Iraq had no vast arsenal of
weapons of mass destmction.
Were voters truly sophisticated. Bush would sufter yet
more disapproval in the next
round of polling on account of
his ri gged, mean-spirited bud-

Morton ·

Kondracke

get. which understates coming
deficits and strikes ,a fiscally
responsible pose at the
ex pense of social pro~rams
that serve the poor and stck.
It's a budget much like the
State of the Union, designed to
tend to Bush's conservative
base by plunging ahead with
huge new tax breaks skewed
to the wealthy and cuts strictly
in domestic programs.
While boosting defense and
homeland security - legitimately - Bush is cutting
vocational and adult education, housing assistance for the
elderly, dropout prevention
assistance, medical research
and litemcy programs.
And still, the deficit for tiscal
2005 is projected to be $521
billion - a number that has
House Republican moderates
and conservatives considering
a joint rebellion for a recent
GOP Conterence meeting.
The
conservative
Republican Study Committee
headed by Rep. Sue Myrick,
R-N.C., and the moderate
Tuesday ·Group headed by
Rep. Mike Castle. R-Del .. are
planning what one participant
called a 'three-hour gripe session' and will propose itn auto·
matic spending freeze mechanism like the GrammRudman-Hollings trigger of
the 1990s.
If there were .to be a trigger.
it certainly should apply to
Bush's tax-cut proposals · as

Stains can permanently
clothing, carpeting,
ruin
CHESHIRIO - Kathleen Noble 86 of Cheshire Ohio went
linens
or . other household
into the arms of her Lord, Feb. 9 2004 at Holzer Senior Care
in Gallipolis.
·
She wa; born 'in Cheshire, Dec. 20, items if you are not careful.
I 9 I7, the daughter of the late Margaret McCarty Noble and When treating stains. keep
George Dav1.s Nobje, She was employed at Scott's Grocery for in mind that there are three
"P's" to help with their
many. years.
promptness,
Although never married she was a loving daughter. sister removal
patience
and
persistence .
and aunt. She was a loving and caring person who cared
deeply for her family. She was a devoted member of the First treat stains immediate:
Cheshire Bapti st Church, which she faithfully attended when ly. If they are allowed .to
dry, they will be much
she was able. She graduated from Cheshire High Sohool.
In addttton to her parents she was preceded in death by more difficull to remove .
brothers, John Noble of Akron. Earl Noble of Gallipolis, and Launder the garment only
George Noble of London; sisters, Freda Noble of Cheshire, after the stain is gone, since
washing may make it
Hazel Colltn~ of Jacks?n, and Mary Sherrick of Lancaster.
She ts sumved by ststers, Doris Zerkle and Helen Preston, almost impossible to elimiboth of Cheshire, loving nieces, nephews and many friends . nate. Professional cleaners
.
God has taken You home Kathleen.
may not be able to get out
Graveside services will be II a:m. Thursday, Feb. 12, 2004 stains unless they are fresh.
at Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire, with Pastor William
Be patient.
Determine
Little officiating. Friends may call Wednesday evening from 6 the proper stain removal
to 8 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.
procedures
to
follow.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- Check with the Extension
homes.com
·
office at 740-992-6696 to
learn the best techniques for
different fabrics and types
Check in an
of stains.
inconspicuous
area before
. POMEROY - Dorothy Elizabeth Reibel, 86, of Pomeroy
starting
the
treatment.
You
dted on Fnday. Feb. 6. 2004 at The Arbors in Gallipolis .
She was a cataloger for the Columbus Public Library for 30 want to remove the stain.
years. Dorothy was a · gracluate of Ohio University. and not bleach out the color.
recei~ed her Master" s Degree from the University of North Start treating the spot from
Caroltna. Her ltbrary degree was granted from Columbia the outer edge, working
Umvers1ty 111 New York. She was born on May 20. 1917 in towards the · center of the
.Be sure to blot.
Pomeroy. the daughter o.f the late Louis and Frances Grueser stain.
Reibel.
Surviving are a sister. Marcella Baker of Gallipolis, a niece
Frances Lou (Dean) Peterson of Russell. Ky.; a nephew Lloyd
(Sally) Baker of Proctorville: three great nieces, Sara Yost ;
Sus'an Locke and Martha Baker, one great nephew David
Baker. and two great-great nephews, Ben and Nick Yost.
Graveside services were held Tuesday, February I0, 2Q04 at
the Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy with Pastor Alvis
Pollard officiating.
There were no calling hours.
POMEROY -Marriage
Arrangements were by Willis Funeral Home in Gallipolis. In licenses have been issued in
lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Meigs County Meigs County Probate Court to
Historical Society.
Thomas Eugene Lambert, 50,
Visit www.willisfuneralhome.com for e-mail condolences.
Pomeroy, and Fronia Kathleen
Bowser. 54, Vinton; William
Ray "Barber, Jr., 24. Reedsville,
and Sarah Jo Hill, 22 ,
Reedsville; and Nathan Philip
RACINE - Patric(a Marie Harris Brown, 52, of 31435 Oldaker, 18, Huntington, W.Va.,
Salser Road, Racine. died Sunday, Feb. 8, 2004, at the Holzer and Jessica Nicole Anderson,
Medical Center, Gallipolis following an extended illness.
18. Hartford. W.Va.
Born on Sept. 17,1951 at Pomeroy, she was the daughter of
Phyllis Joseph Harris Baker of Racine and the late William F.
"Bill" Harris. She was a bartender at the Good Times.
Besides her mother, she is survived by her husband,
POMEROY - A personal
Michael J. Brown of Racine: a daughter and son-in, law,
Michelle and Clyde Sayre of Racine; two sons and a daugh- injury lawsuit l1lls been filed in
ter-in-law, Cmge W. Brown of Racine, and Christopher and Meigs County Common Pleas
Pearl Brown of Monroe, N. C. ; two sisters and brothers-in- Court by Rodney S. Maher.
law, Mary Ann and Delton Fowler and Becky and Dan Waillington, W.Va, against P'dul
Dudding. all of Racine; a brother and sister-in-law, William Block, Racine, and others, alleging
"Bi ll" and Carolyn Harris of Racine, and grandchildren, injuries sustained on Feb. 6, 2002.
A civil suit ha~ been tiled by
Michael W. Brown. David Brown, Trisha Brown, Tedra Sayre ,
Alex Sayre, Billy Colmer. Seth Colmer, Kiefer Colmer and Scott Whobrey. Middleport,
against Shannon L. Scholderer,
Keana Fraley, several nieces, nephews and cousins.
In addition to her father, she was preceded in death by her Middleport, and others, alleging
father-in-law. George W. Brown. her mother-in-law, Frieda J. damage to property in a Feb. 20,
2002 motor vehicle accident.
VanTassel, and several aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with Pastor Larry Fisher officiating.
Burial will be in Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY - Shannon P.

lion. not counting interest.
The budget's decept ion and
cmel priorities were unveiled
after last week's Gallup poll
was taken. but its internals
show deep general dissaJisfaction with Bush policy.
Bush's job approval on the
economy was 43 percent.
down from 54 percent in early
January. On li1rcign afti1irs. it
was 46 percent, down from 58
percent. On Iraq. 46 percent.
clown from 61 .
Keny out polled Bu.sh as being
more 'in touch with the problems of J imuy Ame1icm•S:
putting 'the country's interesLs
•d1cad of his own political interests." and sh•uing 'your values."
Bush is St.'en 'L
' a mt1ch stmnger
leader who "st;.mds up l(ll' what
he believes in.·
And Bt~&gt;h hasn'l really
hegun to light. He has collectco al most $200 million 1o
spend partially on ads touting
his ·achievements.
Bush has command of the
'bully pulpit' and he can
V\ i.l~ Uismal .
expect two boosts when taxBush's buuget promised to payers receive reftlnds this
reduce dctk its by half over the spring from the 2003 round of
next live years. but it excluded tax cuts and seniors discover
any estimate of the cost of in July that they're getting 20
oper&gt;1tions in Iraq anti percent lo 40 percent disAfghanistan. the 30.000 new cuunls on pre'scription drugs.
Ken·y's polling advantage is
troops for the Army suddenly
authorized
by
Defense bound 10 \vither uniler blister&lt;:rlliCISlll
Of
his
Secretary Donald Rumsfc ld. 1112
'Massachusetts
libeml"
voting
the long-term cost of tax cuts.
or adjustments that must be record. especially on national
made in the Alternative security issues.
So. unless the economy falMinimum Tax.
As The Washington Post ters or lmq lums into a quagnoted last week in a s1 ingi1\g mire. Bush is due for a comeeditorial
headlined back. But heaven help us in a
'Bogus Budgeting· - the second Bush term with a heavbiggest distortion of all was ily Repuhlican Congress.
to limit estimates to a fi ve- Bush won't even have to preyear window during which tend to be a ·compassionate
Bush's plan to make his tax conservative.·
(Morton Kondracke is exec·
cuts permanent wmlid cost
just $ 132 billion. But the 10- urit ·e editor r!{' Roll Call. the
year cosl would be S936 bil - 1"'"'"!"'I"'r of' C"t'i rot Hill. J
well as domestic spending. but
such an idea is likely to be
fiercely opposed by the
administration.
There is !?ood reason for
members ol Congress and
ordinary citizens to he worried
about budget deficits. If 1hey
aren't reversed, intere.st rates
are bound to rise, the economy
will weaken and there'll be no
way to finance the ret irement
of the baby lmom ge nemtion.
Bush's master plan is to
reduce the deticit main ly hy
stimul ating investment and
economic grow th thrm1gh one
round of tax cuts after another
benefiting those who pay the
most taxes - the wealthy but so far there's linle evidem:e
that the plan is working l(&gt;r
ordinary Americans.
Et:Oilomic growth surgetJ at
an K2 percent rate in the third
quarter of 200.\ but that
dropped by half in the fourth
qua11er. and job creation wh icl · more important to
voicr .llill l corporate prollts

Dorothy Elizabeth Reibel

Marriage
licenses

Patricia Marie Brown

Civil actions

MADE HIM THINK
HE KNEW IT?

• E
0

INTE"LLIGE"NCE

u

E
0

u

o
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~Ni$R.

I

© 2004 by NEA. Inc.

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· The opinions expressed in this column are the
. consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. \·
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As the valuable 1 'Almanac
of American Polit1cs' notes,
ldal10's Sen. Larry Craig 'has a
very conservati ye voting
record.' and still ddes. Despite
this. on Oct. 15, he introduced
;i cmcial bipartisan1supported
bi II to revise parjs of the
Patriot Act. Entitled the
Security and Freedom Insured
(SAFE) Act, the media has
paid scant attention. But
Attorney
General John
Ashcroft has told Senate
Judiciary
Conunittee
Chairman Orrin Hatch that he
strongly objects to the bill. and
threaten~ that the president's
senior advisers would recommend that he veto it.
In introducing the bill, Craig
said: 'I spend a lot of time on
' the ground in my home state
of Idaho, and regardless of the
·pride Idahoans have in the
success of the war on terrprism, many of them continue to
raise concerns about the tools
being used in that war.' He
cited the Patriot Act among
those concerns that 'are shared
by a wide re~ional and political spect!1Jm. The SAFE Act's
bipartisan cosponsors include
Democratic Massachusetts
Sen. John Kerry.
.
Among the groups supporting the SAFE Act's revisions to
the Patriot Act are the
American
Conservative
Union, the Gun Owners of
America, the American Civil
Liberties Union, the Free
Cong~ss Foundation and the
American Lib\'llfY Association.
In a letter to the Senate,
theSe groups emphasize that
'the SAFE Act would prevent
fishing expeditions into sensiri ve personal records by
requiring that the records
sought iit foreign intelligence
investigations pertain to an
alleged spy, terrorist or other

LOWER SALEM - Robert D. Carnahan, 75, of Lower
Salem; Ohio, formerly of Meigs County, died Tuesday, Feb. 3,
2004 at Marietta Memorial Hospital.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Delbert and Hilda
Baum Carnahan. and an infant sister. He is survived by his
wife, Donna Morrison Carnahan, and three daughters, Denise
Miner of Ocala , Fla.; Dawnita (Charles) Vigne of Ocala, Fla,;
and Danielle (lames) Dutton of Dexter City. ; four sons,
Robert Carnahan, Jr.. Scott Carnahan of Lower Salem, and
Steve Bush and Terry Bush of Athens, and four gmndchildren.
Also surviving are two brothers, Larry Carnahan and
Maurice Carnahan of Long Bottom; two sisters, Jeanne
(Eddy) Ritz of Louisville, Ky., and Dolores (John) Hartness of
Long Bottom, and several nieces and nephews.
Private memorial services were held Friday. Feb. 6, at
Marietta with Glenn Pevarski of the Marietta Congregation of
Jehovah's Witnesses officiating .

The Patriot Act in trouble
Nat
Hentoff

foreign agent.'
Right now, these Patriot Act
critics say, ~ federal agents can
get a court to order that anyone's library, bookstore or
other records be turned over
regardless of whether there is
any suspicion about the person
whose .records are turned
over.' Though Ashcroft says
he hasn't used that provision to
search library records, he hasn't said he wouldn't.
These fishing expeditions
by the FBI have become even
more extensive. On Dec. 3
(the Saturday that Saddam
Hussein was captured),
President Bush signed the
2004
Intelligence
Authorization
Act
that
includes a provision giving the
FBI the power - without having to go to any judge - to
obtain a wide rdllge of personal records through the greatly
e~panded use of the National
Security Letters.
·
These letters, in the form of
administrative
sub~?DCnas,
allow the FBI to obtaJn ·such
business records as data from
financial institutions, credit
card ' companies, airlines,
stockbrokers and the U.S. Post
Office. With no judicial supervision. these records are,gathered and searched regarding
persons who may be 'relevant'
to a national security investigation.
This is hardly a precise stan-

dard and , indeed, invites
abuse.
This additional in vasion of
the individuals' ri ghts was
originally part of a draft of
Ashcroti's Patriot Act II. Bui
when that proposal was leaked
by someone in the .lusti~e
Department, and then suffered
considerable ~ritici s m. the
Justice Department began to
try to slip parts of tl1at legislation into law piecemeal. TI1e
greatly en larged scope of
1 National Security Letters was
enacted without pub Iic hearings.
Furthermore. in keeping
with the overall secrecy ot thi s
government 'security' operdtion, recipients of the National
Security Letters itre bound by
law not to reveal they have
received the letters.
So it was hardly surprising
that When Bush, during his
State of the Union Address.
told Congress that sections of
the Patriot Act would expire
on Dec. 3 1, 2005, there was
applause by some congressional members who absolutely want those sections
removed. The press saiel only
De(llocrats applauded these
expirations, but according to
eyewitnesses
' there ,
Republican libertarians also
expressed their reservations
about the Patriot Act.
However, the president
strongly urged Congress to
renew those sections. So did
Vice President Dick Cheney
when he spoke before the
American
Conservative
. Union's •. Political Action
Conference on Jan. 24. But the
response from the audience
.was less than enthusiastic. And,
as The New York Tunes reported, conservative Republican F.
James Sensenbrenner, chairman of the House Judiciary

Committee. ·vowed that
ex tending the aci before
reviewing its results by 2005
would happen 'over my dead
body."
The Patriot Aci and other
revisions of the Bill of Rights
arc in trouhle in Congress.
Moreover. it is time for Sen.
·Hatch to hold hearings on Sen.
Craig's SAFE Aci (bill S.
1709) and other bipart isan
bills that create responsible
congressional overs ight to
~mmter this administrmion's
bypassing of the very
Constitution it is sworn to protect. Hatch approves of the
Patriot Act, but he must ·
remember that he has also
sworn
tu
uphold
the
Constitution.
'More thao two centuries
ago." the Jan . 20 Boston Globe
reports 'the patrio.ts of
Brewster (Mass.) shut down
the Colonial courts on Cape
Cod in one of the tirst acts of
resistance ' to King George Ill.
Now, the Brewster Town
Meeting 'has formally condemned the ... USA Patriot
Act, united against the laws ot'
a different leader named
George." So have 236 towns,
cities and counties in 37 states
through Bill of Rights Defense
Committee resolutions.
Congress has heard from
these Americans. They must
hear from more citizens to
secure the liberties the president always assures us we are
fighting to protect from the
terrorists.
•(Nar Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the
First Amendment and rhe Bill
of Rig/us and author of sever·
.a/ hooks, including his current
work,, 'The War on the Bill of
Rights and the .Gathering
Resist(lnce' (Seven Stories
Press, 2003).
••

can only be removed with
water; drycleaning won "t
work. However. with woo l
fabric , the clothing still
needs to be taken to a
drycleaner. They will be
Becky
able to test for colorfastBaer
ne ss. then use steam or
water to remove the . 'a lt.
The original color should
return.
If .candle - wax is a probinstead of
rubbing the
lem.
carefully sc rape off as
mark, beca use that can
much
of the wax a&gt; you
damage the fiber, fini sh or
fabric color. Avoid soap can with a dull knife .
and hot water which may Cover the spot with several
set some spots, especially layers of absorbent paper
those that are protein-based. towels. then press with a
Stubborn stains may require warm, dry iron. Replenish
repeated treatments in order the paper towels as the · wax
for the blemish to com- is absorbed. Once the wax
is remo ved. treat any
pletely disappear.
During the winter you remaining colored stain
may encounter different with a "pretreat" cleaning
Read the ~are
types of stains that are not product.
label
to
determine the
usually a problem during
other times of the year. hottest temperature in which
For instance road salt, used the item can be was hed.
Crayon markings can be
to melt snow, can result in
salt rings or splatters removed from clothing by
appearing on the bottom of spraying the stain with a
wool coats and pants. The hardware product like WDLet it stand a few
salt may cause a temporary 40.
change in the garment's minutes, then repeat on the
color to brown , pink or reverse side.
Rub liquid
orange. This discoloration dishwashing deterge nt into

For The Record

WHAT

u

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Kathleen Noble

WHAT DID THE
PRESIDEWT KNOW &amp;

.;

. www.mydailysentinetcom

Obituaries

Bush polls bound tn improve

The D.aily Sentinel

\

PageA4

from PageA1
mandatory filing for all village residents.

Other
business
Business
owners
Michelle Harris,
Candles,
and
Barnhart, Marine
approached village

Country
Thomas
Services.
council to

BPA

Easter Louise Brown

from PageA1

ASHLAND, KY. - Easter Loui~e Brown . .77, of Ashland,
Ky., died Sunday. Feb. I, 2004 at her residence.
Born on Nov. 6, 1926 in Boyd County, Ky., she was the
daughter of the late Oliver and Bessie Lemaster Blanton. She
was a homemaker.
She is survived by her husband, Roger Dale Brown; four
daughters and sons-in-law, Patricia and Denny Sexton of
Grayson, Ky., Sharon and Ed Dixon of Westwood, Ky.,
Brenda and Matt Deborde of Grayson, Ky., and Robin and Jay
Swain of Reedsville, seven grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren; and a sister. Esther Ruth Blanton of Ironton.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by a son,
Donnie Eugene Foster. ·
Funeral services were held at II a.m. Wednesday, Feb. '4,
2004 at the Lazear Funeral Home Chapel in Ashland, Ky. Rev.
Eddie Wiler officiated and burial was in Golden Oaks
Memorial Gardens.

dates, and failure of the village 10 properly chlorinate
the water supply.
"As a village council member, I don't see how we can
ever vote to remove the E\oard
of Public Affairs," Pooler
said. "If we do, we'll be right
back where we started."
Mayor Sandy Jannarelli
said the village will accept
applications for the position
of village administrator
through 4 p.m. on Feb. 18.

William Joseph 'lbome
MIDDLEPORT - William Joseph Thorne, 35, of
Middleport died Dec. II, 2003 at the Holzer Medical Center
in ·Gallipolis. He is survived by his wife. Carmen, of
Middleport. No funeral services were held.
·

-.. Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribt: today • 992·2155
,.

... ..

Tax

Other
business
Dodger Vaughan, Tom
Dooley and Susan Baker of the
Middleport
Communiiy

a

remover.

Devotion unending for
husband caring for wife

Chapman was sentenced to
six months local confinement on a motion to revoke
community control filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Cha(1man was originally
sentenced to a cha rge of
trafficking in cocaine , a
third-degree felony.
A six-lnonth sentence was
reduced \ to 60 days, and
Chapman. was ordered to pay
$3,300 a11 cost of confme·
ment.

the spot until ihe stain is
go ne. A paper towel can
help absorb any remaining
Hand wa h the
resid ue.
garment unti l the
'D-40
&gt;mell is gone. before laundering.
Valentine's
Day
may
bring about it&gt; own iype of
laundry problems. Remove
lipstick ; tains on collars by
dabbii1g them wi th denatured alcohol and dishwashing liqui d. then was h as
usual.
If there is a red
wine sp ill on carpeting.
pour white wine on the area
immediatelv. then blot.
Sponge wi"th warm water
and pat the area dry. Don' t
use salt on carpeting as you
· would for tabl e linen s
because it will actuall y
draw dir1 to that spot.
If smeared chocolate is an
issue, let it set then scrape
with a dull .knife
Soak
clothing in 'detergent with
enzymes. then wash according to the label. If the item
can't be laundered, ge ntl y
rub suds from carpet shampoo into the spot.
Blot
with a damp cloth . When
dry, treat with a liquid staln

NORTH RIDGEVILLE. Telev!'simi, - espc..:ially c•ir(AP) - Devotion is routine toons wi th their bright colors
for Dudley Shaw.
r uns \continuou sly to
He dresses and cleans hi s
1
wife, Evelyn, who was diag- en· "tain her.
"My \ hopei is that she wakes
nosed with Alzheimer' s dis~
ease I0 years ago . He feeds up and r atches," said Shaw. 91 .
her water from a spoon every
A hpme care aide at)d
hour to keep her hydrated. He Shaw "s\daughter help out. ·
prepares her meals. cleans the
"11 makes a busy day."" Shaw
house and does the laundrv.
An estimated 4.5 million said. ·:~did then il stmts all over
Americans have the incumble agmn.
.
·
brain disease. One in 10
His rewatll is that his wif~ \
Americans has had a family
'
member with Alzheimer's. blue eyd still gaze into hts.
according to the Alzheimer"s During d1e'ir 67 ye&lt;u-s of marriage.
the couple ?uilt a home together.
Association.
Mrs . Shaw, 90 , lost her raised a family and endured the
mobility a year after being loss of three ,,r their four children.
diagnosed and was confined
"She wants to stay around
to a bed. Four years ago, she
and keep \m eye on me,"
lost her ability to speak.
She naps most of the day. Shaw said.

1

His community control was
continued.

Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce
was granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to
Mar~o Florian from Bret E.
Flonan.
•
A divorce action filed by
· Robert L. Miller against Kathy
A. Miller has been dismissed.

Dissolution

·sunday Times-Sentinel

POMEROY - A dissolu. tion has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Carlton Michael
Criss and Karen Ann Cniss.

Subscribe today¥ 740-992·2155

I

request permission to place a Congo is paid $900 per cutsign listing their busines~es at ting. Council members estithe intersection of \Nye mated that grass is cut
Avenue and E. Main Street in between 12 10 15 times a
Pomeroy. Counci I members year.
said they would review t he
Village
councfl
existing ordinance and co!lle approved a $39,935 bid for a
up wiih an equitable soluti0n. new dump truck for the vil Village
council lage from Don Tate Moiors in
approved a $50 pay increase Pomeroy. Two other compafor Terry Congo. who cuts nies submitted bids which
Turnpike
of
the grass at the Beechgrove included
Cemetery
in
Pomeroy. Gallipolis and Gibson Berea
Including the additional $50. Ford of Kentucky. The truck

will be used for a variety of
jobs including snow removal
by the streei depanment.
The Me igs Coutlly
Ministerial
Association
, requested approval from l'il ' la" e L·n uncil to platlt ve·., _
elahle gardens on property
the village owns on Bulternut
Avenue. Council approveu
the plan nn a trial basis.

ority for the year. The associ ation hopes to work with a
local landscaper to select.
plant and care for the trees on
a contract basis.
"There has been nothing
done to address the issue of
beautifying the downtown,"
Dooley said. "This is our project, and we' re going to do it. ~
Iannarelli said an ODNR representative will meet with village
employees on Feb. 18 regardingthe planting and care of trees. and
invited the community associa·

tion to &lt;end repre&lt;e n1a1ives. and
to include the tree committee
memhe1-s in its plans.
Rev. Robert Robinson
shared a verse and led the
meeting in a momellt of .si lence
io honor Clinton Turner. formerl y of Pomeroy, who was
killed last week in Iraq.
Council al so apfroved the
mayor"s report o fees and
tines collected. in the amount
of $2.650.20. and approved
payment of bill s · in tbc
amount of SI5J 15.86.

Association requested council's
pennission to pursue the planting of trees in the downtown
shopping district, using ao;sociation funds and funds from the
Ohio . Depm1men1 of Natural
Resources the village has set
aside in a certificate of deposit.
While a committee was
appointed several years ago
to determine what tree s are
best for the area, no trees
have been purchased, Dooley
noted, and the association has
made the tree planting a pri-

~

AU lt)'les ot carpet are lacluded:
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BERBER
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CARPET,
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from us and we'll
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fora free no
ohUptlon quote.

Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671

I.----..-;__-------------------:----,--;-------:------ - ~---· ---

,.

~

•

�www:mydallysentinel.com

.

Thesday, February 10, 2004
Prep scoreboard, Page 82
Redwomen fall to Malone, Page 82
Rio wins close encounter at Malone, _Page 82

.'

ER
c

Bl

The Qaily Sentinel

INSIDE

1Uesda~Februaryt0,2004

Rio Grande
spo•·ts

42091 Pomeroy Pike • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: (740) 992·2158 • Fax: 740-992·5 19

Tonlghl's gamn
Men's Baekelball
ShaWnee St. at Rio, 8 p.m.
- Women's Balkeltllll
St1m\mee St. at Rio, 6 p.m•.

Bv corr WoLFE
SPORTS

\..turday's gsmn
Men's ·aukelball
Tlffin at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Women's Baaketball_
Tiffin at Rio Grande~ 6 p.m.

Prep Standings
Boys basketball

SEOAL

'

Team
Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Jackson
Athens
Warren
Point Pleasant

,....,,

Cosmetology Is a two-year program. Students may enroll in this program In their junior year or be 16 yean of age. The program focuses on lab and
classroom skills related to the profession, such as: scalp It hair care, cutting. coloring. perming, styling, face and nail care. In addition, students must
take Science, Math, and English to complete the needed credits for Cosmetology. Upon the completion of the program, students will take the State
Board Examination to become licensed cosmetologists In the State of Ohio. The instrudon are Kay Proffitt and Linda Yonker.

.

5fQ AU.

8·1
8-2
7·2
4-6
3-7
2-7
1-8

Lady Eagles drop South Gallia

11--4
12·5
11 ·5
6-9
7-9
6·10
3·13

RESPONDENT

MERCERVILLE - The Eastern
Lady Eagles (13·5) turned up the
wick and never looked back in dropping the South Gallia Rebels 66-20
Monday night during non-league var·
sity girls basketball action.
"We played a lol of kids a great
deal of time," said Eastern Coach
Rick Edwards. "Hallie Brooks had a
big second half. Morgan (Weber) and
Erin (Weber) continue to put up good
numbers. We did . not give up a field
goal in the second half. Our defense
was exceptional."
All of the Rebels' second half
points came at the line.
Edwards continued. "We have two

big games before we
get set to prepare for
tournament
play.
These next two ~ ,~,,
games should go a
long way in prep· ~ - w· .. "',
ping us for the tour·n!'lment. Alexander
and Trimble are b()th ~
tremendous teams
-that we will have to
really play hard
Weber

r--=,--....,

r:;!i'~.,'
[\

i

\

against. "

Eastern was led by Morgan Weber
with 17 points, while Hallie Brooks
brought home a double-double with
II points and 10 rebounds. Erin
Weber added 12 points and seven
rebounds, while Jen Hayman and
Krista White added six points each.

Alyssa Holter added
four. Jesse - Hupp
five.
Amber
Willbarger four. and
Jenna Hupp one.
South Gallia was
led by Ashley Clark
with six, Kristen
Halley with fiv e
points.
Chel sea
Canaday four, two
each from Ashley
Brooks
Cremeans, Jessica
Cantrell, and one from Stacie Fellure.
Eastern rolled to a 21·5 first period
lead, led mostly my Morgan Weber.
who hit 6-13 from the field and 5-5 at
the line. Sister Erin Weber also had
impressive numbers with a 4-9 night
from the lield and a 4-4 night at the line.

Eastern began.substituting freely in
the second quaner as twelve players
saw ·action in the va rsity tilt
Everyone collected a piece of the
scori ng by hal ftime as Eastern
marched to a 32-14 lead at the intermi ss ion.-

Hallie Brooks had a great second
half to emerged as one of the gameis
top scorers. as she scored all of her 11
points in the half. Brooks also had a
great inside game and emerged as the
gameis top rebounder with 10. After
three quarters Eastern led 48-15.
A rare but somewhat boisterous
fact came to fruition in the final
round. The Eagles held the Rebels
without a second half fLCid goal. All

Please see Eagles, Bl

Southern
grounds
White
Falcons

TVC

Ohio Division
Team
TVC
Vinton County
6·1
Alexander
5·2
Belpre
4·3
Meigs
3-4
Wellston
3·5
Nelsonville· York
1-7
Hocking Division
TVC
Team
7·1
Trimble
7-1
Eastern
4-3
Southern
3-4
Federal Hocking
Miller
2·6
0-8
Waterford
Team
Chesapeake
River Valley
Rock Hill
South PointFairland
Coal Grove

l\ll
13·3
12-4
10·6
10-6
6·11
3-13
Al.l.
12·4
12-5
1 0·6
8-7
3-14
0·17

ovc
Q':!!;_

6·2
5·3
4-3
4·3
2·5
1-6

Others
Team
South Gallia
Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
Wahama
Oak Hill

Automotive Technology Is a two-year program startlnc the junior year or any year the student is at least 16 yean of age. In this program students
be trained in various areas of ~~~aintalnlng. v.ehldes. the·operation o.f casoUOtlt engines, diagnos.-cs an~ analysis as troubleshooting procedures,
the repairing of various types of vehicles. By the end of the senior year, thf! student will be well-trained in the field of automotive technology and
Immediately join the workforce In that field. Instructor for the dass Is Tom Werry.
_

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
' SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Placing nine
girls in the scoring column ,
Southern used a' halanced
team effort to ground the visiting Wahama White Falcons
54-37 during a non -league
girls· varsity basketball contest in Charles W Hayman
gymnasium Monday night.
The Southern win. its second against the tough West
Virginia school. Southern
( 14·5) prepares for its last
contest against Meigs on
Thursday, while Wahama
drops to 12-6.
Southern was led by senior
Katie Sayre who tossed in 16
point and
had seven
rebounds, while sidekick
Deana Pullins netted 12
points and four rebounds.
Pullins was 4-4 from twopoint ranged and 2-4 from the
three poinl arc. She also held
Wahama 's talented point
guard Keilh Ann Sayre to just
I0 points.
Junior Susan Brauer drilled
two three pointers and an
inside jumper _for eight
point,&gt;. center Ashley Dunn
added six, while Jessica Hill,
Brooke Kiser, and Joanne
Pickens each notched three
points. and Ashley Roush and
Kristiina Williams had two
apiece.
Wahama was led by Keith
Ann Say re with 10 points,
Ashley Roush wilh eight.
Whitney Knight five , and ·
four each from Katie
Hendrick son,
Jessica
Hoffman . and Julia Hoffman.
Wahama. often the White
Falcons· high scorer was held
to just four points in a great
defensive
effort
from
Southern's Joanne Pickens,
Ashley Dunn. and Ashley
Rousli . Wahama's Jennifer
Flowers at!det! 1wo points.
Southern went up H-0 on a
Jessica Hill three pointer. a
Katie Sayre drive-in lay-up
and an old-fashioned three
point play by Joanne Pickens.
Wahama's Ashley Roush
made it 8-2. but four more
lay-ins by Sayre and a threepointer and another field goal
by Pullins pushed Southern
to a 21·6 first period lead.
In the secbnd period
Southern lost its intensity, a
turn-around that was in part
10 a tighter Wahama defense .
Additionally, Wahama picked
up the pace and went on the
a.ttack to outscore Southern
10-5 in lhe frame . Ashley
Roush. who had four points
in the first round, added four
more in the second ·frame to
lead the Fa lcons.
.
Keilh Ann Sayre . Whitney
Knight.
and
Katie
Hendrickson each added two
points as Wahama out-hus·
tled Southern during the sec-,
ond period. Southern's Katie
Sayre added four points and
Kiser added one in a sub par
Sollthern second quarler
offense . Southern s~ill managed' to lead 26- 16 al the half.

8!.!.
15-2
6-10
9·7
8·8
6-10
6-9

ALL
8-6
8·7
7-7
2·11
2-12

Girls basketball

SEOAL

Team
Warren
Jackson
Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Athens
Point Pleasant

_5_EQ

10-0
7-2
8-3
4-7
4-7
4-7
0-11

A!.!.
17-1
13-4
13·6
8-10
8·11
6-13
0·15

TVC

Ohio Division
l§run

IYQ ALL

l§run

IYQ ALL

Belpre
7-2
Alexander
6·3
Meigs
5-4
Vinton County
5·4
Nelsonville-York
2-6
Wellston
1·7
Hocking Division
Trimble
Eastern
Waterford
Southern
Federal Hocking
Miller

The Electronics It lnstrumentatlon major Is a two-year program that Introduces students to DC and AC circuit analysis and digital circuitry. Junlon
be&amp;ln with basic component Identifications, scbematlc analysis and basic drcultry. At the end of the junior course, they are intrOduced to the world of
digital Ingle. During the senior year, students continue digital and Integrate It through mlcroprocesson and end with pic controllen. With this knowlecfp, stuCients have the ability to apply for an entry-level position at most power plants. Students who successfully complete this major have the abilIty to test or challenge some counes offered at WSCC narrowing the two-year degree program by four counes.
-

Team
South Point
Fairland
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
Coal Grove

12-7
13,5
10·8
5-13
4·13 •
1-14

9-0
6·3
5-4
5-5
2-7
0-8

17·1
12·5
10·8
14·5
6-12
3·15

Q':!!;_

AU.
7-10
10·8

ovc
7-2
6-3
5·3
4-4

2-6
1-7

9-9

6·11
4·14
9-9

Others .
l§run

Oak Hill
Wahama
Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan
South Gallia

ALL
18·1
12·6
9-6
10-6
2-17

Prep schedule
Today's games
Boys BasKetball
Coal Grove at River Valley
Eouth Gellla at Teays Valley Christian
Ohio Valley Christian at Grace Christian
Wahama at Southern

Buffalo at Hannan ·
Glrla Bukatboll
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood
Wadneod~,

Fobruary II
B.oys Bask,tball

.

Gallla Academv vs. River Valley (at Rio
Grande) ""
Glrla a..ketball
Gallia Academy at Ironton
. River VaHey at South Point

Nurse
_ proll'am Is a on~-year prngram offered to students In their
year
The proll'am co11slsts
afternoon. Be1lnnln1 second semester. students
related Instruction during the momlng and four periods of simulated laboratory -~elice In
participate In on-th.e-Job cooperative employmen,t at a local health care' or hospital fadllty during the afternoon or e11enln1 houn: Students will be
_certified In CPR and First Ald. Interested students may also enroll In the Eme,.ency Medical Technician class offared throu1h our Meigs County EMS.

Thurwday, February 12
.
Girls Basketball
Poca at Point Pleasant
Buffalo at Wahama
Pauley Bridge at Hannan
Meigs at Southern
.

Friday, February 13

Boyi Baakalball
Gallia Academy at Warren
South Gall ia at Buffa;to
Wood County ChriStian at OVCS
Meigs at Nelsonville-YorK
Eastern at Trimble
Southern at·Wlitertord
Logan at Point Pleasanl
Grace Christian at Hannan

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL YOUR GUIDANCE
OFFICE
.
.

· Meigs High.School 992·2158 • Southem High School 949·26 i 1 • Eastem High School985·3329
•

•

'

•

•

-

,-- - ~~-------

\

-

7 .••. -·

Cleveland Cavaliers' leBron James (23) drives past Boston Celtics' Ricky Davis in the second quarter Monday in
Cleveland. (AP)

LeBron leads Cavs past Boston
•

'
CLEVELAND (AP) Ricky
"a black hole."
Davis returned to Gund Arena and
Davis apologized to Cavaliers'
hardly recognized the place. The fans about the remarks followin g
crowd was rowdy; the Cavs ' mascot Monday morning's shootaround. But
made fun of him and he got booed . -that didn ' t stop them from booing
A lot has happened since he got him from the moment he came 111
traded.
with 3:45 left in the l'irsl quarter.
Rookie LeBron James scored 24
During a timeout in the second
points and the Cleveland Cavaliers quarter, Moondog, Cleveland's flop·
made sure they didn't give Davis py-eared mascot, mopped the floor
anything more to say with a 97-89 with a No. 31 Cavs jersey- Davis '
win over the Boston Celtics on number with Cleveland . .
Monday night.
" I heard the crowd on· that one,"
_ "They gol th~ best of that one," Davis _said. "Whatever:"
.
said Davis, who was back in
Dav1s scored 10 pomts on 3-ot-8
Cleveland for the first time since he sh9oti ng and had four ,turnovers in
was dealt to Boslon in a six-player 28 'minutes .
swap on Dec. 15.
"It's always emotional when you
James played the. final 10:19 with come back to somewhere you got
a strained left calf muscle, but hit a traded from," said Davis , who came
crucial 3-pointer and grabbed a big to Cleveland from Miami in a 200 I
rebound down the · stretch as the trade. "I didn't get enough shots
Cavs snapped a three-game losing tonight to get going."
streak.
Paul Pierce scored 32 points - · 19
"lt .tightened up, but I was able to in the second quarter - for _Bos10n.
come back," James said. "I ' ll be all but made just I of 7 field goals in the
rrght."
_
·
fourth , when -the Celtics scored ohly
Zydrunas llgauskas added 19 13 pQints.
points and 16 rebounds as Clevelan\l - "They changed some things up on
also broke a 13-game slide against me in the second half .. and I didn ' t
the Celtics. The Cavs hadn't defeat· get as many looks," Pierce &amp;aid.
ed Boston since Nov. 4,. 2000.
Eric Williams, who came over
Most important for Cleveland fans from Boston in the deal along with
was the Cavs beat Davis. Shortly Tony Battie and Kedrick Brown. had
afler the trade, the sometimes selfish 16 points, nine in the fourth quarler.
guard critiCized the Cavs , their front Jeff Mcinnis had nine assists for
_office ;1ndthe city. calling Clevelan? Cleveland.
I

Afler James dr;~ined a 3-pointcr
with 8:49 left , Williams hit a ju mper
and a 3-pointer as the Cavs went nn
a 9-0 run to take a 92-84 lead witn
5:42 remaining.
However, Pierce shot the ligh ts oul
- the scoreboard lights. that is on a jumper with 4:53 left. Pierce
first faked James into the air. drew
the foul and hit a 20-fooler to bring
the Celtics within 92-86.
Just as Pierce' s ball went through
the net, all the arena's scoreboards
went dark and it took roughly I0
minutes for the problem to be fixed .
During the stoppage. Moondo g
entertained the crowd by attempting
a few overhead shots from halfcourt .
with his back to the basket. He final ly hi I one after several tries . As the crowd roared, Pierce joined
the fun. trying three flings over his
head that all missed their target.
" I make those every day. Honest.
Ever'y day," Pierce said . "The rims
aren 't . straight · or something here.
They're not lined up eve nl y."
When play re&gt;tuned , lhe Celt ics .
remained cold from the field as they
scored just five points in the final
8:18. Boston wasju st5-of- 19 in the
final period.
Pier&lt;.:e refused lo blame the score·
board outage for Boslon ·s poor
shooting.
"That 's not an excuse," he said .
" Both teams had to s it." -

Please see Southern, B1

.,

�·' Tuesday, February 10,2004

Tuesday, February 10, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page B2

www.mydailysentinel.com

;·- ----------------------------......:....---j! P'rep scoreboard
Southern 54, Wahama 37

r Wahama
6
10
8
13 ~ 37
1 Southern
2~
5
16 12 54
:
WAHAMA - Whttney Kntght 1 2-2 5
, Katie HendrtckSon 2 0-0 4, Jessica
• Hoffman 2 D-O 4, Ashley Roush 4 0-2 B
Keith Ann Sayre 5 0-1 10, Nancy Bnnker 0
o-o 0, Jennifer Flowers 0 2-3 2, Julia

HoHman 1 2·2 4. TOliiLS - 15 6· 10 37
SoUTHERN - Ashley Ounn 3 0-0 6,

Jessica Hill 1 o-2 3, Deana Pullins 5 0-0

12. KaUe Sayre 6 34 15. Susan Brauer 3
8, Brooke Ktser 1 1-2 3, Joanne
Pickens t 1-1 3, Ashley Roush 1 0-0 2
Knstllna Wtlliams 1 o-o 2. Jordan Netgler 0

o-o

0·0 0, Linda Eddy 0 D-0 0 TOTALS - 22 5·
954

3-polnt goals - Wahama 1 (Kntght) .
Southern 5 (Pullins 2, Brauer 2 , Hill)

Eastern 66, South Gallia 20
..

Eastern

21

11 16 18 - 66

Soulh Gall•a

5

9

1 5 - 20

EASTERN - Alyssa Holter 2 0-0 4,
Morgan Weber 6 5 5 17. Jesste Hupp 1 3
3 5, Jen Hayman 2 2·6 6, Enn Weber 4 4- 4 12. Cassie Nuner 0 0-0 0. Knsta While 3
• Q-0 6, Hallie Brooks 5 1·2 11 , Janna Hupp

. : 0 1-2 1. Amber Wtllbarger 1 2 4 4 Georgie

. • Koblentz 0 0-Q 0, Tanya Barber 0 0·0 0
• • TOTALS - 24 18-26 66
: SOUTH GALLIA - Knsten Halley 1 3-4
~ 5. Ashley Cremeans 1 o 0 2. La ra Vilela o
• 0·0 0, Jesstca Cantrell 0 2-4 2 Ashley
: Clark 2 1-3 6. Elke Schuster 0 0-0 0.
• • Chelsea Canaday 1 2·2 4, Lacy Lane 0 0·
• · 0 0 Stac1e Fellure 0 1·2 1. Julia Gwtnn 0 0·
.: 0 0, Jtll Swatn 0 0-Q 0 TOTALS - 5 9-15
. . 20.
1
3-pomt goals- Eastern 0 , SG 1 (Clark)

..

:.
..

.,
'
.

'

·

Ohio High School Girls Basketball
Monday's Results
Akr Ftrestone 62, Akr Ellet 43
Akr Kenmore 59. Akr Centrai-Hower 41
Andover Pymatumng Valleyr'" 37 ,
Lordstown 33
Ashtabula 51 Young W1lson 35
Athens 53 Pt Pleasant (W Va ) 35
Avon Lake 43, NOf'th Olmsted 29
Beallsville 54. Old Washmgton Buckeye
Tratl 48
Bridgeport 62. Cameron (W Va l 50
Brookfield 54, Newton Falls 40
Caldwell 62. Sarahsville Shenandoah 61
Canton T1mken 61 Navarre Fatrless 55
OT
Chagnn Falls 54, Aurora 44
.
Chagnn Valley Chagrm Otvtslon
Chardon 5'9, Ashtabula Sis John &amp; Paul
31
Cheshtre Rtver Valley 60, Galhpohs Gall1a
Academy 55
Cle Lutheran W 66. Rtchmond His 38
Cle. MLK 69, Fatrport 38
Cle St Joseph 65, Fa1rv1ew 50
Cleveland His 51, Maple Hts 48
Gals Hartley 77, Sugar Grove Berne
Unton 44
Cots Oh10 Deaf 48, Madtson Chnshan 22
Columbiana 69. Sallnevttle Southern 24
• Cotumb1ana Crestv1ew 53. Lisbon Davtd
Anderson 50
Cortland Lakev1ew 69 , Leavittsburg
LaBrae 39
Cortland Maplewood 48 , Ktnsman
Badger 30
Delaware Buckeye Valley 38, Manon
Elgin 34
Delphos Jefferson 79, Orwell Grand
Valley 43 '
E Liverpool 61, Wellsville 45
Enon Greenan 47, S Charleston SE 45,
OT

Fatrfteld Chnstian 57 Muskmgum
Chrtsflan 19
Fayetteville 55, Ctn Chnst•an 32
FeliCity 61 . West }Jmon 33
Fostoria 60, Carey 35
Franklin 50, As~t abu la Edgewood 15

Redwomen fall to Malone
..

•

Garretsville 53. Wmdham 49
Welflngton 46, Sullivan Black R1ver 32
Georgetown 63, A1pley 32
W1llard 42 , Castalia Margaretta 28
Gtrard 38. warren ChampiOn 32
Williamsburg 79, C1n SCPA 19
Glouster Tnmble 62, Albany Alexander 46
Xema 63, Beavercreek 55
Greenfteld McClain 58. Seaman North
Young. Boardman 56 , Blackhawk (Pa) 32
Adams 36
Young Chns. 52, Mass Chns 15
Grove City Christian 4 7, Delawa re
Zanesv11fe 52, Cots Whetstone 20
Chnsttan 30
Zanesv1lle Maysvtlle 66, Croo~s v1 lle 38
Hamtlton Badin 72 , Bethel-Tate 23
Hanoverton Un1ted 47, E. Palestine 38
Ohio High Schocl Boys Baaketball
Hubbard 45 Young Ltberty 37
Monday's Aesutra
Ironton 48. Proctorv•lle Fatrla nd 35
Chesterland West Geauga 72, Kirtland 41
Jamestown Greenevtew 64, Spnng Cath
Cle Hentage Chris 64 MaSSillon Chns
Cent 54
52
Johnstown 61 Cols Harvest Prep 30
Cle VA SJ 65, Western Reserve Acade my
Kahda 77 Fmdlay L1berty-Benton 34
42
Kennedy Cath Pa 67 Young Rayen 61, Fa1rf1efd Chrtshan 73, Muskmgum Chns
OT
35
Kmgs M1lls K.ngs 66 M1ltord 47
Mentor Chnst1an 52, Re1mer Ad 37
Latham Western 63, Beaver Eastern 59
Milford Center Fairbanks 80, A1dgeway
Lee1on1a 39, Sebnng McK•nley 35
Rtdgemont 52
Lima Perry 52. Arlington 34
N Atdgevtlfe Lake A1dge 57 , Medma
Ltsbon Beaver Local 65 Warren Hardmg Chnshan 43
61
PemberiJdle Eastwood 67. Genoa 49
Lowellv1lle 60. M1neral R1dge 35
Perrysburg 61 , Whitehouse Anthony
Marion Pleasant 74 . Milfo rd Center Wayne 59
Fatrbanks 61
Tol Maumee Valley 61 , Ann Arbor (Mteh )
McDermott Northwest 62 Portsmouth Green Htlls 47
Clay 33
""'
Wtllow Wood Symmes Valley 76, New
McDonald 42. Berhn Center W Reserve Boston Glenwood 67
36
Middletown Jotadtson 56 , New Parts
W.Va. prep basketball scores
National Tratl 42
Monday's Results
Monroe 56. West CarrolltOn 42
Girls
N L1ma S Range 48, Vtenna Mathews 42 Alleghany, Va. 58. Ja mes Monroe 50
N Rtdgevttle Lake Rtdge 26 Medtna
Burch 60. Chapmanville 25
Cabell Midland 77, Rtvers•de 17
Chnstlan 12
Nelsonville York 67 Hemlock Mtller 32
Fa1rmont Senter 52 Wtlltamstown 46
Fayellevtlle 75 Liberty Aale1gh 31
New Mtddletown Sprmg!teld 64 , N.
Jackson Jackson- Milton 44
G1lber1 66 Williamson 14
Newa rk L1ck1ng Valley 73, Uhca 31
Grafton 58. Lmcoln 50
Orrv1 lle 60, Masstllon 33
Greate r Beckley Chnsllan 50, Mount
Oxlord Tal awanda 45 , Mtddlelown Hope 33
Hannan 47, Teays Valley Chnshan 22
FenwiCk 40
Hedgesville at Jefferson, ppd.
Patnesville Harvey 58, Cle E 38
Hundred 72, Paden City 58
Pataskala Watkms Memonal 65, Fatrfteld
Magnolia 37, R1ver, Oh1o 31
Umon 60
P1keton 59 Lucasville Valley 42
Man 69, Duval 51
Portsmouth 49 . Mtnford 36
Martmsburg 50, Keyser 37
Ractne Southern 54, Wahama (W Va ) 37
Mercer Chnsttan 83, Bluefield 20
Monroe Central , Ohio 53 , Tyler
Rayland Buckeye Local 59. Marttns Ferry
Consolidated 48 , OT
53. 0T
Richmond Edtson 50, Wmtersvtlle fndtan
Montcalm 65. Greenbrier West 34
Creek 48
Moorefield 35, East Hardy 33
S Webster 61, Wellston 34
Oak Hill 65. Valley Fayene 30
Shadysh1de 54, Bellrure St John 45
Paw Paw 45, Mounta1n V1ew, Va. 30
Southington Chalker 4 t . N Bloomheld
Petersburg 71. Hampshire 16
Bloomfteld 21
Phihp Barbo~ 54, Preston 48
St Pans Graham 51 Spnng. NW 48
Ptke Vtew 74, Pocahontas, Va 45
Stewart Federal Hock1ng 78, Gallipolis
Pace 67, Hamltn 50
OhiO Valley Chns 40
Pocahontas County 60, Tucker County 57
Strasbou rg-Franklin 46, Massillon Tuslaw
Richwood 61, Independence 55
37
St Joseph 39, Wayne 37
Struthers 60, Campbell MemOrial 21
St Marys 54, Doddridge ·County 34
Tallmadge 45, Akron E 34
Toronto, Ohio 53, Madonna 46
Thomas Worthmgton 66, Cols S 22
Waynesburg, Pa 76, Clay-Battelle 49
ThOrnvtlle Shendan 65 , Dresden irt- Wheeltng Park 68. Brooke 26
Valley 34
Wyoming East 63, Weststde 29
Tol ChrtSIIan 60, Old Fort 34
Boys
Tol Ottowa H1lls 44 , Tal Woodmere 31
Alleghany. Md. 83, Keyser 58
Toronto 53, We1rton (W Va) Madonna 46
Bndgeport 73, South Hamson 55
Tuscarawas Cent Cath 49. W Lafayette
Buffalo 60. Hannan 5 t
Rtdgewood 28
Doddndge County 71 , Calhoun County
UhnchsvtUe Claymont 46, Cadiz Hamson 84
Central 37
Fatrmont Sen1or 54. East Fa1rmont 34
Upper Sandusky 73. Caledonia River
Fayene11111e 64 , Valley Fayette 61
Valley 25
Greater Beckley Chnsttan 92, Mou nt
Urbana 44. New Carltsle Tecumseh 33
Hope 70
Vtncent Warren 46, McConnelsvtlle
Louden County, Va. 65, Musselman 58
Mor'Qan 45
Parkersburg South 91, North Manon 59
W Jefferson 60, Lancaster Ftsher
Robert C. Byrd 59, Buckhannon-Upshur
CatholiC 33
56
Warren Howland 61, Alliance 42
St Albans 59, Spring Valley 44
Warren JFK 43, Orange 42 , OT
South Gallla, Ohto 81 Cross Lanes
Warrepsvtlle Hts 58, Shaw 34
Chnstian 74
Warsaw Rtver V1ew 52, New Ph1lladelph1a
Tnmty Chnstlan 63, Notre Dame 53
48
Tucker County 90, Harman 35
Waterford 44, New Matamoras Frontier Tygarts Valley 53 Pendleton County 51
33
Valley Wetzel 73, St Marys 54
Wauseon 59, Northwood 42
Wyomtng East 74, Oak Htll55

'Rio track returns to Otterbein
WESTERVILLE The Soulsby and Fuller finished
University of Rio Grande track II lih with a time of I :5 1.84.
and field squad made a return
Freshman
Hope
• visit to Otterbein on Friday -to Jagodzinski was I Oth in the
compete in the Otterbein pole vault and 17th in the
Invitational in week four of the 300-meter dash (46.93).
indoor track season.
Other Redwomen res ults:
Sophomore s printer Tory lana Marshall finished 19th in
Jordan had the top perfor- the 1,500-meter run (5:41.71)
mance, placing second m the and Billie Robinson was right
. women's 55-meter dash with behind Marshall in 20th wnh
· a time of 7.45. Fellow sopho- a time of 5:52.48. Freshman
more N1esha Fuller finished Alicia Smith was 15th in the
· fourth
(7.53).
Freshman shot put ~28 feet, 4 inches).
Shannon Soulsby had a strong
On the men 's side sophothird place effort in the 500- more Br~ndon Brown was
meter dash (1:27.48).
fourth in 1the 55-meter dash
Freshman Cara Ratcliff fin- ( 6.80),
freshman
Gastin
ished seventh in the 55-meters Green waf fourth in the shot
(7.72). The 4x200-meter relay put ( 44 feet, I 0.25 inches),
team of Jordan , Ratcliff, Brad Gilders finished fifth in

Eagles
from Page 81
six Rebel points came at the
line.
Led by Brooks, Eastern
posted 'Ill 18-5 fourth period
· as the Lady Eagles rolled to a
66-20 win.
The Eagles hit 24-63 two's.

•

0-1 three 's, land were 18-26 at
the line. E&lt;lstern claimed 41
rebounds 1 ( Brooks
I0 ,
Willbarger 5 . E. Weber 7) , 14
s teal s (Morga n Weber 3),
e ight assists ~Hayman 4 ), and
17 turnovers. ,
South Galli~ hit 4-35 two's,
1-8 three's, a11d 9-15 at the
line . South Gallia had 38
rebounds . No other slats were
available.

the 500-meter dash (I :08.89),
Nate Hall was tied for sixth in
the hi g h jump (5 feet, 10 inches) and Brian Mitchell was
seventh in the long JUmp and
eighth in the 55 - meter hurdles
(8.65).
Freshman
Jonathan
Huntsberger was 15th in the
pole vault ( II feet , 6 inches).
This meet was not a scored
event.
Rio
Grande
heads
to
Marietta for the first of two
meets
held
at
Marietta
College on Friday. The meet
time starts at 4:30 p .m.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
CANTON
The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen
basketball
dropped a tough, 74-67 decision to the Malone Lady
Pioneer s on the road at
Malone College on Saturday.
At present, Malone possesses a six-game winning
streak versus the Red women .
Rio Grande ( 18-9. 7-7
AMC South ) struggled out of
the gate and found itself in a
double-digit hole that they
could not escape.
Malone
led 35-24 at halftime.
The Redwomen did place
four players in double fig.
ures, led by sophomore post
player Tiffanie ,Hager's 17
points The Bidwell, Ohio
native also pulled down
seven rebounds and blocked
three shots .
Freshman Lauren Fox continued her solid play, scoring
13 points, junior guard Angel

·utrihune - Sentinel - l\egt~ter
CLASSIFIED

•
•
•

Allen and junior forward s hooting from the tield, 3 c
Alkia Fountain each tossed percent (6-of-18)
frorr
in 12 points . Fountain tallied three- point land and ar
a double-double , pulling impressive 82 perce nt (18·
down 13 rebounds.
of-22) from the charit)
Malone(12-14, 4-IOAMC stripe .
South ) had four players in
Rio Grande out-reboundec
double figures , led by Rio Malone . 36-32. but tumec
Grande killer Michelle Lin g the ball over more than the
with, a game-high, 22 points. Lady Pioneers, 16-13 .
Ling also collected five
Malone again captures. the
rebounds and 'dished out four season series as Rio Grande
assists. Kim Mast added 16 can't
so lve
the
Lad)
point s while Mary Wittmer Pioneers. Malone edged Ri c
and Nikki Parson chipped in 66-65 at the Newt Olive 1
13 points e'ach. Wittmer was Arena. ianuary •1O.
the top rebounder for the
Thanks
loss b
Lady Pioneers with six.
to a
)
The Redwomen used a hot Urbana,
the
Redwomer
shooting second half to make remain tied for fifth place
a run, but it wasn't enough to and the fina l playoff spot ir
get
the
victory.
Rio the
upcoming Al)lericar
outscored Malone in the sec· Mideas t
Con ference
and half, 43 -39.
Tournament.
Rio Grande shot 46 perRio Grande will face chiel
cent (26-of-57) from the nemesis
Shawnee
State
field, 31 percent (4-of-13) toda~ at the Newt. Game
from three-point land and 65 ' time IS set for li p.m .
percent ( 11 -of- 17) from the
Shawnee State defeatec
free throw line. Malone was the Redwomen, 67-53, Jan
at 46 percent (25-of-54) 20 in Portsmouth.

,,

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

CANTON
NAJA
Division II No. 15 Rio
Grande rebounded after a
tough loss at Mount Vernon
Nazarene on Thursday to
win a close encounter with
Malone on Saturday, 76-70
at
Malone
College
in
American
Mideast
Conference South Division
men 's basketball action.
Rio Grande (17-8, 11-3
AMC South) used its' trademark balanced attack with
sor.homore center Reggie
Williamson
pacing
the
Redmen with 13 points.
Junior forward • Dawayne
Mcintosh recorded a doubled?.uble with 12 points and I 0
re bounds.
' Malone (16-9, 9-5 AMC
South) was led by guard

Jason Mishler 's 20 points.
Shane Conwell added I 7
point s and Chris Miller
chipped in 13 points. Senior
postman Jason Hess led all
players in rebounds with 14.
He also had three blocked
shots.
Rio Grande led 39-36 at
halftime.
Rio Grande shot 41.5 percent (27-of-65) from the
field, 27 percent ( 4-of-15)
from beyond the three-point
arc and 82 percent ( 18-of22) from the free throw line.
Malone countered with 45
percent (28-of-62) from the
floor, 23 percent (5-of-22)
from long range and only 53
percent (9-of-17) from the
charity stripe.
Rio Grande's performance
at the free throw line proved
to be a big factor in the
game.

Your Ad,

Southern
from Page 81
Wahama 's Sayre drew a lot of attention from the Southern defense as did
college bound star Hoffman, who is a
major ingredient of the Wahama
offense. The Southern defense did a
grea t job on these two talented players.
Likewise, especially the second half,
Wahama did a great job on Southern's
Katie Sayre, who had just five of her
fifteen points the second half.
The first minute into the third frame,

that the cases against them also
be dismissed. Sferrazza heard
arguments on that request but
did not issue a ruling:
Connecticut,
Rutgers,
Pittsburgh and West Virginia
argue that the ACC, Miami and
Boston College conspired to
weaken the B1g East.
Sferrazza originally dismissed the case against the
ACC in October, prompting
Connecticut Attorney General
Richard Blumenthal to reflle
the lawsuit, adding as detendants individual directors of
the ACC. The new lawsuit also

Offee lloaP'~

Southern missed five shots before call- three's, 22-57 overall, and 5-9 at the
ing a time out. After a final pep talk ,
line. Southern had 30 rebounds (Sayre
the Lady 'Does came out supercharged 7, Roush 5), three blocks ('Dunn 3).• 10
with an offensive boost from Deana steals (Dunn 3), five as&amp;ists (Sayre 3),
Pullins who had a steal and lay-in,
13 turnovers, and 13 fouls.
another field goal, and a three pointer
Wahama hit 14-48 two's, 1-7 three's',
to get Southern rolling. Susan Brauer,
15-55 overall, and Ii-I 0 at the line.
who had a good overall game. notched
Wahama had 38 rebounds (Roush II ,
a three pointer, while Sayre, Kiser, and
Sayre 8.. Hoffman 9), ten ste11ls
• Roush each added two in a 16-8 oft'set
in Southern's favor. The score after (Hoffman 5), 20 turnovers. and ten
fouls.
three rounds was 42-24 Southern.
Tickets for Southern's girls' and
Southern substituted freely in the
•
boys
' sectional tournament games are
final round, but played good team ball
and great defense in holding on for the on sale in the h1gh school otl'ice.
Southern hosts Meigs for senior
54-37 win.
Southern hit 17-48 two's, 5-19
night on Thursday .

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All real estate advertlllng
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aub}ect lo lhe Faderat
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available $115 per month,
•ncfudes water. sewer. trash
call (740)992·2167

newspaper will not
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Thla

advertlsemenla tor real
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violation of the law Our
rMdera are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised in
thla newspaper are
avallable on an equal
opportunity baua.

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3248 after 5pm
wVa Vtew photosflnforma ~ br Ranch Style House has· tton online www.9rvb com
a 24x30 detached garage. code 111503 or call
30x30 barn on 4 acres on (304)BS2-2770
Carson Ad at Mason asking
S7o.ooo (304)773·6187
Moon.E HoME&gt;
HoMES
FORS.u.E

FORS~LE

3 bedroom , 2 baths on 4 3
acres Must Sellll Call
t 4x60 very clean r~ady to
(740)709·1166
move 1nto
Furnished.
Bnck Ranch, 4 bedrooms, 1 lncludmg washer/dryer &amp;
1/2 bath , full basement. fire· storage bUilding. $11 ,000.
place, woodburner, garage, (7401388-0460
paved dnveway (740)339·
1995 16x80 lool Fa1rmont
0213
mobile hom&amp;. 3 bedroom. 2
For Sale on comract very bath. good shape' must be
nice 2 BR home, newly moved, near Tuppers Plains,
$19,000,
se ll
remodeled, nice location books
$4,000 do,.n coli (304)674· $17,000, 740·867-8357 or
0019
(740)667·9823

'1

1 6 acres, wooded flat spot,
10x12 buildtng, water, sep·
he, electnc already on land
$15,000. (740)384·4341

discrimination based on
race, color, religion, aex

advertise "any

preference, limitation or

PROIE'll&gt;10NAL
SF.R\1CES

LOTS&amp;
ACREAGE

Ntce level lot. 90'x200'
located at 201 Airltne Road
1n the Porter area Pnced at
$15.000
Call (740)4464514 or after 5pm call
(740)446-3248

whiCh make&amp; it Illegal to

r

1180
WANl'Eil
~.---oiloii'oiiDoiiiii--,..l
..,
Childcars State licensed
Focus helpmg 1ow-1ticome
families olltam chtldcare.
W1th Bhrs steep 11me for
non-traditiOnal shtfts as QWil
ot your BIGHTS. 740·2459242

r

Take care of elderly, ,23
years
expertence Call
Sharon at (740)992-9661 or
(7 40)992-2659 Leave mes
sage

Scenic Htlls Nu rsmg Center,
a Tandem Health Care 1ac1h·
ty, 1s seekmg State Tested
lNG CO recommends tha
Nurs1ng ASSIStants
u do bustness wtth pea
le
you know. and NOT t
Shllt dtfferen!IBI ava tlable
Please respond to Dtanna end money through lh
Thompson. 311 Buckndge matl unt1l you have inveslt
ated the olfen
Ad Bidwell. OH 45614 Ph
(740)446·7 150
FaM
(740)446 -1246
Ema il
' MONI:Y
adin shn@tandemhealth·
TO LoAN
care c:om Please specify,
poslltonllocatlon of 1nlerest Behind In your Mortgage
EOE/SFDF For other oppor· or in Foreclosure? Don't
tun1ties,
contact Sell or tile Bankruplcy
HR@tandemhealthcare co Serv1ces Guaranteed Call
m
ALL-STATES MORTGAGE
MEDIATIO N
1--888-615·8673 ext. 490
Tandem Health
www allstatemortgage.net
Care
Zl)

AGreat
Opportunity Awaits!

•

l'OR SALE

Shifts

"TAlK" TO YOU!!

HOME."i

To Do

Weekends,
All

10

WAN1Fll

ZERO MONEY DOWN
To qualifted buyers stop 1n
today and check Wllh Ernie
or Lynn
Cole's Mob1le Homes
15266 us 50 East
Athens. OhiO 45701
(740)592-1972
"Where You Get Your
Moneys Worth"

3 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 acre
garage 5 m11es tram
GallipoliS $450 month Call
(740)245·5378
3 bedroom, unfurni shed.
ntee yard , Clly schOol d1stnct
Cell (740)446-7473
4 room house. appliances
furnished. . washer/dryer
hook up $250 month +
depoSit Call (740)446-0974
415 Elm St. Ractne, 4 bed·
room house, wtthin walk•ng
dtslance
of
Southern
Schools, $400/month plus
depos1t. HUD accepted .
(740)992·6194 or 740-541·
0154

Beautiful river v1ew, tdeal,tor
one or two people No Pets .
references (740)441·0181
N1ce 2 or 3 bedroom mobile
home Includes water, sewer,
trash, no pets, starling at
$300 per month , call
(740)992·2167

no1

• Bo~e
• Th11

""''•P••oe•l

~~~~ 1~.10-·H·o·&amp;·s)..E:.~
( ..U.&gt;_...

2000 Oakwood mob1le BEAUTIFUL
APART·
home 14X80 3 bedroom, 2 MENTS AT BUDGET
bath Total electrtc Askmg PRICES AT JACKSON
$21 ,500 00 (740)~92·9263 ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dr1ve from $344 to $442
3 bedroom. new bathroom &amp; Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
112 bath. new furnace, wrap 740-446 2568
Equal
around deck , appliances HOUSing Opportuntty
mcluded. some furniture,
very good cond•tion, 740· CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
992·5267 0 &lt; (740)247-2113 EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
70-72 mob1le home, 2 bdr , 1
and/or small houses FOR
bath eleclnc heat settmg
" on 50x200 lot, has one stor- RENT Call (7 40 )441"1111
age buildmg , 515 OOO. for applicatiOn &amp; tntormalton
(.7_4.0..:)_74_2_·4_0_1_1_ _ _ _ Cottage Apt on L•ncoln Ave
1n Pt Pleasant $275 00 a
New 3 bedroom 2 bath Only
$ 995 down and only mon ask for Nancy 304·
$194 36 per month Call 675-5540 or 304-675-4024
Karena 740-385-7671
Dehghtful, 1 &amp; 2 BR untts
very clean used 3 bed- near Holzer, CIA h1gh efft·
room/2 bath. $9995 00 Will ctency gas furnaces , Ou1et
help wtth delivery. Call Ntkkt . locaiiOn, $359 to $485
740·385-9948
(740)446·2957

www.comics.com
1110

110
1.

WE NEED TO

$15.44-$21 40/hr now h1rlng. For application and fr~e
government job tnfo, call
American Assoc. of Labor,
1-(913)599-8220, 24 hrs

_I

I

PART-TIME TELLER- Local
hank 1s accepting appllcattons for part llme teller and
customer servtce pos1t10ns
Must exhtbll professtonal· 1511
ScliOOIB
1sm. atte ntton to detail and
INm!U&lt;.'Il()N
H 1 W t d
enJoy prov1dmg exceptional
H1 W t d
-:=:e:p=:a:n=e==:...===e=p=:a:n=e==; customer service. Previous Gallipolis Career College
r
experience m customer
serviCe and cash handlmg (Careers Close To Home)
preferred Knowledge of Call Today' 740·446-4367.
1·800·214-04521
computers a plus Must be
WNW galllpOIISCareercotle~ com
avatlabfe Man through Sat
AccrecMad Member AccredltlnO
Please subm11 resumes to Cound lor Independent Colleges
The Datly Sentinel. PO Box and Schools 12748
729 ·34 Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 E 0 E
MISCELLANID '
Pomeroy police department
IS seeking par1.time dis· Ftrewood· S25 00 ptck·Up
patche r, ava1labte lor all load, (you p1ck ~ •p )
shills contact Tammy Smt1h (740)992·9263
:
Monday th ru Fnday 9am2pm. (740)992·6411 E.O.E
Free removal of used apph·
Pos1t1on open in Southeast. ances in the GalltpoiiS area.
Ohio, wtth mechamcal,com· Call (740)441-16~
'
pany. experience necessa ry
:
send resume &amp; letter of rec- -UIII-ily-li::-r-a,il_e_r4-,'-,
X7::'''-e-, p-a-nd-:e-:d
ommendahon , P 0 Box 363, metal , metal floor 4'X4' tallThe Plams, Oh 45780.
gate New patnt $375 00
POSTAL JOBS (740)742·2821

The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company
is seeking a highly motivated
indiYidual who is interested in an
"ADVERTISING
' SALES CAREER",
with unlimited earning potential!
Interested??

r Mo~~:~Mffi Ir

CARLYLE

::--~-----­

t

1.

POLICIES· Oh1o IJalle~ Publishing reurvealhe right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at an~ time. Errore must be reported on lha first day or
Ttlbune-S.ntlnei-Rtglattr will be reaponalble lor no more than the cost of lhe apace occupiad by the error and only the first ina.ertion We
any lose or expense that results fronrtha pubtlcatlon or omission ol an advertlnment. Correction will be made In the first available edition.
are always conlldenl1al • Current rata card applies • All real estate advartlaemenla are aubj-.:1 to the Fedaral Fair Houamg Act of 1968.
accepla
hetp wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not know1ngly accept any advertl•lng In violation of the law

lwright@lc net

r

•

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

Expenenced auto body
man. must have own tools.
Apply al Larry's Body Shop
or send resume 2046
Addison Pike, Galhpolts,
Ohoo

*"*"Gov't Postal Jobs••••
Free Bnck &amp; Mo rtar 1111 HIRING 20041· Up to
behmd. Sprmg Valley Plaza $1 ,047 71 Weekly FRE E
(740)446-4040
Call\ Call Now for lntervtew
&amp; Reg1strat1on InformatiOn
Se lect Area 1-800-892·
Moving must 1tnd a good
home for 1/21ab/112boxer _5_14_4_e_'1_ 9_5_·_7_d_ay_s_. _ _
neutered male 14-15 mon
.. Federal Postal JobS ..
old vet checked, well tra1ned To $43,000 yr/ Free Call No
house dog great w/k1ds Exper•ence Necessary No
(304)675-4677
H1r1ngl Full Beneltts 1-800842-1622 ext 225
·To a good home 5 month An Excellent way to earn
old Beagle pup, already
money Lets talk the
Local Insurance Agency
neutered Call (740)446NEW AVON
seekmg Fui1-T1me 31 112 hrs
2077
Call Manlyn 304 ·882·2645 weekly.
fast
paced
Joyce 304·675-6919
ClencaVAgent for Immediate
lo&amp;rAND
Apr1f 304·882·3630
H1re M101mum requ1rement
FOUND
,;..~Arre~y~o~u'-'ICo~oK~IIn~g:"'p~co~
r e::""'. , ·Excellent customer/phone
stable JOb ?
sktlls. computer knowledge.
3 Year old German
G111e us a call i
accuracy 1n currency and
Sheppard. light brown
You
could
earn
up
to
figures
. wilhng to test to
Answerers to "Baxter"
$8/hour
plus
bonuses
become
l1censed, Ma•l
Portland Road vtctmty
~.e
also
offer
patd
trammg,
Resume
along
wtlh refer·
(740)843-5281 Reward
holidays and vacattons.
ences to PO Box 26, PI
Full or part ttme sh1fts
Pleasant, WV 25550
available
$200
sign
on
Lost
Female
cat.
Med1 Home Health Agency.
bonus Call Today
gray/black/w hile slrt pped
Inc. seeking a tull-t1me AN
1·877·463-6247
ext
2456
wtth white chest and feet
for the Gallipolis Ohto area
Reward' (740)339-1594
Must be licensed both 1n
AS SEENON TV
Ohto and West Virgmta We
INSTRUCTION
oiler a compelttcve salary,
LEARN TO DRIVE
bener•ts package, and 401 K
TRACTOR· TRAILER
E.O E Please sevd resume
NEW
PROGRAM
4X4 Round Baler, good conto 352 Second Avenue,
No
Ex.penence
Needed
ditiOn . Call after 6pm,
Galltpolts OH 45631 Attn
Placement Dept
(740)256·9353
D1ana Herless. Cltnlcal
Ftnancmg Avatlable
Manager
CDUTraining
Absolute Top Dollar U.S ALLIANCE
Need 7 ladtes to sell Avon
S1lver.
Gold Cams. Tractor· Trailer
Call 740·446-3358
Proofsets. 01amonds, Gold Tra1n1ng Centers
Now H~r~ng full and part
Rmgs.
U S Currency,- Wytheville, VA
11me.
McClure's
M T S. Com Shop, :1 51 Call Toll Free
Restaurants. ln Gallipolis.
Second Avenue, Galhp~hs, 1-800-334-1203
Middleport and Pomeroy
740·446-2842.
AVONI All Areas• To Buy or Apply
Monday , thru
Sell Shirley Spears 304- Saturday, 10·1 1 am
Older used school band 675-1429
Part ttme pos1t1on 20-30
mus tcal mstruments Also
hour week Need reliable
Ohtldre
ns
V1llage
Team
wantmg older baseball
cards, 1975 and before Teacher full ltme w/benefits person to help on da1ry !arm
early childhood credential (740)992·501 0
(740)388·8692
prelerred Send Resume by Part-t1me House Keeper
I \11'1 !I\ \11· \1
2"12 "04 to 2122 .Jefferson needed Send resume and
SIR\]{ IS
Ave PI Pleasant, WV references 10 PO Box 502
_25_s_so_______ Cheshtre Oh1o 45620.
110

Now you can h~;~ve borders and graphics
~
addedtCiyourclassifled ads
.s'j~.
lf1"r
Borders Sl.OO/per ad
I!!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lnc:lude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
I~ \01

OecultirM

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p_m.
Monday-Friday for ln&amp;ertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
Frllda&lt;v For Sunday&amp; Paper

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

The
Redmen
edged
Malone on the glass , 40-39
and
Malone
had
16
turnovers to only 13 for Rio
Grande.
With the victory, Rio
Grande remain s one game
off the pace in the race for
the AMC South Division
crown.
Rio Grande will face
Shawn'ee State today at the
Newt Oliver Arena. The
game will be the rubber
match between the two
schools th1s season. Rio
Grande edged the Bears. 5552, November 15 in the
finals of the Bevo Francis
Tournament and Shawnee
State scored an 82-68 win in
Portsmouth, Jan . 20.
Tip-off is set for 8 p.m.
following
the
women's
game. The game is s ponsored by McDonald's.

added Boston College and its
athletic
director,
Eugene
DeFilippo.
Attorneys argued Monday
that Blumenthal's suit against
ACC members was a veiled
effort to get the judge to reconsider the case.
The lawsuit names ACC
Commissioner John Swofford,
ACC
President
Carolyn
Callahan, ACC Vice President
Donn
Ward
and
ACC
Treasurer
Cecil
Hu'ey.
Callahan, Ward and Huey are
professors who serve rotating
terms on the board.

l\egister

Sentinel

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Judge again dismisses Big
East lawsuit against ACC
VERNON, Conn. (AP) For the second time in four
months, a state j11dge removed
the Atlantic Coast Conference
as a defendant in a lawsuit ftled
by four Big East football
schools over the departure of
Miami and Boston College for
theACC.
Superior
Court
Judge
Samuel
Sferrazza
ruled
• Monday that theACC did not
have · sufficient
ties
to
Connecticut to be sued bere.
Attorneys
for
Boston
Colle~e and members of the
ACC s governing body asked

UI:rihurte

To Place

Rio wins close encounter at Malone
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

Moymg-Sale Spmet p1ano
sofa, chatrs. end-tables
anttque
tr unk,
cedar
wardrobe, cedar chest
much more 1(740)446-2828
Nascar Toddle• bed, blue
$100 Call (740)441·0193
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repa1r·675·7388 For sale.
re-condtttoned automatiC
washers &amp; dryers retngerators. gas and electnc
ranges air condtttoners and
wnnger washers Wtll do
repatrs on major brands m
shop or at your home

Used Furmture Store. 130
Bulav1lle Ptke Mattresses
dressers.
couches
bunkbeds recliners what
nots Grave Monuments
(740)446-4782 Gallipolis
OH Hrs 10-4 (M·S) Sunday
For Lease. Beauttfull y by appoi ntment
restored , unfurntshed, two
bedroom apartment over·
ANilQUJ-:&lt;;
looktng the C1ty Park and
Rtver All new appl1anCes . 1
1/2
baths
$600/mo . Buy or sell Rtver~ne
Antiq ues 1124 East Matn
Secunty
deposit
on
SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
References reqw red No
pets Call 740-446-2325 or 992-2526 Russ Moore
owner
740-446·4425
MlSCHJ .ANEOUS
Furntshed effiCiency 3 room
MERl1lA~1)1SE
and bath An ut11it1es ·patd
Downstatrs, $285 919 2nd
2000 IMAC OS9 w1th
Ave (740)446-3945
PageMaker &amp; PhotosMp ,
Gracious hvtng 1 and 2 bed- pnnter &amp; other accessonesroom apartments at VIllage $700/ 080 Left Hand
Manor
and
R1vers1de Washburn AcoustiC GultarApar tmen ts 1n Middleport $150 (740)446·7881
From $295-$444 Call 740992-5064. Equal Ho usmg Drum sel· $265 electric and
Opportumttes
accust•c gUitars (740)2561102 ask tor Jr
Middleport N 3rd Ave , one
bedroom turntshed apart- For sale cheap (2) lots •n
ment, depostl &amp; references. Ohto
Valley
Memory
no pe1s. (740)992·0165
Gardens Call (740)245New 4 room apt Kttchen, 5139
LR. 2 BR bath No pets
JET
(740)367-7746 f7 40i367·
AERATION MOTORS
7015 before 8pm
Repa1red New &amp; RebUilt In
Stock Call Ron Eva ns 1New Haven 1 br turmshed
ap1 . dep &amp; rei . no pelS. 800-537 ·9528
1740)992·0165
Nice two bedroom apart- LIQUidation closed CVS
ments Large rooms Fully Drugstore on 2nd Ave
eqwped ·ktlchen Cenlral Shelvtng showcase drmk
heabng &amp; cooling Washer &amp; coolers, &amp; safe 2/16-2/20
dryer hookup (304)882- Call(336)-332·4560
2523
Masontc Gold Ruby, &amp;
Dtamond Rm g Large 5350
Tara
Townhouse (304)576·3364
Apartments Very Spactous,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors CA 1 NEW AND USED STEEL
112 Bath Newly Carpeted Steal Beams P1 pe Rebar
Angle
Adult Pool. &amp; Baby Pool . For Con crele.
Pa110. Start $385/Mo No Channe l Flat Bar. Steel
For
Drams.
Pets. Lease Plus Secunty Gratmg
Dnveways
&amp;
Walkways
L&amp;L
Oepos1t Requ~red . Days
740·446·3481. Eventngs Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
740-367·0502
Fnday, 8am·4 30pm Closed
Twtn Atvers Tower IS accept· Thursday, Saturday &amp;
mg apphcat1ons for wattmg Sunday (740)446---7300
list for Hud-substzed, 1· br,
apart ment, call 675-6679 wood 1r glass top coffee
table 6' couch w/matchmg
EHO
chatr Elec sew1ny machme.
\IIlli 111\111'1
27" Zentth color TV . s · w1de
X6 high Hutch
Call
HOUSEHOLD
(740)4~6-0971
.

r

Goo~

Good Used Appliances
Recondi tiOned
and
Guaranteed
Washers
Dryers.
Ranges. and
Refngerators, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appl1ances. 76
V1ne 51 . (740)446·7398
Good washers &amp; dryers. $95
&amp; up Washer &amp; dryer sets.
$275 &amp; up Ranges $95 &amp;
up Frost tree Refngerator
$125 &amp; up Couch &amp; chair,
$10q Overstuffe d chairs.
$20 &amp; Up NICe full SIZe bed
With box spnngs &amp; mattress.
$75. Quean stze mattress &amp;
box springs, $125 &amp; up Full
SIZEI box spnngs &amp; mattress
$150
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vme Street
(740)446-7398

81111 OINI;

St

"',,II·.,

Block bnck. sewer pipes
w•ndows li ntels. etc Claude
W1nlers . R1o Grande. OH
Call740-245·5121
Pole Bwldmg Spec1al
30x48x9. 1·3' enuy 1· 14x9
shdtng door patnted steel
gutter. erected $8189 00
24x32x9 4 ·. 1·3' enliy1 210')18' tr\su lated Overheads
12" ove rhang, gutters painted steel root &amp; waUs InSul ated. erected $9247 00
30x40x9 4 ·. 1-3' entry. 2·
10'x8', non-tnsula1ed patnted ·steel. 12"overharig tnsulated roof guller. erected
pnce $10,157 00
740-742·4011,
800-396·3026

1 and 2 bedroom apart ments. furnished and unfurnished. security depoSit Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
required, no pets, 740·992· Chapel Road, Porter. Ohto
(740)446-7444 1-877-8302218
9162 Free Estt mates. Easy 1998
Fleetwood
2 bedroom apt St At. 160 ftnanct ng. eo days same as Camper/tipout 30 It sleeps
past Holzer. $475 mo cash . Visa/ Maste r Card . 6. awn tng \304)q75· 1499
Onve· a· little save alot
(740)441 -0194

t

�www.mydallysentlnel.com

4 Sale Green Wing Baby

Macaws S1.200 each 2
~and'

raised (304)743-3870

AKC

registered German
black &amp; tan , 6
•Wks. old, shots &amp; wormed,
• (740)992·3972 after 5pm .

~ S hepherd ,

AKC Saint Bernard puppies,
. l male. 1 female. Reedy to
gol Parents on premises
$300-$350 . Call (740)256·
1090.
I \I {\ I " I 1'1'1 II "

Phillip

to extend their

Alder

thanks to friends,
neighbors for their
kindness in our
sorrow. Special
thank&lt; tot"-" Racine
American Legion
l'o.&lt;t 602. Racine

I.B

Vern, Julie

~uare Bale Elevator $175.

Grain Moistwe Tester SSO
Like New Call (304)57628 12

r

11'!11"--~....- - . ,

~~~

r

10

10

Atm-.;
lllH SAI.I:

H AY &amp;

SSOO!.Hondas.
Chevys.
Jeeps. etc ! POLICE
..,
IMPOUNDS Cars !rom
Round bales $12.50 Square $500. For liStings 1-800-719bales 2nd-culling grass 3001 e)(t 3901
52.50. Ear corn $2.50 a
02 Ford Taurus SES, 37,500
bushel. Ground ear corn
m1les. extended warranty
S4.50 lor 100 pounds.
Sell
lor
pay -oft
Call

(740)992·2623
II~\

(740)388·9125

\\l't lit I \110\

1500# round bales, Michael

••_ _ V10
a _ur_ke_._l7_._o)_9_as_.•_._
-

L

A Uilli
1'011 SALE

1811111

1965 Mustang 200, 6 9yl
auto. very restorable. $700
firm : ,999Yamaha 350,740-

843-1168.

· 70 Round Bales mixed Hay ..__ _iiiiioiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l - - - - - - -: 4x4, very good &amp; tight bales
1973 40r Nova 250 6cyl,
1992 Sunbird. GT fo r parts New Tires. Battery, Wipers
: $12Ea Call (304}576:2812
only. Call (740)245-9346
(304)675·6633
96 Saturn, needs work ,

$ 1,000080 (740)992·7719

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

6:30

Windows • Roofi ng

Lastl'hyrsday· of
enry month
AU pack $5.1MI
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl

•Umestone
•Sand•lln

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

140·985-35&amp;4

...........

Aun-.;
ll)R SALE

Lw--•G
iiiiiHAiiiiiN--,.J

BISSEll

Pomeroy• Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursdoy
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

Trucking

Bethany Church
February 14- 8 am
For information contact
K Hart 949-2656
J . Campbell247-7304

Women's Auxiliary.

&amp; llarhara Pier«
for their support &amp;
help &amp; to HCf)'onc
who brought food.

1979 Pontiac Bonneville.
10
AUi al
301 . auto. naeds m1nor
repa•rs. $400
50 H.P.
_.1
Mercu ry_ outboard and extra
parts. runs. $250. {304)675- 92 Ford Ranger 4-&lt;:yc. std.
$12,00.00. 96 Ford Ranger
513 1
$2.000.00. 91 Firebird V-8.
1993 flwck Lesal:lre 40r, V6 auto $1 ,800.00. 97 Escort.
Auto Air $ 1895.00 1993 auto. $2.000.00. 9B Escort.
Chevy Corsica 4dr V6 Auto 5 speed, $1 .800.00. Call for
A1r $995 .00 1989 Ford additional
information .
Ranger
Sspd
$995 .00 (740)742·2357
Riverview Motors 2 blocks
-98_M
_o_n-le_C_a-rlo-.- -__ _
62 000
above McDonald's Pomeroy
miles.
loaded, remote start.
OH (740)992-3490
- - - -- - - - Asking $6,800, call 740·245·
1995 Grand-AM , 2 door,
hunter green, 80,000 miles, 9629.
1988 Mazda RX7 Turbo.
one owner. garage kept, Black with gray leather int. 5·
$4 .000. (740)992-3961
speed,
loaded. 85,050
miles. Asking $3,800, call
1997 Neon Sport, 68K, 740-245-9386
$2 ,695:1995 Grand Am, 20, ll'lli"'"-~-~-...,
VANS &amp;
99K, $2,495; 1989 Chevy
4-WDs
Pickup, $2.495 ; other in
stock. WE TAKE TRADES!
COOK MOTORS
1997 S-10 Blazer 4K4
(740)446-0103
Loaded
87.000
miles
EKcellent conditi on $7500
1998 Dodge Stratus , 97,000 ca ll (576-3364
miles. crUise, tilt/air. $2,000
OBO. Call (740)256-903 1 or 97 Chevy 510 4x4 Sspd. Air,
(7 40)256- 1233.
V6 $4495.00 95 Ford
Ranger Supercab 4x4 V6
81 Camara. T-Tops, runs fair, Auto, Air $4995.00 1995
body lair, $2500 call Chevy Blazer 2Dr. 4x4 Auto,
(304)675-7099
Air $4995.00 1996 lsuzu
Rodeo VB Auto. Air 4K4
86 Escort. 4 &amp;. 4 cyl., auto,
$5495.00 Riverview Motors
new tires. fuel pump, brakes.
2 bl ocks above McDonald's
engine has been replaced,
Pomeroy OH (740)992-3490
$11 50. (740)742-4011

'--···ll·R·S·AI•J'•·

r~-----'

SELL YOUR
VEHICLE
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

92 Buick Regal power win dows and loCks, AMIFM
cass .. tilt steering , cruise.
Runs great. good co ndition.
$2.000 080. 740-245-5295
or 740-339-0426.

FREE ESTIMATES

• 6 4 3
6 K 10

MONTY

West
• AKJ
• 4
• 10 7 52
4 J9865

CALLT&amp; IJ HYIJHALILII'S,
ask for Terr i· @ 740-9M~-4.lH4

Vou1• Kight to

December,
2003, of valuation for five
there will be submit- (5• years.
tad a vote of the peo·
The Polls for said
pte of said subdlvl· Election
be
witt
at
6:30
slon at a PRIMARY opened
ELECTION to be held o'clock a.m . and
In the Townhlp of remain open until
Letart, Ohio, at the 7:30 o'clock a.m. and
regular places of vot- remain open until
vi.
Richard A. Adkins, Ing therein , on the 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
2nd day of March,
et. al.
said day.
Defendants
2004 , the question of
By order of the
Case No. 03CV111
levying a tax, In Board of Elections, of
· In pursuance of an excess of the ten mill
Meigs County, Ohio
order of sale in the limitation, for the ben~ Dated January 2,
above entitled action. eflt
of
Letart 2004
I Wm offer tor sale at Township for the pur- John
N.
lhle ,
public auction, at the pose of fire protec- Chairperson
Courthouse
In tion.
Rita
0.
Smith ,
Pomeroy, Ohio in the
Said tax .being a Director
above named County, replacement iax of 1 (2. 3, 10, 17, 24
on the 12th day of mil at a rate not
March 2004 at 10,00 , exceeding 1.0 mills
a.m., the following lor each one dollar of
Public Notice
described· real estate valuation,
which
to wll:
amounts to ten cents
MORTGAGE ELECBaing Lots Number ($0.10• for each one TRONIC REGISTRAThree (3., Five (5., hundred dollars of TION SYSTEMS, INC.
Seven &lt;nand Nine (9. valuation for five (5) SOLELY AS NOMIof
Turner's years.
NEE
Subdivision Number
The Polls for said FOR
FREEDOM
· 1 as the same is des·
Election
will
be MORTGAGE CORPO· lgnated and delineat· opened at 6:30 a.m. RATION OBA FREE: ed on the recorded and remain open until DOM HOME MORT.
Plat thereof, in Plat 7:30 o'clock a.m. and GAGE
Book 4, Page 4, remain open until CORPORATION
Office, 7:30 o'clock P.M. of -vs.
Recorder's
Meigs County, Ohio.
said day.
BRENT A. SMITH aka
Excepting 35 feet By order of the' Boar~ BRENT
ALLEN
off from the South of Elections, of Meigs SMITH et at.
portion of lot 3 that County, Ohio
LEGAL NOTICE
joins lot one which Dated January 2, Jane Doe. Unknown
has been previously 2004
Spouse, If any, of
conveyed to Tahnsee Rita
D.
Smith,
Brent A. Sm lth aks
Director
Johnaon.
Brent Allen Smith,
Parcel Nos.: 12- (2. 3, tO, 17, 24
whose last place of
00009-000, 12-00010residence Is known
000, 12-000t1-000 &amp;
as 210 South Fourth
Public Notice
12-00012-000.
Avenue, Middleport,
. Said premloea localOH 45760-1105, but
. ed at 66 Nalson Road, NOTICE OF ELEC· whose present place
. rutland, Ohio 45775.
TION ON TAX LEVY IN of
Is
residence
Said
Premlsetl• EXCESS OF THE TEN
unknown, will take
· Appraised
at MILL LIMITATION.
notice
that
on
December 8, 2003,
$40,000.00 and can- Revised
Code,
not be sold for lasa Sections 3501.11(0),
MORTGAGE ELEC·
than two-thirds of 5705.19, 5705.25
TRONIC REGISTRA·
that amount.
NOTICE Is hereby TION SYSTEMS, INC.
TERMSOFSALE : given that In pur· SOLELY AS NOMI·
down, auance
· $5,000.00 ·
of
a NEE FOR FREEDOM
remainder upon ten ~ Resolution of the
MORTGAGE CORPO·
. dar of dead.
VIllage Council of the RATION DBA FREE·
· Sheriff of
Melga VIllage of Racine,
DOM HOME MORT·
· County, OH
Racine, Ohio, passed GAGE
CORPORA·
. Frank &amp; Wooldridge on the 1at day of TION
flied
Its
Co., L.P.A.
December,
2003, Complaint In Cm No.
: Anorneys for Plaintiff there will be sUbmit- 03CV 1391n the Court
Pearl ted a vote of the-peo- . of Common Pleas of
600 Souht
pie of said subdivi- Meigs
County,
: Street
; Columbus, OH 43206
sion at a PRIMARY Marlene
Harrison,
: (814. 221 -1662.
ELECTION to be held Meigs County Clerk
(1. 20, 27, (2. 3, 10, 17 In the VIllage of of Courts, P.O. Box
Racine, Ohio, al the 151 , 100 Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
regular places of
Public Notice
lng therein, on the 45789, seeking fore' .
2nd day of March, closure and alleging
.NOTt.CE OF ELEC, 2004, the queallon of that the Deltendant
TION ON TAX LEVY IN levying a tax , )n Jane Doe, Unknowl'i
EXCESS OF THE TEN &amp;XCIII Of ..,e ten mill Spouse, If any, of
-MILL LIMITATION.
limitation, for the ben- Brent A Smith aka
; Ravlsad
Code, efit of Recine Vlltage Brent Allen Smith has
r,Sectlono 3501 .11(G., tor the purpose of or claims to have an
~ ~705.19, 5705.25
.
Fire Protection.
lntereot In the real
; • NOTICE Ia hereby
Said tax baing a estate
de•cribed
l!lven that In pur- replacement ta x of below:
. euance
of
a 0.1 mil at a rata not
Situated In the
Resolution of the exceeding 0.7 mllta VIllage of Middleport.
' Board of Township tor each one dollar of County of Meigs and
of
the valuation:
which State of Ohio;
: Truotaea
The following real
' :rownohlp of Letart, •mount• to · seven
:. Racine, ·Ohio, passed canto ($0.07• for each estate situate In the
· ·0 n the · t 5th . day of one hundred dollars VIllage of Middleport.
0

vo'·

-- ~ -

Kno~ 9

L ARRY SCHEY

/cHiVRO,~T '

7~0

trailef. $6800 firm. (740)742·
40 t 1

·

Phone (7411)593-667
At hens. Ohio

A Bencr

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Original 2.9 Ford Engine,
$500.00 FIRM, Fiberglass
topper. Ford Ranger short

let me do 1\ for youl

bed, $1 00.00 (304)576·
2806 affer 6 PM

liNDA'S PAINTING

CAMPF.RS&amp;
HoMEs

M&lt;rroH

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICnON

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Hoi\1Jo:

Hill's Self
Storage

~
BASI!MENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetim e guarantee. Loca l references fur·
ni shed. Establi shed 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim

• Stump Grinding
Buck.et Truck

"'' :fip.,~·xfo• ' ,
~L:
.._ ~o·ll'3o'·',, ·
~; .,..
l ..
&lt;h

Stop &amp; Compare

JONES'

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

.

-

2·/0

...... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _li;.:;&gt;~c.loo&gt;IE.='S._.

140-992-1611

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

"I 1(\ IC I "

BARNEY

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

(1 O'K10' 6 1O'x20')

1983 29 Ft. Fleetwood
Camper Exc. Cond. $3500.
(304)773-6187

.. _._.............

• New Homes

m1::, .':&gt;"-'(:) 'IOU
:)(.IZ\/E f'R.E:':lf-\
Of-\ I0 C.l P-.. tJ\

·'·

"''

"''

H\EIZE'. P-..11£1--l' T ...
WE U:':lE ZC.BIZI'.
1-\U~ELC:&gt; I

I

' HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

"lfeellike

I

In the County of each one dollar of
Meigs and In the
valuation,
which
State
of
Ohio,
amounts to ten cents
described as follows:
($0.10• for each one
Lot Number Eighty hundred dollars of
In Palmer Addition In valuation for 5 years.
the Town of Sheffield,
The Potts for said
now
Middleport,
Election
wilt
be
Meigs County, Ohio, opened at 6:30 a.m.
being fifty feet front
and remain open until
and one hundred teet
7:30 o'clock a.m. and
deep, baing the same
remain open until
premises deeded by 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
Sanford Russell and
sold day.
wife Wm. D. White and
By order of the Board
Wm. D. White and wife
of Elections, of Meigs
Daniel C. Rathburn.
County, Ohio
Said property being
Dated January 2,
located on the south2004
east corner of Palmer
John
N.
lhle,
and South Fourth
Chairperson
Streets.
Rita
D.
Smith,
The
Defendant
Dlreclor
named
above
Ia
(2p, 10, 17, 24
required to answer on
or before the 13th day
of April, 2004
Public Notice
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRA- NOTICE OF ELECTION SYSTEMS, INC,
TION
SOLELY AS NOMINotice Is hereby
NEE FOR FREEDOM given that pursuant
MORTGAGE CORPo- to s resolution adopt·
RATION DBA FRr;;E- ed by the Board of
OOM HOME MORT· Education of the
GAGE
CORPORA· ' Meigs Local School
TION
District, County of
BY:
SHAPIRO
Meigs, Ohio, on the
&amp; FELTY, L.L.P.
3rd day of December,
Phillip c. Barragata, 2003, there will ba
Attorney at Law
aubmltted to the qual·
Attorney for Plaintiff· lfled alactora ot said
Petitioner
school. district at the
1500 West Third election to be held on
Street, Sullo 400
the 2nd day of March,
Cleveland, OH 44113
2004, at the regular
(216. 621·1530
places of
voting
(2. 10, 17, 24 (3. 2, 9, thonjln, the queatton
16
of levying a tax out, aide of the ten-mill
constitutional limitaPublic Notice
tion lor the benefit of
the Meigs
Local
NOTICE OF ELEC- Schqol District for the
TION ON TAX LEVY IN purpose of providing
EXCESS OF THE TEN books and school
MILL LIMITATION.
busaa and other necRevised
Code,
essary
permanent
Sfttlons 3501.11 (G.,
ImprovementS at a
5705.19, 5705.25
rate of three (3.0•
NOTICE Is hereby
mills for each one
given that In pur· dollar ($1.00• of tax
suance
of
a valuation,
which
Resolution of tho
amounts to thirty
Board of Trustees ot cents ($0.30) for each
the Township· of one hundred dollars
Lebanon , ·Portland
($1 00.00. of ta&gt;f valuaOhio, passed on the
tion, for a period of
15th
day
of (lve (5• years, comDecembar,
2003, mencing with tax year
there will be submit- 2004, collection year
ted a vote of the P.,o·
2005.
pie of said aubdlvl·
The polls . w.lll be
si.Qn at a PRIMARY
open from 6:30 e.m·.
ELECTION (o be held to .7:30 p.m. on' said
In the Township of date.
Lebanon, Ohio, at the BY ORDER OF THE
regular places Of vot~
BOARD OF ELEC·
lng therein, on tho TIONS
2rld day of March, OF THE COUNTY OF
2004, tho quaotlon of MEIGS, OHIO
levying a tax, In
Rita o. Smith
excess of the tan milt
Director
limitation, for the ben· (2. 3, 10, 17, 24
eflt
of
Lebanon
Township for the pur·
Public Notice.
pose
of
Fire
Protection.
SHERIFF'S SALE,
Said tax bslng s
replacement tax of 1 REAL ESTATE
mills at a rata not CASE NUMBER 03
cv 016
exceeding 1 mills for
0

l

BANK ONE, NATION·
AL ASSOCIATION AS
TRUSTEE
Plaintiff
·VB·

WILLIAM P. HYSELL,
at al. Defendants
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of S&amp;le to me
directed tram said
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the
front stePs of tha
Meigs County .Court
House on Friday,
March 12, 2004, at
10:30 A.M ., of· said
day, the following
described real es.tate:
Situate
In
the
Vlltaga of Middleport,
County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio, and
being a part of Lot
No. 427 In Lower
Pomeroy,
now
Middleport, Ohio, and
described as follows:
Commencing at the
Northweat corner of
Lot 427 which Is also
the Northeast corner
of Lot 426 at Oliver
Street; thence Eabt
along the North line
ot Lot 427, 40 teet;
thence South 70 f&amp;eti
thence Wes,t 40 feet;
thence North along
the West line of Lot
427, 70 feet to the
place of beginning,
being a lot fronting 40
feet In depth along
the West aide of Lot
427.
CURRENT OWNER:
PROPERTY
ADDRESS: PP f :
PRIOR DEED REFER·
ENCE:
William P. Hysell 835
Oliver
· Street,
Middleport,
Ohio.
46780
15-0092.000
volume 99, Page 499
APPRAISED
AT:
$10,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
Cannot be sold for
leso than 213rda of
the appraised value:
10% down 'Oil day of
sale, cosh or ·certified
check, balance on
conftnnallon of sale.
RALPH E. TRUSSELL,
Sheriff Meigs County,
Ohio
REIMER &amp; LORBER
Co., L.P.A.
Dan n I 1
By:
.· (Rag.
Reimer
10031109.
James
c.
Wrentmore
(Rag.
80048779.
AHornaya for Plaintiff
2450
Edlaon
Blvd.
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg,
Ohio
44087
(330) 425-4201
2110,17,24

Pass

34

Pass

All pass

East

West

Game might be
on, so try for it

East Stat&lt;' Street

I

Delivered Right tu Your

Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

94 Stratos bass boat. 120hp
trolling motor. !Ish Iinder &amp;

Publl4;: Nutlccs In ';~~.:.~:o~::::~:

South
1•

Opening lead: oil A

button 4x4, 67hrs. on it,
must sell excellent condition,
740 992-7771
BoATS &amp; MOIORS
HlR SALE
..__ _iiiiiiiiitiii'--'

1!1411 mo. pd

UBLIC
OTICES

• Q2

Deal er: South
Vulnerable: Both

2003 405 Foreman-S , push

r

• Q 9 84
• 7 6!
• K QJ 9

• 10 6
• AQJ109
t A 8
4 A7 4 3

L

f!IO A.~.!'
,,.._.._,~

East

South

M(Jil)RCYQEl

1

02-L0-04

9 K 8 52

Also New H11wklinc Hrush ow~. hm: hhull'S. ~ru dl·r
hlade.'i utilit ~ · lnlilt· r~. jtutlst•ntd;.s, anclmnrt·.
And ... ~ Massl'~" ft' r~tuson Trut·lor!i.
Call ror det11il
As a lw a~·s ''t' s cill han· h~· dr ;tu lh: hu)ot's.uil auul
n ·puir qlindt'n..

740-992-7599
f40

North
• 7 5 3 2

Now Available ot T&amp;D Hydraulics
• Form Pro Tractors
20 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive
[ach has full I ) 'ear warranty on pnrts ai nd lahor,
Priced fron t $S,()(MI &amp; $13,000 w/uption~ 8\'ailuhle.

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Shariff's Sale of
Rest Eotate
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
Beneficial of Ohio ,
Inc. dba Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio
Plaintiff

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85
NEA Croasword Puzzle
ACROSS

.leannelle l.awrrnce

JD 9ft. Haybine rebuiiJ. Gehl
a-wheel
hay
rake.
lh ternational field Culhvalor.
Call (740)256-601 1.

www.mydailysentinel.com
BRIDGE

Campbell, George &amp;

good. runs good. $3.800
Call (740)379- 2860

Tuesday, February 10, 2004
ALLEYOOP

The family or Sylvia
M. Wolfe would like

,\ 11\I""'ICJI~

3000 Ford Tract01 . looks

Tuesday, February 10, 2004

Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

740-992·7953

r ~--

.

I'm out
on a limb!"
BIG NATE

·- ..

"Not me!
My money is with ·
Rotky Hupp ln•urante
and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264 •

HOW COME YOU

\

t;OT

DETENTION,

Ct-IE5TER

\

REARRAt-IGEil
KIO'.S FACE

THAT

KEPT TALKING
ME WHILE. r WAS
Tll.'(ING TO 'RE"'D
M'( COMIC SOOK .

7

COMIC.

BOOK?

NATE , FOR
YOUR OWN
SAFETY , I' to\
MOVING YOU
oO ANOTHER

DESK.
'f;;'

d 1 mo

YOUNG'S
CARP~NTER

SERVICE
• Room Additi ons &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Aoollng &amp; Gutter&amp;
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

See'.
Rocky "R.J "

Hupp
IMPORTS

• Patio and Porch De cks

Reduced Winter Rates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 5
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local

Athens

\ PEANUTS

DOES A 6RAMMA 1-lAVE THE
TO CRITICIZE A GRANDCHILD,
OR SHOULD 51-lE CRITICIZE THE
KID'S MOT~ER WIIO, OF ~vur1:oc:, 1
15 HER OWN Ct.IILD?

MV OPINION, I DON1T
THINK SHE DOES, AND I TI-IINK
IN

I'M GOING TO TELL HER ...

OF COURSE,
'{OU WANT TO ..

UNLESS,

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
. Eledric
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740·991· 0933
Cell 740·591·1073

~~~ ­
High &amp;Dry

Seli·StQrage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Con~rete Work
Roofing •All types

740·992·7953
J

Dean HUI
New&amp; Used

'

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

so WI-I'(

OOtF€6L

1-800-822-0417

L-IKE

lAUGHI!JG'?

"W. V's # I Chevy. Ponllac. Bu lrk. Olds
&amp; Cus tom Va n Dea le r"

Slanlcv .ftJgging
and Jrcc ]rimming
•Timber Harvesling
and Mnnngcmen1
• Rcsidcntiul Tree
Trimniing and '
Rcmm•ol '
• Free ENtimutcs

( 'all:
(;,In

Slanl' ''

17-tU ) 7-t!-22'!.1

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

~ PATEL CLINIC

Ot&gt;IIS, 1-E'I''f&gt; 1'AL.K EFFOR'f
VERS05 RE'TURN HERE

d

Halesh M. Patel
MD,.FACP
Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology
530 West Union Street

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

GRIZZWELLS
~U@\tR , \N\.\b.T tb
Yeti Wt&gt;.~T
~

G

AstroGraph
-... 'lllrlhdo,y:

Wedn ..day, Feb. 11, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
The year ahe ad could turn into one or your
happier periods by maintaining a sense of
order and balance in your lite. II will be
1mportant to wo rk hard , but equalize this
wi th leisure-time acli\litles and rela11ation .
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Think
twi ce before yielding to temptations to
take an opposing position today on a pop ular cause, no matter how much you th ink
you're right Even supp orters may side
with opp onents.
PISCE S (Feb. .20-M arch .2 0) - Keep in
mind today th at everyone is ent1 tl ed to h1 s
or her opinion, Being too cri tical or harsh
~~ a uld ttJ rn wh at should be a minor debate
in to a seriou s confrontnlion where no one
wi ll win.
ARI ES (March 21-April 19) ~ When 11
comes to financial matters today, do not
discoun t your own good judgmen t
Permitting someone else to do your th inking for you 1n this realm could end up costing you money.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - II you're
wise Ieday, you wilt not take any independent action on an Important situation
or ma tter which concerns both you and
your mate. Discuss it th oroughly w1th him
or her fir st
GEMINI (May 2 t -June .20) - Most peop le
are n' t apt to perform too well when someone Is lookmg over their shoulder. and
you're no e)(ception. Put yourself 1n th ese
c1rcumstances so that you don't do so to
anyone else
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - l fs best to
try to steer clear of people today who tend
to be overly demanding . Even though
you're normally able to tolerate th ese
types, this isn't apl to be the case for you
now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - USually a good
challenge .awakens your be tter qualit1es
and you rise to the occasion, but this
might not be the case today. Don't willing ly lmm8rse yourself in any uphill struggl es .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Subdue any
InClinations you get today (o contradict
others merely lor the sake of argument
Instead ol showing off your intelligence
and winning point s, you may make ene mies
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 - Do not be
stingy when deAling with others today. but,
by the same token, take special care to
make certain th at the lion's share or
91(penses incurred by all don't tall on you .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Be1ng
over ly conce rned abou t guarding you r
personal interests today cciuld cause you
to fail to recognize the needs. affairs or
wants ot associates. Broaden you r per·
spective.
SAGITTA RIUS (NO\/. 23-0ec . 21) There's a possibility that a problem will
re ar it s ugly head today from a responSIbility you've negtecled to take care ol. hopIng that somehow it would be attended lo
by another.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - Unless
you str ive lo be your own person today,
there Is a strong likelihood th at you could
end up yielding to peer pressure and do
something that would not be in your best
interests .

39Ex~

~Yimdown

Brought
about
Ohio or
Spanish •
city
Herd

follower
Olin and
Russell

MP 's prey
- noire
Bouquel's
place
Moose kin
Lose one's
balance
They exist

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
are crea1eo!rom QUOiallo,s ny lamouspeoclt
EC!Ch "'llt&gt;r 111 It•!! CIQher Slarrc!s l1r illl Oiher
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PREiitOUS SOLUTION - "I want to be remembered as a oallplayer who gave
all he had to give: - Pittsburgh Pirate great Roberlo Clemente

(c) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 2·10

T:~~:t:~Y S@~~~-~"e~~e

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we shou ld be proud
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chap informed hiS
frion~ "·Thot way we don ·t have
make-~. ~ ~- -."
t~e d'lvdle quoted
in lhe mtSStl'9 words
s1e;:&gt; No J below

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

K11/en • Valid- Camel - Offend- DEFECTIVE
Automechanictocustomer, "ltisn'teasy being an auto '
mechanic. It's disturbing to realize that every ca r 1 see
durtng the da¥ IS DEFECTIVE'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

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SruoiES SHOW \1-lt'IT
DdiLY"CoNSLIMPrl()n OF

PIKI-IEI:!

WiNe SLOWS T~ dG1NG

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PRo&lt;:ess .

If medical care is all about caring with
heart's tender touch and warmth of
tears and smiles along with the cutting
edge care, well, you can counl orl us! ~

/1 •

You open one of a major, and partner
raises lo the two-level. You have too much
power to pass. but not enough to jump to
game. Whal would you do?
Normally, you bid another suit, one where
you would like partner to have either
some high cards or shortage. You make
what is called a help-suit game-try. Also.
strange though it sounds. usually you
pick yo ur weakest side suit. And if you bid
a minor, you may have only three cards in
that suit; but 1! you bid the other major,
you a re ~ supposed to have four cards
there because it m1ght be your besllit . A
key point: This new-suit bid is 100 percent forcing. At the worst, partner must
go back to yo ur first ·bid suit at the threelevel .
On th is deal. you (South} are in four
hearts. West attacks witll three rounds of
spades. After rutti ng the third , how would
you continue?
South has only 15 high-card points, but
he has good playing potential and (for
Losing Trick Count alicionados) si)( losers. (There can be at most three losers in
any suit .) The key to game·s being
playable is partner's lit in clubs. And
North, desp1te having only minimum
point-count, should bid game becaUse ol
his good club llolding and lour trumps.
You draw one round ol trumps from lland,
take the two top clubs ending in lland,
and ruff a club with the heart eight so
East cannot overruff. Cross back to hand
with a heart. tr ump your last club with
dummy'S heart king, ruff a spade, draw
East's last trump , and claim. Only 21
combined points, but an ~ easy" g~m e!

1 Smok&amp;o
house
hanger
4 Rifle pellets
7 Thwart
11 Ia, to Fritz
12 Sevareld or
Clapton
14 Anr.llns
Jol o role
15 Coq au 16 Milan maney, formerly
11 Waterless
1B Painters'
stands
20 VIctorian
22 Startled cry
23 Impresario
- Hurok
24 Petroleum
mine•
27 Cleared the
tables
30 Jecques'
pals
31 Feel sure of
32 Kipling
novel
34 Wheel part
35 Not narrow
36 Knowing
look
37 News
summaries

40 Jungfrau
41 Colendar
abbr.
42 Japanaoe
theater
45 Pimiento
holders
49 Wool glvera
50 Moniker
52 Everything
53 Quick letter
54 Degree
holder
55 Go down
lhe slopes
56 Yukon
vehicle
57 Ancient
10 Disney dog 38
Tokyo
13 Klndofpill
58 Sixth sense 19 Lampreys 39
2t Proml•i ng
DOWN
24 Kids ' card
game
41
1 Drone's
25 Sultan·s
home
cousin
42
2 China's
26 Whitewash
location
component 43
3 Alias abbr. 27 Furniture
44
4 Debutantes
items
46
5 Invigorating 28 Barely gets
6 Knight 's
47
address
29
48
7 Thrashes
31 Jagging
about
33 Newlywed 51
B Galley
title
movers
35 Take a stroll
9 Pupil 's
36 Strauss
place
of jeans

l

I ClLWB'rS ~;..~a..JDE~D HOI.V
lj:fO.Se Q1TS S ~ep•NG IN lfie

P8 Rt&lt; "e:l"1"' me~~ '"PJ"lHAJLGoor· LOCJ\&lt;.: S. ..

�•

Tuesday, February 10, 2004

•

,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 86

www.mydailysentinel.com

Big, barking dog takes . SEODAB releases sectional

Redmen defense shuts
down Shawnee, Bt·

early lead at Westminster boys tournament ·pairings
NEW YORK (AP) - Hi s ed handler Beth Sweigart
barks bouncing all around the with a kiss, and Coco later
arena, Josh looked eager to won the terrier group.
"She thinks she is an excelget going. And with a lick of a
fan's face and guided by his lent dog. She is asking to
lucky leash, the big , black win," Sweigart said.
Newfoundland bounded back
Over the years, terriers have
onto the green carpet at dominated this all-champion
Madison Square Garden.
event for purebreds. with a
Moments later. handler Kerry blue terrier named
Michelle Ostermiller was Mick winning last February.
kissing his slobbering muzzle. Coco was aiming to do the
the crowd was cheering and it sa me
at
this
12Mth
was official: an early win Westminster show.
Monday at Westminster. then
A primped Pekingese called
a victory at night marked him Les and a standard poodle
as a favorite at America' s named Mikimoto on Fifth
most prestigious dog show.
also repeated in best of breed.
"People are drawn to him and advanced to group judgbecause he's a real dog," co- ing Monday night.
owner Peggy Helming said.
The dogs came in 162
"He's got a heart as big as he breeds and varieties. in all
is."
shapes and sizes. There were
With actresses Delta Burke 79 different kinds of
and Glenn Close among the Dachshunds but only one
fanciers in attendance. there American water spaniel, there
figured to plenty of competi- were canines that took part in
tion among the 2,624 entries. recent sled dog races and olhAnd a lot of it might come ers that visited hospital
from the nation' s No. I show patients last weekend.
dog. a perky Norfolk terrier
"They are show dogs. sure,
named Coco.
but they are regular dogs,
"It's insane. it's chaotic too,'' said David Frei, co-host
backstage," said Burke, cur- of USA Network's coverage.
rently in the Broadway show "They sleep on our couches
"Thoroughly Modern Millie." and steal food off our counJosh was a repeat winner in ters."
the workin~ group, assuring
Josh clearly was the most
him a spot 111 the final seven. popular last year after he.
Plus. he'll have this factor in turned around to watch himhis favor Tuesday night when self on the video board. He
the top dog is chosen: the sounded his presence this
judge who picked him in the time, and even judge Ruth
group last year is the best in Zimmerman laughed - in
show judge thi s time.
Westminster parlance, he's
To win. though, he'll have "very vocal" because show
to beat out Coco, a 5-year-old people frown on saying a dog
from England. She's already barks a lot , fearing it makes
won 54 best in show titles. them appear too unruly.
including the widely televised
AI !55 pounds, the 4-yearAKC/Eukanuba event in old Josh weighs a lot more
Long Beach. Calif.
than Ostermiller. She kept
Exceptionally sprite with a 1 telling him, "s low. · slow"
fast gait. Coco breezed in best • when he romped around the
of breed . Show chairman ring and, no surprise, she
Thomas Bradley congratulat- emerged with his black hair

all over her ice blue ~ uit .
"He's just letting you know
he's there," Ostermiller said.
All in all, a fine performance that ended a twomonth retirement to compete.
'"That 's hard to beat,"
praised rival handler Karen
Mammanu.
Like a lot of 'show people.
Ostermiller and Helming
have their own set of superstitions and lucky charms. They
also have things to avoid no handler wears a No . 13
annband at Westminster. ·
Ostermiller took out her
lead. commonly called the
leash. from a plastic bag to
use one more time. She also
followed tradition by matching the color of her washcloth , used to tidy Josh's
mouth, with her outlit.
Helming wanted No. 5 for
the show ring. yet instead
wound up with 17. No problem, because when Helming
and her dog checked into her
hotel across the Garden , guess
what room she got? Yep, No.
555.
··so, we 're OK," she said.
Mammano always uses
three rubber bands to hold her
armband imd comb in place.
She's also particular about
what she wears.
"Never second-ph:ce red,"
she said.
Sweigart only grooms her
aspiring best in show with a
special "Coco brush." featur- ·
ing a picture of a Norfolk terrier on the back. Others use
lucky pennies, pendants and
play toys, while some rely on
routines with a more personal
touch.
Handler Hiram Stewart,
guiding Les the Pekingese ,
preferred a positive talk with
his pooch before big events.
"I tell him he's the king,"
Stewart said.

Nash has vivid memories
from his All-Star weekend
COLUMBUS (AP) - Rick
Nash said be almost expected
the biggest stars in hockey to
look at him as if he were in
the wrong I ocker room .
Instead, they made him feel as
if he belonged.
The 19-year-old Columbus
Blue Jacket played in his first
NHL All-Star game on
Sunday. Judging from hi s
league-leading 31 goals at the
break, it probably won't be
his last.
Raised
in
Brampton,
Ontario, not far from Toronto,
Nash didn't hesitate when
asked what was the high point
of his weekend in St. Paul ,
Minn.
"II was nice seeing Mats
Sundin, obviously," he said
with a wide grin, referring to
the longtime Maple Leaf star.
"Growing up watching him
and to shake his hand and
meet him was pretty cool. But
it was all the guys, (Markus)
Naslund, (Todd) Bertuzzi and
those type of guys. They were
really mce."
Just two years ago, a substantially shorter and lighter
Nash was playing forward for
the London Knights of the
Ontario Hockey League. Fast
.forward to Sunday when he
was sharing the ice with the
New York Rangers' Mark
Messier, New Jersey's Martin
Brodeur and Colorado's Joe
S3kic, who had three goals to
skate away with the MVP tro-

phy.
Nash didn ' t score in his
three shots on goal, but he did
show some flair. He took a
puck that was behind him.
whisked it between his skates
and got off a shot on
Montreal 's Jose Theodore
that the goaltender was able
to glove.
"He was tremendous,"
Columbus goalie Marc Denis
said. "I really wish he could
have buried it against Theo
there . But you know he's
going to have many more
chances. So many All-Star
games this guy is going to go
to!,
Nash was the youngest AllStar si nee 1986. He flashed
just a fraction of his talent in
Saturday night's skills competition when he easily outraced Ouawa's esteemed
Daniel Alfred sson in the
puck-handling segment.
That undoubtedly opened
some eyes, in part because
Alfredsson has proven to be
the consummate skater and
scorer in his eight seasons
with the Senators, posting 211
goals.
What's
more,
Alfredsson is just 5-foot-11,
199 pounds compared to
Nash's 6-4 and 215 pounds .
"Every secc;ind word the
announcers said was about
Rick Nash, how great his
hands were and how good a
kid he was," interim Blue
Jackets coach Gerard Gallant

BY BRAD SHERMAN
was awarded a No. 3 seed
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM and also a free pass to the .
championship game.
JACKSON
After
The Tornadoes await the
Sunday, there are undoubt- winner betwee n No. 6
edly a lot of happy basket- Symmes Valley (7-8) and
ball coaches and fans in No. II Waterfo rd (0- 17 ).
Gallia and Meigs counties.
T.he VICtor and Sou,thern lock
The Southeast Ohio horns on Feb. 28 at 8 p.m..
District Athletic Board held also at Wellston. •
its annual tournament draw
Both Eastern and Southern
Sunday at Jackson High reSide m the upper brackt;t.
School to determine the pair- and could posstbly meet m
ings for boys sectional tour- the D1stn c1 fmal.
nament s held later this
South Galha ts the No. 4
month.
seed and Will face ,a tough
The draw was particularly No . 5 Southeastern (6-11)
kind to local Division IV club QUI of the Sc10t~ Valley
teams, a~ all three are just Co'nferen~e:, That match-up
one win away from a District takes place Feb. 27 111
berth at the Cnnvocation Wellston at 8 p.m.
There were not as many
Center in Athens.
Eastern
( 12-4)
was smiling faces on , the
rewarded for its tough non- Division 11 side. however, as
conference schedule , and far as seeding was con took the top seed al the sec- cerned.
Galli a Academy ( J2 ,5),
lionals held .at Wellston High
who suffered a bad los~ at
School.
The automatic bye pul..'i the Jackson Friday lost the -~ ov ll,agles in the sectional eted No. I seed' to the red hot
championship against the Vinton County Vikings ( 13winner of No. 8 Crooksville 3).
The Blue Devils settled for
(5- 11) and No. 9 Miller (314). The tit le till is scheduled the second seed and will
for 6:15p.m. on Feb.27.
meet fellow Sotllheastern
Fellow
Tri -Valley Ohio Athletic League memConference
Hocking berand No.7 Warren (6-10).
Division member, Southern, The game tips off at 6: 15

an opportunity to fully siudy
the court's decision," NFL
spokesman Greg Aiello said.
"The case is in its very early
stages. and we have every
confidence that we will ultimately prevail. "
Bengals spokesman .Jack
Brennan· said the team had no
comment.
The lawsuit originally was
filed by Hamilton County
commissioner Todd . Portune,
who has feuded with the
Benga]s over financing and
management of Paul 'Brown
Stadi urn. The $458 million stadium, whic h opened in 2000,
wa' built in part with money
from a county sales lax hike . .
A companion lawsuit tiled
in state courts was torown out.

STAFF REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
ROCKSPRINGS - Sam
Pierce scored 19 points to
lead Meigs to a 51-49 win
over Belpre Saturday.
The Marauders led 39-27
at the end of the third quarter, but had to hold off a furious fourth quarter showing
by the Eagles. Belpre. which

had already clinched a share
of the TVC Ohio going into
the game, out-scored Meigs
22-12 in the fourth, but could
not grab the win.
Also for the Marauders
(I 0-8,
5-4
Tri- Valley
Conference Ohio Division),
Renee Bailey scored .11
points.
Whitney Blackburn led
Belpre (12-7. 7-2) with 18

points, while Shawntae
Cline pitched in with II
points.
Jaynee Davis led the
Marauders under the glass
with II . rebounds. while
Brittany Ferguson grabbed
eight boards for the Eagles.
Davis also had five steals.
Meigslravels to Southern
Thursday.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2155

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"'"' ·""'"';""'"'""' '""'

SPORTS
• Kentucky tops Alabama.
See Page 81

BY J. MtLES lAYTON
JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

SISTERSVILLE. W.Va.
- To the bugle cry of
Taps, Staff Sgt. Roger
Clinton Turner, Jr., was
laid to rest at Greenwood
Cemetery Tuesday in
Sistersville, W.Va.
A grieving family and
community were present
to pay their last respects to
a soldier who gave the
ultimate sacrifice to keep
America safe and free.
Turner was killed in a
rocket attack Feb. I on an
army base in central Iraq.
He was a vehicle mechanic assigned to the I Oth
Cavalry Re~iment, 4th ·
Infantry Divtsion of the
U.S . Army and was stationed at Fort Hood,
Texas.
Dignitaries and community leaders from two
states attended the service.
There was a representative
from U.S. Senator Jay
Rockeleller's office present. With tears in her
eyes, Dottie Turner said
good-bye to her only son.
Turner's wife Teresa, who
is
originally
from
Sistersville, wrote a statement for the Rev. William
Williamson to read at the
service.
"While the world talks
of weapons of ,mass
destruction, an · Iraqi
weapon found you sleeping.
The
weapon
destroyed our lives,"
Williamson said. "Every
time there is a smiling
child's face in Iraq ... it's
because you made the sacrifice."
·
Turner was buried with
military honors. Members
of the 16th Cavalry
Regiment from Fort Knox,
Ky., removed and careful.
ly folded the American
flag draping the casket.
Teresa could not hold back
her tears when a soldier
leaned down and gave her
the flag. Seven members
of the regiment then raised
their rifles in the air in unison, all in precise order,
and fired three shots.
"He made the Jeace in
Iraq and he staye to keep
the peace for people there.
He made the ultimate sacrifice," said Maj . Gen .
Terry Tucker, commanding general of Fort Knox,
Ky.

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• William Donald
Foglesong

Subscribe today.

said.
A year ago as a rookie,
Nash had played in the NHL's
YoungStars game, a 4-on-4
scoring spectacle to show off
the league's brightest kids. He
said when he first walked into
the Western Conference
dressing room, he expected
the veterans to give him a
hard time.
"I thought they might ask
me why I wasn't in the
YoungStars game dressing
room or something," he said.
Nash was on the same line
with Calgary Flames right
winger Jarome lginla, who
led the NHL with 52 goals
two years ago. The line was
centered by the Detroit Red
Wings' Pavel Datsyuk, who
already has 25 goals and 55
points.
Besides the rush on
Theodore, Nash also had a
hard shot that goalie Roberto
Luongo stopped in the third
period.
"I don't think disappointed
is the right word , but it would
have been nice to have
scored," he said. "At the end
of the day it was a great experience and it was a lot of fun."
What's more, he got something more than just a handshake to show for his weekend in Minnesota.
"I got a team western
Conference jersey and I got a
Mark Messier one as well,"
he said. "And he signed it."

Spiegel decided there were
federal issues worthy of a triaL
· Portulle said the judge's ruling opens the way for lawyers
to get detailed financial information from the league
through the di scovery process
leading to trial. No trial date
··
has been set.
"That's the kind of stuff
they absolutely don't wa1)t" to
get out and have never been
willing to release, but now
will have to," Portune said. "I .
think it's great news for the
county and for county taxpayers. There was a very strong
effort by the Bengals and the
NFL to keep these cases bottled up without ever gelling
out of 1he box and to paint
them as frivolou s."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Lady Marauders top Belpre

WEATHER

Delallo on PliO A3

LoTIERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-9-2
Pick 4 day: 8-3-8-1
Pick 3 night: 2-3-1
Pick 4 night: 7-6.()4
Buckeye 5: 2-9-12-23-35

West Vll'ginia
Dally 3: 4·0-7
Dally 4: 5-9-B-2
Powerball: 4-11-16-19-22-25

A special military honor guard from Ft. Knox. Ky., served as pallbearers to their brother at arms, U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Roger
Clinton Turner, Jr.. who was laid to rest Tuesday at Greenwood Cemetery in Sistersville, W.Va. (J. Miles Layton)

Hillside slips onto
Bob Roberts Field
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTIN EL .COM

POMEROY- Tons of dirt
and numerous trees on tlie
Spring Valley Lane hillside
overloo.king Bob Roberts
Field in Pomeroy came tumbling down Tuesday.
The debri s blocked the
roadway behind the football
field used by village employees to get back to the sewer
treatment system. A large
uprooted pine tree rested on
top of the Meigs High
School score board, a chain
link fence was taken out, a
tree bounced off the goal
post causing minimal damage.
The slip exposed the foundation of a restored log cabin

high on the hill behind the
stad ium. It and a nearby
house which appeared not to
be damaged by the slide are
owned by David Lewis.
Workers from Jeffer&gt;
Trucking and Excavation
were at the site clearning
trees from the roadway
Tuesday_afternoon.
Water pressure from an old
mine shaft is suspected to be
the cause of the landslide.
Meigs Local Superintendent
William Buckley said that
the Department of Natural
Resource~ has been contacted and he expects a representative from that agency in
this week to evaluate th~ situation and determine what
steps need to be taken !O stabilize the hillside.

Teresa L, Bowen Turner receives a flag symbolizing the service
and sacrifice of her husband. U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Roger Clinton
Turner, Jr., who was killed in Iraq Sunday. (J. Miles Layton)

Middleport offices could move in May
INDEX

ed date for moving, and be moved into the school
work · toward it," Manley building once phone and
computer lines are installed
said. .
and
counters and storage
MIDDLEPORT
. Council plans to pursue
Middle~ort village offices grant funding for the con- spaces are constructed.
Iannarelli said Monday
could e relocated to the struction of a new jail, to be
MiddleCort
Elementary _ built on the ~ear portion of the police department and
school uilding as early as the school building, but jail will remain in the Race
May.
plans for tha~ major con- Street village hall indefiAt Monday eveni"'s reg- struction proJect are sttll nitely.
ular meeting of Mi dleport being completed and fundThe Meigs Local Board of
Village
Council, ing sources researched , Education transferred ownCouncilman Roger Manley Mayor Sandy Iannarelli said ershlp of the Pearl Street
suggested that council set a Monday evening.
building. alont with the
May 3 deadline for moving
Meanwhile, other offices, middle school uildinJ on
most village administrative including those of the tax South Third Ave .. an the
operations, into the Pearl administrator, fiscal officer, Central Building hehind it,
Street school building.
public works department
"We need to set a project- and mayor and council, will
Please see Move, AS
BY BRIAN J. REED
6REEO@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAOES

Federal judge upholds lawsuit challenging NFL
:CINCINNATI (AP) - A tedeial judge ll!led Monday that a
taXpayer can purSue a lawsuit
alleging that the NFL has ille!l:ally uSed its clout to "extort"
. new stldiums from cifih
U.S. 1 District Judge S.
Arthur Spiegel rejected the
l~gue· ~ arguments that there
w.as no legal stal]ding for the
case, w~ich is based on how
the Cim:innati Bengals got
their new, stadium . .
Lawyer1s for · taxpayer
Carrie D~vis now can try to
· get financial records and
other priyale information
from the league as they prepare for trial, something the
NFL has st/pngly resisted in
previous antitrust cases.
. "Our auoqjeys have not had

p.m. on Feb. 24 at the Logan
Middle School.
The 8 p.m. game that night
also features a local as No. 3
Meigs (10-6) battles No. 6
Fairfield Union (7-9).
If the seeding holds true,
Gallia Academy and rMeigs
would meet in the se ·tiona!
championship.
When the two c1u9s met
early in the season, the
Marauders mi ssed eight
straight free throws and surrendered an 11-point fourth
quarter lead. The DeviiJ won
59-58 in overtime.
l,
While most teams haye to
win twice to get to Districts.
still some have to win three
h· · h
· hi
-. t at ~s t e scenano a ., mg
1
River Vall~y.
The .Rmders entered tpe
draw wuh the same record ~s
Warren. and wmners of s1x
ol the.Jr last nme contest ~.
But the coaches were more
impressed with Warren 's)
SEOAL opposition than
River Valley's non-league
schedu Ie.
.
As a result , R1ver Valley
received the eighth seed and
gets stuck in the play-in
game against No. 9 New
Lexington (3-12). That contest is at 7 p.m. on Feb. 23.

Smokers still lighting
up despite bans, Aa

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A2

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A.5

Sports

B1

Weather

A3

"© 0004 Ohio VaHey Publlshi"ll Co.

Meigs Local Superintendlint William Buckley, Bob JefferS of Jeffers
Trucking and Excavating, and Pomeroy Village Administrator Bill
Anderson, left to nght, look over the landslide site from Spring Valley
Lane at the back of Bob Roberts F1eld. (Cha~ene Hoeflich)

Annual Heart Fair

sponsored by the HMC Community Health and Wei/ness Deparhnent and HMC Cardiopulmonary Units

·

Saturday, February 14, 2004 • 8 AM - 12 Noon • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

. . 800. 949.4H4 - "'"' ..: rt}.luilf m11

"

FREE SCREENINGS • Non-Fasting Cholesterol and Glucose, Blood Pressure,
Body Fat Analysis and more. Free health info will also be available, featuring
· HAJic die Cardiac Surgeon" with Michael Lewis, MD.
12 Noon- 1 PM- SPecial Presentation by Michael A. Englund, DO, Cardiologist
"Cardiac Risk Facfors" : Boxed lunches will be

MEDICAL ~ENTER
Refresh~ents and Door Prizes!
Far mare informa~on,
call /740) 446-5679

•
-'--~------------...J-------·-·-·--·

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