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                  <text>•

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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:;o(l:\1"·\nl ..l .l · ' " · '' ·;

"'"' ·""'"';""'"'""' '""'

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-------·-·-·--·

�0

BY THE BEND

' The Daily Sentinel

:Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, Feb. II
POMEROY
- The
Meigs County Board of
: Health will meet at 5 p.m.
: in the department's confer: ence room.ll2 E. Memorial
: Drive .
Thursday, Feb. 12
. .SYRACUSE Special
: meeting of Syracuse Village
• Council
and
Syracuse
: Volunteer Fire Deparment,
: · 7 p.m. at the municipal
: building.

Clubs and
Organizations

PageA2

Thursday, Feb. 12
POMEROY
Alpha
Iota Masters. II a.m. St.
Paul Lutheran Church meeting and soup luncheon .
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 . 7 p.m. at
the hall. Meal "at 6:30 p.m.
Thesday, Feb. 17
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363.
F&amp;A .M. will hold practice
for the Master Mason
Degree work at 7:30 p.m.
at the lodge hall. All officers and members interested
in helping with the degree
work for annual inspection
are ~IS ked to attend.

Church services

Wednesday, Feb. II
TUPPERS PLAINS Thursday, Feb. 12
. Eastern Local Board of
RUTLAND ·_ Revival
. Education will meet in reg- services will be held at the
-· ular session. 6 p.m. in the Rutland FreeWill Baptist
Elementary School confer- Church. 7 p.m. through
Feb . 14. Tim Simpson and
ence room.

Ronnie warrens will be the
evangelists. There will be
special singing each night.
Pastor Jamie Fortner
invites the public.

Woman with a past must
fight to stay in present
Dear
Abby

Birthdays

but I feel emotionally
abused. Please help. - THE
GHOST OF COLLEGE
PAST
DEAR GHOST: Much as
we might wish to, none of us
can change the past . Mature
individuals apologize to
those they may have hurt and
then incorporate the lessons
they have learned into their
present behavior.
Punishing you for what
happened years ago serves
no purpose and could be considered verbal abuse. Unless
your hu sband can overcou1e
his insecurity, bury the past
and stop taking potshots at
you, your libido will continue to wither and your marriage won't survive.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
married for two years to the
most wonderful woman.
However, we have 90t yet
consummated our marriage.
She insists on living with her
mother. I think it's because·
of the many terrible things
her mother has told her about
men and sex.
I am at the end of my rope.
I am married, but not married, to the greatest woman

Coopers announce
birth Of daughter

~004 WIN Marketeer winner
who is seen as a role in Networking organizes
model in marketing her monthly luncheons and
products or services. In activities for women in
order to be eligible to business to network, share
receive the award, the information · and resources
committee believes the and
identify
business
recipient takes full advan- opportunities.
tage of the WIN events to
The group strives to crepromote her business and ate an open, supportive
uses a variety of techniques environment that · values
or approaches to marketmg. women and celebrates their
Southeast Ohio Women achievements.

.'I '.

'

.....

·'

1!111 M1rl1 Cooper

on Earth. What do I do? UNCONSUMMATED IN
KOREA
DEAR
UNCONSUMMATED : Talk to the clergyperson who married you.
Then talk to a lawyer. From
my perspective. the relationship you have described is
not only NOT a marriage but
also may be grounds for an
annulment.
DEAR ABBY: My fiance
and I live in New York. Her
mother sent my aunt. who
lives in California. a bridal
shower invitation.
My mother thinks it was a
flagrant solicitation for a gift .
My aunt can' t afford multiple trips from coast-to-coast
and will now most likely feel
obligated to send a gift.
We say, it's only an invitation. We weren't looking for
~ gift, and we didn't want to
leave anyone out.
Who's right? - SOONTO-BE-MARRIED
GROOM
DEAR GROOM : Your
mother. When a shower invitation is received by someone who reali stically isn 't
expected to attend , the person usually feels he or she is
being "soaked" for a gift.
(An4 they 're usually right.)
Dear Abby is wrillen by
Abigail Van Buren. also
-known as Jeamre Phillips,
and was founded bv her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abbr
at
www.DearAbbr.com
P. 0.
Box 69440. LOs Angeles. CA
90069.

or

For the Record

Foreclosures

PORTLAND - Gary and
Jessica Cooper of Portland
announce the birth of a.
daughter.
Ella
Marie
Cooper, on Jan . 23 at
Camden-Clark
Memorial
Hospital in Parkersburg.
The infant weighed 6
pounds. 10 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Barry and Melinda Smith
of Racine. Paternal grandparents are Gary and
1\:farilyn
Cooper
of
Portland.
Maternal great-grandparents are Delbert and Ruth
Smith of Racine and Sue
Dailey of Portland. Paternal
great-grandmother is Julia
Engle of Pomeroy.

· Sharon Powell of Southeast Ohio Women in Networking, left. presents the 2004 Win Marketeer
Aw1ard to Julie Campbell of Racine.

R\ACINE
Julie
Campbell has been selected
as t~e winner . of the 2004
· WIN Marketeer Award by
the Southeast Ohio Women
in N~tworking.
Campbell is a Mary Kay
Indep~ndent Beauty consultant whose business and
residence is in Racine.
The rvtarketeer Award is
given to the WIN member

...

POMEROY A foreclosure has been granted in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Home
National
Bank
against
Randy R. Mills.
A foreclosure action filed
by Home National Bank
against Shannon M. Wood ,
and others, has been dismissed.

Dissolution

dilys

POMEROY - A dissolution has been granted in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Floyd H.
Cleland and Elberta C.
Cleland.

Dismissed

Rates of Taxation 2003 .

.

In pur&amp;llance of taw, I, Howard E. Fran~ . Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio, In compliance with Revised Code No. 323 .08 of State Of Ohio, do hereby
give notice of the Aatltl ol Taxation lor the Tax Year of 2003. Rate&amp; expreued In dollars and cenls of each one thousand dollars te x value.tion

Your Choice of Meal For Two.
Mix or Match
Your Choices Only $15.99
{forTwo) ·
.
· · 111 ~ Drink InclUded
,
Grilled Slrllll
• " 1nMe11 /
served wiiiiJIII'
j Prlcel (, cllalce ellluleed.~CIIICkil 11'8111
lllrello over Pasta
frtlh Bardell SIIMI.·

•••••
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St. Rt. 7 &amp; 50, Coolville, OH • 740-667-6101

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10,750

Dow Jones
Industrials

10,250

Feb. 10, 2Q04

Dow Jones

Industrials

"·"'"'

10,6 13.85

Pet..._.

hom prevloua: +0 .33

NOV
High
10,626.66

DEC

FEB

JAN

LDw
10,559 .26

Nasdaq

9 ,250

composite

Aecorct high: 11 ,722.98
Jan. 14. 2000

Feb. 10.2004

Standard

2000

1,600

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NOV

DEC

FEB

JAN

High

LDw

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2,060.44

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MarCh 10, 2000

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316
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JAN

NOV

DEC

High

low
1,138.70

1,147.02

FEB

1,000

Record high: 1 ,527 46
March 24, 2000

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AP

:.:
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Declined :
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Unchanged:
256
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Volume: 1,633.656,630

---------=
AP

Local Stocks
ACI- 27.97
AEP - 33 .39
Akzo- 39.67
Ashland Inc . - 46 .16
BBT - 37.41
BLI- 14 .82
Bob Evans- 32.30
Borg Warner - 94.72
City Holding - 35.07
Champion - 5.20
Charming Shops - 6 .14
Col- 32.91
DuPont - 44.59
DG - 23 .01
Federal Mogul - .28

Gannett- 87.05
General Electric- 32.50
GKNLY- 4.98
Harley Davidson - 52.45
Kmart - 28.71
Kroger- 18.90
Ltd . - 18 .88
NSC - 22.59
Oak Hill Financial- 33.00
Bank One- 51.58
OVB- 29/.64
Peoples
29.25
. Pepsico 1 50.79
Premier - 8.81
Rocky
- 23.00

-t

RD Shell - 47.88
Rockwell - 31.35
Sears- 45.66
SBC- 25.94
AT&amp;T - 19 .88
USB- 27.85
Wendy's - 38.36
Wal-Mart - ·57.53
Worthington- 16 .3 1
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m . closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions. provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis .

Loretta Holsinger
has joined the staff at

RACINE BARBER SHOP
She invites all her customers to come in!

Call 949-3510
for appointment.
Walk-Ins Welcome

Prices Good through Saturda)' Ftbr••'l' 14th

Jeweiry
Complete Stock

1/2

Timex
Watches

30% Off
Extra Special
Friday only

14 7/8oz.

Extra Special
Friday only

Reg. $8.99

lNG &amp; SATURDAYS AVAILABLE
WALK-INS ACCEPTED

.

I

.

) EDWARD C. BEITER,

O~D.

INDEPENDENT DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

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Vol':' me: 1,789,407,300

1,150

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UnchangH:

0,200

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Poor's 500
1,145.54

1,145.54

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2.000

2,075.33

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Poor's 500

2,200

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9.750

in. Each person received "
ti cket and the bar donated
25 cents to the charitv fnr
each ticket.
.
The city contends that the
charity formed by the bar
owners was a sham and thm
its only purpose was to
dodge the ban that took
effect in August .
"It's not a scam:· Delaney
said. "The mone y sti ll goes
to the children :·
A haze of smoke hun g in
the air as smokers 'and !;onsmokers gm hered for happy
hour.
Pierson. who Ji,·es in
Michigan a few miles north
of Toledo. said he'l l c·on tinue to come back to drink
and smoke at Delaney's
until the ban forces him out .
"When the city of Toledo
runs me back to Michigan.
I'll stay there:· he sitid.
But Delancy has an alter·
native plan if the bar owners
don't prevail in court.
"We' ll become a private
club." he said wi th a grin .
"What we'll be is a modern day speakeasy:·

Whitman's
Sampler Heart

.....1.,,

GALLIPOLIS, OH

HOWARD E. FRANK. Meigs Co!XIty Treasurer

Will have Special Bakery items for Valentines'

Market watch

A DAY ON WALL STREET

About 40 bar ow ners
formed a nonprofit charity
called "Taverns for Tot s. "
They charge patrons $1 for ~
lifetime membership and
promise to donate the fee and
I percent of their gross
receipts to children's charities.
"It's a very innovative.
creative way of doing a
charity, and yes. we can still
allow smoking,.. said bar
owner Bill Delaney. "Being
innovative and creative that's the American way."
A federal judge has put a
temporary stop to their plan
and is expected to decide by
the end of February whether
it can continue. but some of
those tryi ng to sidestep the
ban still were allowing
smoking.
A sign above the bar at
Delaney's Lounge over the
weekend noted that the tavern was hosting a private
benefit for a shelter for battered women and children.
A glass jar and a plastic
pitcher next to cash register
held about $30 in donations.
Still, anyone could walk

Women's Colognes,
Perfumes, Gift Sets

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Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 3 I - 37 W-S 5 mph
Temperatures will rise from
35 early afternoon to the high

Bill Delaney. owner of Delaney·s. stands at his bar in Toledo.
Oh io. Toledo's smoking ban prohibits smoking in all bars and
restaurants except in approved smoking lounges . The law too k
effect on Aug. 24. Restaurants have largely complied without
complaint, but bar owners have unsuccessfully tried to have
the law amended or set aside in court. (AP Photo/ J.D. Pooley)

~

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Morning (7:00am-Noon)
25- 33 W 10 mph
Temperatures will ri se to 33
with today's low of 25 occurring around 6:00am. Skies
will be sunny with I0 MPH
wind s from the west.

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for the day of 37 at 3:00pm as cloudy with 5 MPH winds
they drop back down to 31 from the southeast.
later this afternoon. Skies will
be sunny to mostly sunny
(I :00amwi th 5 MPH winds from the .Overnight
west turning from the south as 6:00am) 28 - 28 S-SE 5 mph
the afternoon progresses .
It will be a · cloudy
Evening
(7:00pm- overnight. Temperatures will
Midnight) 28 - 31 SE ~ mph linger at 28. Winds will be 5
Temperatures will hold MPH from the south turning
steady around 29. Skies will from the southeast as the
range from mostly clear to overnight progresses.

TOLEDO
J~ me s
Pierson sat at the comttr of
the bar with a cigarette in
his hand and a coun summons in hi s coat pocket.
The retired autoworker
was charged three weeks
ago with violating the city's
ban on smoking in bars and
restaurants.
That wasn't stopping him
from a beer over ice and
anot her cigarette.
·"In reality. I'm breaking
the law right now," said
Pierson, 62. of Temperance.
Mich. -" Everybody should
stand up for their rights."
Defiant smokers and tavern owners in cities where
smoking has been outlawed
are rising · up to protest.
staging "smoke-ins" and filing lawsuits to overturn
clean air ordi nances.
"We're trying every angle
we t:an to get everyone on
our side," said Jerry Zaspel,
owner of Barb 's Westgate
Inn, in Tacoma, Wash. ·
Driving smoke rs away
will put him out of business,
Zaspel said . "It's not a
smoking issue . It's a survival issue," he said . · ·
Some bar owners in
Tacoma refused to put away
their ashtrays before a judge
threw out the ban Jan. 23.
Supporters of the ordinance
plan to appeal.
A husband and wife who
ran a truck stop restaurant in
Tampa, Fla. wouldn't kick
out the smokers when a
statewide ban on smoking
began in July.
The stand won the hearts
of smokers, but they lost
their restaurant when the·
plaza's owner evicted them
in September for tlouting
the law.
Nonsmoking ordinances
started becoming popular in
the mid-1980s as grocery
stores banned smoking and
restaurants put in seating
areas for non smokers.
A California law banning
smoking in bars and restaurants in 1994 led to another
surge in clean air legi slation .
There have been only a
handful of victories for
smoking ban opponents.
City council members in
Austin, Texas, overturned a
ban on smoking in restaurants and bars in October
, after business owners said it
could have a .devastaling
economic impact.
Toledo bar owners have
taken the_ fight against
smoking bans a step further
by creating a charity to take
advantage of a loophole that
allows smoking in private
clubs and at private social
functions.
"Usually it's a yery, very
small minority who stands
in defiance and it usually
lasts about a month." . said
Josh Alpert, spokesman for
Ameri,;:ans for Nonsmokers'
Rights.
"What 's happening 111
Toledo is probably the most
creative." he said.

PRICE

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Wednesday, February 11

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NewsChannel

Bv JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRlTER

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Real ••tate taxes which have n01 been paid at the Close of each collectiOn carry a penalty of ten percent. Tax., m~ be p•k:l althe offk:e of the County
Treasurer or by mall. Please bnng your last 11111 receipt ; and If you pay by mall, be sure to locate your property by taxing dittrict and anclou et8mped
S&amp;\1-address anyalope . Alway• examine yourtu 111Celpt to see that It covers all your property, Office hours are 8 : ~q a.m. to ~ :00 p.m. Monday thi'Qugh
Friday • Closed on Satui'Qay. FtJ iurt to receive tax statements cto,s not a'o'Oid any penalty, Interest or Ch&amp;J'Q&amp; incu"ed lor aucl'l delay. Ohio Revised
Coda 323.13. Closing data March 19, 2004.

Cool Spot 112

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~ednesday,Februaryt1, 2004

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POMEROY - A divorce
action filed 10 Meig s
County Common Pleas
Court by Kathie Young
against
Grant
Eugene
Young has been dismissed.

'

OHIO
S111okers still lighting up
despite cigarette bans

Fe b. 10,2004

~

.

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

~ednesday,Februarytt,2004

DEAR ABBY: I am a 25year-old
woman with a colFriday, Feb. 13
orful past. During college, I
LONG BOTIOM Delivered will perform at 7 had flings with about a dozen
men while I was in a longp.m. the Faith Full Gospel
distance relationship with
Church at Long Bottom
"Michael." I was not mature
enough to break up with
Michael or to restrain
myself, but I have accepted
my past mistakes and moved
Thesday, Feb. 17
POMEROY - Cora Mae on.
I have been married to
Smith will observe her
82nd birthday on Feb. 17. "John" for more than two
Cards may be sent to her at years . We have a monoga36894
Texas
Road, mous relationship and I take
my wedding vows seriously.
Pomeroy, 45769.
We argue all the time, and
John throws my past in my
Monday, Feb. 23
face
every time we have a
POMEROY Marjorie
dispute
- especially if we
Kapple wi II celebrate her
g5th birthday Feb. 23. are arguing about sex. He
Cards may be sent to her at says things like, "You sure
II 0 Maple St. , Pomeroy, liked having sex with all
those other guys," or, "You
45769.
must be getting busy with
so m~one else since you're
not interested in me tonight."
John believes that because I
cheated on Michael years
ago that I'll cheat, or have
cheated, 011 him, too.
John thinks that until I
show remorse for my past,
we will never get over it. I
am sick of having my past
thrown in my face and sick
of apologizing for it.
(Apparently al) apology isn't
·
remorse enough.)
In less than a month, we
will be in his sister's wedding, and I don't want to
fate a hapr,y marriage.
John wtll not agree to
counseling nor can we .afford
it. I don't like thinking this,

FUTil' mmllwr:tra

\

•

740-441-2151
·'

50% Off

30% Off

Only $6.17.

Russell Stover

Russell Stover

Candy
tlb.

Asst. Chocolates
~eart lib.

.Reg. $7.99

Reg. $4.99

Only $5.47

Only $3.37

'

�~The

'.

·O PINION -

Daily Sentinel

PageA4

VVednesday,Februaryt1 ,

Obituaries

Disaster ahead for grocery strikers?

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

..

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishmmt of religion, or prolribiting tile
free exercise thereof; or abridging tlte freedom
of speech, or of tile press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment_to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
\WARDROBE
MALFUNCTION.'
LOSE TURN.

since the 'strike of the
decade' at the Hormel meat
packing plant in Austin,
Minn. It was initiated by
members of the United Food
and Commercial Workers
Union Local P-9.
The local deployed all
manner of tactics to break
down Hormel management,
which was seeking to get its
labor costs under control .
The union waged secondary boycotts against
companies doing business
with Hormel. It brought in
outside agitators, like Jesse
Jackson. It committed civil
disobedience (necessitating
Minnesota Gov. Rudy
Perpich to call in the
National Guard).
By the time I arrived in
Austin, about seven months
into the bitter labor dispute .
the P-9 leadership was so
radicalized there seemed little hope of a strike settlement.
When the strike finally
ended, after the P-9 leadership was ousted by its parent
union, the meat packers ratified a new contract that was
hardly better than what
Harmel had offered nearly a
year earlier.
That brings me to the
Southern California grocery
workers strike (and lockout),
which, like the Hormel
strike of two decades ago,
was precipitated by local
leaders of the UFCW.
The increasingly bitter
labor dispute, now in its
fourth month, has · idled
some 70,000 unionized
employees of the Albertsons.

Joseph
Perkins

Vons and Ralphs supermarket chains, from San Diego
to San Luis Obispo. That
ranks the strike among the
nation's longest in recent
decades involving so many
workers.
.
The core issues in the
Southern California grocery
strike, like those in the
Hormel strike. are wages
and benefits .
The supermarket chains
seek a new tier approach to
wages, maintaining existing
pay scales for cmrent workers, but implementing a
lower scale for new hires.
They also are asking their
unionized employees to
share a small portion of the
cost of their health benefits.
The UFCW contends that
the proposals by Albertsons,
RaiRJls and Vons are 'based
on greed, not financial
need.' It claims that the combined profits of the three
supermarket chains have
increased 91 percent over
the past four years.
The chains simply ' have
turned on their employMickey
ees ,'
said
Kasparian, president of
UFCW Local 135 in San
Diego
County.
' The
employees that serve the
customers, built the busi-

ne sses and created the
profit. '
Well , if the supermarket
chains were trul y enjoyi ng
the huge profits the UFCW
claims. if Albensons, Ralphs
and Vons enjoyed oligopoly
control over the Southern
California grocery ·market,
theh maybe the union's fourmonth strike might be understandable.
But the retail grocery business is highly competitive.
Supermarkets have to sell a
high volume of products to
generate the thinnest of profit
margins. In fact. Supermarket
News reported thi s past
November that profits on
sales fell below I percent for
the preceding 12 months.
And traditional supe rmarket chains. like Albertsons.
Ralphs and Vons, will face
even more non -traditional
(non -unio nized ) rival s in
mon1 '
1d years to come.
. ·A .upermarket's biggest
competition these days is
rarely another supermarket.'
according to AI Urbanski ,
editorial
director
of
Progressive
Grocer
&amp;
Supermarket Business.
'It' s the nearb y supercenter. warehouse cIu b. dol lar store. mass merchandiser,
or drug store that also happens to be selling food.·
Indeed, the supermarket
chains nut only ha ve to vie
for market share with supercenters like Wai-Mart. club
stores like Costco and specialty stores like Trader Joe's
and Whole Foods.
They now have to protect
their dwindling market share
from such retai l chains as

Target, Sears and Toys R Us.
all of which are jumping into
the grocery business .
Albertsons. Ralphs and
Vons are asking the UFCW
locals in SoCal to accept the
new tier approach to wages
that UFCW locals have actually agreed to in 32 other
states.
They are asking the
70,000 idled grocery work- ·
ers to pay a mere $5 a week
toward their health insurance
(for single employees): $ 15
a week f•or employees with
depertdents.
·
They would go from 'the
best of the best Rolls Royce
plan to a 'very goocl' plan
that would still qualify as a
Cadillac by today's health
care standards,' according to
the supermarket chains.
Indeed. the chains are only
asking their workers to do no
more than what 90 percent
of American workers do: pay
for some portion of their
health benefits.
Like UFCW Local P-9
two decades ago. the UFCW
locals in SoCal refuse to
ackn ow ledge the increasingly competiti ve climate of
their indust ry.
The con,eq uences proved
disastrou s for Hormel's
striking meatpackers. many
of whom re main scarred to
this day by the bitter labor
dispute. And we could see
the same lamentable result in
the Southern Cal ifornia grocery workers strike:
(joseph Pl(rkim is a colwnnistfor. Th e San Diego Union fribune and &lt;WI he reached at
Jo se ph . Pak i ns @ U ni 0
Tri b. com.)

11

I

MASON. W. Va. - William Donald
Foglesong. 89. of Mason , WVa., died
Monday. Feb. 9. 2004, at his residence.
.
He was born Dec. 9, 1914, in
Mason, son of the late William Hoy
Foglesong and Martha Kath erine
Ruttencutter Foglesong.
He was the former owner and operator o\ the Foglesong Funeral Home.
He was a member of the Mason
Umted Methodist Church, where he
William Donald
served as Sunday School superintenFoglesong
dent for many years. He was a 1931
..
graduate of Wahama High School , and later became principal , basketball coach and math teacher.
. A 1936 grad~ate of Ohio Uni~ersity, he was also a gradu.ue ol the C!!JC!nnau College ol Mortuary Science.
He was a member ot the We st Virginia Funeral· Directors
Assocoatlon. _the New Haven Rotary Club, and chairman of
the board ol lhe Mason County Bank, and was very active
111 bankm g. He was the plant manager of Marietta
Manufactunng 111 Point Pleasant, W.Va., and a member of
I he Chiton Lodge No. 23 of the AF &amp; AM.
He was preceded in d.eath by his parents; his first wife,
Ellen Foglesong ; a brother and sister-in-law, Samuel and
Jane Foglesong; and a brother-in-law, W. Ray Proffitt.
He 1s surv1ved by hrs wrte, Jeanne Foglesong of Mason;
dau ghters and sons-m-law. Marilyn and James Johnson III of
Atlanta, Ga .. and Kathy and Harry Connor of Chattanooga,
Tenn. ; a daughter~ Ctnda Foglesong of Kingsport, Tenn.; a
son and daughter-111-law. William D. and Nina Foglesong of
Hockessi n, Del.: a stepson, Mark William Long of Jackson,
Oh1o : and a siSter, Evelyn Proffitt of Mason.
He is also .survived by grandchildren, Greg Johnson,
Jame s Johnson IV,. Shari Ellen Johnson, Greg Foglesong,
Bob Foglesong, Cra1g Connor and Kimberly Connor; a stepgra ndda u~ ht er, Kelly Newell; three great-grandchildren: and
several nreces and nephews.
Serv ices wil l be I p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12, 2004, in the
Maso n United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Sam Cale·
IV offi ci ating. Burial will follow in the Suncrest Cemetery
at Pomt Pleasant. Fnends may call at the Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home 111 Mason from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. I I, 2004.
. ·
·
Mr. Foglesong will lie in state one hour prior to the church
servoce.
In lieu of flowers. contributions can be made to the Mason
United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 336 Mason W V:a
25260.
.
' . .
To e-mail condolences, visit foglesongtucker@city.net

NASA rover travels nearly 70 feet,
sets one-day distance record on Mars

8UTCOULD
HE CATCH
E

8

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01"AH(ER. © 2004 by NEA, Inc.

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

WESTMINSTER

BESTINS'ftOW
""=:
-. ..
... [] ---

-- - ------

NASA's Spirit rover took this Image, released by NASA on
Tuesday, of a series of tiny dunes, left, each a few Inches tall, on
Monday, after completing tha longest drive ever made oy a rover
on another planet, 69.6 feet (21.2m). (AP Photo/NASA/JPL)

.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
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and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
-

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

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,.

It doesn't ad up
two of the gangliest high
We pulled into a fast food
school students I have ever
place at a rest stop just off
seen, unpacking food, turnthe interstate. In -the coming dials and chopping letmercial for this chain, the
tuce. They never once stop
place is full of shiny, happy
talking to each other.
people singing and clapping
Jim
Another thing you never see
hands over wonderful, inexMullen
· in the commercial. As we
pensive, tasty fast food. Each
customer is happier and
- - - - finally get to the front of the
line, instead of the eager-tocleaner than the next and
please scrubbed faces of the
everybody
behind
the
counter is cheerful and eager crack, but a lot of cheek -as TV commercial , we face
to please. It's f1.1ll of beautiful well. Worse still, this &gt;'oung som~one in an ill-fitting unipeople and well-behaved man has not been w0rking form who was hired yesterchi ldren. And we won't just · out. It looks like 50 pounds day and is having the worst
be eating, we're going to be of silly putty trying to escape day of her life. All day long
served by the kids who look in two different directions. If people have been coming up
like they all go to that . high there was an outside chance to her 'wanting' things.
school they used in 'Fame.' there would be some soap in Every single one of them.
Maybe they'll even do a the men's room I would be Why Me? is written all over
tloorshow for us.
running there to wash the her face . She is so confused,
the drill seems so completely
I don't know if we're in the sight out my ·eyes.
exact same restaurant where
None of the kids behind unfamiliar to her, that we
they ftlmed the wmmercial, the -counter are singing . Or wonder not if she's ever been
but it sure ·looks like it. even smiling. You wonder behind the counter before,
Except the customers are not what the recruitment ad in but has she ever been in front
'
as good-looking, and they're the paper must say to get this of one?
di scussion
After
much
not singing or clapping their quality of counter help.
hands over the food. They all 'Can't make change? Can't back and forth between our
look pretty beat and tired. multi-task? Have multiple order taker and three superiSome of them look down piercings? Apply today. ors it was finally determined
right grumpy.
Learn how to make 'Can I that this chain did indeed
hamburgers . and
There is a line to order, help you' sound like a tiu:eat. serve
something I didn't notice in Must have poor people skills French fries and that we
the commercials, and the and a blank stare. Poor pay, could order them. We had a
pants of the guy in front of · no benefits and it's out in the harder time convincing them
that no matter what the cash
me in that line are about to middle of nowhere.'fall off. I not only see a dis·
In the part of the kitchen register said, two hamburgtressing amount of butt we can see from the line are ers and two French fries

Question: A few weeks ago
I began having pain in my
left ear. I thought it was an
ear infection, and I went to
the doctor. He said I had a
TMJ disorder. Could you tell
me what causes thi s and
what I can do to get better?
My doctor is sending me to
an oral surgeon. Will I need
surgery'!
Answer: Temporomandibular
joint (TMJ) syndrome is a
painful condition that causes
inflanunation in the joint created by the temporal bone in the
skull and the lower jaw bone
(or mandible). As you can see,
the tenn "temporomandibular"
comes fium combining "temporal" and "mandible" to make an
adjective. Therefore, ihe abbreviation "TMJ" literally refers to
the joint itself, although it is
often used to refer to the disorder mther than the joint.

could not possibly cost $598.
Sue tried vainly to explain
the value of a decimal point
to the cashier and its importance in the history of civilization , how it made things
like space travel, modern
medicine and yes, even the
running of thi s roadside
restaurant possible. The all important key was called for
and looking at us like the
troublemakers we are, the
manager cleared the register
and rang up $5.98. I gave
him $10 and · he gave me
back $ 15.98. I decided not to
push n~ luck, said thank you
and pocketed my change.
We saw the commercial
for the fast food restaurant
again that night at a roadside
hotel. I had to wonder if the
people who made the wmmercial had ever been in one
of the restaurants. It wus 1(11lowed by a commerci;tl ror
the hotel we were slaying in.
In the commercial, the front
desk clerk is singing and
dancing.
(Jim Mullen is the awhor of
'lr Takes A Village Idiot: A
Memoir of Life Afier tilt' City'
(Simon and Schuster, 200 1).
He also contributes regularly
to .Entertainment Weekly,
where he cw~ be reached at
jirnJ11ullen@en~com)

'

LOS ANGELES CAP) The Spirit rover shattered a
one-duy distance record on
Mars, rolling nearly 70 feet
ucross the planet 's rocky surface, NASA said Tuesday.
, The drive covered more
than three times the greatest
distance that NASA's tiny
Sojourner rover ever traveled
in a day on its own 1997 mission to Mars, mission manager Jim Erickso n said.
"The basic goal was to drive
us far as they could and see how
things went in the time that they
had," Erickson said of the drive,
which ended late Monday with"
out any problems.
· Spirit drove "blind" about
half the distance. following 'a
planned route to a stopping
point. For the second half of
the short trip, the rover drove

Move
from PageA1
to · the village in 2003. The
schools were vacated when
construction was completed
on the new . Meigs Middle
School at Rocksprings and
the new . Meigs Elementary
School near Rutland.
Cpuncil has begun to consider allowing The Legends
Realty Co., Indianapolis, Ind.,
to convert the large middle
school building, which once
housed Middleport High
School, into apartments. A 30day period granted the _realty
company to assess the property and its potential for rehabilitation will end in early
March, at ·wh.ich time council
will begin to negotiate a price
for the building and the football field area behind it, if the
firm remains interested in
I)

'

to a second stoppoing poinl,
autonomously executed a tum,
and then rolled onward before
stopping, Erickson said.
"Everythingseemedtogofme
there. Tomorrow's plan is fur.
!her driving. The day after that is
driving even further," Erickson
told reporters by telephone.
NASA has sent Spirit toward
a
crater
nicknamed
"Bonneville" that sits about

There are many things that
can cause this problem. Teeth
that don't ali gn properly "malocc lu sion" in medical
is a very common
lingo ·cause. Some people grind
their teeth - a condition
called bruxism. Thi s-usuall y
occurs at night and can lead
to pain in the TMJ. Injury to
the jaw or the side of the
head can also cause TMJ
syndrome. And, you can get
arthritis in the T.MJ, just like
any other joint in the body.
'The primary sy mptom is
pain with opening and closing the mouth . Thi s pain is
usually worse in the morning
and is just 'in front of the ear.
This pain can radiate to the
ear, cheek, neck or shoulder.
Some people also complain
that their jaw catches when
they open their mouth. Some
people have a grating or
clicking sound in their TMJ
when they eat. ·
Your doctor probably made
the diagnosis of .TMJ syndrome by feeling this joint
with his lingers while you
opened and closed your
mouth. This is a technique
we caU palpation. He may

have felt clicking or devia tion of the jaw to one side
when you opened your
mouth . Also, he ma) have
noted that you couldn 't open
your mouth as wide as normal. "You may have indicated
that you fe lt pain when he
appli ed sli ght pressure as he
palpated th e joint. And.
depending on the re sults of
this phy sical examination. he
may have asked for an X-ray
or MRI to aid in the di ag nosis of your condition .
In most cases , TMJ syndrome can be treated with
dietary modifi cations to
eliminat~. very chewy foods,
gum ch&lt;I!Wing and ice eating.
Non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like
ibuprofen are al so very helpful as is moi st heat to the
area a couple of times a day
for 10- 15 minute s. Some
people who grind their teeth
or have pronounced malocclu sion benefit from a dental
appli ance that 'prevents the
jaw from closing completely.
This has been shown to
relieve the symptom s in over
70 percent of pati ent s with
TMJ problems. Some cases

of TMJ syndrome re spond
very well to mteopathi c
manipulat ive treatmem; so, if
your phy sician is a D.O.. ypu
might ask if this manual
medi cine technique mi ght be
effecti ve in your case.
Fortunate ly. the odds are
you probably won' t need
surge ry. Si" tis ti c"lly. the
need for this is rare: it i'
indkated in le ss than fi ve
percent of cases.
Familr Medi cine® IS a
H'l!l~ klr co lumn . To submit
questions. •n·ire tu Martha A.
Simpson. D.O.. M.B.A .. Ohio
Unh·ers ir r
College
of
O.weo1wthic Medicine. P. 0.
Bo.r I 10. Athens. Ohio
./5701 . Metfiml i~l}umw ­
tiou in this column n fJIV l'id-

ed 'as an educational serrice
mdy. lr does not replace the
j udgment of. _1'0111' personal
phrsician . 11'110 shou ld be
relil"l

011

to dia8110.\'l' and

rt'cmJmlt:lld trnam cmjiu- £111_\.

medi ca l cunditiom. Past
columns are amilahle on lim'

a,r

11 'II ·11·.jllmdio.org/fin.

Local Briefs
Relay for Life
fund raiser
Friday
A hot-dog and bake sale
will held from 10:30 a.m. to
2 p.m. in Jhe lobby of the
Pomeroy office of Farmers
Bank to benefit the 2004
Relay for Life. The event is
sponsored by the Cancer
Fighters of the American
Cancer Society of Farmers
Bank.

POMEROY
- The
Modern
Woodmen
of
American Camp 6335 invites
all Modern Woodmen to a
dinner to be held from 4:30
to 6:30 p.m. at Captain D's
Seafood · Restaurant
in
Gallipolis Tuesday. The
camp will pay $2.50 toward
the cost of each person 's
meal. A family door prize
will be awarded. Guests are
welcome.

FRISBEES?
y
E

Reader's jaw
pain pan
protiably be ·
treated
without surgery

Modern
Woodmen to
have dinner

'fEAH,
·.

Family Medicine

William Donald Foglesong

•

It has been nearly 20 years

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

VVednesday,Februarytt,2004
'

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Center plans
free supper
MIDDLEPORT
A
free soup and sandwich
supper will be served
from 4 to 6 p.m. on
Friday, Feb. ·27 at the
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center,
Fifth
and
Main
in
Middleport.

Coalition recently announced
the
enhancement
of
MedConnex, a program that
assists patients with finding
support for maintenance
medications .
A representative is now
based at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipoli s to serve
the needs of individuals whose
POMEROY - The Meigs physician practices in Gallia,
County Health Department Jackson or Meigs counties.
may have access to more flu
The new program acquires
vaccine if enough of the pub- free prescription maintenance
lie is interested, according to medications through pharmaSherry Weese, R.N., director ceutical
companies
for
of nursing. ·
patients who qualify locally.
She asked that anyone
The
Rtver
Cities
interested in getting the vac- Community Health Coa lition
cine
call
the
Health is a not-for-profit affiliation
Department by noon on of local hospital s. health care
Tuesday.
agencies and other public and
Weese al so announced that private entities that collec.:
the department will be con- tively work on improving
dueling a hearing clinic on health care for people in
Tuesday, Feb. 24, and a southern Ohio , northern
vision clinic on Wednesday, Kentucky and western West
Feb. 25.
Virginia. It is funded through
The clinics are condiuted a federal grant, contributions
by
specil!lists
from and membership dues.
Children's
Hospital
in
If you would like more
Columbus. There is no information
about
the
charge for the seJvice provid- MedConnex program, or to
ed to children from birth to detennine your qualifications
21 years of age.
. for participation, please call
Anyone who has or knows (740) 441-3913 between the
of a child who could benefit hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30p.m.,
from the service is asked to Monday through Friday.
contact Weese at the health
department, 992-6626 from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m .

Health
Department
offers flu vaccine,
vision and
hearing tests

MedConnex
Opens Tri-State
Offices
GALLIPOLIS River
Cities Community Health

WOUB·FM Radio
airs program on
highway projects

ATHENS -Wi th several
highway projects nearing
completion in southeastern
Ohio, once again there are ·
ribbon-cutting speeche s pro-

claiming that highwa ys mean
prosperity.
On Tuesday, Feb. 17. "This
Time Around : Reinventing
Community," airing on the
WOUB-FM Radio Network
at 8:30a.m .. will focus O!j the
importance of the southeastern Ohio highway system in
"Impact of Highway s."
Listene1s will be able to join
r..tdio producer Mark Hellenherg
who, on a 1a:ent trip to Jackson,
explored the link between dJC
highway system and the county's
economic .
development.
Hellenberg interviewed RwKiy
Healh, city councilman w1d
Chanlber of Commen:c president:
Doug Fry. director of tl'l: Jack.10n
County Economic Development
Boord; and Lloyd While. a 75-year
resident of Jack.o;on 'md fOrmer
county commissiotJCr.
'This
Time
Around: ·
Reinventing Community" is a
year long series that explores
the fabric of communi ty, how ·
and why communities change.
and what the future may hold
·for
Appalachian
Ohio.
Features focus on communities within the WOUB Radi&lt;l
Network coverage area and
includes four quarterly call-in
discussion programs.
The second discussion pro,gram will air on Tuesday.
Feb. 24 at 7 p.m. A compan iun websile is uvui luble at:
www.thistimearound.org and
allows community membe rs
to interact on line. This Time
Around:
Reinventing
Community
repeat~
on
Tuesday afternoons at 4 p.m.
during Afternoon Edition on
the WOUB Radio Network.

Tests confirm avian flu on second Delaware farm

DOVER , Del. (AP) Tests confirmed avian tlu
on
a second
central
800 feet from where the space- Delaware farm, a surprise
crati landed. NASA hopes the that creates a "serious situasix-wheeled rover eventually tion" for the region's poulwill cover as much 140 feet try industry, state agriculd Eri k
ture officials announced
a ay, c son said.
Tuesday.
Spirit's twin, Opponunity, also
The discovery was sure to
was on the move at it~ landing hurt efforts to lift bans by
site, halfway around the planet.
foreign countries on imports
of U.S. poultry that were
developing the property.
. instituted in the past week.
The chicken house was
lmmarelli said she has meetnot
one of 20 tested in a
ings scheduled with state officials regarding ~ssible grant two-mile radius of the farm
funding for the jail facility to be where the first flock tested
built as an addition to the Pearl positive last week, but was
Street buildiilg.
found in a commercial

as

TAKE CLOSER LOOK ••.
TO SEE ALL THAT WE
CAN
OFFER
YOU.

Hearing
Healthcarr

flock of roaster-type chickens in northern Sussex
County, at least · five miles
away, according to a state
agriculture departmfnt news
release.
Tests on 20 chicken houses within two miles of the
first flock were n~gative ,
the release said .
"Thi s development IS
completely
unexpected
given the precautions we
took, the investigation we
made and the industry 's
expectations of thi s disbehavior,"
ease's
Agriculture
Secretary
Michael T. Scuse said in
the release.

"We will be taking imm ediate actions to conta in this
disease. but thi s is now a
serious situation for the
Delmarva poultry industry.''
Delmarva
refers
io
Delaware , Marvland and
Virginia.
~
· In response. all sales of
live poult ry in Delaware. all
sales or auctions of farm
equipment and all farmerand grower-related meetings
hav e been canceled. the
state agriculture departmenl
announced.
The disease was first
found on a farm in southern Kent County operated
by an indepeildent grower

·who sold to the live bird
market in New York Citv.
State offi cials had immed.iately ordered the slaughter
of 12.000 birds and be gan
testing flock s within ~th e
two-mile radius of the
infected site.
before
th e
Even
announcemem about the
second flock. China on
Tuesday joi.ned · Poland ,
Japan.· Malaysia, Singapore
and South Korea in banning
U.S.
poultry
import s
because of the pre.vious discovery. Hong Kong had
banned the import of live
birds and poultry from
Delaware only.

BOA~•OCDCOC~COC~COC~cocrn

6'~'thrday,

"

~
.._

february 14th only~

Small 16oz. Milkshake

•.

.~

Buy One-~d
One
Free
'""....
.·
• · cfme-e-lflrea•lj It's that time ofyear lftl'll'l'~
0 Treat your sweets to a Special Ice Cream Cakt:
•
OnlyatDQ.

i

'-"

Dairy Queen Brazier .
Middleport, Ohio

740-992-3322

.[]COC[]COC[]CO· ·

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 11,2004

Senlore hold up their end oi bargain, Pag'a 82
NFL asks Judge to auipand draft order, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page 86

GS

Bl

The Daily ·Sentinel

INSIDE

..

RltTEC

VVednesday,Februarytt,2004

ENTER

42091
P~one:

(740)

Prep Standings

Redmen defense shuts down Shawnee

Boys basketball

Pike • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
2158 • Fax:740·992·5839

SEOAL

Iw!m
f,larietta '
Gallia Academy
Logan
Jackson
Athens
Warren
Point Pleasant

BY BUTCH COOPER

.s.EQ ALl.

BCOOPER@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

9-1 13-4
8-2 12-5
7-3 11-6
4-6 7-9
3-7 7-9
2-7 6-11
1-8 3-13

RIO GRANDE - · Rio Grande
head coach Earl Thomas wasn't
pleased with his defense's effort in
the first half, so the Redmen came out
in the second half determined to shut
. down Shawnee Stale.
Rio's defense held the Bears to just
18 points in the second half as the
NAIA Division II No. 16 Redmen
won the rubber match against
Shawnee State with a 60-49 victory
Tuesday.
Shawnee State was held to 26 percent shooting in the second half.
"That is very good." said Thomas.
" If we can get that kind of defensive
effort the rest oftpe year, we're going
to be in good shape.
"I was disappointed in our defen-

TVC
Ohio Division
rLQ

Iw!m
Vinton County
Alexander
Belpre
Meigs
Wellston
Nelsonville-York

6-1
5-2
5-3
3-5·
3-5
1-7

Hocking Division
TVC

Ie.am
Trimble
Eastern
Southern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Waterford

T11e Meigs Marketing program consists of integrating the classroom, co-op work experience and club adivitles. A holistic learning strategy is applied.
as these major components all interad together to supplement and reinforce each other. Classroom leaming adivities vary from textbook to authentic
working conditions. The senior projed is the development of a business plan, which Incorporates the accumulation and application of information
learned from all of the major components. T11e.laboratories that the students participate/learn in are the businesses that serve the local community.

Ie.am
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
South Point
Coal Grove
Fairland

ovc

7-1
7•1
4-3
3-4
2-6
0-8

~

7-2
5·3
5•4
4-4 .
2.-6
2-6

Others
Ie.am
South Gallia ·
Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
Wahama
Oak Hill

Al.L.
13-3
13-4
11-6
10-7
6-12
4-13
A!.L
12-5
12-5
11-6
8-7
3-15
0-17 .

.

SEOAL

.s.EQ Al.l.

17-1
13-4
13-6
8-10
8-11
6-13
1-15

TVC
Ohio Division

-whether It on the
at
or at home. The
carpentry
program
on
importance
on the
units on hand tools
power
place em:rhasis on Items most commonly used In building construdlon.
wiring
are studied
along with footer and foundation planning an constn~dlon, floor construdlon, framing, wall and ceiling framing, roof framing and roofing materials.
lnstrudor for the program is Charles Frecker.
·
·

" Ie.am
Belpre
Alexander
Meigs
Vinton County
Nelsonville-York
Wellston

rLQ
7-2
6-3
5-4
5·4

2-6

1-7

Al.l.
12-7
13-5
10-8
5·13
4-13
1-14

Hocking Division

Ie.am
IYC. AU.
'Trimble
9-0 17-1
Eastern
6-3 12·5
Waterford
5-4 10-9
Southern
5-5 14-5
Federal Hocking
2-7 6-12
Miller
0-8 3-15
• clinches division title
Ie.am
South Point
Fairland
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
Coal Grove

ovc

~

7-2
6-3
5-3
4-4
2-6
1-7

Al.L.
7-10
10-8
9-9
6-11
4-14
9-9

Meigs wrestlers
finish sixth at
TVC meet
WATERFORD
Nelsonville- York earned a
decisive victory at the TriValley Conference wrestling
rneet Saturday at Waterford.
The Buckeyes amas~ 2fJ9
1-2 points, bettering second
place Belpre (166) by more
than I00 points. Host Waterford
took third with 158 followed by
Vmton County (61) in .fourth,
Trimble (46 I:z) fifth, Meigs
(41) sixth and Federal Hocking
(8) was seventh.
B.W. Smallwood (140
pounds) and Shawn Day (145)
were the top finishers for
Meigs, as both were third in
their res~tive w e classes.
i=t
. AJ.Dickens(l71),
Stooe
(215) and heavyweiglu .
DeWeese finished in foorth.
· Meigs is one of 16 teams
c0mpeting at the Division II
Southeast· sectional . tournament this Friday and Saturday
at Athens High School. Action
~ets underway at 6 p.m. Friday.

Is·a comprehensive, actlon~based
· ·proaram
throuah 12th pade students. Students participate
that
problem solvlnsln the four arus of technology. Transportation, construction, comm-.nlcaUon, and manufadurlns tKhnololles are studh!s uch arade. Projects consists of aerodynamic deslan, COl car construdlon, solar power, boat hull deslp. house constn~dlon, crane
: and tower eonstructlon, paphlc communication, and various other actlvl.tles. Instructor for the dan Is Jason Jackson.
.

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STAFF REPORT

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen basketball team
used some early emotion to
jump out to a 17-7 lead over
NAIA Divi sion II No. 12
Shawnee State. but cou ld not
hold together as the Lady
Bears
downed ·
the
Redwomen. 68-55, Tuesday
ni ght at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grande (18-1 0, 7-8
AMCS) started early and
quickly gained a I 2-5 advantage behind the play of junior
guard Angel Allen . The
Beckley, West Virginia nati ve
scored six of her I 0 points in
the opening moments to give
the Redwomen the lead.
Shawnee State (20-5. 11-4
AMCS) stormed back behind
a coup le of three-point
bombs by re serve guard
Nikki Tucker. The Lady
Bears cut the deficit to 19- 15
at the 7:30 mark of the first
half.
Rio would take a 27-23
lead to halftime.
In the second half. the
Shawnee State thoroughbreds . Mandy Goin and
Heather Schilling took over
the game and SSU Head
Coach Robin Hagen-Smith
shifted the defense into a
zone. which left Rio Grande
powerless because of ineffective three-point shooting.
The Lady Bears ga ined
their first lead at 28-27 with
18 minutes remaining and
never looked back. Shawnee
pushed the lead to as high as
14 points (60-46) in the second half.
Rio placed three players in
double figures, led by Alkia
Fountain's I 5 points. The
Columbus native also pulled
down
eight
rebounds.
Sophomore center Tiffanie
Hager added a double-double
of 13 points and 11 rebounds.
Allen added 10 points and
pulled down live rebounds .
Shawnee State was led by
Go in with 20 points ( 14 in
the second half) and nine
rebounds. Schilling tossed in
14 points (nine in the second
half).
Cassie Hackworth
added nine points and five
rebounds to the Lady Bear
effort. Mandy Deal dis hed
out five assists .
Rio could not solve the

Southern downs White Falcons
Bv ScOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

I

RACINE - Playing one
of their best . defensive
games of the year, the
Southern Tornadoes held the
Wahama White Falcons to
just II field goals in posting
a 58-31 non-league win
Tuesday night in Charles W.
Hayman gymnasium.
. Southern (11-6) is tuning
up for a sectional tournament run, while Wahama
falls to 2-12 overall.
Southern was led by
junior Wes Burrows, who
had 16 points and eight
rebounds. Craig Randolph

...
••

•

-:.

tallied 15 points , while
Aaron Sellers added seven,
Derek Teaford six, Jeremy
Yeauger six and four each
from Josh Smith and Tyler
Roberts.
Wahama was led by R.T.
Roush with 13 points, while
Brant Davis added four, and
three each from Kameron
Sayre, Roman Ward, and
Holt
Barnitz.
Shawn
Mossman and Clay Roush
added two and Colbe Ingles
one.
Southern jumped out to
an 8-0 lead before Roush
took over the inside game
and cut into he Southern
lead. Burrows drilled a three

to end the frame.' giving
Southern a 13-7 advantage.
Southern 's defense in the
second quarter was tremendous. The Tornadoes tightened the noose on the White
Falcons, while putting up
some pretty good numbers
of their own.
Midway
through
the
frame,
Randolph was sidelined
with three fouls. Teaford
and Sellers picked up the
slack at point guard.
Teaford had an assi st to
Sellers on the back door cut,
and also had a goal of his
own with a good floor
game. It was Burrows who
carried the burden however.

--·- -"- - .

Redwomen
fall to
Shawnee
State
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRI8UNE .COM

as he posted a nine-point
frame . Burrows had 12 at
the half as Southern coasted
to a 29-10 advantage.
Wahama's lone field goal
was a Mossman layin, while
Roush went 1-2 at the line.
Overall for the game,
Southern's defense forced
23 turnovers.
The third quarter was a
sloppy quarter from both
arenas. Teaford, Sellers and
Randolph led the way with
four, four and six points
respeciively. The Tornadoes
outscored Wahama 18-11 in
the frame for a 47 -2 I tally.

Please see Rio, Bl

Please see Southern. Bl

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LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Antwain Barbour, making his second start of the season, scored a
career-high 23 points and No . 8
K~ntucky beat Alabama 66-55 on.
Tuesday night.
Barbour, who started in place of the
injured Gerald Fitch, the Wildcats'
leading scorer, went )0-{)f-13 from the
field and had five rebounds for
Kentucky ( 17-3, 7-2 Southeastern
Conference), which handed Alabama
(11 -9, 3-6) its fifth straight loss.
Alabmna entered the game leading
the SEC in 3-point shooting at 37.9
percent but the Crimson Tide finished
5-of-18 (27.8 percent) against the
Wildcats. Leading scorer Kennedy
Winston, who had 68· points in the
Crimson Tide's previous three games,
finished with 12 on 3-of-13 shooting.
Earnest Shelton scored 13 points to
lead Alabama, which had won two of
its previous three meetings against
Kentucky, including one in Lexington.
Barbour's previous career high wa~
13 points, which canre in his first NCAA
Division I game, last seao;on against
Ariwna State. He matched that just II
I12 minutes into Thesday 's game, as he
scored Kentucky's first 13 points.
He had six points in an 11 -2 second-half run as Kentucky pulled
away from a two-point lead . Hi s
layup with 11 :49 left put Kentucky
ahead 45-34, and the Crimson Tide
came no closer than nine points the
rest of the way.
Barbour started four games last
season, but struggled with consistency and confidence after a broken
hand sid€lined him for more than a
month.
. Those struggles carried over into
the first part of hi s senior season, but
coach Tubby Smith said there was
no doubt who would replace Fitch in
the starting lineup when the
Wildcats' leading scorer strained a
ligament in his shooting hand.
Barbour scored I0 points and had a
game-winning three-point play in his Kentucky 's Chuck Hayes chest bumps teammate Antwain Barbour during a second
first start this season, a 65-64 win over half timeout in their 66-55 win over Alabama Tuesday in Lexington, Ky. Barbour
led all scorers with 23 points. (AP)
No. 25 South Carolina on Saturday.

Al.l.
9-6
8-7
7-8
2-11
2-12

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

which were on the defensive side of
the ball.
The Redmen held a smallest of
leads at halftime. 32-31 after
Shawnee State\ Kevin c;unningham
made a ba.&gt;ket with two seconds left
on the clock.
Davenport then opened the second
half making one of two free-throw
attempts to tie the game.
Keep that free throw in mind .
Seth Deerfield made a shot off the
glass at the 19: 19 mark of the second
half to help Rio regain the lead. A
pair of Reggie \\illliamson buckets
inside and a Simpson 3-ppinter saw
the Redmen jump on top 41-32 .
Rio Grande's defense was even
more dominatin~.
Cunningham 's free throw was the

Kentucky tops Alabama., 66-SS

Al.L.
16-2
10-7
6-11
8-9
7-9
6-11

Girls basketball
Ie.am
Warren
Jackson
Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Athens
Point Pleasant

sive effort in the first half. I just didn't think our intensity defensively
was very good. We let them dictate to
us instead of the other way around.
We're not very good when that happens."
Matt Simpson was the only Rio
Grande. player to score in double figures with 19 points, including tlve 3point goals. Reggie Williamson
hauled down nine rebounds for the
Redmen ( 18-8, 12-3 American
Mideast Conference South Division)
along with his eight points.

"I don "t know who
nipped the sw itch.
but 1 hope they can
keep t1nding it."' said
Thomas on Tuesday
of Simpson "s performance, who had spoken earlier in the
season
about
Simpson's offensive
potential.
Simpson
"I hope we can
duct tape t)le on
switch the rest of the season, because
if plays like that, he just elevate.s
everybody else, and we ' re going to
be in good shape down the stretch."
Shawnee State ( 12-14, 8-6) was led
by Nick Donley with 17 points,
including five 3-pointers, and Adam
Davenport added 13 points. Delano
Thomas grabbed II rebounds, all of

---. ------ --

�WedneSday, Febntary u,

The Daily Sentinel • Page B2

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

Seniors hold up their end of
the bargain on their night
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It 's that time of year to spotlight
seniors playing their final home game .
• Isn' t it fu'nn y how they usually &gt;teal
the spotlight anyway'J
Take, for example. Stow coach Bob
Podges' dilemma. l-Ie wanted to honor
hi s seniors but the Bulldo gs (15 -2)
were meeting unbeaten Barherton in
the biggest game of th e year.
Still, it was Sen ior Night , so Podge'
replaced th,ree juniors so he had all five
· seniors in file st;u·tin g lineup.
• They didn't disappoint. fighting to a
·: stalemate before the first sub came in
· · midway thr@ugh the opening quarter.
And Stow wcnr on to one of its bigg~st
victorie s in years. upse tting the
. Magics , 60-49.
· :· Speaking .0 f seniors. one of th e
state's best is Youngstown Boardman ·s
Amber Bland. \she had a string of eight
straight 30-plLI~ point games snapped,
settling for a m~ager 27 in a 64-37 vic·
tory over Cantoh McKinley.
The 5-foot-9 Penn State signee has
; already passed the 2,000-point mark in
· .. career scoring .
Then again, it's not always a senior
who leads the way. Take Cincinnati
North College· hill freshman O.J .
' Mayo, for instance.
Mayo totaled 63 point s in two games
last week as North College Hill ran its
. record to 15-0. Mayo is averaging 28
points per game after transferring from
Rose Hill Chris tian in Ashland, Ky.,
where he averaged better than 20
points a game as a varsity starter- in
both the seventh and eighth grades.
North College 1-lill's latest win ·was
• 81-29 over Cincinnati Hills Christian
Academy.
SHOOTING STARS: Brandon
Crawford of Gahanna Evange l
Christian Academy scored a schoolrecord 50 points on 23 of 29 shooting
from the field in a 92 -23 victory over
Cincinnati Christian Center; Bryan 's

NFL asks judge to suspend order on draft
NEW YORK "(AP) - The
NFL asked a judge Tuesday to
suspend her dec ision to allow
high school players into the
draft, arguing that an
onslaught of teenagers would
harm the league, its athletes
and college football.
U.S . District Judge Shira
Scheindlin issued her ruling
last Thursday in a laws uit by
Ohi o State running bac k
Maurice Clarett. a 20-yearold sophomore who played
just one season in coll ege
before trying to enter the
· draft.
The NFL asked the judge
for a stay while it appeals.
saying a higher court may not
be able to rule before the
April draft.
"Absent a stay, countless
college underclass men, as
well as high school students

who lack the physical and
psychological maturity to
succeed in professional football, will be encouraged prematurely to declare themselves eligible for the NFL
draft," it said.
·
At issue is a league rule that
a player must be out of high
sc hool for three years before
he is eligible for the draft .
The NFL arg4ed that the
rule is for the young players'
own good: It is designed to
make sure they are big
enough and strong enough to
play with the pros.
The
league
said,
"Immediate enforcement of
the court ruling wi ll eAcourage teenaga athletes to overtrain - or worse - to use
steroids or dangerous nutritional supplements in the hope
of rapidl y developing the

talented basketball player,"
added Earl Thomas. " He's a
very, very talented student.
He's very smart. I think
from Page B1
sometimes, he may be too
Bears' only point fo r the fi rst smart. He may be thinks the
seven minutes of the second game a little too much, which
half, a streak that was means he's about a half a step
snapped by a pair of quick too late. When he comes out
and plays with the intensity
baskets by Delano Thomas.
Later on in the half, a 3- he did (Tue sday ), he 's as
pointer by Donley made it a good a player as anybody in
four point game, but that was the conference right now."
With the win, Rio Grande
as close as Shawnee State got
remains a game back of
after Rio's early run.
,
During the game's final Cedarville, a 92-72 winner
•• minute and a half, the over Urbana Tuesday. for the
Redmen put the game away AMC South crown, setting
for good on a couple of up a poss ible title show down
Simpson free throws, fol- next week at Cedarville.
lowed by a another pair by
Cain Vandall less than 40
seconds later. The duo's foul
shooting gave Rio Grande the
biggest lead of the night by
either team, 59-47.
Simpson broke loose for
the Red men in · the firs t half,
keeping pa!'e with Donley.
After Donley opened the
game with two 3-pointers,
_ , putting the Bears on top 6-0,
. Simpson made a short jumper
· and then a 3-poil)_ter to ma~e
it a one-point ~ame. A pair of
Simpson 3-pmnters and one
by Jeromy Dishman during
an 11-0 run helped the
Redmen take their first lead
of the night, 18·1~.
Simpson was 4-for-4 from
beyond the arc in the fil'llt
half, while Donley was 4-for·

strength and speed required to
compete in the NFL"
Scheindlin, however, said
the · e ligibilit~ rule violates
antitrust law by denying
young athletes the right to
market their talents.
The NFL ~et a March I
deadline for h~ h school players and coli e underclassmen to apply for the draft,
pending its appeal.
The league said that without
a stay, its 32 ~lubs will be
forced to evaluate and interview a large number of
prospective NFL\players.
Those players then would
sacrifice their scholarships
and education for an uncertain
future, ultimately (1erhaps displacing NFL veter!\ns.
"There would also be corresponding serious. disruptive
and irreparable effects on the

Red men

com~ tC)

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•

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Shawnee State zone as the
Redwomen made only
three-point attempt in 13
tries (7.7 percent). Rio shot
34 percent (22-of-64) from
the field and 83 percent (I 0of-12) from the foul line.
Shawnee State shot 44
percent (74-of-54) frqm the
field, 22 percent (2-of-9)
from long range and 72 per·
cent (18-of-25) from the
charity stripe.

and pain less it is to

wisely. like

"I was ubsolutely hot." suid
SimpNon. "I ju~t kind of' CUf11C
out und shot It ond dldll't
really think ubout It when I
WIIN ~hoot ing. I just told
m~sclf it was golns In,"
'(Simpson's) a very. very

Rio

•
from Page B1

MtlpCounly, OH

G..lli. Covnty. OH

r

Before the Redmen can
think about that game,
though; they have to entertain
Tiffin in their final home
game of the season.
The divi sion winner earns a
automatic spot. in the NAIA
Division II national tournament . If the Redmen win
their final three games of the
season, they will clinch the
division title.
"Our goal is to win the division so we don 't have to go
through the playoll because
that playoff is going to be bru·
tal," said Thomas. "We just
assume to be able to win this
thing outright and sit back and
let everybody else battle."

Spend your
refund
on your
future.

college football programs that
inves~ed substantial sums in
recruiting these players and
fostering their athletic development," the NFL said.
Any veterans who lose their
jobs "would have no 'remedy
if thi s court's ruling were ultimately reversed."

Rio did manage to outrebound SSU, 40-37, but
also
collected
more
.turnovers (19-16). Shawnee
captures the season series
with the win and now owns
a 30-2 record lifetime in the
series between the schools.
SSU downed Rio. 67-53 in
Portsmouth, January 20.
The Redwomen will face
a red-hot Tiffin team on
Saturday in the final home
game of the season on
Saturday. Game time is set
for 6 p.m. at the Newt.
Rio Grande defeated
Tiffin, 67 -58, January 17m
Tiffin.

www.mydallysentinel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

4, Roush 5). nine steal s
(Faulk 2, Moss'man 2). four
assists. and 24 fouls.
frpm Page B1
Southern won the reserve
game 54-.40 led by Buddy
The last quarter was Young with 18 point ,. R.J .
and Joe
played fairly even as both Harmon II
with
six.
teams emptied their bench- Nottingham
Waham
a
was
led
by
es. Roberts and Burrows
led the Southern charges Brandon Fowler with nine,
with four each, whi le Davis Brenton Clark with eight
had four for Wahama in the and Kameron Sayre \'lith
finale and Ward. three. seven.
to
goe&gt;
Southern
Southern then waltzed to
Waterford on Friday.
, the 58-31 finale.
Southern hit just 23-61
Southern 58, Wahama 31
overall, hitting 2 1-51 twos, Wahama
7
3
11 10 -31
13 16 18 11 - 58
and 2-10 threes, while con- Southern
WAHAMA (2· 12) - Chase Ord 0 0-0
necting on·just 10-25 at the 0, Holl Barnitz 1 0-0 3. Bran1 Davis 2 0line.
Southern had 22 0 4, Roman Ward 1 1-5 3. Lucas
0 0·0 0, Shawn Mossman 1 0 rebounds (Burrows 8, Darin 0Litchfield
2. Colbe Ingels 0 1-3 1.·Aaron Faulk 0
Teaford 3), 15 steals 0·0 0 . Kameron Sayre 1 1-1 3, Bran don
0 0.0 0, Clay Roush 0 2-4 2. A T.
(Randolph 4 ), 14 turnovers, Fowler
Roush 5 3·6 13. TOTALS- 11 8-21 31 .
12 assists (Randolph 5,
SOUTHERN (11 -6)- Derek Teaford 3
0·1
6. Aaron Sellers 3 1·6 7, Cra ig
Teaford 3. Burrows 3). and' Randolph
5 5·6 15, Chrts Tue,ker 0 0-2 0 ,
19 fouls.
Jeremy Veauger 2 2-5 6. Josh Harris 0 0·
Wahama hit 11-37 over- ~ 0 0. Tyler Roberls 2 0·0 4, Wes Burrows
2-3 16, Dustin Keyes o O·O o. Josh
all , hitting I 0-26 twos, and 6Smith
2 0·0 4. Dar1n Teaford 0 0·2 0 .
1-1 1 threes, while hitting 8- Jake Nease 0 0·0 0. R.J. Harmon 0 0·0
TOTALS- 23 10-25 58
21 at the line. Wahama had 0.3-polnt
goals - W 1 {Ba rnitz). S 2
26 rebounds (Ward 5, Faulk (Burrows)

Southern

spot atop the Columbus City League,
winning 107 of their last 110 divisional ga mes; Louisville St. Thomas
Aquinas ' boys ( 15-2) need just one
more win to match their highest regular-season win total ever; North
Canton Hoover 's boys ( 16-0) remain
on pace to become the first team from
the Federal League to go unbeaten in
the league 's 40 years; Bellville Clear
Fork's girls won their first-ever
Mohican Area Conference title in the
league 's final 'year of existence;
Johnstown Monroe ( 16-0) clinched its
first ever outrig ht Mid-Buckeye
Conference championship in its second
winning season in a row after 17
straight losing campaigns; Arlington's
boys are ranked No. I in Division IV
for the first time ever; LaGrange
Keystone's girls :won their lOth game
in a row to clinch . a league title;
Thornville Sherigan's girl s have won
their last 31 league games; and the
girls from Zanesville ( 17 -2) tied last
year's team for most victories in a season.
NOTEWORTHY:
Niles
McKinley's . Stacia Ray set a school
record with eight 3-pointers in a recent
victory over Campbell Memorial;
Samuel Rutherford became New
Matamoras Frontier's career scoring
leader with 1,391 points when he had
17 in a loss to Old Washington
Buckeye Trail; Jonathon Avery had 23
points, 21 rebounds and seven blocked
shots in Mansfield Senior 's 77-55 win
over Lexington; Travis Simmering had
30 points and Matt Schlarb 29 to
outscore Shelby by themselve s in
Cory
Lexington's
72-53
win;
Guttenberg hit 32 consecutive free
throws at one point and now is 52 of 59
O'n the season for Buckeye Central's
boys; and DeAndre Byrd had 23
po ints, 12 rebounds, eight steals and
eight assists as Cincinnati Taft beat
Dayton Belmont 77-64.

Chris Carpenter picked up 45 points in
the Golden Bears· 72-58 win over
Crestline's
Sherwood
Fairview;
Amanda Ronk went for 33 points in a
SH-52 win over Lucas: Jak.e Robinson
of Lish1)n Beaver Local scored 1.9 of
his 30 point s in the third quarter of a
7 1-48 victory over Wintersville Indian
Creek ; and Ke\ in Weybright scored 32
points to lead Wyoming past defending
Div. Ill state champ Reading 53-44.
STILL WINNING: ZanesviHe We st
Muskingum's girls' 72-53 win over
Zanesville Maysville gave legendary
head coach Jack Van Reeth his 750th
career win. Van Reeth's coaching
rewrd of 750-223 has come with a
c·ornbi nation of boys and girl s teams.
Van Reeth mav best be remembered for
coaching at Millersburg West Holmes
from 1984 to 1998. winning three consecutive state title s. His teams won 108
games in a row - regular season and
in tournament - in the mid- 1980s.
WILD ENDINGS: Caitlin Beckett
made two fou l shots with 2.5 seconds
remain ing to help Hamilton Badin beat
Cincinnati McNicholas 49-48; Bellville
Clear Fork's boys have lost four games
by a combined six points, including
twice to Loudonville by a point each
time : Mansfield Temple Christi an's
Matt Dunn hit a shot from midcourt as
time expired in a 58-56 win over rival
Mansfield Christian; Bascom HopewellLoudon went the first seven minutes of
the third quarter without scoring a point
in a showdown with league co-leader
New Riegel but still came back to win.
45-40; and . top-ranked LaGrange
Keystone stayed unbeaten when Jake
Bailosky hit a soft jumper in the lane
with 5 seconds left in overt ime to secure
a 60-58 win over Lorain Clearview.
ON A ,ROLL: Despite the graduation of three starters and the death of
their coach, Bruce Howard, in April to
li ver failure, Col umbu s Brookhaven's
boys ( 15-2) are back in the ir familiar

Wednesday, February 11 , 2004

lwright4!llc.net
Environm ental
Director

Candid ates must posses a
valid Ohio Sanitarian reg istrati on certif ic ate. Minimum
of three years e&gt;eperi ence as
a public health Registered
sanitarian or itS equivalent
Pleas e reply to the Vinton
County Health Di st rict State
Route 93. PO Box 305,
McArthur, Ohio 4565t . EOE

ZERO MONEY DOWN
To qualified buyers slop in
today and check with Ernie
or Lynn
Cole's Mobile Homes
15266 U.S. 50 East
Athens, Ohio 45701
1740)592-1972
'Where You Get Your
Money's Worth"

D
0
0

•

r

WI'S &amp;
ACREAC;E

1.6 acres. wooded. flat spot.
10x12 building. water. sep·
tic. electric already on land
$15.000. (740)384-4341

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

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w.wrt:u

Chjldcare Stale licensed.
Focus helping low-income
families obtain childcare.
With 8hrs. sleep time loJ
non-traditional shills as Qlli!
of your BIGHIS:. 740·2459242.

Georges Portable Sawmill.
don' t haul your logs to the
$15.44·$21 .40/hr, now hir·
mill just call 304·675·1957.
ing. For application and free
Make 50% selling Avon.
government job info. call Jim's Carpentry and small
Limited
time
ONLY.
American As soc. of Labor, landscaping. Call (740)446·
(740)446-3358.
1·(913)599-8220 , 24 hrs .
2506.
Medl Home Health Agency,
••••ng •• peop e ,oca.. , Take care of elderly, 23
Inc. seeking a full·tim e AN
rho want to earn mane
years
expe ri ence. Ca ll
for the Gallipolis , Ohio area.
rwhile losmg weight, show Sharon at (740)992·9661 or
Must be licensed both in
tng
ot hers
how {7 40)992·2659. Leave mes·
Ohio and West VIrgin ia. We
lnlo rma!IOnal
DVD/CC sage
offer a competitive salary, ~vailable upon request 740
benefits package, and 401 K.
Take ca re ot your elderly
41· 1984
E.O .E. Please send resume
love one's call 304·675-4860
to 352 Second Avenue.
by week · vacations eel. "
Rig
Op.erator reasoftable ~
Gallipoli s. OH 45631. Attn: Service
Diana Harless.
Clinical Wanted· expe rience a must.
11\\\tl\1
Carl E. Smith Petroleum,
Manager.
Sandyville. WV, work in local
BustNfX'i
Meigs County Board Of
Tuppers P!a1ns area, contact
Mental Retardati on and
Sue Jelt lor interview,
OI~'Uifi UN ITV
Developmental Disabilities (304)273·93 13
Job Opening Not1ce
~
SubstitUte Veh1cla Operator
PUBLISH
II {bus driver) at the Meigs
STNAs
County Board of M en tal
u do bu si ness with peo
FT/PT/PRN
Retardation
and
le you ~now, and NOT I
Developmental Disabilities.
end money th rough th
Must have Ohto Commercial
mail until you have investi
All
Driver License with School
ated the oflerin .
Bus Endorsement . Class B.
Current Medtcal Exam, CPR Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
MONEY
and First Aide Cert11icale. a Tandem Health Care lacili·
ml.oAN
ty,
1s
see
king
State
Test
ed
Please send resu me to
MCBMROD. P.O. Bo&gt; 307. Nursing As sistants.
Behind in your Mortgage
Syracuse, Ohi o 45779
Shift diilerential available. or in Foreclosure? Don't
Now Hiring fu ll and part Pl ease respond to : Dianna Sell or
file Ban~ruptcy.
l ime.
McClure's Thompson, 311 Buckrid ge Services Guaranteed . Call
Reslaurants . In Gallipolis, Rd. 'Bidwell, OH 45614 . Ph: ALL-STAT ES MORTGAGE
Middleport and Pomeroy. (740)446·7 150.
Fe.: MEDIATION.
Apply
Monday
thru (740)446- 1248.
Email 1·888·615· 8673 eJd. 490
Saturday, 10· 11 am
II
adin . shn @tandemhealth·
ca re .com . Please specify
Part time posi tion . 20·3()
position/location ol interest.
hour week. Need reliable
EOEi SFDF. For other oppor·
person to help on dairy farm .
tu nilies .
contact
(740)992-501 0
TURNED DOWN ON
H A @ tandemhealthcare.co
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
Part-ti me Hou se Keeper m
No Fee Unless We Win!
needed . Send resume and
1·888-582·3345
references to PO. Box 502
Tandem
Health
It
I \I I ._,I \II
Cheshire. Ohio 45620.

POSTAL JOBS

Weekends,
Shifts

r

Care

All real estate advertising
in this newspaper is
subject Ia the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which m1kea It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, n~llglon , sex
familial status or national
origin , or any Intention to
make any 1uch
preferenCe, llmitallon or
di scrimination."

This newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that·all
dwellings advertised In
thl1 newtpaper are

INSI'RucnoN

~0~15::'4~~-~~--,
20

Monu.E HUWli

Buy or se ll. Rrvertne
Anhques. 1124 East Marn
on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
992-2526. Russ Moore .

R1ver. AU new appliances. 1 ii:
o';:='"i-e::O:r.~-----.,
1/2
baths.
5600/mo..
MJSCELUNEOLS
Security
deposi t.
MEJtl:HANDISE
References require,d. No
pets. Call 740·446·2325 or
For sale cheap (2) lots 1n
740·446·4425
Ohio
Valley
Memory
Furnished efliciency 3 room Garden s. Call (740)245·
and bath. All utilities paid . 5139
Downstairs. 5285. 9 19 2nd
JET
Ave . (7 40)446-3945
AERATION MOTORS
Gracious living . I and 2 bed· Repai red . New &amp; Rebuilt In
room apartments at Village Stock. Call Ron Evans 1Manor
and
Riverside 800-537-9528
Apar tments in Middleport.
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal Housing LiQuidation , closed CVS
Drugstore on 2n d Ave
OPport\}nities .
Sh~ l ving showcase drrnk
Middleport N 3rd Ave. one coolers. &amp; sate. 2i t 6·2/20
bed room furnished apart· Ca ll (336)·332 -4560
men! . depostl &amp; referenc es.
Mason1c Gold . Ruby. &amp;
no pets, (740)992·0165
Diamond R1ng Large $350.
New 4 room apt Kl!chen. (304)576·3364
LA. 2 BR. bath . No pets.
(740)367-7746; t740)367- NEW ANO USED STEEL
Steel Beam s. P1pc Rebar
7015 before 8pm.
For
Concret e.
Angle.
New Haven, 1 br. furnished Channel. Flnt Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drams
apt., dep . &amp; ref., no pels,
(740)992-01 65
Driveway~ &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday. Wectnesday &amp;
Fnday Bam-4:30pm. C!a'sed
Thursday.
Satur.day 1 &amp;
Sunday (740)446- 7300 I
Sta r! You r Own Show!!!
Over 200 CD+G Karaoke
D1scs.
(Ongmals.
not
copies) . H1ghest quality,
sound cho1ce ctry, pop, hils
monthly eel..
wit ll song
book. $6,000 value for
$2 .500.
also speakers.
amps, players, ect For Sale
740-367-0495

415 Elm St., Racine. 4 bed·
room house. withi n walking
distance
ol
Southern
Schools. $400/month plus
deposit, HUD accepted.
(740 )992·6194 or 74Q-54 1·

r

JltiiLil!N( ;

SUPPI .fi·'.S
\II ll&lt; 'II\ \111 ., 1·

HolY:HOL()

Block. brick. sewer p1pes.
windows. lintels . etc Claude

G&lt;xms
_______
,~

Wint ers. R10 Grande. OH
Cai i 740-245·5121

10
~.,.

·--·I'O·R-Riil'ii'Niil'-_.1

r

For Sale: Waterbed. dresser,
I-1-:rs
chest ol drawers, wood split·
FOK SALE
Beautiful river v1ew. ideal lot te r. fireplace insert 740· - one or two people. No pets. 446-2613 or 740- 446-8 105. AKC regr s!ered German
Shepherd. black &amp; ta n 6
reforences. (740)441 ·0 181. G d U • A 1.
00
seu
pp lances.
wks. old. shot s &amp; wormed
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom mobile Reconditioned
and (740)992·3972 alter 5pm
home incl udes water, sewer. Guaranteecl
Washers .
trash , no pets. starting at Dryers
Ranges.
and AK C Saint Bernard pupp1es
$300 per mon.th . call Refrtgerators. Some start at 1 male. 1 female . Ready to
(740)992·2167
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 go! Pa rents on prenl1ses
i:;:;~-:'Vine St., (740)446-7398
5300·$350 Call (740)256·
APARTMENTS
fU R R ENT
Good washers &amp; dryers. S95 1090.
-

...----,

available on an equal
opportunity baaes .

For Sale on contract very
nice 2 BR home, newly
remodeled , nice location

&amp; up. Washer &amp; dryer sets, Engi1sh bulldog
MALE
$275 &amp; up. Ranges $95 &amp;
1 and 2 bedroom apart· up. Frost free Relrigerator AKC, 15 mos. old . w.'cage

men ls, lur n1sh~d and unfur$4,000 down call (304)674- nished, securi ty depOSi t
required, no pe ls. 740·9920019
22 18 .
FORECLOSURE!
4 bed on ly $7,900. for list·
Bedroom Apartm er t.
ings call
Kitchen Furnished.
.All
1--800·7 19·3001 extf1 44
Elect ric,
$300 Month.
Deposit Aeq uired.Near High
House for Sale: 4 miles out
School. (304)675·3100 c.;&gt;r
Sandhill Road . 3 Bedroom 1
(304)675-5 509
Balh $85,000 (304)675·
2507
2 bedroom apt. St. At 160
past Holzer. $475 mo.
MOBJLEHO~
(740)441 -0194.

FOR SALE

14x:60 very clean ready to
move
into.
Furnished .
incl uding washer/dryer &amp;
storage bui lding. $11 ,000.
(740)388.0460.

r

1'11761'!u."~',
111"""------.,
·~~~ I

For
Leas e:
Beautifu lly
restored , unfurnished, two
bedroom apartment over·
looking the City Park and

2 BR water/trash pa rd, no
pe ts. references &amp; deposit
reqUired. near Porter 388·
1100.

to

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740·446·2568.
Equ al
Housin9 Opportunity.
.:.:__c._.:.:__ _ : . _ _
CONVENIENTLV LOCAl·
ED~
' AFFORDABLE!
To house
apartments.
an or .small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)44.1· 11 11
for ~pphcation &amp; information .

1995 16x80 foot Fairmont
mobile home, 3 bed room, 2
bath. good shape, must be
moved. near Tuppers Plains,
2 br. Ranch Style House has books· $19,000,
sell
a 24:.:30 detached gar9ge.
$17.000. 740·667·6357
3Q)(30 barn on 4 acres on (740)667·982 3
Carson AC1 . at Mason asking
2000 Oakwood
mobile
$70,000 (304)773-6 187
home 14X80. 3 bedroom. 2
3 bed room house complete· bath. Total electric. Ask ing in
ly remodeled in 2000. $21 ,500.00. (740)992-926 3.
ana S&lt;:hoota 12746.
Privacy fence and storage
mobile
buildin g. Located near has · 2000 .oakwood
home
.
14X70,
3
bedroom.
.
JY.u.')\..r.d..o'-""''"~ • Pltal
and
interstate.
(740)709-0587 Call
fo r $ 15,ooo.oo. (740)992·631 3
Firewood - $25.00 pick-up details.
91 Mobile Home, on one
load,
(you
pick
up)
acre plus. Central air, out
3 bedroom, 2 baths on 4.3
(740)992-9263
building, large front deck. In
acres. Must Sell!! Catl
Mercerville, near schools.
(740)709· 1166
No Land Con tracts.
For
Free removal ol used appli· For Sale: House on 2nd $28 .000. Call (740)256ances In tho Gallipolis area. Ave., brick , 1 1/2 story. Call 6663. acldress: 2333 Co)(
(740)446·3478.
Rd. Crown Ci~. 011i~,
Call (7 40)441 ·1690.

PART·TIME TE LLER· Loca l
bank is accepting appli ca· 150
Sl.'HOOI.~
lions lor part time ielt er and
customer service positionS
I.,G,;,a.lll•p•oliitaiiiCiioiirieeiriiCiiioiil•teg•e,.l
Must. 8J(hibil ·prolesslonttl·
(Careers Close To Home)
ism, attention to deta il and
enjoy providing e)(ceptiona l Call Todayt 740·446·4367,
_ _
.
_
1 800 214 0452
customer service. Previous
experience in custorl)er www. ~ailipoii8Careercolle~.com
serviCe and cash handling Accredited Member Accrediting
referred. Knowledge 01 Council tor Independent CoHege11
P

Pomeroy po lice department
Is seeking part-tim e dis·
patcher. aval iabte for all
shifts , contact Tammy Smith
Monday thru Friday 9am·
2pm,(740)992·64 11 E.O.E.

FOR RH•'l'

Very clean used 3 bed·
roomf2 bath. $9995.00. Will
help with delivery. Call Nikki.
740-385·9948.

HEu•
Help wanted· part-time ba r·
tender. Eveni ngs &amp; week·
ends. Send. res ume to PO
Position open in Southeast,
Bo:.: 773, Gallipolis, Ohio
Ohio, with mechan ical com·
45631.
pany, experience necessary
send resu me &amp; letter of rec·
ommendation, P 0 Box 363,
Fun casual job for 1B+
The Plains, Oh 45780.
New faces! New places!
Great cast'!. &amp; bonus's!

computers a plus. Must be
available ·Mon. through Sat
Please submit res umes to
The Daily Sentinel, PO Bo)(
729·34, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 E.O.E.

APAIUMINIS

I'OH SAI.E
New 3 bedroom 2 bath . Only
$995
down
and only
$194.36 per month , Call
Karena 740·365·7671 .

Health
opening.

E.:perienced auto body
man, must have own tools.
Apply at Larry's Body Shop
or send resume : 2046
Addison Pike , Gall 1poli s,
Ohio.
ave you ever
oug
bout helpin g a child who i
in trouble and might need
lace to stay tor a couple o
Milestone
ays?
The
Foster Care Agency IS look
ng lor providers in ~alii
ounly to do short-ter
are for homeless·run awa
hildren ages 0·18 . Fo ste
ome licensing is reqUired
eimbersement is included.
Please call 1·888·823-753
or more information.

MOHILE HOM!1;

I

0'

$1,000 Cal l 740·44 1·0182
$125 &amp; up. Couch &amp; chair,
or 740·446·564 1
$100. Overstulled cha1rs.
I \U\1 Sl PJIIII· S
$20 &amp; up. Nice full size bed
~\I 1\ISIO( ~
with bO)( springs &amp; mattress,
$75. Queen size mattress &amp;
box springs, $125 &amp; up. Full ti10
F.\R!\ 1,
size
bo)(
springs
&amp;
mallress
F.QliiPMENI'
$150.
. . ._ _ _ _ _,.J
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street
(7 40)446· 7398

John Deere 2550 4x4 w1l h
245 Loade r new motor
clutch
$14 .000
cal
304)
593·0794
Mollohan Carpet . 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio
"""
ILw&amp;
(740)446·7444 ' 1·877-830·
GRAIN
9162 . Free Eslrmates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
1200 lb. round bales. Never
cash . Visa/ Master Card
wet. S15 00 per bale
Drive· a· little saVe alot.
. (7401446-4053.
Moyjng -Sale. Spinet piano.
sola. chairs . end-tables 1500# round bale s Mrchael
antique
trun k.
ceda r Burk e, (740)985·4444
wardrobe , cedat chest For Sate Hay $2 00 a ba le
much more 1 (740)446·2628. about 1 .000 bales lelt Ca ll
(740 )446· 785 7
Nascar Todd ler bed . blue
$100. Call (740)441·0193
. Ha_y for sale; ~ound

&amp;

Thompsons Appl iance &amp; sQuare , bale s.
Delano
Aepair-675-7388 . For sale, Jacksons Farm. 304-675·
re-conditioned
automatic 1743 or 740·446·1104

Apt. on lincoln Ave .
Pleasant $275.00 a Wash·ers &amp; dryers. refrigeraask for Nancy 304· tors . gas and electric
or 304·675·4024 .1 ranges ,' air conditioners . and
wringer washers . Will do
1 &amp; 2 BR units repairs on major brands in
CIA high elfi · shop or at your home
gas furnaces , Quiet
i , $359 to $485. Used Furni1Ure Store , 130
Bulav1lle Pike. Ma ttresses.
dressers.
couches.
bunkbeds. recliners, what·
nots . Grave Moriumenla.
(7 40)446·4782 . Clalllpol,s.
OH Hrs. 10·4 (M"S\ Sunday
by appointment.

Round bales $1 2. 50 Square
bales 2nd-cuttrng grass
$2.50
Eat corn $2 .50 a
bushel . Ground ear corn
$4 .50 for ·· 100 pounds
{740)992·2623

IH I "I'OR I \110~
10

AtJilJN
tl!R SALE

1992 Sunbird, GT lor parts
only. Call (7 40)245-9346

�Wednesday, February 11 , 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sentinel

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Wednesday, February 11 , 2004

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Live Operators 2417
For Free Information,
Call Toll Free·

~

FORSAJ.t:
$5001. Hondas ,
Chevys.
Jeeps.
etc ! POLICE
IMPOUNDS Ca rs from
$500. fo r listings 1-800-7 19-

3001 &lt;))(! 390 1

~ 02 Ford Taurus SES, 37,500
- miles. extend ed "Narranty.
Sell
for
pay-off
(740)388-9125.

Call

1973 4Dr No\la 250 6cyl.

New Tires, Banery, Wipers

1304)675-6633
1993 Buick Lesabr e 4Dr. V6

1997· Neon Sport, 68K .
$2,695: 1995 Grand Am. 20.
99K, $2,495: 1989 Chevy
Pickup, $2.495 ; other in

mRSAI.E

~20

~

1

92 Ford Ranger 4-cyc. s1d. 1991 Chevy S-10 pickup,
$12 ,00.00. 96 Ford Ranger auto. ps-, $ 1,900 OBO
$2.000.00. 91 Firebird V-8. (304 )675·52S3

r

VANS &amp;
4-WDs

a better place.

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Your loving
Wife.Vera
Sons, Charles
&amp; Keith
Oaughler. Vida
Grandson,
Grandaugh1er

r.

Ir

L.__,.;;.;.;.;ill'loo-r·

Let me do it for youl

&amp; Great Grandsond

CAMPERS &amp;

MCYIOR
_ HOM~

I

2003 405 Foreman-S , push
button 4x4 , 67hrs. on it ,
must sell excellent condition. f
(7 40)992 _7771

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

I

926.99 feet, passing pin set by this survey
an Iron pin set by this at the point of beginsurvey at 889.06 feet,
ning of the Real
to the beat boundary
Estate
described
of a 5.8 acre parcel of herein;
the Grantor's land
Thence continuing
near the center of North 03 degrees 40
Gook Creak Road;
minutes 84 seconds
Thence along the East 200.00 feet to an
East boundary of said
Iron pin set by this
6.8 acre parcel and survey;
running near the cenThence South 88
ter of Goose Creek degrees 49 minutes
Road
South
42
11
seconds East
degrees 36 minutes 1085.32 feet, passln
20
seconds East an Iron pin set by this
74.00 feet and South survey at 1062.29
28 degrees 36 min- feet, to the East
utes 20 seconds East
boundary of a 6.8
201 .00 feat;
acre parcel of lhe
Thence North 88 Grantor's land near
degrees 49 minutes . tho center of Goose
11 seconds West Creek Road; Parcel
Nos. 17-00173.003,
1085.032 feet; pass·
ing ~n Iron pin set by 17-00173.004 &amp; 17this survey st 23.04 00173.005
feet, to the point of Said
Premises
beginning, containing
Located at 42028
5.000 acres, 3.213
Gooaecreek
Road,
acres out of a 50·acre
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
parcel
ot
the Said
Premises
Grantor's land and Appraised
at
1.787 acres out of a $17,000.00 and can·
6.8 sere parcel of the
not be sold for less
Grantor's land.
than two·thlrds of
Sub)ecl to legal that amount.
easments :
Terms ot Sale: $5,000
Situated In Scioto down,
remainder
Town'Shlp,
Meigs
upon tender of deed.
County, In the !;ltste of Ralph Trussell
Ohio, In Section 18,
Sheriff
of
Meigs
Township 7 North. County, Ohio
range t4 West of the
FRANK
&amp;
Ohio
Company WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
Purchase and .baing a L.P.A.
parcel created out of AHorneys lor PlalntiH
the Wanda Wyeth and 600
South
Pearl
Robert Wellman prop- Straet
erty (Described In Columbus,
Ohio
Volume 338, Page 43206
175, Meigs County
(614) 221 · 1662
Deed Recorda, her•
(1) 21, 28, (2) 4, 11, t8
lnalter referred to aa
the Grantor 's land)
Public Notice
bounded
and
described as follows:
Commencing st an
PUBLIC NOTICE
Iron pin set by this
NOTICE: Ia hereby
asurvey ·at a fence cor- given
that
on
'her, said fence corner
Saturday, February
being
at
the
14, 2004, at 10:00
Southwest corner of a.m., a public sale will
a 50 acre parcel of the
be held at 2tt W
Grantor's land ·,and Second St, Pomeroy,
ee~umtd to be local·
Ohio. The Farmers
ad at the Soutfw&lt;aot
Bank and Savings
corner of said section Company Ia selling
18;
lor caah In hand or
Thence along the certified check the
South llhe of 11id 50 following collateral ;
acre parcel of land
1897
SUBARU
South 86 degreaa t5 · LEGACYGT
4X4
minute• 34 aeconda . 4S3BK675XV7308475
Eaat 986.29 feet to an
The Farmers Bank
Iron pin set by thla
and
Sa_vlng1
survey and assumed
Company, Pomeroy1
to be on the South
Ohio, reserves the
line of said Section
right to bid at this
18;
•
·sale, and to withdraw
Thence North .03
the above collateral
degrees 40 minutes
prior to eale: Further,
26 seconds East The Farmers Bank
200.00 feet, to an Iron
and
Saving•

' ·,

Hill's Self
Storage

411 K Q 4
• 1 4

• AK5
"' A J 98 5

South

We st

North

East

1•

Pass

3 t

P ass

3 .tt
3¥

Pass

3 NT

Pa ss

Puss

Pass

Pass

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Oh io

4577 1
740-949-2217

nished . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, R o~ers Basement

Waterproofing .

You are planning to bid game. Howe\ler,
you know that your side has only a mino r·
suit fit. How shou ld you continue the auc·

ROBERT
BISSEll

are In three

CONSTRUCnON
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

do not have stoppers in all of the unbid

sulta? Oace psr1ner has raised your
minor-suit opening, II you bid a new sull.
you

r;::, mo&lt;:E. M'f'i f\1 NG
'{OU'Rf. l,f[l,~\ \)

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

1"'\ f\~Ve:

PE."'T\\E~
"'moe&gt;1~ !

LEGAL NOTICE
Offers
will
be
received at the oHice
of Bernard V. Fultz,
AHorney at Law, 11t·
112 West Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, lor the sale of
the Nellie Zerkle real·
dance real estate
located at 34 Race
Street, Middleport,
Ohio. The residence
conalats of two lots
fronting on Front
Street lacing the Ohio
River on which there
Is located the former
Zerkle Trucking build·
lng containing
2
garagaa. a down
stairs oHice suite and
a second story apart·
ment containing a
large living room
extending the lull
·length of the real•
dence lacing the Ohio
River, two badroomo,
one
bathroom,
kitchen and dining
room, Sealed ollero
lor the property will
be received until the
25th day of February,
2004 11 the oHice of
Bernard V. Fultz. The
right 11 reserved to
reject any ond all
oHera. Appointment&amp;
to examine the pram·
11~1 mey be made by
calling 74CI-II92-71 01.
(2) 11, 12, 13, t6, t7;
18, 19, 20, 23,24 tOT

P"Me: I&gt;$. Of
ti\OTi.!fJit:i·

11'\ · L~W 1

•

G
.

WHAT':&gt;

CARPENTER
SERVICE
PEANUTS

V.C. YOUNG Ill

IMPORTS
Athens

992-6215

740-742-341

J&amp;L
Eledric

Dean Hill

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

1-800-822-0417
"W.Y's # 1 Chevy. Pontiac, Buick , Olds
&amp; Custom

Slunlcy fll(jyin(j
und Jrcc Jrimmill(j

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph 740·992-0933
Ceii74D·591·1073

~'R~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages1
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

740·992·7953

•Timbe.r Harvesting

and Management
• Resldenlial Tree
. Trimming and
Removal

• Free Estin1ates

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

PATEL CLINIC
Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP

well for you in the pa st may be where your
breaks lie in the year ahead . You could now
become extre mely lucky where once you
experience d o nly disappointment
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - There's an
old saying that goes, "Everyth1ng happens
lor the be st." Although you may consider
this a bit hokey, c han ces are it will apply to
you today, particularly in material ways.
PIS CES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Be lair and
balanced in working oul agreements with
others today, but str ive to ne goti ate from
knowledge, intelligence and experience. so
th at unnece ssary conc e~ si o ns aren't
made.
ARIE S (March 2 1-Apri l 19) What
1
appears to be merely a routine obligation
could al so pro~ide you with so me hid den
At.~
opportunitieS today to further your personal interests. Do your duty and the benefits
will foll ow
TAU RUS (April 20-May 20) - A social situation that you are anti cipating as being
quite d'sagree able co uld su rprise you
today when developments turn out to be
iust the opposite, and thi ngs run rather
smoothly
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Don't let any
outside interests cut into the time you
spend with your !emily or close loved ones
today. Nqthing will be more important than
bein g part of thei r affairs.
CANCER {J une 21-July 22) - If you've
been Invit ed to join a new social gro up,
today might be the day to take th em up on
~~A
thei r offer. Once you bre ak the ice, th ey'll
comfortably feel like lifelong fr iends to you
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Unselfi shn ess is
FlA'/~
a mantle that you can wear with pride any·
BQVI~!
time . Today, by cloaki ng Yourself in just
such a garment, you' ll ea rn the respect
and admiration of all yo u encounte r.
VIRGO {Aug . 23·Sept. 22 ) - Ambition and
optimism will make up two very compatible
· components o f your psyche today. With
these two powerful forces wori&lt;ing fo r you ,
some outsl anding ac hrevements are possi·
ble.
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) - Someone
wh ose co mpanionship you never felt you
enjoyed may show you today that you
m9Bh more to him or her th an being a
r-----r-::::----,,..-~-=~-=--, · mere acq uaintance by displaying a gen·
erosity only offered to d oSe lnends.'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - ' Dre ams
r-r...;==~~ ~-=.::;:~~:..-') can beco me realllies today by foc using
only on po.sitilie elements. Hope should
never be tempered with pessi m1sm 01 you
could inadvertently dilute your possibili ties.
SAGitTARI US (Nov. ~3·D ec. 21) - Even
though there may be a price ta g attached,
achieving objectives important to you is
well within your reach . Be prepa red 10 grve
w hat Is ca lled lor because the rewards will
be worth II.
.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Don't
be ahy or hesitant a ~o ut getting In . tG~uch
with key' peop le wt\o could help advance
your plans or goals'. You could be ·axtreme M 9A'/f!!) :Z.·I I
ly lucKy today in developing arr~n g ementa

1-lELLO. 6RAMMA'? I JUST
YOU WERE RI6J.lT.. '(E5, '(OV
!T 5 EA5'1'TO APOLOGIZE
CALLEDTO APOLOGIZE .YOU t.I.Rl'l
TAU GI-lT ME A VALUABLE
TO
ANSWERING MACI·liNE
RIGI-\T.. J 51-10ULD!-lAVE WRITTEN
LE550t.I ..TAANK
GUMMA .. I::J-..__,.b ~.._..__, --~~
M'&lt; '' TJ.lANK YOU '' NOTE 500Nc:lcl ~ r--__..,

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

'lilur 'lltrthda.v :

By Bernice Sede Osol
Tt1ings that might not have worked out too

7

YOUNG'S

BETTY

II€Y!
CCIJroN fOI4
A OOZEN JEU,.V DONUTS

Q
•

by Luis Campos
C~lebr i ty

C1PMr cryptograms are Clealed t1om Quotations by lamous ~ pasr alld pr&amp;&amp;ent
Eactllette! lll the ~lpllt l sl!lnd&gt; lor anolho:!l

Today' sclue: Wequ.els M

" GZHZE
CSXA

JKNZ
AFSA

JYAAJZ
NK

NYIFA
KJV

UPA

WSEISEZA

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 count on us!

1 mo

•

GZZVN
AFSA

NK

JYAAJZ

TYJJKPE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Though1 is aclton in rehearsal. " - S. Freud
"Change your thougt1ts and you change your world.'' - No1man Vtncent Peale
(c)2004 by NEA. Inc . &lt;·11

WORD
GAM!

0 four

Rll!orronge

lew

form

!O

letten

the

of

~oomb l ed

four

word1 be·
word'

.

J-__,1--,.1.,.
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NREG

I1I
5

Overheard in offic e eleva-

;;:·

K R Y· J E

N

I~~~e- ~h~~g- ~~

.
_
L....L-l.........L..:.....:.....L.....J

8

"Ournew bosswillneverbe
successful. He has not learned
th at corneri ng people is not the
tor

I I" I 0
)IOU

Comp lm

gelling thern 1n

the chuckle ouo"d

bv ldl,n9 in the m ~~~ · n t; worm
develop from sTe p No J bt" laW.

P&lt;tNT NUMB£~ £0 l E11£ RI IN
lHf i E SQUAR ES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOV E lE TTERS
10 GET ANS W E ~

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Morbid· Envoy - Oas1s -Engage · BIG ONES .
"llhin k we should be proud of our little mistakes," one
nol so smart chap in formed his fnen d'That way we don't
have lo ad mit we make BI G ONE S."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

with them .

530 West1Union Street
Suite C
Athens, Ohio 4570 I
Phone: (740) 592-5918
Office Hours: 8am-5pm (Mon-Fri)

AFZ

WPXF ."

il"/

Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology

SIZ

GZZVN

INSIDE MV c.HOCO

Dlst bv UFS, Inc w-.oomlcl.ccm '1:11

KC

AstroGraph

Thursday, Feb. 12, 2004

ALL

dl mo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

four-card or longer

club to dumr:ny's king . Here. you end with
10 tricks. But even if East is void in clubs,
your contract is still safe.

BIG NATE

• Patio and Porch Decks
Reduced Winter Rates

no

monds, showing a stopper in that suit
And when Nor1h highlights his heart hold·
ing, South converts to three no-trump.
{Note that wi1h this layout South must
guess the trumps to make five clubs.)
You ha11e seven .top tricks : one spade
(trick one), two hearts, two diamond s and
two clubs. You can get t he extra tricks
from clubs, but must make sure East can·
not gain the le ad; otherwise. he will push
a spade straight through you . So, play a

' "lfeellike
I'm out
on a limb!"

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

After South o pens one club, North makes

major). Now Soulh rebid s lhree dia-

mo.

TH t S

pars.

club suppo rt (and

uuu....:"'~·":; "': ......
.:;;;;;;;6;;;.,._j;_....;;;;;;;_ _...~ A..____...,___....._ .....
1

showing at least game Interest ,

12 support points with five-card or lon ger

~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truc k

are

promising a stopper in 1ha1sull, and ask·
lng par1ner to show his side-auil slop-

a llmll raise to three clubs. promising t0-

~

Public Notice

Public Nollce

0

J

Tree Service

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local

NOTICE
B a d I o r d
Township's Annual
Financial Report Is
complete and Is avail·
able lor viewing at the
clerk's home upon
notice.
Barbara J Grueaer,
Clerk
(2) 111TC

'21

I

Hours

740·992·7953

leads the

tional hsnd). ll'a usually easlsr 10 win nine
trlcka lhan t 1. Bul what do you do if you

W4AT'S FER
SUPPER,
MAW ?

I

Company reserves
the right to re)ect any
or all bids submiHed.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold "as Ia·
where Is", with no
expressed or Implied
warranty given .
' For further Information, or for an
appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date contact Cyndle Gillilan,
Diane
Rector, or
Randy Hays at 992·
2136.
(2)11,12,13

West

minor (unless you ha11e a very distribu -

BARNEY

"Not me!
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport. OH
Phone: 843-5264."

no·trump.

spade eight: 1wo. 10, king. How would
you conllnue?
With a mlnor-ault lit, you should bethink·
lng about three no-lrump. nol live ol lhe

1

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

37 Suave
39 Slight
var1ation
41 Tralp~es
about
43 High heel
44 Honeydew
45 Laird' s
,
household
47 Cal Tech
grad
48 Den
49 Belief
50 Fem. saint
51 Burning
52 Slicker Info

lion?
Belore I answer, assumelhat you (Sou1h)

Fully Insured

1114/1

12 Aclor
- Malden
16 Hidden
18 Toledo's
lake
20 Brain wave
21 Roman
historian
22 Intelligent
24 Rear.
to Popeye
26 Type
of school
27 Bad habit
28 Geologic
sample
30 Party·
thrower's
plea
31 Team cheer

A minor-suit fit?
Think no·trump

JONES'

Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee . local references fu r·

5290 .

Pomeroy to Cheater.
Financial Services,
SheriH'a Sale of Real
which point Is 150
Inc. PlalntiH
Estate
The State ot Ohio, feet west ol the east
vs.
Rosalie
A.
Melg'a County
line of sec. No. 8;
Rayburn, at. al.
Beneficial Ohio, Inc. thence in e northeast·
Delendabts.
erly direction parallel
db a
Case No. 03CVD87
Beneficial Mortgage with the easterly line
In pursuance of an
Co.ot Ohio
of said section no. 8,
Order of Sale In the
one hundred fifty
l&gt;l~lntiH
above entitled action,
VB
(150) teet; thence In a
I will oHer lor sale at
westerly
Terry N. Waugh, et al.
direction
public auction, at the
Delendants
Courthouse
100 feet; thence In a
In
Case No. D3CV1 01
southwesterly dlrec·
Pomeroy, Ohio In the
In pursuance of an lion parallel with the
above named County,
Order of Sale In the east line of said sac·
on the 19th day of
above entitled action, lion, 150 feet to the
March, 2004 at 10:00
I will offer lor sale at north side of the
a.m ., the following
public auction, at the Pomeroy
Chester
described real estate,
Courthouse
In Pike Road; thence In
to wit:
Exhibit " A"
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the an easterly dlrecllon
above named County,
along said road 100
Situated in Scioto
Township,
Meigs
o the 26th day of feel to the place of
County, In the State of
March, 2004, at 10:00 beginning. This Is
a.m., the following part of the same
Ohio: 5.000 Acre
described real estate,
Parcel.
property that wao
to wit:
Being In Section
deeded by F. M. Bass
Situated In the and S.E. Bass lo
t8, Township 7 North,
State of Ohio, County
Range 14 West of the
Emmett and Mary
of
Meigs
and Windon, grantors, In
Ohio
Company
Township
of deed dated October
Purchase, and being
Salisbury and being 3, l917, and recorded
a parcel created out
further descrlbed as In volume 116, page
of the Wanda Syeth
494,
Records
follows:
of
and Robart Wellman
Being In section Deeds, Meigs County,
property (described
no. 8, town 2, range Ohio.
In Volume 338 , Page
13, and bounded and Also all of our rights
176 Meigs County
described as follows:
and interesJs In a
Deed Records, herlBeginning at a water line running
nafter teferred to as
point which Is 150 from
the
above
the Grantor's land)
feet northeast of the described premises
Bounded
and
Pomeroy
Chester along State Highway
deocrlbed as follows:
: Pike Road, said point No. 7, to the Meigs
Commencing at an
. being the northeast Water
Company
Iron pin by lhls sur· corner of a lot oold by water main running
vey at a fence corner,
former grantor&amp; to from Pomeroy to the
said fence corner
former grantees by former Forest Run
being
at
the
deed recorded In vol- Coal Mine.
Southwest corner of
a 50 acre parcel of the
ume 120, page 111 , Parcel Number: 14·
thence In a northeast- 00050 &amp; 14-00051
Grantor's land and
assumed to be local·
. erly direction parallel
Property
Address :
· with the east line of 33375 State Route 7
ad at the Southwest
corner olaald section
: section noc 8 ,nearby Pomeroy, OH 45769
90 teet; thence In a Said
Premises r18;
Appraised
. westerly
direction
at
Thence along the
t 00 feet; thence In a $45,000.00 and can·
South line of said 50
southwesterly dlrec· not be sold lor less
acre parcel South 86
lion parallel wllh tile than · two·thlrds of
degrees 19 minutes
uld east line of sac· that amount.
24 seconds east
. lion no. 8 ninety (90) TERMSOFSALE:
986.89 teet to an Iron
. laet; thence easterly
$5,000.00
down,
pin set by this survey
· along the north line remainder upon ten·
and asaumed to be
: of the lot above men· dar of deed.
on the South line of
· tioned, aa conveyeq , Ralph Trussell .
aaid section18;
Thence North 03
: by deed recorded In
Stierlll
of
Meigs
- - - - - volume 120, page County, Ohio
·degrees 40 minutes
'ttl,
to
former Frank &amp; Wooldridge
25 seconda East
: grantees, one hun· Co., L.P.A,
400.00 feet, palling
. dred (100) feet to the
AHorneys lor PlalniiH
an Iron pin eat by this
800
South
Pearl
: place of beginning.
survey at 200.00 feet.
Also, the following
Street
To an Iron pin set by
described real eatate • Columbus,
this survey at the
Ohl~
situated
In
the 43206
point of beginning of
·c ounty of Meigs, (614) 221-1662
Real
Estate
the
State of Ohio, and In (1) 21,28 (2) 4, 11 , 18
described herein ;
Thence continuing .
Sac. No. 8, township
North 03 degrees 40
no. 3, range no. 13, of
Public Nollce
. mlnulas 26 seconds
Sallabury Townahlp,
and bounded and - - - - - - -East 200.00 feet to an
described as follows:
ShariH's Sale of
Iron pin oat by this
Beginning at a Real Estate
survey;
point on the north
Thence North 89
State of Ohio,
The _
elde of the Pike Road · Meigs County
degrees ·26 minutes
American
leading
from
General
38 seconds East

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beeth St.
middleport, OH
(740) 992-3194
992-6635

·

4-WDs

M010RCYCLE'l

South

Oeal er: South
Vulnerable: East-West

(10'K10' 610'K20')

I

ve

L«&lt;

10 7 3

• QJ 9 2
t J 10 B
.. Q 4 3

CALL T&amp;D HYDRA ULI CS,
ask for Terry @ 740·985·4384

Phone f7&lt;10 )!193-66o7ll
Athens. Ohio

~
auto $ 1,800 .00. 97 Escort. :_...:__...:__ __ _
1983 29 Ft. Fleetwood
stock. WE TAKE TRADE S!
au to, $2.o00 .00 . 98 E sca r1. Myer Snow Plow 7.5. Poly 97 Chev y S10 4x4 5spd. Air,
Camper
Exc. Cond . $3500.
V6
$4495.00
95
Ford
5 speed , $ 1.800.00. Call tor Blade, flame, li ghts, ready to
COOK MOTORS
additional
info rm ation. work. Used 3 winters, in ve ry Ranger Supercab 4J~4 , V6 (304)773·6187
(740)446-0103
good con dition. Heavy duty Auto , Air $4995.00 1995
- - - - - - - - (74 0)742-2357
lo r 3/4 ton truck. $3, 500 new, Chevy Blazer 2Dr. 4x4 Auto,
1998 Do dge Stratus. 97.000
"I U\ II 1 "
will sell lor $1 .900, Jackso n, Air $4995 .00 1996 lsuzu "'l'li~-~~--..,
mites, cru ise. tiiVair. $2.000 - --G-M-C--Sa-la_r_i-S-L
E
.
93
740-978-8300.
0 80. Call (740)256-9031 or
Rode o
Auto, Ai r 4x4 r.~r 10
109,000 miles. greal shape,
(740)256 _1233 .
$5495.00 Riverview Motors
HOME
well maintained. $5.000. Call
Vo\NS&amp;
2 block s above McDonald's
IMPROVEMEI\1'S
2003 Monte Carlo LS. 3.4, 2 (7401388-8070.
Pomeroy OH (740)992·3490
door 30K Garage kept.

SandStone. e)(c. cond. ask- 96 Satu rn , needs work, 1997

•

a6 s

• Q 93 2

realize, you're in

~.oL--,;;I~IiiiHii~ili~iiKSiil"-• (;~:';:=:arr=:;::.:lf1~: I

S-1 0 Blazer 4x4
ing $17.000 1304)675·36 13 $ 1 ,000 080_1 (740)992-77 19 Load ed
87, 000
miles
Excellent con diti on $7500
81 Camara, T-Tops, runs fair,
98 Monte Car lo. 62.000 ca ll (576-3364
body lai r,
$2500 call
(304)675-7099
miles, loaded, remote start
Asking $6,800, call 740-245- 1999 Jeep G rand Cher.
Laredo. 4)(4, V-6. 84J)OQK,
92 Buick Regal power win- 9629
740 992 3490
OH (
)
,
dows and locks, AM!FM 1988 Mazda RX7 Turbo. exce ll ent cond ., must sell for
2·2259
1995 Grand-AM , 12 doo r, cass .. tilt steeri ng, cruise. Bla ck with gray leather in!. 5· pay-ollt (74
hunter green, 80,000 miles. Runs great . good condition speed . load ed
85,050
2000
Jee
Cherokee,
one owner, garade kept, $2,000 080. 740..245·5295 miles. Asking $3, 800, call (740)245·5 162 or (740)446·
740·245·9386.
$4.000, (740)992·39f1
or 740·339· 0426.

Aula Air $1895.00 1993
Chevy Corsica 4dr V6 Auto
Air $995 .00 1\989 Ford
Ranger
Sspd 1 $995.00
Riverview Molars 2 blocks
above McDonald's Pomeroy

B

lP

·-

Hawkline Brushogs, box blades, grader

blades utility trailers, goose net.· ks, and more.
And ...Ntn: Masse}' Ferguson Tractors .
Call for detail
As alwa)'S WI.' still ha,·e hyd·r aulit hose.'i. oil and
repair C)'linder.s.

We stop, think and

Dale &amp; Pauline
Amu;

•

750 East State Street

and long to see
your face

~
10

East

Opening lead: • 8

him on those street-;
or gold &amp; we spend
our days alone.
A• we look through
tear-blurred eyes

lnliv8rsln

Al!IUS

MONTY

Priced from $5,000 &amp; $13,000 \\'/optio ns availahl e.

K 10 7 6 2

West
. AJ985

you home.
Now you wal.k wllh

•55111
•

02 -lL -04

• 1 6 4
•

I can' t
believe Its been
a year since the
Good Lord called

canis

1-600-357-1 170

Bring thi s coupon
Buy $5.00

North
• 6 2
• AK3

In Memory

...on

Slart hT'II"'ediatetyt

How Available al T&amp;D Hydraulics
• Farm Pro Troctors
20 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive
Each has full I year " ·arra nt)' on parts and labor.
Also~

740-992-7599
Bonanza Get
~::::::::n~•l ~--5~F~R~E~E~-J

;J]Thanll~

ca• 1·868-590-9379

6:30

FREE ESTIMATES

Card of Thanks
STUFFING ENVELOPES

Pon'ieroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Ear ly birds start

BUILDERS IDC.

Trucking

RNa lnttmt,
STOP FEESi Member 888, Liconlld.
De .. y ~Coui'Ming.
Lower payment&amp;.

Split Proli!s!

l'lom otR·MiinQ ~
1.. lUI +UII»nl IN Ql1ly ~ n!JtHWJC ·
l.lf1l prt91ll'l for ~ the ONIStltlr'iJ
lf'lllm rJ tWgl, ~ lnl

~

BISSELL

R.B

41 BUih's org.
42 MU . bi'Mich
1 Fllnga
46 Shaggy
6 Duplicity
animal
11 Not
48 Jacket
future
wholeaale
12 Dogbouse 49 Gas-pump
13 Topsy-turvy
platform
52 Thlck .yellow
14 Rewrite•
15 Evening
peper
wear
53 Bee bites
16 - MaJor or 54 Tease
Minor
(2 wds.)
t7 Bronte
55 Parking governess 55 Traffic signal
18 House
DOWN
addition
19 Chinese
fabric
King with
23 Pub missile
six wives
25 Jean Stein 2 Give verbal
bestseller
expression
26 Pipe
to
3 Sweelened
material
29 Tempestlhe pot
uous
4 Caps
32 Day before 5 Not to be
33 Sugarloaf
trusted
locale
6 Sparklers
34 Nollong·
7 Funny
feeling
winded
35 Writer
B Counlry
hotel
- Rand
36 Neutral lone 9 Escorted
38 John,
10 Metro RRs
in Siberia
11 Disrespecl·
lui
4ll Squint

Annwer to Prevlou1 Puzzle

ACROSS

SOUP TO NUTZ
HE wenT tee ri!!IH•"''
\):)Wn eT Ml l~Rs ~\':&gt;..

�SCOREBOARD·.

The Daily Sentinel
Prep basketball
Prwp boyo IIIli bolkllboll pollllol

COLUMBUS (API - How a stale panel ol '
sports writers and broadcasters rates O h ~
high schOOl boys basketball teams in the

fifth weekly Associated Rress poll ot 2004 ,
by OH SAA d ivisions, with won·loSI record
and total points (fi rst-pl ace votes in paren-

theses)·

DIVISION I
1, Cin. LaSalle (26) 1&amp;0

325

2. K ca n. Hoover (7) 16·0
3, Cin. M.peller 15-2
4, Troy (i ) IS· I

306

5. Cots. Broo~ha,en 15·2
6, Can. McKinley 14-2
7, Lakewood St. Edward 13-3
8, Wadsworth 13· 1

9, Spring. S. 14-2
10, Westerville S. 15-2

248
219
168
162
11 9
102
69
18

Others receivin g 12 or more po1nts: 11,
Warren Harding 17 12 (lie) , Dublin SCIOto.
Hami lton 14. 14, Wooster 13.

DIVISION II
1, LaG range Keystone (21) 17 .Q 294
2 , Ak r_ S VSM ( 10) 1:3-3
285

3. Onawa-Giandorl 15-2
256
4, Newark Lick1ng Valley (2) 15·0 238
5, Cots . Bexley 14·2
165

S. Circleville

Logan Elm 15-1

123
121
B. Day Chamnad!NIIieone (1) 11-6 72
9. Akr Bucht el 12-2
42
10, Port Cli nton 14-3
37

7. Dover 16-2

Other s receiving 12 or more points 11 ,
Shelby 24 . 12, Cambndge 18 . 13 (lie), Akr
Cent .-Hower. McConnels vi lle Morgan .
Wa useon . Fostona 16 17 (tie). L1ma
Shawnee. Canal Fulton NW 15 . 19 , _lisbon
Be aver 12,

DIVISION Ill
1, Cin. N.College H ill(2 1) 15-0
2. Vers511les (7 ) 14-0
3. Johnstown -Monroe j1 ) 16-0
4 , Akr. Manchester (1) 13- 1
5, Loudonville 14-2
6, Cuyahoga Fall s CVC A 14-1
7, St. Thomas Aq uinas (1) 15-2
8 , Day. Oakwood 14-2
9, Findlay L1beny-Benton 14 -2
10, Middletown Fe nwick 14-2

309
2B7
252
205
138
115
95
73
67
32

Others rec:eiving 12 or more poi nts: 11 ,
Bellaire 29 12. Archbold 23. 13 (tie ).
Collin s Weste rn Reserve. Youngs. Moo ney
21 . 15 , Chesapeake 20. 16 . ·Ironton 16 . 17,
Piketon 14. 18. Beverly Ft. Frye 13.

DIVISION IV
1. Arlington (2B) 16-0

323

2. New Wash l3u:Joe;o c.rt (1)14-2 260
3, Sebnng McK1ntey ( 1) 14-1
248
4, Ft. Loramie (3) 15-1

5, Mansfield St. Peter's 13-3
6, Berlin Hiland 11 -3
7, Lakeside Danbu ry 13-2
8, S. Charleston SE 14-3
9, Co ls. Tree ol Life 14-2
10, Canton Heritage 01ristian 13--1
New Matamoras Frontier 12-2

247
159
111
105
104
65
21
21

Others receiving 12 or more points : 12,
Russia t8 . 13, Petti sville 16. 14 (tie ),
Convoy Crestview. Mogado re. Yellow
Springs, Van Buren 12.
Ohio High School Boys Basketball
Tue aday's Results
Akr. Buchtel110. Akr. Kenmo re 64
Akr. Central-Hewer 63, Akr . Firestone 54
Akr. Ellet 57. Akr. E. 40
Akr. N. 76, Akr. Gar1ield 72 , OT
Albany Alexander 60, Glouster Trimble 59
Alliance 65, Warren Howland 55
Alliance Marlington 56, Navarre Fairless 40
Amanda-C iearc reek 68. C ots . Hami lton

Twp. 49
Andover Pymatuning Valtey 40. Orwell
Grand Valley 35
Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 72 .
Cornerstone 60
Atwater Waterloo 52, Mantua Crestwood

44
Barnesville 48, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 43
Beachwood 93, Cuyahoga Hts. 50
Beavercreek 72 ~ Day. Col. White 60

Bedford 97, Cle. JFK 68
Bellevue 51 , r.ff ln COlumbian 49
Belpre 85, Pomeroy Meigs 7~8
Berea 44 , Parma Va lley Forge 39
Berlin Center We.!l1ern R eserve 56,
McDonald 50
Berlin H iland 74 , Strasburg-Franklin 50
Beverly Ft. Frye 67 , Vincenl Wa rren 49
1Bloom-Carroll 69, AshvUie Teays Vall ey 4 5
Bowli ng Green 55, Holland Spring. 42
8 recksv1ll e 46, Medma 44
1
1Brooklyn 67. Gates Mills Gilmour 58
BrunswiCk 68, N. Royalton 55
Syesv1Ue
Mea dowbrook
70.
Old
\Aiashington Bu ckeye Trail 48
!dwell 65. Sara hsville Shenandoah 52
mpbell emo ro~al 60, Youngs . Chaney 53.
n GlenOak 73. Youngs. Boardman 5 7
n. Heritage Chn stian 100. Yo ungs
Ctfnstian 55
Car1 . McKinley 76. MaSSillOn Perry 46
Can'al Winchtlster 52. Circleville 40
Castalia Margarena 63. Oak Harbor 49
Cen\ervtlle 53. Kettering Alter 40
Chardon NDCL 56, Parma Holy Name 46
Chesapeake 65 . Proctorville Fairland 46
Cin Anderson 7 1, Mason 6 1·
Cin. Count ry Day 56 . Cin. Ch ristian 44
C1n. Eld er 78, Cm Woodward 47
Cin. Hillcrest 79. Cin. Jacobs 75
Ci n. La Salle 72. Ctn. Purce ll Manan 46
Cm. Landma r k Trinity 80 , Ham1lton
Chnstian 43
Cin Moeller 63. Day. Chammaae -Jutienne
1

~

PageB6

M.

51

33

Summit Slllloo Licking fill. eo, Grofld'Siow

Kings Mills K ings 82, Goshen 55· •
Kirtland 66, Fairport Harbor Harding 48
Lakewood 48, Maple Hts. 46
Latham Western 71 , Manchester 58

55
Thomvllle Sheridan 82, Crookovllle 54
Tiffin Calvert 85. McG ~ttey Upper Scioto
Valley 68

Lebanon 94, Day. Edgewood 65

Tol. Ottawa Hills 66, Tot Emmanuel Baptist

Lev.tis Center Olentangy 62, MarysiJille 59.

OT
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 77, Milford 57
Liberty Un1on 43, Lancaster Fisher Cath.

40
Lima Bath 60. Pe m b ~rville Eastwood 59,

20T
lima Temple Christian 60. Va nlue 56
Little Miami 39, Cin. Norwood 38
Lockland 66. Clark Montessori.37
Lora1n Southv1ew 78, Lorain Admiral King

44
Lovela nd 60. Cin. Walnut Hills 54
Mad1so n Ch (istian 55, Granville Christian

41
54,
Magno l1 a
San ely
Valley
Newcomerstown 41
Maria Stein Marion Local 62 , Newton 32
Mariana 79~ Logan 73
Massillon Wash1ngton 75, Hudson 73, 30T
McConnelsville Morga n 56 . DreSden TriValley 42
Mechanicsburg 64 , W. Jefferson 54
Mentor 85, Garfield Hts. 74
Mentor Chr 56 . K1ngsway Chr. 35
Miamisburg 59, O~&lt;k&gt; r d Talawanda 47
Mi ddlebu rg Hts. Mi~ p ark 62, Elyria 5 1
Millersbu rg W. Holmes 47. Wooster Triway

••·
or
Millersport

92. Sugar Grove Berne Union
Cm Pn nceton 58. W. Chester Lakota W. 54
Gin. Seven Hills 50, Cin . SCPA 38
82
Cin Summit 48, C1n Hill s Chrisl1an 47, OT Min etal Ridge 72. Lowellville 69
: Min ster 62. Houston 34
Gin. Turpin 60. Wilmington 55
Mog adore 6&amp;. Peninsula Woodridge 54
C1n Winton Woods 67, Ci n. Glen·Este 59
Mt. Ora b Western Brown 62 , New
G1n. Withrow 68. G1n . Aiken 60
Circleville Logan Elm 59, Fair11eld Union 56 Richmond 53
Mt. Vernon 73. Olentangy Li berty 56
Cle Glenville 85 . Cle Benedicflne 75
N. C an, Hoover 69 , Massillon Jackson 34
Cle Her1ta ge 56 , Elyr1a FBCS 24
N. Lewisburg Tri ad 7 1, DeGraff Rive rside
Cle MLK 65, Cle. Horizon Sc1ence 54
55
Cle O range 60. Chagrin Falls Kenston 56
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 67, Che shire Nelsonv ille-York 66. Heml ock Miller 46
New Boston Glenwood 8 3. Ironton St.
River Va lley 65
Joseph 52
Cols. Beechcroft 76, Cots . Wh etstpne 45
New Concord John Glenn 56. Zanesville
Cols. Brookhaven 7 1. Cots. E. 54
W. Musk1ngum 54
Cols. Independence 92, Cols . Briggs 50
New Le banon Di ~&lt; i e 45. Un ion City
Cols. Lmden 68 . Cols. Centenmal 56
Cols. Marion-Fra nklin 85. Cols. Eastmoor Mississinawa Valley 34
New London 67, Plyrn,pu1h 60
68
New Matamoras Frontier 84 , Woodsfield
Cols. Milflin 65 Cots . Northland 62
Monroe Cent. 82
Col s. Rea dy 70, Worth 1ngton Kilbourne 56
Col s. Tree of life as. Maranatha Christian New Miam161 , Miami Valley 55
New Pa ns National Trail 69 , Middletown
54
.
Cots.
73, Cots. AfricenHic 54
Madison 49
Newark Cath. 56, Harvest Prep 40
Cols. Walnut R1dg e 87, Co/s . S. 85, OT
Newark licking Valley 71 . Cols. Bexley 55
Columbus Grove 47 , Pandora -Gilboa 33
Newton Fa lls 78. Le avittsburg LaBrae 58
Cortland Lakeview 60, Hubba rd 5 1
Cuyahoga Valley Christia n 56 . Kidron Niles McKinley 72, Struthers 56
No rthside Chrislian 49, Evangel Christian
Central Ch ristian 48
41
Day. Jeffe rson 78, Xen1a Christia n 72, OT
Norwalk St. Paul 44, Ashland Crestview 36
Day. Oakwood 70. Ca rlisle 48
Delaware Christian 63, liberty Christian 39 Oak Hills 72 , Cin. Colerain 60
Doylestown Chippewa 83, Medina Buckeye Oberlin Firelands 48. Open Door 42
Olmsted Falls 61 , Avon Lake 38
44
Oreg on Stritch 75. Tol . Maumee Valley 58
Dublin Cottman 77, Gahanna 68
Painesville Riverside 50, Conneaut 4 1 1
Eastla ke N. 62 , Painesville Harvey 57
Parm a Padua 58 , Mentor Lake Cath. 49
El yr1a Cath 47. Garf1elcl Ht s. Trmity 34
Parma Sr. 62. N. Ridgeville 59
Euclid 58. E. Cle. Shaw 54
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 67, Philo 66,
Fa1rborn 82. W. C arrollton 79
20T
Fostoria 76. Shelby 65
Perry 85, Ashlabula Edgewood 55
Ft. Jenning s 55, Ottoville 3~ .
Garrett sville Garf1eld 45. Street sboro 44
Pickering ton Cent. 40, Newark 29
Piqua 46. Milton-Union 37
Geneva 54 . Chardon 32
Poland 56. Can field 48
Granv1lle 57, New Albany 52
Greenfield McClai n 60. Chillicothe Unioto Portsmouth Sciotoville 65. Beaver Eastern

w.

47

.

Tol . SCOtt 60. Lima Sr. :;a
Tontogany Otsego 60, Ka n~s Lakota 52
Troy Christian 58 , Rid . Chrislian 46
Tu scarawas Cent . Cath . 54 . Zoarville
Tusc;arawas Va lley 45
Twinsburg Chamberlin 55 , Aurora 43
U rbana 62, Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan

61
Van Buren 60, Kalid a 48
w. Lafayette R1dgewood 66, Bowerston
C ononon Valley 53
W. Liberty -Salem 52, Ceda rvi lle 37
Warren Harding 64 , Young s. Wilson 49
Warsttw R iver View 53, G nadenhutten
Indi an Valley 37
Wauseon 73. Northwood 34
Wayn estteld-Goshen
50,
Ridgeway
Ridgemont 37
Well ington 58, Sulli van Btack R1ver 42
Wester:ville N. 40. Lancaster 38
Wh iteha ll -Yearling 79 , Gahanna Cols.
Academy 60
W ill ard 61 , Norwalk 59
Willoughby S. 58, Mayfi eld 41
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 75,
Portsmoulh Notre Da me 34
W inqh am 74. Mogadore Field 60
Yellow Springs 99, Middletown Christian 59
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 55, Uniontown
Lake 43
Youngs. Liberty 50, Girard 49
Youngs. Mooney 43, Youngs . Ursuline 40
Zanesville Maysville 67. New Lexington 58
Zanesville Rosecrans 62, Akr. Hoban 47

Ohio High School Glrlo Basketball
Tuesday's Results
Akr. Hoban 51 , Can. Cent. Cath. 30
Arcadia 50 , Ada 29
Archbold 56. Defiance 44
Barberton Norton 40, Medina H ighland 36
Bascom Hopewell -Loudon 52, Gibsonburg

44
Bellevue 64 , Sandusky Perkins 3 1
Bryan 64 . Hilltop 36
Bu rton Berkshire 44, Lordstown 18
Centerburg 73, Millersport 50
Chillicothe 54, Washi ngton C.H. Miami
Trace 46
·
Chillicothe Huntington Ross 43, Richmond
Dele SE 40
Chillicothe Unioto 59, Frankfort Adena 42
~ hillicoth e Zane Trace 60. Piketon 39
Cin . Indian Hill 48. Finneytown 32
Cin . Madeira 43, Cin. Wyoming 28
Cin . Mariemont 53. N. Bend Taylor 36
Cin . McAuley 48, Ci n. St. Ursula 41
Cin . Mercy 59. Cin. Ursuline 5 ~
Cin . Mt. Notre Dame 61 , Cin. Seton 34
Cin . Trailblazers 56, Cin. Temple 32
Gin . Withrow 5 1, Cin . Mt Healthy 38
Cle . Rhodes 64, Sandu sky 6 1, OT
Cle. VASJ 73, Lyndhurst Brush 55
Col s. Eastmoor 54, Worthington Kilbourne

44
Col s. Ready 77 , Lancaster Fisher Cath. 24
Cols. School for Girls 65 , Gahanna Cols.
Academy 32
Cols. Walnut Ridge 68, Cots. Franklin His.

41
Continen lal 72, Haviland Wayne Trace 57
Convoy Crestview 38 , Sherwood Fairview

17

26

58

Day. Belmont 38 . Lewistown Tri-County N.

Hamilton 78, Syca more 50
Ham1lton Badin 36, St . Bernard Roger
Bacon 34
Han overt on United 59. E. Pale stine 52
Harrison 60. Am elia 50
Heb1 on Lakewo od 56. Heath 51
Hickory (Pa.) 54, Warren JFK 5 1
Hilliard Darby 58, Grove City Cent .
Cros sing 49
Hoi Qate 49, Miller City 29
Hunli':J9 Valley University 62, Gates Mills
Hawken 48
Huron 58. Vermilion 5 1
Independence 96, Richmond Hts. 76
Ironton 52, Wheelersburg 31
Ironton Rock Hill 67, S. Point 55
Jackson 5?. Wellston 51
Johnstown Northridge 64, Utica 49
Johnstown-Monroe 79, Westervi lle C ent.

Ra cine Southern 58. Wahama (W.Va .) 31
Ravenna SE 62, Rootstown 49
.
Rocky River 58, Wickliffe 39
Rocky River Lutheran W. 67, Columbia 44
S. Charleston SE 55, London Madison
Plains 35
S. Webster 61, Franklin Furnace Green 50
SCioto McDermott NW 70. Waverly 46
Sebring McKin ley 73, Leetonia 22
Shadyside 93, Bridgeport 52
Sidney Lehman 62, Jackson Center 59
Sparta Highland 54, Cots. Wellington ·49,

36

or

Sprin g. Greenan • 49, N~ Carlisle
Tecumseh 44
Spring. N. 87 , Sidney 52
Spring. NE 59, Spring. Kenton Ridge 46
Strongsville 76, Parma Normandy 57
Sugarcreek Garaway 6 1, Malvern 42

Day. Chaminade-Julienne 51 , Cols. Be~&lt;ley

38
Day. Meadowdale 60, Day. Col. White 51
Delaware Buckeye' Valley 45, Cols.
Whetstone 37
Delaware Chri stian 56, Evangel Christian

28
Dublin Scioto 46, Ma rysville 30
E . Can . 56, Massillon Tuslaw 44
Eastlake N. 56, Madison 32
Elida 68, Lafayette Allen E. 38
Fairfield Ch ristian 55, Torah Academy 28
Fairlawn 59, St. Paris Graham 42
Fostori a St. We ndelin 73, Bettsville 24
Ft. Recovery 69. Celina 47
Gahanna 57; Dublin Coffman 46
Granville Christian 41 , Madison Christian

24

Big Ten to experiment
with instant replay
in2004,B1

Wednesday, February 11, 2004
Hamler Palrk:!&lt; Henry 53, Lolpoic 26
Hilliard Darby 47, Grove C ity Ctnt
Crossing 36
Hudeon 61 , Can . GlenOak 1.3, OT
Johnstown Northridge !59, Westerville
Cent. 44
Kettering Alter 50, St. Bernard Roger
Bacon 40
Lodi Cloverleaf 52 , CaO. Timken 20
London 63, Spring. Shawnee 44
Mansfield Christian 68, Marion Cath. 36
Massil lon Chr istian 31 , Mogadore Christian

28
Maumee 45, RoSsford 40
Metamora Evergreen 53, Uberty Center 4~
Montpelier 60, Pioneer N. Cent. 47
MI. Ve rnon 45, Cots. DeSales 29
N. Robi nson Col. Crawford 48. Sycamore
Mohawk 19
New Bremen 53. Spencerville 51
Olentangy Liberty 36, Sunbury Big Walnut

35
Paulding 6 3, Bluffton 49 .
Perry 89, Cle. Orang e 48
Pickerington Cenl. 79, Newark 44
Pickerington N. 7B, Lewis Center
Olentangy 18
Port Clinton 65, Gen oa 49
Preble Shawnee 4 7, Milton Union 42
Ravenna 61 , Mogadore Field 56
Reading 49, Deer Park 34
Richfield Revere 55, Cuyahoga Valley
Christian 41
Sandusky St. Mary's 43, Lakeside Danbury

35
Shadyside 81 , Barn esv ille 51
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 63, Shaker
Hts. Lau rel 6 1, OT
Sullivan Black River 36. Rittman 31
Sylvania Southview 36, Holland Spring . 24
Thompson Ledgemonll'37, Will oughby Hills
Cornerstone 31
·,
Tol . Libbey 41 , Tol. Rogers 39
Troy Christian 35, Miami Valley 18
Upper Arlington 52. Grove City 40
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 58, Arcanum

44
Wapakoneta 47, Coldwater 36
Westervill e N. 48, Lancaster 33
Williamsport Westfall 50, Bainbridge Paint
Valley 46
Willoughby Andrews 55, Lakewood Sl.
Augustine 45
Willoughby S. 64, Macedonia -Nordonia 60
Worthington Christian 65 , Fredericktown

24

W.Va. prep basketball scores
Tuesday's Results

Girls
Berkeley Springs 51 , Moorefield 46
Braxton County '65, Webster County 47
Bridgeport 55, Uberty Harrison 16
Calvary Christian 56, Wood County
Christian 53
Cameron 78, West Greene, Pa. 62
Capltal87, Riverside 12
East Fairmont 69, North Marion 47
Elk Valley Christian 55, Beth Haven 32
Elkins 59, Rober! C. Byrd 31
Emmanuel Christian 53, Rainelle Ch ristian
42
.
Gilmer County 56, Cal houn County 40
Grace Christian 38, Cross Lanes Christian
20
Grace Christian, Md. 30, Faith Christian 28
Greenbrier East 72. Pocahontas County 52
Guyan Valley 83, Harts 80
Hedgesv ille 68, Jefferson 40
Hurricane 57, Cabell Midland 50
Lewis County 37 , Philip Barbour 33
Lincoln 55. Ritchie County 53
Logan 49 , Sissonville 28
Mercer Christian 60. Montcalm 32
Morgantown 64, Fairmont Senior 48
Mount de Chanta l 70 , Bishop Donahue 36
Nitro 85, Huntington 68
Paden City 47, Clay-Banelle 44
Parke rsburg Calholic 67, St. Marys 50
Parkersburg South 72, Tol sia 44
PikeView 55. James Monroe 39
Point Pleasant 68, Ravenswood 32
Preston 43, Buckhannon-Upsh ur 40
Princeton 65, Nicholas County 39
Ripley 42, Parkersburg 39
Roane County 57, Clay County 49
Shady Spring 59, Greenbrier West 25
Sherman 55, Mount Hope 44
South Charleston 71 , George Washington
56

South Harrison 59 , Trinity 37

Spring Volley eo. Sl. Albans 30
Summers County 85. Blutlleld 34
Tug Valley 73, Scott 35
lYoarts Valley 60. Harman 35
Wheeling Central 66, Linsly 38
Williamstown 68. Doddridge County 36

tionpushes
highway funding, A6

Boys
Allegany, Md. 79 , Hampshi re 46
Bellaire, Ohi o 67, Tyler Consolidated 64,

•

or
Cameron 04, Hundred 60
Chapmanville
Matewan 43
Clarke County. Va . 58. JeffersOn 57
Clay County 57 , Webster County 42
Clay-Battelle 54 . Paden City 51
East Hardy 59, Union 54
Elkins 95, Nicholas County 43
Frankfort 74, Berkeley Sp nng s 67
Gilb ert 100. Big Creek 53
Gilmer County 60. Roane County 42
Grace Christian 76 , Ohio Valley Chri stian

n.

68
Ha~ . Md. 70, Paw Paw 50
Harts 70, Guyan Valley 51 "'
John Marshall 65. Brooke 60
Liberty Raleigh 75, Sherman 61
Magnolia 77. Williamstown 52
Martinsburg 60 , Hedgesville,59
Meadow Bridge 56, Fayetteville 51
Mercer Christian 73, James Monroe 65
NQtre Dame 65 . Valley Wetzel 58
Oak Glen 71 , Madonna 60
Oak Hill 9 1, P1keView B2
Pendleton County 70 . Harman 52
Poc:a 81 , Wayne 42
Ric hwood 76. Greenbrier West 57
So uth Gallia , Ohio 67 , Teays Valley
Christian 57
Southern . Md. 51 , Petersburg 28
St. Joseph 73, Cross Lanes Chr istian 59
Summers County 58. Shady Spring 52
Toronto, Ohio 60, Weir 55
TL:'::ker County 71 , Pocahontas County 63
Tug Valley 67. Scot1 57
Valley Fayette 57, Midland Trail 50
Van 76, Hamlin 75, 20T
Westside 74, Independence 42
Williamson 58, Charleston,Catholic 41
Win fieiQ 72, Herbert Hoover 55
Wood County Chris tian 62 . Calvary Baptist

Republicans rally for the days ahead at Lincoln Day dinner

SPORTS
• Herd tops Eastern
Michigan. See Page B1

BY

ROCKSPRINGS - With
the Republican primary just
a few short weeks away, the
party faithful gathered
Wednesday at Meigs High
SchQOI to do a little campaigning and celebrate
President Abraham Lincoln's
birthday.
"What you do in this election in March and what you
do in the election in
November makes all the difference," said Ohio Attorney
General Betty Montgomery
who gave the keynote

)

49
Wyoming East 94 , Iaeger 63

Pro basketball
National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W l Pel GB
30 20 .600
New Jersey
25 28 .472 6 1/2
New Yo rk
23 30 .434 8 112
Boston
21 31 .404 10
Philadelphia
21 32 .396 10 112
Miami
16 33 327 13 112
Washington
13 40 245 18 112
Orlando
Central Division
W L Pet
Indiana
39 14 .736
33 .20 .623
Detroit
Milwaukee
27 24 529
27 24 .529
New Orleans
To ronto
24 25 .490
Cleveland
20 32 .385
18 35 .340
Atlanta

Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas Judge Fred
Crow Ill . who faces four
other Republicans in the
primary for the 4th District
Court of Appeals . spoke
about his lengthy experience on the bench and his
deep roots in Meigs County
at the annual Lincoln Day
Repub1ican
Dinner
Wednesday at Meigs High
School.
Oh io Attorney
General Betty Montgomery,
who is seen here talking to
state representative Jimmy
Stewart. gave· the keynote
address. (J. Miles Layton)

Please see Dinner, AS

PMAto
host
Easter
egg hunt

GB
6
11
11
13
18 112
21

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

OBITUARIES

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

tor; reported on the new program for middle school students geared to facilitate students toward , si~ nifi can t
gains in student achtevement
through implementation of
"benchmarks."
The faculty first identified
"measurable goals for signiticantly improving student
achievement" and then challenged the students wilh projects and other activities
including technology to
extend and enrich learning in
the classroom, O'Brien said.

POM EROY
The
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association will host a n
Easter egg hunt for community children on April 6.
The hunt is tenta(i vely
scheduled to be held at the
Meigs football field in
Pomeroy at 10 a.m. with the
children to be divided into
three age groups - three and
under, four through six. and
seven and up .
·
At Tuesday's meeting. the
Merchants approved the purchase of a bunny rabbit costume at a cost of $119, 2500
plastic eggs, and $100 worth
of small toys and trinkets to
put in the · eggs. Michelle
Noble. chairman or the event.
proposed golden and silver
eggs with larger prizes.
Also discussed briefly by
Annie Chapman was (he
planned Heritage Day program to be held on May 8' in
downtown Pomeroy. The ailday affair will feature a variety of displays. crafters,
tl o~er ,and vegetable vendors. local entertainment like
the commun ity band, bell
choirs, and choral groups,
and an ethnic food garden in
the minipark.
The day will include a
prom dress promenade and a
dance featuring the bicentennial dancers.
It was reported that ano(her
300 of the souvenir tree ornaments featuring a picture of
the new Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge will be in later this
month. The group voted to
order additional ornaments
showing the old PomeroyM;Ison Bridge for residents
wanting to purchas~ the pair.
The new bridge will be completed in 2006.
Purchase of the large
brick for the walkway at
the
new
Mulberry
Comm unit y Ce nt er at
$250 was confirmed .
Nancy Thoene reponed
that work on the Center i's
progressing. The asbe stos

Please see Reports. AS

Ple1se 'see Elster, AS

. Page AS
• Clarence Bradford

Pacific Dlvleion
WLPctGB
Sa~ramen lo

address.
Montgomery stressed how
important Ohio will be in the
upcoming presidential election. No Republican has ever
lost Ohio and won the presidency. Montgomery, a
potential candidate for governor in 2006, rallied the
party. faithful and stressed
how tmportant the next few
months are to future of the
state and country.
Local politicians and
office holders competing
against each other in the
March primary took thi s rare

'•*"";'

Chicago
14 38 .269 24 1/2
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
W L PciGB
Minnesota
36 15 .706
San Antonio
35 18 .660 2
Dalla s
33 19 .635 3 112
Houston
29 22 .569 7
Memphis
29 22 .569 7
Denver
30 23 .566 7
Utah
25 26 .490 11

WEATHER

38 13 .735
3 1 18 .633 5

L.A. Lakers
Portland
Seattle
L.A. Clippers
Golden Stal e
Phoenix

J. MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON~MYOAILYSENTINEL . COM

24 25 .490 12

24
22
21
18

26.480
28 .440
28 .429
35 .340

12 112
14 112
15
20

:The Home National ~ank Is Proud to_ .~upport the
,

Yo11th of Our Local Communtttes.

·

One way we do this is by.sponsoring Home Natiot~ral Bank ,Nigh:r a( South~rn .
H(~h School, Meigs High S~ht?ol and Eastern High School. A ·donation .was
made to the respective
. . school'S athletic departtitt;nts.
.

'

'

-

t

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

.

.

'

MEIGS MARAUDERS

t·' t,

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EASTERN EAGLES

I
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'

First Ice Bowl raises $8oo for foo bank

LO'I'IERIES

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOMYOAII.YSENTINEL.COM

'

(

'

:~;_

,,;

'

High water played into Saturday's disc golf Ice Bowl at Forked Run State Park, as Jim Hicks from Proctorville finds footing to
drive his disc . (Ciell LaBonte)
·

Detalll on Pace A&amp;

Ohio

tournament was part of a
nationwide
di sc
golf
fundraising event, and was
held at Forked Run State
Park.
Play was delayed for a half
,hour while a contingent from
Huntington detoured around
high water.
"You couldn't have asked
for better weather, as the 17
players began their day with
30-degree
temperature s,
light snow and steady five to

10 mile per-hour winds,"
· said Clell LaBonte, one of
the local Ice Bowl organizers. "This is the Ice Bowl,
after all ."
This was the Meigs
County
Disc
Golf
Association ' s first Ice
Bowl1 designed to encourage oisc golf play in the
depths of winter.
Sloan
of
Marilyn
Second Harvest said the
food bank will purchase

several truckloads of food
for the needy in the area,
using funds generated by
the fee (\3owl.
Local 1 youth
Ethan
Nottingfuarn teamed up
with a Huntington pro ,
Jim Roberts, to take third
place in the doubles competition w\ith Mark Collins
and Tony IBowles, both of
Huntington, taking sec-

Dally 3: 1-Q-1
Dally 4: 9-5-1·5

REEDSVILLE - Disc
golf enthusiasts from as far
away as Huntington, W.Va.
and Dayton braved the ·elements Saturday to raise over
$800 and pounds of food for
the
Second
Harvest
Foodbank of Southeastern
Ohio.
The Meigs County Ice
Bowl 2004 charity disc golf

INDEX

R!~~~~~'1?, ~~'j'~~~~~~,~~~ ~c~~.'f~lr~~;~

Pick 3 day: 9-6-4
Pick 4 day: 9-2-9-2
Pick 3 night: 3-0-0
Pick 4 night: s-o-1 -9
Buckeye 5: 3-8-14-28-31
Suparl.olto: 1-16-20-36-41 '42 (7)
Kicker: 5-7-2-6-5-8

WestVuginia

HOEFUCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SECI10NS -

12 PAOIIS

Calendars

A2

Passifieds

83~

'

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A2

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
A3
As

Sports

81

Weather

A6

Places ToGo

© aoo4 Ohio VaUey Publlllhlng co.

POMEROY - Reports
on progress in the new
teaching programs ·at the
Meigs Middle and Primary
Schools were presented to
the Meigs Local Board of
Education members at
Tuesday night's meeting.
Kristen Acree, interim
principal, and Lea Ann King,
Reading Academy coordinator at ·the Primary School,
reported that the ~cademy
began school in August with
98 K-2 students performing
below grade lever and so far

improve enough to leave the
program after the second
nine weeks ~rading period.
Acree satd the students
leave the program when the
classroom teacher and King
feel the student can function
more independently in the
regular classroom. She noted
that when those students left
the program, they were
replaced with 33 others who
needed help. She said that so
far this year 131 students
have received help in
achieving reading skills.
The teachers exi?lained that
the students work m the regu-

cial Reading Academy classroom. Small group instruction, even one-on-one assistance, is given to teach reading skills. There is emphasis
on vocabulary words, handson activities to reinforce
skills, work on computers,
and educational games.
A certificate of improvement is awarded by the
Reading Academy (O those
students who are able to
resume regular classroom
work.
Mary O' Brien, Meigs
Middle School princ ipal ,
and Rebecca Zurcher, Co-

Please

sr
]

Bank, AS

oocl
Drive
at Holzer Senior Care Center
380 Colonial Drive, Bidwell
(behin.d Holzer Medical Center on Jackson Pike in Gallipolis)

Monday, February 16
10

AM~

3 PM

Holzer $enlor Care Center

a

.-To schedule time; please coli Amber or Emily at
740) 446·5001

- - - - - - --

--·-

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
•

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