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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Tuesday, January 7, 2003
ACROSS

Abusive husband looks inside
after his family leaves him
DEAR ABBY: This is in
response to "Texas Tina,"
whose husband drives like a
maniac with her in the car
when he's angry. As I read her
letter. I saw myself a few
years ago.
• I agree that "Stan" must
make his own anger-management appointment. I would
like to go further and tell Tina
that until her husband is willing to examine his own
-behavior and make changes,
nothing will change.
I went on Zoloft for a while,
but chose not to'take drugs to
fix a problem that was behav- ioral. not chemical. I went to
counselinl!, said I was sorry,
and pronused to change.
However, not until my wife
left me, not until she took my
kids away, not until I was
given a citation for telephone
harassment and had to show
up in court, did I change. I
was lucky. As . a first-time
domestic violence offender, I
was allowed to go through a
program that gave me a lot of
.
_
ms!ght.
I m sure that wtth a httle
searching, a similar program
could be found in Tina's area.
1 WOULD STRESS THAT
HER HUSBAND MUST BE
THE ONE TO DO THIS. If
he refuses - if he "doesn't
get around to it" - t~en Ti~a
needs to make a ch01ce. Thts

source
4 Tentacle
7 Go for a
field goal
11 Olsen of
vaudeville
. 12 Crumbly
cheese
14
Slime
it, or ;u:e attempting to manipDEAR WANTS: It is very
15
Literary
ulate their intimates back into important to acknowledge the
compilation
the relationship - or to avoid loss . A card and flowers 16 Rip apart
incarceration. ·
would be appropriate. So 17 Not home
I commend you for not would a simple card or a note 18 Descend a
blamin~ your behavior on of sympathy and support
·ciiH
somethmg other than your- "during this sad time." Your 20 Wisdom
teeth
self. Living ."in fear_that you message need not be long and
22
leHer
may one day return to the flowery, just a communication 23 Curly
Novelist
place you once were," howev- to let her know that she and
- Levin
er, suggests that you should her family are · in your 24 Snitch
remain in a maintenance thoughts and prayers.
27 Clutches
counseling program that can
Dear Abby is written by 30 Glance at
keep you on your positive Abigail Van Buren. also 31 In-flight
feature
track. If not, you could very known as Jeanne Phillips. and 32out
well return to your abusive was founded by her mother.
(withdraw)
behavior.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear 34 Actress
Victims must realize that Abby at www.DearAbby.com
-Hagen
35
Young
the obsessive need that most or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
horse
batterers have to control their Angeles, CA 90069. .
36 Terror
pl!rtners usually escalates, is
37 Brief
seldom satisfied, and can be
romance
fatal to entire families. The
39 Pier
Domestic Violence Hoiline
((800) 799-7233) can help
them establish a safety plan
and support system that could
very well save their lives, particularly when they are exit- ing such a relationship.
DEAR
ABBY:
What
should you do when a friend
or co- worker has a miscarriage? Someone suggested we
No matter what
send flowers and a card to our
direction you turn
co-worker. I am afraid that
flowers would be inappropri- you can always
ate. Is just a card enough to
It In the
send? - WANTS TO DO
THE RIGHT THING IN
OHIO

De at
Abby
ADVICE
is a warning sign. Things may
get worse, and Tina may wind
up seriously injured.
Abby, I now acknowledge
who and what I orice was. To
deny it would be to repeat it. I
live every day of my life in
fear that I will return to the
place where I once was. It is
that fear that helps me to keep
a check on myself. I was
given many useful tools to
help me on my path, but the
best thing I received out of all
of this was enlightenment. KEVIN IN PORTLAND,
ORE.
DEAR KEVIN: You are a
lucky man. You seem to pos--sess the prerequisites necessary to change abusive behavior: remorse, willingness to
assume responsibility, motiva~ion to change and insight.
These traits, however, are
rarely found in abusive men.
Most go into treatment not
because they want to, but
because they are forced into

I

1 Energy

Prep·basketball: Eastem boys vidorious, B1

40 Election

winners
41 Long time
42 Most
congenial
45 Count&amp;•
nance
49 Elnploys
50 Harrow
rival
52 Mae West role
53 Highland
aHire
54 Winged
Victory
55 Stomach
9 Autocrat
muscles
10 Typewriter
56 "Como
parte
- usted?"
13
Fleet
57 Part of
commander
.
mpg
19 Bushel
58 Born as
fraction
·
21
Out loud
DOWN
24 VIrus
Infection
1 Hang-glide
25 Pinch
2 Wrist-toelbow bone 26 Bakery
purchase
3 Kind of
27 Equipment
tide
4 Once more 28 Byron or
Keats
5 Staggers
29
Tift
6 Natural elev.
7 Eucalyptus 31 Sprinkle
33 Taete
eaters
35 Engine
8 Where
parts
Keokuk is

Middleport • Pomeroy, O.hlo
5ll CI:NfS • Vol. 53, No. 100

ARIES (~arch 21- April19)-If a situation slio.uld suddenly
arife today that calls for someone to take control, you will be
the one whom friends and associates turn to. You'll be prepared
to take the reigns.
TAURUS (April20- May 20)
.. Associations too steeped in
tradition aren't apt to be of much
help to you today. Chances are
you'll be looking for
progressive-thinking people who
can make much of nothing.
GEMINI (May 21- June 20)-You're sill in a favorable cycle
today where your hopes and
wishes are concerned .
Something triggered striclly by
chance could reaffirm this and
lift your expectations.
CANCER (June 21- July 22)• A sudden shift in circumstance
could provide you with an
opportunity to realize an objective that's been important you
you. What transpires won't be
lasting, so move fast.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22)--

Your judgment is keen today, so
don't hesitate to make a snap
decision should one be called for
ai this time. You'll be able to
evaluate developments quickly
and accurately.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sept. 22) -Someone in the position to do so
may enter the picture today and
make a beneficial adjustment
that you couldn't do on your
own. It'll save you a great deal
of time.
LIBRA (Sept. 23- Oct. 23) -Don't hesitate to take advantage
of a last-minute social invitation

38 Mariachi gig

Three men plead guilty to burglary charges

39 Sociable

type .

41 Draw forth
42 Heal in a

microwave
43 Osiris"
slater
44 Early
Briton
46 Astronaut
- Shepard
47 Sarcastic
remark
48 If not
51 Walter'•
reward

BY

POMEROY - Three local men
pled guilty to burglary from incidents that occurred Dec. 22 in
Pomero~ and Racine.
.Roome J. Johnson, 25, and
Jamie Terzopplous, ;2.3, both from
the Racine area, entered pleas of
guilty to one count of burglary.
As charged, burglary is' a felony
of the fourth degree, and carries a

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ANC' UNFORTUNAT~LY FOR
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Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

MY,

.ANOTtll:~ PALl.

I ,, I '

338 in Racine , investigated by
Meigs County Deputy · Sheriff
Scott Trussell.
Roush could be sentenced 10 the
maximum of 18 months on each of
his two charges and the sentences
could be ordered to be served consecutively, or one after the other.
According to police reports,-the
triQ of men would approach the
homes of senior citizens. One of
the men would ask to use a phone
at\d:the trio would be let in. While

the one man was using· the phone
and distracting the home owner,
the other two men would proceed
to burglarize the premises.
Proffitt, who. condu cted . the
criminal investigation in Pomeroy,
said there is a zero tolerance policy for crimes against the elderly.
"We will not tolerate crimes
against the elderly," he said. "It is
sad that people allow themselves
to deceive the elderly and disabled. This will not be tolerated."

Working in conjunction with the
Sheriff's
Meigs
County
Department, Proffitt said it was
group effort to bring these men to
justice.
"We are going to pull all of .our
resources together to make sure
that this doesn'r happen to t)le
elderly any more," he said.
·
Sentencing will be Feb. 10. Each
of the defendants was released O.ll
a $5,000 bond , Prosecutor Pat
Story said.

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Sentinel correspondent

' 1 .•·

AS
84-5

86
86
A4
A3
A3
81-3
A2

• ASsistant ll~rarlan Olita Heighton looks over plans that will eventually turn into reality at the library. ~hlle renovations will still comlnue, patrons will be able to go upstairs and check out a book in late January. (J. Miles Layton)

Library renovations closer to com~Jetion
.

BY J. MILlS lAYTON
including a children's
...
~_ntl_n...:e!_co_rr_esp
..,.·,:_on_.de_nt__ area, genealogy room,
new entrance and a big,
ger
circulation desk. For
POMEROY - When
· the ;Ae;w ,..1-:'K Row ling th,ose patrons who apprenovel' about Harry Potter ciate natural light, the
comes out, it will have a upstairs has many large
home In the newly .reno- windows featuring 11 picturesque view of the
vated library.
The upstairs, which Ohio River.
Assistant
librarian
has been "closed off for
several months, will be Olita Heighton, who has
open to lhe public in late served the library for 19
years, said the addition
January.
When finally complet- will benefit the commued, the upstairs will fea- nity.
"I think the expansion
ture many improvements

will be a good addition
to the community and a
place where everyone
can come," she said.
Shortly, a professional
moving
company,
Carney-McNichols Inc.,
will be doing the major
lifting by moving loads
of heavy book~ and other
library materials on to
the renovated floor.
There are 38,000 items at
this branch including
magazi nes,
books,
videos and audiotapes,
though not all of these

will be moved upstairs.
As soon as the construction is complete
upstairs, renovations will
begin downstairs. The
construction
work,
which was done by Lou
Morgan Builders , will
cost about $778,000.
The new addition will
be financed through the
board's building fund.
The addition is being
built on land donated by
long-time board member
Charles E. Blakeslee.

C&gt; 2003 Ohio Valley Publishi"'! Co.

''iJ-1 '

RACINE - The Southern
Local
School
Board
approved a renewal levy
which provides the necessary funds needed for the
maintenance and operatio!l
of the school system.
The 4-mill levy, whicb
raises more than $200,000
each year, has been operational since 1991. It has been
renewed and approved b~
the voters four times ·ami
again is on the ballot in May:
The levy has remained
unchanged since it was originally adopted. For a house
worth $50,000, the 4-mill
tax rate is about $48 per
year. The last time property
was appraised was in 1998.
Superintendent Bob Grueser
said levy helps pay "for
everything," including general operation, salaries, utilities and building maintenance.
In 2000, this levy came
within a hair of being defeated by the voters. There were
1,130 votes for and 1,119
against. Like an election in
Florida, absentee ballots had
a large role in determining
the passage of the levy. · ·
Many school systems in
Ohio rely on the levy system
to provide extra revenue to
supplement education.
This is due to the fact that ·
an equitable school funding
formula has yet to be estab·
lished in Columbus. The
Ohio Supreme Court hl!s
recently declared Gov. Bob
Taft's and the legislature's
funding formula invalid.
Speaking for the majority,
Justice Paul Pfeifer ordered
"a complete systematic overhaul" of the system for funding education.
State law allows school
districts to set a millage minimum at 20 mills. Southern
Local Schools has 27 mills,
but only collects for 20. As
property values inevitably
increase, the state adjusts the
millage amount collected to
keep this amount comparable to the original amount
the levy was trying to raise.
For example, t~e renewal
levy has been adjusted to
approximately 3.7 mills
in stead of the original 4
mills because property values have increased.

~~,.,..,.

~

~~~~i~i~~·: ~~~=·~~~0~~~==~~-~~~~

GOING

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
will soon be 11ble to report road
and weather conditions to
motorists in every comer of
the state once it installs 88
wireless weather stations one in each county - and
more than 160 pavement sensors on Ohio's roads.
The weather stations and
sensors are located along interstates, U.S. routes and state
routes. They continuously
report information such as
temperature, precipitation and
visibility.
'
''These sensors give us an
accurate, real-time look at our
transportation system and
allow us to quickly respond to
' .. • , Jn_c!d.~~~s.::. &lt;;mo_T Direct~r
Gotilon l&gt;ioctor satd. '
ODOT RWIS Coordinator
Abner Johnson said, "Not only
is this a cost~benefit to ODOT,
but it is also an enhancement
of safety to the traveling pub:
lie."
With
the
Weather
Information Network expected
to be running statewide by
Jan.31, the new weather stations will enable ODOT to
adjust snow and ice activities
based on the · weather conditions in each county.
ODOT's 88 weather stations
will provide information for
the public to view at any time.
Much like the construction and
road condition information
ODOT currently provides, the
public will have access to conditions
online
at
www.dot.state.oh.us.
"Our information will be
more comprehensive and more
accurate than what is currently
available," Johnson said.
"Also, because these sensors
monitor traffic sp.e eds and
counts, we can improve our
maintenance scheduling in
each county as well."

:a kdlou- 1:1 ......

ASLEEP

f;;
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maximum possible sentence of 18
months in prison and a fine of up
to $5,000..
Kevin Roush, 33, also from the
Racine area, entered pleas of
guilty to two separate cc;mnts of
burglary.
The first count was a result of
the incident on Dec . 22 in
Pomeroy involving Johnson and
Terzopplous. The second count
resulted from an incident on Dec.
7, at a residence !&gt;D Ohio Route

Renewa-l
levy gets
board's
nod

Index

1

1M AWAKE.

1

'fOU D BETTER
WAKE UP.. ThE
SCIIOOL. BUS 1$
COMIN6 ...

WHAT

MILES LAYTON.

Pavement
se.nsors
readied
byODOT

you get today. There's a chance
a newcomer, whom you'll find
extremely interesting, may be at
the gathering.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23- Nov. .
22)-- Chances are you' II be
more ingenious or resourceful
th;m usual today when you put
your mind to working on special
projects, especially those that
are of the household variety.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) .. Something fun might
unexpectedly pop up today that
you could find much to your -liking and .want to do, so you may
want to keep your plans flexible.

SWndfeft, IIIC ,

J.

Sentinel correspondent

-

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
C :lOD3 U~.:l l'tii!UM

wwwmy&lt;l.,ily&lt;•uhn•l wm

36 Wallanda

Astrograph

VVednesday,Jan. 8,2003
BY BERNICE BEDE OSOL
Unusual conditions in the year
ahead may have a direct effect
upon your work or career. The
aspects will be in your favor and
the results should be both exciting and profitable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan.
19)-- You might take advantage
of this time to work on some·
thing for the home that could
save you a bundle of money.
VVhat you conceive will work
out better than you thought.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb.
i. 9)-- Today may be one of those
days where you should give priority to your personal needs,
even if you have to exclude
other demands. Take care of
yourself for once. --,
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 20)
-- Timing may be of extreme
importance to you today, and
fonunately, you'll be able to use
your instincts in order to play
things perfectly. Trust your sixth
sense.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2003

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CARDIOVASCULAR
-INSTITUTE

Cardiac Catheterization Services
available at the Charles E. Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery Center
For more information, call

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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Jan. 9

•• *

••

ol Columbul 137'/44' I

~~~WVA
'

I:J 2003 AccuWealher,

'

"

Colder weather coming
to 15 mph.
Thursday night...Cloudy. A
slight chance of snow showers from late evening on.
Lows in the upper 20s,
Chance of snow 20 percent.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Cioudy with a
slight chance of snow showers. Highs 30 to 40. Chance of
snow 20 percent.
Friday
nighLMostly
cloudy with a slight chance of
snow showers. Lows in the
lower 20s. Chance of snow 20
percent.
Saturday... Partly cloudy,
Highs in the lower 30s.
Simday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper teens and
highs in the lower 30s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. Lows in the upper teens
and highs in the lower 30s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper teens and
highs in ,the lower 30s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Arter one more warm day,
cold weather will return for
the weekend,
Mild temperatures will continue today as gusty westerly
winds continue. Under partly
to mostly cloudy skies, temperatures will warm into 50s,
Partly cloudy skies are
expected across the region
tonight. Lows will mainly be
in the lower and middle 30s.
A cold front wi II dive
southeast across the region on
Thursday, Colder air will
begin to filter in behind the
front. Highs on Thursday will
be in the 40s.
Unseasonably cold temperatures can be expected Friday
through Sunday. High temperatures all three days will
fail to climb out of the 20s
with single digit lo?' temperatures at some locanons,
Weather foreaut:
Toni¥ht...Partly
cloudy.
Lows to the mid 40s. West
winds 12 to 18 mph.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy.
Highs near SO. West winds 10

rates
federal
state tofrom
de-linktheOhio's
tax .
statutes.
A similar move came in
June when Ohio passed a
budget-balancing bill that
departed from the federal
schedule for business-taxdepreciation allowances,
saving the state from losing
$175 million this year.
A spokeswoman said Gov,

ADAY ON WALL STREET
Jan, 7.2003

tO,OOO

Dow

Jones
--8.000
-:oc=T--,N:::O:::V~~DE::,C:;::_-,-,JA""'N~ 7•000 .

Pet chaf99
from previous:

High

Law

8,802.84 8,7t3.03

.0.38

Rtoonl high: 1t,72H8
Jan, t4.2000

Jan, 7,2003

t,600
,__1.400

--t,200

1,431,57

OCT
High
t,442.26

Pet.change

+0.72

from prev'oos:

NOV
Law
1,416,23

1,000
DEC
JAN
RtcOfd high: 5,048.62
March to, 2000

Jan, 7,2003

&lt;·

-

900

•••

922,93
Pet chaf99

from previous

OCT
High
930,81

-o.65

NOV
Law
919,93

Private graveside services
were held for the family at
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. Riverview Cemetery. There
- qifford King, 86, of were no calling hours.
Ravens~ood , formerly of Arrangements were under the ,
Galhpohs, departed this life direction of Fisher Funeral
Monday, January 6, 2003, in Home in Middleport,
the Ravenswood Care Center
Memorial contributions
following an extended ill: may be made to a charity of
ness.
choice, or to the Overbrook
He was born April 19. Center Resident Activity
1916, in Leon, West Vrrginia, Fund, 333 Page Street,
son of the late Glen and Middleport, Ohio 45760,
·. Leota Coast King.
- Paid notice
He was a retired farmer, a
former employee of Kaiser
Aluminum and Chemical
•
Corporation in Ravenswood,
'
a member of the Gallipolis
Masonic Lodge, and was a
member of the Smith Church
in Leon,
Surviving are two sons,
Glenmer King · and Warren
COOLVILLE -Jonathan
King, both of Dunbar, West Lee Richards, 30, Coolville,
Virginia; a daughter, Carolyn died Sunday, Jan. 5, 200~, as
Cook of Winfield, West the ~esult of injuries susVirginia; seven sisters,
Rosalie C&lt;;:harles) Rogers, tained in an automobile acciMargaret Smith and Katie dent.
He is also survived by his .
Davis, all of Parkersburg,
Wes~ Virginia, Iva Campbell wife, Tammy Richards.
Services will be 2 p.m., ·
of Rutland, Lucy Finley of
Belpre, Betty Coleman of Friday in White Funeral
Plain City, and Helen Shinn Home, Coolville. with Rev.
of Barboursville, West Bill Duty officiating. Burial
Virginia; and six grandchil- will follow at Stewart
dren and several great-grand- Cemetery,
Hockingport.
children.
He was also preceded in Friends may call at the funerBritish Prime Minister Tony Blair speaks at the House of Commons, in this image from television, Blair said it was essential
death by his wife. Freda; a al home from noon until time
to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction . It was up to the Iraqi leader whether Iraq gave them up peacefully or was
daughter, Wanda; two broth- of service Friday.
disarmed by force, he said. (AP)
·
ers, Harold and Robert; and
&lt;
two infant sisters.
Services will be I p.m.
Thursday, January 9, 2003, in
the Casto Funeral Home in
Evans, West Virginia, with
the Rev. Jim McCormick
officiating, Burial will follow
POMEROY
God's
Troopers said Williams
PORTLAND
A
in the Longview Cemetery at Clothing Parish in Racine
RACINE - There will be from the high school was in
woman was airlifted to an was eastbound, .05 miles
Evans. Friends may call at , will have a 25-cent sale the
an auction at the old 1961, but the school
area
hospital following a west of Ohio Route 124,
the funeral home from noon week of Jan. 13.
Southern High School Jan. remained aS a junior high
one-car
accident Tuesday when the car she drove
until the service time
II between 10 a.m, and until it was closed more than
Good winter clothing is
on County Road 31 (Bald went off the right side of
Thursday, January 9, 2003.
noon.
available. The shop is open
a year ago. There will also
Knob-Stiversville).
the the road and lost control. ,
..- Paid notice 11 a,m. to 2 p,m, Monday
Pieces of nostalgia from be available to those seeking
Gallia-Meigs Post of the The car came back on the
the building, which was
through Friday,
a
cuddly
piece
of
history,
State
Highway Patrol road, went off the right
built back in 1929 will be
purple
velvet
teddy
bears
as
reported,
for sale. Multiple generaSandy K. Williams, age side again, and struck a
MIDDLEPORT ·
tions of students and sports momentos made from the
and address unlisted, was utility pole , junction box ,
Beatrice Ellen Smith, 92,
heroes, like some in the junior high stage curtains.
transported by MedFlight and a support cable.
Middleport, went to be with
For more information,
Wolfe family, went to school
to Cabell Huntington ·The car had disablin~ ,
her Lord and Savior on
contact the Southern Local
in the building,
GALLIPOLIS- The Jan .
Hospital,
Huntington, damage, the report said.
Tuesday, January 7, 2003.
The last class to graduate School District at 949-2669.
20
and
Feb,
17
meeting
of
the
WVa,, following the 11:19 The accident remains
She was born March 2,
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Board
a.m. accident
under investigation.
1910. in San Francisco,
California, daughter of the of Alcohol, Drug Addiction
and Mental Health Services
~~l'le~alll . , anq , Oly'!lJ?ia ·have been canceled.
The board will hold a speShe was a homemaker.
cial
meeting at 7 p.m .. Feb.
Surviving are four daughCHARLOTI'E, N.C. (AP) Administration spokeswoman
ters and two sons-in-law, . 10, to conduct regular busi-A commuter plane carrying Laura Brown said.
Mary Ellen and Ted Spires of ness,
21 people crashed into a mainJonathan Ornstein, a
Defiance, and Pauline and
tenance hangar as it was tak- spokesman for Mesa Airlines,
Fred Hoffman, Shirley Ann
ing off Wednesday at which owns Air Midwest. told
Smith and Bessie Baughman,
Charlotte/Douglas CNN that everyone on board
all of Middleport; a son and
International Airport. There the plane was killed. Bridges
daughter-in-law, Ray and
were no survivors, an airline said two people on the ground o
Karen Smith of Sandr.ville,
spokesman said.
were also uilaccounted for but
Kentucky; 24 grandchildren,
"The pl;me is so destroyed could be elsewhere.
38 great grandchildren and
there's not much to see," said
The plane crashed as it was
seven great-great grandchilpolice spokesman Keith
POMEROY .- A Meigs
dren; a daughter-in-law, County Mental Retardation
Bridges. "The debris is in such taking off in clear, windy
weather just before 9 a.m. The
Nancy Smith of Newark; and and
bad shape."
Developmental
three sisters, Minnie, Pauline Disabilities (MRDD) bus was ·
Nineteen passengers and last radio contact with the
two crew members were on pilots was clearance for takeand lllez.
rear-ended
Tuesday
at
a
stop
Besides her parents, she
Air Midwest Flight 5481, a off, Brown said.
Ohio
Route
143
around
8
on
The plane veered into the
was preceded in death by her
Beech 1900 twin-engine turboprop
departing
for hangar, authorities said, and
husb;10d, Willi~ Fred Smith a.m.
An aide in the back of the . Green vi lie -Spartanburg, wimesses told WCNC-TV it
Sr., in 1991; three sons,
bus
received very minor
Reader Services
(USPS 213-s&amp;OJ
William Fred Smith Jr., John
Federal
Aviation came down on its back.
injuries
and
was
transported
Correction
Polley
Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co.
Carter Smith, and an infant
Our
main
concern
in
an
stories
is
to
be
Published
every
~ afternoon,
son; two daughters, Virginia to Holzer Medical Center.
accurate.
If
you
know
of
an
error
in
a
Monday
through
Friday,
111 Court
None of the students
Rhoda Smith Duckworth and
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- Street. Pomeroy. Ohio, Secondan infant daughter; a brother, aboard the bus was injured.
2156 .
class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Member: The Associated Press
Paul Fabrie; and two grand- There was no damage to the
and · lhe
Ohio
Newspaper
accident
is
still
Our
main
number
Is
bus.
The
children, Jill Ellen Spires and
Association.
(740)
992·2t56.
under investigation.
Sally Duckworth Zerl~,

Jonathan
Richards

tz::~::::ii~~~~~~~~~.;___..;::];L:;ci~~~~~;j
On a cold and blustery day in Chicago, President Bush walks from his helicopter to board Air
Force One at O'Hare Airport after he unveiled his new economic stimulus plan. At far right, his
chief of staff Andy Card laughs with political adviser Karl Rove, cent~r. (AP)

Local Briefs

Bob Taft would support a plan, if enacted, could cost the year t~at begins July I
decoupling,
Ohio $323 million in per- and $257 million the next
Gudmundson said Bush's sonal-income-tax revenue in year.

when 65 people were killed.
Most categories of crime were
higher, especially in the West
End and Over-the-Rhine neighborhoods.
Dale Mallory, president of
the West End Community
Cquncil; is behind the effort to
Illite private security in the ,
once-fashionable neighborhood. His father, former Ohio
Rep. William Mallory Sr.,livcs
just down the street from him,
as does his brother, Democratic
state Sen. Mark Mallory.
'There was violence when I
was a kid,'' said William
Mallory, who has lived in the
neighborhood since the 1920s.
"But I've never .seen anything
like thi s. "
In the mid-to-late 19th century, the West End was the home
of 11\lU1Y of the city's elite, and
a center of social and sporting
life, Dayton Street, with blocks
of stately Victorian homes, was
known as Millionaires' Row.
By the early 1960s, the rich
were long gone and many of
the old houses had fallen into
disrepair. In 1964, three blocks
of old homes were declared a
historic district to prevent their
demolition.

FAIRFIELD (AP)
Elder-Beerman .Stores Corp.
plans to .close its department
store in Forest Fair Mall
north of Cincinnati after its
lease expires at the end of
Ap,ril.
'Our goal is to be the destination department store in
small markets," Gloria
Siegler, spokeswoman for
the Dayton-based chain, said
Tuesday. "Dayton and
Toledo are our biggest markets. Our newer stores are
one level and they're located
in strip centers."
The Forest Fair Mall store,
which has been in operation
since 19~9. is not compatible
with the company's growth
strategy, Siegler said.
Jobs will be offered to the
store's 32 full-time employ-

ees in other area stores where
positions are available, she
said.
Elder-Beerman closed its
downtown Cincinnati store
several years ago, and its
downtown Dayton store in
July. The chain's store in
downtown Hamilton is doing
well and is consistent with
Elder-Beerman's focus on
smaller markets, Siegler said.
"We're defining a niche for
Elder-Beerman,
and
Cincinnati's a little too big,"
she said.
Elder-Beerman employs
about 7,000 people and operates more than 60 department
stores in Ohio, West Vir~inia,
Indiana, Michigan, Dhnois,
Kentucky, Wisconsin and
Pennsylvania.

•

Clothing sale

Beatrice Smith

' J

l

Auction set at old SHS Woman injured in crash .

Meeting
announced

Commuter1&gt;1ane crashes

For the Record

Bus crash
investigated

The Daily Sentinel

Don't miss a BINGO number
and your chance to win

600

. '

Clifford King

Deaths

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

Speaking out about Iraq

Obituaries

rman chain
Police to work 12-hour Elder-Bee_
to ·close another store
shifts in crackdown
CINCINNATI (AP)
Police are responding to recent
killings in a high-crime neighborhood near downtown by
assigning a special enforcement team to work 12-hour
shifts.
Police Chief Tom Streicher
wants the team of about 6S
officers from the violent crime
squad and drug unit to make as
many drug arrests as possible
by watching for deals and making buys.
Mayor Charlie Luken met
Tuesday afternoon with residents and business owners in
the West End neighborhood,
where there were two homicides in three days.
In the most recent killing, a
17-year-old girl was shot
Monday afternoon as she rode
in a car. The crackdown was
prompted, in part, by discussions among some residents
about hiring private security.
"Because we've already got
part of this group together, I
can put as many cops out there
as possible," said Capt. James
Whalen, task force commander.
Cincinnati had a 15-year
high in homicides last year,

.

Department extensions are:

"

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700

JAN
DEC
Recofd high: 1,527.48
March 24, 2000

AP

on the number of Bingo
cards you can play.
Cards in your Sunday,
.January s. 2003 paper

Local Stocks
AEP - 29,97
Arch Coal - 2U 3
Akzo- 33,19
AmTech/SBC - 30,28
Ashland Inc, - 29,12
AT&amp;T- 27,01
Bank One - 37,30

BLI -

t3,01

Bob Evans - 24,02
BorgWarner - 52,70
Champion - 3,10
Charming Shops - 4,08
City Holding - 27,67
Col - 23AO
DG- t2,56
DuPont- 44,58

Federal Mogul USB-22,48

,25

Gannett-75, 10
General Eleclrlc- 25,90

GKNLY - 3,60

Hartoy Oavfdson- 47,94

Rockwell- 2U8
Rocky Boots - 4,99
AD Shell- 45,53
Sears- 24,70

Get home delivery today
Sentinel992-2155

Wai-Mart - 5M6

Wendy's- 27.67
Worthington- 15,91
Ltd. - 14,05
Daily stock reports are
NSC -20,56
the 4 p,m, closing
Oak HI Fi1ancial- 2t67 quotes of the previous
OVB - 20,51
day's transactions, pro'
BBT-38.38
vided
by Smith Partners
Peoples-26
at Advest lf1C, of
Pepsico - 42,16
Premier - 7,63
Gallipolis,
Kmart- ,24
Kroger- 15,98

...

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A3, ·

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio
•

COLUMBUS (AP)
President Bush's economicstimulus package could create more budget woes for
Ohio.
·
State tax officials say it
would whack about $600
million out of Ohio's
already -beleaguered budget
over two years.
That would be from
income taxes on stock dividends, which the president
wants to eliminate.
Ohio
Department of
Taxation spokesman Gary
Gudmundson said Tuesday
if' Bush chooses to cut the
tax rate ratner than eliminate
the tax , the loss to the Ohio
treasury. would be less,
Eliminating the federal
taxes on stock dividends
would affect state revenues
because Ohio's personal
income rax is based on the
adjusted-grossfederal
income figure,
The prospect of a $600
million revenue loss - on
top of a projected budget
shortfall possibly as high as
$4 billion -could force the

..

8,740.59

Wednesday, January 8, 2003

Ohio budget could take big hit from
Bush's plan to jump-start economy

Ohio weather

KY.

PageA2
..
Tuesday, January 8, 2003

.

••

•

'PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

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inion

The Daily Sentinel

'
Wednesday, January 8, 2003

The Daily sentinel .

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www.mydallyuntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

BeHe Pearce
Managing Editor

BY MARTHA A. SIMPSON

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor ,

Assistant prof., family medicne

"

. Leuers r0 rhe editor are welcome. They should be less than
J()() words. All lerters are subject to editing and must be.
signed and include address and telephone numbe r. No
unsigned /euers will be published. Lef/ers should be in good
rasre. addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below are the con,,emus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'s editorial b oard,

;

uf! Jess othenvi se noted.

Politically correct foolishnesss
makes way into classroom
• The Florida Times-Union, Jacksonville, on politically
correct holidays: When a second-grade teacher in
Massachusetts instructed her students to bring a Christmas
book to share with the class last year, Laura Greska selected a
Little Golden Book titled "The Christmas Story." As soon as
she started reading it, however, the teacher stopped her.
Frosty, Santa and Rudolph were OK, but baby Jesus was not
One New York school superintendent this month ordered
teachers to take down all student art depicting Christmas trees,
Hanukkah menor~ hs and, of course, the dreaded Nativi•y
scene . ... There could be nothing related to any specific holiday.. ..
This is politically correct fooli shness at its worst.
Christmas means different things to different people ... and
nothing to some. Regardless, it began as a celebration of a
birth in a Bethlehem stable some 2,000 years ago. Christians
believe Jesus was the ultimate gift - given by a heavenly
father to his children on Earth. Everyone is free to believe or
disbelieve that. Even if one disbelieves, it doesn't alter the fact
that the holiday began as an act by Christians to honor their
God for that gift. The first Christmas story is not subversive or
in any way dangerous. It has inspired people to acts of charity and ki¥ness. That is not something to be feared.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

f

ls

-~ATIONAL VIEW

Nonsense

Local • Entertainment

PERKINS' VIEW

Making national resolutio~s as the new year opens

..
.~

.'

As time goes by, 2002 may not stick
foment better relations with the United .
out in our collective memory, but it was
States and the West To encourage his. ·
an eventful year nevertheless.
comrades in Beijing to use their influ-. ·
On the international front, President
ence with Pyongyang to discourage ,
Bush put Saddam Hussein on notice
North Korea from developing .a nuclear ..
that the United States no longer would
arsenal that will imperil peace on the_ :
stand idly by as his rogue regime devel :
peninsula. To make good on China' &amp;.·
oped weapons of mass destruction, and
promise to respect the "human dignity":
he ~ot both Congress and the United
of its people.
,
..
.
·Nations Security Council to back him
OS
Mexican President Vicente Fox: To ,
on it. The U.S. economy remained in
stop insisting that Washington bestow ,, ,
the doldrums, with the Dow, the S&amp;P
amnesty on millions of his cou,n~men . ,
500 and the Nasdaq plummeting to
· COLUMNIST · and women living illegally in the. . ·
five-year lows. Collli!Jll.er confidence
United States. To continue to crack.·
fell to a nine-year.' low, not the least
down on the drug cartels operating.:
because of corporate scandals involv- Hill, making sure that congressional within his country.
.
:,
ing such companies as Enron , leaders stay focused on the White
Chief Justice William Rehnquist,. :
Justice John Paul Stevens, Justice
WorldCom, Tyco, ImClone, Adelphia House agenda. To stay healthy.
Communications and Qwest. In enterSenate Majority Leader Bill Frist and Sandra Day O'Connor: To feel free to '
tainment news, Halle Berry won the House Speaker Dennis Hasten: To take retire, as they are septuageQarians and·.
Academy Award for best actress and advantage of Republican control of the have served on the Supreme C.;;urt for,. i
Denzel Washington the award for best Senate, House and White House for the more than two decades each. .
,. .
actor, putting to rest suggestions that first time since 1954 (save for a few
Sen. Patty Murray: To explain to the. ..
Hollywood does not properly appreci- · months in 2001, before Sen. Jim families of the victims of the Sept. 11,
ate the work ofminonties.
·
· Jeffor.ds f)s~rte.d the P~Yl ba·passing 2001 , terror attacks what she meant.
Finally, on the political scene, meanmg u egis atton, me u 10 per- when she said that Osama bin Laden is ;
Republicans defied predictions for the manent tall cuts,. an ene~gy b I and so beloved around the world, compared.mid-term elections, not only gaining maybe ev~n a Social Sec~:anty ov~rhaul. , to the United States. To. explain how ;
seats in the House of Representatives, To recogm~ that R~pubhcans Will bear her remarks weren't akin to ·praising-&lt;
but also retaking control of the Senate. the .blam~ tf nothmg gets done on Hitler, Stalin, Mao or other of histol)'l's. .
1
Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott el'ijoyed his Capitol Htll . . .
inass murderers.
·1 : ;; ;status as incoming majority leader for
Hou~e Mmonty. Leader Nancy
Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez;;.
barely a month before he was forced to Pelos~. · ~0 recogmze th~t most of Freddie Prinze Jr. and Sarah Michelle
step down for flattering Strom Amenca 1 ~ not near~y as hberal as .the Gellar, Charlie Shee.n and Denise
San F~anctsco dtstnct she represents. Richards: To last longer than Billie BolT
Thurmond on his I OOth birthday.
So much, then, for 2002. Time now to To resist the Impulse of some members Thornton and Angelina Jolie, Nicholas
usher in the new year and offer resolu- of my party to spend t,he next year or so Cage and Lisa Marie Presley. i!Dd Tou;i
lions to leading newsmakers. President demag&lt;!g~n.ng ~epubhcans on race and Green and Drew Barrymore. , ·, .,
Bush: To free the Iraqi people from the other dtvtSIV~ Issues.
.
Hootie Johnson: To bring an end to,
tyranny of their despotic dictator; to ~et
Iraq Prestdent Sad~am Hussem, the controversy over Aug\Js.ta'•
the U.S. economy running on all cylm- Nort~ Korea dtctator Ktm Jong n,. Iran National's male-only ' 'meiltbedhijf
ders again; to re-nominate the highly Prestdent ~o~ammed Khataml: To before the ul?coming Master's toumaqualified conservatives judges who sto~ complamn~g that ~us~ dec!~?, ment by inviting, say, Justice Sandra
were turned away by the Democrat- thetr rogu~ nalions an ~xts of evil Day 0' Connor, Congresswoman .
controlled Senate for strictly partisan when t!Jey ve done nothmJ! to. prove Katherine Harris or another consenra: '
reasons.
othef':"'ISe. ~0
recogmze
th~t tive female golf enthusiast to join the' '
First Lady Laura Bus)!: To remain a Washmgton wtll not tolerate thetr prestigious club.
';
non-t::ontroversial figure, in welcome development of weapons tha~ rna§ one
Daniel Pearl: To not be forgotten. ' ~
contrast to her predecessor. To keep the da~ be u.sed to attack the Umted tates
(Joseph Perkins is li columMst' fo r•
twins, Jenna and Barbara, out of trou- or tts. alhes.
.
The San Diego Union ;Tribune aiid cal{~
bl
Chmese.General Secreta!)' Hu Jmtao: be
reached
at··
~ice President Dick Cheney: To be To recogmze the opport~mty he has, as Joseph. Perkins@ UnionTrib.com.)
··
the president's point man on Capitol the chosen successor to Jiang Zemen, to
··
,

Joseph

p k1
er

1

1

Ji

Today is Wednesday, Jan. 8, the eighth day of 2003. There
are 357 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan . 8, 1935, rO&lt;;k-and-roll legend Elvis Presley was
born in Tupelo, Miss.
On this date :
In 1642. astronomer Galileo Galilei died in Arcetri, Italy.
In 1815, U.S. forces led by Gen. Andrew Jackson defeated
the British in the Battle of New Orleans - the closing
engagement of the War of 1812.
In 1894, fire caused serious damage at the World' s
Columbian Exposition in Chicago. .
In 191 8, President Wilson outlined his 14 points for peace
after World War I.
In 1959, Charles .De Gaulle was inaugurated as president of
France 's Fifth Republic.
_
In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson declared a "War on
Poverty."
In 1973, secret peace talks between the United States and
'·
North Vietnam resumed near Paris.
In 1976, Chinese premier Chou En-lai died in Beijing at age
THE VILLAGE IDIOT.
78.
"•
In 1982, American Telephone and Telegraph settled the
Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit against it by agreeing to
divest itself of the 22 Bell System companies.
In 1987. for the first;time, the Dow Jones industrial average
Last year I got a Happy Halloween ;
It wasn't long ago, at le;ast in geologclosed above 2,000, ending the day at 2002.25.
card from normally normal Alice down·ical terms, when you could listen to one
Ten years ago: Serb gunmen shot and killed Bosnia's deputy
the road. What is the etiquette here? Am :
radio station and hear a song by the
prime minister (Hakija Turajlic) in the presence of French
I supposed to send her one back or send ·'
Beatles followed by a song by country
peacekeepers. At post offices across America, commemoraa mental health worker to her home ·to
star Ros;er Miller then hear a hit by
tive Elvi s Presler, stamps went on sale on what would have
check up on her? You might think,''·
Frank
Smatra:
An
instrumental
by
Herb
been "the King's' 58th birthday.
"What a barmless gesture, a Ralloweetf'
Alben and the Tijuana Brass might
Five years ago: Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of the 1993
card." But trust me, that's how it starts:
come after a Four Tops record but
World Trade Center bombing, was sentenced in New York to
First, it's cards; in 10 years they'll want
before a Peter, Paul and Mary folk song.
li fe impri sonment. Air traffic control over the Pacific broke
us all to exchange Halloween gifts.
'
In an hour you might hear I 0 or 12 difdown for 16 hours; officials said the outage posed no real danferent types of music. Sure, there were
But for your niche-marketing dollar;·,.
ger. At the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in
country stations and soul stations and
nothing beats the cable television. Why '
Philadelphia, Michelle Kwan received seven perfect presentaCOLUMNIST
classical stations, but the big winners
spend a million dollars a minute advertion marks out of 1\ine for her short program.
played the Top 40 songs over and over.
ttsing on "Friends" when, for _pennies;o
One year ago: President Bush signed the most far-reaching
ou can run your infomercial on "The)
Today's radio is the opposite, with
federal education bill in nearly four decades. The Most Rev.
Mother
Woman,
Bowling'
Ball
each station playing one type of music
eft-Handed Blond B.ass Fi shin~
George Carey, the Archbishop of Canterbury, announced his
all day long. Rap, country, metal, clas- Collector, Taxidermy Today or Teen Awards." Over and over and over again.
retirement as spiritual leader of the world's 70 million
sic roc)c, pop and nothing else. Some Lawyer. The wife is buying
They sell an awful lot of_ cleanin~ 1
Anglicans. Ozzie Smith, regarded as the finest-fielding shortstations get ridiculously specific. "At Sophisticated Living while the husband products on these infomercials. And air'
stop ever, was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame on his first
00, we play the best hits of 1987 is buyinj! WWE SmackDown! Is that of them brag about how well they
try. We ndy's fast food chain fo under Dave Thomas died in XYZ-1
Junior nfling through Super Sadistic
throu~h 1992 and two songs from June
remove bloodstains. If you're cleaning
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., at age 69.
·
1994! ' "At Attention Deficit Disorder Videos while Muffy is picking up up so much blood that you need to buy
Today's Birthdays: Actor-comedian Larry Storch is 80.
102, you 'll hear the best music of the Xtreme Piercing? What does that fami- two bottles of this stuff for $19.99, r .
Actor Ron Moody is 79. Comedian Soupy Sales is 77.
mid-' 60s to 1973!" The country stations ly talk about at dinner?
can't help but wonder, what is going on ·
Broadcast journalist Sander Vanocur is 75. CBS newsman
As a young kid I remember ' waiting at your house? Maybe you should be :
·
play
music
by
people
who
grew
u~ in
Charles Osgood is 70. Singer Shirley Bassey is 66. Countrybig cities but pretend they were ratsed for my granddad to finish his Saturday calling a doctor, not an 800 number. Or '
gospel singer Cristy Lane is 63. Rhythm-and-blues singer
on a poor dirt farm. When these guys Evening Post so I could read it, too. the police. Sure it removes bloodstains,
Anthony Gourdine (Li ttle Anthony and the Imperials) is 62.
are not out golfi ng in Palm Springs and What grandkid is waiting for today's but what about those unsightly bullet
Actress· Yvette Mimieux is 61. Physicist Stephen Hawking is
skiing in Aspen, they' re singing about grandparent to relinquish his copy of .holes in your living room walls? No
61. Rock musician Robby Krieger (The Doors) is 57. Rock
RV Monthly so he can read it?
picking cotton and .spitting tobacco.
problem. Buy Bullet Patch! One appli- :
singer David Bowie is 56. Movie di rector John McTiernan is
The greeting card comP.anies are cation and you' ll never know it was:
It's
not
just
radio.
You
can
hardly
find
52 . Actress Harriet Sansom Harris is 48. Actress Maria Pitillo .
a magazine on the newsstand that any doing it, too, making incredibly specif- there ! From the wonderful folks who.is 38 . Actress Michelle Forbes is 36. Singer R. K elly is 36.
two people in the same household ic cards for the most unlikely events. brought you Organic Citrus Blood Rock musician Jeff Abercrombie (Fuel) is 34. Actress Ami
You can now buy "Happy You Passed
Dolenz is 34. Reggae singer Sean Paul is 30. Country singer . would both enjoy. Instead of someth ing That Kidney Stone, from Your Second Remover!
for everybody, there's someth ing for
Mullen is the author of "It Takes
Tift Merritt i'&gt; · 28 . Actress Jenny Lewis is 27. Actor Scott
Cousi n,
Bob."
cards,
"Your A Jim
almost
nobody.
Look
at
the
magazine
Village
Idiot: A Memoir of Life After.
Whyte is 25. A~:tress Gaby Hoffman is 21.
Grand mother (mother's side) is So the City" (Simon and Schuster, 2001), .
rack
in
any
grocery
store
and
you
wonThought for Today: "'Why is propaganda so m uc~ more sue- .
der which of your neighb9rs IS buying Sory1, You Got Voted off 'American He also contributes regularly Ia .·
cco;.,ful when it ~.tirs up hatred than when it t ries to stir IJP
Garage Door Opener Aficionado, Idol !" cards and "From Your Nephew Entertainment Weekly, where he can be
lnendly feelmg? - Bertrand Russe ll , Enghsh philosopher
Surrogate Father News, New Working Joe in the Navy - Heard You Got the reached at j im- mullen@ew.com
,and mathematician ( 1872-1970).
Cat Spayed!" cards. · •
.
.

Media seems to l!ff'e!_Jg)1jething for almost nobody

Jim
. Mullens

,.
•

Question: My husband has
· a lot of moles on his back. He
frequently asks me to look at
them for him. What am I
looking for? He worries about
his moles being bad, but I
C!UI't get him to go to the doctQr.
:Answer: Moles are very
common. The
average
Caucasian has about 20 moles
on his or her body. Moles are
less common in people with
heavily pigmented skin, such
as African Americans. Most
moles are harmless, but it is
important to watch moles and
know which changes can signal possible danger.
Moles generally develop
early in life and evolve over
the life of the person. In
childhood moles are flat,
small brown lesions. Through
adolescence and early adulthood, moles can grow in size
and become slightly raised.
During pregnancy moles can
become darker' and larger.
After you reach the age of 70,
your moles could start to fade
and degenerate. This process
may continue as you grow
older. Regardless of your
stage of life, however, a normal mole has sharp borders or
margins, a uniform color, a
symmetrical shape, and a
smooth outline or contour. In
general a non-cancerous mole
- technically calle~ a benign
mole - is also smaller than a
pencil eraser and of a single
color, usually pink. to tan to
dark brown.
When lookin¥ for an abnormal mole, it trught be helpful
to remember a mnemonic
phrase that I've given to my
medical students. It's the first
seven letters of the alphabet
A-BC-D-E-F-0. Bach letter
stands for an important clue
that could indicate a cancer-

Several artists get five
Grammy nods apiece
I.
.NEW YORK (AP) -

.

'

.

· Another best nel artist

O~amniy yoters reco~nized a nominee, Lavigne,
also
w1de vanety of ~~!'liSts and came up big: The IS-year-

genres Tuesda.y, w1th Jl!orah old was nominated for song
Jon~s,
Avnl
Lavtgne, · of the year best female pop
'
Emtnem
and
Bruce ·
Springsteen dominating the vocal performance and best
major categories, including pop vocal ~!bum, among
record song and album of other categones.
R&amp;B singer Ashanti also
the ye~.
Eight artists received five got five nominations as did
Gram~y nomi~ations each.
rocker Sheryl Crow, rapper .
Sprmg~.teen s . s.eP~; 11 - Nelly and neosoul artist
the~ed The RISing was Raphael Saadiq.
nommated for ~!bum of the
Other nominees for album
year, and the tttle track for
. .
song of the year. .
of .the ,~~ar w~~e the D1x~e
Eminem received an Chtcks Home and Nelly s
album citation foi- "The "Nellyville."
Eminem Show," and a
Nelly 's "Dilemma," fearecord citation for "Without turing Kelly Rowland, was
Me."
cited for record of the year;
.Newcomer Jones was he also was nominated in
nominated for record of the. three rap categories.
year for her underground hit
"Don't Know Why." Her
"Any one they want to
"Come Away With Me" was give me , I'm more than
nominated for album of the happy to receive," · said
year, and she received a best Nelly, who's been nominated
in the past but never won.
new artist nod.

CHESTER- A Christmas
program wts a feature of the
December meeting of
Chester Council
323,
Daughters of America, held
at the hall.
Holiday reading s were
given by Charlotte Grant,
Julie Curti s, Mary Jo .
Barringer, Doris Grueser,
Everett Grant, and Helen
Wolfe. Door prizes were
won by Goldie Frederick,
Janet Depoy, Deloris Wolfe,
and Laura Mae Nice, and
refreshments were served.
Quarterly birthdays were

also observed at the meeting
with Deloris Wolfe, Helen
Wolf,
Kathryn Baum,
Thelma white, Dorothy
Myers,
Sand y White,
Charlotte Grant, lnzy
Newell, Arden Depoy. and
Janet Depoy being honored.
It was noted that several
members attended the IOOth
anniversary of Guiding Star
Council 124, Syracuse.
Reported ill was Marcia
Keller. Helen Wolf, councilor, presided at the meeting which opened in ri:aalistic form _
.

DAR hosts guest speaker
'

MIDDLEPORT Proj!f31l!s offered to elderly
Me1gs Countians and how
they are financed were discussed by Susan Oliver,
executive director of the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, guest speaker at the
December meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution.
Oliver talked about the
various outreach programs
offered to· seniors including
meals, social services, transportation, wellness and prevention, preventative health
activities including exercise
programs, opportunities for
volunteer service, and lifelong learning experiences.
She was complimentary
of her staff and volunteers
and noted that the agency
had received recognition on
the state level for the scope
of services offered to the
elderly.
Most funding for services,
according to the executive
director, come from Title III
of the Older Americans Act,
Oliver said. She also noted
that funds are received from

a tax levy which will come
up for r~ewal in May. This
will be the third five-year
levy to be presented to the
voters.
Regent Abbie Stratton
announced an officers'
meeting to be held on Jan.
II . Gifts were sent to the
Veterans
Hospital
in
Chillicothe and delegates
were elected for the State
and
National
DAR
Conventions. Named delegates were Stratton; Anna
Cleland, and Rachel Denni s
with Emma Ashley as alternate.
American history essay
winners were announced by
Pat Holter, chairman. She
noted' that 110 essays had
been received on the topic, a
letter form Valley Forge;
winter 1777-1778.
Winners will be notified
and presentations made at
the Feb. 8 meeting at the
Pomeroy Pubic Library.
The meeting as held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ferman Moore. Cohostesses
were Stratton, Alice Struble
and Karen Werry.
;

Church holds Christmas
program, party "'
Holiday activities at the
Alfred . United Methodl~ .
Chun:h included a program on
the Sunday night before
Christmas and a ctiurch charge
New Year's Eve party on Dec.
31.
Marilyn · and
Wilbur
RobinsOn hosted a Christmas
dlnn for the' famil
Ller d and Ruth B~ had
oy
'th th . .,__ ,
Christmas. WI .eJr uu•wy at
ho~ w1th thetr children,
Kevm an~ Tonya Brooks of
Chester, Jun and Pam B~ks
of Veto Lake, Bob and 'I'ril!&amp;
Brooks of Brooks and Debbte
an~ Jeremy B~. local, ~d
theJr 10 granclchildren, Hallie,
Aaron, Heather; Zachary,
Adam, Rachel, Andy and
Ty Jer Brooks, Katlyn and
Allison Barber and Mildred
'

Births
·Johnsons
announce birth
POMEROY-James
and Beth Perrin Johnson
announce the birth of a
son,
Owen
Bradley
Johnson, born on Nov. 22,
2002 at Lebanon.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson
have a daughter, Caroline.
Grandparents are Dr.
James
Johnson
of
Cincinnati and Gay Perrin
of Pomeroy.

Community Calendar
Public Meeting~ Clubs and
Organizations
YVednesda~Jan . 8
MIDDLEPORT - Board of
Public Affairs, change in
meeting from Jan . 1, 5:30
p.m., council chambers.
Changed due to holiday.
Friday, Jan. 10
POMEROY - Meigs
County Trustees and Clerks
Association, annual meeting,
7 p.m. at tile Meigs C~ unty
Senior Citizens Building.
Saturday, Jan. 11
PORTAND -· Letart
Township Trustees, 9 a.m.
appropriations meeting at the
township building.
•

···+--

-·· -- ~-

•

'·-

YVednesda~Jan.8

RACINE
Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m., Racine
Public Library. Pauline Horton
will review "The Pillars of
Creation; by Terry Goodklnd,
The annual bus iness meeting
will also be held .

Wednesday, January 8, 2003

program held

Brooks, mother of Lloyd
Brooks.
Christmas visitors ofWIUTen
and Charlotte VanMeter were
Mr. and Mrs. George Wlison
and Anthony Marcinko of
Alamogordo, New Mexico;
Shelton and Stephanie Fisher
of San Angelo Texas ·and
•
•
Joyce and Jerry ~urke~ Alfred.
Ben and Doris Ewmg had
the Caldwell families for
Christmas dinner and a gift
exchange.
Richard, florence and nm
Spencer hosted the Boyles
family at a Christmas party
with 33 attending.
N'
R b'
th
.ma ~ mson spent .e
holiday w1th Pete an Oste
Follrod, Norma Jean .and
Gerald S~artz, Robert and
Janet Robmson and all her
grandchildren.
Callers at the Poole-Parker
home during the Christmas
holidays were Lenora and
Roger Leitheit, Gary Johnson,
and Debbie and Rick
Barringer.

Josh Brolin, shown in this undated promotional photo, portrays Senator Bill Sterling Jr. in the new NBC drama series
'Mister Sterling." The show pre mieres Friday at 8 p. m. (AP)

'Mister Ster:ling': A
stubborn hero lands
in the U.S. Senate
NEW YORK (AP)- The
public-spirited but private
son of a former California
governor, Bill Sterling Jr.
has. suddenly been thru st
into the spotlight.
Not that he sought his new
title - U.S. senator - or
wanted it. Or even grasps its
full meaning.
"Do you know what
you're
doing .here?"
Sterling's chief of staff asks
once he's sworn into office.
"Or is this just some crazy
roller-coaster
ride
to
nowhere that' s gonna make
us all look like idiots?"
The answer may lie somewhere in between. On
NBC's exuberant new
drama, "Mister Sterling,"
the better question might be:
Can a Boy Scout with a
maverick streak stay true to
himself on Capitol Hill?
(The series premteres Friday
at 8 p.m. EST.)
Here's the background:
California's scandal-beset
senior senator has died
unellpectedly. His successor
will be hand-picked by the
Democratic governor, who
wants a problem-free fill-in
until the election two years
away.
A perfect , placeholder:
The son and namesake of
beloved ex-Gov. William
Sterling who, played by
Josh Brolin, has a squeakyclean past and no political
ambitions.
Even so, Bill Jr. turns out
to be full of ~ urpri se s.

For one thing he isn' t a
Democrat, despite his
Democratic breeding. No
one thought to chec k. "It's
never mattered before,''
Sterling says of his
lnder.endent label, "and I
'dido t think it wo uld matter

here."
It does, espec ially in a
Senate closely split between
Democrats
and
Republicans. And in a fl as h,
this freshman senator leverages his non-committed status into plum committee
assignments from
the
Democrats, simply by
declaring hi s support for
that party's leadership.
Just as impressive, by the
end of the second episode,
he has stilled yappin g
reponers who accuse him
(however validly) of vaulting to power on the strength
of his father's name. Sen.
Sterling shuts them up with
nine words: " I love my
father. But I'm my own
man."
This remedial sound bite
was furnished, unsolicited,
by his father.
Magnificently played by
81-year-old
James
Whitmore, the old man realizes Bill is an embittered
politician's kid.
Thi s
accounts for hi s lifelong
aversion to the family business. (When approached to
become senator, he's running a program for penitentiary inmates to get their
GED.)

1071CI ,.0 DOG OWNERS
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2002 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 3t. Fees are Four Dollars
for each dog, male or female. Kennel ·Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
llcenae by mall, complete and return application to: Nancy Parker Campbell, Meigs County
Auditor, 100 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769. Enclose a self-addressed, stamped
!~!!!~e!.'!!~h.. !.~~~~-t~!-~h..!P!!~!~'-~~~!1:!.."..!!·........................................................................
OYVNER OF DOG
ADDRESS
TELEPHONE
TOWNSHIP
($4.00)

AGE

r

; ' I

ous mole. If you "notice any of
the following , a8k your family doctor or dermatologist to
take a look at the mole:
•
Asymmetzy (one side
looks different than the
other),
•
Border irregularity,
•
Color variation (two
or three different colors in tl\e
same mole, such as black,
b
rown, red, or white),
•
Diameter over 6mm
(pencil eraser),
•
Elevation
(raised
above the skin surface),
•
Feeling or change in
sensation (e . ~-· itching or
unusual sensation), and
•
Growth (noticeable
increase in size).
There is also the "ugly
duckling sign." This is a mole
that stands out or looks very
different from all the rest of
the moles on your body.
Here are some additional
things to look for that could
si;;nal that a mole is suspicious. A mole that ulcerates,
or ·bleeds for over three
weeks, moles that change in
shape or color, and black
lesions on non-sun exposed
skin in Caucasian people.
The good news ts that most
moles are benign, but the best
way to determine if · you
should be concerned about a
mole i's to visit your physician
for a .thorough skin exam.
Some physicians will "map"
patient's moles and use this as
a guide when doing follow up
visits to see if moles have
changed. '
("Family Medicine " is a
weekly column. To submit
.
u
ha A
q~estlons, write to mart
,.
Stmpson: D.O., M.B.A., Ohto
Umvers1ty_
Co!l~ge
of
Osteopathic Medtct~e, P.O.
,)Jox 110, Athens, Oh10 ~5701.
You can also ematl Dr.
S!mpson
at
SJmpsonm@ohlo,edu Past
columns are available online
at www.jhradio.org/fm.)

C~ristmas

Page AS

SEX

Year Month Male Female

.,.. COLOR
...
"
"' 'B flc: ~
I!!
~ l
"'
'"
(!l

·c

HAIR
11

~

C&gt;

c:
0

_J

t::

_g

en

FEES
BREED
IF KNOWN PAID

Friday, Jan. 10
MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Fellowship meeting , noon luncheon at the Golden Coral.
Call Betty Gilkey at 992-5666
for more information.
Saturday, Jan. 11
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen , 5 p.m. at
the haiL Meeting and meal.
Camp will provide oyste r stew
and vegetable soup. Those
attending are to take covered
dish.

Thuraday, Jan. 9
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, 6:30 p.m. Lutheran
Church. Take covered dish of
favorite recipe with five copies
of recipe to be auctioned off.
Wedneaday, Jan. 8
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
POMEROY
.Stroke
9053 7 p.m. at the hall in Survivors Support group meetTuppers. Plains. Meal at 6:30 ing, 2 to 2:30 p.m. at the Meigs
p.m.
Senior Citizens Center. Topics
·will be on the recovery process
and information on diabetes.

.

Support Groups

NOTICE: License must be obtained no late than January 31, 2002, to avoid paying penalty, After this
date; penalty wilt be $4.00 fo r sir\gle tag and $20.00 for Kennel license.
.
100 E. Second Street
(
· NANCY PARKER CAMP.B~LL
·
Meigs County Auditor

-.

r

�PageA6
..

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Wednesday, January 8, 200~

More prep hoops,. Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83

••

Page Bl

Damaging wind blamed for two deaths, fans fire threatening homes
LOS ANGELES (AP) -

A Los Angeles County firefighter is s'ilhouetted against
the flames of a 10-acre brush
fire in the Corral Canyon area
of Malibu. Calif. This blaze
along with another early
morning fire caused no dam&amp;ile or injuries. The flames
were feed by the Santa Ana
winds
howling
across
Southern California. (AP)
High
wind
warnings
remained in effect Tuesday
as the seasonal Santa Ana
wind fanned wildfires that
threatened hundreds of
Malibu homes overlooking

the Pacific.
Two deaths had been
blamed on the wind si nee
the weekend, along· with
toppled trees, downed
power lines and overturned
tractor-trailer rigs.
Three homes in Malibu
were damaged and hundreds more were threatened
by a fire in the Santa
Monica Mountains that had
grown to 1,500 acres
Tuesday morning. Wind
also stoked {I !50-acre blaze
that damaged five homes
near Norco, 45 miles east of
Los Angeles, and a II 0-acre
fire in rugged terrain on
Catalina Island.
More than 700 firefigHters were battling the Malibu
blaze. which was I0 percent
contained Tuesday morning, said Inspector Ed
Osorio of the Los Angeles
County Fire Department.
The wind was blowing at
20 to 30 mph in the canyons
with gusts up to 60 mph on
the ridges.
Fire officials hoped to
have the blaze controlled by
the end of the day, when .the
wind was expected to calm.
About I00 people left
their homes as mandatory
evacuations were ordered

for Encinal and Decker
canyons in Malibu.
The cause of the fire was
under investigation, but a
downed power line was suspected, Brown said . .
The dry; warm wind hit.
Sunday night and gusted up
to 79 mph through Monday,
blowing from the desert
interior toward the coast.
A woman was killed by a
falling tree Monday in San
Diego 's hi storic Old Town,
and a passenger in a car was
killed Sunday by windblown debris on a freeway
in Riverside.
An estimated 730,000
Southern California Edison
customers lost power at
times durin~ the two days,
utility officials said. More
than 3,000 had been without power for more than 24
hours,
said
Edison
spokesman Gil Alexander.
Power in the hardest hit
areas may not be restored
for 'several days, he said.
Metrolink commuter rail
serv ice was interrupted for
nearly two hours Tuesday
morning he•·ause the wind
blew tree limbs onto the
tracks in the Pomona area.
On Monday. the wind
caused numerous delays at

Wednesday, January 8, 2003

Redmen squeak
by Urbana
URBANA
The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketball team got
out of Urbana with a win on
Tuesday night by the skin of
their teeth as they edged the
Blue Knights, 55-54 at the
Grimes Center.
Redmen senior forward
Jerry Barlow buried two free
throws with 12 seconds ·
remaining to seal the win.
Urbana's Jason Myers was
stripped' of the ball on a drive
to the basket with six.seconds
left and Rio's Ran dar Luts
recovered it and the game
was over.
·
Rio Grande (12-6, 3-0
AMC) used a solid shooting
ftrst half to take a 37-29 lead
to the lockerroom. Urbana (511, 1-2 AMC) missed a golden opportunity to cut the lead
to six before the half ended as
AI Davenport missed a layup at the buzzer. The Redmen
shot 52 percent from'the floor
in the first 20 minutes,
including a scorching 6-of- I I
from three-point land.
The second half was a different matter altogether.
Rio Grande and Urbana
combined for a total of four
points in the ftrst eight minutes of the second half.
Urbana didn't have a field
goal for over nine minutes.
Rio made only 5-of-20
attempts in the second half,
including I ~of-1 0 from long
range.
Urbana chippel.l away at
the lead and finally gained a.
51-50 edge with about two
minutes to play on a lay-up
by Davenport. The two teams
traded the lead until Barlow
hit the charity tosses.
The Blue Knights main gun
Jarrod Brumbaugh missed
three front -ends of 1-and-1
opportunities that could have
g1ven Urbana the upset.
Barlow topped the scoring
chart for the 'Redmen with 19
~- He ~ _ripped down a
game-high 15 boards. Chris
Ballenger scored 14 points.
Brumbau~h led all scorers
with 20 pomts and collected
seven rebounds. Brad Smith
poured in 15.
Rio won the battle of the
boards, 40-29 and registered
10 turnovers to only six for
the Blue Knights.
Rio Grande will return
home on Saturday to tangle
with Malone. Game time is
set for 8 p.m. and is sponsored by McDonald 's.

Beverly Hills and Long Beach, Calif., firefighters stand by and wait as a wildfire comes close
to one of the many million dollar homes along Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu , Calif. (AP) ~ ;
Ontario
International
Airport and prompted
American Airlines to cancel most of its flights there.
In Los Angeles, a falling
power line ' started a fire
th at destroyed a house and

three cars, sail! fire Capt.
AI Higginbotham.
.
In Yorba Linda, a 91year-old pepper tree planted by the father of former
President Nixon h&lt;W, major
damage, but was expected

to survive, said an official
of the Richard Nixon
Library and Birthplace.
The seasonal Santa Ana
wind typically appears
from
September
to
.February.

:
:
.
,
:

•
•

New Congress begins Groups prepare for INS registration deadline
with GOP at helm
of
tO
WASHINGTON (AP) ':'"""'r"'' Ref ub li can s
of icially
took control
of the 108th
Congress
Tuesday,
swearing in
new leaders
w· h
o
promised to
move quickly on extendFrlst
ing jobless
benefits so
they can focus on President
a~·.~ eCQJ19m4: stimulus plan
and overdue budget bi.liS.
New House and Senate inembers were sworn in shortly after
noon, and new Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee
planned to immediately begin
Senate debate on the jobless
assistance package on Tuesday.
He hoped to finish work on that
bill by Thursday.
In the House, California Rep.
Nancy Pelosi was sworn in as
minority leader, the ftrSt woman
to head a party in either chamber.
Pelosi was surrounded by her
children and grandchildren
when sbe took the oath from her
pl'!ldecessor,
Rep.
Dick
Gephardt of Missouri, the
Democrats' leader in the House
for the past eight years.
"We will need to test our
imaginations," Pelosi said, "We
need to govern in new ways
beyond the simplistic labels of
left and right."
Vice President Dick Cheney
called the Senate into order and
administered the oath of office
to senators four at a time, shaking hands with new members,
including Republicans Lamar
Alexander of Tennessee and
John Cornyn of Texas.
GOP Sen. Ted Stevens of
Alaska was appointed Senate
president pro tern, making him
third in line behind the vice
president and House speaker in
the presidential succession line.
Dennis Hasten, R-Ill.. was
certain to be re-elected as House
speaker, with House members
beginning to tally their votes
Tuesday afternoon. His new
No. 2 will be Rep. Tom DeLay,
R-Texas, replacing the retired
Rep. Dick Armey, R-Texas.
With Frist undertakin~ his
ftrst day as Senate maJority
1

leader, Republicans were ready
to begin debate on the jobless
assistance package. Bush must
sign a bill b&gt;' Thursday to avoid
any disrupuon in payments to
unemployed workers.
House passage could come
Wednesday, reflecting a GOP
desire to quickly quiet
Democratic criticism that
Republicans have ignored victims of the struggling.economy.
Democrats have complained
that the GOP plan was too
skimpy and were preparing
alternatives that would last
lon11er and cover .more people,
raismg questions about

quic~

enactment. Now working from
the minority in the Senate,
Democrats say Republicans still
will have to listen to them.
"The Senate is nearly evenly
divided, 51-49, and I think
given that cifcumstances, given
the fact that you need 60 votes
in the Senate to move forward
and do things, the president and
Sen. Frist and the Repl(blican
majority understand they are
going to have to reach out and
form bipartisan coalitions," Sen.
Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said on
C-SPAN.
Frist seemed comfortable
with his new, high-profile job,
getting a quick jogging session
in between television interviews
Tuesday morning.
"It is my hope in· this
Congress that we wi.ll be
defmed by achievement as well
as a cooperative spiri~" Frist
said in his ftrSt floor speech as
leader. "At this point in time our
nation faces truly historic challenges~ winning that war against
terrorism, boosting economic
growth, boosting job creation
addressing multiple health care
challenges that have become
crises and ensuring our agenda
is inclusive of all Americans."
The political combat was a
counterpoint to the pomp and
the parties that were expected to
dominate the first day of the
new Congress.
The other 66 senators were
not up for re-election in the fall
elections that turned a narrow
Democratic Senate edge into a
51-48-1 Republican majority,
giving them the control they lost
when Sen. James Jeffords of
Vermont left the GOP tp
become an independent in
2001.

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Legal's INS Watch, who has been record- by having to tell authorities where he lives
ing the names
men entering the and goes to school - and to submit
Immigration and Naturalization Service bein~ fingerprinted and photographed. :
building s·an Francisco. "It helps us make
"I m the most peaceful person on earth,~'
sure folks don't get lost in the system. We he said.
want them to know we're watching."
Nirnr and a handful of other, mostly
Clipboard in hand, Nimr roamed up and Arab-American and South Asian U.S. cindown the line outside the INS building this zens, have pledged to monitor the registraweek, pausing to ask men if they were there lions in San Francisco all week. 'fill:
for the special iegistrntion program. Some Muslim Public Affaini Council in Los
nodded warily.
·
Angeles and chapters in at least 15 citieS
Nimr told the men she wanted to make also were setting up monitoring efforts. :
sure they didn't get lost in the INS systerh.
National groups such as the Council
Some gave her their names and INS alien American-Islamic Relations and the
number, plus phone numbers of attorneys, American-Arab
Anti-Discriminatibn
relatives and friends, She asked them to Committee are generally advising men J.o
check back with her when they left the register, but urging them to consult a lawyer
building.
before they go. Women are not required .to
Zouvir Achour gave his name to Laura register.
Farha, a volunteer working with Nimr.
In Michigan; CAIR· !:&gt;'mailed· mosques
"It'~ a *~ thing. At least S&lt;_~~ne is about_ the d~e. while . th' Aiabwatc~g, satd Achour, a Tums1an who American Family SupPOrt Center distriblives m San Francisco. ..
uted fliers.about the regtStration and is seddWhile he thinks registrntion is "a norm~~'ing attorneys, staff and volunteers to transprocess," the 28-year-old student said he late and provide legal advice at the INS
al~ feels his privacy is being compromised office in New York City. . -

m

oo

Redwomen drop
second straight
.

URBANA
The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen basketball team
fell behind early at Urbana on
Tuesday night and never
recovered as they lost to the
Lady Blue Knights at the
Grimes Center, 73-56.
Rio Grande (10-5, 1-2
AMC) trailed 38-22 at halftime and was able to pull
within seven points with
about eight minutes remaining. Urbana salted the game
away at the free throw line,
naihng 12-of-19 from the
stripe for the game.
The Redwomen received
double-double efforts from
Alida Fountain and Tiffany
Johnson. Fountain scored 14
points and pulled down I5
rebounds while Johnson
added 13 points and I0
boards. Junior fdrward Annie
Tucker chipped in 10 points
and hauled down nine
rebounds off the bench.
Urbana (8-6, 2-1 AMC)
guard Missy Miller posted
explosive numbers, pumping
jn 25 points thanks in part to
four 3-poiniers in the first
half. Chemika Pittman added
20 points and nine rebounds.
The Redwomen continued to
struggle on the offensive end.
Rio shot only 29 percent from
the field, 17 percent from
three-point land and 54 percent
from the free throw line.
Rio dominated the glass
despite the loss, outboarding
the Lady Blue Knights 54-43.
Rio committed I7 turnovers
to 16 for Urbana.
Rio Grande wiil attempt to
stop the game losing skid on
Saturday when they host
Malone at 6 p.m. at the Newt
Oliver Arena.

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Trying to
prevent mass arrests, several groups are
tracking citizens of 13 mostly Middle
Eastern countries as th&amp;adJf~ster at INS
offices to meet a Friday
e.
The Muslim, Arab-American and civil
liberties groups want to prevent a repeat of
detentions that took place in Southern
California last month when visitors from
five other countries were required to register.
INS officials said about 400 men were
deli!ined for suspected violations of criminal or immigration laws. Most were
released within three days.
By Friday, another 7,000 men from countries considered high risks for terrorist activity must check in under the National
Security Entry-Exit Registrntion System.
Civil liberties advocates say the program is
an inefficient way to find tern)rists, and will
only alienate a group that could help the
govemmen(!
"What we're hoping is that we don't have
what happened in L.A. happen here," said
Heba Nunr, an attorney for La Raza Cenlro

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I

NFL

Boys basketball

Eagles·ju.mp on
To·mcats, win big
BY Scon WoLFE
Sports correspondent

New York Jets quarterback Chad Pennington celebrates a second-quarter touchdown
against the Indianapolis Colts during the AFC wild card game Saturday at Giants Stadium
in East Rutherford, N.J. Pennington has come so far in less than one season as a starter
that people are starting to mention him in the same sentence as Joe Montana. (AP)

'

·~-·-·4·

'"\

.Penning~on's rapid
development stu-nning
HEMPSTEAD,
N.Y.
(AP) - Former Marshall
quarterback
Chad
Pennington has come so far
in less than one season as an
NFL starter that people are
staning to mention him in
the same sentence as Joe
Montana.
Pennington's coach has
done it. His offensive coordinator has done it. Even
opponents have brought up
the Hall of Fame quarterback's name when talking
about Pennington.
Pennington is entertained
by such talk. For a player
with 13 pro starts, he• is
amazingly composed on
and off the field. But he
knows his resume doesn' t
include four NFL titles or
the kind of long-term efficiency for which Montana
was known.
"He's got four Super
Bowl rings," Pennington
noted, but then added,
"Even in i:lis third year, didn't they win the Super
Bowl? Until that happens, I
definitely look at that as a
compliment."
Jets offensive coordinator
Paul Hackett also worked
with Montana in San
Francisco and Kansas City.
Hackett has a collection of
tapes of Montana's work,
and he and Pennington
watched them.
What Hackett has seen
during Pennington's rapid
development reminds him
· of many successful quarterbacks. Including, as Jets
coach Herman Edwards
would say, Joe Legend.
"I think Chad has been
the most patient, quietly
learning, waiting sponge,
sucking up every l:tit of
information he could,"
Hackett said. "All of a sudden it became his time, he
was just turning over and
saying, 'I've waited .a long
time for it and now it's
going to happen, and I'm
going to make it count."'
During training camp and
even preseason games lead-

···-'·----------·--·- - ·.

__ ,_

GLOUSTER -Outscoring
Trimble 22-6 in the first period, Eastern continued its post
Christmas dominance and
held off a late Trimble rally to
claim a 74-61 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
win over the Tomcats
Tuesday
1n
White
Gymnasium.
Eastern (6-4, 2-2 TVC
Hocking) was led in scoring
by a senior-freshman duet of
Brent Buckley and Nathan
Cozart who both tossed in 16
points overalL Buckley has
come on strong since returning to the line-up and had his
best offensive output of the
year, while Cozart again ran
the EHS offense to perfection
with four assists. Nathan
Grubb added eleven points
with an%her good game,
while Jason Kimes added ten
points and a team-high eight
rebounds.
Alex Simpson added nine
points, Cody Dill eight,
Brandon Werry two, and
Robert Cross two. Cozart,
Kimes, and Grubb each had
two three pointers in a potent
EHS offensive explosion.
Trimble (2-5, 0-4) was led
by Noah Barrett with 18
points, R.J. Andrews with ten
points, Zach Walton five, four
each from A.J. Jenkins and
Justin Jenkins, and two from
Joe Cooper.
·
"We ·played pretty well the
first quarter," said EHS head
coach Howie Caldwell. "We
have really grown as a team
and this 1s · one of the few
times we(ve gone to Trimble
and came home with a big
win. Other than missing a few
free throws we should have
made we did a pretty good

Girls basketball

Meigs tops Wellston
BY JtM SouLSaY

buckets around a Chrissy
Miller hoop gave Meigs
their largest lead of the
WELLSTON
The night at 46-40.
·Meigs Lady Marauders used
Wellston ·again refused to
a balanced scoring attack in go away and raced to witliin
posting a 48-46 win at one at 40-39 on a Hillary
Patrick basket. Drenner then
Wellston on Monday. ·
The Marauders found hit a huge three pointer at
themselves in an early 11-2 the left wing to give the
hole following a Kimmy Marauders some breathing
Cremeans 3-pointer midway roOJil.
through the first quarter.
After the Rockets closed
Maria Drenner countered to 43-42, Jaynee Davis !)it 3
with a 3-point basket at the of 4 free throws to give
2:22 mark, recording the Meigs a 46-42 advantage
first Marauder points from with I :24 left.
the field .
.
Maria Drenner hit two
The Marauders trailed 13 _ . free throws with 19.5 left to
give Meigs a 48-43 lead setS into the second period but ting up a frantic finish .
Pierce opened the quarter Wellston got a free throw
with a steal and a lay up from Linton with 13.6 secfouled on the play Pierce onds left.
completed the 3-point play.
The Marauders were
After
two
Shannon whistled for a technical foul
Soulsby free throws, Pierce for .us:il}g a player in the
the recipient of a Renee game that was listed in the
Bailey assist and Marauders scorebook with a different
were within one at 13-12. uniform number: Cremeans
Wellston widened the gap to hit two foul shots and the
19-14 before a Soulsby put Rockets had possession of
back and a Justine Dowler the ball with a chance to lie
free
throw
left
the or win w~h 13.6 seconds
Marauders trailing 19-17 at left ,
the half.
·
Two Roc[&lt;:et shots came
Soulsby opened the sec- up off the mark as Meigs
ond half by nailing a 3- held on for the win. Pierce
pointer off a Drenner assist, lead Meigs with 14 points,
the three points equaled the Davi s and Drenner had I 0
total third quarter points each, Soul.sby added 9.
scored by the Marauders in Cremeans hit for 22 for
the last ·two games com- Wellston
with Partick
bined.
adding 15 . Davis led Meigs
After Kimmy Cremeans with II rebounds Soulsby
hit her third 3-pointer of the snared 8.
game, back· to back hoops
The Marauders had 32
by pierce and Jaynee Davi s total rebounds. Patrick
gave the Marauders a 4- grabbed !Oofthe 31 Roc!tet
point lead.
boards.
The Rockets battled back
The Marauders (2-9, 2-2)
to take a two-point lead late . travel
to
Belpre on
in the period before Drenner Thursday.
tied the score at 34 heading
Meigs won the JV contest,
to the final quarter.
36-23 . Felisha Stumbo
Meigs went to the inside scored 15 to pace the
game early in the final 8 Marauders, Jill Jenkins
minutes, Davis wrapped two added nine .
Sports correspondent

·
New York Jets' head coach Herman Edwards, left, and
quarterback Chad Pennington watch the .closing minutes
of their 41-Q win over the Indianapolis Colts Saturday at
Giants Stadium. (AP)
ing u_p to the 2002 season,
And the opposing coach
Penmngton often did not who must find a way to
look prepared. His passes slow down Pennington and
floated in practice. He the Jets' dangerous,pffense
seemed to force things.
sees something more.
But then Pennington took
"I see a young man who
over for a slightly injured has been consistent, who
Vinny Testaverde in week had the highest completion
four and was promoted to percentage in the league,"
first-string the next week. Raiders coach Bill Callahan
The Jets were 1-4 when he said. "His ability to make
became the starter, and now plays and to understand
they are headed to Oakland where to go with the ball
on Sunday for a second- has really played into his
round playoff game.
hands.
Pennington was sensa- . !'He's very, very efficient
tiona! in his postseason in his decision-making. His
debut, a 41-0 VIctory over process is very complete.
the Colts last weekend. He The intelligent player that
went 19-for-25 for 222 he is, he'll only continue to
yards and three touch- get better."
downs, with a rating of 142.
Pennington doesn't pay
He led the league in pass- much more than passing
er rating (I 04.2) and com- attention to such accolades
pletion percentage (68 .9) and predictions.
this season.
"In this league, to get the
"He doesn't have a real respect of your teammates,
strong arm, but neither did you can't talk about it,'' he
Joe Montana," Raiders All- said. "You can't just hang
Pro safety Rod Woodson out with them. You have to
·said. "I'm not comparing play well on the field and
him to Joe Montana, trust earn your stripes on the
me on that. I think he's done field b~ winning football
well for a young guy in the games.'
·
league."
Just like Joe Legend did.

job. I thought our early plar,
was a key factor in the game. '
Eastern burst out of the gate
with a potent full court game
and aggressive defense. The
result was a 22-6 first quarter
tally. ~ckley, Grubb and
Cozart· got· on the scoring
merry-go-round early, but
also Simpson and Kimes
nailed down some big buckets and follow-up jumpers.
Eastern was great in the
transition and scored several
goals of the fast break.
Several of Easternfs 13 steals
came iri the span, part of a
defensive scheme that had the
Tomcats frustrated early.
Additionally, several Tomcat
shots fell off the mark, and
Eastern built upon the given
opportunity. The game was
tied at 2-2 and EHS went oo a
I 0-0 run and a 12-4 run to end
the frame.
Eastern played well the second period, but Trimble found
some renewed offense and
played even throughout the
frame. The score at the half
.stood 39-23 Eastern.
Eastern came out of the
gate with a potent 25-poirit
effort again with Buckley,
Simpson, Cozart, Grubb,
Kimes and Dill at the helm of
the EHS scoring machine.
The Eastern defense though
went south, however, as
Trimble hit some shots it had
missed earlier. At the end .of
three rounds the score stood
64-46.
Eastern held off a mild
Trimble rally in the finale -to
gain its sixth win of the season.
Eastern hit 25-of-56 overall
from the field including 7-of23 on threes while hitting 17for-29 at the line. Trimble hi'
24-of-64 overalL
Trimble won the reservt
game 56-39.

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Boys basketball

I

. Wednesday, January 8, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, January 8, 2003

Girls basketball

Boys basketball
•

Eastern 74, Trimble 61
Eastern .................... 22 17 25. 10 - 74
Trimble ......................6 17 23 15 -61
EASTERN (6-4, 2·2) - Jason Kimes 3
2~6 10, Nathan Cozart "6· 2-2 16, Nathan
Grubb 3 3-4 11, Alex Si~son 2 4·4 9,
Brent Buekfiy 6 4·9 16, Brandon Werry 1
Q.O 2, Robert Cross 1 0.0 2, Cody Dill 3 2·
4 6. TOTALS 25 17-29 74. 3·point goals 7 (Kimes 2, Cozart 2, Grubb 2, Simpson 1).
TRIMBLE (2·5, 0·4) - Joe Cooper 1 0.2
2, R.J. Andrews 41 -3 10, Noah Barrett 8 14 1B, Mike Sikorski 0 o-iJ O, Justin Jenkins
2 0-0 4, A.J. Jenkins 1 2-4 4, Zach Walton
2 1· 1 5, Bruce Fouts 5 6·8 16. TOTALS 24
11 -22 61 . 3·polnt goals - 2 (An&amp;ews,
Barrett) .
Rebounds - Eastern 26 (Kimes 8),
Trimble 36 (Fouts 11, Barrett 9): Assists Eastern 14 (Cozart 4), Trimble 6 (Jenkins
2); Blocks- Eastern 7 (DIII4, Simpson 3) ,
Trimble 0: Steals - Eastern 13 (Cozart 4,
Grubb 4) , Trimble 10 (Walton 6); Turnovers
- Eastern 20, Trimble 23.
JV -Trimble 56, Eastern 39.

Co!respondent report

left. meigs held on with the
last Tomcat attempt coming
close but falling off the iron
POMEROY - The Meigs into the hands of Bush as time
Marauders picked up their expired. Meigs struck first in
second win in as many nights, overtime with Buzz Fackler
de feating
the
Trimble and Doug Dill combining for
•· Tomcills 79-77 in overtime at five points to give Meigs . a
Meigs Hi~h Saturday ni~ht. · 70-65 lead.
The wm coupled wtth a
Again the Tomcats came
Marauder
blowout
of
Wahama Friday night evens back tying the score on an
the season record at 4-4. AJ . Jenkins three pointer
Doug Dill and John Bobb with 2:01 left. Now it was the
each tossed in 15 points for Marauders tum to make a run.
the Marauders with Dill Ault scored followed by a
drilling a three pointer from Fackler free throw. Trimble
the right wing with 18 seconds left in regulation to tie was then hit with a technical
foul for calling a time out
the game.
Trimble had one last shot to with none left. Ault canned
win the game, but the last one of two froni the line. 1\vo
Tomcat shot bounced off the Dill free throws gave Meigs a
rim as time ran out. Trimble 76-70 lead with 38 seconds
jumped to an early 6-1 lead left. A.J. Jenkins hit a three
before Meigs Zack Bush and for the Tomcats but two
Bobb took a 9-6 lead with
3: 15 to go in the opening Brooks Johnson free throws
quarter. The game stayed with fuve seconds left sealed
close throufhout the rest of the win. Noah Barrett hit a
the first hal . ·
three at the buzzer to bring
The Tomcats opened a 26- the final score to 79-77.
20 lead with 4:20 left in the
Meigs coach Carl Wolfe
first half. The Marauders was happy witl) the win but
outscored the Tomcats 12-2 not all aspects of his team's
the rest of the half. Ty Ault
connected on three of four free play.
''We made too many mental
throws; Bobb added a charity
toss to close the gap to 26-24. mistakes, and did a poor job
After a Trimble hoop by Justin at the foul line," he said.
Jenkins. Ryan Hannan took
The veteran coach called the
over for Meigs; Hannan technical foul in overtime a
scored the games next six critical call "at that time of the
points, the last two off a'beau- game." Meigs shot the ball
tiful pass from Carl Wolfe to
well hitting 26-of-47 from the
give Meigs a 30-28 lead.
two-point
range and one of
Wolfe added two free
throws to give Meigs a 32-28 ·five from three-point distance.
halftime advantage. The ftrst
The Marauders struggled at
two minutes of the second the line going just 24-of-46.
half was the John Bobb show. Besides the IS-point efforts
. Bobb scored seven of his 15 for Dill and Bobb, Bush and
points in a two minute span to
push the Meigs lead to double Ault scored in double figures
digits. Brooks Johnson gave with 12 and 10 points respecMeigs a 13 point lead at 43- tively. Bush and Johnson each
30 with 5:30 to go in the third snagged 11 rebounds for
· period. The Tmcats refused to Meigs. S. Noah Barrett Jed
fold and closed the period Trimble. with 24 points, A.J.
with a 10 -2 burst lead by Jenkins added 16, and Justin
Noah Barrett to narrow the Jenkins scored 12.
gap to 49-45 heading' into the
Trimble won the JV game
filial period.
71-57.
Shust lead Trimble
'The action was fast and
furious Jn the final stanza with 29 Eric Van Meter led
with first the Tomcats taking Meigs with 15, Dustin
a 54-51 lead then the Vaughan added 14 and Jeremy
Marauders behind Bush grab- Blackston had 12. Trimble
bing a 59-54 advantage. Zach won the freshman game SlWalton hit one of two free 49.
throws to give Trimble a 65Dixon had 18 for the
62 lead with 32 ticks remaining. Dill then sank the three Tomcats. Brandon Kimes led
pointer that tied the game at Meigs with 13; Don Whan had
6S-65 with still 18 seconds 12 and Weston Fife II.
JIM SOULSSY
Spo rts correspondent

••

Marauders blow
outWahama
•
•

Bv

JIM SouLSBY
Sporls correspondent

,I

MASON, W.Va. -Coach
Carl
Wolfe's . Meigs
Marauders posted an 86-59
win over the Wahama White
Falcons m a non-league
Friday.
Meigs (3-4) jumped out to a
good start in the first quarter
as seniors Buzz Fackler and
Brooks Johnson combined for
fifteen points with Doug Dill
and Ryan Hannan adding two
each.
Wahama put 11 on the
scoreboard led by Heath
Rickard with six points,
Aaron Faulk with four and a
free throw by Gabe .Lambert.
· A stingy zone defense and
possibly a shade of overconfidence on the Marauders part
resulted in a different scenario in the second eight minutes. Anthony Mitchell, with
I0 points, led the White
F~lcons on a 14-6 run with
R.T. Roush and Lambert each
posting a goal.
Meanwhile, the maroon and
gold, unable to penetrate the
zone, could only muster six
on a pair of Dill filed goals
and one by Johnson.
·The score was knotted at 25
after two quarters.
· One can only guess as to
what transpired in tile Meigs
locker romp during the break.
Whatever it was inspired the
Marauders to come out firing
irl the third frame.
Fackler. from outside the
circle, drai ned a three, added
a two-pointer then promptly

netted three more 3-pointers
to seemingly break a close
game wide open. Johnson and
Zach Bush chipped in with
four each, Jon Bobb added
three, Doug Dill and Ryan
Hannan contributed two each
to build a IS-point Meigs
lead.
Rickard led the Falcons
with seven in the third quarter.
The Meigs onslaught continued through the fourth as
the White Falcons were
32-20.
With
outscored
Fackler on the bench for a
well-deserved breather,
'Senior Brooks Johnson and
sophomore Zach Bush kept
up the pace.
With both teams in the double bonus, it became a foulshooting contest. Bush, scoreless in the ftrst half. hit 8-of-9
from the charity stripe and
tacked on six from the field to
finish with 18 on the night. ·
Johnson canned 4-of-S
from the line and a pair of
field goals for a total of 20.
Fackler led all scorers with 24
and Doug Dill hit for I 0.
Bobb added five points,
Wolfe four, Hannan four and
Boyd one.
Wahama placed three players in double figures. Rickard
and Mitchell hlid 13 each and
Aaron Davis added I J.
Wahama hit 17-of-S I from
two point range, 4-of-8 outside the arc and 13-of-29
from the free throw line.
Meigs 2S-of-49 two pointers,
S-of-9 from 3-point range and
21 -of-33 from the charity
stripe.

STEWART - Behind an
18-10 outburst in the final
quarter and a 15-for-22 free
throw shooting spree down
the stretch, Southern defeated Federal Hocking 59-47
Monday
at
Mcinturf
Gymnasium. ·
Southern (8-2, 4-1 TVC
Hocking) was led by an outstanding offensive effort
from junior Katie Sayre, who
was 2-for-2 on 3-pointers at
crucial pohlls in the game, 4for-4 at the line and scored a
game-hig_h 16 points.
Amy Lee notched 13
points and had a great floor
game with five assists.
Ashley Dunn had a doubledouble with I 0 points and 10
rebounds, while Rachel
Chapman added seven,
Deana Pullins six, Brigette
Barnes four and Tara Pickens
two.
"It was just another great
team effort," said Suthern
Scott
Wolfe.
coach
"Everyone contributed again
and everyone got tough at
crunch time."
Federal Hocking ( 4-7, 1-4
TVC Hocking) was led by
Kelsey Lackey with I 0
points. Amanda Stover ad~d
eight, and Terri Wolfe and
Natalie Williams had seven
.each.
Southern scored on an
opening lay-in by Chapman
. and after jump-starting its
offense with the press, leaped
to an 11-4 lead on a 3-pointer
and two field goals by Sayre.
Lee hit a couple inside drivers and Dunn and Pullins
added two points each.
Kelsey Lackey and Sarah
Springer each tallied six ·
points to keep Federal in the
hunt, scoring back-to-back
buckets on the SHS press to
cut the SHS lead to 17-16
after one period of play.
Southern picked up its
defense in the second period
as Federal got into some mild'
foul trouble just before the
half. Wolfe rallied with six
points for the Lancers, while
southern distributed its scoring over five players; Lee,
Dunn, Barnes, Chapman and
Tara Pickens. Southern went

Melgt 78, "ll'lmbte OT
, Trimble .............. 14 14 17 20 12
Malgs ................. 13 19 17 16 14 -79
TRIMBLE - A.J. Jen~ns 8 1 16, Noah
Barrett 8 3 24, Zach Walton 3 2 8. Justin,
Jenkins 3 e 12, A.J. Andrews 3 0 6, Bruce
Fouls 4 0 8, Scott Brow~, t 0 3. TOTALS 28
12·22
MEIGS - John Bobb 5 5 15, Carl Wolle
1 3 5, Doug 01115 4 15, Dave Boyd o o o,
1Y Ault 3 4 10, Buzz Fac~or 2 4 8, Brooks
Johnson 3 2 8, Ryan Hannan 3 0 6, lack
Bush 5 2 12. TOTALS 27 24·46 79.
3-polnt goals - Tnmble 9 (Barrett 5, A.J.
Jenkins 3, Brown 1); Meigs I (Dill).

-n ·

n.

Federal Hocking's Kelsey Lackey is boxed in 'by Southern's Brigette Barnes {12) and Katie
Sayre {10). Southern's Rachel Ch.apman, Amy Lee and Ashley Dunn look on.

up 28-22, but a pair of at the line and Pullins hit a
Natalie Williams free throws banker from the left side for a
key score.
cut it to 28-24 at the half.
"It is always tough to win
Stover helped Federal get
at Federal Hockin~," Wolfe back into the game with six
said. "Coach Hendrix does an markers and Gilders added
outstanding job. We lost an four more to cut the SHS lead
overtime game here last year from six to 37-36 at the third
that cost us the league cham- period buzzer.
pionship and we had that in
Dunn came up with a steal
the back of our minds. The and couple of baseline lay- ·
girls weren't going to leave ins to spark the Tornadoes m
here without a victory the last round. Pullins added
tonight.
a key goal and Chapman hit a
"I thought the key to the reverse lay-in off a Dunn
game was our unselfish team steal. The rest of the damage
play and . our foul shooting came from some clutch free
going down the stretch. At throw shooting (15-for-28)
times we didn't play smart, going down the stretch as
but we played as a team. And SHS edge its way to victory,
most of all we played well 59-47. Lee hit 5-of-6, Barnes
when we had to.'
3-for-4 and Sayre 4-for-4 in
The third quarter was both the streak.
an offensive struggle and a
"Brigette Barnes has held
defensive chess game. Katie her man to under eight points
Sayre sparked a stagnant each of the last three games,
SHS offense with a baseline and we put her on what we
goal for two and three-point- think is ·· the opponentfs
er off the inbounds play for biggest scoring threat,"
another score. Lee added two · Wolfe said. "She hasn't been

the scorer oflast year, but she
has won us some ball games
defensively. This and Amy
Lee's good floor game were
key factors, along with the
fact every team member contributed m some way.
"It is veT¥ tough to win on
the road m this Hocking
Division," Wolfe added.
"The league is so very well
balanced. Federal Hocking is
young, but they are one of the
most athletic teams we have
faced. We feel very fortunate
to go hotye with a win
tonight." '
Southern won the reserve
game in overtime 45-40 Jed
by Joanne Pickens with 22
points. Ashley Roush and
Jessica Hill each added seven
and Susan Brauer five .
Jennifer Sweeney had nine
for Federal Hocking.
Southern goes to Eastern
Thursday. The EastemTrimble game set "· foa
Monday was cancelled due to
snow.

Jackson run dooms Marauder girls
BY JIM SOULSBY

Sports correspondent

POMEROY- It was deja
. vu all over again for . the
Meigs Lady Marauder basketball team Saturday.
Facing
the
Jackson
lronladies at Meigs High
School, the Marauders were
outscored 17-0 by the visitors over a 5:42 span o( the
third period as Jackson posted a S8-43 win.
The · Marauders (1-9) in
their last game at Logan let
a halftime lead slip away by
being outscored 16-0 in the
third period as they fell to
the Lady Chiefs by six.
The
lronladies
and
Marauders battled to a halftime deadlock at 27 all
before the third quarter
onslaught.
Maria Drenner gave the
Marauders an early 6-4 lead

as the senior scored 6 of her
8 points in the first three
minutes of the game. The
lronladies fueled by 6
Amanda Buckler points
went on an 11-0 run to build
a 15-6 lead with under three
minutes to go in the first
quarter.
Meigs clawed their way
back into the game and
ended the quarter on a threepoint play by Shannon
Soulsby to close, to 17-15 at
the end of eight minutes .
Jackson then went into an
offensive lull as
the
Ironladies went 5:06 of the
second period before they
were able to break the scoring ice . Samantha Pierce,
Justine Dowler and
Souls\)y combined to give
the marauders a 22-17 lead.
At the one-minute mark,
two J aynee Davis free
throws gave the"marauders a

27-23 lead. Jackson scored
the last four second quarter
points to draw even at 27-27
at the half.
Holly Evan opened the
decisive 17-0 run with a
three pointer from the right
corner, 5:18 later she ended
it the saine way as the
lronladies built a 44-27
lead.
The Marauders in the
meantime were committing
I0 of their 30 turnovers in
the quarter.
'
Renee Bailey found the
hoop at the 2: 18 mark to put
Meigs on the second half
board.
By the t-hird period the
smoke had cleared and the
Mara·uders
had
been
outscored 19-3 and the issue
had been all but settled.
Jackson built' the lead to
as many as 21 points in the
final quarter in coasting to

the 58-43 win.
Soulsby and Davis scored
10 each to lead Meigs, with
Drenner adding eight and
Pierce and Bailey hitting
for five each. Lindsey
Steppe netted 13 to lead
Jackson, ·Evans added one.
Meigs went 11-of-47
from the field and 20-of-27
at the · foul line. The
Marauders held a huge 4223 rebounding edge with
Davis grabbing nine, Bailey
eight and soulsby seven.
Leali led Jackson with five.
The lronladies committed
14 turnovers compared to
30 miscues for Meigs.
Jackson hit on 23 -of-56
field goals and seven of 18
free throws.
Jackson won the JV game
in overtime, 26-24. Angel
Harter led Meigs with nine.
Felisha Stumbo scored six,
Jill Jenkins added five .

Southern school board
passes renewal levy

0 Ll
on the number of Bingo
cards you can play.
Cards In your Sunday,
January 5, 2003 paper

I

t

Tueoday
Akr. Manchester 90, Mogadore 60
Akr. SVSM 97, Cle. VASJ 60
Albany Ale•ander 64, Balpre 63
Amherst 71, Bay Village Bay 66
Archbold 65, Stryker 36
Ashlabula Lakeside 62, Jefferson 56
Aurora 61 , Chesterland W. Geauga 58
Bamesvllla 63. St. Clairsville 59
Batavia 73, Cln. SCPA 48
BeallsiJIIIe 79, Cameron, W.Va. 38
Beavercreek 78, Sidney 30
Bodford Chanel 65, Pepper ~Ike
University 41
Bellbrook 50, W. Carrollton 44
Belmont Union Local 51 , Cadiz Harrison
Cent.35
Beloit W. Branch 74. Akr. Spring. 61
Berlin CentBJ W. Reserve 37, tvk0onak:l36
Berlin Hiland St. New Philadelphia
Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 24
Baverly Ft. Frye 63, Old Washington
Buckeye Trail 43
Bloomdale Elmw00&lt;161, Gibsonburg 51
Bowling Green 64, Rossford 58
Brecksville 83, Berea 57, OT
Brooklyn 65, Beachwood 41
Brunswick 69, N. Ridgeville 62
Cembrldge 57, Dover 45
Can Fulton NW 62, Louisville 48
Con. S. 88, Alliance Ma~lnglon 63
canal Winchester 40, lancaster Fisher

Calli. 30

Mogadore Field 69. Garrettsville Garfield 31
Mowrystown Whiteoak n , Fayetteville 46
Mt. Vernon 71, Sunbury Big Walnut 54
Mt. Vernon Acad. 90, Village Acad. so .
N. L...sllUrgTriad80, DeGraff Riverside 56
Nelsonville York 63. Pomory Meigs 57
New Albany 74, Harvest Prep 34
New Concord John Glenn 56, CrooksiJIUe
38
New Lebanon Dixie 59, Germantown
Valley VifrN 57 •
New Matamoras Fronlier 65, Caldwell 64
New
Philadelphia 44,
ByesiJille
Meadowbrook 41
New Richmond 71 , Georgetown 69, OT
Newark Ucking Valley 55, Howark E.
.Knox 44
Newbury 55, Oates Mills Hawken 53 •
Newcomerstown 57, W. Latayette
Ridgewood 51
Newport, Ky., 72, Bethel·Tale 68
Newton Falls 55, Brookfield 31
NlieB McKinley 78, Salem 50
Oberlin 72, .Eiyrla Mktvlew 69
Oberlin Flrei.Jnds 91 , Awn 56
Olmsted Falls 67 , Rocky AliJer 48
Oregon Strilch 84, Tol. Maumee Valley n
Ottawa Hll!s 71, Tol. Emmaooel Baptist 53
Parma Holy Name 63, Parma Normandy 56
Peebles 83, Ripley 48
Peppel Pike Oranga 84, Wickliffe 62
Perry 55. Chagrin Falls 52
Perrysbourg 63, Sylvania Southview 60
Philo 46, Warsaw River Vifffl 43
Plain · City Jonathan Alder 57, W.
Jefferson 47
Rli1t F'leii!Wt. wv.. 53. Vil1lorll'o'!lla152, or
Poland Seminary 69, Warren H""'and 57
PortsmoulhW. 64, Oak Hill 51
Rayland Buckeye Local 82; Richmond
Edison 78
·
Reedsville E. 74, Glouster Trimble 61
Reynoldsburg 52. Groveport 46
Rocky Alv~r Lutheran W. 78, Richmond
Hts. 67, 2 OT
s. Charleston SE 60, London Madison
Plains 42
S. Point 57, Proctorville Fairland 47
S. Webster 83, McOGrmott NW 69
Salineville Southern 58, Hanoverton
UMed58
Sandusky 73, Oregon Clay 67
Sarahsville Shenandoah 66, Waterford 61
Sebring 63, Lisbon 52
Spring. Kenton Ridge 58, Spring. NE 49
Spring. N. 63, Piqua 62 ..,
Spring. S. 69. Clayton Northmont 68
St. Henry 60, Uma Senior 31
S1eubenvllle 60, Martins Ferry 50
Stewart Federal Hocking 82, Hemlock
Miller 54
Strasburg-Franklin 59, Malvern 31
Strongsville 78, N. Royalton 77, OT
Sugarcreek Garaway 87, Bowerston
Conotton Valley 27
Swanton 53. Ewrgreen 46
SYlvania Northview 71, Whithouse
Anthony Wayne 64
Thomls Worthington 70, Westland 37
Thornville Sheridan 63, McConnelsville
Morgan 49
Toronto 39, Wellsville 34
Trotwood 90, Greenville 53
Troy 56, Kenerlng Fairmont 38
Troy Chr. 57, Middletown Chr. 46
Vandalia Butler 63, Xenia 42
Wadsworth 66, Akr. Firestone 61
Warren Champion 73, Kinsman Badger 44
Warrensville 86, Parma 52
Wellington 67, Lorain Clearvlew B6
Western latham 58, Portsmouth Clay 43
w-...1e s. 60, Worthington ~me 50
Westlake 61, Avon Lake 60
Wheelersburg 59, Waverly 56
Willoughby S. 59, Fairport 38
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 62,
Portsmouth SCiotovtlle E. 55
WOO&lt;Imore 59, Lakota 57
WOOd8field Monroe Cent. 72, Shadyside 64
Wooster Triway 66,
Apphtcre.ek
Weynedale 50 ·
Xenia Chr. 63, Cln. Chr. 44
Yellow Springs 61, Day. Jefferson 56
Youngs. Austintown·Fitch 51, Youngs.
Boaldman 42
Youngs. Liberty 42, Hubbard 40
'roungs. Mooney 59, Campbell Mamorlal34
zanesvile Maysville 42. New LeNington 34
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valle~ 44,
Uhrichsville Claymont 41

canfield 66, Struthers 56
Centerville 68, Huber His. Weyne 45
Chesapeake 90, Coal Grove DawsonBryant33
Cln. Anderson 59, Batavia Clermont NE 33
Ctn. Country Cay 45, New Miami 35
ctn. Glen Este 48 , Goshen 39
Cln. Hills Chr. Academy 48, Cln. N.
College Hill45
Cln. La Selle 56, Cln . Aiken 45
Cln. Landmark Chi'. 68, Cln. Summit
CquWy D'l'/ .49
.. ..
,
,
Cln. Lockland 63, Sl. Bernald 60, OT
Cln. Moeller 60, Cln. McNicholas 47
Cin. Norwood 59, Cin. Turpin 45
Cle. Benedictine 45, Parma Padua 40
Cia. Glenville 94, B-rd 7~
Cle. Heritage 51, Mentor Chr. 44
Cle. Kennedy 57, Maple Hts. 55, OT
Cle. M.L. King 99, Ashtabula Sla. John &amp;
PaulO
Cots. Beechc•oft 66, COis. Unden 68
Cols. Brookhaven 68. Cots. Northtand 57
Cols. E. 65, Cols. Whetstone 55
Cols. Eastmoor Aced. 55, Cols. Briggs 26
Cols. Hartley 54, Zanesville Rosecrans 52
Melgo 48, Wellston 46
Cols. Independence 106, Cols. S. 51
Melgs ......................... 5 12 19 12 - 48
COfs. Mifflin 98, COis. Centennial 50
Cola. Tree of Ufe 78, Sugar Grove Berne Wellston ........ ...... ..... 13 6 15 12 -48
MEIGS - Maria Drenner 3 2 10, Justine
Union 51
Dq_wler 1 1 3, Samantha Pierce 5 4 14,
Cols. w. 54, ~rion· Franktln 50
Shannon Soulsby 3 2 9, Michelle Drenner
Cola. Watterson 73, Cola. DeSales 54
o o 0. Renee Bailey o o o. Jaynee Davis 3
Colo. Welington 74, COis. HamiRon Twp. 67 4 10, Fel~ha Stumbo o o o. Chrissy Miller
Columbia 79, Independence 62
1 0 2. TOTALS 16 13·19 48. 3·point goala
- Meigs 3 (Drenner 2, Soulsby).
Columbiana 59, Leetonia 50
WELLSTON - Radar 2 0 4, Patrick 5 5
Convoy CresiVIew 60, Contlnenlal44
15, Cremeans 58 22 , Ralnel 0 2 2, Bunell
Cornerstone Chr. 72, Fuchs Mizrachi 56
1 0 2. Linton 0 1 1. TOTALS 1316·27 46. 3Coshocton 61 . Gnad. lndian Valley 48
Cuyahoga Falls Chr. Acad. 73, Peninsula polnt goals - Wellslon 4 (Cremeans 4).
Woodrldga 67, OT
Southern 59, Fad. Hocking 47
Danbury 55, Northwood 53
Southern .................. 17 10 9 18 ..:.. 59
Day. Chaminade.Julienne 36, Cln. Roger Fed. Hoc~ng ........... 16 6 12 10 - 4)o..
Bacon 32
SOUTHERN (8·2, 4·1)- Katie Sayre\il
Day. Col. While 66, Lima Senior 82
4-4 16, Rachel Chapman 3 1-4 7, Brigette
Day. Miami Valley 42, Ridgeville Chr. 36
Barnes 0 4-6 4 , Deana Pullins 3 ~ 6, Amy
Delaware 73, Franklin HIS. 61
Lee 3 7-8 13. Ash~y Dunn 4 2·5 10,
Delaware Chr. 47. Liberty Chr. 44
Joanne Pickens a 0-0 a. Tara Pickens 1 0Doylestown Chippewa 54, Massillon 1 2. Ashaly Roush 0 IJ.O 0, Brooke Kisor 0
0.0 0. TOTALS 19 18·28 59,
Tuslaw 51
Total FG 19·45. 3·point goals 2·2
Dresden Tri·Valley 42, Zanesville W.
(Sayre). Rebounds 43 (Barnos12, Dunn 8,
Musklngum 40
Chapman 8). Steals 7 (Dunn 3, Chapman
Dublin Coffman 79, Hilliard Darby 70
Dublin Scioto 37, CO~. Upper Arlington 34 2) . Asaists 13 (Lee 5). Turnovers 29.
FEDERAL HOCKING (4·7, t-4)
E. Can . 76, Magnolia Sandy Valley 63
Ashley Johnson 0 0.0 0, Nalalle Williams 2
E. Liverpool 87, Ballalro 84
3-3 7, Terri Wolfe 3 1·3 7, Brandee Harl 1
E. Palestine 53, Ashland Crestview 44
1-2 3, manda Siovor 4 0·1 8, Kelsey
Fairview 43, N. Olmolld39
Lackey 4 2·2 10, FaHh Glldars 3 IJ.O 8,
Fostoria 63. Bellevue 66
Sarah Springer 3 0.1 8. TOTALS 20 7·12
'47.
Franklin 71 , Carlisle 58
Total FG 20·69. 3·polnl goala 0·1 o.
Fn~nklln Fumaco GA18n72. New Booton 58
Rtbounda 28 (Lackey 7,Sprlngor 6).
Fremont Rou 60, Tol. St. Francia 58
Alllo118 (Wolfe 3). B l - ohots 5 (Wolle
Ft. Loromlo 58, Anna 43
2). Sttalo 12 (Siovor, Sprlngor 3) .
Galllpolla Gtlllt Acid. 78, Marlotta 85
Galli Mllll Gilmour 80, Cuyahoga Hll. 45 TurnCWII'I 18.
GoniYI 88, Alhlabult Edgowood 48
J1o1110n 118, Mtlal 43
·
Granvlllt 87, Ullca 42
JlCitlon ................... t7 10 l i 12 -56
Gn1nvlll1
Millersport 28
2
Greenlltld McOitln 48, Lynohbu~lay 37
Hamilton Plott 47, Edgowood H
Holly E111no 4 o 11, Kolly Smith 4 o 8, Kala
Hllllald Dovldoon 54, Grov. City 48
Lemon 0 1 1. Jtnnllynn Martin 0 1 1,
Vlotorlt L.eall 4 2 10, Llndtoy Sltptle 8 0
Houolon 48, JaokiOn Oonltr ~
13, Sarah Llontrll 0 aa, Marlt MtVII 2 0
Jaolclon 77, Logan 73, OT
4, Brlttony Moora 0 I 1. TOTALS 23 7·1.1
Kont Ploo-R
Slrttllboro ~
56.
Kotla~ng Alltr 48, Cln, Elcllr 48
MEIGS - ~~- Btllty 1 3 8, Marla
Kirtland 56, Burton Borl&lt;lhlrt 48
Orannor 3 a a, Juotlnt Oowltr 1 1 3.
LaGn~ngo KoyotontU. lrookoldo 48
Btmantha Pltrot 1 3 5, Shannon Souloby
ooc1 St.
011.Cont. Ca!lt.• 3 3 10. Mlohollt Ortnnor 1 0 JaynH
L.lwla Ctnltr Olonlangy 57, Qrov. City Davia 1 8 10, Chrltty Mlllor 0 0 0, Kal'lo
Conlntl Crceolng 58
Dtvll 0 0 0, Flllaha 61umbo 0 0 0. TOTAl.S
Ubtrty Ctntor 81, Dtlta 47
11 20.27 43.
Llllldng Coutty
-.g,
3opolnl goalo - Jacklon 8 (Evano 3,
Uma Cont. Cath. 51, W. Llbtrty Solom 48 S l - 1, Sm~h t ) Malge 1 (Souloby).
Ll'1'l Chr. Aotll.ll8. Andlty HerltaQo Chr.58
Lima Perry 70, Dolo Homln N. 49
Antwtrp 38. Ha=oyno Tract 32
Lima ShawnH 78, Ooflanco 88
Barberton 84, Mtylltkl 48
Lima Temple Chr. 83, Evangel 56
Boy Villtgt Bay :18, Con . Ctnl. Cath. 35
Llobon BNvtr Local T7.\bulgt. Chanty 54
Cantorburg 54, MI. Glltad 47
Lorain Colh. 50, Clo. Hlo. Luthoran E. 47
Chllllootha Huntington 58, Richmond
Loldotown 72, Bloomflt~ 53
Dolt SE 48
Lueoavlllo Volloy 77, Mlnlord 55
Chilloolht Unloto 88. Fronl&lt;fort Adena 58
Maplewood 88, Andover Pyf"Otunlng
Chllllcolho Zona Troct 41 , Plkoton 31
Cln. Anderton 46, Cln. Mlllorll 27
vonoy 4~
Cln. LO&gt;/Oiand 70, Balavla Clermont NE 44
Marion Loool 84. Wopokonota 50
Cln. Madeira 63, Cln. Flnnoytown 35
Maryovlllo 47, Potookala Watklnl
Cln. Mariemont 53, Cln. Indian Hl!l ~
Mamorlal31
Cln. McNicholas 48, Hamilton Bodin 43
Melllllon e2, Barberton 57
Cln. Mercy 48, Cln. McAulay 31
MaumH 50, Hollon&lt;! Spnng. 43
Cln. Mcunt Notra Dame 72, Clot Saton 42
McArthur Vlnlon County 51 , Welltton 36
Cln. St. Uroula 57, Cln. UrauHne 49
Medlne 59, Mld&lt;lloburg HIS. Midpark 44
Cln. Sycamore 49, Cln. Colerain 46
Medina Chr. 74, Ely•lo Flrot Baptlot 72
Cln. Taft 53. Cln. Wottom Hilla 44
Mentor L&amp;ka Ceth. 55, Madison 34
Cln. Taylor 81 , Cln. ~eadlng 48
Mlddlofl•~ Cardlnel 84. Orwell Grand
Cln. Withrow 70, Cln. Woodwald 18
Valley 75, OT
Cln. Wyoming 60, Cln. Deer Park 32
ClrcieviHe 50, Canal Wlnctlester 42
Millbury Laka 81 , Genoa 37
Cle. Hts. Beaumont 59, Shaker Hta.
Mlllaraburg W. Holmes 75, Smithville 30
Laurel 24
Mineral Ridge 80, Lowellville 54

Girls basketball

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

Scoreboard

Meigs ·slips by Southern rolls past Federal Hocking
Trimble in OT
BY

'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

a.

w.v. ee

Clyde 58. Willard 56
Cots: Acad. 47, Cots. Tree of Lite 32 ·
Cots. Beechcrott 57 , Cots. Linden 53
Cots. Brookhaven 66, Cols. Northland 26
Cots. Hamilton 1Wp. 50, Bloom-Carroll 40
Cols. Independence 98, Cots. S. 24
Cots. Mifflin 85, Cots. Centennial 32
Cols. Upper Mlngton 52. Dublin SCioto 33
-COls. Wellington 81, Harvest Prep ~ 2
Co ts. Whetstone 55, Cols. E. 53

COpley 75, Norton 27
Cuyehoga Falls 40, ~Ia Nordonla 38
Cuyahoga Falls Chr. Aoad. 85, Alu. Elms 29
Delaware 84, Cots. Franklin Hts. 33
O&amp;l&gt;h&lt;&gt;&lt;l JeffeiSOO 59. Pru1&lt;Way 48
Fairtanks 43, Delaware Buck8ye Valley 32
Fairborn 49, Day. Chr. 44
Fairfield Union 48, Amanda.Ciearcreek 41
Findlay 57, Wapakoneta 39
Fredericktown 50, BellviUe Clear Fork 45
Fremont St. Joseph 45, Sandusky St.

Mary 43
Ft. Recovery 69. Aneonla 37
GraniJille Chr. 34, Falr11eld Chr. 33
Greenfield McClain 35 , Hillsboro 24
Hamilton 52, Cln. Oak HIAa 45
Haroleon 38, FrankUn County 38
Hoalh 59, Summit Slatton Licking His. 4.1
Hicksville 57, DoHa 35
Hudson 74, Solon 30 .
Kalida 74, Van Wert Llnoolnvlew 13
Kenerlng Al1er 51 , Cln. Purcell Marian 47
Laleyette Allen E. 65, Waynestlek:l47
Liberty Chr. 46, Grove City Chr. 39
·Lodi Cloverleaf 45, Franklin Furnace
Green 36
Logan Elm 55, Ashville Teays Valley 51
Loudonville 56, W. Salem rlW 47
Madison 79, Chardon 36
Marion Harding 53, Keinton 45
Marion ~leasent 54, Cols. School tor
Girls 35
Marysville 58, Pataskala Watkins
Memorlal47
McGulfey Upper SCioto Vally 55,
Arlington 35
Middletown Chr. 57, Lima Temple Chr. 52
Minster 43, Versailles 40, OT
Mt. Vernon 59, Sunbury Big Walnut 33
New L8banon Dixie 49, Camden Preble
Shawnee .38
Paulding 65, Van Wert 82, OT
Powell Village Acad . 37, Mt. Vernon
Acad. 32 ·
Ravenna 68, Kenston 45
Reyn·oldsburg 65, Groveport 53
Rlchwoo&lt;l N. Ur1on 69. Marion Elgin 67, 20T
SanduskY Perkins 67, Danbury 26
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 74, N.
Ridgeville Lake Ridge 19
Sidney lehman Cath. 81, W. Alexandria
Twin Valley S. 54
St. Henry 60, Lima Senior 31
Stow 79. Lyndhurst Brush 57
Sycamore Mohawk 51 , Bucyrus 36
Tallmadge 55, Medina Highland 35
Tol. Ubbey 58, Pioneer N. Cent. 34
Twinsburg 63, Kent Roosevelt 57
l:Jpper Sandu!)ky 48, Bascom Hopewell·
Loudon 39
Urbana 68, London 58
Van Buren 76, Old Fort 44
.Vanlue 54, Fostoria St. Wendelin 47
W. Unity Hilltop 48, Montpelier 33
Wadsworth 90, Richfield Revere 36
Washington C.H. 52, E. Clinton 38
Weinon, W.Va. 44, Wintersville Indian
Creek 33
W&lt;!st Chester Lakota W. 66. Uberty Twp.
Lakola E. 40
Weadand 48, Thomas Worthington 43
Williamsport WesUall 59, Bainbridge
Paint Valley 55
Wood County Chr. 42, Massillon Chf. 40
Wooster 59, can. GtenOak 51
'
Worthington Kilbourne 47, Weslarvllle S. 43
Xenia Chr. 51, Day. Miami Valley 48
Yelk:w Springs 44. Cln. c~ Morrteoson 43
Youngs. Rayon 66, YQungs. Wilson 27
Zanesville 60, Newark 41

College basketball

San Antonlo ..... v21 13 .618
7.5
Uteh ........ ... .... l ... 19 14 .576
9
Houston .............16 14 .563
9.5
Minnesola .. :....... 17 16 .515
11
Memphis ............ 11
22 .333
t7
Denver .................7 26 .212
21
Paclflc Dlvlelon
WLPctGB
Sacramento ...... .26
9 .743
Phoenix ............. 22
13 .629
4
Portland ............. 20 13 .606
5
Seattle .............. 16 17 .485
9
L.A. Lakers ........ 15 20 .429
11
Golden State ..... 14 19 .424
t1
L.A. Ctippers ...... 12 22 .353
13.5
Monday'a Game~
Washington 100. Boston 95
Milwaukee 106, Cleveland 94
Orlando 103, New York 100
Indian~ 105, ~hlladelphla I 04, OT
New Jersey 101, Atlanta 94
Detroit 82, Toronto 74
Memphis 106. New Orteans 102
Chicago 113, Utah 98
Dallas 86, Denver 71
Golden State 99, Miami 85
1\Jeeday'a 01m11
Sacramento 101 , Milwaukee 76
Houlton 94, Minnesota 86
Phoonl• 66. Portland 81
L.A. I..akers 119, Seanle 98
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at Washington, 7 p.m.
Houston at Orlando, 7 p.m.
New York at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Detrott at Phlla&lt;lelphla. 7 p.m.
Dallas at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
GOlden State at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Utah, 9 p.m.
Miami at Denver, 9 p.m.
Boston at New Orlean&amp;, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Saattle. 10 p.m.
Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Sacramento at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
San Antonio at Portland, 10 p.m.

s unday, Feb. 2
AJ..tlonolulu

Edmonton at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

AFC vs. NFC, Ttit. IABC)

Transactions
,

Hockey .

. 8-!-SEBALL
Ameri can League
KANSAS CITY ROYALS- Agreed to
National Hockey League
_ terms with RHP Albie Lopez on a one-year
EASTERN CONFERENCE
contract.
Atlantic Dlvielon
TEXAS RANGERS- Agreed to terms
W L TOLP1o GFGA
w1th C Chad Kreuter on a minor league
Philadelphia .... 21 10 8 1 51 95 84
contract.
New Jersey .... 22 12 2 3 49 92 79
TORONTO BLUE JAYs-Acquired OF
N.Y. Islandtlrs ... 18 16 5 1 42 1t 41 16
John-Ford Griffin from Oakland for a player
Piitsburg h ......17 16 3 5 421 19 124 ·to be named.
•
N.Y. Rangers .. 1521 6 1 37103 136
Nlltlonal League
Northeaet Dlvlelon
CINCINNATI AEOB-Agreed to terms
W L T OLP1s GFGA
with LHP Kent Mercker and LHP Felix
onawa..... ...... 25 9 s 1 56 134 88 Heredia on minor loague contracts.
Bostl&gt;n ........... 2114 4 1 47 123109
COLORADO ROCKIES- Agreed to
Toronto .......... 21 15 4 1 47 118 98
terms with 38 Chris Stynes on a one-year
Montreat... .... 16 16 5 4 41 112 125
contract
Buffalo ............ 10 23 5 2 27 89 113
BASKETBALL
National·Baeketbllll A11oclatlon
Sdutheaat Dlvlalon
ATLANTA . HAWKS- Wai ved G Mike
W L T OLPts GFGA
Wilks.
TampaBay ..... 1815 5 3 441161 16
CHARLOTTE- Named Ed Tapscott
Washlngton .... 1816 5 2 431 07 113
executive ~ Ice president.
· Carolina .......... 16 16 6 3 41 94 106
DALLAS MAVERICKs-Waived G Adam
Florlda .......... .. 12 12 9 7 40 9411 4
Harrington.
Atlanta .......... 10 24 2 4 26 99 150
TORONTO RAPTOA5-WaiWd C Greg
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Foster and G Jermalne Jackson.
Central OlvleloP'I
FOOTBALL
W L T OLP11 GFGA
Natfon11 Football League
Oetr0il ............. 23 ~a 7 1 54 123 96
ATLANTA FALCON5-Pieced LB John
St. Louis ....... 21 12 5 3 50 132104
Holecek on injured re serve. Signed WA
Chicago ........ 19 13 7 1 46 96 90
Jimmy Farris from praclice squad. Signed·
Nashville ......... 12 18 7 4 35 8911 1
WR Anthony Bright to the practice squad.
Colurnbus ....... 14 20 4 2 34109 122
BUFFALO BILLS- Announced lne contracts of Miles Atifldge, linebackers coach,
Northweat Dlvlelon
and Ronnie VlnM:Iarek, offensive line coach,
W L TOLPto GFGA
will not be re newed.
· vancouver ...... 24 11 5 0 531271 01
CLEVELAND BROWNS- Announced
Mlnnesota ....... 21 13 7 1 5011 0 96
the retirement of Foge Fazio, defen sive
Edmonton...... .1813 5 5 4611 21 10
coordinator. Fired Ray Hamilton, defensive
Colorado ....... .. 1611 9 5 46116104
line coach. •
Calgary ........... 14 IS 6 3 37 89110
DALLAS COWBOYS- Named Jim ·
PacHic Dlvlalon
Jeffcoat defensive ends coach. Signed QT ·
W L T OLPio QFGA
Willie Blade and OL Dave Volk.
National Fatrtball League
oanas ............. 2310 10 1 57 133 67
DENVER BRONC05-Signed QB Nick
Ployollo
LosAngeles ... 171i 4 3 41 10?1 16
Rolovich, CB Corey Chamblin, DE Devon
AIITimeoEST
Anahalm ......... 15 15 7 3 40 98102
Finn , LB Louis Green, DL Jeff Harris and T
Wild-cam Playollo
Phoenix ......... 15 11 6 3 39 104 120 · Wayne Smith.
• Sotunlly, Jon. 4
San Jose ...... .. 1.5 17 5 3 38 110 126
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS- Signed Ol
AFC
TWo polnls tor a win, one paint tor a tie Matt Anderl e, OL Hans Olsen. DT Brandon
N.Y. Jets 41 , Indianapolis 0
Hicks and LB J.A. Johnson trom the pracand overtime lo...
NFC
·
tice squad.
Monday'• Games
Atlanta 27, Green Bay 7
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Signod .
Nashville
5,
Columbus
1
Sunday, Jan. 5
CB Oyshod Carter, DT Ken Kocker. G
Los Angeles 3, Minnesota 2
AFC
Brandon Gorin, WR Scott McCready, lB
Ottawa
5,
N.Y.
Rangers
2
Pittsburgh 36, Cleveland ~3
Courtney Ledyard and QB Shane Stafford.
Edmonton 5, San Jose 5, tie
NFC
-f\e-signed
WA T.C. Taylor.
.
TUeaday'e Games
San Francisco 39, N.Y. Giants 38
NEW YORK GIANT5-Signed G Sean
Phjladelphla 3, Buffalo 2
O'Connor, AB Antonio wa rren, G Vincent
Dlvlelonal Ployoffo
Tampa Bay 1. Detro~ o
Sandoval, T Char-Ron Dorsey, OB R~an
Saturday, Jan. 11
N.Y. Islanders 6, Pittsburgh 3
Van Dyke, P Steve Cheek and DT Ahmad :
AFC
Caroli na 3, Atlanta 3, tie
Miller.
•
Pittsburgh at Tennessee, 4:30p.m. (CBS)
Toronto 5, Boston 2
SAN
FRANCISCO
49ER5-Signed
T
•
NFC
New Jersey 3, Montreal 2
Austin Lee to lhe practice squad.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 8 p.m. (FOX)
Nashville 2, St: Louis 1, OT
HOCKEY
SUnday, Jan. 12
Callas
7,
Los
Angeles
4
National
Hockey League
NFC
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS- Fired
Calgary 4, Colorado 2
San Francisco at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Dave King, coach. Named president ancj
Wednelday'a Gamet
(FOX)
general manager Doug Macl ean interim
Carolina
at
N.Y.
Rangers,
7
p.m.
AFC
coach.
Detroit at Florida, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Jats at Oakland, 4:30 p.m. ICBS)
FLORIDA PANTHERS- Recalled G
Columbus at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Wade Flaherty from San Antonio of the ·
Conleronce Chomplonohlpo
Phoenix at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
AHL
.
Sunday, Jen. 19
Ottawa at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
MINNESOTA WILD-Recalled G Dieter '
AFC
Championship
and
NFC
Edmonton at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.
Kochan from Houston of the AHL.
Championship
Thuredav'• Games
Reassigned LW Hnat Domenichell l to
3 p.m. and6:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Tampa Bay. 7 p.m.
Houston. Announced C Pierre-Marc ·
~hi!adelphla at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Bouchard has returned from the Canadian
SUper Bowl
N.Y. Rangers at Mo,ntreal , 7:30p.m.
national junior hockey learn.
.
Sund1y, J1n. 28
Toronto at PIUsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
PlfTSBURGH PENGUIN5-Recalle&lt;l Cl
At San Diego
Chicago at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Sebastien
Caron
from
Wilkes•
AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 6:18
Ottawa at·Calgary, 9 p.m.
Barre/Scranton of the AHL.
• •
p.m.
Anaheim at Colorado, 9 p.m.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-fleturned'Q
St. Louis at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
StG\Ie Emlnger to hi&amp; junior learn.
· Pn&gt; Bowl

Pro football

Men
Tuacloy
EAST
'Army 6!5, ·Fairleigh ·Dickinson 63
Binghamton 74, St. Francis, NY 62.
Bucknell 66, Robert Morris 53
Colgate 64. Dartmouth 54
Holy Crosa 83, Oulnnipiac 75
lafayette 97, Centenary, N.J. 42
Manhattan 82, Siena 66
Princeton 76, UMBC 43
West Virginia 68, Miami 83
SOUTH
Chattanooga 7.2 , UNC-Greensboro 56
Florida 74, Mississippi St. 66
Florida A&amp;M 76, Morris Brown 65
Georgia SOuthern 71, Furman 64
Memphis 85, Tulane 73
Reinhardt 64, W. Carolina 63
The Citadel 88, Emmanuel 55
Wake Forest 98, Elan 56
MIDWEST
Bowling Green 61 , Ball St. 57
E. Michigan 94, Wls.-Green Bay 87
Illinois·76, Minnesota 70
lnd.-Pur.-FI. WaynQ 86, lnd.-Pur.-lndpls.
80, OT
Marquette 60. Saint Louis 54
Missouri 88, Centenary 58
N. Iowa 66. Illinois St. 64
Nebraska 70, Lipscomb 60
Richmond 67, Xavier 59
W. Illinois 110, St. Ambrose 83
Wichita St. 71 , Indiana St. 55
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 80, Mount St. Mary's, Md. 47
Oklahoma 73, Connecticut 63
FAR WEST
Colorado 93, Colorado St. 72
New Mexico 59, N. Arizona 57 1
Portland St. 65, Sacramento St. 52
Women
Tualday
EAST
American U. 80, Alder 68
Harvard 69, Colgate 54
Lehigh 68, Princeton 81
Manhattan 64, Sl. Pate~&amp; 48
VIllanova 62, VIrginia Tech 60
.
SOUTH
. Elon 52, N.C.·AahaviHe 44
Furman 67, Davidson 56
George Washington 55, Richmond 49
Llborty 87, Winthrop 57
Loulavlllo 78, Columblo 54
Murray St. 'Ill. lnd.·Pur.·Ft. Wayno 82
TIMRIIIH 81 , Old Dominion 83
~
MIDWIIT
Ooyton 82, Xavier 85
Dtlrol184, Butler 'Ill, OT
lnd . ·~ur.·lndplo. 74, St. Joooph'l, Ind. 70
Lfli'Oia of Chicago 88, Chloago SL 54
Miami IOhlo) 54, Akron
Nlogara 71 , Oaklond. Mich. 83
IOUTHWIIT
North Toxao $8, Wobor St. 55
Oral ROW!I 54, Houlton 82
fAll WilT
BYU
Idaho 81. 88
UC Santa Barbora 73, CS Norlhndgo 41
UNLV 81 , Loyola Marymount 81

tij1 Gallipolis
Chiropractic
~-Center

Dr. Joey D. Willcoxonll
WeAre A
*'MASSEY FERGUSON"

Full ser,vlce
hclllb

(10) 2002 MF471, 2WD. 8x2 trent&amp;.~]
dual remotes, wet brakes, less
Diagnostic X-Rays
than 30 hra., lull warranty,
• Pe,..onal
'----..J
5.9% aa low aa $289 per month.
Rehabilitation
• Nutritional Counseling
• Personal Injury
• Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted

Offertnc:

A WIRED WORLD COMPANY , .

JIM'S FARM

EQUIPMENT, INC.
J 150 bstem Avenue
GaUipolls, Ohio

740-441-0200

446-1484

yCJ)reams

&amp;~ftt C)ftlnss
ALPHA
DRY SPA

Great for:

*
*
*

• Weight Loss
Metabolic :&gt;tmnutattton
• Detoxification
Relaxation &amp; Stress
• Pain &amp; Injuries
Enhances.Deep
• Increases Blood
Clrculallon and Much Mnr·a ...

ee

Sprtna

ee.

Plaza • Gallipolis

YEAR-END
ClEARANCE

Pro basketball
NBA
IAITI!AN CONfiRI~CI
Atlantlo Olvlolon
W
L Pet.
011
New Jtroay ........ 26
8 .743
6
Botton ............... t e 14 .576
Phllodolphlo....... 19 15 .559
8.5
7.5
Orlando ............ 19 t7 .528
8.5
Wuhlnglon ....... 17 17 .500
12
New York ........... 12 19 .367
MlamL ................ 12 22 .353 13.5
Centrtll DtviiiDn
DB
W
L
Pet
lndlana ...... ......... 24 10 .706
1
Detroll ...... .......... 22 10 .858
6 •.
New 011eana ..... 20 1IS .556
10
Milwaukee ......... 14 20 ·" 2
11
Chicago .. ........... 13 21 .382
11 .5
Adanla ............... 12 21 .364
16.5
Toronto ................ 8 27 .229
18
Cleveland............. 7 29 . t 94
WESTIRN CONFERENCE
MI-t Olvlolon
GB
W
L
Pet
Dalles ................28
5 .646

card to win.

Save '!P to

SOUfo
on ••led Items
Save 100/o

16" 1 TOJ)plrtg

PIZZA

HOLZER
CLINIC

9.99

8

on ALL APPLIANCES

MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY
•Qua lity • Selection • Service

304-773-5592

www.holzercllnlc.com

-

. -~. r--- -

----- -·-

~ ·.~-~'--·~

•

�2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

!ribune ·Sentinel-:- legtster

Njcl 2 bedroom apartment, Buy

or

sell .

Riverine AKC Chocolate . lab pup~les, born 1H8-ll2.1 mate,
relrtgerator lurnlohed, $300 on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 74(). $250, 3 females, $300 eoch.
· month, $160 deposn. Water 992·2528. Russ Moore , Descendan1a ot Butch &amp;
lr¥:1uded. (740)446·9061 .
owner.
Suolo. (740)44Nl643

~112 4th Avenue, stove, Anllques, 1124 Eaet Moln

CLASSIFIED

r

North lrd. Middleport. two
BD turntahod appt. Oeposn
&amp; References, No Pats 992·

~~
,.~

0165

A-ble • Comrenlonl

N~ Taking Applications35 West 2 Bedroom
T~wnhouse
ApartmeAts ,

low Monthly investments

I
•

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

Home Delivery
FREE Color Catalog
Call Today HlQQ-7t1 .Q158
www.np.etstan.com

ll"&amp;ludes Wate r sewage,
~... sh ' S350IM0., 7~8-

•n .,

0QOS.

---~-~---

;&gt;ieaaanl Valley Apartment
Are now laking Applications
lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR .,
APplications
are taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:Jl0 A.M .-4 P.M. Oflkle Is
Lcacated at 1151 Evergreen
Dtlve Paint Pleaaanl, WV
Phone No Ia (304)875-5806.
E.H.O
Tara
Townhouse
APartments , Very Spacious,
2 Btclroorne, 2 Fklor11, &lt;;A, 1
1r,! Bath, Newly Corpetod,

ifti~-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·

.·,...,

list for Hud-subslzed, 1. br. _(7_40_)_448-_2_380-:::---a,artment, call 675·8679
JET

E~O
1\ito -

'

tJjiet lfouN
Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

-~-----1"

r. ___

'\( I \ II'\\-..

I

I'ERsoN
___AUI
_ _...

·
Attention·, all single ladies
age 21 to 35 that are lonely
and would like someone In
their life, for faster response
and more information send
photo to J. Coon, P.O. Box
57, Portl and, Ohio 45770

I ro

6
HFuWANim

I

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sa le. Chester Township,
Meigs Co unty, send letters

of in\eresl to : The D!i~ily
Sentinel. PO Bmc 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Sc1appin' Mania
All your scra pbooking sup·

plies like paper. stickers.
wire . buttons, fibe rs, and

more.
Comt~

1

crop wilh us Friday,

January 10, 6pm to 1Opm at

AEP Building in
Pleasant.
Food,

Point
Fun ,

Prizes. Call (740)441-8249
Cost $ 10

r

G IVEAWAY

Free mixed breed puppies
born 11 · 19-02 304·675 3126

r

~niT AND
FOUND

L ost/Puppy. Pa r t/ Cho w /
Sheppard (4months) Blonde
Hair. Goes by the name Sky,
Harley Davidson Collar, Kids
Pet(304) 773-5798
Video Carmera in Black Bag
Wolf Pen. Arnold Ad Area
REWARD 992-0413

r

'11)

BUY .

IIFuWANim

Local Home Health Agency
seeki ng AN , LPN, Home
Health Aides, and Secretary.
Prefer Home Health experi.ence, but not necessary.
--~------ Competitive wages. Send
AVONt All Areas! To Buy or resume to : P.O. sox 707,
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304- Gallipolis, OH '45631 , or
675· 1429.
apply at 859 3rd Avenue,
Gallipolis.
Carleton
School/Meigs
Industries seeks a substitute ---~----Maintenance Person needHealth Services Coord inator
ed. ParHime. Valley View
(RN or LPN) to wo rk with
Apartments,
800 State
students and adu lts with
Route 325, Thurman, OH
developmen tal disabilitie s.
45685 . Apply at office or
Must be a registered nurse
or licensed practical nurse submit resume (740)2865~76 or (740)384-5319
currenlly licensed in the
---~~---State ol Ohio. Prelerred
Make this year a success!
qualifications: Experience in
Up
to 38¢ CTM. No forced
public health nursing, expe~
NE
or Canada. One year
rience working with children
OTA, 23 years old.-CDL with
and aduUs With developmental disabilities. Send resume Hazmat requi red . No loadi ng
or unloading. Guaranteed
to:
home policy. 2000 or newer
Steve Beha. EXecutive
Director.CarletonSchooi/Mel conventlonals, Owni!K operators welcome , PTLSOO..
gs Indus tries. 131 a Carleton 848·0405.
Street, P.O. BoM 307,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
-M-cC-:-1-ur-e-·s-Res-ta_u_ra_n_t_n_ow_

Carleto n
School/Meigs
Industries seeks substitute
employees lor various posl~
tlons in the agency working
with children and adults with
developmental disabilities.
Must have' high school diploma or equivalent.
Sent
resume to:
Steve Beha, Executive
Director, Melga County
Board of MRDD 1310
Carleton Street, Box 307,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779

Cart
M.TS. Co in Shop, 15 1 Foater
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, NNtlad, Become a therapeulic foster care giver. You
740·446·2842
will be Aeimburae $30-$45 1
day for ttle care of child In
I \ 11 '1 f I' \I I \ I
your home\ Training will
\ I I(\ II I o..,
begin January. For more
Informatio n
call
Oasis
Therapeutic Care givers
IJF;u• WAMID
Netwon.:, Albany, Oh, toll
free 1-877 ·325- t 558

I

o.

7535

6

--------Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Dar•t Group Home,
now paytng minimum wage,
new shiMs: 7am-3pm, 7am5pm. 3pm· 11pm, 11pm7(1m. call 740.· 992-5023.

11" ~ I
6

lbuWANim

na;~~d

lor Good Electric Washer, Best

busy office. Phone skills,
acknowledge at Microsoft
office required .. Must have
Excellent orga_
nization skills,
excellent' Communication
skills. Ability to hand multiple
tasks. Send resume to: JROB
200 Main Street, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550

Offer/ 2 Good Gas Hot
W8:rer Heaters, Best Offer

992.0315

118

WANIED

To Do

Georges Portable sawmill,
The Melgo County Chamber don' haul your k&gt;gs to the

of Commerce Is currently milt just call 304-675-1957.
seeking qualified applicants

week. (304)773-5048

Th is challenging position is
responsl~ie

for the day Ia
day operations of our chamber and tor services 1o our
membership: The success·

Will clean houses, give me a
call · at
304·675·2968or
(740)992-2787. II no answer
leave massage.

lui candidate should pes·

sese skills in planning, event Will clean houses, give me a
c al l at
304 -875·2968or
(740)992·2787. If no answer
leave message.

management, membership
relations, as well as excellent verbal and written skills.
A degree In business, marketlnQ, and/or communlcation is prererred. This posi.tion Includes a competi!lve
salary and benefit package.
Interested applicants may
apply in confidence by sendlng a resume, letter of interest, and.th ree references to:
Operations Director, 238
West Main Street, Pt?rneroy,
OH 45750
AppllcaUo n deadline Is
January 17, 2003

I I \ \\I I \ I

htmlllalltatUI ;·ntttlonll
origin, or•ny Intention to
m11ke •n", •uch
preference, limitation or
dl.crlmln.tlon."

Thl1 n.w.PIIper will nat
knowingly 8CCepl
•dvertlumente tor real
tatate which Ia In
vlolatton ·of the law. Our
rNderearehereby
Informed that all
dwtlllna- advertiMd In
thle newep~~per are
•vallable on •n eqUIII

Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
!NOnCE!
tract, $500 down to qualified
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· buyers. CaN (740)446·3570
lNG CO. recommends thaf for a quick sale.
you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send House for sale or rent. 2br.
money through the mall until gas heat. Madison Ave. +
you have lnvosflgatod the Deposit.
(304)675·1911
offering.
aher 7pm.

i

I'RooEoNAL
~-

I

.:Jr.aVICI'S

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
No Foa Unloos We Wlnl
1·888·582·3345
I&lt;t \ I I ' I \ I I

HOM!iS

Full
T ime,
Speech
roRSAu:
Language Pathologlst· PRN,
Exc.llont Benellt Pacl&lt;age
ASK ABOUT RELOCATION 2 BR , 1 bath, LA, FA, car·
port, 2 car garage, ~ereened
ASSISTANCE AND/ OR
porch, new CA, natural gas.
SIGN ON BONUS
$85,000 OBO. After 4pm,
Join the Mardan Team.
(740)441·~20
Experience tho difference ~
Contact Leo Marlin PhiMipo· 2 story homo, Middleport.
Corporate
Recruiter, $30,000, will do land con·
Marden
Rehabilitation tract (740)286·2828 or
AIIOO . Toll Freo: 888-638· (740)288-0189.
0769 Fax Resumes to: e'86·
636·076 1 Email: lmphllllpa 3 Bedroom newly remod·
0 mardencompanles.Com eled. In Middleport, call Tom
Anderson after 5 p.m.
992-3348
Truck Drlvera. Immediate
hire, e1111 A COl required , 4
BEDROOM
HOME
excellent pay, experience Forecloaur•, only $1-4,900,
roqulrod. Eom up 10 ,000. Won't loot. 1-8QQ-719·3001
per wnk.Call 304-675 - Ext. F1.44

e1

experience. Respond to ad 4005
with :i roferonceo. JR 11 200
Main Street, Pt. Pl. WV Wa,.houae
operation
25550
needs merchandise handler
- - - - - - - - - - - to k:lad and unload truck..
Madl Home Health Agency, Send Reaume to: JA5, 200
Inc"
seeking
ful l·llme Moln Street, Point Plseaant,
licensed Physical Therapist wv 25550
for Ohio and ·west VIrginia ll'r~~~----,
client based. We offer a
B~
corripetitive salary, bent~fits
- - l l iTRAINJNG
iiiiiiiiiiiiiO._.I.
package, 401 k, flex tima, •
and SIGN·.ON BONUS. Golllpollo CorMr College
Please send resume to
(Careers Close To Home)
68150 Bayberry Drive, St. Call Todayl 74().44 8-4367,
Clairsville, OH ,43950. Ann :
t-800-214-0452,
Greg Varner Administrator.
Reg ii90-05· 1274B.

Allrwl Htateldvertl•lng
In thl• MWipipitr 1•
eubjecttotheFederel
Fotr Houeiii!IAclolte68
which rMkn It lllegll to
advert!.. "•ny
pteter.nce,llml18tlon CM'
dtoc~mlnallon booed on

opportunity-•.

THERAPISTS

lo.

.. .·..... .-.
~

I.ncludes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
nu1:ar 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

'

..

~~.

. -·

4 br., olr. &amp; dr., 2 baths, 112
basement, lg. kitchen wllots
. of cupboards. a/c·fan &amp;
neat, water softener, new
windows , fg. front porch
overlooking river, will oonsld·
ar trade, (740)992·9012

·I

e

t

Land home packages. No
payments while under con.
structlon. unte
or no
down Paymen I requ Ire d .
,.,.
(740)446·32 t8
New 2-story home, 3 bed·
room, 1·112 bath, open floor
plan, cuatom cabinetry,
Bidwell, $97,000. (740)845·
0102 (coli)
--'-_;_----New 2000 oq H homo, 10
minutes from Hoepltil.
Complete abov. ground
pool with porch, driveway
and garage foundation,
below
appraisal.
Price
(740)448·3384 . .

2

",

2br. 2 bath . all electric on
re11ted ~ot. Between Bam &amp;
8pm. (304)875-8180
"Get Your Money's WOrth" at
Coles Mobile Homes, St. Rt.
50
East
of
Athens .
Deliveries, set-ups, excavat~
ing, foundations, sewage
systems, driveways, heating
and cooling along with parts
~i'ld service. You should
~ept nothing leas. Since
1967 we oro Cole's Mobile
Homes where you ~Get Your
Money's Worth."

w•,plth' 1
j

ments, furnished and unfur-,.,
nlshed, security deposit
requi(ed, no pets, 74~92- .
2218.
•~

1 b8droon1 and 2 be~room- :
apartments, air conditioning.'~
downtown location. Call l·
;_
(7_40..:)_44_6_-4 8_
5.:.9_ _ ___c• .
3 bedroom farm house tor 1 BedrOom ApartmentS"·
rent. $400 month, $300
deposit. Gas heat (740)446· Starting
at
$289/mo,
Washerf " Dryer Ho okup, •
0118
Stove and Refrigerator:"
3 bedroom house in Bidwell, (740)441 ·.1 519.
1 .
$450 month + deposit 1 or 2 BR A ppt. 1or A ent,
Reference Required . No UtiUIIes Pd., No Pets
" '
pets. (740)245-1418
·
992 _5858

.. '

~-~-~~~-

For Solo: Reconditioned
w•ahen, dryoro and relrlg·
ei.tora.
Thomptons
Appllanoe. 3407 Jackaon
AV.nua, (304)875-7388.
Good Uaod Appliances,
Recondltk&gt;nad
and
13uarantaod. •
Waohero,
Ory&lt;~(e,
Rangeo,
and
Relrlgorafors, Somo etart at
$9!i. Sklggo o\pplloncea, 76
VIne St., (140)446-7398

PRECISION DEER
PROCESSING

Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7South ,.

77 Cnevy Camara Bad
engine, lots of new parts.
$850., 84 Chevy El Camino
SS $3,500. Call after 6.
(31\4)675-4853
~~'("""--,----..,- 1!!11!"_ _ _ _ _.....,
83 Chevette Scooter 4 sp., 2
dr., good condition~ Many
M010RCYa..ES
new parta. $650.00 843- ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _...

Coolville, OH 45723

740.667·0363

5263

..,lllj:z:::::'I'Rucxs::::::::::
roR SAlE

liZ

I

Auro PARIS &amp;
ACCJ;SSORJES

i .

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. Established t975.
Call 24 Hrs.. (740~ 448·
0870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

r
Moroacr~ I
Lw-...:::::.:=;::;.,_.1

C&amp;C
General
Home
Malntononce· Painting, vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors,
window&amp;, baths, mobile
1987 Yamaha 4·wlieeler
home repair and more. For
..,
needs work · on rear end.
lroe estimate call Chat, 74().
N00 POUCE IMPOUNDS! $400. (304)875-3959
Hondao, Chavya, otcl Caral
992·8323.
· Truckt from SSOO. For list,
lngo 1·800·718·3001 ext.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
3901

(!

liON EVANS ENTERPRIS. -19_9_2_B-ul-ck-L-aS_a_b-re-V·-8
ES Jackaon, Ohio, 1
Engine, 188,000 mllee, car
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark &amp;37•9528
Chapel Road, Porter. Olllo.
In good ·shape. $2,000.,
(740)446·74-14 1·877·83()- 1111"-~...........- . , 1995 Buick Skylark 2dr, 3·.1
9182. Froe Eetlrnateo, Easy
11unJJtNG
V-8, 116,000 mllaa. Look&amp; &amp;
ftrianclng, 90 dayo same os '"~--lliiSum.IFsiiiiiiiii-_.1 .runs
good.
$2,500.
caah . VIsa/ Master Card. '
(304)458· 1088
Drive· a· little eave alot.
All steel building 50x60 was ' 1993 Chrysler Now Yorker,
$!! ,500 now $7 ,815 othare 104,000 miles, 3.3 engine,
Ueed furniture atora, 130
available 1-800-2e2..0 111
automattc, clean, good tires,
·eulavme Pike. We sell mat$1500 OBO. (740)379-2723
tresses,
bunk
beda,
dressers, couches, appll· Block. brick, sewer pipes, ' - - - - - - - - ances, much more. Grave windows, lintels, etc. Claude 2002 Cavalier 4 door sedan,
monuments. (740)448-4782 Winters. Ale Grande, OH rod, 2800 miles. $10,000.
Call' 74().245·51 21 .
Phone (304)675-1503
Gallipolis, OH .

-eoo-

r.

Start the New
Year with a
new career!
Are youfrusrrared wirh your currenrjob
and looking for a be11er q_ne?
lnfoCision Management Corporation
pays up to $7/hour and offers a variety
of schedules to meet your needs. We
also have a complete benefits package
with our full and part-time shifts.

Make a change ror the better!
Call today for more.information and to
schedule an interview.

bedroom
house In 2 bedroom
~partment : j1
Mlddteport, 1 car garage, no ldtchen, femlly room, bath,• •,
pets, $375 plus deposit, $375 month. 560 Centenary ~
(740)992-3194
_Rd_..:.(7_40c:.:).:.446~-9~442..::..~~:::-~-----='C"

:z

j

r

BUSINESl

Bun.DJNGS

I

LoTs &amp;
A&lt;liEAGE

2 bedroom mobile home,
VInton area. Reference &amp;
Depoa~ required. No poll.

112 acre k&gt;l on Tycoon Lake (740)388.()857
wl12x60Tralfor$16,500.00
now $13,500.00
2br. Mobile home for rent. .
(740) 247·1100
(304)638•2505 (3 04) 576 •
9991
4 Commerctal lots 141 o
Lewis St. w/small rental 2br. Mobllo home for rent. .
~house. Make Offer. Call after (304)638·2505 (304)576·

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Tllbrsday
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza

·

Melgl County
Cammon Plello

. CaH No. 01-CV·124

In pureuanea of en
order luued from
·Conuii0i1 Pleat Court
within end lor the

Lot 7 ol lha Bally

RoH Subcllvlalon ••
recorded In Plat
Cabinet, Page 46 In
liHt office of the Wlge
County Recorder.

County

of

31ot clay of January,
2003,and
to
me
dl.-.1, I will offer
lor eala at Public
Auellon on Friday at
the Courthoun In
Pomeroy. Ohio, at
1 0:510 AM of eald
day. the following
Rill Eelllta, to-wit:
Sltullted In the
Village ol Middleport,
County ol Melge end
State ol Ohio: Being

Located at 141 Covert

Lane, Middleport, .OH
45769.

Said proJM'Iy hal
bean apprelead at
$43,3000 and cannot
nil for 1H1 than twothird• ol appraloa·
ment. Thl1 appreiHI
lo betlld upon a vlou·

el lnepactlon of thai Parcenl (10%) clay ol
pert ol the premiHa sale, balance within
to which accaaa waa 3Q clays.
l'lldlly available. The
approlaera a11ume Ralph E. Trussell,
ol
Wigs
no raeponalblllty lor, Shariff
and give no weight to, • County, Ohio
unknown legal mat· Stephen D. Milas,
tare, Including, but Allornay, 18 Weal
not limited to, con· Monument Avenue
·cealed or latent Dayton, Ohio 45402
defects, ~ndl or the
prannca of harmful (1) 8, 15, 22, 2003
or toxic chemlcalo,
pollutants, or peas.
Terma ol Stole: Ten

uge.

For all your !:lome

3br. Trailer In Coun lry · on
peved road, county water,
dlocount to 10nk&gt;ra. Sand
Reaponse to: EB 3 200 Main
Street, Point Pleasant,

wv

25550

992·297~ ~. ~

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

PC DOCTOR

97 Beech St.
middleport, on

We Make Houae Calli

(lrxlO' 610'x2D1

F0&lt; Rent or Sale. 14&lt;80
1995 Clayton Tra iler 2 bed·
room, 1 bath. Asking $8,500.
or $375. month $200.
Oepos~ . Very good condl·
tlon. Call (304)6752457 or
(304)675·1589. Rofironces
Required .

IBSON
(i~PniCS

I-IOU DAY
gp~CIAL
~~lVP 1()%
()

,,

r ~11 rJr•

E': t i ':I I IPr:c:

www.wvpcdr.com
torOwv

dr.com

740·992-1717

1-800-822-0417

Shop early for the
holidays!
New Shipment
Farm Toys &amp;
Construction Toys
All Brands .

t

I II

I

,,

&amp;Custom Van

..I lost my shirt
In the stock
market!"

"Not mel
My money is with
Rocky Hupp lnsuronce

ond Flnanciol SeMces.

Box 189, Middleport. OH

Phone: 843-5264."

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me de 1t for youl

UNU'S PIINDNI

Best Service at
tile Best Price
"Y." \~~('"'&lt;I? •• c}lff,,!"
Skin, Cut, Wrap
&amp;Freeze
All this for only

$45.00

Jncl~d

01her Accessories

"W.Vs #I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds

1000 S.R. 7 South
Coolville, OH

Footers, Foundation,
Add-Ons, New Homes.
Pole Barns, Concrete,
Electric, Plumbing

Shield &amp; Full Line

Dean Hill

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

45723
1-74()..667-0363

'*''*

!I!I2G
992-2272

10x20

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Building over 30 yearl·

A-1~1-SIORAGE

New&amp; Used

Depoy'sAg Pll1s

rillS
FAMILY
COISTRICTIII

Now Renting

lOxlO

BISSEll

740-992-7599

or visit website:
www.herbsndlet.com

HARTWELL
STORAGE

SL RL 7 Cioeglein Rd.
Pomeroy

• Tonneuc Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug

Ball Logging
&amp;Firewood

Open 9am-5pm

31645SR325

on htJUl&lt;' J"id~p
Call U&gt; r." ,II )0\lr ~&lt;H III)IJI&lt;I n.:cJ,

,Lanosvllle, OH

(740) 446-1812

740-742-2076

A.d· 11.1' &lt;1/Jtll/f our

f'~ t&lt;lin\11~•- f'"'

Stnir"r Plmu!

Hill' s Se lf
Storage
29tl70 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740·848-2217

Bib IIIII
Dump Truck Delivery
1·740.81NI4J

( / 10) •lq } 'liL'.'

Wolfe Heatlno &amp;Coollno

=

• 10 yr partl &amp; labor
• Servlte on all brands
• Realdentlal &amp; llalit commercial
•·www.amerltanstlndardalr.com
GAS, FUEL OIL &amp; HEAT PUMPS

Modern 1 bedroom apart- :~!
ment (740)448-0390
•

:--:--:-:.....-'.---·.
1 br Apt.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

FOR SALE

-'-'------- t

Modern

k

(740) 992-3194 (304) 675-5282

992-6635

740·992·7996

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

B. D. COIISTRUCTIOD

Emili: bladuOtapllnk.oom

;i.,

JUST launched!!!
LOSE WEI GHT
NOW! Bums FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All Natural/Doctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME .,
product TODAYU'' -\_
· Call: Jeanie
·

Tree Service

(740) 992·3320

w!ti.1

750 East State Street Phone (740)593-661'11
Athens, Ohio

JONES'

Improvement needs
'No Job To Small"

ruuffliiCt

Dolu&gt;t, 1 BR Town House,: ,
near
Holzer,
CIA;''
Econornlcat gas ~aat,
hookup, $359.00 pluo utili'!%
Ueo. (740)446·2957
.••
•
Furnlahed 3 rooms + bath, ·•
upstairs, c lean, no pets.~
Refere nce
&amp;
deposit ·t
required. (140)446·1519
.
Gracious IMng. 1 and 2 bed·.,.
room apartment&amp; at VIlla~
. .~
Manor
and
Riverside"''
Apartment&amp; In Middleport.:
From $278•$348. Call 741l-.,.
992·5084. Equal · Houslng1
Opportunities.
...

Jeff Warner Ins.
.
992-5479

Specializing In:
Roofing, D11cka,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Addltlon11
Owner:
Terrv: Lamm
(740) 992-0739

GetS FREE

a.

bui lder. Beautiful River VIew Ideal
For 1 Or 2 Paoplo,
111 \ 1\f o..,
Aarerencas, Deposit, No
Pett, Foster Trailer Ftark,
740-441-(l, 81.

HOUlliS

United StatiO of
ve. lllbeCC8
E."JY..., DeceaMCI,
et el. '

Amerlce

Melga,

Stale ol Ohio, on IIHI

...

BING02171

BEAUTIFUL
APART.
MENTa
AT IIUDQET:':1t
PRICES AT JACKSO(Ijj
ESTATES, 52 WeatwOOd" ·
9991
·Drive lrom $297 to $383~
Wolk to shop &amp; movlta. Call t~
•
2br. Ramodoltd new eorpel. 74 446·2508. ·
Equal·,·
5280 month. No Peto.
(304)675-8291 Leave moo· · Houolng Opportunity.
~

~r""'~M~&lt;::
...."'SALE"=Hor.wi~·
....,.,1 ~;~~;:8~~~omo

roRRmr

Haven, WV now aoceptlng'
appllcatlona lor HUO.subsl•&lt; .
dlzed, 1 bedroom apart-~
ment. UUIIUea, Included Call; •
(304)882·3121 . Apartment&gt;:
available lor 'qual"led sen- ' •
·
~
for/GIIIblod poriOn. EHO :

SHERIFF'S SALE

(740) 992-2222 or
(740) 446·1018

Cellular

Pomeroy Eagles

BUILDERS IOC.

!

call Gallia Meigs
Community A cllon
Agency

740-992·5232

1-877-463-6247 ext. 2454

3

For mora inform ation,

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

.
•
1

r•.a

You could be
eligible f.or FREE
help getting
back.to work

SeD-Storage

KE Kawasaki 100, 125
1998 Chevy S·IO, l&gt;acl&lt;. LS. miles. dirt&amp; street legal, like
40,000 mll,a, AJC, C/C, now 304·773.aooo

i

Aravou
laid onil

~~~
High&amp; Dry

·
1997 Honda CRBOR Racing
dirt bike w/n&amp;w,.. motor.
$1 ,000. OBO. (304)8753959

1983 Chevy 5·10 Pick up
truck. $800. (304)675·3711

$6500.
(740!448·4600
(740)368·8478

NIW AND UIID STilL
Stool Beama,J'fpe Rebar
For
Con.,.to,
Angle,
Chonnol, Flot Bor, Sttol
Grating
For
Dralna,
Driveways &amp; Walkwayl. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
TUooday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Ck&gt;atd 198ol Chevy Camara w/306
thursday,
Saturday
&amp; High output angina. Camara
Sunday. (740)44~7300
aluminum wheola, w/otJ
--~~-~-- player. block wn·topo. $825.
Oak Student dtlaka· vety OBO or trtda for Blazer.
sturdy, Oak veneor on ply· (304)895-3408
woOd, 4-&lt;lrawera. Can be
uud as a oomputer daak. 1961 PonVac, runs good,
4rx24', $40. Call f!.apm, M· good tlrot. $700. (304)576·
,.
F No Phone caflt Wad. 2189
(740)245-9047
1990 Buick Century, $1295;
Waterline Special: 314 200 1994 Aehlova, 20. $1495:
PSI $21 .00 Par 100; 1' 200 1995 Borotta, $2395; 18
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All ather cars and trucka In
Brua Compreoelon Fittings 1111icl&lt;. COOK MOTORS
(740)446.01 03
In Stock.

Skin, cut, wrap
All boneless cut
740-949-0706
7!1G-941H800

r:ai

pain! sprayer, $125; 30" gas "--lliiFiiooiiiiilliii!ilFiikiioo_.l
,
m es excellent constove $100; Toyota AM/FM dltlon $12,500. 1-740·388·
Mol&gt;llt homo lot, tskee up to cassette radios, $30 each;
8023 after 5 p.m or LeaVe
Jone Stowort
Message
80". Renl $125 month,
Toyota
AMIFM
cassette,
Cd
741HH·71133
--~~-~~~
~poolt $100. (740)448·
radios,
$200
each. Congrotulatlonal vou have 2001 Chrysler Town &amp;
0175 or (304)875-5985
(740)441-1971, H no anawer won 2 free movie tickets to · Country LXI Van . Loaded
Trllllor epace lor rent. $125 leave moasage.
the
Spring
Valley
7 wlopttons, 3.8, V-8 snglno,
per month, plus dopoelt.
II I Call the Sentinel 50,000 miles. Llko New.
Priest's Trailer Park. Water New &amp; Used Heat Pumps·
$18,500. (304)882·2072
Paid. Call (740)446·3844
Gaa
Furnaces.
Free
Estimates. (740)448-6300
\ llf:c II \ \ lll'-1

Antique dining room lurnl·
tura, excellent condl11on.
Antiquo wolnut, mlrrorod
cherry
bedroom
droeuri!Ocklng chltlro. Must
s.cr~lce. (304)875·3959

773-5412

:!

1997 3BA Trallor on 8 112
acres on Carpenter Rd . , -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
PorVand, OH $20,000 (740) Homes From $199/Mo.. 4%
New tog Mme on 1· t l3 1evel 843·8496
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
acres, 11 rooms. 3BA , 2-1/2
APR. For Lletlngs, 800-319t9Q8 Schu~ 16 x 80 2 BR w/
bath, 28 foot ceilings, central Heated Garage 1-740-992- 3323 Ext. 1709.
air &amp; heat, atone fireptace, t987
.
1 bedroom furnished house
stone frontage and founda·
tlon. Mostly furnished. Just Good used t4x58 . Only In Gallipolis. Good locallon.
pets.
References
minutes from Huntington. $5995· will help with deliv- 'No
Ashland and lrontoA area. ery. Call Nikki, 740-385· required. Phone (740)448·
$380,000 (740)258-9247
9948.
1t62
(

1

1Jou!EwxJ&gt;
Gooos
...__oiiiiiit_..,..

3br. house in Mason $375.
bedroome· '6"rilonth loaSO: t
month + $300. OepoM. No GBrage ApartMent, utilitie&amp;~ew 2003 14 wide O nly Pets. call (304)882·3852
paid, n9 pets, no parties: ;.
$550 moht~ plus S5SO. ,
$799 - down and only
$159.43 per month. Call 3br. House located in deposit. (740)448-0241
Mason, VN. $495. + Utilities.
•
Harold, 74!1-385 -7671 .
2 SR , Ael, Range, Washer/
No Pots. (304)773-588t
Dryer ,Storage/Building ,
Nice lots available· for up to
4br. On Route 2. $450 month Corner or Ash &amp; Pearl,
16x80 mobile. M mes, $115
+ $400. Deposit + 811 utilities. Middleport, OH 992·7933 .
water included, (740)992·
No Pots. (304)895-3815
:----:--:----:------''
2167
3 rm. &amp; bath, furnished apt,
1!1!11"-~~----,
5 rooms &amp; bath, so Olive St, all utllities paid ,except elec-"'1
$275.00 a mon. 304·675$325 mo. (740)446·3945
AND
1365
Four houses for rent. (2) 2
Commercial building, with bedrooms, ( t) 1 bedroom. 3· 1br apartments aval!able
3rd '"- Avenue . Jan. 1st. $300.00 a men. utll.
large office space, ahd 2
Included wl $100.00 sec.
apartments downtown. 512 p!if~i;;~~fu::':;'l
dep, 304-675-3654
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis .
$102,000. (740)286·2828 or
Apartment Available Now.' ·
740 288·0189.
iio-rl RlverB8nd Place, Ne.,.......

Now houso for sale, Dobllle
Drive, $130,000 . 3 bed·
rooms, 2 batha. Call after
112 aore or laaa mobile
5:30pm, (740)245·92 68
home lot with water, sewer,
Wanted! Good cradtt -cua- and electric. Anywhere In
tomera to purchase new the vicinity of Rodney,
home wl1and. SO down to Bidwell and Porter area.
qualified customers. 1·5 (740)245-5453
acre
tracta
avpllable.
(740)446-3093
Will pay top dOllar for prime

1994 Schult 16x72 Mobile
Homo Priced to soli Quick
Call (740) 385·2434

~~

U.

r

range, washer. dryer, stor- water. sewer. trash $325.
age building, corner of Month, No Pets 992-5059
Ash/Pearl St. , Middleport ,
740-992·7933
2 bedroom house, approx 1
mile from Gallipolis on SA
2001 14x80
Oakwood 588. $400 month, $300·
mobile home (216)351 ·7086 deposjt. Reference required.
or (216)257-1485.
(740)446·3413

r

All Makes Trac10r &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pans

AERATION MOTORS·
V.oo&amp;
..________,~
~\VDs
2.8 MFI motor out of 85
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. can Ron Evans, 1- 5 Month old Paint Colt.
Fireblrd, $300. (740)44t 8QQ-537·9528 .
(304)545-I5!0
1990 Pontiac Trans Sport 0335
'I I ~\ ! ! I '
AQHA If 'Mare For Sale, van, $300. Call (304 )6751
68
9
KindleWOOd Fireplace ·rneert, $300.00 Yearling others for __ _ _1e
_a_ve_m_•_••_•_ge___
HOME
-· •
good condition. $250 ftrin: sale $800. &amp; up H4Q.992Abo&lt;klar exercise machine, 2800
1999 Jeep Ranger, soft-top "--IMPRoiiiiiiiiiVEl\1ENISiiiiiiiltiliorl
like new,
Wagner 112 ill:lr--~-~--., 4 cylinder. automatic . CD, ,
HOP professional grade
SEm &amp;
68il
'i r,OOOcrulslle, tilt, chrome
BASEMENT

sso:

,r:

.....

~~ I M~~ I
~~ I ":.= I:,
~:::=.~.::r==~ !·-, b~~r~om, · ~etrlgerator, •B•A•H•o•uiiseiiiiniAi~~;i,inio~."!:. ~~::t·2 ,. b~~clra;;;·"~-Part{;;

....
. , cofor, rell""'on, ...

Will babysit In my horne In

to join our organization as
the Mason area 7 days a
the Olrctor of Operations.

ll4J

'
I

Or .Fax

e
1

Custom sewing and alterallons. (740)441-9077

Start the New Yea r out
Rlghtlfl
Athens, OH, Kimes Nursing
&amp; Rehab Cen ter. Skilled
Nursing
Facility,
Occu p a t i o n a l
Therap Ia t/ Man agar- F u11
Prr_o_e_n_ta_f_A_oe_l_at-an_t_n_oed-~ Time, COTA·Full Time, PTA·
ed. Send resumea to CLA
569 cJ0 G 111 II8 o II
'
a po
a Y
Tribune, . P.O. Box 469,
_ 63_1_·_ _
G-•II-Ipo_l_ls,_o_H_45
Part-time 'poaltlon available
In Molgo County Ohio &amp;
Mason County WV· to complete mobile lnaurance
exema, blood &amp; urine collections, must have phlebotomy
skills, fax reoumo to: 304·
766-1684 or man · to:
Perooonol, P. 0 . Box 845,
Dunbor, WV 2~

'I

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publlahlng rtiiiVIIIhe right to edit, reject, or cancel any Ill It 111)' till"· E11ore
repol1ed on tflt flnt dly of publication and
Tribune-Sentinel-Regliter wll be rwponalblt for no more than the COli of the 1J11Ct occupied by lhe error and only the ftrttlnll(llon. We lhall not be lllblo, mrl
any lou or expenae lhll rwulta from the publication or omlulon ol an edl1rtleement. Correctton will be made In the ftrst mllllile ldiUon. •Box number
are always confidential. • Current rete card applies. •All real ea11te adveltlaemenll are aubject to the Ftdaral Fair Houalng Ae1 ol1968. • This niWIIpi!MWI ~
accepiB only help Wlll1ed ada meeting EOE llandards. We will not kQawingly accept any ldveltlllng
law.

hiring all 3 locatlona, tutl or
part·tlmo, plcl&lt; up appllca·
uon at location &amp; bring back
between
10:00am
&amp;
t0:3Qam, Monday thru
Saturday.

gfvert hourly pay depending on

Agent· a tee~m of
Doctors need help marketing new heal!h care programs. Top reps earn up to
$2 ,000 weekly 1-80o- 87

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu11ne11 Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sur1da•rs

888-974-JOBS

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In Next Day's Paper
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It'

information call 992·3332 or ed for sizable warehouse
992·0228 Leave Message
Operation. Send Resume to:
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•

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992·6215

Pomtroy, ~lo

�•

'
Wednesday, January 8; 2003

WW!N.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B 6 • 'f.he Dally Sentinel

Freeloading sons nlust begin
to shoulder their own weight
DEAR AB.BY: My husband
left me two years ago. Since
that time I have struggled
financially with no help from
him. I earn only half of what I
need to pay my bills each
month. Several times this past
year I was sick and rnis~ed
work w1th no compensation
- so you can imagine the
poverty level at whkh I li~e.
My three children still hve
with me. They are 17, 19 and
22.
The problem is, my two
oldest boys have full-time
jobs, yet they refuse to help
out financially. I ask only that
they contribute $50 a week. I
know I am doing them a disservice by allowing them to
freeload, because they're not
learning to take responsibility.
However, I cannot handle the
ultimatum of ''pay up or get
out."

Should my kids choose to
leave, I wopld be sick with
worry. I am worried now, too,
but not nearly as warned as
I'd be if they were to walk out
of my life, as my oldest so.n
did when I gave him that ulumatum a year ago. He has
only recently started talking
to me again, but our relationship is .strained. He blames me
for the hardship he experienced when he went out on
his own.
Is there another way to

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
make my children contribute
to our household without taking drastic measures? Please
help, Abby. I am too tired to
get an additional part-time job
m order to keep our heads
abOve water. - AT A LOSS
IN RIVERHEAD, N.Y.
DEAR AT A LOSS: Please
do not tolerate this situation
any longer. You're doing no
one a favor- including yourself.
Your boys have a lot of
growing up to do. Your
request for $50 a week from
the older boys is not excessive. They are young men
now and should want to ease
the burden you're carrying to
give them a home.
Call a family meeting.
Explain your financial situation in no uncertain terms.
Then decide - as a familywhat steps can be taken.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
married for 32 years. I love
my husband dearly, but last

year I had a cancerous breast husband start communicating
removed. I am doing well so again. As things stand, you
far. The problem is my hus- are flirting with disaster band has not touched me and the one who could be
seriously harmed is you.
since the sm:gery.
In the meantime, I ran into Dear Abby is written by
an old friend with whom I Abigail Van Buren, also
was very much in love ~hen I known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was 17. He is also married. was founded by her mother,
We see each other as often as Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
possible - which isn't very Abby at www.DearAbby.com
often because his job takes or PO. Box 69440, Los
him all over the country. I am Angele , CA 90069.
not sure he would give up his
present life, nor am I sure I
Do You Feel the
would give up mine, but my
husband is pushing me out the
Need Read?
door.
I can't seem to get my high
school sweetheart off my
mind. He treats me so much
better than my husband, who
has a bad temper, has hurt me
more than once and..obviously
can't stand to look at me. At
my a~e, should I grab what
little JOY I have left, or forget
it? - HURTING IN THE
MIDWEST
DEAR HURTING: Before
making any decisions that
Whether your favorite
could affect the rest of your
subject is matli or music,
life, please pick up the phone
science or social studies,
and call the American Cancer
you'll find something
Society. It sponsors support
interesting in the
groups nationwide for su~­
newspaper. In lac~ the
vivors of cancer and the1r
paper is such a reliable
source
for the information
spouses. To find one in your
you
want,
you can even use
community, call the toll-free
it
as
a
homework
and
number: (800) 227-2345. It is .
school
research
tool.
imperative that you and your

to

ACROSS

Knea or
elbow
6 Eject lava
11 Desolate ·
12 Go hungry
13 Lend a
hand
14 Hamlet's
title
15 Upward
shove
16 Playwright
-Coward
17 Murray or
Rica
18 Got
acquainted
19 Island off
Italy
23 Tight-fitting
25 Pub ml11lle
26 Gossip
29 Stopped a
squetk
32 Englnear·
lng ech.
33 Yea, to
Jacques
34 Ambition
35 Permanent
marker
36 Ferber of

41

42

-1

46

48
49
52
53

54
55
56

Senior Quarterly Inside toci.Y!

Cozy room
Flie a
manuscript
MOMA
artist
Fling
Bright color
Engine part
Farewells
Lets out,
maxbe
Malls
Brooding

•

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

DOWN
1 Fleece

seaker

2 Welles or

Bean
3 Bearded
flowers
4 Aerie
5 Explosive
letters
6 To be, to
Balzac
7 Objected
bitterly
8 Coffee
· server
9 Pipe plastic
10 Golf gadget
11 Rum cake
"Show Boat" 12 Laundry
38 Congeals
problem
40 Encum16 Trousseau
brance
item

50 CENTS • Vol. 53 , No. 101

18 Sierra Club 39 Looks alter ·

lease . on the building last
month, after vacating the
.. last portion of the building
it occupied.
Meigs County commisBY BRIAN J. REED
sioners,
who own the buildStaff writer
ing, received keys for the
hospital and took possesPOMEROY - County sion Dec. 30, and will now
officials will begin efforts begin efforts to attract
to market the Veterans another health care facility
Memorial Hospital building into the county-owned
with an open house later building.
this month .. '
The hospital open house,
Consolidated
Health scheduled for Jan. 31, will
Systems Inc., . Gallipolis,
relinquished its 99-year serve as a public relations
tool to emphasize that the

Open house
being planned

You're not apt to stumble over
old obstacles in the year ahead
because you will use past experiences as a formidable mentor
to guide your way. By knowing
what you're doing, those
impediments can't control you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan.
19)-- If you let others direct you
today in a situation. where you
should be leading them, nothing
very fruitful is apt to result. Take
charge of things yourself and get
them done.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb.
19)--Your chances for fulfilling
a secret ambition are much better today than they have been for
quite some time. Breathe new
life into an important desire
you've been harboring.
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 20)
-- Luck is on your side today
when it comes to involvements
with groups, clubs or organizations. If you've been thinking of
establishing a new affiliation,

LEO (July 23- Aug. 22)-- The
k d
best way to get back to wor an
be productive today is to have a
well-thought-out oame p1an.
Everything you do" shou ld be

done with a definite purpose in
mind.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23- Sept. 22) -Do not despair if Cupid hasn't
been too attentive to you
recently. He's about to make
amends and today might be the
day. You'll like what he has in
mind.
LlliRA (Sept. 23- Oct. 23) -Conditions are perfect for you to
disengage yourself from a mat-

BY LAWRENCE J.
Staff writer

annoyance to both you and your
I
od
fami y. Start anew t ay.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23- Nov.
22)-- Plan your day carefully so
· ·
that you do not end up spmnmg
your wheels. If you fail to check
things out beforehand, your
efforts will be for nothing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) --Although it might
start off merely with a pop in
stead of a big bang, something
propitious might develop for
you today that in the long run
could enhance your material
well-being.
'

~=~=============---,

\fORD SCRIMMAGE"c SOLUTION BY JUDDlne HAMBRICK
2000 u~~ fulure S't"'tkM.

=..l!..

-

• 87

o_§§_
4th DOWN

AVERAGE
GAME 165·175
,_,.,

JUOD'S TOTAl

• 65
262

...

enforcement of an Oct. 25,
2002 cease and desist order its
Division of Air Quality filed
against
Highlanders
for
exceeding opacity limits.
Opacity is the degree to
which emissions reduce the
transmission of light or obscure
the view of an object in the

AVERAGE GAME 210.220
by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOURPLAYTOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECTIONS: Malle a 2· to 7·1E1tter word from the letters on tad'l yardlnl.
Add points to eacn word or letter USing acorlng dlrectMlnsat ~ - S811en-ltilt81'
words get a 60-poiri bonus. AU "words can bt{laood In Wetl811(1 New World
CoHege Dictklnary.
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
t.-.ol

C 2003 U~MI Flllhn !lwrdlcall.. N .

back~round.

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

Ne1ther DEP senior counsel
Mark Ruldolph nor Higlanders
attorney Hiram Lewis was
immediately available for comment Wednesday. However,
DAQ
director Stephanie
Timmermeyer in a prepared
statement said that while
Highlanders has been given
. additional time to complete
work on its equipment, it must
stay in compliance with the
law. ·
. ''The compliance agreement
outlines that Highlanders must
'operate within the law and have
no visible emissions from its
stack greater than 20 percent
opacity," said Timmenneyer.
"This merely protects the
health and safety of nearby residents."

'HeW IS 'PU~ CI\EMI'8ThY

~ C~ffi 1\4\S

i~
~

Consolidated occupied it,
but the county and its hospital commission will now
have full access to it in
attempts to secure funding
for a community·health center and critical access hospital.
An application for Fairly
Qualified Health Center
funding through the federal
government was rejected
last year, but a . second
application is now being
readied and will be submitted next month.
Consolidated
Health

'0Et-IIE'5TER?'

~~

t:ol IJII'll'-

~~~=::~~
.

J. MILES LAYTON
Sentinel correspondent
MARIETTA - Potential
.changes in the amount of
classroom training needed to
be a volunteer firefighter have
ignited a controversy.
Currently, the minimum
amount of training needed to
Dick Johnson, a supervisor with the Ohio Flrefighting Academy, discusses potential serve as a volunteer fireman
changes In the amount of classroom time volunteer firefighterS need to be eligible to is 36 hours of classroom
serve In Marietta Wednesday. Classroom time may be increased by36 to 125 hours of training.
training, (J. Miles L&lt;tyton)
The Fire Alliance, which is
an
umbrella or~anization rep.
.
.
.
resenting maJor four fire·
man's .groups, is ·¢onsidering
options to chlmge the
·
required minimum to 120
·
•
classroom hours. Any potenMedical tial changes would have to go
Rick Dlaettnar, chief of Emergency
Bv J. Mti.EII LAYTON
the Pomeroy Volunteer Services.
to the state legislature first
Sentinel corrBspondent
"Having served on some before anything can he adoptFire Department, is optimistic a&amp;out any proposed of the stat\\ boards, they ed by fire departments.
POMEROY
The changes in classroom can move pretty quick if
Local volunteer firefighters
number of volunteer ftre- training.
they want to," Byer said. and chiefs from many counfighters may go np in
"The requirements are "Just from what I have ties in southern Ohio attended
smoke if J?Otential changes still in the discussion heard here tonight, there a meeting Wednesday to
are. ~ade m the amount of stage," he said. "There are are going to be some voice concerns about any
traJDII,lg needed to serve:
no formal proposals. It is changes in the future."
changes in the amount of
Me1gs County rehes , too early to tell whether
During his tenure on the !raining.
. .
solely on about 225 volun- there is going to be any board, Dyer fought to · Dick Johnson, a trammg
teer frrefighters, many of · curriculum change."
maintain the volunteer supervisor with the Ohio Fire
~hom have years of expeBob Dyer, Meigs County quality of Emer~ency Fighting Academy, discussed
Techmcians the reasons why the Fire
nence. .
.
.
Emergency Management Medical
. The Frre Alhance,. w~ch director, and members of (EMTs). After he left, Alliance is considering
1s an u.mb~ella orgamzau:on the Pomeroy Volunteer changes similar to the • changes.
represe~tlng four . major Fire Department, attended those being considered by
Johnson said the number of
firem.en s groups! IS con- a meeting with representa- the Fire Alliance virtually firefighter deaths during the
sJdenng changmg .the tives from the Ohio eliminated the use of vol- past decade has not increased
amo~nt of classroom lime Firefighting Academy and unteer EMT personnel as or decreased, but has remained
requrred by the state ne~~- the Ohio Department of emergency squads increas- constant at about I00 fatalities
ed to serve from the nuru- Public Safety Wednesday in~ly became full-time a year. Increased training
mum of 36 hour~ to 125.
in Marietta.
patd employees.
could lower this statistic.
If a consen~us IS reached
Dyer has served on state
Dyer said he sees a lot of
Johnson said the trend in fire
on any . l_lOSSJbl~ changes, boards which have recom- the same tactics that were fighting has evolved from
the dects1on to Implement mended changes to Iaw- used to change the nature fighting large structure fires
the~e changes ~o.uld . ~ makers. for more than six of EMT departments being like the MGM Grand, to mainyears a~ay and mvolve a years, Byer was a member
ly fighting smaller localized
change m state law.
of the State Board of Please see Alliance, Al
structure fires in homes and

businesses.
Because these smaller structures are constructed in a different manner, often with less
attention to safety, that this
presents a greater danger to
ftrefighters now and in the
future as these structures age.
Many ftre chiefs and veteran
volunteer firefighters questioned the necessity of adding
more classroom time to their
already busy workload.
While many contended that
any additional classroom
training would be helpful, it
would discourage recruit~pent
of new members.
,
Ted Patterson, district captain with the Reno Fire
Department in Washington
County, said increasing the
already hefty training time is
not much of an incentive to
new recruits.
··"Someone is not going to
say, if you can get the training
hours up, I would be more
willing to join," Patterson
said.
Johnson said additional
classroom training is a necessity for safety. ·
"Rrusing hours is not going
to help fire departments get
new members, but it is an ongoing process which will
make departments safer,"
Johnson srud.
Many firefighters raised
concerns about what a change
would do to already existing
firefighters.
Several people said they had
been on call and/or fighting
fires for days without a break.
Some said they had not had
time to s~nd with their wives
and families because of the

•

Please see VFD, Al

Route 7 crash leaves .one dead, three injured

Index
2 SediDH- 12 ......

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

A2
84-5
86
86

Sports

81-3

Weather

iystems Inc., which operates Holzer Medical Center
in Gallipolis, assumed operation of the hospital by
virtue of the 99-year lease
signed in 1995, but began
closing the hospital's vari•
ous departments shortly
after a hospital operations
levy was rejected by voters
ill 1999.
The last resident of the
hospital's extended care
unit , the last to be closed,
was relocated in mid-2002.
Since then, the building has
been vacant.

Firefighters
may see more·
sacrifices

..
·
~tWo~ce~~~~-~!tr:n~ ·-Tra1n'ln-g·. propo$·a1pondered·

to

mag~·

people from all the local
hospitals," Sheets said, "to
tour the building and to
make it clear that the hospital is, again , in county
hands, .and that it is in good
condition."
Sheets said county officials have spoken with a
number of hospitals in the
region in the past several
months, and have received
preliminary interest in
locating some health care
services in Meigs County.
The hospital remained
county property while

SMTH

CHARLESTON, W.Va. The new year has brought a
partial resolution to the\ matter
of alleged air pollution problems at Highlanders Alloys.
In an agreement entered
Tuesday before Kanawha
County Circuit Judge James
Stuckey, the West Virginia
Department of Environmental
Protection gave Highlanders
until Feb. 24 to make its
Number 2 furnace and baghouse fully functional and .
March 1 to complete ducJwork '

Answer

Word
Scrim·

county has control of the
building once again, to publi.cize that it is available for
occupancy, and to demonstrate that the building is a
viable facility in good condition, according to County
Commissioner Jim Sheets.
Elected officials, mem:
hers of committees working
to attract health care services into the county, and
representatives of hospitals
throughout the region will
be invited to the open house
reception, Sheets said.
"We're going to invite

BY

;----,
previous

w ww ony•l.,ly"·"t""'l """

Highlanders
Alloys, DEP
agree on
compliance
·schedule

L_________________________________

make your move .w.
, ARI&amp;,&lt;i (M;j!'ch.21; April 19)-The only thing that could stand
in your way to success today IS·
You. Through determination and
diligence you can ·accomplish
anything you set your mind to.
Shake the holidays off and get
gomg.
TAURUS (April 20- May 20)
.-- Conditions will provide the
right opportunities today, but
you'll need to furnish the knowl·
edge and expertise. Draw upon
what you' ve gained from past
experiences.
GEMINI (May 21- June 20)-Start the new year off by being
alert for fresh opportunities that
will enable you to increase your
earnings through sources other
than your usual ones. Start prob·
ing around today.
CANCER (June 21- July 22)·
- Any agreements negotiated
today look promising. but it
won't hurt to have counseling on
all the facts and details before
you sign something that will be

THURSDAY, JANUARY 'J, 2003

County beginS market~ng VMH building

(2 wds.)
founder
41 Morning
Johnmoisture&amp;
20 Desk
accessory 43 Old hat
44 Elephant
21 Upscale
tusk
cheese
. 45 Playing
22 Memo
cards
-.
abbr.
47 Gehrig and :
24 Doze off
Grant
26 "Plano
48 City near :
Man"
Mauna Loa .
singer
.7
27 Car Import 49 Kennel
sound
28 Dine's
companion 50 Ancient
30 Tied
Tokyo
..
51 Fleur-de· - ·
31 Tierra
-Fuego 52 Singer
-Tillis
37 Harem
jewelry

4~trograph
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BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

•

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C&gt; 2003 Ohio Valley Publimins Co.

BY KEvtN KEuv
162 Woodland Drive, was
News editor
· pronounced dead at the
..,;,:_~------- scene of the 8:05 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - A two- crash, about two miles
south of. Gallipoli~. troopvehicle accident on Ohio ers said.
Route 7 South left a · Columb was the driver of
Gallipolis woman dead and a 1989 Dodge Ram 50
three
others
injured pickup that was southWednesday, the Gallia- bound when it went left of
Meigs Post of the State center and collided head-on
Highway Patrol reported.
with a northbound 2000
Rachel E. Columb, 28, Toyota Camry driven by

'

Roger E. Cordrey, 45,
Crestline.
The
crash
forced
Cordrey's car off the right
side of the roaa, where it
struck a utility pole. Both
Columb and her passenger,
Skye
E.
4-year-old
Columb, were ejected from
the pickup, troopers said .
Also injured in the Crash
was Cordrey's passenger,
Ronald M. Cordrey, 44,

also of Crestline . Ronald
Cordrey, Roger Cordrey
and Skye Columb were all
transported to
Holzer
Medical Center by Gallia
CountfEMS.
Troopers said the crash,
the .first traffic fatality of
2003 investigated by the
patrol in Gallia County,
remains under investigation .
The accident came only

days after the G-M Post
investigated a one-car accident Sunday in western
Meigs County that left a
Coolville man, Jonathan L.
Richards, 30, dead and
resulted in charges filed
against the driver of the
sports utility vehicle he
operated. The victim was a
passenger in the SUV,
troopers said.

ThQ, Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet

Sunday, January 12 from 2:00 - 4:00 pm
'fHE NEW
PAPER60Y

in the Hospital's French 500 Room.

Hf HAS, GUI'fE
P.N ARM

Guest Speaker: Tim Murphy - Holzer Clinic Cardia Pulmonary Rehab
who will discuss "Exercise in Cold Wealher"

Classes
January 13, 14 and 15 from 5:00 ·8:00pm in the French 500 Room

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
I

www .holzer.org

·For more informotion, or to register, call (740) 446~5080
-~'--~-

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