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'
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
.1~=-+--+-+-+-t~I\o~~----~~~e-g~a.~iy~b~i-nd:i~n-g-.----------~~-er-:th~a~t~h~a-s~b~e-e_n_a__s~ou-r~c-e~of

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

•

A4
A3
A3
A2

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
-~'--~-

---

"

l

•

\

�Ohio• Local

·The Daily Sentinel
Friday, Jan. 10

""

•

• ii

-

CINCINNATI (AP) - An
Ohio businessman who prosecutors have accused of trying to
illegally bring 25 Yerneni men
into the United States last year
was indicted Wednesday on
charges of transporting stolen
goods across state lines.
1be federal . indictment
charges Ali Kareem Aladimi,
41 , of the Dayton suburb of
Beavercreek, and three other
men with transponing a stolen
tractor-trailer filled with stolen
· baby food from Mississippi to a
suburban Cincinnati warehouse. Authorities seized the
food during a raid Dec. 30,

- - ..

••••
•

! Manoflold ID'/25' I •

IND.

••••
•

•••
••

••••
•

, !CoiUmbue 121'125' I

::::-.~
-.
\~

•••
• *

KY.

Inc.

02003

when Aladimi was arrested.
Aladimi, who is a U.S. citizen and has lived in the country
for about 20 years, was born in
Yemen.
On Monday, a federal magistrate in Cincinnati · ordered
Aladimi · held without bond
after federal prosecutors said a
search warrant turned up
records showing that he tried to
bring 25 men from Yemen
without any indication that they
were to work for him.
"This is all being blown out
of proportion ... because he's a
Middle Easterner, because of
his ethnicity," his lawyer Max

c &amp;••~•~f!fit!'J'Z.
Rm
FUn.

SI.Jnn~

Pt CIO\Qy'

Cb.ldy

Showera

Snow

T-ston'M

lei

Arctic air is on the way for
the region.
An Arctic cold front over
the Great Lakes will dfop
so utheast across the area
today ·and early tonight.
Be fore the front moves
th. ough, the region will see
another fairly nice day as
temperatures remain in the
40s to lower 50s this morning
before falling into the 30s this
evening.
A band of snow showers
and flurries will drop south
into northern Ohio late today
then remain over the snowbelt tonight through the
weekend as temperatures fall.
The carea will see varying
amounts of clouds and possible tlurries through the weekend.
Lows Friday morning will
be in the 20s with highs
Friday afternoon in the mid
20s to lower 30s. On the
weekend, highs wyl mainly
be in the 20s with lows most! y in the teens Friday night
and from 5 to 15 degrees
Saturday night.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Increasing cloudi-

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Jan . 8,2003

10,000

Dow

Jones
Pot

- - a,ooo

from previous: ·1.88

..

8,7311.07

Law

8,580.10

-hiJh: 11 ,722.88

1,800

Nasdaq

1,400

com...,v~··~

Pet. cha'?'
lrom proMOU~

-2.13

High
1,424.12

NOV

Low
1,399.06

1,000
JAN
DEC
Roconl high: 5,048.62
Maret\ 10, 2000

Jan. 8, 2003

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

900

800

909.93
Pet. change

fromprevious •1.41

OCT
High
922.93

NOV

Low
908.32

Kravitz said Wednesday.
His lawyers said the men
were artisans who would have
made stained-glass windows
for Aladimi, who operates a
wholesale distribution business
that ships beauty products and
groceries to relai.l stores.
The men's immigration
process was stopped after the
Sept. II , 200 I , terrorist attacks,
his lawyers said.
Fred Alverson, a spokesman
for the U.S. attorney's office in
southern Ohio, said Wednesday
that federal authorities have not
linked Aladimi to any terrorist
··
activity.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
grand jury indicted five people Wednesday on federal
charges of Medicare fraud
and money laundering in a
scheme to set up mental
health clinics that sent inflated bills to the government
health insurance program.
The people opened five
clinics in Florida through an
arm
of
the
former
Youngstown
Osteopathic
Hospital, the indictment
said. The hospital closed in
2000 after filing for bankruptcy in 1999.
· The clinics operated from
1996 through 1998 and collected hundreds of thousands
of dollars in Medicare funds,
the indictment said. It did
not say how much of that
money came from improper

Community Calendar
Public Meetings

I'
I

\

Friday, Jan. 10
POMEROY-Meigs
County Trustees and
Clerks Association, annual
meeting, 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior
Citizens Building.

Saturday, Jan. 18
PORTLAND - Portland
Community Center semiannual community meetIng, 1 p.m. at the
Community of Christ
Church, corner of Portland
and Lovett Road behind
the township garage.

Clubs and
Organizations
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.

Circle, 7 p.m. at Bethany
Church
with
Hazel
McKelvey · and Evelyn
Foreman to have the program and refreshments.
Take a bear for the bear
project. All area women
are Invited to attend.

CHESTER - Annual
inspection of Shade River
Masonic Lodge 453 7:30.
p.m. following a 6:30 p.m.
dinner. Work will be in the
EA degree.

- Paid notice

Church
Friday, Jan. 10
MIDDLEPORT- m~tlngs ·
Widows Fellowship meet·
Friday, Jan. 10.
Ing, noon luncheon at the
LONG
BOTTOM- Faith
Golden Coral. Call Betty
Gilkey at 992·5686 for Full Gospel Church, 7 p.m.
service with Dave Dailey
more Information.
preaching and singing.
i
Other special music.
Saturday, Jan. 11
POMEROY
Sunday, Jan.12
Burlingham
Modern
RUTLAND
King
Woodmen, 5 p.m. at the
Family
of
Lancaster
will
be .
hall. Meeting and meal.
Camp will provide oyster at the Rutland Free Will
stew and vegetable soup. Baptist Church 7 p.m. Paul
Those. attending are to Taylor, pastor invites the
take covered dish.
public.

700

you might even talk In your steep.

Roct&lt;well - 20.97
Rocl&lt;y Boo1s - 5.19
AD Shell - 44.61
Sears- 25.05
Wai·Mart- 49.99
Wendy's- 28.30
Worthington - 15.46
Daily stock reports are
1he 4 p.m . closing
quotes of the previous
day's tranaaC11ons, provided by Sml1h Partners
a1 Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

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

Marriage
license
POMEROY - A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County
Probate Court to Matthew
Alan Theiss, 24, and
Jeonifer Rose Jackson, 22,
both of Pomeroy.

Appointed
POMEROY Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow
III appointed Janice L.
"'foung, Reedsville, and
Christopher T.
Wolfe,
Racine, as members of the
Jury Commission.

EVERYDAY
31/2" Doubles

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See one of our clerke lor detalle of the
Fuji True Color Film Club Card.

HAVE 6 ROLLS DEVELOPED
AND GET THE SEVENTH ROLL
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Your Photofllllthl119 Needs!
SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullouoh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Presi:rlptlon Ph. 992·2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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4" Doubles

AnyExp.

POMEROY
Dissolutions have been
granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court .to
Darrick E . McCloud and
Cary D . McCloud, Jack
Wayne Hart and Catherine
I. Hart, Gina Elliott and
Michael E. Elliott Jr., and
William B. Slack and
Jennifer S. Slack.

• Unlimited night and
weekend minutes
• 550 Anvtime Mlnutea

HOURS
Mon- Frl8am - 9pm
. Sa1. 8am- 5pm

Sun. Closed

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(10&amp; per r

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Suits flied

Nold•1210

$0

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CAdit-~.

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

installment contract.
A suit h.as been filed by
David
M.
Perso ns,
Ehillicothe, against State
F arm
Insurance
Companies, Marietta, seeking payment of medical
bills stemming from an
automobile accident.
A laws uit seeking partition of real estate in Olive
Township has been filed by
Janet Doherty, Belpre ,
against Thomas Llewellen
O sborne, Seward, Ala. ; and
others .
.
A foreclosure suit has
been filed by Mortgage
Electronic
Registration
Systems Inc., Scotts Bluff,
Neb., against Keith A.
Hannah , Pomeroy, and others, alleging default on a
loan agreement in the
amount of $72,144.36.

POMEROY - A civil
suit has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by J&amp;M Lands ,
Wellston, against James
Degroat, Wanaque , N.J. ,
alleging default on a land

Rolling right along

CHARLOITE, N.C. (A P)
The coc kpit vo ice
recorder froqJ the commuter
plane that crashed has "very
good" sound but there are a
few problems with the other
so-called bl ac k box , a federal
investigator
said
Thursday~

The
fiery
crash
Wednesday morning killed
all 21 aboard.
The cause of the crash
was not clear and investijlators said they were ruhrig
nothing out. FBI agent-incharge Chris Swecker said
there was no preliminary
indication of terrorism.
The flight data recorder
and cockpit voice recorder
were
both
recovered
Wednesday and sent · to
Washington for analysis.
"Not too long ago we
received · word back from

Dr. Davis
to observe
birthday
MIDDLEPORT Dr.
Joseph Davis, former Mei~s
County
physician, wtll
observe hts 90th birthday
on Sunday.
He was born in Ashland,
Ky., on Jan. H. 1913, to
Joseph and Ruby Welch
Davis. Dr. Davis attended
the Ohio State University
Schools of Pharmacy and
Medicine. In 1939, he married the former Kathleen
Bush of Middleport. They
have four daughters , five
grandsons, and two great
grandsons.
.
He served in both World
War II and the Korean
Conflict.
Dr. Davis began his medical practice in Middleport
in 1946, and retired in
1978. Since his retirement,
he has traveled extensively
throughout the world.
Cards may be !"ailed to
him at 689 Page St. ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Correction
PORTLAND - · Lebanon
Township Trustees ~ill
conduct an appropriations
meeting at 9 a.m. Saturday
at the township building.

VFD
from PageA1
demands of doing the job with
decreasing manpower.
Donald Warnock, fire chief
for the Antrim Community
Volunteer Fire Department in
Guernsey County, leads a
squad of 26 men, many of
whom have several years
experience fighting fires.
He said that in addition to
their full-time jobs, his men
have numerous time consuming responsibilities.
Warnock said if these proposed changes come to pass,
that II of his men would
resign. As much as they lived
to serve, the additional classroom time would be too much
to bear as a volunteer.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 1-6·3

Plclc 4:

0-5-7-2

SupeiLatlll: 1~21 -28-3 1 -33-41
Bonus Ball: 11
Kicker: 2 JI-6-4-7·4
Buckeye 5: 13-14-17-23-36
Pick 3 nlaflt: 2-4-0
Pick 4 night: 1-6-2-1
W.VA.

D1lly 3: 3-4-4
D1ily 4: 7-2-0-6
Pouue1hl: 16-22-26 44 46 (20)

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Investigators say black
boxes recovered in North
Carolina crash that killed 21

·Local Briefs

. For the Record

Dissolutions

2nd Set Free

Local Stocks

REEDSVILLE - Grant L.
Boring, 75 , of Reedsville
died Tuesday, January
2003, at his residence.
He was born in Lisbon on
July 22, 1927, son of Edith
Eraman, and the late Ira H.
Boring.
He was a beloved father,
grandfather and friend. He
was a member of the Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053,
Coolville Masonic Lodge,
Honorable
Order
of
Kentucky Colonels and the
Forked Run Sportsmen's
Club . .
Surviving, _ besides his
mother, are a daughter,
Patricia Martin and her husband, Hugh, of Reedsville; a
son, Michael Boring and his
wife, Laura, of Winterset,
Iowa;
two
grandsons,
Michael and Angel Martin,
and Matthew Martin and
Amber VanSickle; a granddaughter,
Jenna
Larke
Boring; two step-gran~­
daughters, Jessica Smith ana
Amy Smith of Des Moines,
Iowa; a brother-in-law, Erich
and Gertrude Ellwart of
Munchburg, Germany; a sister-in-law, Elfriede Ellwart of
Lichtenstein; a niece, Janet
Hoffman; and three nephews,
John Hetzer, Rainer Ellwart
and Christian Ell wart. Besides his father, he was
preceded in death by his sister
and
brother-in-law,
Phyllis and John Hetzer;
brothers-in-law, Gunter and
George Ellwart; and a sisterin-law, Elfriede Wygas.
A memorial service will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday,
January II, 2003, at White
Funeral Home in Coolville,
with Phil Sturm officiating.
Friends may call two hours
prior to the service. Coolville
Masonic Lodge will conduct
Masonic services at 11 :30
a.m.
. Burial will be in Reedsville
Cemetery. ·
Memorial contributions
may ,be made to the
90;
Reedsville .. Squad
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

1:

'

JAN
DEC
RICOfd high: 1,527.4e
Maret\ 24, 2000

Federal Mogul - .27
USB- 22.35
Gannett- 73.97
General Electric- 25.50
GKNlY - 3.65
Harley Davidson - 47.36
Kmart- .23
Kroger - 15.99
Ltd. - 13.75
NSC - 20.43
Osk Hill Fonanclal-21 .96
OVB - 20.51
BBT - 38 .05
Peoples - 25.51
Pepsico ,... 42.70
Premier - 8.05

Grant L. Boring

billing.
One of the five indicted
was Richard B. White, 59, a
management
consultant
from Louisiana hired by the
hospital to set up Pathways
Center
for
Geriatric
Psychiatry, the clinics' parent
organization
in
Youngstown.
Assistant U.S. Attorney
James C. Lynch said White
designed the clinics with
financial assistance from the
hospital.
indicted
were
Also
Michael B. Suhadolnik, 46,
of Chardon; Raul Sanchez
de Varona, 38, of Coral
Gables, Fla. ; and Maryann
Barnett, 64, and Patricia
Matejko, 59, both of
Canfield.

AP

AEP - 29.79
Arch Coal - 20.80
Akzo - 33 .79
AmTech/SBC- 28.78
Ashland Inc. - 28.80
1\T&amp;T- 27.40
Bank One - 37.40
Bll-13.32
Bob Evans - 24.01
BorgWarner - 51.94
Champion - 3.29
Charming Shops- 4.02
Ci1y Holding - 27.20
Col -23.23
DG - 12.38
DuPont - 43.58

Obituaries

Aladimi also is awaiting trial
in California on federal ~
that he was involved in a conspiracy to distribute over-thecounter drugs used in illegal
laboratories. He was free on
bond until the Dec. 30 raid.
In a 1999 search of his home
related to the California case,
the government seized more
than $750,000 in currency concealed in resealed shampoo bottles in boxes marked for shipment to Yemen, court records
show.
"He's allowed to keep cash in
his home," Kravitz said

Monday, Jan.13
POMEROY - A financial aid' worskhop will be
held for seniors who are
planning to go to college
next year and their parents
at 7 p.m. in the Miegs High TUPPERS PLAINSSchool
library. VFW 9053 7 p.m. at the
Representatives from the hall in Tuppers Plains.
University of Rio Grande Meal at 6:30 p.m.
will be speaking, Cliff
Kennedy, guidance coun- RACINE - Sonshine
~
selor, announced.
Unlim1ted n1ght and weekend rninllles

1,200

OCT

family and municipal
judges are reviewing cases
to
determine
which
inmates they can move to
prisons or treatment ceoters and which ones they
can release.
Meanwhile,
commissioners could decide soon
whether to put a jail tax
issue on the May ballot.
"We really have to be
sharp and creative," said
Massillon
Municipal
Judge Edward Elum .
"There's going to be a lot
of bad guys walking free."
County Common Pleas
1udge
Richard
D.
Reinbold Jr. said people
charged with low-level
felonies will not be kept in
jail while they wait for initial court appearances.

Jan. 14,2000

Jan.8, 2003

1,401 .07

CANTON (AP)- Stark
County 's jail will soon
have fewer inmates.
Faced with laying off 38
jail employees next week
because of county budget
cuts, Sheriff Timothy A.
Swanson said he must
reduce the jail population
at the Safety Building by
144 inmates.
He said the staff
decrease will force him to
close portions of four jail
wings and move inmates
out of the facility in
Canton.
The jail's population of
379 must be reduced to
235, Swanson said.
encouragement
With
from Swanson· and his jail
administrators,
Stark
County's common pleas,

Saturday, Jan. 11
PORTAND-Letart
Township Trustees, 9 a.m.
appropriations meeting at
the township building.

~OCT~~~NOV,.,.---=;:;o:::::ec~-,.JA~N,-- 7 ' 000

cl\ar9l

Thursday, January 9, 2003

Five indicted for inflating
clinics' Medicare bills

ness. A slight chance of snow
showers after midnight. Lows
in the upper 20s. Northwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of snow 20 percent.
Friday... Mostly cloudy and
colder with a chance of snow
showers. Highs in the mid
30s. West winds around 10
mph. Chance of snow 30 per-~
cent.
Friday
night.. .Mostly
cloudy and cold with a chance
of snow showers. Lows in the
upper teens. Chance of snow
30 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 20s. ·
Saturday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
teens.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 20s. ·
Monday ... Partll
cloudy
with a chance o snow late.
Lows in the upper teens and
highs in the lower 30s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of snow. Lows near 20
and highs in the lower 30s.
Wednesday .. . Increasing
cloudiness with a chance of
rain or snow late. Lows 20 to
25 and highs 37 to 44

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

8,595.31

Thur8day,January 9, 2003

Businessman, 3 others indicted
for transporting stolen baby food

Ohio ..weather

•

·PageA2.

Alliance
from Page A1

Dave Garra, an employee of Lucas Plumbing, works on
connectors for hydraulic pumps for a new roller coaster
at Cedar Point Amusuement Park in Sandusky. Published
reports have estimated the height of the coaster at
about 400 feet; the park was to release details Thursday
morning on its Web stie. This will be the 15th roller
coaster at the park. (AP)

done to change fire departments .
tie said the rule changes
involving training time
were "so frequent and fast
that it practically killed
volunteer EMT because of
the amount of regulations."
"A ll of these hours have
already affected EMS systems because of all these
changes ,"
Byer
said.
"Volunteers can't keep up
and drop out."
Brian
)&gt;feffer,
Ohio
Department of Public
Safety, said the state takes

Washington that we have a
very good (voice) recorder,"
John Goglia , a National
Transportat ion Safety_ Board
member, said Thursday on
CBS ' "The Early Show."
He told ABC 's "Good
Mornin g America" that the
flight data recorder has not
been pl ayed out yet,
becau se an inve sti gator
"had some problems getting
data out of it."
The pilot , identified by
US Airways as Katie Leslie
of Charlotte, contacted the
tower at takeoff to report an
emergency,
said
Greg
Martin, a spokesman for the
Federal
Aviation
Administration.
"However, (the transmission) was cut short and the
emergency was never identified," he said.
·

a long time to create and
implement changes in policy.
He advised concerned
fire chiefs and volunteers
to get involved with the
Fire Alliance so that there
voice could be better heard
before any changes are
made at the legislative
level.
This dramatic increase in
the amount of initial time
involved could act .as a
deterrent to recruitment
and retention of voluntee(
firefighters.
Clay Crowe, a member of
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department, said if these
proposals come into being,
"there will be a lot of loss."

Pomeroy merchants discuss recent promotions~
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
News editor
POMEROY - Ways to
enhance Christmas decorations and expand holiday
activities to attract visitors
to town were' discussed at
the Pomeroy Merchants
Association
meeting
Wednesday at Peoples Bank.
It was decided that while
the holiday tour of the town
was canceled in December,
another one will be scheduled this year.
Planning will begin in
early fall so that the tickets
can be put on sale in
November. John Musser,
president, . proposed that
downtown
entertainment
and. refreshments be combined with the historic tour

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

•

to make it more appealing.
The cookie, candy and
handmade wooden toy contests were reported successful, attracting large numbers
of participants. It will be
held a~ain this year.
Addmg new dowQtown
decorations was discu~sed,
and Bobbi Karr, Susan Clark
and . George Wright were
appointed to the committee
to · check into repairing or
replacing them before_ fall.
Members were asked to
submit suggestions as to
design and color for new
banners to be used on the
village's Victorian lamps. It
was noted that some of the
banners in use for several
years have faded .
It was also reported that a
new bulb featuring a picture of the new Pomeroy-

pleted there by students,
and suggested having the
students do a s imilar pro"
ject with the merchants for
airing on the local tele'vision station.
Suzanne
Bentz,
the
teacher involved in the
project, will be contacted
to determine the feasibility.
Regular meeting dates
were changed to the second Tuesday of each
month.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correc119n Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. It you know of an error in a
story. call the newsroom al (740) 9.92·
2156.

Our FIIFIIn number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:
SHOWN ON
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON·FRI &amp;
12:30 PM SAT • SUN

Mason Bridge will be
available this year.
For several years, the
association has sold ornaments picturing Pomeroy
landmarks. Funds raised
through the project have
gone
for . decorations.
Balance in that fund now is
,$2,551.
The Jazz ,and Blues
Society's summer concert
program will begin on
Friday, June 27 and continue on Friday nights ,
including July 4, for five
weeks and conclude with a
festival
on
the
last
Saturday
of
July,
announced Jackie Welker,
organizer.
George Wright discussed
a video project of vocationa] activities at Meigs
High School recently com-

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14

(UsPs 213-9601
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Monday 1hrough Friday, 111 Court
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All AGES , All TIMES $4.00

CHILDBIRTH EDUCATION CLASSES
• Third Saturday of every month (All Day)
e Taught by a Certifi'ed Childbirth Educator
• FREE to ·PVH patients - $25 charge to patients from other facilities
• Expectant mothers need to be at least 32 weeks (8 months) for class
e Loved ones are encouraged to participate

FOR MORE INFORMATION: (304) 675-4340, Ext.1232

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The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Nation •·world

.The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 9, 2003 .

•

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
Nearly 60 vehicles
wrecked on a six-mile stretch
of Interstate 80 during the
morning
commute
Wednesday in a string of
crashes blamed on fog and
black ice.
The Utah Highway Patrol
reported 14crashes involving
59 vehicles, at least five of
them tractor-trailers.
There were no immediate
reports of fatalities; however,
II people were taken to hospitals. At least four people
were seriously injured,
including a woman in her 40s
who was crushed from the
chest down when her car was
shoved under a burning tractor-trailer, authorities said.
"This was all caused by the
weather," said patrol Capt.
Alan Workman. "It was the
moisture on the roads freezing over."
At one crash site, 17 vehicles had piled up, .and chairs
and other household items
had been strung across the
interstate by a tipped-over
semitrailer.
Matt Golden, ~3. a statistical analyst from Tooele, said
he was headed to work on his

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

,Managing Etilitor

Editor

-2002

Letters to the ediwr are welcome. They should be less than
300 ll'ords. All /ellrrs are subject to · ~diting and must be
si~11ed and include address and telephone number. No .
unsigned letters will be p11blished. Leiters should be in good

NATIO~AL

;;;,1' 1~11 ~
I

· ~/'

..1• ..

~lP

.

•

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

.

;;ec

.. ,

~

VIEW

Kind&amp; cool?
-- ....

It~

time for open discourse on
national policy to return .tq arena
• The Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Wash., on presidential executive orders: When President Clinton signed
one of his controversial executive orders, an aide marveled,
"Stroke of the pen . Law of the land. Kinda cool."
Republicans were outraged. They wanted to know why
there wasn't more public input and why the issue didn't go
through Congress. They noted that the founding fathers
would flip their powdered wigs at such an affront to the
checks and balances so carefully inscribed in the
Constitution.
All excellent points.
But last week, President Bush whipped out his pen and a
few strokes later, faith-based initiatives and a new forestthinning policy became the law of the land. Last month, the
administration announced plans to dramatically curtail
environmental reviews for drilling, logging and other activities in national forests.
Now that both sides have gotten their partisan giggles
from executive orders, it's time for adults to step in and
remind our national leaders that this isn't the way a representative democracy is supposed to be run . .
Our nation needs to move back toward the Madisonian
ideal of laws being openly debated and determined by the
535 representatives of the people. Such a system gives us a
check against extremism and more accountability.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of 2003. There
are 356 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 9, 1913, Richard Milhous Nixon, the 37th president of the United States, was born in Yorba Linda, Calif.
On this date:
In 1788, Connecticut became the fifth state to ratify the
U.S. Constitution.
In 1793, Frenchman Jean Pierre Blanchard, using a hotai r balloon, flew between Philadelphia. and Woodbury, N.J.
In 1861 , Mississippi seceded from the Union.
In 1861, the "Star of the West," a merchant vessel bringing reinforcements to Federal troops at Fort Sumter, S.C.,
retreated after being fired on by a battery in the harbor.
In 1945 , during World War II, American forces began
landing at Lingayen Gulf in the Philippines.
In 1957, Anthony Eden resigned as British prime minister.
In 1964, anti-U .S. rioting broke out in the Panama Canal
Zone, resu lting in the deaths of 21 Panamanians and three
U.S. soldiers.
·
In 1968, the Surveyor 7 space probe made a soft landing
on the moon , marking the end of the American series of
unmanned explorations of the lunar surface.
In 1972, reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes. speaking
by telephone from the Bahamas to reporters in Hollywood,
said a purported biography of him by Clifford Irving was a
fake.
In 1997, a Comair commuter plane crashed 18 miles short
of the Detroit Metropolitan Airport, killing all 29 people on
board.
Ten years ago: Two Red Cross officials visited a camp of
Palestinians who had been deported by Israel to a no man's
land in southern Lebanon. Seven people were found shot to
death at a restaurant in Palatine, Ill. (Two suspects were
·
finally arrested in May 2002).
Five years ago: Northern Ireland Secretary Mo Mowlam
visited the Maze Prison to make a face-to-face appeal for
peace to Protestant militants. The Barry Switzer era with the
Dallas Cowboys ended with the announcement of the
coach' s resignatio n.
.
One year ago: A U.S. military tanker ·plane crashed in
western Pakistan, killing all seven Marines on board. Two
Islamic militants stormed an Israeli army post near the Gaza
Strip. killing four soldiers before being shot dead in a gun
battle. The Bush administration and the auto industry
agreed to promote development of pollution-free cars and
trucks powered by hydrogen fuel cells.
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Herbert Lorn is 86. Author
Judith Krantz is 75 . Football Hall-of-Farner Bart Starr is 69.
Sportscaster Dick Enberg is 68. Actor Bob Denver is 68.
Actress K . Callan is 67. Country singer Big AI Downing is
63 . Actor-singer Jimmy Boyd (" I Saw Momniy Kissing
Santa Claus") is 63. Folk singer Joan Baez is 62. Actress
Susannah York is 62. Rock mu sician Jimmy Page (Led
Zeppelin ) is 59. Pop singer Bill Cowsill is 55 . Singer David
· Johan sen (aka Buster Poindexter) is 53. Singer Crystal
Gay le is 52. Rock musician Eric Erlandson (Hole) is 40.
Actress Jocl.y Richardson is 38 . Rock musician Carl Bell
(Fuel) is 36. Rock singe,r Steve Harwell (Smash Mouth) is
31i. Roc k si nger-musician Dave Matthews is 36. Singer A.J .
McLean !Backstreet Boy s) is 25.
Thought for Today: "One 's lifework, I have learned,
grow' with the working and the living. Do it as if your life '"
depended on it , and first thing you know, you' ll have made
a li fe out 0f it. A good life. too ." - Theresa . Helburn.
American theatri ca l producer ( 1887-1959).

Thursday, January 9, 2003

Fog, black ice leads to series of pileups
involving nearly 60 vehicles on 1-80

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce

Page AS

Max Factor heir Andrew Luster, accused of raping three
women after rendering them unconscious with the daterape drug gamma hydroxybutyrate, is shown in this Dec.
16, 2002, file photo in a Ventura, Calif., courtroom.
Ventura County Superior Court Judge Ken Riley issued a
fugitive warrant for Luster. He disappeared in mid-trial
from In-hom~! detention after posting bail of $1 million.
(AP)

•

·'

Investigators launch
worldwide search for-heir
to cosmetics empire

'

LAMBRO'S VIEW

&gt; •

pemocrats lopk to overcome slim pickimgsfor 2004
BY DoNALD LAMBRO

cycle that makes a Democratic chatWASHINGTON- Like it or not, the lenge a daunting prospect. He has the
two-year presidential campaign race is presidential bully pulpit and knows
off and running : George W. Bush's how to use it. In addition, his party conagenda is being reshaped with 2004 trois the House and Senate and thus
clearly targeted, and Democrats seek- controls the committees, legislative
ing his job are testing political mes- machinery and when bills can be
sages with their party's faithful.
bought up for a vote.
Bush is riding high in the polls,
Republicans have united as never
though not because everything is going before and demonstrated that unity in
well. He is seen as a tough-minded, last year's legislative skirmishes, such
wartime leader who has mounted an all- as the one over the economic stimulus
out offensive against terrorism while bill. This solidarity will create a favorsimultaneously restoring respect and able environment for spending curbs in
dignity to the presidency.
the budget and Bush's judicial nominaHowever, Bush.'s approval ratings lions.
As for stepping up the tax cuts, which
could plummet if the economy remains
soft or slips; if Wall Street's bear mar- Bush wants to do, most of the 12
ket persists; or if events go badly in the Democrats who voted for the presiwar on terrorism and in Iraq.
dent's 2001 tax cut plan are still there
Bush and the Republicans are enter- · and still back those tax cuts. He'll·have
ing a critical period of political consol- more maneuvering room on those
idation and outreach. They effectively votes, especially under a budget reconcontrol all three branches of govern- ciliation process that cannot be filibusment, but must find a way to strengthen tered.
and expand their majority in the elecBut what about the Democratic hopetorate for the 2004 battle to come.
fuls who want Bush's job? There are a
Three overriding issues surely will lot of them, though for the most part
dominate the voters' concerns over the · this is a lightweight bunch who has
next two years: a homeland security some serious political handicaps.
apparatus that keeps Americans safe, a
The worst handicap is that, with the
healthier econ_gmy, and disarming exception of little-known Vermont Gov.
Saddam Hussei61s regime in Iraq with a Howard Dean, the whole crowd is in
minimum of casualties .
Congress, not a place that the voters
But Bush will seek to co-opt the look to for leadership anymore.
Democrats' big tax-and-spend agenda
Nowadays, lawmakers are seen as
in ·a number of other areas, particularly part of the problem, not part of the soluhealth care. A big chunk of the 40 mil- lion. President John F. Kennedy was the
lion Americans who are uninsured last sitting member to win the White
would be helped if they could offset House.
part or all of their health insurance preLet's start with Sen. John Edwards of
miums with lower income tax bills. He North Carolina. He is a freshman who
is going to push a tax credit to do just is only in the fourth year of his first sixthat.
· year term. He has made millions as a
At the outset, Bush has several big personal injury lawsuit attorney, but
things going for him in this election had never run for public office before.

•

..

'

And he now wants to be president of
the United States?
Handsome and ambitious, Edwards :
has not distinguished himself in the..:
Senate in any major legislative battles. :
However, he has been the subject of :
some fawning ar1icles from the liberal :
establishment press in magazines like
Vanity Fair and Esquire, but is that how .
we choose our presidents?. The rest of ·
the congressional-pack does have a lot :
of experience and plenty, of big spend- :
ing votes to prove 11.
:
Sen. John Kerry, for example, is near- :
ly an ideologi€al clone of Teddy : ·
Kennedy, but are the Democrats ready
to nominate another d,rd-i n-the-wool :
Massachusetts liberal. Bush 's. aides ;
would like nothing better. Even if he :
wins his par1y primary in neighboring ·
New Hampshire, it is hard to believe ,
that this former anti-warprotes,ter.co!!ld :
do well in the Southern contests that ~
follow.
Then there is former House
Democratic leader Dick Qephardt of .
Missouri and Senate Democratic leader :
Tom Daschle of South Dakota. Both are ·
longtime creatures of Congress, :
beholden to their party's liberal special :
interests. If you love the deficits, they :
voted for them. If you hate tax cuts, ,
they voted against them.
Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, :
AI Gore's personable running mate, is :
not
well-liked
in ultra-liberal :
Hollywood and New York media cir- ;
cles because of his criticism of sex and ·
violence in the entertainment industries. Yet that, plus his deeply religious :
beliefs and past support for school ·
choice pro~rams, could make him the ·
Democrats most formWable opponent.

Ordinary people will make 2003 a better year
Maybe 2002 will be remembered as
the]ear of cynicism, when we discovere in a seemingly endless series of
revelations that our own government
was spying on us, rounding UJ? our foreign-born neighbors, thwartmg freedom of speech, denouncing dissenters
as traitors, declaring a right to pre-emptive strikes on any country - the hst
goes on.
The prospects for the coming year
look even gloomier. War. Recession.
Staggering state budget cuts. A government run by a secrecy -obsessed president.
A Congress · that will fulfill its
"checks and balances" role with important input such as, "Excellent idea, Mr.
President! More coffee?"
So how do we greet 2003 with hope
instead of more cynicism!
By reminding ourselves that no policy, leader, institution or tragedy is more
powerful than we are. So I am beginnin~ the new year by remembering the
ordtnary Americans who during the
past year did the right thing and
changed everything.
Coleen Rowley, Sherron Watki'ns and
Cynthia Cooper, named last week as
Time magazine's "Persons of the Year,"
exposed wrongdoing at the FBI, Enron
and WorldCom. Risking their jobs, they
blew the whistle on corruption and
incompetence .and ultimately transformed the way we conduct bui\i ness
and federal law enforcement.
Two women named Jane Roberts and
'-

--·

--·-~

--

. ---·-

-

-

Joan
Ryan
COWMNIST

Pennsylvania this summer. They
devised ways to locate the miners, then
to pump air into the chamber where
they were trapped. The soot-smeared
faces of the miners as they emerged ·
from the hole had television viewers in ·
tears, not just from relief, but also from
the heartbreaking commitment and
ingenuity that maqe it possible.
Faithful pari shioners cracked the
hard shell of the Catholic hierarchy in .
an unprecedented campaign to root out
sex offenders among its priests. The
parishioners, rather than the Vatican,
led the church back to its core values.
Cardinal 'Bernard Law ended up resigning as Boston "s archbishop, and at least
325 priests nationwide either quit or
were dismissed.
I thought about these stories, and
similar ones, as I scanned the architectural imaginings for the new World
Trade Center. I thought I'd see buildings that embodied strength and
endurance, things fierce and immov·
able. Instead, many seem as ephemeral
as clouds, great glass wisps floating
into the sky. The bui ldings seem to be
monuments not to the tragedy of the
fallen but to the hope of those still here.
My wish for the new year is that we
are like those l;lllildings: pillars of hope
girded with steel.
.

Lois Abraham, one from California, the
other from New Mexico, were angry
when President Bush yanked the $34
million in fund ing that Congress had
appropriated for the United Nations
Population Fund that supports family
planning and reproductive rights in
struggling nations. The women figured
that even if our government could turn
its back on poor women around the
world, the rest of us dido 't have to. So
they are raising $34 million, $1 at a
time. More than . $2,000 is arriving
every day through the www.unfpa.org
Web site.
A truck driver named Ron Lantz
ended the sniper nightmare in the
Washington , D.C. , area. He spotted a
blue Caprice at a rest stop in Maryland,
.called the police .and, finally, the
(Joan Ryan is a colunmistfor the San
snipers w.ere caught.'
.
More than a hundred workers drilled Francisco Chronicle. Send commellts
to he r in care of this newspaper or send
for three days through 240 feet of rock her
e- mail a t j oanryan. @sfgate.com. )
to rescue nine trapped CQal miners in

j

BALTIMORE (AP) - A
lawyer for relatives of a sevenmember family killed in an
arson fire says the city is
responsible for their deaths
because an anti-drug campaign
encouraged them to speak out
against neighborhood drug
dealers.
A memo being sent this
week to the cit}' solicitor's
office outlines the claim that
the city owes relatives of
Carnell and Angela Dawson
"substantial redress" for the
deaths, said attorney Janell
Byrd-Chichester, a member of
attorney Johnnie Cochran's
Washington law firm.
No lawsuit has been ·filed,
but Cochran, who represented
0 .J. Simpson in his murder
trial, has mdicated one is likely.
· Prosecutors say the victims
were killed in retaliation for
reporting drug dealers to
police. Darrell L. Brooks, 21 , a
neighbor of the Dawsons;
faces federal charges in the
deaths.
·
. Byrd-Chichester said the
city is responsible for the
deaths because the anti-drug
"Baltimore Believe" campaign
encouraged them to speak out
against dealers .
"It's reckless to invite people
to step up to a dangerous situation, and then be on notice that
these particular people have

-

.

"It sounded like gunfire
going off," he said. "It just
exploded. It was just unbelievable. What you're thinking is, 'How can the cars just
keep coming and coming?

NEWARK, N.J . (AP) - really besieged work force. hadn't been able to find
State
officials
on You can't say much more .Murphy or the children.
Wednesday rejected union than that," Rosenstein said
Faheem's twin , Raheem
claims that a social worker then . "When you have 107 Williams, 7, and another
was severely overworked childrep on your caseload, brother, Tyrone Hill , 4, also
hospitalized
while monitoring a 7-year- you might not do all the col- remained
old boy who was later found later~! calls. Nobo!ly can do Wednesday and were in fair
dead m a plastic storage this JOb."
·
. condition. The brothers
bin.
The averl)ge caseload in have been placed in state
The unidentified case- New Jersey ts 35 children. custody pending placement
worker was responsible for National advocates recom- in a foster home.
53 children in 27 families, mend that a worker handle
Also
Wednesday,
said Micah Rasmussen, a no more than 25.
Williams' boyfriend was
An autopsy concluded arrested
for
sexually
spokesman for Gov. James
E~ McGreevey.
that Faheem, who was assaulting one of the boys
Union
leaders · had ·found in the home of his in August 2001 while he
claimed ,the ."Worker was mother's cousin, She(!')' L.
responsible for 107 cases, Murphy, died from starvaand they disputed·the state's tion and blunt force to the
number.
'
stomach. The death was
"We believe it was many ruled a homicide. No one
more thari that," said Hetty has been charged in the
death.
Rosenstein, president
Communication Workers of Authorities were still
America Local 1037.
searching for Murphy, a 41 Rosenstein had offered year-old go-go dancer, who
the higher number Tuesday, IS charged with child endansaying the union hoped the germent.
caseworker and her superviThe children had been in
sors would not .be made Murphy's care since their
scapegoats in the death of mother, Melinda Williams,
Faheem Williams. The boy was jailed on assault
was discovered in a rela- charges in March. Williams,
tive's home Sunday, a day · who remained hospitalized
after two of his brothers Wednesday as she recovwere found starving in a ered from a car wreck, was
locked basement room.
released from custody in
"You're talking about a August but told police she

Can't they see

thi ~

acci-

dent?'"

The interstate was temporarily closed for several
miles just west of Salt Lake
City because of the crashes.

was living with the fam ily,
a prosecutor said. Joseph
Reese, 45 , was being held
on $100,000 bail.
ha s
The
governor
demanded a report on the
case from the family services agency. which closed
its case on the family in ·
March without an onsite
investigation . Speaking on
NBC' s "Today" show,
McGreevey said the boys
showed "s light improvement" when he visited them
Tuesday night.

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

of

Get home delivery today
Sentinel992-2155

·Lawyer blames death
of family on Boston's
anti-drug campaign

RYAN'S VIEW

motorcycle when people on
the side of the road tried to
wave him down because of
the conditions. He had just
st&lt;;~pped when he was hit by a
m1mvan.

State·rejects union claim that caseworker
in dead boy's case was overburdened.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Luster is see on camera
- Investigators launched having sex w th a woman
a worldwide search for an arid decl ." g: "That's
heir to the Max Factor exactly wh t I like in my
cosmetics fortune after he room: A p sed-out beaudisappeared in the middle tiful girl.'
His attorneys say the sex
of his trial on date-rape
charges.
was consensual, suggestAuthorities said 39- ing the women were feignyear-old Andrew Luster ing sleep to help him film
fled his beachfront home pornographic movies.
Friday in his sport utility
They also dispute that
vehicle, accompanied by Luster is a fugitive and
his dog.
suggest he could have
The great-grandson of been abducted or involved
Max Factor went on trial in an accident
Dec. 16 on 87 charges,
Luster, who lived off a
including rape, sodomy trust fund'· and real estate
and poisoning, and will investments while pursucontinue to be tried in ing his hobby of surfing,
absentia. The trial is was under a form of house
expected to last a couple arrest in which he woie an ·
more weeks.
electronic
monitoring
If convicted, Luster device.
could be sentenced to up
The restrictions were
to ISO years ill prison. '
eased before the trial,
The case began 2 112 allowing him to be away
years ago when a 21-year- from home from 8 a.m. to
old college student told 8 p.m. on court days and
authorities Luster drugged during a two-week holiday
and raped her after she break. The relaxed restric·
met hiril in a bar.
- lions, authorities said,
Authorities searched his gave Luster at least a 12house and seized 17 home hour head start when he
videos they said show left.
·
other victims who may
Authorities said Luster
have been given the date- left behind his cold-weathrape drug GHB and raped. er clothes, meaning he
In one tape played in may . have headed for a
court after he disappeared, warm climate.

(Washington-based political journalist and columnist Donald Lanlbro is
filling in for Morton Kondracke. )

Firefighters extinguish a fire while trying to take care of a person trapped in a vehicle under a
burning semHruck that is part of a multiple car pile up in Salt Lake City, Utah on 1-80 near 5600
West in due to dense 'fog and icy conditions. (AP)

28 Miltion people in the U.S. have hearing loss ....
Are you one of them?

stepped up and are in danger,
and then fail to provide prote&lt;;tion," Byrd-Chichester said.
"The outcome should not have
been surprising."

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Thursday, January 9,

· The Paily Sentinel

Inside:
College beaketball, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 82

Page Bl
Thursday, January 9, 2003

URG men crack
NAIATop 25
OLATHE, Kan. - For the
first time this season the
University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketball team
pear in the NAJA Division
Top 25 Poll .
The Redmen (12-6) have
cpmpiled a four-game winning streak and have won
five of their last si;t outings.
Rio Grande is ranked 25th
this week receiving 31 votes.
They were No. 27 in the
. pre-season poll.
The current rating is the
third of the regular season
and the first in the 2003 calendar year.
Fellow American Mideast
Conference competitors Saint
Vincent (No. 5) and Shawnee
State (No. 14 also appear in
the current rating.
Rio Grande will put the No.
25 ranking on the line on
Saturday when they host
Malone at the Newt Oliver
Arena. Game time is set for 8
p.m.

if

I

Coverboy Krenzel modest a_
bout honor
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State
quarterback Craig Krenzel reacted
with modesty Wednesday to being on
the cover of next week's issue of
Sports Illustrated.
The cover features an action photo
of Krenzel about to throw a pass with
Miami lineman Jerome McDougle
rushing 1oward him in Ohio State's
31-24 double-overtime upset of
Miami in last week's Fiesta Bowl for
the national championship.
Inside, another photo shows
Krenzel, the leading rusher with 81
yards in the national title game, scormg on a quarterback sneak in the second quarter.
"That kind of stuff doesn't really
do it for me," said Krenzel, a molecular genetics major who wants to
become a doctor.
"I'm sure 30 years from now, it will

be something to look back at, but
right now it is important for me to be
able to celebrate with my team," he
said. "The team doesn' 1 really care
who was on the cover."
Krenzel and fellow Buckeyes
spoke with reporters outside the university's Woody Hayes Athletic
Center. Some were fi[Jning interview
segments for ESPN to show on its
ESPN Classic channel's Saturday
rebroadcast of the title game.
Krenzel said he and some teammates received a standing ovation
from other passengers when they
stepped on a commercial flight back
to Columbus on Sunday.
Meanwhile,
linebacker
Matt
Wilhelm said the key plar of the
game isn't the one everyone stalking
about.
Wilhelm's hard hit on Miami quar-

terback Ken Dorsey, a senior with a
now 38-2 record, sent Dorsey off the
field for a play. The Buckeyes sacked
Dorsey four times and knocked him
down l 0 more times. After the game,
Dorsey was hospitalized for several
hours with dehydration and a possible concussion.
In Sports Illustrated, Wilhelm was
quoted: "Their offensive line was
overrated."
But Wednesday, Wilhelm said
Miami's field goal that sent the game
into overtime was more important. .
"Myself and Dustin Fox are both
jumpers and the ball hit my thumb,"
he said. "When you say football is a
game of inches, you just realize how
far it is from my thumb to my hand.
If it hit solid in my hand, the game is
over. In my mind that is the play that
sticks out to me."

·College basketball

Cincinnati
blows lead,
still wins

NFL implements
new policy
NEW YORK (AP) - The
NFL implemented several
officiating chan¥es, including the positiomilg of officials on field-goal attempts to
avoid future foul-ups like the
one at the end of the ·Oiants49ers playoff game.
· Under the new policy, initiated by commissioner Paul
Tagliabue, the seven field
officials will be realigned so
they can better see what happens in the event of a fake
field goal or a botched
attempt, like the one at the
. end onast Sunday's game.
•

CINCINNATI (AP) Strong at the point, weak at
center, very poor at finishing
off opponents.
One game into Conference
USA play, the seven-time
defending champions have
developed a pattern that's
giving everyone els~ some
hope that thts will finally be
the year to unseat Cincinnati.
Taron B.arker and Chadd
Moore shared the point
almost fla•wlP.,&lt;&lt;lv
night, ., .

·Tfibe signs
two pitchers

~·

'

.B,I't.

market
a rightji~id~d hitt,er. But two veteran pitchers
been added.
, .. Pitchers: Terry Mulholland
and Dave Burba returned to
the Indians on Wednesday,
hours before the midnight
deadline for them to re-sign.
Mulholland agreed to a
$500,000, one-year contract
and Burba agreed to a minor
league deal that includes a
provision for a $500,000,
. one-year contract if he is
added to the major league
roster.
Both can earn an additional
$700,000 in performance
bonuses. If the pair had not
signed Wednesday, they
would have been unable to
return to the Indians Until
,May 1.
. :~: .. I

NCAA clears
.Tennessee
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- The NCAA has found no
evidence
of
violations
involving payments forrner
Tennessee quarterback Tee
Martin received from an
Alabama sportswriter in
· 1999.
The NCAA al~o accepted
Tennessee's
self-imposed
penalties for
recruiting
mfractions related to former
player Eric Locke. The university will give up two foot·
ball scholarships in the
upcoming signing period and
has banned two boosters
from contributing to the athletic department for three .
years.

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MlAMI (AP) San
Francisco Giants pitcher
Livan Hernandez was arrested for allegedly trying to hit
an elderly mah with a couple
of golf clubs during a street
fight, police said.
was
Hernandez,
27 ,'
charged with felony ag~ra­
vated assault after he got mto
. a "violent" scuffle with the
man, who received a minor
cut on the back of his head,
according to a witness
account cited in a police
statement.

Some players are already talking
.
about next year.
"We have what it takes to repeat,"
tailback Lydell Ross said. "Our
whole offense is coming back. We
have a lot of big-time players coming
back."
Ohio State has 13 graduating
seniors on its roster, including
Wilhelm. Also, Darrion Scott is "definitely" returning despite rumors
he' II go pro, sports information director Steve Snapp said Wednesday.
Krenzel is a junior this year. Ross,
a sophomore, was a backup in freshman Maurice Clarett's star-making
season.
But a repeat won't be easy.
"Everybody' s going to be gunning
for us now," Ross said. "Everybody
wants to beat us just like we wanted
to beat Miami."

Cincinnati forward Jason Maxlell (54) blocks
the first half Wednesday in Cincinnati. (AP)

a shot by DePaul _forward Sam Hoskin

(25) in

· the
at
the end before holding on for
a 64-56 victory over DePaul.
Cincinnati let a 19-point
second-half lead get down to
two in the closing minutes,
before Leonard Stokes had a
basket, a steal and three free
throws that let the Bearcats
(8-3, 1-0) escape a close call.
"We've won the conference
seven straight times," said
Stokes, a senior. "Everybody
is going to be gunning for
you."
This time, the rest of the
league has a fixed target.
DePaul (8-3, 0- 1) was
picked by the league's coache.s to finish last in its division,

but has gotten off to its best
start in nine years under firstyear coach Dave Leitao.
In a test against the league's
most accomplished team, the
Blue Demons initially got
flustered, then got their act
together too late.
Cincinnati never trailed
after an opening 13-5 run.
The lead was 19 with II minutes left in the game, but
DePaul went on an 18-2 run
that
got
flu"stricken
Cincinnati
coach
Bot
H!l~gins- out of hi~ foldj!lf
chau for a few stomps anc
screams.
Sam Hoskin scored 22
points, including a three-poinl
play that cut it to 55-53 with
3:25 left. Stokes hit a basket
to stop the C01)1eback, then
finished it off.
Leitao had. no explanation
for why his team played so
poorly, then came together at
the end.
"That's a $100 million
question when it comes to
basketball,"
he
said.
"Sometimes you don't know
why it happens.
"All of a sudden, we started

Please see UC. 81

NASCAR may ban Browns interview Campo
autograph hounds Ex-Dallas boss
in running for
from garage areas defensive
DAYTONA BEACH, Aa.
(AP) - NASCAR is considering a plan to prohibit
drivers fi;om signing autographs in the garage area at
tracks to reduce fan congestion.
NASCAR chairman Bill
France Jr. said Wednesday
the possible ban is part of
the sanctioning body.' s
ongoing effort to restore
order in the garage.
"We need to get the garage
area back to where the guys
can work on the cars,"
France said in an interview
with The Associated Press.
"So if we do this, when a fan
asks a driver for an autograph, the driver will be able
to say 'NASCAR won't let

me .' "
A sport that has long prided itself on the level of
access that fans have with
the teams, NASCAR in
recent years has seen an
overcrowding that has led to
numerous complaints from
drivers and crews, as well as
injuries among spectators.
Jeff Gordon is swarmed
by dozens of fans every time
he's in the garage. Dale
Earnhardt Jr. has taken to
sprinting to 'his destinations.
Crew members have

griped. that people surround
the cars, making it impossible for them to move
around, and fans have been
treated for injuries from
being run over by heavy tool
carts or being knocked doyvn
in the crowds surrounding
drivers.
Last season, a Tennessee
woman charged Winston
Cup champion Tony Stewart
with assault for allegedly
shoving her against a hauler
when she tried to get an
auloj!raph, but a grand jury
declined to indict him.
The Stewart episode
forced NASCAR to re-evaluate its near open-door policy on letting fan s into the
garage, especially after several drivers went to the sanctioning body in support of
Stewart saying the current
garage access was creating
near chaos.
So France said he's proposed only allowing drivers
to sign autoj!raphs in the
area immedtately around
their hauler and organizing a
period once a weekend
where all 43 drivers would
take turns sitting at a table to
si¥n a_utographs in I 0rmnute mcrements.

coordinator job
BEREA (AP) - Former
Dallas Cowboys coach Dave
Campo interviewed to be the
Cleveland Browns ' defensive
coordinator
on
Wednesday and soon could
be reunited with Browns
coach Butch Davis.
Campo, fired by Dallas on
Dec. 30 after leading the
Cowboys to their third
straight 5-11 season, met
with Davis for about six
hours at the Browns' training headquarters.
Browns spokesman Todd
Stewart said Campo was
returning to his home in
Dallas. Stewart said the
team does not expect to
make any announcements
for several days.
"He'd be a very nice and
comfortable fit," Browns
president Carmen Policy
said in an interview on radio
station WTAM . "But no job
offer has been made."
Davis was not available
for comment.
Browns defensive coordinator Foge Fazio retired
Tuesday, two days after the
Browns blew a 17 -point lead
in the second half and lost to
Pittsburgh 36-33 in an AFC

1¥1

Dave Campo

wild-card game.
The Browns also fired
defen sive line coach Ray
Hamilton following the collapse against the Steelers.
Campo also has interviewed with Seattle coach
Mike Holmgren for the
Seahawks' vacant defensive
coordi nator's position, but
\he Browns figure to have
the inside track at signing
him because of his relationship with Davis.
Before
leading
the
Cowboy s to a 15-33 record
the past three seasons, the
55-yeaJ'!old Campo was ·an
assistant on Dallas' staff for

PIHM see NASCAR. 81

J!,l - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . : - - - - - -, .-,.....,... . _-. ..., - ,.r ,. · •

-?.

... ,

. ·-

~.

-

'

.

'

·,-

II years, including six with
Davis.
Campo was the Cowboys'
defensive coordinator from
1995 to 1999, and won
thn:e Super Bowls with
them. He coached the secondary at the University of
Miami in 1987 and 1988,
when Davis was the
Hurricanes' defensive coordinator.
Campo also coached the
Cowboys' defensive backs
from 1991 to 1994, becoming the defensive coo~dina­
tor in 1995 when Davts left
to become head coach at
Miami.

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Mid-American Conference

Bobcats outlast Akron
Fear of losing
kept Hunter
going through
four over~imes
Bv TIM PUET
Associated Press
Ohio's Brandon Hunter
says he kept · going through
four overlimes against Akron
because he couldn' t bear the
thought of losing.
ter scored 30 points,
..._.., mcludin 1h~~l as t six of the
fourth overtime, and had 26
rebounds Wednesday night as
the Bobcats defeated the Zips
112- 104 in the longest game
ever for both schools.
Hunter's field goal with 35
seconds to play in the last
extra period made it 108-104.
He added two free throws
with 30 seconds left and two
more with four seconds to go.
"l didn ' t want to feel like
Akron (afterwards)," Hunter
said. "I was cussing myself
out, telling myself I have to
step it up. It was just ridiculous play after ridiculous play.
I just said, 'We can't Jose thts
• ball game."'
Nine players fouled out
over the course of the game,
which took more than three
hours. That gave both teams'
reserves, especially Ohio's
Zach Kiekow, a chance" to
shine in the late going.
A jumper by Kiekow with
I :32 to play gave the Bobcats
the lead for good at 106-104.
Kiekow scored six of his
eight points in the final overtime.
'T ve never been part of a
four-overtime game," Ohio
coach Tim O'Shea said ....I've
never played in one or
coached in one. You can go
back to junior high. I thought
it was a remarkable game and
a big win for us."

uc

from Page B1
to attack on both ends. We
got hands in shooters' faces,
and we allowed only one shot
at the basket."
The late run was little consolation .
"Regardless of where this
program is, was or is going to
be, it's about winning,"
Leitao said. "We didn't win
because we didn't do the
thin gs we need to do for the
majority of the game."
Cincinnati dominated until
th e final, frantic minutes,
allo wing the ailing Huggins
10 relax for most of the night.
He had a massive heart attack
on Sept. 28, but didn't miss a
practice.

NASCAR
from Page B1
. Punishment for signing
autographs at any other time
could be monetary - perhaps
a $500 fine although
France said he preferred
penali zing offending drivers
by sending them to the back of
!he field at the start ofthe race.
"Obviously, it would be a
judgment call on when a driver
would be punished for it, but
we' ve got to do something
because these guys can't even
walk around anymore," he said.
NASCAR plans to unveil the
new rules for garage access
later this month, France said.
But its goal is to reduce the
total number of individuals in
the garage during competition by some 20 percent.
Expected to be introduced
this season will be s~cial
"hot" passes that Will be

Thursday, January 9, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

· Del var Barrett had 21
points and II rebounds for
Ohio, which had a 61-40
rebounding advantage. Steve
Esterkamp added 17 points
and played 57 of the 60 minutes, while Sonny Johnson
scored 16 apd Thomas
Stephens had I 0 assists.
Derrick Tarver of the Zips
led both teams in scoring with
41
points and Johnny
Hollingsworth, who made of
18-of-21 free throws, had 24.
Andy Hipsher had 14
rebounds.
The ~arne was tied 19 times
and netther team led by more
than six points until the end.
Akron led 34-31 at halftime. A jumper by Stephens
with five seconds to play
ended a 5-0 Ohio run and tied
the game at 69 at the end of
regulation play. It remained
tied at 78 after one overtime,
89 after ' two and 98 after
three.
The night's other four MidAmerican Conference games
all were com81eted in the
standard
4
minutes.
Northern Illinois defeated
Toledo 72-65, Kent State
downed Miami of Ohio 6052, Marshall was a 69-63 victor over Buffalo and Central
Michigan got by Western
Michigan 80-75.
·
Jay Bates had 23 points to
pace Northern Illinois over
Toledo. Marcus Smallwood
added 16 points and had I 0
rebounds.
A 12-2 run in which Bates
scored five points gave
Northern Illinois a 26-14 lead
with 5:22 left in the first half,
and the Huskies never trailed
after that.
· The defeat, coming one
game after the Rockets had
beaten Michigan State, disappointed Toledo coach Stan
Joplin.
"It's obvious we can't han'dle success and I think we
took a couple steps backward," he said. "We have to

do a better job and not read
our press clippings or listen to
people who tell us how good
we are."
·Nick Moore scored 21 for
Toledo, all on 3-pointers. The
Rockets made 13 of their 22
field goals from long range,
but never were able to catch
up.
Kent State's victory over
Miami was the Golden
Flashes' 17th in a row in
MAC play, breaking the conference record of 16 set by the
RedHawks in · 1956-57 and
~
1958-59.
John Edwards gave Kent
the lead and Antonio Gates hit
two consecutive layups to
complete a 6-0' run midway
through the second half as
Kent rallied to take control.
Gates finished with 21
poinl8 and Edwards 13 for
Kent. Juby Johnson had 23
for Miami.
Marshall stayed unbeaten in
conference play as Ronald
Blacks hear scored 22 points
to lead the Thundering Herd
over Buffalo.
Turner Battle's 13 led the
Bulls.
Buffalo
scored
three
straight layups to open the
second half and take a 40-39
lead, but Marshall answered
with a 13-5 run that included
five points from Blackshear
to take command and held the
lead the rest of the way.
Mike Manciel scored 23
points to lead four Central
Michigan players in double
figures against Western
Michigan.
Central macte 13 3-point
field goi!ls. The Chippewas'
80 points were the most given ·
up this season by the Broncos, ,
who entered the game with
the
nation's
third-rated
defense.
Mike Williams of Western,
who missed the previous two
games with a hip injury, had
24 points and II rebounds.

He had to skip Tuesday's
workout because of the flu,
and was still feeling the effects
during the game. He only
erupted at the officials twice,
an mdication of how he felt.
"I've had better days,"
Huggins said. "I'm better
than I was yesterday."
He was pleased with his
two point guards. Senior
Taron Barker returned after
missing a game because of a
sore back, and had nine
points, six assists and only
one turnover.
Freshman backup Chadd
Moore, who filled in for him
last week, had 11 points,
three assists and only one
turnover. Both of them were
on the floor at the end to
snuff out the Blue Demons'
comeback, the first time
they've played together in
practice or a game.

"I was telling Huggs,
'We've got to give Chadd a
little more playing time to see
what he can do out there,"'
Barker said. "Now he can
come in and pick me up." ·
Cincinnati still doesn't know
how to fix its biggest problem.
Starting center Derek Hollman
had one rebound and dido' t
score in 14 minutes, leaving it
up to power forward Jason
Max.iellto anchor the front line
again. Max.iell had 12 points ·.
and eight rebounds in 36 minutes, the most playing time for
•
any Bearcat.
Huggins has one other
major concern.
"We just don't finish anything off," Huggins said. "It's
been that way all year. We
don't seize opportunities, and
it's going to get us. It's just a
matter of when it's going ro
get us."

given to team members,
NA SCAR officials and
media that allow entrance
into the gara~e while cars are
on the track m practice, qualifying or the race.
Without the pass, access to
the garage won't be granted.

The rule is likely to be
enforced on pit road during
the race, but not during practice and qualifying.
Teams and sponsors ·will
receive an allotted sum of
passes each week.

Thursday, January 9, 2003

Scoreboard

Wolverines edge Badgers
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)
Michigan' s basketball program gave its
fans a reason to cheer for the first time in a
·
long time.
Daniel Horton's 6-foot jumper with 7.1
seconds left and blocked shot as time
expired gave Michigan a come-frombehind 66-65 victory over Wisconsin on
Wednesday night in the Big Ten opener for
both teams.
.
After the Wolverines won after trailing
by 15 with 6:31 left, the crowd at Crisler
Arena rushed the court for the first time
since a win over Duke in 1997.
"It shows how big of a win this was for
our program," said Horton. who had 25
points, seven assists anp two steals and
dido 't play anything like a freshman .
Michigan (8-6) has won eight straight
games for the first time since the beginning of the 1996-97 season, and has
bounced back after losing the fmt six
games fur the first time in school history.
"It grves us a tremendous amount of
confidence and momentum," Michigan
coach Tommy Amaker said.
'fhe Badgers (10-3) had won four
straight.
The Wolverines, who haven't come
close to having a winning Big Ten record
the past four years, have made more news
off the court than on itrecently.
The university punished its basketball
program in November after a federal
m vestigation revealed that former booster
Ed Martin loaned more than $600,000 to
Chris Webber and others.
Michigan imposed a postseason bait for
this season, forfeited victories from five
previous seasons, returned $450,000 to the'
NCAA for money earned from the tournament play during those years, put itself on
two years of probation and removed four
0

Boys Basketball · .

banners from the 'l'afters.
After a hearing before the NCAA infractions committee in February, the school
will find out if it will face any more sanctions.
For at least one night, the scandal and
scrutiny was forgotten by a thrillin~ com~­
back against one of the four defendmg Btg
Ten champions.
Wisconsin looked like it might coast to a
victory when it led 59-44, but Michigan
made six 3-pointers to pull withjn one with
l : 13 left. Horton calmly dribbled the
length ofihe floor to make the game-winning leaner oiiDd, after a timeout, blocked
Devin Harris' shot in the Jane .
"It hllf\s like nothing else," said Kirk
Penney, who led Wisconsin with 16 points. . .
"We had that game. It hurts so much to
think about this game. You want to say
we' re going to learn and grow from it, but
this hurts."
Wisconsin appeared to take control of
the game by outscoring the Wolverines 104 to open the second half and take a 44-35
lead. Later, an 11-2 run gave them their
15-point lead.
After missing II of his first 13 shots,
La Veil Blanchard made three straight ).
pointers and Horton made another to cut
Michigan's deficit to 63-56 with 3:01left.
Horton and Blanchard each made 3-pointers on consecutive possessions to pull
Michigan within one, before Harris missed
the front end of a one-and-one with I :07
left.
Bernard Robinson scored 11 points after
missing the first game of his career with
injured knees and saying he doubted he
would play the Badgers. BIanchard scored

Wedneaday
Akr. Hoban 57, Youngs. Ursuline 44
Beaver E. 66, Portsmouth Notre Dame 44
Cln. Jacobs 71 , Cln. Hillcrest 49
.
Cln. Reading 76, Cln. lndian Hill 49
Green 56, Lodi Cloverleaf 45
Kings 56, Cln. Madeira 54
Wood County Chr. 64 , Masslllon Chr. 59

Girls Basketball
Wtdnelday
Beachwood 25, Columbia ~ 5
Beavercreek 51, Huber Hts. Wayne 35
Beloit W. Branch 62, Akr. Spring. 23
Brkjgoport 52, Bishop Donahue, W.Va. 39
Brooklyn 55, Richmond Hts. 30
Bu- Ber1&lt;ahlm 49, Olwoll GIMd Valley 21
Can. S. 45, Alliance Marllngton 22
Canal Fulton NW 45, Louisville 38 OT
carctinel47, Gates Mills Hawken
Chagrin Falls 51 , W. Geaugo 34
Cln. Country Day 58, New Miami 27
Cln. Shroder Paldela 64, Cin. SCPA 49
Clayton Northmont 47, Piqua 34
Cle. Hts. 55, Euctid 48
Colo. DeSales 59, Cols. Hartley 36
Cots. Ready 45, Zanesvllle Rosecrans 43
Cots. Wottersoo 78, Hebron Lakewood 37
Coshocton 55, E. Can. 31
Crooksville 48, New Lexington 43
Day. Dunba• 79, Day. Meadowdale 49
Day. Slivers 65, Day. Belmont 29
Grafton Mldview 50, Avon 39
Hilliard Davidson 40, Grove City 30
lndependenco 58, Cuyahoga Hts. 50
Kettering Falrmoot 52, Spring. N. 45
Keyelona 53, Wellington 50
Kirtland 44, Newbury 16
.
Lorain Admiral King 59, Elyria 56
Maple Hts. 67, Garfield Hill. 44
Montor 70, Shaker His. 31
Minerva 46, Carrollton 42
Mogadore eo, Ravenna SE 42
New Casde, Pa. 56, Youngs. Mooney 3t
New Concord John GJenn 45 , Zanesville
W. Muaklngum 40
New Philadelphia 61, Gnad.lndlan Vall.43
Old Washington Buckeye Trail 52 ,
Beverly A. Frye 42
Parma 37, Normandy 35
Papper Pike Orange eo, Aurora 34
Parry 55, WlckiiHe 24
Portsmouth Sclotovllle Community 64,
Manchester 53
Rocl&lt;y River Lutheran W. 72, Gatos Mils
Gilmour 35
Salem 43, Poland Seminary 36
Shaw 67, Warrensvllle 52
Spring. S . 51, Centerville 47
St. Bernard 55. Cln. Clark Montessori 35
Thompson Ledgemont . 43, Cle. Hts.
Lutheran E. 35
Thornville Sheridan 48, Dresden Trl·
Valley 42
Tot. Cent. Calh. 87, Tot . Wallo 26
Tot. ScoH 76, Tol. Sl. Ursula 62
Tol. Slart 63, Tot. Woodward 45
Trotwood-Madison 44, Vandalia Butler 39
Uhrichsville Claymont 59, Byesville
Meadowbrook 31
Valley Forge 51, Bodford 44
Weirton , W.Va. 59, Steubenville 42
v;. Latham 47, Ironton St. Joseph 22
Wood County Chr. 64, Massillon Chr. 59
Xenia 43, Troy 31
Zallesvll~ Maysville 53, River View 27

33

Alando Tucker.had 15 for the Badgers.

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Mld;-Amerlean Confefenee
Bowling Green 73, Ohio 72
W. Michigan 73, Kent St. 58
Heartland Conference

Defiance 90, Manchester so·
Franklin 92, Bluffton 42
Horizon League
Cleveland St. 81 , Youngstown St. 44
North Coast Conference
Wooster n , Oberlin 68
Wittenberg 71 , Ohio Wesleyan 62
Ohio Conference
Baldwin-Wallace 80, Ohio Northern 62
John Carrol170, Heidelberg 54
Mount Union 60, Capital 55
Otterbein 87, Marietta 51
Wilmington, Ohio 94, Musklngum 74
Non-confiiWIGI
,
Thomas More 74, Mount St. Joseph 64

Pro Basketball
NBA

National Hockey League
· EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atllntlc DIYialon
w · L T 01.1'11 GFGA
Philadelphla.... 21 10 8 1 51 95 84
Now Jersey .... 22 12 2 3 49 92 79
N.Y.Ialand&amp;ra ... 1816 5 ' 1 42114116
Pittsbu•gh ....... 17 16 3 5 42 119124
N.Y. Rangers .. 16 21 6 1 39 108137

Northe..t Dlvl,lon
W L T Ol1'11 GFQA
01t8.wa ... ........ .25 10 5 1 56 138 ·94
Boston ... ......... 21 14 4 1 47 123109
Toronto ... .. ...... 21 15 4.. 1 47 118 98
Montreal ......... 1616 5 4 41112125
BuHalo ............ 1023 6 2 v 89113
Southeest. DMelon
W L T OLP11 QFGA
Tampa Bay ..... 181 5 5 3 44116116
Washlngton .... 1616 5 2 43107113
Carolina .......... 16 H 6 3 41 95111
Flonda ............ 12 12 9 B 41 9!;116
Atlanta ............ 1024 2 4 26 99150
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Dlvlalon
W L TOLPia GFGA
l- :. . .1.. ........... 24 10 7 1 56 125 97
St Louis ......... 2112 5 3 50 132104
Ch1Cago ..... ..... 19 13 8 1 47 96 90
Columbus ....... 1520 4 2 36111123
Na. hville .... ..... 12 18 7 4 ·35 89111
Northweat Dlvleton
W L TOLPII QFQA
Vanl ·'IV8f ......25 11 5 0 55 133 105
· Mlnn•sota.......2114 7 1 50111 98
Edl110nton ....... 1913 5 5 48113110
Colora. o ......... 1611 9 5 46118104
Celgary ........... 1416 6 3 37 69110
Pacific Dlv.. lon
W L T OLP11 GFGA
Dallas ... .........23 10 10 1 57133 67
LasAngoles ... 1717 4 3 41107116
Anahe lm ...... ... 15 16 7 3 40 98103
Phaonix .......... 1517 7 3 40104120
SenJose .... .... 1517 5 3 38110126
Two pointe for 1 win, one point for a tie
and overtime 1011.

Transactions

Buccaneers LB
easily wins race
with Miami's
Jas.on Taylor
BY BARRY WILNER
Associated Press

Tampa Bay linebacker
Derrick Brooks is the crown
jewel of the NFL's best
defense and easily topped
Miami end Jason Taylor for
The Associated Press NFL
Defensive Player of the Year
award Wednesday.
The Buccaneers' star has
been one of pro football's
best linebackers almost since
he broke into the league in
1995. But teammates Warren
Sapp and John Lynch often
drew more attention, and
Sapp won the award in 1999.
There was no ignoring
Brooks this year. He led his
team in tackles (170) for the
fifth consecutive year and
led the NFL with three interception returns for TDs . His
four TDs on turnovers tied
for second most in a single
season in league history.
Brooks also had career
highs in interceptions (five)
and passes defensed (15).
So"was the award overdue?
"You can say that, but I'm
going to be positive and say
it's the ri~ht time for me to
win
it,'
Brooks
said
Wednesday. "Hopefully this
can be done in a championship year. I just feel kind
of funny. It's really, in my
opinion, a team award ."
Brooks' teamdlllowed 196
points, 45 fewer than any
other team, in winning the
NFC South with a 12-4
record. It ranked first in
overall defense and against
the pass and had 31 interceptions, six better than any
other team.
And nobody played a big-

ger role than
"I try to kn ow eve rythin g
Brooks, an there is to know about this
eight - year defense," Brooks said. " I can
veteran who answer a question from a
received 36 cornerback, a linebacker, a
votes from a lineman . I learn it, I know it.
nationwide .!'talk to the secondary coach.
panel - of r talk to the line coach, ju st
sports writ - to be prepared.
ers
and
"You never know in a ballbroadtasters game, in a crucial situation,
Brooks
who cover a lineman may look at me
the NFL.
and need an answ er to a
That · easily outdistanced question . I have to answer il
Taylor, who led the league right there, because the ball
with 18 1/2 sacks. Taylor got is being snapped ."
II votes, while Philadelphia
There actually was some
safety Brian Dawkins earned doubt about how effective a
the only other vote . Last pro Brooks would be when
year's winner was Giants he came out of Florida State
end Michael Strahan.
after an All-America career.
Brooks has "been more He went 28th in the first
than deserving for years . round because some scouts
He's always been the heart thought he was too light and
and soul of our team," said short.
Sapp, who also had a strong
But at 6 feet and 235
year. "It always takes us a pounds, Brooks is as effecwhile to find the great ones. tive in pass coverage as any
They ' re kind of hidden, linebacker in the last decade.
especially when he has a A d 110
h'
·· ·
mouth like me beside him all
n
one at ts postllon IS
more adept against the run,
that time. ... He's just an regardless of size.
unafssu'!'ing , bhusinesslike
"He's just a complete foolpro ess10na1 w 0 goes to ball player," Bucs defensive
coordinator Monte Kiffin
work every day."
Brooks takes his role as a said. "He can go siqeline to
team leader very seriously. sideline. He can play physiMaking big plays is one cal. He' s like a big , physical
thing. Being available to middle linebacker who can
guide teammates through the go sideline to sideline. He
plays pass defense , can
season is just as important.
Brooks makes a habit of cover.
discussing
the
Tampa
"With all that, he 's got the
defense with anyone who is great attitude. He loves football."
interested.

. •WIN•

2FREEnc•m
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SPRING IIllEY

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FIND YOUR NAME IN
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,
14,995'-10,200 .
ic'""""......,._;..... 18,995-12,100
ID,VIJ.=! .... J1,1,00
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43K ..............-16,115-12,100

Li~!-: .2!~ ._.1~e. Ram 1ICHI 414 • 4K-.............-~24,tt5-19,:SOO .
·~~"' 1i•nM..tl1:e lnwpw .. Sll(.._ ...................---·•2.115--· 7.400

'i ll• · .:~·~·. 1"!~ stra~r~~·K::.....................~.....,s.... 12,100 ,

1,.,.,.p ; ~1101 clfi,liil~

Se"Ji'l''\llK .................~........... 11,tt,.... J2,400 .
......•JntrePkf, ~ lk .................- ......,........ 17,1t5.... 1J,:SOO
1-dirysfitr Concoide ~IlK ........_........ 11,9t5--fi.800
, . Ford raurus - UK....- - -..--.--.. 11,995 ...... 7,700
..._ • • D'odplntrepld- ..............--..-· .....~.... 11,995-7,100
2000 Chevy Mllllbu - .
11,9t5i'.... 7,300

..n .

Wom•n

Take charge of your life by bec?mlng a member of the Ple•m VIIIIJ WIIRIII Genter.

For Morelnformauon: (3041 875·7222

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Sentinel992-2155

at .

College Basketball

I

~
-~

High Point 64, Radford 53 ·
HQward
Norlolk St. 74
Marshall 62, Buffalo 59, OT
MIDWEST
Bell St. 74, N. Illinois 71
Bowling Groen 73, Ohio 72
Cleveland St. 81 , Youngstown St. 44
E. Michigan 65, Cent Michigan 61 , OT
Kansas St. 88, Kansas 49
W. Illinois 67, Saint louiS"52
W. Michigan 73, Kent St. 58
Wis.-Green Bay 58, Marquette 47
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 71, Missouri 65 .
·
Rice 61 , Texas A&amp;M-Corpus Chrllsli 55
TeKas 77 , Oklahoma St. 44
TeKas Tech 77, Texas A&amp;M 56
FAR WEST
Colorado 64, Iowa St. 63
Gonzaga 71 , E. Washlng1on 84
Wyoming 76, Portland 67

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlontlc Dlvlolon
Wednetday'e Gamee
W
L Pel.
GB
N.Y. Rangers 5. Carolina 1
New Jersey ........ 26
9 .743
Detroit 2, Florida 1, OT
5.5
Boston ............... 20 t4 .586
Columbus 2, Minnesota 1
Phlladelphla ....... 19 16 .543
7
Phoenik 0, Chicago 0, tie
Orlando ............. 19 18 .514
8
Vancouver 6, Ottawa 4
Washington ...... .18 17 .514
8
Edmonton 1, Anaheim 0
Now York ........... 12 20 .375
12.5
Thu111dlly'1 Oamea
Mlaml .. ....... ........ 12 23 .343
14
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
C.ntrel Dlvlelon
Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
WLPctGB
N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, 7:30p.m.
lndtana ............... 25 10 .714
Toronto at PIHsburgh, 7:30p.m.
Dotroll ........ ........ 23 10 .697
1
Chicago at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
New Orleans ..... 20 17 .541
6
Ottawa at Calgary, 9 p.m
Milwaukee .. ....... 14 20 .412
10.5
Anaheim at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Chlcago ............. 13 22 .371
12
Stlouis at san Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Attanta ........ ... .... 12 22 .353
12.5
Edmonton at los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Toronto ................8 27 .229
17
Friday'• Gamaa
Cleveland .............7 29 .194
18.5
Boston at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Washlngton at Carolina. 7 p.m.
Midwest Dlvlelon
New Jersey at Florida, 7:30p.m.
WLPciGB
Phoenix at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Dallas ................29
5 .853
Columbus at Vancower, 10 p.m.
San Antonlo .......22 13 .629
7.5
Ulah ...................20 14 .586
9
Hpuston ............ .19 14 .576
9.5
Mlnnesota .......... 18 16 .529
1' .
Momphls ............ t1
23 .324
18 •
21 '·'
BASEBALl
Donver .. ...............8 26 .235
American League
Paclftc DIVIIIOn
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Agreed 10
WLPciGB
terms witt! LHP Terry Mulholland on a one-Sacramento ... ....26
9 .743
year contract and RHP Dave BUrba on a
4.5
Phoenlx .............22 14 .611
minor league contract. Designated RHP
Portland .. .......... 20 13 .606
5
Jose Santiago for assignment.
SeatUe ............... 16 18 .471
9.5
TORONTO BLUE JAY&amp;-Assignod LHP
L.A. Laker&amp; ........ 15 20 .429
11
Men
Golden State ..... 14 20 .412
11.5
Jason Kershner to Syracuse of the ll.
Wtdneoclay ·
Nlllonal L..eegua
L.A. Cllppers ..... .13 22 .371
13
EAST
Wednnday'a Games
CHICAGO CUBS-Agreed 1o tori)'S with
Boston U. 66. Albany. N.Y. 63
OF Lenny Harris on a minor league con·
Indiana 89, New York 87
Brown 65, Rider 53
tract.
Houston 91 . Orlando 81
Duquesne 61 , Temple 54
Washington 101, Chicago 98
FLORIDA MARLIN&amp;-Agreed to 1orms
Fairlleld 72, Loyola, Md. eo
with OF Todd Hollandsworth on a one-year
Datlas f 17, Attanta 99
Hartlord 66, Stooy Brook 61
contract. Announced OF Kevin Millar
Detrott 103, Philadelphia 94, OT
Harvard 93, Roanoke 88
agreed to terms with the Chunichl Dragons
Minnesota 102, Golden State 95
Hofstra 70, George Mason 67
of the Japanese league.
Utah 99, PhoeniX 93
lona jja. Canlolua 73
.BASKii,TBALL
~r 86cU1fml 76
1!14"1r ' ' * * n'&amp;lo·:ftlwoon 61 ,,,
National Baaketbell Aaeoclatlon
Boston 93, New Orleans 83
, le~lg~ 86, Haverford 74 ·
san Antonio 106, Seattle 95
,
DENVER NUGGET&amp;-Signed G John
; Marohal 69, Buffalo 63
L.A. Cllppem 103, Memphis 95
Crotty to a 1O·dey contract.
New Hampshire 74, Maine 64
Thuroday'o Gamee
HOUSTON ROCKETs-Waived F Pate
Niagara 76, Marlet 68
Sacramento at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
Mlckeal .
Pann 66, American U. 55
San Antonio at Portland, 10 p.m.
INDIANA PACERS-Placed F Austin
Providence 75, St. John's 71
Frtdoy'• Game•
Croshere on the Injured list. Activated F
Rhode leland 81, Yale 69
.
Indiana at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Jonathan Bender from the Injured list.
Saint .1oaeph's 75, St. Bonaventure 58
New Jersey at Toronto, 7 p.m.
FOOTBALL
Syracuse 70, Seton Hall 66
Golden State at Washlng16n , 7 p.m.
National Football LNQ!JI
Vermont 89, Northeastern 81
Now York a1 Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
DENVER BRONCOS-Signed RB
VIllanova 92, VIrginia Tech 81, OT
Houston at Atlanta, 7:30 p.'m.
Marlion Jackson and TE Arlher love.
Wagner 74, Sacred Heart 63
Boston at Dallas, 8 p.m.
DETROIT LION5-FI•ed Larry Kirksey,
SOUlH
Sacramento at Minnesota, 8 p.m:
wide receivers coach, end Glenn Pires,
Alabama 61, Arkansas 51
Chicago at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
~nebackers coach.
Auburn 62, vanderbl ~ 59
Detroit at New Orleans, 8:30p.m.
GREEN BAY PACKER&amp;-Signed DB
Birmingham-Southern 83, Radford 65
Miami at Utah, 9 p.m.
Jeremy UnerU, WR Travis Williams, WR
Coastal CaroNna 64, Winthrop 50
Memphis at Phoenl•, 9 p.m.
Brian Haugabrook, AB Jerry Westbrooks,
Delaware 74, William &amp; Mary 72
Portland at Denver, 9 p.m.
.,. LB· Tony Donald, LB Isaac Keys II, LB
OreKel74, va.Commonwealth 73
L.A. Cllppe10 at Seattle, t0:30 p.m.
Jermaine Petty, TE Joey Knapp . and WR
Duke 93, Georgetown 86
Cleveland at L.A. Lakors. 10:30 p.m .
Shawn Mills.
Goorgla Tech 61, Cornell 55
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Fired Willie
Kentucky 74, Tennessee 71
Shaw, defensive coordinator. Promoted
LSU 80, Houston 51
assistant head coach George O'leary to
Louisville 80, CharloHo 59
defensive coordinator. Named Pete
Maryland 108, Hamptoo 58
Bereich assistant defensive line coach,
N.C.·Ashovillo 71, Charleston So. 58
National Football League
Norfolk 51. 73, Howard 66
Chuck Knox Jr. defensive backs coach and
Ployolll
Kev~oss assistant second&amp;ry coach.
North Carolina 79, Davidson 64
AI Timet EST
Old Dominion 67, N.C.·WIImington 57
D~LAND
RAIDER5-Signed TE
WlldoCird Ptayollo
South Carolina 55 , Mlsslsslppl49
Brandon Christenson .to the practice
Saturday, Jan. 4
squad . Waived TE Ben Steele.
Southern Mlos. 72 , TCU 64
AFC
UAB 79, South Florkj.a 69
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Signed LB
N.Y. Jets 41, Indianapolis 0
Terry Killens. Waived S Jason Moore.
MIDWEST
NFC
WASHINGTON REDSKIN5-Signed DE
Cent. Michigan 60. w. Michigan 75
Atlanta 27, Green Bay 7
DeAngelo Lloyd.
Cinclnnatl64, OeP.aul 56
Sunday, Jan. 5
Crolghtoo 65, Bradloy·58
HOCKEY
AFC
Day1on 76, La Salle 72
National Hockey Loogue
Pittsburgh 36, Cleveland 33
ATLANTA THAASHEA$-Assigned F
Indiana 78, Pann St. 65
I
NFC
Iowa 88, Northwestern 63
Chris Herperger to Chicago of the AHL.
San Francisco 39, N.Y. Giants 38
BUFFALO SABRES-Called up RW
Ken! Sl. eo. MlamiiOhlo) 52
Michigan 66, Wisconsin 65
Jaroslav Kristek from Rochester of the
Dlvtolonat ptoyona
N. Illinois 72, Toledo 65 ·
AHL
Sa1urday, Jon. 11
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS-Traded D
Ohio 112. Akron 104, 40T
AFC
S. Illinois 90, Evansville 84
Pl11sburgh at Tennessee, 4:30 p.m. Boris Mironov to the New York Rangers for
SW Missouri St. 74, Drake 72, 20T
a 2004 fourth -round draft pick.
{CBS)
SOUTHWEST
DETROIT RED WINGS- Assigned C
NFC
Oklahoma St. 91, Texas A&amp;M -Corpus
Jason Williams to Grand Rctplds of the
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 8 p.m. (FOX)
Chris1156
•
AHL.
Sunday, Jao. 12
Alee 85, Texas-Pan American 79
E;DMONTON . OILERS,- Rocalled RW
NFC
FAR WEST
San Francisco at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Fernando Pisani from Hamilton of the AHL
Cal 51. -Fullo~on 66. UC Irvine 65. OT
FLORIDA PANTHERS- Recalled G
{FOX)
San Otego St. 76, San Diogo 72
Tyrone Garner from San Antonio of th'
AFC
SOutham Cal eo. UCLA 75
AHL
N.Y. Ja1S at Oakland , 4;30 p.m. {CBS)
Weber St. 75, BYU 69
NEW YORK RANGERS- Rocallod F
Wyoming 112, Savannah St. n
Jamie Lundmark and AW John Tripp from
Conlel"'nce Chllrflplonehlp"s
Hartford of the AH L.
,
Sundly,Jan.19
COLLEGE
Ohio Collages
NFC
AFC
Championsh ip
and
COLUMBIA- Named Bob ShOop football
• Alllntlc·10 Conference
Championship
coach .
Dayton 76, La Salle 72
3 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
FLORIDA- Announced junior Dl Clint
Conference USA
Mitchell will forego his senior season and
Super Bowl
Clnctnna1164. DePaul 56
enter the NFL draft.
Mid-American Conference
Sunday,Jan. 26
FlOR IDA STATE- Anno unced junior
Kent St. eo, Miami, Ohio 52
AI Son Diogo
N. Illinois 72, Toledo 65
AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 6:18 WA Anquan Boldin will fo rego his sen ior
season and enter the NFL draft.
Ohio 112, Al&lt;ron 104, 40T
p.m_.
GEORGIA- Announced junior RB Musa
lllortlond Con!erenco
Smith will forego his senior season and
Defiance 88, Manch&amp;Sier eo
Pro Bowl
enter the NFL draft.
Franklin 65, Bluffton 53
Sunday, Fob. 2
IlLINOIS-Announced
K
Peter
North C0111t Canterwnc•
At Honolulu
Christofllakos will skip his senior seasOn
Ohio Wesleyan 76, Denison 67
AFC vs. NFC, TBA {ABC)
and enter the NFL draft.
Wlnenberg 81, Kenyon 66
Wooster 88, Oberlin 45
Ohio Conference
CApital 7.. , Mount UniOn 55
John Carroll 75, Heidelberg 56
Marietta 73, Otterbein 65
Musklngum 72, Wilmington 53
Ohio Northern ~. Baldwin-Wallace 44
Non--conference
Mount St. Joseph 73, Thomas Mora 64
Thiel 100, Hiram 87

17.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

~

WldnM&lt;Iay
EAST
Boston College 73, St. John's 37 1
Brown 69, Army 62
·
ConnOC1icu1 67, Rutgers 62
Falrlolgh OickJnoon 82, St. Francis, NY
64
GOO&lt;getown 79, Providence 67
Miami 85, Syracuse 88 ,
Northeastern 78, Vermont 72
Notre Came 66, Wes1 Virg inia 59
Penn 75, Lalayotto 66
Saint Joeeph'o 68. Mossactuisens 61
Stony Brook 58, Hertford 57

on the number of Bingo
cards you can play.
Cards in your Sunday,
Jan~ary 5, 2003 paper

Jeep
TH!.l£ ' 5 ONLY ONI!

GRAB LIFE

IY 111liiOIIIIS

!@)

ooo••

SOUTH

Appalachian St. 79, ETSU 76
Cornell 62, Coppin St. ~ 1
Florida St. 64, N.C. S1a1e 55

I

- - - - --""-

�www.

~rtbune - Sentinel 0-

legister

Antique walnut marble 1op Oak Student desks· ·-w ary Mixed hey, 15001b bales,
wash
stand,
$350, sturdy, Oak veneer on ply- $f5 each. (740)379-2540
(740)942202
wood, 4-drawers . Can be
used as a computer desk.
42"x24", $40. Call 6·8pm,
M·F No Phone calls Wed.
(740)245·9047
Jane Stewart
740-1112-7833
Waterline Special: 314 200 Conoratulotlonol Vou have
PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1' 200 won 2 tree movie tickets to
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All the Spring Valley 7 GallipoBrass Compression Fittings lis. Call the Sentinel for deIn Stock.
tails. (740)992·2155)
BURN Fat. BLOCK Crav· RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
II{ \'\" 1'1 ~~ ~ I \ II~ 1\
lnga. end BOOST Energy ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-BQO- ::nr;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r~

CLASSIFIED

Molp Covnty, OH

~~~a::~;~:er r·952~ llmiDiNG
Ex·

New

__ ,.

... . ...

,

~

tared, mother full blooded.
JET
Both parent&amp; on premises.
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rsbullt In Shots, wormed &amp; tai ls
docked,
$1 25
each.
Stock. Calf Ron Evans, I · (740)386·8743
60().537·9528.
Registered
Pomeranian
pupa, $250, parents on site,
Larva amount of costume had 1st shcta, ready H 1.
Jewelry. 1100. Muat fake 1740)441.()386
all. (304)882-2436

r.-~--------------·

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to .5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

ro

\ \'\ 01 \t I ' II \ 1...,

r

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
· Monday-Friday tor Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
un&lt;lav In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

r.

~

6

110
IIELPW!\NIID 11

r

dustrles seeks a substitute
Health Services Coordinator
(AN or LPN) to work with
students and adults with developmental
disabilities .
Mus.t be a regi stered nurse
or licensed practical nurse
currently licensed In the
Stat$ m Ohio. PreferTed
qualllicatlons: E.Kperience
in public health nursing, experl·ence working with chll·
dren and adults with de-weiopmental disabilities. Send
resume to:
Steve Beha, Executive
Directo r,·CarletonSChooi/Mel
gs Industries, 1310 Carleton
Street, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779

I

C.1 S.r Carry Out permit
lor sale, Chester Townsh!p,
Meigs COunty, send loners
of interest to: The Dally
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457 69.
GIVEAWA\'

.
1 gray cat, 6 mos. old to
give away, (740)992-6882

HEu&gt;W!\NIID

hiring all 3 locations, full or

part-time,~ 'Pick up ~lea-

tlon at location &amp; bring back
between
1O:ooam
&amp;
10:30am, Monday thru Sat·
urday.
- - -- - - - - PIT Dental Asalatant need·
ed. Send reaumea to Cl.A
569, clo Gallipolis Dally
Trr·buno, P.O. Box 469 , Gal·
tipolis, OH 45631 .

..,r_·_HELP
_ _w._!\NIID
_ _..I

ta

r-------.,.1

En,·oy taking pictu res? Went
to work •On yo ur own with no
boss looking over your
1950's, 1960's, 1970's, 45. shoukJer? II so we ere fnter33 RPM records, antiques &amp; as ted in talking to you.
coll9ctibl es (937)675-2930 Need
th an $30,000. a
r? more
992 429
4
1937)372·6453
yea
•
Falter Care glvera NeedAbsolute Top Dollar: U.S. ed, Become a therapeutic
Silver. Gold Coins. Proof- foster care giver. You will be
s ets ~,
Diamonds.
Gold Reimburse $30-$4 5 a day

WANTED

mBuv

U.S. Currency,·
Rings.
M.T. S. Coin Shop, 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 740446-2842

fo r the care of child in your
home. Training will begin
January. For more Informslion cell Oasis Therapeutic
·
N twork ' 'b
C
I \ 11 '10\ \ II \ I
are givers e
. "" any, Oh', toll free 1-Sn-325"' I H\ U I ...,
1558
Help wanted caring to r the
HF..LPWANTID
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,
Account Agent- a team of new shUts: 7am-3pm, 7am·
Doctors need help market- 5pm , 3pm· 11pm, 11pm·
ing' ne w health care pro- 7am, call 74Q-992-5023.
grams. Top reps earn up to LOCAL
COMPANY
$2,000 weekly t -80&lt;&gt;-870- FULUPART TIME . EARN
7535
UP TO $15. PER HOUR

s '

;;::::::;;::::::==., M~J!wOMIN I

j

G)
=

All real estate advertising
Inthlsnewapaperls
su'bject to the Federal
FalrHauslngActot1868
which makes tt lllepl to
edvertl .. "1ny
preference, llmltsllon or
dlscrlmlnetlon billed
on
·
race, color, rellglon, ..x
tamlllaletstua or n1tlon11
origin, or sny lntenUon to
make any euch
preferenc.. llmhstlon or
dl.crlmlnstlon."

Galllpolla Carwr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Today! 740-446·4367,
f -v
"00·2f4·".52,
.....
Reg 190·05·12748.
1170

MtsaaJ..ANrolS

I

·

· Washer, Best
Good El ectnc
Offer/ 2 Good Gas Hot
Werer Heaters, Best Offer
992-031 5

This newap.per will not
knowingly aocept
•dvertiMrMnts for,..,
ut.te Which lain
vlol.tlonolthelsw. Our
reeden ar. hereby. Informed that all
hl1ln-gaadv•-•pent,atd.,..ln
dwe
1 10
r•v•llsbfe on an equal

r.i80~;,;,;~~---.,

11

WANIB&gt;
To Do

Chlldcare, Oak Hill area,
Monday- Sunday, all Shifts.
Cash or County. Call Amy
(740)682-6498

~~~op~poo~n~un~lty~bo~tt~··~~
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
tract, $500 down 19 qualified
c
buyers. all (740)446-3570
for a quick sale.

n..-.--- ·

r

c

r

rio ~

3 bed om 1-1/2 bath, Wanted! Good credit cus~
Stan the New Year out wl new
· addition. Lo-- tamers to purchase new
Right!! I
cated on 12 acres with home wltand. $0 down to
"Athens, OH, Kimes Nursing stocked pond. City Schools, qualified customers. 1-5
&amp; Rehab Center, Skll!ed (740)446-8901
acre
tracts
available.
Nursing FacUlty, Occupa(740}448-3093
tiona! TherapisVManager- 4
BEDROOM
HOME 1!'11~:":~--::"~...;··.,
FuH Time; COT"-Full Time, Foreclosure, only $14,900,
u-FOR--~~m.
tYJJ.JIKL.I!.,
UlYu:o
PTA-Full Time, Speech Won't last. 1-800-719-3001
Language Pathologlat-PAN, Ext. F144
Excellent Benefit Package
- - - -- - - - ASK ABOUT RELOCATION 4 br., lr. ·&amp; dr.; 2 batl'la, 1f2 . 1986 'Re'dman 14X?O, 3'
ASSISTANCE AND/ OR .basement. lg. kitchen wllots tH,d~oorns, 1 112 bath, total
SIGN ON BONUS
of cup boards, aJc- f an &amp; eIectrIc wIthI heat pump,
•
·
.,
Join the Marden Team. Ex- heat , wa ter souener,
new
~ , ,5oo , ca II 1 30 4 )a"~
en; . d ow~.
• 1g. f ront pore h 3829 . 11 no answer 1eave
perlence the dl"ere-el
wm
"
·~
1 k.lng nver,
·
Contact Lee Martin
Phillips- overoo
WI·11 con· message and WI'II return
·d
t
d
1740)992
Corporate Recruiter, Mer- Sl er ra e,
•901 2
you r call·
den Rehab ilitation Assoc.
- - - - -- - - .I
1994 SchuIt 16x72 Mob1
Toll Free: 86~36-0769
e
Fax Resumes to: 866·636Home Priced to sell Quick
0761 Email: lmphllllps. 0
Call &lt;740) 385"2434

Custom sewing and altere·
tlons l740)44f 9077
·
•
·
Receptionist needed for Georges Portable Sawmill,
bu sy office. Phone skills, don't h$ul your logs to the
acknowledge ol Microsoft mill just call304·675-1957.
office required .. Must have
Will babysit In my hOme In
Excetlonf organization skills, the Mason area 7 days a
excellent Communication week. (304)n3.5048
skills. AbiHty to hand multipie tasks. Send resume to: Will clean houses. gl-we me
JR08 200 Main Street, Point a call at 304·675-2968or
Pleasant. WV 26550
(740)992-2787 . 1f no answer
leave message.
---::--::- : : - - - - - The Meigs County Chamber
ot Commerce is currentlyr
iiiiiiOr;;;;;;;;;~B~•;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
seeking qualified applicants
l.A31.1u ...."»
to join our organization as ·-oivrruJ&lt;iitiiiliiii'uiiir"itio''_.l
the Director of Operations.
This challenging position Is
INOTICEI
lbl I th do to OHIO v•LLEY PUBLISH
e
or
e
Y
""'
respons
lNG Co roccmmonds that•
d
I
llo
h
ay opera ns 0 our c am.
ber and tOf services to our you do business with people
membershlp. The success-· you know, end NOT to send
lui candidate should pos- money through the mall until
sess skills in planning, you have investigated ttie
event management, mem· ,off!ioj::M;,;
ng;·~-----,
1111
~
bership relations, as we ll as
excellent vertlal and written
.,__~
sk.lls
A dogroo 1
·n bus·1
.x.o&lt;n~
1
·
· k ·
dl "
ness, mar etlng, an or
communication is preferred.
TURNED DOWN ON
This position Includes a SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
competltivs salary and benNo Fee Unless We Winl
efil package. Interested ap1·888·582·3345
pllcants may apply in confl·
dance by sending 8 resume, =:iir;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
8~
letter of interest, and three r~10
references t9: Operations
FOR SALE
Director, 238 Wast Main

OFFICE ENVIRONMENT I·
AI Local Convient store, for 868·974·JOBS
information call 992-3332 or
Local Home Health Agency
992-0228 Leave Message
seeking RN, LPN, Home
Health Aides, and Secreta·
ATTN : Point Pleasant.
Postal positions. C le~ slcar­ ry_ Preter Home Health ex·
riers/sorters. No exp. re· perience , but not necessary.
quired. Benefits. For exam, Competitive wag8s. Send
salary, and tasting informa· resume to: P.O. Bo)( 707,
liOn celt (630)393-3032 Ext. Gallipolis, OH 45631 , or ap- Street. Pomeroy. OH 45769
ply at 859 3rd Avenue, Gal- Application deadline is Jan782 Bam-Bpm. 7 days.
lipolis.
17 2003
uary
'
-...,-----Avon Reps need9d- North· Maintenance Person need· _
ern Gall~ anti alt off Meigs ed. Part-time. Valley View Truck Drtvera, lmmectiate
County Call (740)379-9422 Apar1ments , 800
tate hire, ctass A DL required,
Route 325, Thurman, OH excellent pay. experience
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or 45685. Apply at office Or requii'ed. Earn up to
Sail. Shirley Spears, 304- submit · resume (740)286· $1,000. per Wftk.Call304675- 1429
5676 or 1740)384-5319
675·4005

I

2 BR, 1 bath, LA, FA, carport, 2 car garage, screened
porch, new CA. natu ral gas.
•• 5 000 OBO Aft
~ ,
·
.
er 4pm,
(740)441 -9220
2 story home, Middleport,
$30,000, will do land con·
tract. (740)286-2828 or
(740)286-0169

ii..

j

I

i

I

Deposit · required. No pets. MENTS AT BUDGET p~J.
a
1740)386.()657
CES AT JACKSON ES·
2 bedroom trailer, Patriot TATES, 52 Westwood DriVe
area, ( 7 ~) 379 _2540
trom $297 to .$383. Walk to
shop &amp; 'movies . Call 7402 SA all electric fo r rent 446-2568. Equal Housing
$300. per month 5200. De- Opportu ~ily.
posit HUO accepted, no .::.:::::.:=::!:.._____
pets, reference 742·2014
Furnished 1br. apartment.
Sewer, trash. water paid.
2hbr. Mobile home for rent. In $325. Mon th + Deposit &amp;
t e Glen wood area w/ ref. (304)675·3042
h 1 d
(304) 576 ===:.:.::_::..:.:____
was er
ryer
• Furnished 3 rooms + bath,
':9:"99'-'1:-:-,----::--:---~--:: upstairs , clean , no pets.
2br. Mobile home for rent. In Re lerence &amp; deposit rethe Glenwood area w/ qui'red . 1740)446-1519
washer &amp; dryer (304)576Gracious living . 1 and 2
9991
::::-'-:::---:-:-:-----:: bedroom apartments at Vii·
2br· Ae modeled new carpe t· lage Manor and Riverside
$280 month . No Pets. Apartments in Middfeport.
(304)675·6291 Leave mes- From $2 7B-$348. Call 740•
sage.
992-5 064. Equal Housing
3br. Trailer In Countl)' on Opportunities.
-'-'-- - - - - - paved road , county water, Modern 1 bedroom apart·
discount to seniors. Send
Lon; &amp;
Response to: EB 3 200 ment 1740)446·0390
ACRFAGE
Main Street, Point Pleasant, Modern 1 br Apt. 740·
·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiio-~ wv 25550
1740)446·0390
~.:,:,e..:::...:::=---_
N'
bod
"'
1/2 acre lot on Tycoon Lake Beautiful River View Ideal •ce 2
room a.,artment
wl 12x60Traller$16.500.00
For 1 Or 2 People, Releren- with garage. 5 minutes to
now $13,500.00
ces, Deposit, No Pets. Fos· Holzer, $400 month, refer·
(740) 24?,-1 100
ter Trailer' Park, 740-441 - ence and deposit required.
0181·
(740)446-2801

'--=""-=------

I

j

_..:.;=-----::---::-

4 Commercial lots 1410 :For Rent or Sale. 14xGO
Lewis St. wlsmall re ntal 1995 Cl
T . 2 bed
1 .
house. Make Offer. Call afayton raler
•
1
ter 5pm. (304)727·3318
room,
bath. Asking
$8,500. or $375. month
n .... r.o--.
;v,
JV.I\W.L!\NIID~
• :tlE
$2uu. Deposit. Very gOOd
condition.
Call
( 304 l 6752457 or (304l 675•
Will pay top dollar for prime 158 9 References Req uired.
land . New home builder. Mobile home for rer.t. no
(740)4•6·3093
pets, 1740)992·5858

=

~~~~ ~~

~rjjii-~Tit~UCKS·SAu;---.,~

Hondas, Chevys. etcl Cars!
FOR
Trucks from $500.
For
listings 1·8()().719-3001 ext. 1979 Jeep truck, 3'4 ton
3901
J20, 360, V·B, auto, body In
good cond ~on, 36 In Buck·
$2000
OBO .
1984 Chevy Camaro w/305 shots,
High output engine. Camara (740)245-5803
alumin um wheels , wlcd ---::--::------,--player, black w/t·topa. $825. 198, International School
OBO or trade for Blazer. bus, full size, gas or pro(304) 89s-3406
pane, $1200; 1967 Ton
:.:__.:_=c=-:_:..:_.,---::---, Truck, 352, 4 speed,
1986 Chevrolet Cavalier, 4 (740)379-9257
door, good work, asking
$275. (740)379-2359
f983 Ch svy 5· 10 P~k up
- - ' - - ' - - - - - - I'UCk. $800. 1304)675·37f1
1986 Pontiac, runs good,
good tires. $700. 1304)576- 1998 Chevy S· fO , black,
LS, 40,000 mlloe, i'JC, C/C,
2169
$6500.
(740)446·4600
f990 Buick Century, $f295; ~(71!i40r)386-;;,·;;,84:i'i7o;a...,':'"_..,
f994 Achieva, 20, $f495; IF
r·WDs~&amp;
1995 Beretta . $2395; 16
n.~'3
.
o1her cars and trucks In ·--11tiioiiiii;..ll[ll.,l
stock. COOK MOTORS
(740)446.Q f03
1990 Pontiac Trans Sport
van, $300. Call (304)675·
1990 Pontiac Sunblrd, auto- 6691 leave menage
matl(l, 135,000 mllea, $500.
~17;.:;40.:;):24
.;.:;5..:
·580
;:;:.3~--- ·f999 Jeep Ranger, aoft·top
1993 Chrysler New Yorker. 4 cylinder, automatic , CD,
1~.000 miles, 3.3 engine, air, cruise, tll1, chro me
automatic, clean, good tires, 88,000 mll11 excellent con$1500 OBO. (740)379·2723 dillon $12,500. 1·740·3888023 aHor 5 p.m or Leave
1993 Olde Cutlass, 1 owner, Message
sharp , (740)446·7767 ·
-

r

111

r·

All boneless cut

740.949-0708
740.949-7800

laidoHil

You-could be
ullglble for FREE
help getting
back fo work

Jeff Warner Ins.

~&gt;.gency

992-5479

(740) 992·2222 or
(740) 446-1018

1gg7 Honda CRBOR Racing
dirt bike w/new motor.
Sl ,OOO. OBO . (304)675•

r

I

I

?!-~~
High&amp; Dry

MOOORCVOB&gt;

3959

Auro PARI'S &amp;
ACClli1illiUES

I

SeU·Storage

•

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

2.8 MFI motor out ot 85
Flreblrd $300 . (740)441 ·
'
0335

740·992·5232

-., I I ~\ I I I "

r10

HOME

IMPRoVEMiNJ'S

BINGO 2171
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nlahsd. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hro. (740) 446·
0870, Roger~ Baeement
Waterproofing .

cac General Home Malnt..

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Additions

ofevery montb
All pack $!.110
Brlna this ~oupon

For all your Home
Improvement needs
"No Job To Smatr

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

B. D. COIISIRUCTIOR
992·29

MANLEYS
SELf STORAGE

PC DOCTOR

97Beedl St.
middleport, OH

We Make House Cella

&amp;\

(llrxll' 610'1128')

Computan, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

[7411)992-3194
992-6635

www.wvpcdr.com
octorOwv r.com

(304) 675·5282

~P[CIAL
Q:J vp 10%
o r1

Bwll i P'! '

BISSELL

Depoy'aAg P8l1s

NewHomes • Vinyl

45723

Siding• New Garages

1-7411-667·0363
Shop early for th~
holidays!
New Shipment
Farm Toys &amp;
Construction Toys
All Brands

74().992·7599

BINGO
Jan. 11
'6:30 pm
1st Pack $10.00
After that $5.00 each
Starburst $1650.00
Middleport American ·
Legion

washe rs: dryers and refrig ·
orators. Thompsons Appliance. 3407 Jackton Avenue, (304)675·7"" ".
: :-:----::--::--::Good Used Appliances. Reconditioned and Guaranteed . Washers, Dryers ,
Ranges, and RWigeralors,
SOme start at $95. Skaggs
Appliances, 76 Vine St.,
(740)446·7398
.
--::--::------:-.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio.
(740)446·7444 1·877· 830·
91 62. Free Estimates, Easy

Portland Community Center
Semi-Annual Community
Mealing

linancing, 90 days same as
cash. VlsaJ Master Card.

January 118th, 2003

NOTICI
ONnge Townehlp

The
Annuli
l'lnanolll Rli'Ort II
oomplete end evatl·
lbll for ..YIIW by
1ppolntment 11 lht
hom• of tht oltrk,
0•1• l'ollrod. (740)
... 3111.
.
(1) 1, 1003

,•,

Happy Birthday I

This aood lookins

Community of Christ
Church
Corner of Portland Rd. and

little gal is still

Lovett Rd.

FIXTYat

(Behind Twp. Garage)

SIXTY
We love you
All your friends

1:00 p.m.

1-800·822-0417
"W.V s # 1 Ch evy, Pontiac , Buick , Olds
&amp; Cu s tom Va n D eal er-

..I lost my shirt
inthestock
market!"

"Nat mel

My money is with
Rocky Hupp lnsuronce
and Flnondal Sorvlces,
Box 189, M iddleport. OH
Phcrn e: 843-5264." / ,.,_ ,

Take the PAIN
out :,f PAINTING!
Lt: rn~

J~~ 1~

for yGu1

Best Service at
Price
the
-y.. "'""' I?~· ,,,,,.·~'­
Skin, Cut, Wrap

&amp;Freeze

Building over 30 years
Footers, Foundation ,

All this for only

Pole Barns , Concrete,

$45.00

Electric, Plumbing

31645SR325

ln.J~~ran«

For Sale: Reconditioned

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1000 S.R. 7 South
Coolville,OH

Wont l"r/IJ/kd

Lonosvllle, OH

(740) 992-3320

=--:-------

New&amp;Used

740-992·1717

r ~ llri '·

II US
r.LY
CIIITIICTIOII

Dean Hill

10x10
10x20

Add·Ons, New Homes.

Sunday at 12:00

A-JMH-srawl
!mG6
992-2272

STORAGE

J.lOUDAY

FREE ESTIMATES

Antique dining room fumitu re, excellent condition.
Antique wa lnut, mirrored
che rry
bedroom
dresser/rOCking ch~irs.' Must
Sacrifice. (304)675-3959

Now Renting

IBSON
HARTWELL
fiRAPniC8

RESID E NTIAL

Slug Shoot

www.herbondlet.com

JONES'

COMMERCIAL and

Goonoi
~-------·

740-992·7996
or visit website:

(740) 992.0739

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Long Bottom

Get th is AWESOME
product TODAY
Call : Jeanie

Owner:

nonce· Painting, vinyl oldBuy $5.00 Bonanza
lng, carpentry, doore, win·
Get S FREE
dowa, baths, mobile horne '--.;;,;.;..;.;;;;;;;;.._,
repair and more. For free I'"'!'"_ _ _ _ _ _,
aotlmate call Chot, 740-992·
6323.
---::---::-- - Superior Homo Molnl..
nance. We do all repairs on
homes . Carpentry, ptumblng, hot water tanka, Inside
and out. (740)44f.QII 3

Recom m ended

TsrryLamm

BUILDERS IIIC.

11:11""-:':""
........-.,
rlO HOUSEHOU&gt;

JUST launched!ll
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Bums FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All Nalurai/Doclor

Pomeroy Eagles

Pomeroy

\ II HI II \ \ 111 " 1

Cellular

For more infonnation,
call GaUia Meigs
Community Action

St. Rt. 7 Goeall!in Rd.

- - - - -- - - Trailer space for rent $125.
per/month, plus deposit At
2, 7 miles North of Point
Pleasant. ~304)895-3094
: : - - - - - - --,--,Trar·lor speco lor rent · $f25
per month, plus deposit
Priest's Trai~r Park. Water
Paid. Call (740)446-3644

\

Skin, cut, wrap

Arevou

11::11"'_ _ _ _ _ _.,

Mobile home lot. takes up to
Re nt $125 month, deposit $100. (740)446.0175
Of (304) 675·5965

Nice 2 bedroom apartment, tresses, bunk beds, dress466 _112 4 th Avenue, stove, ers , couches,· appliances,
much more. Grave monu- ·
refrigerato r furnished. $300 ments. (740)446-4782 Getmonth, $150 deposit. Water .
included. 1740)446 _9061 _
!!polis, OH.
--------Now Taking Applications- W.P. VJasher $75. GE dry·
35 West 2 Bedroom Town - er, S75. Kenmore washer,
house Apartments, Includes $65, all white. Almond FF
Water
Sewaga, Trash, refrigerator $75, (7-40)446·
$350/Mo., 740· 446.()()()8. · 9066 collaHer 6pm.

PROCESSING

740-667-0363

ao~ .

Drive- a-linla save alot.
--------Used furniture store, 130
Bulaville Pike. we' sell met·

773-5&lt;112

Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1(}()(} St. Rt. 7SOuth
Coolville, OH 45723

I

ro~~

Jim Ru.rlc

Electric, P l umbing,
•nd Small Home
M•lnWn•nce Job•

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pans
Factory Authorized

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for
wailing list for Hud-subsized, 1· br, apartment. call
~
675-6679 EHO
2 bedroom apartment, kitch· - - - - - - - - en, family room, bath, $375
Two • • 2 BR apartments
month. 560 Centenary Ad.
available in Syracuse $200.
(740)446-9442
deposit $330. per month.
2 bedrooms- 6 month lease Rent includes Water, Sew.er
Garage Apartment, utilities &amp; Trash, No Pets, applicapaid, no pets, no parties. tion, Reference &amp; Sufficient
$550 month plus $550 de- Income to Qualify 378-6111
posit. (740)446·0241

l

IMPOUNDS!

PAm

83 Chovette Scooter 4 sp ..

~F..io--•FOR•A•UIUi•SAIJ:•••o~l ~~~
SlOG POUCE

DEPOY•u

gine, lots of new part s.
$650., 84 Chevy El Camino
SS $3,500. Call after 6 .
(304 )675-4853

Try looking
in the
Classifieds!

1519.
_l_o_r_2_
B_R_Ap-p1-.fo_r_R_on-t, Utilities Pd., No Pets
.9,92:.·585
=:::8__ __ _ _

u

77· Chevy Camaro Bad en-

Saving for
your nest
egg

11

s

r

r A~

Time for Frost Seeding Pas·
ture and Hay Aelds. ATV
Broadcoat Soedore, 12 volt,
High Quality. F~a moat ATV,
$2985. Jim's Farm Equlpment, (740)446-2464

·-------,1

2001 14xBO Oakwood mo· 3br. House
InIIIIIMag
'IN 4located
5· + I es.
bile home (216)351-7086 or son,
·
No Pets. (304)n3· 5881
1216 )257 _1485 _
4br. On Route 2. $450
2br. 2 bath all electric on month + $400. Deposit + all
rented lot. Between Sam &amp; l ll'tl
N p
(304)
695
1 es. 0 81s.
u
- 3 rm. &amp; beth, furnished apt.
Spm. (304)675·8f60
""I
S
.xJ
all utilities pai d ,e)(cept alec.
Freedom by Schultz, 2 bed· 5 rooms &amp; bath, so Olive st. $275.00 a mon. 304-675room, refrig erator, range, $325 mo. (740)446-3945
~13:.;6:.:5_ _ _ _ _ __
washer, dryer,
storage
building, corner of Ash/Peart Four houses for rent (2) 2 3- 1br apartments available
St. , Middleport , 740 _992 _ bedrooms, (1) 1 bedroom. Jan. 1st. $300.00 a man.
Upper
3rd
Avenue. util. included w/ $100.00
7933
(740)441 ·0219
sec. dep. 304-675·3654
•oat Yo ur Money's Worth'"
MOBILEFORRENrHOMES
Apartment Available Now.
at Coles Mobile Harries, St.
R' B d PI
N
H
At. so East of Athens. DelivIVer en
ace, ew aerles, set-ups, excavating,
ven, WV now accepting applications bed
for room
HUD-subsifoundations, sewage sys- 2 bod rqo m mob'lI e h omo • dized,
apart1
.ta ms, driveways, heati ng· reference, deposi t required. ment. Utilities included Call
and cooling along with pails $275 a month 1740)367·
(304)882-31 21 - Apartment
and service. You should a~ 0632
. bl f
.f.
1 e or quail 1ed se·
---::-----::--::-- ava •e
cept nothing less . Since 2_ bedroo m mobile home, n1or/dl sabled person. EHO
1967 we where
are Cole's
Homes
youMobile
•Get Vi hton area. Reference &amp; BEAUTIFUL
APART-

5

L,~--EsulrMwiiliiiiiiiiiitt_.l

r

1998 Schult 16 x 80 2 BR 3br. house in Mason $375.
w/ Heated Garage 1•740- month + $300. Deposit. No
992-19ff7
Pets. call (304)882-3652

pr!ii--:::........

FARM

Trailer for rent in Mason. No Pleasant Valley Apartment
•--FORiiiliiiRF.Nriiiill-r·1 Petit (304)n:J.S751
Are now taking Applications
for 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR., Appii1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
APAIOMF.NIS
cations are taken Monday
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
FOR RENT
thru Friday, from 9:00A.M.DoWn, 30 Years at 8.5%
4 P.M. Otrk:e Is Located at
APR. For Listings, 800-319·
11 51 Evergreen Drive Point
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Pleasant, WV Phone No is '
Ext. 1109.
ment&amp;, furnished and unfur- (304)675-5806. E.H.O
1 BA House In Racine, with nlshed , ~security deposit rewater, sewer, lraeh $325. qulrGd, no pets. 740-992· -,-.r-.. - ,-o-w-.n"'rlo-u-,..- -, -.-p-art~!
2218 · ·
Month, No Pets 992·5059
' :I
menta, Very Spaci ous, t
2
2 bedroom house, approx 1 1 bedroom and 2 bedroom Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
mile from Gallipolis on SR apartments, ai r con ditioning, 1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
586. $400 '*'nih,
$300 do· downtown location. Ca ll Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
·,.~
posit.
Reference
required. "-'=..:.:...:.:::.::...
(740)446-4859 ____ tio, Start $375/Mo. No Pets,
(
)
•
740 446 341 3
-1 Bedroom Apartments Lease Plus Security Deposit
Required, Days: 740~44 6·
3 bedroom farm house lor Starting at $289/mo, Wash·
d
348,1; Evenings: 740-367rent. $400 month, $300 e- erl Dryer Hookup, Stove
050
posit. Gas heat. (740)446- and Refrigerator. (740)441- _: -2_ · - - - - , -- - -

13323

House for sa1 8 or rent · 2br·
gas heat Madison Ave. +
Depos~ (304)675 1911 at Your Money's Worth."
•
• · -(L,: - - - - - - ter 7pm.·
Gooa uSed 14x56. Only
Land home packages. 'No $5995- will help with dellv:
payments while under con- ery. Call Nikki. 740·385atructlon.
Little
or no 9948.
down payment required. ,-,-----::---..,-(740)446-3218
New 2003 14 wide. Only
$799- down and only
New 2-stol)' home, 3 bed- $l59.43 per month. ·Call
room, 1-112 bath, open floor Harold, 740·385-7671.
plari , custom cabinetry, Bid· - - - - - - - - : : - well, $97,000. (740)645· Nice lots available for up to
0102 (cell)
16x80 mobile homes, $115
water included, (740)9 92Now 2000 SQ H homo, 10 2f67
~--,
minutes hom Hoa. pilal.
B!NINFNi
Complete above. · gro und
0 • - ~INGS
AND UU
pool with porch, driveway
ILIJ
· . ~
and garage foun datiOn
Price below
appraisaL Commercial building, with
'-17_4.:_
0)44
_ 6_·3384
__. _ _ _ _ large office space, and 2
New house for sale, Debbie apartments csowntown. 51 2
Drive, $ 130 •000 _ 3 bed· 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
$102,000. (740)266-2828 or
rooms, 2 baths. Call after 1740)286-0169.
5:30pm. (740)245-926S
ia:lr'--.'"!"._~--.,

New log home on 1-113 level acres. 11 rooms, 3BR, 2112 bath, . 28 foot ceilings,
central air &amp; heat. stone fireplace, stone frontage and
foundation . Mostly furnish·
ed. Just minutes !rom Hun·
ting1on, Ashland and Ironton
area. $350,000 (740f2569247
-------Price reduced For Sale 3
bod
b
rooms, 2·1 12 aths, fam·
ily room with fireplace , 2 car
garage, lots of storage. All
brick home on appro~~: . 1
acre lot. Rt 2 Poplar
Heights. (304)675-3242
304)675-3516

"~

0118
1997 3BR Trailer on 8 112 c3-:-bod
--::r-m--::
oo hc- u-so--::
in-:B7id-we
--::IJ,
acres on Carpenter Ad. $45o rnonth + deposit Ref·
Portland, OH $20,000 (740) erence Required. No pets.
843-5496
(740)245-141 8

r

I

'r.10

ro

2002 Dodge Noon, 6,200
miles, spoiler, sunroof, COl
Cassetta, $4600 OBO.
(740)256·f233

1994 Corvene Coupe, [
Marollcva.&amp;'i .
white, rod toathor, g11111 top, ~
•
LT1, automatic, . caa11tte,
Cd,
radio.
$11 ,000 . 1987 Yamaha 4-whealar
needs work on rear end .
(740)882-7512
$400. (304)675-3959
f997 Mercury Sable GS , - -- - - -- -;:.:;,,;;;:,;,;;,,;,;::.;.._~ 35K miles, PW, POL, AT, 1998 Yamaha Tlmbarwol1
UvEsrocK
PSoai, AM/FM Caoeetto, ATV, Sf700 OBO. New f7
~
white, $5500. (7.0)446· Inch Chromo Whoels for
(740~7300
2375
99·03 Mustang Cobra,
5700, 060 (740)256• 1621
5 Month old Paint Colt.
2001 Neon. 16,000 mllee.
Nice cloon Bottle gas heat· (304)545-1510
Call anytime. Like .new, KE Kawasak i 100. 125
·er, used 2 yeara, alao Fire(740)446·2427 mlloe, dirt&amp; otraetlogal, like
wood
for sale.
Call Pure Bred Angus bull. 20 $7,000.
(740)862-3042
now 304-773-6000
(740)245-5492
month old. (304)862·2575

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

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

riO ~~

---::----::----::~
c
Part·tlme
position available
tn Meigs County Ohio &amp; Mason County WV· to com·
plate mobile Insurance exems, blood &amp; urine coneetlons, must have phtebotomy skills, fax resume to: msrdencompanles.Com
304-766- 1684 or mail to:
Personnel, P. 0 . Box 845, 1146
Bt.lSINQS
Dunbar, WV25064
TllAINING

Car.leton School/Meigs InFree mixed breed puppies dustries se eks substitute
born 1 1 - 1~ -02 304-675- employees for various posi3126
tions in the agency working
with children and adults with
Free puppies- 112 Beagle, 2 developmental disabilities. ----~---males, very cute. 6 weeks Must have high school di- Person to assist with milking
old. 1740)446·4355
ploma or equivalent. Send on larger dairy and general
dairy chores. Tractor exp.
Lab pupp Ies, black &amp; white, resume
St
Bto:h E
t'1 D' required. Housing. utilities.
10 weeks old, (740)367·
eve .~ . a. Cxecu ve I· hourly pay depending on
rector, ..... e1gs ounty 8 oard
0661
experience. Respond to ad
f MRDD 1310 C I 1
C;iir--:--~--, o
are on with 3 references. JR11 200
LOtT AND
Street , Box 307, Syracuse,
Ohio 45n9
Main Street, Pt. Pl . WV
FOUND
L,
25550
C
Construction
ompan y
FOUND
needs one or two experi · :-:--:--:-:-----::--::--::-:---Young red and White male enced workers with building Medi Home .Health Agency,
beagle on Barton Chapel trades skills. Send resumes Inc., !leeklng .full-time liRoad:
Owners
ca ll outlinin9 experience and censed Physical Therapist
(740)377·4295(evenings)
references to CLA 570, c/o for Ohio and West Virginia
Gallipolis Daily · Trib une, client base d. We offer a
Video Carmera in Black Bag P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, competitive salary, benefits
Wolf Pen. Arnold Ad Area OH 45631
package, 401 k, fleK time.
and SIGN-ON BONUS.
REWARD 992·0413
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT Please send resume to
PAY! Asse mble Products at 68 150 Bayberry Drive, st:
Free 1·800· Cl airsville, OH 43950. Attn:
Home' Call ~oil
1•
467-5566 Ext. 12170
GregVamerAdministrator.

r
r

NI!W AND UIED 8TE!L
Staal Beame, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete, Angle, Channtl, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Draine. Drlvawayo &amp;
Wllkwayo. L&amp;L Scrap Mot·
alt Open Monday, Tuooday,
Wednuday &amp; Friday, Sam·
• :30pm. CIOH&lt;I Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
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• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Description • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrt11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

1 Carleton School/Meigs In- McClure's Restaurant now THERAPISTS
PERsoNALS
~-------·

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162 1.

I \ I(\ I -.1 I ' I 'I II "

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ma1oo. (740)446-63011

Word Ads

-tti~iiiiiiiiiiiiio-r

"j

To Place
ijtribune
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legtster
Your Ad, · (740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675·1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2151.
or Fax To (304) 675·5234

()ff/ee llo~~

.._ .

ber 23, 2002 . Call Tracy at Block, brick, sewer pipes,
(740)441 · 1982
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winte rs, Ala Grande, OH
,cliaii-11,;;740-;;;;,;2;;4;;5·~5;,;12;;.1;;,.--~
Ooak top computer, Doll Di·
manelon L Sorlos, $600;
I'E:rs
Halnee
B•othors Baby ·--itFORiiiiiliSiiiAU:____
Grand Plano, 1740)446· ·
7893 after 5:30pm.
AK C Chocolate Lab pupplea, born 11·18-Q2.1 male,
Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; $250, 3 fe males, $300
Repairs. Problems? Need each. Descendants of Butch
Tuned? Cell The Plano Or. &amp; Susie. (740)441 ·0643 .
74Q.446.4525
Clearance ealo 50% off
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In One Week With Us
REACH .OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

p~~: Octo-

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• Tonneue Cover •
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Other Accessories
I

I

I

( I l())

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q q/ 11H ,) )

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V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·82t5

Pom• roy. Ohio

�Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 9, 2003:

www:mydallysel'!tlnel.com

For men of few words, love
is easier ·shown ·than said
DEAR ABBY: The letters
regarding the use of the
phrase "I love you " reminded
me of a story. The Finns are
reputed to be people who
don ' t waste many words. An
e xample:
'
"'Jussi' and 'Kaisa ' had
been married for 25. years.
One day, Kaisa asked Jussi.
' Why don't you ever tell me
you love me'' His reply: 'I
told you "I love you" when
we were married. If anythinR
changes, I'll let you know."
-ARNIE HAKKILA, RIO
VERDE, ARIZ.
DEAR ARNIE: No wonder
they say it 's cold in Finland!
Jussi may have been a man of
few words, but I' II bet his
wife had more than a few for
him when she heard that
reply. Read on :·
DEAR ABBY: You may
have missed something in
your reply to "Hurt in Reno."
Hurt told her fiance she loved
him and would be devastated
if anything happened to him,
and was upset when all he
said in return was he "probably" felt the same. She al so
;said he was not affectionate,
but was ~ood to her son.
You sa1d he might be a poor
communicator.
What caught my eye was
the line about how he treats
her son. Is it possible her

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
fiance is engaged to her so he
can have access to the boy?
My second husband turned
out to be a molester. During
the first year of our marriage,
while I was pregnant, he
began to "groom" my daughter to be his sexual partner. ,
Please urge "Hurt" to follow her gut instincts. It could
save her son's future and
years of guilt for hefself. ALMOST SANE AFTER
YEARS OF THERAPY
DEAR ALMOST SANE:
It's interesting how the letters
in my column are interpreted
through the filter of the reader's personal experience. Your
warning should be enough to
alert that mother.
DEAR ABBY: PHOOEYI
on that word "love"! Seventy
years ago. when I was in my
early 20s, I was engaged to a
man who swore he loved me
wilh all his heart. He did until I became very sick. That

was the end of our wedding
plans.
Years later, I met a man I
thought was interested in a
mutual friend. I was shocked
when he invited me to dinner
and a movie. During dinner he
said, "''m not an a!ticulate
person." "That's OK," I flippantly replied. "Neither am
!!"
We saw each other often
after that and time seemed to
fly. Then I had an attack of
pain that came without warnmg. My doctor advised immed~ate surgery. When I told my
friend, he listened, then put
his hands on my shou lders. In
a voice choked with tears he
said, "I LIKE you. Will you
marry me?" I was so astonished I couldn't speak, for we
hadn't even kissed, as unbelievable as that seems.
"You do LIKE me, don't
you?" he asked anxiously.
"Yes," I whispered. I got no
further because I was stopped
by our first kiss.
I'm a widow now, and more
than 90 years old, nearing the
end of my life 's journey.
Please tell "Feeling Hurt'.' that
happy marriage CAN be
built on two people " liking
each other" at the start. My
husband of almost 50 years
didn't say "love" a dozen
times, but by his actions,

a

-

. faithfulness, consideration
and dozens of ways, he
proved - not only to me.• but
also to the world - that he
did.
Now I only wan.t to be with
him. MISSING MY
MATE IN ARIZONA
DEAR MISSING: Thank
you for sharing your truly
unforgettable love story. It
touched my heart.
Dear Abby is written by

Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother;
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAiJby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.
r--~-----:--:---. o

Do You Feel the
Need to Read?

ACROSS

42 Clear, as

.. erofil
1 Shooting ~arrooms
marble
45 Sums for
CPAs
6 ..Paper toy
47 Dusting
10 Flub
cloth
12 Without
vacillating 50 Verdigris
14 Use
52 Slop
15 Creepy
sleeping
feeling
54 Rock plant
16 Raised the 58 Fix·lttool
lid
59 Kung fu
cousin
18 "Mona
Lisa"
60 Iffy aHempt
singer .
61 Planted seed
19 Iceberg
21 Troubles, to
DOWN
Hamlet
23 Eight pts.
1 Actor
-VIgoda
24 Telephone
2 Junk food
trio
26 Coupd'buy
2t Computer
3 Economic
language
Ind.
30 PIN
4 Arctic
prompter
dwelling
32 Mild
5 Married In
exclamation
haste
· 34 Prefix for
6 Ignite
hall
7 Wrath
8 Forger's
36 Senorita's
aunt
nemesis
(hyph.j
37 Yale athlete
38 Houston·
9 Joy
and
Adamson
lioness
Pecklnpah
40 Shade tree 11 Ogle

12 Furnace's

13
17
19
20

22
23

25
27
28
31

33

need
To date
Most clever
Slowly
disappears
Andes
ruminant
Sault
- Marie
Trslpae
about
Consume
Model'&amp;
need
Bedtime
stories
Badly, for
Pierre
Telegraph
signal

35 Holy terror
39 Deluxe

41 Obsessions
44 Censors
46 Large:

prefix

47 Kind of

sheet
48 Cobblera'
toola
49 Manner of
walking
51 Kind
53 Mauna55 Half a bray
56 Monsieur's
summer
57 Writer
- lilunlllne

Whether your
favorite subject
is math or mu1sic,
~cience or
social studies,
you'll find
something
interesting in the
newspaper. In fact, the
paper is such a reliable
source for the information
you want, you can even use
it as a homework and
school research tool.

Astrograph
BY BERNICE BEDE 0SOL

Chances are you 'II be mote of
an originator and inaugurator in
the year ahead than you have
been in the past. Instead of letting your mind vegetate, you ' ll
put it to work to achieve
success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan.
19)-- Unless you're careful
today you could step on the toes
of an associate without realizing
it. Should this happen, the person will be forgiving if you
apologize immediately.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb.
19)--lt might be too easy today
to step out of character for a few
minutes and look for the worse
in others rather than their nobler
qualities . Don' t let that bug bite
you.
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 20)
· - Getting involved with a person who doesn ' t measure up to
your standards could taint you in
the process. It's okay to wan110
be nice to everybody, but pick

and choose your activities.
ARIES (March 21- Aprill9)-Don't let running into a difficult
person spoil your entire day. You
can't control · this guy or gal's
behavior, but you can control
your attitude. Think of all the
good pals you have.
TAURUS (April 20- May 20)
-- Of course you resent someone
anempting to make you over in
their image, but you're smart
enough not to let it bother you,
Keep being your sweet loveable
self, even with him or her.
GEMINI (May 21- June 20)-Be very careful not to stick your
nose into situations where
you 're neither involved nor
invited to do so, no matter how
curious you are. You could create a problem where none
should exist.
· CANCER (June 2 1- July 22)- Should an old unresolved issue
pop up today with your mate,
don't rehash it. Give him or her
a big kiss and change the subject
to one that is more to your

spouse's liking.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22)-Your critical faculties are exceptionally keen today, liut be careful not to use them to spot the
faults of others. Even if you
should see an imperfection, keep
your observations to yourself..
VIRGO (Aug. 23- Sept. 22) ••
Satisfy your restless urgings
today by planning an activity for
the evening. You'll be better
able to do your work and be productive if you know you have
something fun on the·burner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23- Oct. 23) -If you treat your family as your
own pen;onal army today, expect
a rebellion in the ranks. Instead,

•get back in character and be
your fair, harmonious self.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23- Nov.
22)-- It might only take a sideways glance from a detractor
today to reduce you to anger or
tears. If you know your pride or
ego is a trifle vulnerable, don't
allow your mind to dwell on
yourself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) --Well-meaning friends
could turn out to be poor financial counselors today. Size
things up yourself instead of
relying too heavily on the recommendations of others.

1st DOWN
2nd DOWN

3rd DOWN

41h DOWN

.,..ll_

-·..ll!..
• 83

-

= 29

· Answer
to
previous

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Word

F9UR PLAYTOTAL -----,
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECnONS: Maka a 2· to 7·1etter WOfd !rom the letters on each yardllne.

Scrim·

Add points 10 each word or tener usir.g scoflng dlr&amp;aiOniS at rtght Seven-iltler
words get a 60-poi'll borus All words can be lound 1n Webster'• New World

mag~ ·

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327

JUDO'S TOTAL

AVERAGE GAME 175-185

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JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

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WEIRD 8\.IN~~ 'TiliNG !

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