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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

- www.Riydallysentinel.com -

~adnesday, January 22; 2003

alphabet
ender1
1 Silent one 53 Comet
5 Like a
discoverer.
he·man
54 Rlcoh
10 Shoreline•
competitor
12 Glob
55 Recover
13 Most
ancient
DOWN
14 Buy from ,
I
Japan
- 1 Nebr.
neighbor
15 Jedl master
continue.
2
Cheryl
or
16
Turkllh
Dear Abby is written by
VIP
,.
Alan
Abigail Van Buren, also 18 City rtes.
3 Toward the
Known as Jeanne Phillips, and 19 Fork part
ocean
was founded by her mother, 21 Wire
4 Geograph·
lcalabbr.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear . ~ Diverse
. 5 Dad's
Abby at www.DearAbby.com 29 Young
companion
chicken
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
30
Requested
6
Swiss
Angeles, CA 90069.
mountains
32 Turkish
coins
7 Thicken, ••
33 Song ol joy
cream
34 Free8 -d'oau·
floating
vrea
37 Nine9 Casta
vote
headed
Do You Feel the
10 Shy
monster
38 Sheiks,
11 Pupil's
Need to Read'?
usually
reward
40 Zlp
12 Ross or
43 Gorilla
Rlgg
17 Admin.
44 Aue
48 Recently
head
50 Garment
19 Shah's
domain of
maker
52 Greek
vore

Son .placed for adoption kept
secret fi'om fiance's family
DEAR ABBY: Almost two
WEALTHY IN TEXAS
years ago, I placed my beautiDEAR NOT WEALTHY:
ful baby boy for adoption. His
No, I do not. Perhaps this is
name is William. A wonderful
one of the reasons it has been
couple adopted him. As di ffi15 years since the family
cult as it was for me; I knew I
gathered. 'Considering the
was doing the right thing.
cost involved, the amount you
My fiance's family knows
requested was not excessive. I
nothing about William. I want
hope you held the reunion
to tell them. but my fiance
without the complainers and
ADVICE
·doesn't want me to, so I've
that it was a success.
kept quiet. This has bothered
DEAR ABBY: I don't
me for two years, and I carry he intends to spend the rest of know what's wrong with me. I
a lot of unhappiness inside his life.
am an 18-year-old girl, and I
because of it.
DEAR ABBY: I come from date only older guys who
I am considering tell'.lg my a lar~e family, Because there either have a girlfriend or are
fiance's family without him hasn t been a family reunion engaged. It's like I can't b·
present, but I'm afraid I could for more than 15 years, I haPP.Y with anyone single to.
lose him over this. Should I thought it was time. I con tact- available.
allow this situation to go on ed all my aunts, uncles and
Sometimes I have even
and wait for my fiance to tell cousins and asked them to dated my friends • boyfriends
his family, or should I be hon- provide me with names and behind their backs. I'm afraid
est with them about William? addresses of their children in the future this will all catch
Please give me your opinion, and grandchildren so I could up with me. I don 't want to
Abby. BARBIE IN send invitations.
act like this anymore, Abby. I
TEXAS
After receiving the informa- really don't. Please help. DEAR BARBIE: I admire tion , I sent everyone letters "SALLY'' IN CINCINNATI
you for wanting to level with announcing the place and- DEAR "SALLY'': It is an
your fiance's family. It's the time of the reunion - and intelligent person who recogright thing to do because asked them to donate $25 per nizes she (or he) is engaging
"secrets" like yours have a family to cover the cost of in self-defeating behavior way of coming to light even- food , beverages, paper goods, and thi s certainly qualifies. I
tually.
table rental, etc. Several of don ' t know if you have a fear
However, I strongly feel my relatives found this of commitment or whether
that you should not tell his extremely offensive and said "poaching" gives you a feelfamily unless your fiance is if they had to pay to attend a ing of power. Whatever your
beside you. It is important he family reunion, they weren't motivation, some counseling
make it clear to them that coming!
to get to the bottom of it
regardless of their reaction to
Abby, do you think I was would be very helpful. Unless
the news, he loves you and wrong to ask for some finan- you're willing to examine
you are the person with whom cial
help?
NOT your behavior, the pattern will

Dear
Abby

I

Thursday. Jan. 23; 2003
BY BERNICE BEDE Osol
In the year ahead a number
of small packages could add
up to one giant bundle in the
long run. Make the most of
each and every little happening that comes along and add
it to your collection.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb:
19) -- If you relax and let
Dame Fortune take over,
things are likely to work out
to rour ultimate benefit today.
. Bemg uptight or overly anxiou~ can shut out lucky happemngs.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Don't just keep studying a situation that is important to you, do something
constructive that can turn ,
things in your favor. Movement is necessary to rise
above the mundane.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- Making everyone
you're associated with today
feel important is an enormously big asset for you. All
who can will want to hook up
with you and help you with

·-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
50 CENTS • Vol. S3, No. 111
20 Chartt
21 Grey Cup
sports org.
22 Diva's ·
melody
23 Antarctic
explorer
24 Noted
limerick
maker
26 Brit's cry
(2 wds.)
27 -out
(used
thriftily)
28 Costly
31 Double
helix
35 Uravels
36 Drum, as
fingers

Whether your favorite
subject is math or music,
science 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.

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POMEROY - Blocks of
white muslin enhanced with
the red and blue Ohio
Bicentennial logo in the
center are being mailed out
by the hundreds from the
Meigs
County
Senior
Citizens Center.
For some weeks now
seniors have been folding
the 18- 'by '22:-.ihch muslin
bieces centered with the 12liy 12-inch bicentennial
logo to residents ail over the
state.
It is one way the Ohio
Bicentennial Commission is
calling attention to the
observance of Ohio's 200th
birthday this year and the
role of quilting in the state's
history.
The center got involved in
the project through Nicole
Pickens Morretti of Meigs
County who is employed
with the Ohio Bicentennial
Commission, and her mother Patty Pickens who works
for the Meigs County
Council on Agin~.
Local senior cttizens volunteered to take on the project of handling the mailing of the quilt blocks for
the entire state.
Several times a week
many women and a few
men gather around long
tables in the community
room to fold 200 or so of
the quilt blocks, pack them
into manilla envelopes after
attaching address labels
and inserting letters from
the
Ohio Bicentennial

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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

-

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Cl200.'1 UniiMI Fl .. ,.l "'*.tl, Inc.

BY

Index
2

SediOIIS -

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

Commission, and take them
to the post office for mailing to residents across the
· state.
To date, more than 4,000
have been handled and
mailed out to those who
requested them in the project which is called "Ohio
Quilts ." Thousands more
will be sent out over the
next few weeks.
One of the blocks
availabl~ f~ee to any Oll:io ·•
resident by calling
OHI0-200. They carl be
used in any way - as the
centerpiece for a quilt, to
make a pillow cover or be
used for other household
decor. The finished project
must, however, remain the
property of the person who
requested the block and is
not to be sold.
. Pickens said tltat the volunteers enjoy being a part Polly Eichinger, _left, and Leona Cleland, volunteers at the
of promoting the celebra- Senior Citizens Center, fold Ohio B(centennial quilt blocks in
lion of Ohio's bicentennial. preparation for mailing to Ohio residents. The Meigs County
She said it isn't too late to Council on Aging volunteered to harrdle the Ohio Bicentennial
·call in and get a block, but Commission's promotion for the quilt show to be held at the
that it is too late to enter the Ohio State Fair. (Charlene Hoeflich)
ail-Ohio Quilt Challenge
and the showcase which while those in the Quilt of workmanship, and best
will be a feature of the Showcase are those depict- use of color and design .
Ohio State Fair, Aug. 1-17. ing Ohio's quilting history.
The Showcase quilts will
The deadline for submitting
The Challenge quilts be a display of Ohio quilts
a statement of intent to must use traditional or depicting Ohio 's quilting
enter the quilt show was innovative concepts and history. These will mclude
Jan. 20.
must incorporate at least heirloom quilts., 200 or
There are two parts to the one Ohio symbol - the more year old quilts, and
quilt show which will be tomato, ladybug, cardinal, quilts that illustrate signifistaged at the Ohio State trillium, white tail deer. cant happenings in Ohio's
Fair - the All-Ohio Quilt trilobite , carnation, flint, cities and towns over the
Challenge and the All-Ohio buckeye tree, black racer past 200 years.
snake, OBC barn or the
Quilt Showcase.
The exhibit is expected to
OBC
logo.
The
quilts
will
include
more than a thouEntries in the Quilt
Challenge are those fin- be jud~ed for interpretation sand quilts in the two cateished after January 2002 of Oh1o theme, excellence gories.

A3
B4·5
B6
B6
A4

A3
A3
81-3

A2

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY- An open house set
for later this month at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital building is
designed not only to market the
building to health care providers,
but to also show the building to the
general public.
Meigs County Commissioner

HOLZER
,.,

~ - ~'1 '10U t'J'IOW ltxx-1'1'
LIKE. IWO\ {:U:~?

...

,...

OF ~- 1-jf\'( DOV'nl.tt-11(.

[ OFFEI':ED YOO ,.._:&gt;II" 7

POMEROY - Gov. Bob
Taft asked legislators to prepare
for potential tax increases and
budget cuts in order to balance
the budget in his state of the
state address Wednesday.
"If last year's budget gap felt
like a gale force wind, this
year's budget crisis will feel
like the 'Perfect Storm."' said
Taft.
Meigs County's newest legislators, state Sen. Jim Carnes (R20) and state Rep. Jimmy
Stewart (R-92), support the
governor and recognize that
tough choices are ahead.
A shortfall of tax receipts and
incnea'ied spending in Medicaid
have resulted in a $720-million
deficit for the current budget,
which must be balanced by
June 30, according to state law.
Carnes said a lot of other states
are in the same fmancial shape
because of "spiraling Medicaid
costs" which are "unbeliev-

Ohio Gov. Bob Taft delivers
his State of the State
address. (AP)
able." ·
According to Carnes, 75 percent of the state budget cannot
be touched because of state
mandated commitments. 1be
state is required to fund ~
grams such as Medicaid whicll
is not subject to cuts.
_•
Taft said he hopes to contaift

Please see State. AS

Southern School
District gets
good marks ·
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer
RACINE
Southern
School district can be proud of
its progress from the state report
card which rated the district as
meeting 12 out of 22 standards.
The district was rated as
being in "continuous improvement" which means 12 to 20
indicators were met Districts
that meet these criteria had to
develop a three-year continuous
improvement plan and make
satisfactory progress.
Last year, the district scored
nine out of 27 standards which
-meant it was on "academic
watch."
' Superintendent Bob Grueser
attributes the improvement this
year to a comprehensive p,lan
and a "group commitment' by
teaching professionals.
''There was a deliberate plan
to atllH:k the needs of our students," he said.
"We have a very comprehensive improvement pian staffed
by teaching professionals who
can analyze data and help deter-

mine what curriculum alterations and curriculum instruction techniques need to be
adjusted for the benefit of the
students."
Grueser was quick to praise
the dedication of teachers and
students because Southern
schools exceeded the state minimum performance standards in
several categories.
In fourth-grade writing proficiency, more than 81 percent of
the students passed the test. On
the eighth and ninth grade cifi:
zenship proficiency test, more
than 93 percent of students
passed the test.
Student attendance rate was
94.8 percent which exceeded
the state minimum of 93 percent Southern schools came
within a hair's distance of meeting the state mandated graduation rate of 90 percent by ~'vT
ing a graduation rate of 89A
percent.
According to the Ohio
Department of Education
(ODE). this year's annual
report on academic progres~

Please see Southam, A5 :

Open house planned to market Veterans hospital building

12 Paps

C 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

...-

J. MILES lAYTON

Staff writer

Seniors' efforts take bicentennial
emblem to quilters across state
WORD®©®0@@0®®~ .

www.mydaily•entinet.com

Lawmakers
supportTaft's .
'tough choices'

Many hands make light work and numerou~ volunteers at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center assist with stuffing quilt
blocks and other material Into envelopes in preparation for mailing to residents across Ohio. (Charlene Hoeflich)

today that you could benefit
opportunity arises. don't be
materially from a hidden
hesitant to take advantage •of
source of income that you
it.
stumble upon. There could be , SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23lots of gold in this least-exDec. 21) -- Close friends
pected channel.
could be especially lucky for
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) you today. so go out of your
- You are a charismatic perway to spend some time with
son to begin with, but today
those pals who you believe
you'll be especially appealing
can assist you in important
and attract1Ve to members of ways.
the opposite gender. One in
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22particular could be lucky for Jan .- L9) -- The pieces of that
you. ·
puzzle you· ve been working
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. on could magically all come
22) -- This might be .the day together for you today. When
to make that request from per- , you see this happening, make
sons in high places whq \;!IJ-Ild your moves to complete the
help your career. When the picture.

1

THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 2003

39 "Lillie
Women"
role
40 Identify
41 Uvy'a road :
42 Engineer·
lng toy
44 Dlsguatlng
45 She, In
Seville
46 Caroler's
tune
47 Have'a go Ill
48 Smoked .
salmon
49 Not very
careful
51 Sigh of
content

Astrograph
whatever you're doing.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Something may pop up
today that could have great
potential for profit. It might
behoove you to drop whatever
you're doing and apply your
effons towards adding to your
bank account.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Optimism is always a big
plus and you're likely to have
plenty of it today . You ' ll
come off like a winner whose
attitude . everybody will enjoy
and try_ to emulate.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- When it comes to dollar
signs today. Lady Luck will
be doing all she can to help
you get a big piece of the pie.
Enjoy her efforts and make
the most of her offerings.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- It
might behoove you today to
operate as indeP.endently of
others as poss1ble. Others
could s low you down if they
are not in tune with your mind
set and ra_pid pace of action.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
-- There are strong indicators

Eastern falls to Waterford, B 1

ACROSS"

CARDIOVASCULAR

INSTITUTE

Mick Davenport. who has spearheaded efforts to seek federal grant
funding for a critical access hospi tal, said the public is encouraged to
attend the open house, set for I 0
a.m. to noon on Jan. 31.
"The purpose of the open hou se
is really to show the building to the
public," _Davenport said . " We've
invited legislators and health care
providers. ho spitals and physicians
groups, but we hope Meigs County

Citizens will attend, as well,
because their support is so important to our efforts."
"The building is owned by the
county, and it's important that people in the county understand ·the
building is in good condition and a
viable marketing tool in our
attempt to secure ho spital services
again," he added.
"It's also important that the public support our efforts to secure

health care services here again, and
the open house is the perfect oppor'
tunity for people to see what an
asset the hospital is, and what its
potential is," Davenport said.
The hospital is now under the
control of the county's hospital
commission, after Consolidated
Hea lth Systems Inc. relinqui sheq
its 99-year lease late last year.

Please see VMH, AS

Diagnostic

Cardiac Catheterizc1lion· Services
available at the Charles E. Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery Center
I

.

For more information, call

(740) 446-5354
'

�PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

Scientist says gene
may help control ·
aggression, anxiety

A DAY ON WALL STREET

Friday, Jan. 24

Jan.

tO.OOO

22, 2003

Dow
Jones
-:oc=-T-

8,318.73

Pet chango
from pr9Yioua:

•

[ M.
', -nllftlld
::-:-:-'
le-•12ff
---,j •

-1.47

t,400

It

"

·o.35

t,200
OCT
High
t,379.6t

NOV
Low
t ,358.23

t,OOO
DEC
JAN
Rocotd high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

Jan.22, 2003

1.000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

900

878.36

Pet. change
from previous

800

OCT

-1.04

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
gene might control human
aggression and anxiety, a
researcher said.
The discovery is reported
in an article published
Thursday in Neuron, a biology research journal.
Evan S. Deneris, a neuroscientist at Case Western
Reserve University School of
Medicine and principal
investigator of the study, said
the chemical serotonin in
humans enables nerves to
communicate with each other
in the brain and the spinal

Jan. 14, 2000

Nasdaq

Pet chango
from pr9Yioua:

'

Rocord high: 11 ,722.98

t,600

1,359.48

W.VA.

Low
8,306.59

Jan. 22. 2003

com

•IColumbua ~"124'

Hlf1

8,444.6t

-,N"'o::-:v--=oE=c:----cJA"'N- 7.000

High
889.74

NOV
Low
877.64

700

AP

c t.••~-~~~

S111ny. Pt if1o&lt;JdY Clol.lly

SOOwetl T·storrns

Rain

Aunies

&amp;lao

Ice

'Vil"""'*lod-

One more frigid night on tap
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A wind chill advisory is in
effect for most of the area
today.
Snow showers are expected to increase across much
of the area during the day
today. The snow showers
will not amount to much. .
The coldest of air will
pass off to the east by
Friday. The Arctic high
pressure area now over the
Northern Plains will move
southward toward the Gulf
Coast states . This will shift
the wind from the northwest
to the southwest and the
mercury will trend upward.
A heat wave is not in the
forecast, but temperatures
will recover to the upper
teens and 20s Friday and
into the 20s on Saturday.
Generally dry weather
will continue. Some·snow is
possible Saturday night and
Sunday as the next cold
front crosses the area.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of snow
showers. Still very cold,
with lows near S above .

Northwest winds 10 to 15
mph, diminishing a bit
towards morning. Chance of
snow 30 percent.
Friday... Mostly sunny and
continued cold. Highs m the
mid 20s. West winds around
10 mph.
Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows near 10
above.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy
and continued cold. Highs
in the upper 20s.
Saturday
night ... Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
snow showers late. Lows in
the lower 20s. Chance of
snow 20 percent.
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow
showers. Highs in the lower
30s.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper teens and
highs in the mid 30s.
Tuesday.. . Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 20s and
highs in the mid 40s.
Wednesday ... Partly
cloudy. Lows m the upper
20s and highs in the mid
40s.

Local Stocks
AEP-26.57
Arch Coal - 20.35
Akzo-29.35
AmTech/SBC - 26.93
Ashland Inc. - 26.t2
AT&amp;T-25.32
Bank One- 37
BLI-t3.65
Bob Evans - 23.17
BorgWarne' - 51.85
Champion - 3.26
Charming Shops - 3.32
City Holding - 25.73
Col-20.84
DG -t1.64
DuPont- 40.65

Thursday, Jan. 23
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Peking
Restaurant in Mason, W. Ya.

cord.
Research previously had
identified cells that receive
serotonin, but Deneris said
the g~ne in the study may
control serotonin production.
Deneris discovered the
gene, Pet-1 ETS, forir years
ago. In his latest research, he
and colleagueS' manipulated
the gene to tty to learn its role
in the aggressive and anxious
behavior of mice.
When the gene was
removed, the mice were very
anxious and aggressive, he
said.

Federal Mogul - .35
USB - 21 .99
Gannett - 72.09
General Electric - 23.55
GKNLY - 3.60
Harley Davidson- 4t .24
Kmart- .15 ·
Kroger - t6.29
Ltd.- t2.45
NSC -tB.t2
Oek Hill Rnardal- 23.66
OVB- 21.1t
BBT- 33.70
Peoples - 24.72
Pepsico- 42.80
Premier- 7.96

Rockwell - 22.66
Rocky Boots - 5.71
AD Shell- 41 .21
Sears - 27.38
Wai-Mart- 48.07
Wendy's - 28. I 2
Worthington - 14.5t
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smhh Partners
at Adves1 Inc. of
Gallipolis.

CIRCLEVILLE (AP) An apartment fire that started
Wednesday night while a toddler and her baby sitter slept
upstairs killed the 3-year-old,
police said.
The 16-year-old baby sitter
was able to escape through a
second-story window but lost
hold of Morgan Johnson's
hand as she fled, police dispatcher Stephanie Kinser said.
Morgan was pronounced
dead at Berger Hospital of
smoke inhalation.
Danielle Hovatter, who

and the extension of marital
rites to gay couples.
Conservatives have grown
frustrated by higher church
officials who, they say, have
refused to discipline churches
that proclaim their willingness to ordain noncelibate
homosexuals.
Using an obscure clause of
church law, 26 ministers and
31 elders signed a petition
seeking to reconvene last
year's General Assembly in
special . session to push for
strict enforcement of church
policy on gays. The church
has never held such a special
session.
Paul Rolf Jensen, attorney
for the Westminster Church,

said the church constitution
requires only 25 ministers and
25 elders to request a meeting.
Church leaders have not yet
called for the s~cial session,
saying the pelltion must be
certified.
The Rev. William Pawson,
pastor of Westminster, said
Wednesday that he believes
leadership is stalling.
"We have been asked to
trust the process, but we are
seein~ that the process is not
working," he swd.
Pawson said two dozen
complaints have been filed
against Presbyterian churches
for ordaining gay ministers or
blessing gay marriages and

...

2 FlEE ne1111
IPIIIII'"R

··-J

FIND YOUR NAMIIN
TODAV'I CLABBII'IID
SECTION AND WIN I

Take a closer look at O'Bieneu Memorial Hospital.
A closer look at these photographs~ reveal a comprehensive array of
high-resolution iJna8ing technology available to you and your family at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.

Did you know ...

at diagnostic imaging

• O'Bleness was the first healthcare facility in Ohio top~
the technologically advanced LOGIQ 9 GE ultrasound system?
• O'Bleness' new bone densitomeuy unit can help detect and
monitor changes in bone structure?
• Research indicates the CAD lmageChecker* system can detect
up to 2096 more breast cancers than marntnography aJonel
• O'Bleness' cardiovascular laboratory ultrasound and mini lab
offers accredited systems?
• O'Bleness closely examines the needs of our community when
acquiring new technology?

Church
meetings

Birthday
Deemer
celebrates first
SYRACUSE - Mattea
Ranee Deemer, dau~hter of
Chns and
Corissa
Deemer of
Syracuse
celebrat,ed
her
first
Hi rt.hday.
Nov. 23, at
the home of
her paternal
grand par. ents, Bob
and Mari)yn ~mer.
A buffet luncheon was
served. A Winnie the Pooh
J
I

l

I

th~me was c;uTied out in the
cake and other decorations.
Attending in addition to her.
parents and paternal grandparents, were her sister
Alyssa; maternal grandpar- '
ents Cathy and Bill Davis,
great-grandparents Kathryn
and Bob Meredith, and uncl~s
Kevin Deemer and Jonas
Hlltt..
'
·Also 'attending were Marvin
and Eleanor McKelvey,
Gordon, Linda and Jeremy
Fisher, Todd, Kellie, Alex,
Jose ' and Ashlee Cundiff,
Shirley and Christi Palmer,
Amy and Brycton Robie,
Michelle and Dylan Darst,
and Luke Grueser.

Reader Services
Correction Polley

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. Outalde Salea: Dave Harris, Ext t5
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U ta,llll litho, ~011 UlDI.aD
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LONDON (AP) - The Bee Gees
name died with Maurice Gibb, one of
the surviving band members said
Wednesday.
Robin Gibb said he and older brother
Barry would no longer use the name
under which they and their brother
Maurice performed for more than 30
years.
"Anything we do, we will do together, but it'll be as brothers - not under
the name of the Bee Gees, that will be

The Daily Sentinel

Advertising

Memori;t'Ho.pit;l

located in the other areas of the
colon.
A rectal exam and fecal
occult blood test may or may not spot
a tumor. If positive results do occur
from these less-than-effective tests.
patients are recommended to schedule a colonoscopy.
A colonoscopy is the only screening method that looks at the entire
colon. It allows a physician to see the
inside of the colon and cut off and
remove any polyps. Over the course
of seven to ten years those polyps
could become cancerous tumors. The
procedure is done under anesthesia,
so the patient is unaware of what is
happening. The only minor drawback
is the preparation, but, there has been
a significant improvement in it. The
patient now only has to drink about a
pint of the diarrhea-causing liquid
instead of the traditional gallon. This
method, along with a short-term liquid diet, cleans out the digestive system so the doctor can get a clear picture of the internal walls of the
intestines.
The American Cancer Society recommends that a colonoscopy be done
once every ten years after the age of

reserved in history as the three of us ,"
Robin Gibb told Britain's GMTV television show.
He said the surviving siblings would
continue to make music . "I think
Maurice would want that."
Maurice Gibb died Jan. 12 at 53 after
suffering a heart attack prior to undergoing emergency surgery for an intestinal blocka!\e.
Robin Gtbb said the death of his twin
brother was like "losing·· your soul

mate."
The brothers formed the Bee Gees - · ·
short for the Brothers Gibb - in the ·
1960s and recorded a string of No. i '
hits, selling more than 110 million ·
records
. ,
They became a falsetto-voiced disco.
sensation during the 1970s with hits .
from the movie "Saturday Night:
Fever," including. "Stayin' Alive" and
"Night Fever:"
•·

...

.
Society hears mission report···
- '

.

new album at their seaside
house in Brighton on
England's south coast, Clore
said.
Cook began his career as a
member of '80s band The
Housemartins before turning
to dance music. He's known
for his infectious, samplehappy sty Ie.

[~~~

'

RACINE - A report on
mission work was given at a
recent meetin~ of the Bertha
M. Sayre Society held at the
home of Linda Grimm in
Racine.
It ws noted that the White
Cross quota had been sent. A
collection totaling $112 was
taken for the work from the
10 members attending.
Mary K. Yost gave devo-

tions titled "The Grace of
Gratitude" using scripture•
from Psalm 30. Members
responded to roll call with ll.
scripture verse. The prograi!! :
was on "Restoring Dignity:: ~
R~tfreshments were serve(j :
and the next meeting wil b4 :
held adt the home Marge '
Grimm with Martha Lou :
Beegle to have the program. ::
-: ~

~'""""""' •,

'

........-......... YawdmBassett

· Oak1laad CarYed
lndude! rails, triple dresser,
dmt with jewelry box
. and tri-vJew mirror

VaupaBaesett
Oak Slat Bed
H ...dboml, Footboard,

S Drawer Chest,

Triple Dresser with Mirror

are very clear!

HOURS
Mon - Frl8arri - 9pm

EXTENSION AGENT

Fatboy Slim and wife
seperates after three
years of marriage

Our views on healthcare

Kenneth McCulloUCJh; R. Ph.
Charles Rlflle R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street

Becky
Baer

·

'

(AP.) - . Celc::brity birtlldey..s . Singer is . 55. Drummer
for the .week of Jan. 26-Feb. 1: Tommy Ramone of The
Jan. 26: Actor Paul · Ramones is 51. Talk show
Newman: · is · 78. " Sports host Oprah : Winfrey is · 49.
announcer-actor Bob Uecker Country
singer
Irlene
is 68. Actor Scott Glemi is 61. Mandrell is 46. Director-actor
Actor David Strathairn is 54. Edward Bums is 35. Actress
Singer Lucinda Williams is Heather Graham is 33. Actress
50. Guitarist Eddie Van Halen Sara Gilbert ("Roseanne") is
is 46, .,. J:,!?'Jle~ap , ,E!I7.,n . )~. ~.... , ,.,. ~
.
D' k
DeGeneres IS 4:t. Gultartst
Jan. 30: -.omedtan 1c
Andrew Ridgeley (Wham!) is Martin is 81. Actor Gene
40. Gospel singer Kirk ·Hackman is 73. Actres.s
Franklin is 33.
Vanessa Redgrave is 66.
LONDON (AP) - Disc
Jan. 27: Actor .h.mes Singer Marty . Balin of
jockey Fatboy Slim and his
Cromwell ("Babe":) is_ 63. Jefferson Airplane/Jefferson
wife, Zoe Ball, have separatDancer Mikhail B!IJ'Yshnikov Starship is 61. Actor Charles
ed after 3 112 years of maris 55. Actress Minli-Rogers is S. Dutton ("Roc") is 52.
riage. Ball's agent said.
47. Singer Margo Ttiiunins of Comedian
Brett Butler
The couple wants to ~i ve
Cowboy Junkies ' is 42. ("Grace Under Fire") is 45.
themselves "a bit of ttme
Actress Bridget Fonda is 39. Singer Jody Watley is 44.
and
breathing
space,"
Actor Alan Cumming is 38. Actor Christian Bale is 29.
Vivienne Clore said this
Country
singer
Tracy Ac.tor Wilmer Valderrama . weekend.
4wrence is 35. Actor Josh ("That '70s Show") is 23.
-~
Fatboy Slim, 39, whose
Randali' ("Ed") is 31.
Jan. 31: Actress Carol
real name is Norman Cook,
J~. 28: Actor Alan Aida is Channing: is 82. Actress
married Ball, a television
61: Actress Barbi Benton is Suzanne Pleshette is 66.
and radio presenter, in
53. Singer Sam Phillips is 41. Singer Harry Wayne Casey of
August 1999. They have a
Sarah KC and the Sunshine Band ~s
Singer-songwriter
2-year-old son, Woody.
McLachlan is 35. Singer Joey 52. Singer-drummer Phtl
"They have split for now.
Fat one of 'N Sync is 26. Collins is 52. Singer Johnny
It is very amicable," Clore
Singer Nick Carter of Rotten of the Sex Pistols is 47.
said.
.
She said Woody would
Backstreet Boys is 23. Actor Actor Anthony LaPaglia
spend time with both parElijah Wood ("The Lord of ("Murder One") is 44. Actress
ents.
the Rings") is 22.
Kelly Lynch is 44. Actress
Ball, 32, will likely reside
Jan. 29: Actor John Minnie Driver is 32. Actress
at
the couple's home in
Forsythe is 85 . Actress Portia ., d~ Ros.si ("Al!Y
north London, while Cook
Katharine Ross is 63. Actor McBeal ) IS 30. Smger Justm
will continue to work on his
Tom Selleck is 58. Actor Marc Timberlake of 'N Sync is 22.

Editor: Charlene Hoetllch, Ext t2
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext t4
Reporter: J. Miles Layton

O'BLENESS

'

SO for people who are not at hi gb
risk. For those who have immediate
family members that have had col ~
ore ctal cancer, the initial te stin g
should be do ne ten years prior to the
age the family member wa s first di ag:
nosed. The sigmoidoscopy and dou•
ble contrast barium enema should be
done once every fi ve years . The fecal
occult blood te st should be done
annually. But remember, the only
foolproof way of detecting the cancer
is through a colono scopy.
:
Colon cancer is serious. It must b~
detected early. One-third of the indi·
victual s who do not discover they
have it until it breaks through the
intestinal wall will not be living within five years. Only SS% of those
who don ' t detect it until it has
metastisized or caused other organs
to develop cancer will survive:.
However, if the cancer is removec;l
while it is still within the large intestine,
over
91 %
will
live.
Unfortunately, less than 40% of people over the age of 50 have had ANY
type of screening.
Lives are lost each year because
people aren ' t aware of the ri sk factors
or don't believe they could contract
the disease. Often by the time some:
one suspects a problem, the disease "is:
in advanced stages .
·
What can you do to avoid this terrible disease? Change your lifestyle .
Eat a low-fat diet , limit red meal\.
avoid alcohol and tobacco, be physie'
cally active, lose . weight and speak
up. Talk to your physician now about.
getting a Golonoscopy. It could save.
your life.

Bee Gees name died with Maurice Gibb, says brother.:.

Celebrity birthdays

MATINEES
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY

Partnerlng with you, your family and your physician, O'Bleness will
provide the images your doctor orders for diagnosis and treatment.
Together we can provide you with a higher level of diagnostic imaging,
right here at home.

Colorectal cancer is the second
leading cause of cancer death s in
Meigs County. It is almost always
curable, if it is_caught early.
Who is likely to get colon cancer?
There are several factors that increase
a person 's risk. Ninety percent of the
cases of cancer in the colon or rectum
are in people 50 years of age or older.
It develops in both genders at about
the same rate, even though many people are under the misconception that
It occurs more frequently in men.
African Americans are known to contract the disease more often than any
other ethnic group. In addition to
these circumstances, a family history
of colon cancer and polyps can make
a person more susceptible.
At-risk behaviors can also play a
major role. A high fat diet with lots
or red meat, obesity, lack of physical
exercise and alcohol and tobacco use
are primary contributors. Even with
these reasons. 70%-80% of all colon
cancers form in people who are not
high-risk.
Symptoms of the disease include :
constipation, diarrhea, thin stools,
frequent bowel movements , bleeding,
weight loss, a mucous discharge,
abdominal pain, jaundice, anemia and
an abdominal mass that causes an
obstruction . Some people may not
show any signs until the disease is
quite advanced.
Regular screenings may be the only
way to detect colon cancer in its early
stal!es. A flexible sigmoidoscopy and
banum enema are only able to find
tumors in the lower third of the large
intestine. The problem is that the
majority of cancerous tumors are

Sunday, Jan. 26
POMEROY
Special
Thursday, Jan. 23
POMEROY - Caring and singers "Won by One" at Hysell
Sharing Support Group will Run Church 10:45 a.m. Pastor ·
meet at I p.m. at the Senior Mark Micheal invites the public.

lives across the street, heard a
commotion outside about
8: 15 p.m. She opened her
door and saw flames and
smoke coming from the rear
of the building and people
moving about frantically.
''The mother was screaming
her head off, 'Get my babX
out! Get my baby out!''
Hovatter said.
"It was hard to tell what was
going on. Somebody came
· out of the topside window and
had smoke all over them," she
said.

"not one of them has resulted
in a correction."
The Westminster complaint
before the denomination's
judicial commission asks that
church leaders be ordered to
convene the special session of
the General Assembly within
two months of the Jan. 14
petition.
Upon receiving the petition,
the Rev. Fahed Abu-Akel,
moderator of the 2.4 millionmember denomination, asked
those who signed to reconsider.
"I implore you in the name
of Christ and for the good of
the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) to reconsider your
decision," he wrote last week.

'

Support Groups

Presbyterian church may meet on gay issues
CANTON (AP) A
Presbyterian church has filed
a complaint against national
church leadership, trying to
tty to force the denomination
to enforce a ban on gays in the
ministry.
The
complaint,
filed
Thesday by the Westminster
Presbyterian Church, argues
that church leaders are viola!ing the denomination's constitution by delaying a national meeting on church policy
toward gays.
,
The dispute centers on .a
1997 policy adopted by the
Presbyterian
Church
(U.S.A.), based in Louisville,
Ky., that prohibits the ordination of active homosexuals

Things you should know about colon cancer

Citizens Center. The topic for the
next two months will be on
advanced dirjlCtives and living
wills.

Saturday, Jan. 25
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
MIDDLEPORT
Garden Club, 7:30p.m. home of Middleport Church of the
Grace weber. Auction to be held. Nazarene, 7 p.m. with The
Shaffers to sing. The Rev. Allen
TUPPERS PLAINS - YFW Midcap, pastor, invites the pub9053 , 7 p.m." Thursday at the lic.
Tuppers Plains hall. There will
be a special drawing.
STIYERSYILLEl - Hymn
sing, 7 p.m. at the Stiversville
Community Church. The goldc;n
Sunday, Jan. Ui
REEDSVILLE - Gun shoot, tones from Parkersburg, W Ya.
Forked Run Sportsman Club, and Jim and Shirley Nutter from
noon. Slugs only.
Reedsville, will sing. Rev.
Wayne Jewell invites public.

3-year-old dies in fire

•WIN•

We honor most third party
prescription plans.
Your Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacists, Chuck and Ken
are here to fill your
prescription needs.

Clubs and
Organizations

Thursday, January 23, 200~ .

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
..

Community Calendar

JAN
DEC
Rocord high: t,527.46
March 24, 2000

Local • Entertainment

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 23, 2003

Page A~

Charlene Hoetllch, Ext t2
E·msll :

neWsCmydailysenttnel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

cusPs 213-9&amp;0)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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The Daily Sentinel

Thuraday, January 23, 2003

Thursday, January 23, 2003 ..

Obituaries

~~~~~~~~~------------------------------------~----~-------:

....

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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••

Tl£ STIMWJS
DEBATE ILl.lJSTRA1ED

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., c

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

"
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'"

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

..&gt;

'

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

,,
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. ·..

Letters to the editor are welcome. Th ey should be less than
300 words. All letters are suhi.fct to editing and must be
sig ned and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good
taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
The OIJinions expressed in the column below are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. editorial board,
unless otherwise noted.

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NATIONAL VIEW
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No benefit
Hike in teen pregnancies in
some areas sends a signal
• Belleville News-Democrat, Ill., on a red flag over teen
birrhs: Illinois recently announced some encouraging news
about a drop in teenage pregnancies: The rate in 200 I was
10.9 percent, the lowest it has been since 1959, when the
state began keeping statistics.
Unfortunately, the good news doesn't extend to St. Clair
County. Its teen pregnancy rate of 16 percent in 2001 not
only is significantly higher than the state average, but it is
higher than the county 's own rate the previous year of 15.2
percent.
.
The increase should cause parents, schools, churches and
health agencies to redouble their efforts to address this serious problem.
That 16 percent rate means that 592 babies were born to
teen mothers in St. Clair County in 2001 - young women
who in most cases aren't emotionally or financially prepared to be a parent.
·
In many cases, these teen moms are single, and the father
is only marginally involved, if at all. That makes the difficult task of raising and providing for children all the harder.
Taxpayers have a stake in all this, also. Many of these
babies require extra medical care or other public assistance
and services. The Jack of family structure can mean that the
children will require more help at school, either because of
learning or discipline problems.
.
Quite simply, It is not to anyone's advantage for children
to have children before they are ready for the responsibility. The more teenagers believe that and avoid gelling pregnant, the better.

T .ODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Jan. 23, the 23rd day of 2003. There are
342 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 23, 1973, President Nixon announced an accord had
been reached to end the Vietnam War.
On this date:
In 1789, Georgetown University was established in presentday Washington D.C.
In 1845, Congress decided all national elections would be
held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
In 1920, the Dutch government refused demands from the
victorious Allies to hand over the ex-kaiser of Germany.
In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D: Roosevelt announced
his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination.
In 1943, critic Alexander Woollcott suffered a fatal heart
attack during a live broadcast of the CBS radio program
"People's Platform."
In 1950, the Israeli Knesset approved a resolution proclaiming Jerusalem the capital of Israel.
In 1964, the 24th amendment to the Constitution, eliminating the poll tax in federal elections, was ratified.
In 1968, North Korea seized the U.S. Navy ship Pueblo,
charging its crew with being on a spying miss1on. (The crew
was released eleven months later.)
In 1985, debate in Britain's House of Lords was carried on
live television for the first time.
In 1989, surrealist ilrtist Salvador Dali died in his native
Spain at age 84.
Ten years ago: FBI Director William S. Sessions dismissed
a Justice Department report accusing him of ethical abuses; he
in turn accused former Allorney General William P. Barr of a
"crassly calculated attack. "
Five years ago: Fighting scandal allegations involving
Monica Lewinsky, President Clinton assured his Cabinet during a meeting that he was innocent and urged them to concentrate on their jobs. A judge in Fairfax, Va., sentenced Mir
Aimal Kasi to death for an assault rifle attack outside CIA
headquarters in 1993 that killed two men and wounded three
other people. (Kasi was executed last November.)
One year ago: President Bush proposed the biggest defense
spending increase in 20 years: Kenneth Lay stepped down as
chairman and chief executi ve of Enron Corporation. John
Walker Lindh, a U.S. -born Taliban fi ghter, was returned to the
United States to face criminal charges that he' d conspired to
kill fellow Americans. Wall Street Journal reponer Daniel
Pearl was abducted in Karachi, Pakistan, by a group demanding the return of prisoners from the Afghan campaign; he was
later murdered.
Today 's Birthdays: Rock musician Bill Cunningham is 53.
Rock singer-musician Patrick Si mmons (The Doobie
Brothers) is 53. Rock musician Danny Federici (Bruce
Springsteen and theE Street Band) is 53. Rock singer Robin
Zander (Cheap Trick) is 50. Princess Caroline of Monaco is
46. Singer Anita Baker is 45 . Reggae musician Earl Falconer
(UB40) is 44. Actress Ga il O 'Grady is 40. Actress Mariska
Hargitay is 39. Rhyth m-and-blues singer Marc Nelson is 32.
Actress Tiffani Thiessen is 29.
Thought for Today: "The trouble is that hardl y anybody in
America goes to bed angry at night." - George J. Stigler,
American economist ( 19\1 - 199 1).

. ...
;~~

'

·~

KONDRACKE'S VIEW
·t . ,

Democrats should argue: (Secure the homeland first' .....,.
·'

Remember the slogan President Bill
Clinton used to thwart Republican tax
cuts, "Save Social Security First"? Now,
Democrats should adopt a new one:
"Protect Homeland SecuritY First."
This time, though, the slogan should not
be designed primarily as an anti-tax-cut
ploy. but as a genuine assenion about
nallonal priorities: Before culling taxes,
let's spend what we need to spend on
homeland defense.
It's ridiculous for Democrats to say, as
some have, that the United States is no
better at preventing terrorist attacks than it
was on Sept. 11, 2001.
But it is true that despite prowess dispersing AI Qaeda and upgradmg U.S.
airline security and intelligence - the
nation remains highly vulnerable.
A Council on Foreign Relations task
force headed by former Sens. Warren
Rudman (R-N.H.) and Gary Hart (DColo.) reported last year that "America
remains dangerously unprepared to prevent and respond to a catastrophic terrorist attack on U.S. soil."
Congressional Democrats say they
have been told that U.S. intelligence agencies fear that up to 2,000 AI Qaeda "sleeper" agents may be living in the United
States, waiting to carry out terrorist activities.
Various Democrats have figured out
that President Bush can be challenged
''from the right" for not doing enough or spending enough - to protect the
homeland.
Senate Democrats introduced a $14 billion Comprehensive Homeland Security
Act of 2003 as their top-priority bill this
year.
'
It includes $4 billion for local emergency personnel, $1.4 billion for rail security, $4.7 billion for combating bioterrorism and $1 billion to upgrade emergency
communications.
At a recent House Democratic Caucus

proposal would give each worker a $300 •.;
rebate in 2003, but Bush says his plan '!
provides an average tax cut of $1,083 for '·'
the nation's 92 million tax filers.
· · ,,.
But it's questionable whether , ,
Americans respond to "class warfare"
appeals, and independent analyses raise 1:;
questions of whether Bush's cut is really ;:;
as unfair as Democrats allege.
/~
K~ke Newsweek and The New York Tunes :]
carried analyses by the accounting firm ...
Deloitte &amp; Touche, which showed that ;
COLUMNIST
two-children families with incomes under !;.:
$50,000 would get more than a 40 percent ·~ ·
tax break under Bush's plan.
'
meeting, Clinton National Security
Families with incomes of more than $1
Adviser Sandy Berger had the right idea. million would get a cut of just 8.6 percent '"
He said Democrats "should become the -though their dollar savings would be ,:;
party of more."
more than $25,000 a year, compared with .,.,
"More police, more equipment, more around $1,000 for lower-income families. ,;,
antiterrorist systems for our ports and · The third Democratic line of attack has ::::
infrastructure and more engagement of been that Bush's tax cut would swell the ·c
the American people in a significant federal deficit to astronomical piupor- :,
way."
lions, raising long-term interest rates.
·
Berger added: "What the Bush adminisThe interest rate argument may or may
tration has said to the American people not be accurate - rates so far have been _:5
about their particir.ation in the war on ter- descending, not rising - but it's hard to.,
rorism is, 'Be vigilant and go shopping."' get the public excited about it. · · . . . ... ))
Curiously, despite th.eir resolv~ to make . ·And,
according
to
former··
homeland secunty a m~or theme, it has Co11gressional Budget Office Director
hardly figured into Democratic criticism [jafi Crippen, it's the strength of the econ- ,;.,
of Bush's $674 billion tax-cut proposal.
that detennines the size of deficits;· 1" •
Instead, Democratic critiques have omy
not the government's fiscal policy.
.~·
focused on three themes - none of them
So, if Bush's plan actually spurs eco- ;~
terribly effective politically.
norn!c growth - as Republi~ans claim :~ ·
The first is that the Bush plan will not Pres1dent Ronald Reagan's d1d - then .,
work as a short-term stimulus for the deficits would dwindle instead of
economy. But Bush is not trying to ftx the explode.
.i
economy for the short run, but the long
Better
than
the
three
arguments
being
,:;
run, starting in election year 2004.
now by Democf&lt;!ts is this one: If .:;
By comparison, Bush's plan is big and used
Bush gives away $674 billion in tax cuts ~
bold and the $136 billion Democratic - actually, it's close to $2.2 trillion, .,
alternative is short and small. Indeed, including interest, if his 200~ tax cuts are •
Del!locrats still have no agreed-upon made permanent- that money cannot be on
long-term economic plan.
used for other priorities. .
,,.
There's even a question as to whether
(Morton Knndracke is executive .editor of i
the Democratic attack is accurate. Their Roll Cal~ the newspaper of Capitol Hill.) ,,,

Morton

l .:

------------------------------~---------------------------------- ..
1.-J.

RYAN'S VIEW

··:.-

System leaves parents caught between exhaustion, love
Michael Tyre is II years old and
weighs 60 pounds.
He smiles when the do~ barks, when
he hears his mother's votce, when his
little sister runs her hand along his
cheek.
Michael can't speak or walk, the
result of brain damage and cerebral
palsy from an acutely premature ~irth .
He can't swallow. His meals are liquefied and delivered through a feeding
tube inserted into his abdomen. He
breathes through another tube attached
to his trachea. He takes four medications a day through his stomach and
another three through a nebulizer. His
diaper must be changed, his oxygen
tanks refilled, his tracheostomy tubes
sterilized.
His care is an around-the-clock job.
So Medi-Cal Jon~ ago approved coverage for Michael s parents to employ
licensed nurses 16 hours a day, seven
days a week.
This option would be great, if Myra
and John Tyre could find licensed nurses to fill the shifts. They can't. And if
the '!yres hire a caretaker who isn' t a
registered nurse or licensed vocational
nurse, Medi-Cal won't pay. It is a
Catch-22 that traps parents like the
Tyres between two awful options: Live
in a perpetual state of exhaustion from
caring for their severely disabled chil dren while balancing jobs and raising
other children, or put their di sabled
children in an institution.
The Tyres aren't sending Michael
anywhere; they understand their son's
grimaces, squeals and twitches as if
interpreting a secret code. No institution
could care for him with the love and
intuiti veness they can.
But they also can 'I continue as they
have ."A nu rse comes to the Tyres ' home
from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through
Thursday- a total of 24 hours a week.

•

Joan
Ryan
COWMNIST
He attends school from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The rest of the day belongs to Myra and
John.
The couple goes out alone three
nights a year: On Myra's birthday;
John's birthday and their anniversary.
They trade off attending the swim meets
and soccer games of their other two
children, a 17-year-old boy and 9-yearold girl.
They sleep restlessly at night, attuned
to the momtor on their bed stand that
picks up any change in Michael 's
breathing across the hall. "The state
says we can institutionalize him, but
he' ll die," Myra Tyre exJ?lains. "He is
so fragile, and we know htm so well. At
the first sign of a cold, we 're at the doctors. At the first signs of discomfon, we
figure out what 's wrong."
The government recognizes that parents like the Tyres need a break. So they
will pay for Michael to stay a few days
at a "respite-care" facility.
But guess what? Those faci lities also
have been hit by the nursing shortages.
too, so rarely is a bed avai lable for kids
like Michael. The Childre n's Recovery
Center in Campbell. about an hour from
San Francisco, is licensed fo r 22 children, but for the past three years it hasn' t been able to care for more than. IS at

,,..
..
..,
",,

a time - not enough nurses to staff the ..:.:
shifts. There is always a waiting list.
·'&lt;
On Christmas Day a few years ago, a •t
mother and father in Pennsylvania · ~
made national headlines when they left "
their severely disabled 10-year-old son ,:;
at a local hospital. They later said they ;;
couldn't care for him anymore. It was ;,.
too much. They were roundly criticized :~
as bad parents.
"
:·!
Myra Tyre and other parents of :::
severely disabled children know the ~:·
couple was driven to desperation pre- '"
cisely because they had tried to be good ·
parents. They had poured themselves ..,
mto the care of thetr child and finally ·
had nothing left to give.
"It's every day of every week of every ·.~
month of every year," one mother told "
me. "It is beyond exhausting. Every '~
family I know has open shifts or no · '
nurses at all. I do everything I can io ••
keep nurses. I cook them dinner. I make :".:
sure there's a parkin!\ space in front of .~
the house. I make th1 s a happy place to ~;
work. "
.,
What Medi-Cal needs to do is pay the
nurses better. Instead, with California's
budget deficit, Medi -Cal reimbursements are being cut, making , nursing, ,
jobs even less attractive and sinking :
families like the Tyres deeper into their :
Catch-22 trap.
·
~
"Mikey, what are you smiling about?''
Myra Tyre says as she walks into his
room. Michael's mouth is open wide in
a full -face grin . Myra smoothes her
son's hair. She is tired. You can hear it
in her voice; She and her husband just
want to be good parents. But at the end
of each exhausting day, they' re not
always sure what that means.
(Joan Ryan is a columnist for the San
Fran cisco Chronicle. Send comments to
her in care of this newspaper aT send
her
e-mail
at
joan ryan @sfchronicle .com.)

..

Deaths

Local Briefs

Margaret
Marilyn
Elizabeth Hysell Shakelford
POMEROY - Margaret Griest ·
Elizabeth Hysell, 82, of

,

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, d1ed Tuesday,
January 21 , 2003.
She was born March 29
1920, in Bradbury, daughte; ·
of the late John and Sylvia
Cox Spearhas.
She was ·a loving Mother
and homemaker.
She
was
formerly
employed as a home health
care aide. She faithfully
attended the Rutland Church
of God in her younger years.
She is survived by sons,
James (Marilyn) Hysell of
Columbus, and John (Linda)
Hysell
of
Evansville,
Indiana; daughters, Lena
Napper of Rutland, and
Bonnie (Bobby) Arnold of
Pomeroy; two stepchildren;
eight grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren;
several stepgrandchildren
and step-great-grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
In addition to her parents,
she was preceded in death
by her husband, Walter
Hysell; a son, Jackie Lee
Hysell; a brother, Paul
Freshour; sisters, Ann Frank
and Sylvia Ross; her halfsister, Evelyn Romaine; a
son-in-law, David Napper;
and seven stepchildren.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Friday, January 24, 2003, in
Fisher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Officiating will be
Doug Shamblin, and burial
will follow in Homer Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6
to 8 p.m. Thursday, January
23, 2003.
As the Great-Grandmother
of an autistic child, Mrs.
Hysell expressed her desire
to have memorial contributions made to: Pioneer
Center, 11268 County Road
550, Chillicothe, Ohio
45601.
- Paid notice

Roy Eugene
'Gene' Powell
POMEROY . Roy
Eugene "Gene" Powell, 50,
of
Pomeroy, ·
died
Wednesday, January 22,
2003, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant,
West Virginia.
He was born January 3,
1953,
in
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, son of the late
Earl Ivan Powell and
Dolores
Ada . Massey
Powell.
He was emploLed as a
boilermaker with ocal No.
667 of Winfield, West
Virginia, and Local No . .I 05
of Chillicothe. He was a
1971 graduate of Meigs
High School, and he was a
Vietnam veteran, having
served in the U.S. Navy.
He is survived by his wife,
Penny Wolfe Powell of
Pomeroy; children, Roy
Eugene Powell Jr. of
Pomeroy, Ryan Matthew
Powell of Pomeroy, and
Mandy Renee Powell of
Pomeroy; grandchildren,
Keara Faith Powell of
Pomeroy, and Cameron
Bryce Powell of Pomeroy;
sisters, Debra (Roy) Gilkey
of Pomeroy, and Donna (Bo)
Frazier of Pomeroy; several
nieces and nephews; and
several sisters-in-Jaw and
brothers-in-Jaw.
He was preceded in death
by his parents.
Servtces will be II a.m .
Saturday, January 25, 2003,
at Fisher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Officiating will be
Pastor Charles McKenzie.
Following the services,
the deceased requested that
he be cremated. Friends may
call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m . Friday,
January 24, 2003.
- Paid n otic~

Crash
injures driver

POMEROY Marilyn
74,
Shakelford
Griest,
Tucson, Ariz., died recently,
according to word received by
a close friend, Mrs. James
Vennari of Pomeroy.
Mrs.
Griest formerly
resided in the Bend area. She
is survived by her husband,
Richard.

Virgene Parsons
STEWART
Mary
Virgene Parsons, 93, Fort
Myers, Fla., died Monday,
Jan. 20, 2003, following a
short illness.
Services will be II a.m.
Saturday at White Funeral
Home in Coolville, with the
Rev. Monty McCune officiating. Burial will follow at the
Haga Cemetery, Stewart.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
Friday.
The family will receive
friends at the South-Canaan
Baptist Church following burial.

local Briefs
U.S.33 open
to traffic
POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Transporation
announced that the lane of U.S.
33, approximately two miles
north of Shade in Athens
County, which has been closed
to traffic while a la!ge rock was
removed, is now open.
Stephanie Filson, public
information office for ODOT,
said that the emergency job that
began on Jan. 13 was expected
to take two to three weeks to
complete.
However, contractor Alan
Stone Co. of Chesterbill completed the job quicklr and under
the original cost estimate.

Delay schedule
for torhoi'I'OW
POMEROY - Schools in
the Meigs Local School
District will operate on a twohour delay Friday, according to
an · announcement
from
Superintendent
William
Buckley. School also opened
two hours late today
(Thursday) because of slick
roads caused by mot:C snow, it
was reported.

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
Middleport woman was
injured in a one-car accident Monday on Ohio
Route · 7, the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
Brooke A. Vaughan, 20,
261 Hamilton St. , was
transported to Camden Clark Memorial Hospital,
· Parkersburg, W.Va., follow ing the 12:05 p.m. accident,
the patrol said.
.
Troopers said Vaughan
was southbound when she
lost control of the car she
was driving on the snowcovered roadway. The car
slid off of the road and
struck a ditch.
The car had functional
damage, and Vaughan was
· cited for unsafe speed .

Divorce filed
POMEROY - A divorce
action has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Terry R.
Little, Rutland, against
Lora A. Little, Rutland.

Marriage
license
POMEROY - A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County
Probate Court to Joseph
Lee Rife, 21, Pomeroy, and
Kimberly Ann Beyer, 19,
Pomeroy.

Calls answered
POMEROY - Units of
Meigs Emergency Services
answered the following
calls
for
assistance
Wednesday:
CENTRAL
9:41 a.m., Pearl Street,
Middleport, Clara Belle
Riley, Holzer Medical
Center.
II :21 a.m ., Ohio Route
143, motor vehicle accident, Dave Davis, Holzer;
Jonathan E. Green, to St.
Mary's Hospital by helicopter.
4:52p.m., Rutland Street,
Middleport, Doris Lemley.
Holzer.
5:44 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Clinic, Leona Neutzling,
Holzer.
7:40 p.m., County Road
28,
Tabitha
Lawson,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Jail
•
repa1rs
await
permit

The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

Southern
from PageA1
comes at a time of transition
and nationwide education
reform.
Earlier this year, Ohio
won approval by the U.S .
Department of Education

VMH

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

from PageA1
POMEROY - Heat
and running water are
expected to return to the
Meigs County Jail and
sheriff' s offices soon,
and Meig s County commissioners are prepared
to pay for needed
repairs.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell
found frozen, leaking
water pipes in the closed
jail facility Tuesday,
and blamed the problem
on a broken boiler that
left the entire building
without heat for nearly
two weeks.
Commissioner
Jeff
Thornton
said
Wednesday parts for the
boiler have arrived, and
will be installed as soon
as a permit for the work
can be issued by the
Ohio
Industrial
Commission.
A boiler inspector
ordered the boiler shut
down and repaired earlier this month. Deputies
and office staff have
relied on electric space
heaters and blankets on
windows to fight the
cold.
After pipes in the jail
area froze and broke,
water service to the
entire building was also
shut off, and has not
been restored.
Thornton said the
needed parts for the
boiler cost the county
$13,000, and I11bor by
Johnson Controls, the
county's
contracted
heating and cooling
firm, will cost an additional $2,000.
Those expenses will
be paid from the county's general fund, but
not from Trussell's
appropriation, Thornton
said.

The commiss ion members serve as building
tru stees, and must approve
any further use of the
vacant hospital building.

State
from Page A1
the growth of Medicaid by
freezing
reimbursement
rates for all providers,
changing the criteria for the
eligibility of services and
creating a new formula to
pay for long-term institutional care.
In the past two years, the
stale budget has been
reduced by nearly $1 billion . Carnes said "it is
absolutely necessary that
we do more cutting" in
order to balance the budget
"because we can't have a
deficit that is out of
bounds."
· The state workforce has
been reduced by nearly
3,000 jobs. Stewart said the
budget crisis is an opportunity for legislators and the
governor to create a "leaner" state government that
Jives within its means.
"We have two choices,"
he said. "On the one hand
we can try to make our state
government Jive within its
means, or on the other
hand, ask working families
to give more: Right now
I'm more concerned with
making government live
within its means and to try
and protect families which
·are taxed enough already."
To balance · the budget,
Taft has asked the legislature to reduce local govern-

for an accountability plan -.
that will mea.sure how well
schools are educating
Ohio' s students. President
George W. Bush and U.S.
S~c retary of Ed&amp;cation Rod
Paige recognized Ohio and
four other states whi ch
highlighted plans to create
accountability plan s with
the federal No Child Left
Behind Act.

Consolidated,
which
operates Holzer Medical
Center
in
Gallipolis,
assumed operation of
Veterans Memorial in 1995,
but the hospital was finally
closed in 2002.
Next week 's open house
will include hospital tours,
Davenport said.
ment payments by $30 million. Stewart said "the state is passing on its budget
problems to the counties
and townships which solves
nothing."
Southeast Ohio counties
and townships will be hit
the hardest because they
rely on state funds more
than urban communities.
Stewart said he would do
anything within his power
to stop these cuts in local
government funding.
Taft also proposes a new
round of tax increases on
tobacco and alcohol which
he hopes will raise more
than $160 million.
Carnes said he is "philosophically 'opposed" to raising taxes, but he recognizes
that it is necessary. He supports an increase in ciga- ·
rette taxes, but said he will
have to "think about" the · ·
necessity of increasing - ·
taxes on. alcohol.
Stewart said an increase · in cigarette and alcohol :
taxes "hammers" smalt
business owners operating
next to the West Virginia
border.
Stewart said increasing
taxes on alcohol, which he
estimates will bring in ·
approximately $18 to $20: ·
million, is "not such a good .
idea" when considering the ..
amount of harm increased .
taxes will do to small busi -. · .
ness by driving customers
across the river.
I '

..

Even Outer Banks can't
escape Eastern U.S. cold snap
NAGS HEAD, N.C. (AP)
- A rare snowstorm hit the
Outer Banks Thursday and
was expected to drop as much
as I 0 inches- the ftrst significant snowfall for the North
Carolina coast in 13 years.
Dare
Countl,
which
includes most o the Outer
Banks, closed schools and
susP.ended trash collection
unul Monday after the ftrst 3
inches fell, and the state was
sending in snow plows
because the county doesn't
have any of its own.
Ace Hardware in Nags
Head had about 50 shoppers
stocking up on storm essentials Wednesday.
"We've sold all the snow
shovels we had, which was
about five," said manager
Renee Thompson, adding that
the shovels are usually used
for sand, not snow.
The fri~id air, which has
been hurtlmg in from Canada
for more than a week, froze
most of the country east of the
Rocky
Mountains,
and

schools were closed in several
states.
Minneapolis and Fargo,
N.D., weren't expected to
reach zero degrees Thursday,
and temperatures were forecast to remain below freezing
even as far south as Atlanta.
Wind chill warnings and advi-

sories were issued for more
than two dozen stales.
The Outer Banks are usually immune to such chills
because it is insulated by relatively warm water, said Roy
Pringle, a meteorologist with
the National Weather Service
in Morehead City.

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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 23, 2003

•

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 92
NBA roundup, Page 93

G

,~

~

"

nn

.-

I

Page Bl

~'

~.

'"""'

Thursday, January 23, 2003

Raiders rack
up penalties
The Oakland Raiders
racked up an alarming number of penalties en route to
the Super Bowl, right
through their flag-filled AFC
title game. Some Raiders
believe it's a product of their
outlaw image among offiCials. Others admit it's partly
due to boneheaded, hot-tempered play.

Shockey rookie
of the year
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Two
days after fining Jeremy
Shockey $10,000 for tossing
a cup of ice at fans, commissioner Paul Tagliabue honored the New York Giants
tight end with the NFL
Rookie of the Year Award.

Carter to play
in Pro Bowl

Prep basketball

.. -

Eastern·falls
Bv ScoTT Woi.J'E
Sports correspondent

WATERFORD. Scoring the first
nine points of the final quarter, the
Waterford Wildcats broke open a 4848 tie and went on to win a crucial
boys· varsity Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division basketball game.
The loss broke a six-game Eastern
winning streak.
Waterford (5-5, 3-1 TVC Hocking)
took advantage of a 22-11 fourth
quarter to wrestle away what had
been a torrid battle through three

quarters. Waterford took the early
advantage after one round at 14-6,
but Eastern fought right back with a
20-11 offset in the second frame to
lead at the half 26-25.
An upbeat third quarter saw 55
points tilt the scoreboard, resulting in
a 48-48 deadlock going into the final
round. Waterford came to life with
nine straight markers before
Eastern's Alex Simpson hit a field
goal at the 3:59 mark. Eastern got as
close as seven points but that is as
close as they came the rest of the
way.
Waterford was led by Billy Lee

aterford,:
with 23 points, while Darin Sampson
added 15, and Seth Arnold nine.
Eastern (9-5, 3-2) was led by
Nathan Cozart with 17 points and
Cody Dill with 16. Jason Kimes
added eight, Brent Buckley seven.
Nathan Grubb seven, Alex Simpson
four, and Brandon Werry added a
good floor game.
Waterford hit 25-of-4 7 overall with
7-of-18 threes, and 18-of-29 twos,
while collecting 33 rebounds (Arnold
6, Ball 5, Sampson 5). Waterford had
nine assists (Arnold 4 ), seven steals
(Lee 3, Ball 2), 18 turnovers and 12
·fouls.

College basketball

Major League Baseball

Rose holds
meeting with top·
baseball official 'i

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Tennessee coach Jeff
Fisher, coaching the AFC in
the Feb. 2 Pro Bowl in'
Honolulu, ensured the Titans
have a player there: defensive
end Kevin Carter. The Titans
were snubbed in the original
voting, despite winning the
AFC South.

NEW YORK (AP) - The
baseball commissioner's top
deputy met with Pete Rose
and his business agent in
Florida last month, part of
negotiations that could lead to
the reinstatement of the
sport's career hifs leader.
Bob DuPuy, baseball's
president and chief operating
officer, traveled to Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., to speak
with Rose and his business
agent, Warren Greene, on
Dec. 16.
Commissioner Bu!l . Selig
~_!flel:•'!!:9!-e.tl&gt;:. w~QI~Ri;llie in
MilwaUkee on Nov. 2$,
DuPuy declined to com-

Serena set
to play Venus
MELBOURNE, Australia
(AP) - Serena Williams rallied from two breaks down in · ·
the final set to beat Kini•:.
Clijsters 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 in the ·
Australian Open semifinals
and set up a fourth straight ·
major final against her sister
Venus.
Serena beat Venus in the ' ·
finals . at tlie· French Open,
Wimbledon and U.S. Open
last year. Qne more win
means she will be the first
woman to hold all four major
titles at once since Steffi Graf ·
nine years ago.
Venus beat Justine HeninHardenne 6-3, 6-3.
Earlier- at 12:47 a.m. Andy Roddick finally overcame Younes El Aynaoui 4-6,
7-6 (5),4-6, 6-4,21-19 in a4hour, 59-minute match to
reach his first Grand Slam
semifinal.
At 2:23, it was the longest
fifth set in the Open era,
which began in 1968. It
topped Mark Philippoussis'
20-18 win over Sjeng
Schalken in the third round at
Wimbledon in 2000.

Conradt has
SOOth win
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Texas coach Jody Conradt
became just the seco11d
women's coach to reach 800
career victories night when
the 17th-ranked Longhorns
beat No. 7 Texas Tech 69-58.
Conradt joined Tennessee's
Pat Summitt (802) as the only
women's coaches in the Boovictory club. Summitt got in
Jan. 14 with a win over
DePaul.
The 61-year-old Conradt is
800-262 in 34 seasons, with
one national championship,.

Rodriguez says ·
he's healthy

Nothlnc Measures Up To BOB'S
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MIAMI (AP) Ivan
Rodriguez says he's healthy,
and the Florida Marlins must
· agree.
The cost-conscious Marlins
expanded their payroll by
signing the I 0-time All-Star
catcher to a $10 million, oneyear contract.

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-

Dodgers made
$650 M offer
LOS ANGELES (AP) Former New York sports
executive David Checketts
has made a reported $650
million offer to buy the Los
. Angeles Dodgers, the Los
. Angeles Times reported.

- - - -- - - -- -·

Eastern hit 23-of-67 overall, hittiQg
6-of- 16 trey s, and 17-of-4 1 twos,
white going 7-for-9 at the line.
Eastern had 24 rebounds (Dill . 8:
Buckley 6), five steals, 15 turnovQrs;
nine assits (Cozart four and 19 fouls:
Eastern won the reserve game 4741 in overtime led by Chris Carroll
with II, Josh Hayman 10, and Derek
Baum and Adam Dillard eight each.
Matt Townsend had 13 for Waterfoid
and Travis Schaad had 12.
· ·
Eastern goes to Vinton County
Friday.

ment on the
status
of
negotiations·,
w h i c h
~came pubhe Dec. 9. .
"We' v. e
llot a pendmg appiica,.
tion. We're ·
continuing to
Rose
review that
petition;"
DuPuy said Wednesday. "The
commissioner has discussed
.it with Pete. Other than thai, I
don't have anything to say."

Please see Rose, Bl

Super Bowl

.

Marshall's Enoch Bunch , left, drives against West Virginia's Jamon Dunisseau-Collins
during the Capitai Classic Wednesday in Charleston , W.Va. (AP)

West Virginia
edges·Marshall
tHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Drew ,Schifino
changed shoes, got rid of
the headband and gave West
Virginia the necessary
spark.
Schifino scored II of
West' Virginia's final 17
points
to
give
the
Mountaineers a 65-61 victory Wednesday night over
Marshall at the Charleston
Civic Center.
"We were calling his
number down the stretch,
no doubt about it ," said
West Virginia coach John
Beilein. "He' s our best creator. He is so acrobatic with
what he can do."
The Mountaineers (10-6)
broke a three-game losing
streak and beat their crossstate rival for the fifth time
in six years.
Schifino made. just 7-of21 shots but tinished with
21 points and 10 reboun~ s.

"When he missed two or
three, that was a signal to
me to keep jlOi ng to him,"
Beilein sa1d. "Because
chances are, they were
going to even out a bit."
It took awhile. Schifino
had just four points at halftime. He changed shoes in
the locker roqm.
Then, during a timeout
late in the second half and
the score tied at 48-48,
Schifino took off hi s headband and threw it to the end
of the bench in frustration .
"I wasn't shooting well.
and little things just tick
you off," Schifino said.
He scored his team's next
four points and later made
back-to-back baskets to put
West Virginia ahead for
good, 59-55, with I :28 left.
Beilein isn't worried
about Schitino 's habits.
"I know he does change
those things quite a bit,"

Beilein said. "I don't pay a
lot Qf attention. I know he is
superstitious about what he

wears."

What it came down to
was West Virginia's leading
scorer was lethal down the
stretch, and Marshall's wasn't.
" It was tough at the end to
guard him because they
were running plays to get
him open," said Marshall 's
Ronald Blackshear.
Blackshear finished with
19 points, but he was just 3of-11 from 3-point range
and had three airballs over
the final two minutes.
"I don't feel good right
now," Blackshear said. "I
know I didn't play well and
didn't do what it takes to
help my team win."
Kevin Pittsnogle added
14 points for West Virginia.

Please see Marshall, Bl

Tampa Bay Buccaneers ' Lomas Brown (75) runs along sic;le
obstacles while practicing with teammate Cornell Green
Wednesday afternoon at the University of California-San Di~O
in. San Diego. (AP)
··
.

.

Raiders, Bucs put a)j
new spin on practic~. .
SAN DIEGO (AP) - So
much for the NFL's best-laid
plans.
For months, even years, the
leag ue has been carefully
choreographing every step of
this Super Bowl week.
The Oakland Raiders and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers have
made it clear they would
rather dance to their own
1 music.
Their latest slap in the face
of the NFL's fastidious planners came Wednesday : It was
a request , granted by the
league, to close portions of
practice to pool reporters who
normally have had unfettered
access to the workouts. ·

.

.

.. ,

"Th1 s acuon has not b~n
taken in the past, and l~e
PFWA sees no reason for it to
be taken now," said Adain
Schefter, president of the Pto
Football Writers of America.
Schefter said that for the
past 19 years - or since the
last time the Raiders were in
the Super Bowl pool
reporters were allowed to
watch entire practices.
Reporters around the league
have long held to the gentlemen's agreement not to report
on specific plays or formations, but only to stick to generalities, like injuri~s and the

Please see Practice, Bl

�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
Soya
W"*"&gt;n!70,1Eatom51
Eastern ... .. . 6

20
1t

22

11

-

59

Center Western Reserve 19. 14 (tie),
Holgate, Pilsburg Ftanldln-Monroe 18.

Prep Wrestling ·

Colorado 60. Kansas 59
New Mexico 107, W. New Meodco 49
San Franctsco 55. Santa Clara 52

Women

OHSWCA poll
Rocky Atver Lutheran W. 49, Rocky River
EAST
Waterbd .... 14
23 22 - 70 37
COLUMBUS (AP) - Tha fourth of eighl
Albany. N.Y. 75. Blngham!On 62
EASTERN (9-5, 3-2) - Jason Kimes 1
Rocky River Magnificat 49. CleYeland weekly state wrestling polls tot 2003, as
AHegheny 75, Wooster 65
6-6 8, Nathan Co.zat1 6 ().() 17, Nathan Hit. 32
compiled by lhe Ohio High School
Barucl1 63. NYCCT 15
Grubb 3 D-&lt;l 7. Alex Stmpson 2 ()..() 4, Brant
Wrestling Coaches Association with total
Rootstown 56. Mogadofe Fteld 37
Bloomsburg 86, Mansfield 76
Bud&lt;Jey 3 1·2 7, Cody Dill 6 0. 1 16,
points (first-place votes in parentheses):
S. Webster 60, 'Wavvrty 46
Boston College 72. Georgetown 60
Brandon Werry 0 0.0 0. TOTALS 23 7·9 59.
DIVISION I
Seaman N. Adams 53 f'Ortmsouth 45
Boston U. 59, New Hampshire 47
WATERFORD (S.S, :1-1)- Billy Lee 10
1. Lakewood St Edward (10) ....... 100
Spring. S. 65, Sidney. 64
Cabrlnl 80. Arcadia 72
:1-7 23, Se1ll Arnold 2 S.7 9, Joey Bakar 1
2, Massilk&gt;n Perry . .. ..
.. .. n
St. Barnard 57. Hamii1Dn New Miami 18
College ot N.J. 50. Rutgers-Newark 25
J-.4 6. Travis Harra 1 2·2 4, Carin Sampaon
.. 63
Thonwllle Sheridan ~ . ZanesviUe 3. WadswOrth . . . .. .
Eastern 52. Wasltly 39
6 0.1 16, OBVIO Mlllerl 0.12, TonyBaldw1n Maysville 49
4 . Mayf101d Vilage Mayfield .
. ... 61
Edinboto 66, Indiana, Pa. 65
2 ().() 5, Chad Ball2 0.0 5. TOTALS 25 135, Pickerington. . . . . .
. . .. 56
Tof. - r 65, Tof. Walta 52
Elms 80. Becker 47
24 70.
e. Garfiold Heights . . .. . . . .. . . . 44
Tof. Cent. Calh. 59, Tof . St. Ursula 29
Grove City 75, Weshninste[, Pa. 70, OT
3-poinl goals - EU1ern 6 (Cozart 5,
7 , Mentor. .
. . . . . . .. 40
Tof. Notre Dame 55, Tof. Aoilero 2B
Gwynedd Mercy 72, Alvernia 55
Clrub), Walel1ord 7 (Sampoon 4, Bakar.
8. West Chester Lakota W. . . . . ... 19
To! . Woodward 60, To!. Ubl&gt;ey 45
Haverford 47, Bryn Mawr 35
Ba-n. Ball).
9, Ctn. Moeler .
. .. , B
Warren Howland 73, Niles McKinley 30
· Hunter 54. York. N.Y. 40
10, Uberly '!Wp. Lakola East ....... 14
Wananoville 55. Bedlo&lt;d 46
Juniata 53, Albright 51, OT
Chelapeake 71, Cheshire River Valley
DIVISION II
Weoll""" 40, Elyria 21
Keen 80, Aietlsrd StOCkton 75
22
1, St. Paris Graham (8) ........... 60
Xenla 39, Kettering Fairmont 37
Kings, I'll. 70, Lywmlng 38
Cle. Collinwood 61, Cle. Hts. Lutheran E.
Youngs. Mooney 53. Youngs. Austinlown· 2 . Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit......... 70
Lehman 50, Medgar Evers 26
52
Filch 18
3, Cola. DeSales .. .
. ....... 59
Maine 64 , Vermont 38
Cola. Ohio School tor the 06af 71 , Torah
Zanesville W. Muskingum 26, Warsaw 4, Akron St. V-St. Mary ............ 51
Manhanan 68, Fairfiek:l 43
A&lt;odemy 53
River View 9
5, Chagrin Falls Kenston .......... 50
Marymount, Va. 74, York, Pa . 72
Copley 67. Norton 60
6, Bellvue .
. . 24
McDaniel 69, Gettysburg 62
Logan 55. Clalli)lOiio Clallio Academy 40
7,Maumee .................... 18
Messiah 53, Susquehanna 40
N. Bend Taylor 67, Cin. Jacobs o48
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a stale B. Mentor Lake Catholic . . .
. ... 17
Miami 79 , Pittsburgh 76
WodlMvrth 49. Bart&gt;erton
. . 16
. panel of 8P,Of18 writers and broadcasters 9, Sandusky Parkins . . . . .
Millersville 64 , Cheyney 53, OT
rB188 0No high school girlS basketball 10, Clyde ...................... 13
Montclair St. 55, Ramapo 54
Girts
teams in the second weeKly Associated
DIVISION Ill
Neumann
67, Immaculata 57
-.&amp;ly
Preas poll of 2003, by OHSAA divioions, 1, sandusky St Mary (B) . . . . . . ... 98
Northeastern 73, Stony Brook 70
Ashtabula Edgewood 62. Painesville with won-lost record and total poinls (first- 2, Bedford Chane! (1) . .
. ... 87
Pitt.·Greensbof\1 71 . La Rocha 49
Harvey 49
3, Grandview H1s. (1) ... .
place votes in parentheses):
. . 67
Pitt.·Johnstown 69, Califomia, Pa. 60
Atwater Waterloo 67, ~eninsula
DIVISION I
4, Baachwood .................. 62
Rulgers·Camden 59. N.J. City 38
Woodridge 45
1, Eleaveroreek (25) .. . . ... 16-0
334 5. Della ............
.. .. 39
SUNY-Farmingdale 79, Stevens Tech 75
A4lrclfll 45, Chealerland W. Geouga 38
2, Tol. Cent. Calh . (2) ...... 14.0
263 6, Marti ns Ferry ... . . ............ 36
St. John's 67 . Providence 62
AYOfl 55, Oberlin 42
3, Hudson (5) .......... 15.()
278 7. Massillon Tuslaw .......... . . .. 35
St. Mary's, Md . 71, Catholic 60
AVOfl La"" 44. l.alwwood 2B
4, Yoongs. Boardman (3) ... 1:1-0
234 8, Cadiz HIITison Cent. . . ........ 27
Staten Island 66. CCNY 58
Baavercraaf&lt; 56, Spring. N. 39
5, Lanca&amp;lar ............ 12·1
123 9, Cuyahoga HIS....... .
. ... 25
Washington &amp; Jefferson 80, Thiel 45
Bedford Chanel47, Chardon NDCL 46
6, Cols. Brookhaven .. .... 1o-2
119 10, Doylestown Chippewa ......... 14
West Virginia 67. Marshall 63
Burton Befttshire 35, Gates Mills Gilmour 7, N. Can. Hoover ........ 1:1-3
95
Sycamore Mohawt( .... . ...... 14
Wilkes 68, Delaware Valley 59
23
8, Cin. Mt Notre Dame . ... 13-2
89
William Paterson 76, Rowan 64
Byeeville Meadowbrook 53. Sarahsville
9, Zanesville ............ 14·2
n
SOUTH
Shanandoah 47, OT
10, Cln. Mother of Mercy ... 13-2
46
Carson-Newman 94, Lenoir-Ahyne S.
can. s. 43, can. Cent. Ce1h. 42
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Men
Catawba 78, Wingate 75
Canal Fullon INitiO, Alliance Marlinglon Cola. Mifflin •t . 12 (tie), Mt. Vernon,
EAST
Christopher Newport 85, Averett •1
37
Manofleld 29. 14, Cola. lndependaoce 27.
Boston U. 94. New Hampshire 64
Coastal Carolina 64, N.C.-Asheville 49
Canfield 37, Salem 24
15, Oregon Clay 21 . 16, Pickerington 18.
La Salle 78, Massachusetts 57
Columbus Sr. 74, Claylon St 65
Carrolton 483 Loulsvtlle 37
17, Xenia 12.
Saini Joeaph's 79, Fordham 46
E. Mennonlle 76, Lynchburg 52
Centerville 54, Vandalia Butler 45
DIVISION II
Sklrly BIOOk 72, Northeaolem 67
Eckerd 80, Rollins 56
Ctn . Hills Chr. Acad. 46, Cin. Saven Hills 1, Day. Cham ..Julienne (21) .. 13-2 236
Syracuse 83, Salon HaM 65
Fla. Gulf Coasl 71, Palm Beach Atianllc
35
2, Ottawa-Giando~ (7) . .. . .. 12.0 · 253
Temple 71 , Rhoda Island 68
49
CIS)'Ion Norlt1mon1 50, Troy 41
3, Thornvile Sharidan (3) ... 18.0 217
Vermont 65, Maine 59
Flagler 72, Webber 59
Cle. Glenville 36, Shaker Hts. 32
4, Cle. VASJ (14) .. , ....... 10.3 210
VIllanova 94, Boalon College 63
Florida Southam 64, Barry 51
Cia. M.L. King 48, Thomspon Ledgamont 5, Canal Fulton NW ........ 14·1 189
Weal Virginia 65, Ma,.hall 61
Greensboro
63, Chowan 62
38
e, Mllersburg W. Holmao (1) . 12·1 164
SOU1lt
liberty 71, High Paint 53
Cole. Ohio School for lha Deaf 63, Torah 7, KsHarlng AHer ...... , ... 12·2 118
Cincinnati 59, East Carolina 53
Lynn 63, Sl. Leo 43
Academy 51
e. Spring. Ksnfon Ridge ... .. 14-1 90
Florida 1fT, Vanderblll 75
Mars Hill 81, Presbyterian 78
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesun 51, Akr. 9, BaloHW. Branch (1) .
.. 13-3 71
G6orgta 81 , Tennessee 76, OT
MelhodiSI 59, N.C. Wesleyan 38
Hoban 47
10; New Albany , ....... . .. 14·2 e5
Georgia Tech 68, Elan 47
North Fk1rlda 68, Georgia College 87
Day. Meodowdale 81 , Day. Balmont 23
Others receiving 12 or more points: 1 1 ,
Hofstra 66 , William &amp; Mary 64
Tusculum 81 , Newberry 53
Day. Sllvell 70, Day. Col. WhHa 55
Copley 42. 12, Gtwnfleld McClain 24. 13,
Ksnlucf&lt;y 67, A4lburn 51
Virginia Tech 86, RUigOrs 84, OT
Dover 50, Uniontown Lake 33
Willard 17. 14(11e), w......,, Salem 16. 16
Louisville 71 , DePaul43
Winston·Salem 56, Virginia St. 50
Dresden Ttl-Valley Sot , New Concord (lie), Poland, Bellevue 14. 18, Hubbard 13.
Maryland 81 , North Carolina 66
Winthrop 74, Savannah St. 61
John Glenn 46
Memphis n , Houston 66
DIVISION HI
MIDWEST
E. Cle. Shew 56, Parma HIB. Valley Forge 1, S. Euclid Regina (22) . .. . 14·1 296
Mla.siaalppi St.._&amp;4, South Carolina 48
Alma 68, Adrian 53
30
2, Worthlnglon Christian (2) . 1:1-0 282
N.C. Sial&amp; 80, Duke 71
Aquinas 62, Concordia, Mich. 43
Eastlake N. 80, Cia. E. 25
3, Mona! Ridgedale (51 ..... 14-0 242
N.C.·Wflmlngton 65, Towson 53
Ball St. 96, Bowling Green 71
Garlield Hit. Trinfly 58, Mentor La"" 4, Waynesville (1) .•....... 14-0 205
Old Dominion 59, George Mason 4B
Belhel, Ind. B2, St. Francis, Ind. 73
Calh. 46
5, Srnllhvllle (1) .. .. . .... .. 14-0 179
Savannah St 60, Bethune·Cookman 50
Brlar Cliff 87, Sioux Falls 75
Ga1es Millo Haw""" 87, Middlefield e. Bucyrus Wynford (2) ..... IS.O 158
UNC·Clreeneboro 83, Gui~ 71
Calvin &amp;1, St. Mary's, Ind. 50
Cardinal 57
7, Youngs. Urtullne ..... .. . 13-1 138
Va. COmmonwealth 65, James Madison
Carlhage 70, Illinois Westyn 87
Georgetown 68, Cln. Felicity 27
8, Culala Marg81ella ..•... 12·1 73
56
Gr~nvHie 56, Huber Hra. Wayne 46
Cleveland St. 80, lnd.·Pur.·Ft Wayne 65
9, Hamler Patrick: Henry .... t 1·2 70
MIDWEST
Concordia, St.~ 56, Sl. Olaf 51
Hamiltoo Aou 68, Cln. Flnnevtown 50
10, Oak Hill .......... . ... 13-1 33
Bradley 83, Indiana St. 45
lartland 62, Richmond Hta. 48
Dakota Weslyn 66, Northwestern, Iowa
W. Llbarty·Salem ...... .. .. 12·2 33
Cern. M~hfgan 63, Toledo 74
Madison 63, Perry 49
84
Olt!818 receMng 12 or more polnls: 12,
III.·Chlcago 81 , Loyola of Chicago n
Maple Hit. 52, Parma 31
Defiance 84, Bluffton SO
Marlins Farry 28. 13, Girard 24. 14,
Illinois 75, Purdue 62
Maeslllon
Wuhlnglon
50,
New Archbqld 22. 15 (lie), Versailles, A1Water
E. Michigan 67, Ohk149
Kansu St. n , Nebraska 53
Philadelphia 49
Earlham 67, Denison 64, OT
Waterloo 18. 17, St. ClatrovHkl 12.
Michigan 75, Minnesota 63
McConnelsvllla Morvan 50, Crook&amp;ville
Emporia Sf. 51 , Washburn 51
DIVItiiOII IV
Mlohlgan St. 70, Pann St 38
43
Grand View 65, Mount Mercy 53
1, Mansfield Sl. Palefo (23) .. 13-0 318
S. llllnofl 68, N. lowa 7B, OT
Medina Buckeye 49, Colurmla 16
2, Cln. Saven Hills (B) .. .. .. 13-1 258
Hope 72, Albion 49
SW Mloaourf St. 78, UMKG 65
Minerva 51 ; Akr. Spring. 37
Huntington 68, Grace 57
3, Minster (3) . . .......... 1S.1 230
W. Mlcf1igan 76, Bowling Green 58
Minford 52, Wheelersburg 38
4, S. Wal&gt;sler ... . ....... . 14-0 221
Indiana St. 87, Evansville 70
WleconSin
Iowa 61
New La&lt;lngton so, Philo 33
5, Barfln Hiland (2) ........ 13-1 191
John Carron 85, Mount Union 84, OT
BOUlHWEST
Newliury 49, Fairport 31
6, N&lt;lrwt1lk St. Paul ....... . 12·1 155
Kalamazoo 55, Oliwt 51 ·
Arkenau 73, LSU 65
Olmsted Fils 48, Shaker HIB. Holhaway 7, Kalida ................ 12·1 103
Ken1 St. 78, Akron 68
Slephen F.A4lstln
Taxae·San Anlonlo
l!uMn 30
8, Shadvwlda .... ..... .... 11·2 118
86
'
...
•
Lake Erie 70, Pitt. ·Brlldlon! 45
Ollovllle 57, Ft. Jennings 41
9, New Riegel ............ 11·1 55
TCU 93, TUlane 84
Madonna 78, Cornerstone 64
Palneovllle Rlveraide 63, Euclid 59
10, Sf. Henry .. , ........ .. 10.3 44
Taxao·l'an American 71 , Soulhem U. 61
Marian, Ind. 90, Goshen 63
Parma Hta. Holy Name 82, Elyria Cath.
FAR WEST
Marietta n, Musldngum 63
40
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11
' Arizona 71 , Arizona Sl. 63
Missouri 65, Nebraska 53
~rma Normandy ·74, Garfield His. 52
(lie), Baallovllle, LoweiMIIe 20. 13, Berlin
cs Northridge 85, Long Beach St. n
Missouri Southern 79, Missouri Westem

--.,

_,_ ,,... ""''

Colld'ge Basketball

,.

Thursday, January 23, 2003

1•.

n,

DelroH al HouSion , 8:30p.m.
Porlland at New Orleans, B:30 p.m.
San Anfonlo at Ulah, g p.m.
New Jersey a\ L.A. Lal&lt;aro, 10:30 p.m.

55
Missouri-Rolla 74, Truman st. •s
Moun! Marty 72. Dordl64
Moun! St. Joseph 76, 48
N. lllinole 49, Cent Michfgln 43
NW Mis&amp;ouri St. 69, Cent. Missoorl &amp;I
Ohio Weslyn 73. Hiram 43
Oklahoma 61 , - 4 9
01lelbeln 89, Ohio ,..,_. 69

NFL Pllyoii-

Wikkord Ptayollo

St.-81,V'-BO

Satu":lcoJort, • ·

N.Y. Jets 41 , lndiN",tH• 0
Allan1127, Gr- Bay 7
Sundtr. Jon. 5

Wis.·-

'

AFC

Pittsburgh 36, Cl..elond 33

NFC

Sen F11ncloco 39, N.Y. Cllonlt 38
Dlvlofollll Ployollo

sountWEST

Baylor 88, TO&lt;U Aa,M 49
Colorado &amp;1, Oklahoma St. 50
Jarvfll Christian 90, Dellos 611
T.... 89, T.,... Tecl1 58
T.....san Anfonlo &amp;1, Sttpllen F.Aill1fn
50
FAR WEST

~on. n

Tennessee 34, Plltlburgh 31 , OT

NFC

Phlladelpllla 20, Atllnfl 8

au"'1irt"·'a

Redlandio 104, ~ 115

Tampa Bay 31, Son F11no1100

Pro Basketball
W
New Jersey .. 28
Boefon ...... 24
Philadlfphla .. 22
Orlando ...•. 23
Washington .. 21
New Yorfc .... 17
Miami. ...• . . 15

L
13
18
20
2t
21
23
21

AI'C

.500

7..

.425
.357

10).
13),

~Divlolon

W
Indiana ...... 30
Delroil ...... 27
New Orleans . 23
Milwau""" ... 20
ChiCagO ..... 15
Atianlt ...... 14
Toronlo ...... 10
C-and .... 8

L
12
14
20
21

27

28

P&lt;:IGB
.714
2).
.659
.535 7 ),
9
"
.357
.333 1~
20'!..

.233
35
.188
WESTERN CONFERENCE
33

Mldwwl DMIIon
W
L
1'1:1
Dallas ... , .. . 32
8
.800
son An1onlo .. 28
15
.63-1
U1ah ........ 26
18
.810
HOulfon ..... 23
17
.575
Mlnna1101a . , , 24
Momphlo •... 13
Denwr . , •... 10

18
.571
28
.317
31
.244
Plclfto DlviiiOn

W

L

S8ctamanto .. 31
Portland . ' ... 26

11

Phoanlx . . ... 25
L.A. Lakera ... 1e
Slallle ...... 1B
Slala . 18
L.A. Cllfll*l . 1B

16
18
22
22

23

25

I'd
.738
.825
.1581

.-483
.4SO
.43fl
.380

~­
O!Ionclo 103,
Clawland M
DafiU 107, Houa1Gn 68

SIC,.,..,., 108, New JerHy 102

Wf8dl .. 1 ,... GlmM
Milwlul&lt;ae 108, 11oS1on 87
Indiana 101, Toromo 68
Orlando 94, Chicago 81
P!tfladelphla 92, DetroM 63
Mllml 92. Phoenix 88
New 'lbrfc 97, Denver 68
Mlmetola 118, Sealtfe 81
- n d 112, Alllnla 110, 20T
Memphlo 98, San Anlonlo 83
L.A. Cllppe10 98, Ullh 68
New Orlaona 103, Wu11fnglon 94
Slalo114, L.A. Llklro110

e

Oakland 30, N.Y. Jo1110
CGnlerl- Chlmp!Onlhlpo
Suncltr, Jon. 11
NFC Champlonahlp
Tampa Bay 27, Phlladoiphll 10
AFC Chlmplonohlp
Oaklenq 41, TenniiiH 14
Super Bowl
SunHy. J1n. 2t
At Bin DiogO
OBklanO vo. Ta11111a Bay, 8:15 p.m. (ABC)

l'dClB
.683
.571
4&gt;
.524 6~
-~ 6~

Transactions
IIAIIIALL

Amtrfcon Lilt"'

BOSTON RED SOX-Agroed 10 Ierma
with tB David Onlz on a ona-yearcontrlet.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agroe&lt;l lo
22 ~ • terms
with RHP Rick WMa on a ona-yoar
contract.
NEW'tOAK YANKEE8-Agreed 10 larms
ClB with RHP Jon Lieber on a two-year con·
s&gt; traot.
TAMI'A BAY DEVIL RAYs-Agreed fo
7),
terms with C Jorge Fabregaa on a minor
9
league contract.
9
Nlllontf LlltUI
19\
ATLANTA BRAVEs-Agroe&lt;l fo lormo
22 .. with AHP Roberto Hernandez on a oneyear contract.
GB
COLORAOO ROCKIE8-Agreed 10
lerme wllll RHP Rich Clarceo on a millOO'
5
league contract.
6).
FLORIDA MARLIN8-AIJ80d fo forms
11.. with c Ivan Rodriguez on a on•year con·
12
1rac1.
12).
BABKETIIALL
14).
Natfonol
ATLANTA ,HAWK5-Signed G Corey
Banlamln lo a 1lklay con1r8ct
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Placed C Joel
Przybflle on lhe lnjunod 1181. Ac:llvttled C.F
Jamal Sampson from 1ha fnjunod llat.
ORLANDO MAGIG-~ F Ryan
Humphrey tram 1ha Injured lal.
Bl.AZER9PORTLAND
TRAIL
Actlvalad C Chris DUdley from lhe lnjunod
list Pllced C Ruben Bou~ Boumtjo on
1ha lnjunod llet.

a..w -

F00111ALL

-"-'~·

BUFFALO Bl~ CB Ronold
Hanlge, TE Ryan Neutlald, RB Oe'Mond
Parl!8r and LB Joth Stamar.
DENVER BRONCOB-Signad CB Jeff

~­

Brunson.

DETROIT LIONs-Announced lha 11110naflono of Kevin Warren, Hnlor vloo preefdenl ot busfnaoe oporalfona and ltgel
counsel, and Kenl Newllort, apecfal - .
laniiO lha
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARs-Nitned
Ken Andaraon quarttrbldcs COitCh, Alvtr\
Reynolda deMnSive- coach, and Mike
Hafucttak llnebaolcell coach.
OAKLANO
RAIQI:R8-Piaced TE
Marcus Williams on ifltured reeerve.

Dalla at Phlodllpltfa. 7:30p.m.
Slctlmenlo 11 Mlmphfo, B p.m.
New Jeroey II G-. Stale, 10 p.m.

F.,._

Phoenix al Orlando, 7 p.m.
Slaltfe 111-. 7 p.m.
De.- al Boafon, 7:30 p.m.
Sacramemo 11 Alllnla, 7:30p.m.
Dallal al New York, 7:30 p.m.
Waohfnglon at Chicago, 8 p.m.
L.A. Cllppero at Mlnneaole. B p.m.

pr-.

Clippers, Grizzlies end extra long losing streaks
~

Pro Football

St Ce1harina 59, Macalel10r 45
Toledo71, Bullalo 56
Trf.Sie1e 76, Spring Artlof 70
Wilmingfon, Ohio 78, Cepllalll6
Wii.-EIW Clai11 65, Wfo..Pfo- 54
Wio.-l.aCroue 81 ,
49
Wio.-&amp;ewno Pl88, -~ 62
Wio.·Siout 89, wta .. - Follt 7.
Willenborg 65, Kenyon 57

''

NEW YORK (AP) Know how long it had been
smce the Clippers won in
Utah and the Grizzlies
defeated the Spurs?
Long enough that the Salt
Palace was still standing and
the future of NBA basketball
in Vancouver looked bright.
Elton Brand had 24 points
and I 0 rebounds as Los
Angeles won at Utah for the
first time since 1989, defeating
the
Jazz
96-89
Wednesday night.
The Clippers had lost their
previous 26 games in Utah
since defeating the Jazz on
April 18, 1989. The Clippers
had never won at the Delta
Center and had lost 15 in a
row overall to the Jazz.
"Everybody knows the
trouble we've had winning in
this building, so it's a great
win for us against a teal, real
quality team," Clippers
coach Alvin Gentry said.
In San Antonio, · the
Grizzlies snapped a 21-game
losing streak to the Spurs
with a 98-93 victory.
"I only lost six times to
this team," Pau Gasol of his
two-year tenure with the
team . "I felt really good to
get a win against them, espe·
cially on .the road. We're try-

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Hornets 103
Wizards 94

points and Malik Allen 12 to
help the Heat win for the ·
fifth time in their last m. :
home games.

Pacers 101
Raptors 98

At New Orleans, Jamal
Mashburn scored 24 points
and Jamaal Magloire added
16 J??ints and 14 rebounds to
spoil a milestone for Michael
Jordan.
. Jordan scored 18 and sur·
passed Wilt Chamberlain as
the NBA's third leading scor·
er. Hefassed Chamberlain 's
total o 31,419 points with a
minute left in the first half.
But Jordan would score only
four points the rest of the
way and his teilm fell behind
At Los Angeles, Antawn by as many as 22.
Jamison scored 30 points and
Earl Boykins had five of his
16 points in the final 38 seconds.
Boykins hit an 8-foot turnaround jumper for a I 09-105
At Boston, Ray Allen
lead with 38 seconds remain- scored 34 points and Sam
ing, then converted a three- Cassell had his second career
point play for a 112-107 triple-double.
edge w:th 9.7 seconds left.
Cassell had 14 points, 16
Jason Richardson added 17 assists and II rebounds,
points for Golden State, while Michael Redd added
which won for the ninth time 16 points. Allen scored 14
in 14 games and pulled with· points with three 3-pointers
in one game of the Lakers for :n the third quarter when
fourth place in the Pacific Milwaukee stretched a 56-54
lead to 84-76.
Division.

Warriors 114
Lakers 110

Bucks 106
Celtics 97

Practice

~
Unlimited night and weekend minutes

At Indianapolis , Jermaine
O'Neal had a triple-double
with 18 points. 10 rebounds
and I 0 blocked shots.
Erick Strickland scored 19
points and Reggie Miller 16
as the Eastern Conferenceleading Pacers (3 0- 12)
couldn't shake the low ly
Raptors until the final seconds.

T-wolves 96
.Sanies 91

'.

At Minneapoli s, Kevin
Garnett scored 20 points and :
Minnesota finally pul togeth:
er a three-game winning
streak after failing in nin~ ·
previous attempts.
-·
Gary Payton led Seattl¢
with 20 points and 13 assisis
and went I 0-for-13 from the
floor.

76ers 92
Pistons 83
At Auburn Hills, Mich.,
Allen Iverson scored II of
his 21 points in 'the fourth
quarter.
The
win
was
just
Philadelphia' s third . in II
games and ended a threegame losing streak to
Detroit. Iverson added seven
assists, six rebounds and four
steals.
Heat 92, Suns 85
At Miami, Brian Grant had
16 points and I 0 rebounds as
the Heat overcame the
absence of Eddie Jones (flu).
Caron Butler added 13

Trail Blazers 112 :Hawks 11 0, 2 Of.
At Atlanta, Bonzi Wells.
banked in a running one-han: .
der with 1.4 seconds left iri ·
double overtime to send the .
Hawks to their si11:th straight
·'
defeat.
Derek Anderson had 21 _
points to lead Portland, whicli ·
led by as many as 18 midway
through the second quarter. -.

Marshall 's David Anderson
had 12 points and Ardo
Armpalu and Mar\iin Black
added 10 apiece.
Black made a pair of baskets and three free throws to
bring Marshali (8-6) from six
points down to tie the ~arne
at 48-48 with 8:35 remaming
before Schifino took over.
Monty Wright's basket
with 41 seconds left pulled
Marshall within 59-57, but
the Mountaineers made 6-of8 free throws in the.final
seconds to preserve the victory.
Marshall shot just 39 per·
cent from the floor in the
series' lowest scoring game
since
it
returned
to
Charleston in 1992.
West Virginia holds a 23-8
lead in the series. The last
five games have been decid·
ed by six points or less, with
two of them going into overtime.

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SubscriH '191tzy.
992·2156

Rose

1

you might even talk in your sleep.

Dr. Joey D. WilcOX4)0

•

WtAuA

Full5trvkl
'r.d

'

.'

--------~--------------------------------------~
return. Another unidentified Selig's meeting ~ith Hall of'
acquaintance said Rose had Famers. Rose is ineligible for
admitted privately that he bet the Hall of Fame as long a~
on games.
he is on the permanently .
from Page 81
:..
Baseball officials have said banned list.
that
for
there
to
be
an
agreeoriginally
planned
t@
Selig
Newsday
reported
Wednesday that a friend of ment, Rose must admit he bet talk with them on Jan. 17 irl
Rose, who was not identified, on baseball, an accusation he Los Angeles, then called ir
off. He said last week he still ·
said the former player was has repeatedly denied.
"When there's a time and intends to talk with them but
prepared to admit he bet on
place
for Pete to make a com- has not set a date for a meet•
baseball.
ment,
he will. Pete's always ing, possibly before the stan
The Cincinnati Enquirer
reported Friday that two of been very cooperative, and of spring training in mid·
·
Rose's acquaintances, whom will continue to be. For now, February.
we
still
have
no
comment,"
Rose
agreed
to
a
lifetime
it did not identify, said he is
ban from baseball in Augus' ·
willing to publicly admit that Greene said.
Baseball officials say the 1989 following an investiga·
he bet on baseball, as long as
he gets full reinstatement in next step is to schedule tion of his gambling.

Spring

from Page 81

992-2124

had 12 points.
Memphis hadn 't defeated
the Spurs since Feb . 12,
1997, when the franchise
was based in Vancouver. The
Grizzlies are 4-26 against
San Antonio.
''With a young team like
we are, the effort and will·
ingness to learn has been ter·
rific," Grizzlies coach Hubie
Brown said. "Tonight's win
definitely shows how hard
they have worked down the
stretch."

while, opened the week by to the heavily guarded and
thumbing their nose at the sealed practice field on the
schedule. Faced with travel- far side of the lot.
Of course, he can't control
ing from the NFC title game
from Page 81
in Philadelphia, back home to everything, as was apparent
overall tempo of the work- Tampa, Fla., and then to San when reporters Jim Trotter of
outs.
Diego, Bucs coach Jon the San Diego Union-Tribune
At the Super Bowl, the par· Gruden skipped a news con- and T.J . Simers of the Los
.
al
ference Monday to stay Angeles Times watched porllcipating teams have ways beh' d d
k
h
had final edi( on the content
:n an wor on t e game tions of the Oakland practice
of the pool report.
plan.
from a bluff outside the
The
NFL
told
the
Raiders
So, closing p11rt of the prach
·
d Chargers' publicly financed
facility.
tice didn ' t have much of an w at was go:ng on, an
effect on the rerorts that coach Bill Callahan jumped
Trotter and Simers were
on
the
chance
to
bug
out
of
chased
by NFL security
Sports h
Peter King o
guards . from an area that
·
d
Illustrated and Dan Pompei t e.,.Eevent, too.
very
m:nute
an
every
overlooks
the field where the
of The Sporting News wrote hour counts, so I wane
t d to Ra:'ders were
work:'ng. A
')'
th " c Jlah
'd
and distributed to the thousand media members who uu :ze at,
a
an sat · police officer told · them he
. d
S
.
not mentioning that the flight had a letter from the property
·
h
converge on an Diego.
from Oakland to San Diego
. Which !U\!1 . ~~gge&lt;l the, takes less than two hours: .
mffanager saymg t ey were
questiori:
Why
restrict · Of course, Raiders owner 0 • 1:mlts.
?
They left and went to the
acce sS .
AI Davis has a long history of
b s
o· c
..
"There w~re leg:!Imate paranoia about his own pnva- near y an tego ounty
concer~s ra1sed by both cy and _ how to put it?_ an Sheriff's Department and
teams, . .Jea~~~e. ~pokesman.. innova~'\(e: . approach to gath- received permission to watch
Gre~ A:elto eXpla:t:!~· ·' , "". etirig ; l'tltelligence on other from a second bluff located
A:ello said only· 20-to-:30 '.teams.
on public property outside
minutes of the -practices were &lt; The story of Jets coach the practice facility.
Again, they were confront·
closed, and, would be again Walt Mi~haels shouting at a
on Thurs&lt;)ay. ·
·
.
lightbulb in the visitors' lock-,; ed by NFL secur:t:r, but were
"This is how it is going to er room dllring halftime of a,. all owe~ to rema:n on the
be from now·UII';'"·Aiello said. playoff game in Oakland is bluff w:th the ~armng they
It seems natural that the le~enib&amp;. He' was sure the could not ~se b:noculars to
Raiders would be involved in jo:nt was bugged.
watch practice.
shuffling. · Chiefs coach Hank Stram
Over at the Bucs' workout,
the schedule
They ' ve always had a knack and dozens of others felt the nearly 75 fans watched some
for doing their own thing.
same way over the years.
individual def~nsive drills at
On Tuesday, they were 50
Meaowhile, just before the the UC ~an D:ego campus, a
minutes late for their inter- playoffs began this year, state umvers:ty. They also
view sessions at media day: Davis had a fence erected to could not see the closed
They blamed an ABC-TV bisect the parking lot at the · drills.
crew for running late with . Raiders complex. Apparently,
"It's the American way,"
Jerry Rice ·a ndl'im Brown.
he was afraid spies and Gruden said. "I'm not para·
The Buccaneers, mean- reporters ·would get too close noid about anything."

Marshall
Pan~~~oy, ai

ing to build for the future;
get this team in the right
direction. "
Elsewhere, Golden State
beat the Los Angeles Lakers
114-1 10,
New
Orleans
topped Washington I03-94,
Milwaukee downed Boston
I 06-97,
Indiana edged
Toronto
I 01-98,
Philadelphia beat Detroit 92·
83, Miami defeated Phoenix
92-85, Minnesota downed
Seattle 96-91, Portland
nipped Atlanta 112-102 in
double overtime, Orlando
topped Chicago 94-91 and
New York defeated Denver
97-88.
After goin$ up by as many
as 17, the Clippers were able
to thwart several comeback
attempts and end their run of
misfortune. ·•
Corey Maggette added 13
points, including two free
throws with 16.2 seconds left
that sealed the win.
"We start turning this thing
around before the All-Star
break, we' II be excited to
come back," Brand said.
Grizzlies 98, Spurs 93
At San Antonio, Jason
Williams added 18 points, 10
assists and no turnovers,
while Drew Gooden started
in place of Shane Battier and

'

'

811 w. "'*'St.,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

NBA

•

Piqua 47, Tro-dison 46
Poland seminary "8. Struthers 41
f'or1smoulh Notre Dame 42. Ironton St.
Joseph 18
ROYerlna SE 45, Garrell&amp;vifle Garfield 26

Prep Basketball

Thursday, January 23, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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Should Include These Items
• Include Phone Numba' And Adclrels wh. . Needed
new•PIII*I ~
70
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. .•d. .R.un. .• ••v.·.............•.c=.~.w.~_.~Y.~
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HELP WANrnD

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C· 1. Beer Carry Out permit foster care giver. You will be

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Meigs County, send letters for the care of child in your

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Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
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HFuWANrnD

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needed,

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Send Resume to

The B est Products.
The Best Benefit&lt;.
The Best ;wor,k
Environment,

STNA's
~re you a dedicated, caring
Individual who would enjoy
a part-tirrle job that offers
great fulfillment and creative
opportunities? Scenic Hills
Nursing Center has a new
position available. You must
be a state tested nurse
aide. It is from 4:00pm to
8:00pm. Your responsibilities would Include assisting
with evening meals and doing evening activities with
the residents. If you are in·
terested, please call Kristi
O'Dell at (740)446·7150. Or
stop by and apply in person
at 311 Buckridge Road, Bidwell , OH {Right behind
Spring Valley Cinema). We
are and equal opportunity
employer.

____

to Recent
Growth

• Oil

_HELP_w_ANim_...,l

Truck Drivera, Immediate
hire, 'ctass A COL required,
excellent pay, experience
required. Earn up to
$1,000. per WNk.CaU 304·
Help wanted caring for the 675·4005
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage ,
new shifts: 7am·3pm , 7am- _ W_E_N_E-ED-TO-''l:_A_L_K_"_
5pm, 3pm- 11pm, 11pmTO Youll
7am. caii74Q-992·5023.
A Great Opportunity Awaits!
HVAC: B·Service tech/in·
stallers wanted: Commercial The Ohkl Valley Publishing
is seeking a
experience a p~ us. Mu$1 be Company
reliable &amp; haiJe own tools. highly moti\lated individual
Travel &amp; weekends some· who is intersted in an
times req. 3·5 yrs. experl· "OUTSIDE ADVERTISING
SALES CAREER",
ence, $10·$15 hr. Send re·
with
unlimited
earning
sume &amp; inquiries to: G.C.
Hunt. PO Box 43, Middle· polentiall lntersted??
pon, Oh 45760
WE NEED TO TALKI
McClure's Restaurant now
hiring aU 3Jocations, full or •Salary Plus Coromission
part·time , pick up appl ies• -Great working environment
tion at location &amp; bring back •Monday- Friday 8am-5pm
10:00am
&amp;
between
Send your resume to:
10:30am, Monday th ru Sat·
Ohio Valley Publishing
_urday.
:___
P.O. Box 469
Sales
Gallipolis, OH 45631
AI U.S. Cellular, we lake
Fax: (740)446·3008
pride in our customer locus.
or email:
We respect and empower I
A
boyervmydallytribune
.com
our associates to do what's
,,......,.,..., .. ,,_..,
I
right and do it well. Come 130
I.I'IOU""""-"
•
Jo1n our team!
1•
Retail Wlr•le..
Con1utt1nt· Fllrt·tlme
Gelllpoll• and waverty
T•rry Ganen
S8.20/Hr. Ptut Comml ..lon
740-992-6145
You will be our front line in Congratulation•! You have
delivering superior customer won 2 free movie tickets to
satisfaction while achieving the Spring Valley 7 Gallipo·
store objective s. Responsi· lis. Call the Sentinel for de·
bilhies include assisting cus- tails. (740)992·2155)

EASY WOR K I EXCELLENT tamers in buying wire less
PAYI Assemble Products at equipment and service, as
Home. CRII Toll Free 1_800 _ well as perlorming daily re·
tail store duties. The sue467-5566 Ext. 12170
cessful candidate will have
Office help wanted: must be 1 year of retail sales experineat. courteous &amp; reliable. ence. excellent wrlnen and
W/good writi ng &amp; communi- verbal communication skills,
cation skills. Able to learn &amp; . PC profic1ency and HS dlgrow withe business, com· ploma or equivalent. Wireputer skills a plus , $8 hr. to less industry experience is a
start. Send resume &amp; inqui- plus. Required flexibility to
ries, to: G.C. Hunt, PO Box work evenings. weekends,
43, Midcll9port, Oh 45760.
and holidays as n&amp;eded .
Your commitment to total
customer satisfaction Is re warded wllh an excellent
benefits package.
CALLUS NOWI
Use the Toll-Free number:
(877)881-.IOBS
Calls will be ta~ en fro m
• Sales Consultant
8am· Midnight Eaatem
Visit our website at:
• Pans Depanment
www.uscallular.com
Counte r Sales
U.S.Cellular is a
• Parts Department.
drug-free workplace. EOE .

Delivery

16
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Scenic Hills Nursing Center
has an immediate opening
fo'r a part-time dietary aioe
for the 5:ooam to 11 :30am
shift, or 11 :00am to 7:30
pm. We are an equal opportunity employer.
If you are a friendly, energetic person who would like
to join our dedicated team
of caregivers, please call
Justin Frum at (740)4467150 or stop by and apply in
person at 3 11 Buckridge
.Road , B1dwell, OH. (Right
Behind Spring Valley Cine·
mal

~~

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1.~

·--oitiiiiiiliiliii.•,l
'
Gallipolis C~rwr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Gall Todayl740-446-4387,
1·800·214·0452,
Reg 190·05-12748.

"11'1180~-~W~ANIEIJ._._._..,
To Do

~-------pi
~rges

Portable Sawmill,

don't haul your logs to the
milljuat call304-875-t957 .

Will babysit in my home
hours till 7 e\lening. Have
references. Mother of two .
(304)882· tt3 t

Wicked COncepts- · custom
exhaust, engine transmission rebuilds, detailing,
tune-up, speed parts, pow·
der coating, oil changes.
tires, batteries, restorations,
special orders, Mon-sat.
8:00am-9:00pm, Sundays
noon till 6:00pm, 315 Ash
Street, Middleport, Qhlo,
(740)992-4551
1{ I \1 I .., 1 \ I I

riO
,

HOMiili
roR SAIE

2 BR, 1 bath house wnarge
rooms. Well maintained
home in the country, just 10
"ced
minute. ' rom town · P11
'--1 t $56 000
below appraa
· ·
•••n04
C aII (7401 ~
3 Bedroom newty remod·
eled, in Middleport, call Tom
Anderson after 5 p.m.
992·334a
--------3 bedroom, single bath,
large family room , fireplace,
tar:ge living room, complete
new kitchen, utility room. 2
car garage unattached, 10 .
mllea South Gallipolis. In
Eureka, close to Locks &amp;
Dam. Phone (740)256-6949
(740)256-6971 Serious In·
quires Only.
---------

3 bedroom- 1. 112 bath,
w/new 30x30 addition. Lo-

~

,-

I

(740)441-1519

2·3 Bedroom house located
• In New Haven, WV. $375.
mo Deposit $300. no Pets
1989 Clayton Westwlnd, (304)882·3652
2BR, WID hookup. range,
·
260 State St., Gallipolis, 1
refrigerator &amp; electric furBR, fumlshe&lt;l or unfumlsh·
nace. Located on a rented ed
$350 month no pets
lot a 641 Lake Dr., Rio
·
'
·
Gra~. 1 minutes walk to (740l~ 8 3Mlt.... ""' - .,:~.~...,

~

·~

~

campus. $10,000
(614)614-5151

080. 3 bedroom

house, Rio
Grande
area, $500 plus
deposit, no pets. (740)441 ·
:.1:.::9;__ _ __ _ _
1998 SChu~ 16 x 80 2 BR ~15
wl Heated Garage 1-740· 3 bedroom, In Middleport
992• 1987
:::.::...::::.:..______ w/1 car garage, $375 a
2001 14x80 Oakwood, 3 month
plus
deposit,
BR, 2 bath, all appliances (740)992-3194
InCluded. We'll make securi· 3br. House located in Maty depos~, you take over
WV· $495 · + Ul''t'
son,
IR IB&amp;.
payments of $370 month.
No Pets. (304)n3-588t
(218)351 -7088 or (216)257·
•
6 room Furnished house for
1485.
rent in Mason. (304)7732001 Fleetwood, 28x40, 5764
3BR, 2BA, all electric wlap· c ·lean warm 2 bedroom
pliances.
Must ·Move,
• 504 till home In Pomeroy, wlopliOn·
$30.000 . 17401388-o
1 b
$400
ood
Saturday; (740)983- t 900 af· 0 uy,
a mo.. g
lor Saturday.
relarences. (740)698·7244

cated on 12 acres with
stocked pond. City SChools,
(740)446·8901
--------4
BEDROOM
HOME "Get Your Money's Worth"
at Coles Mobile Homes, St.
Foreclosure, only $14,900, At. 50 East of Athens. DellvWon' last. 1-8Q0.719·300t eries, set·ups, excavating,
Ext. F144
toundailons, sewage sys-4 -b-r.-. l- r.-&amp;- dr- ". -2- b_o_th-s-.-112
- terns, driveways, heating
basement, lg. kitchen wllots and cooling along wtlh parts
of cupboards, ale-fan &amp; and service. You should acheat, water softener, new capt nothing less. Since
windows, lg. front porch 1967 we are Cole's Mobile
overlooking river, will con·· Homes where you ~Get
aider trade, (740)992-9012
Your Money's Worth:
Uke new, 14x72 , 3 bed·
Brick Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2
room, 2 bath, drywall, rent·
bath, Qarage, on rlver, 5 ed lot, new berber, lmmedimiles south of Gallipolis.
(740)441-8817
ate occupancy $16,900,
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, (740)992·7680
Nice lots available tor up to
16xBO mobile homes, $11 5

r

For rent or sale- 101 Pleas·
ant Ridge, Pomeroy, $375 a
month,
$375
deposit.
(7c..:4.:;:0lc:6.::;98:.-6:.7:.:83=-----~
For rent or sale· 2 bedroom
house In Portland Long Bot·
tom area, $300 rent, $300
deposit. (740)843-5425
House for rent in West
Columbia on At 62 1 mile
from Mason Walmart OfW,
whirl po ol tu b, 2br. Lg.
K I t c h 1L R 1 D e c k .
$400 ·mol$400 · ec. Depos11 . Fu11 Basement or w fll con·
ld
111 (304)77"9167
s erse ng.
o7'
Small 1 bedroom home in
Middleport, references &amp;
deposit required, (740)992·

s

=

~6:ii154~~--~--.,

Ii

water included, (740)992·
2167

All rNI utate ldvertl81ng
In thl1 new.PIIper II
IUbfect to the Fecter.l
F•lr Houalng Aet of 1M1
which mtk" It lleglil to
ldvlnlu ..any
preft,Nnce, llmtt.tlon or
diNrlmiMtlon bUed on
n~ea, color, religion, • •
fllmlllll ltatUI Of Mtlon11l
origin, or 1ny Intention to
make1ny euch
preterence,lllmltMion or
dlacrtmln.tlon."
Thl1 n.w•paper will not
kMWingly.....,t
ld¥trtl...,..,. tor rell
HteW which lain
vtoiMion of the lew. Our
,.....,.. .... '*-by
Informed tl'wt an
ctw.lllnp Mfvlf11111'd In
thl• ,......,...,., .,..
IVIIIII* on 1ft eqUIII

-unity-.

II \\\CI\1

..
,_.Oirolm.JNny
_ _ _ _._,..

Well maint8ined Ranch
style home in Racine, 3
bedroom, I bath, living·
room.
kitchen , laundry
rOOm , t car ga rage, Iarge 2 bedroom house, 127 Kin·
d eck• sIorage bulldl ng, aII eon Avenue . $500 month
·
(740)949 • plus deposit
I I
. No .-ts,
e Ie ct rIc war,

_fo_ra_q_u_lck_._._le_. _ _ _

Land home packages. No
INO'OCEI
payments while under conOHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· struction.
Little
or no
lNG CO. recommends that down payment requi red .
you do business with people (740)446-3218
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mail until New 2000 sq ft home, 10
you have investigated the minutes from Hospital.
Complete above ground
offering.
pool with Jiorch. drtveway
and garage toundatior •.
Price below appraisal.
(740)446·3384.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Stick bul ~ In t 998, 3 bed·
room, 3 bath fireplace . over
No Fee Unless We Win!
t acre, asking $104,900 .
. t ·888·562-3345
(740)983-()730

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&amp;

;;;;_.,GE

MOBILE HOMES

14 x 60

LTWI

n..........

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Furnished 3 rooms + bath,
upstairs, clean, no pats.
Reference &amp; deposit re- Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·
quired. (740)446-1519
ques , 1124 East Main on
Grac ·,ous living t and 2 SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 74()·
bedroom opartm nts t VII 992·2526. Russ Moore,
•
a
•
lage Manor and Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $2711-$348" Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
7''------'--- Approx. 1ott of Used Kitch•'•od
1 b Apt 740 en cabinets, base &amp; wall ,
M
ern
r
.
•
(740)446-0390
counter top, sink, faucet.
garbage disposal, range
Now Taking Appllcatlons- hood. All fair condition.
35 Wesl 2 Bedroom Town·
$250. Ca ll (740)446·4514
house Apartments, Includes tor more Information.
Water
Sewage, Trash,
$3SO/Mo., 7 40-4-46-0008.
B aby items, Household
Tara Townhouse Apa rt- items, bird cage, Llnle Tyke
ments. Very SpaciouS. 2 work shop, fridg &amp; stove.
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 (304)675·2801
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted. BUAN Fat, BLOCK CravAdult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Ings, and BOOST Energy
tio, Start $385/Mo, No Pets, Like You Ha.ve Never ExLease Plus Security Deposit penencocl.
Required, Days: 74()-446WEIGHT- LOSS
3481 · Evenlnga· 740 387
REVOLUTION
•
·
•
0502 ·
New product launch OctoTwin Rivers Tower Is , .. ber 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
(740)441-1982
cepting applications for
waiting list fo r Hud-sub-- Desk top computer, Dell Dl·
sized, 1· br, apartment, call mansion l Series, $600 ;
Haines Brothers Baby
675·6679 EHO
Grand Plano , (740)4 46·
Two · 2 BR apartments
available in Syracuse $200. 7693 aNer5 30pm .

;,:r7~room, ~=~~~~!,~·J.~~r.";:!;

2 balh , front poreh, storage
bid
11 1
p
g. a e ectrlc.
orter
area.
$400.00 per mo.

112 acre lot on TvtY\Ilft Lake
, __ ..
w112x60Traller$16,500.00
now
.
•
513 500 00
(740) 247·1100

M-F No Phone calls Wed .
4 rooms and bath, stove/ re- (740)245-9047
frigerator. Utilities paid,
$400 month. 46 Olive Used furniture store, 130
Street. (740)446·3945
Bulavllle Pike. We seN mat~
tresses, bunk beds, dressAnartment for rent2br 2217
ers, co uches, appliances,
~North Main Street. $275.
much more. Grave monuMo. + deposit. No Pets.
ments. (740)446·4782 Gal·
Available Feb. 1 (304)675·
llpolls, OH.
4900
BEAUTIFUL
APART- Washer, $75; ·Dryer, $75;
MENTS AT BUDGET PR~ Electric Range, $75; Frosl
CES AT JACKSON ES- Free Refrigerator, small,
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive $75; GE Washer &amp; Dryer
set, S21io; Norge rolrlgera·
from $297 to $383. Walk to
1
tor. nice , $150; Kenmore reshop &amp; moviea. Call 740- frigerator, white, same as
446·2568. Equal Housing
new, $350; Dining lable w~h
~Y'!Ity. .
, / ..
4 -~ halto, '"$1.Gfi;,&lt; w. ...,
Deluxe, 1 BR Town House, have bargains on other
near Holzer, CIA, Economi- Items. Skaggs Appliances,
cal gao heat, WID hookup, 76 VIne Street, (740)446$359.00
plus
utilities. 7398
(740)446·2957

Borders Wayne National ~~------. . .
Forrest, excellent hunti ng,
$38,000 (740)379·914 t
t and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, fumlshed and unfurPropert; for salt~ , close to nished, security deposit reOreen SchOOl, 1/2 acre with qulred, no pets, 740-992·
2 mobile home IOta. Great 22,8.
Investment· Own 1 &amp; rent 1.
1 Bedroom Apartments
ti
c:iial~l1.;..41;,:9~19;.;,.;..1-09~
9
2.;..4_~., Starting
at $289/mo, Wash~~n: . er/ Dryer Hookup, Stove
__
n i'IJ. ... U-1'
• and Refrigerator. {740)441 ·
1519.
Will pay top dollar tor prlma
1 or 2 BA Appt. lor Rent.
land. New home builder.
Utilities Pd., No Pets
(740)446·3093
992·5658
Ul \ I \ I '
1br. Apanment Available
now. 2br. Apartment avail&amp;·
ble Feb. Water. Trash In·
eluded. (3041882·3131

I

2 bedroom garage Apt, 2nd
Avenue. Gallipolis, $275.00
1 ·3 ~edrooms Foreclosed a month, $275 deposit You
Homes From S199/Mo.. ~% pay utilities. Reference reDown, 30 Years at 8.5% quired. (740)44&amp;-3117
APR. For Listings. 80().319·
MOdem 1 bedroom apart3323 Ext. t 709.
ment (740)446·0390

8UWJING

1o &amp; 12 wide portable yard
buildings, available In 9'
thru 21' metal side &amp; root.
6'x6'6" mini roll ·up door;
40x64x13' shop building, 1·
3 entry, 3-12x12 overheads
guitar pointed ateel sides &amp;
roof, insulated roof, erected
price
$20,106.00;
30x40x9'4' garage," 3-10x8
lnsul overheads, 1-3' entry,
Insulated root guner, 1'
overhang . painted steel
sides &amp; roof, erected,
$10,157.00; 24x42x9'4" go·

rogo,'l;(l' llirtry, ~20x8' In-

F'o.

u~
~n
~
. . . . . .Gooosliiiiilii;;.....
-,

Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs. Problems? Need
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
740-«13·4525

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PubUc Noticosln ~~~:~:~1

AKC Golden 1 Retrievers.
$200 each. (740)B43.Q013
Beautiful markings, AKC
Bo.11er pups, 6 weeks old,
shots, current, parents on
premises" (740)379·2639

SHERIFF'S SALE
The Benk of New
York a1 Truetee c/o
HomeEq/The Money
Store

'

VI.

No matter what direction
you turn you can always

1

1

find It In the
classlrieds!

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

~~
.. .
::
..::

~
3

~

v~~~ 1$
...
~,

4

Like New Sofa bed, End Ia·
...1
bte, Aoll·away bed, white
Aolngarator Uke new. TV &amp; Dll:~-.-:::;;;;;;;;;;;~ _.

For Sale: Reconditioned
washers, dryers and refrlg· New &amp; Used Heat Pumpseratora. Thompsons Appll· Gas Furnaces. Free Estlance. 3407 Jackson Ave- male&amp;. (740)446-6308
nue. (304)675-7388. ·
NEW AND USED STEEL
GoOd Used Appliances, Re· Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
conditioned and Guaran- For Corn:rete, Angle, Chon·
teed. Washers , Dryers, nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
Ranges, and Refrigerators, For . Drains, Driveways &amp;
Some start at $95. Sl&lt;oggs Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap MetAppliances, 76 Vine St., als Open Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam·
(740)448· 7398
4 :30pm. Closed Thursday,
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. (740)448-7300
(740)446-7444 1-877-830·
9162. Free Estimates. Easy Waterline Special: 314 200
financing, 90 days same as PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1' 200
cash. Visa/ Master Card. PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
Bras.s COmpression Fittings
Drive- a· little save alot.
In Stock.
Oak Pedestal Round Table RON EV~NS ENTERPRIS.
&amp; Four Chairs. (740)446- ES Jaellson , Ohio, 1·800537-9528
(
0946

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...

Time for Frost Seeding Pas· ;
l Ure and Hay Fields. ATV "1

Broadcast Seeders, 12 volt, ':f
High Quality. Fits moat ATV, ;:$
$295. Jim's Farm Equip·
menl, (740)446-2484
~

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iri;Fo',;..;.;;;.;,:.;;.:;.;;:.;......., "'
LMsrocK
~

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.
Condi-

Boarding, Training,
lionlng, Indoor and Outdoor
riding facilities , trails and
wash bay. t -740·446-471 0

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tr.'l~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

F16

Al.rlni
FOR SALE

"

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94 Cavalier, f~lr conditio n, ::
$1000 OBO. (1~0)258-1446 ,.

•••'
••
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-·•:.
•

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Now Renting

The band Rhythm Station
will be performing at the
Pomeroy Eagles Ariel
#2171, Friday January 24
and Saturday, January 25

BINGO
January 25, 6:30 pm
first pack $10.00
After that $5.00
Starburst $1750
American Legion,
Middleport ·

Robert Coe and
Llaa Coe, II al.
Meigs County
Common Pilei C.u
No. 2002-tV-414&amp;
In purauance of an
order laaued from
Common Pleae Court,
within and for the
county of Meigs,
Stele of Ohio, I will
otter for ule lit Public
Auction on February
6, 2003 to be hald on
the Courthouaa IIepa
at 10:00 am of uld
dey, lhe following
Real E1tele to-wit:
Being In Section
23, UN, R.15W of the
Ohio
Company
PurcheH and being a
parcel created out of
the Riehle A. Coe
property (V. 23, P. sn,
Mligl Co. O.RI, aald
new parcel being
boundotd
and
deecrlbecl •• followa:
Beginning lit the
lnteraac:tlon of S.R.
143 1nd C.R. 15 (Old
S.R. 3451; thence
11ong the centerline
of C.R. 55 (Old S.R.
3461
55' 40' 46"
Wttllt 2n .08 feet to an
Iron pin Ml by lhla
aurvey, palling an
Iron pin Ml by thla
aurvey et 25.21 !Mt;
thence elong the
llluleh CreblrH end
Thelml
Wooelrum
property (V. 213, P.
138, Mllge Co. Deed
Recordel 1111 followIng two celle:

s.

1.

s.

78' 55' 31"

1!111 5.70 t.llt to en
Iron pin 111 by lhle

eurvey;

2. I. 10' 41' 11"
1!111 381.14 r.t to I
polnt In the oenllll11ne
of I .R, 143, Pilling
1n Iron pin llil by thll
eurvey 11 330.1S feet;
thence elong lhe
oent11111ne of I .A. 143,
s. 011' 10' 00" Eell

41.37 feet to the point and
Savlnga
of beginning, contain- · Company Ia selling
lng 1.110 acres.
for cash In hand or
Subject to all legal certified check the
fallowing collateral;
-nta.
The abova dotacrlp1988 FORD F150
tlon was made In 1 FTEF14N4JLA48990
accordence with an 1994 FORD
actual survey con- MUSTANGGT
ducted by Eugene 1FALP42T2RF129574
Triplett, P. 5 6766 on
The Fanners Bank
April 19, 20, 24, 1996. and
Savings
Bearings are baaed ComJIIny, Pomeroy,
on the Aolllng Hilla Ohio, reservea the
Subdlvtalon and are right to bid at this
Intended on ly to sale, and to withdraw
expreaa
angular the abova collateral
prior .10 sale. Further,
mea•uramant.
Baing 1.110 acrea The Farmers Bank
Savings
surveyed from Parcel and
I.D. 10500550,005,
Company reserves
Located at 28490 the right to reject any
Old Stele Route 346, or all blda submitted.
Albany, Ohio 45710.
The
above
Said property haa described collateral
been appraised at will be sole "aa Ia $25,000.00 and can- where Ia", with na
not aell for leu then expreaaad or Implied
two-thlrda
of warranty given.
For further Inforappral11mant.
Terms of Sale; Ten mation, or for an
percent of the highest appointment
to
collataral,
bid, cuh or oertllled Inspect
check, due on the day prior to sale date,
Cyndle
of ult, balance due contact
upon conllrmauon of Rodriguez at 992the aale by tha Mllga 2136.
County Court ot (I I 22, 23, 24 3TC
Common Plell , the
dead will be lulled
upon tha balance
PUBLIC NOTICE
being Jllld.
Aalph D. Tru11111 ,
Mllga County Sharllf
In compliance with
Theodore K. Manley,
section 5705.27 o1 the
Attorney
Ohio Ravlaed Coele,
Manley 1o Dial, LLC
243 North Fifth StrMI, the Meigs County
Budget Comm1111on
3rd FloOr
will meat to review
Columbua. OH 43215
the 2003-2004 budg(1) 18, 23,30
ela ol tha E11tern
Locel, Melga Local
. PUBLIC NOTICE 1nd
Southarn Locel
School Dlatrlcte. The
NOTICE: Ia hereby Commlnlon will mMI
that
on at 10:00 a.m. In the
given
Slturdlly, J11nu1ry 21, Auditor'• Office o1 the
Melga County Court
2003, II 10:00 l.m.. I
public 1111 will ba houat on February 3,
held II 211 Will 2003.
Parker
Second
Str11t, Nancy
Pomfl'oy, Ohio, In 1111 Grueatr, Secretary
County
perking lot ol The Melgl
Fermara Bank and Commlulon
Savlnga Compeny. (1123 !TC
,The Fermera Benk

STORAGE

BUILDERS IDC.
New

H omes •

Siding •

Vinyl

New Garages

• Replacement

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Dean Hill
New&amp;:· used

lOxlO
10x20

South Church St .
Ripley, WV 25271

740-992-1717
Pomeroy

BISSEll

992-2272

HARTWELL

Sl Rl 7 Goeglein Rd.

Your Right lo Know, De6ve...t Rigltt lo

j

(304)675·6633 aHer

10%

fStJr: il tf":r: (l ;n rlr:

JET
Congratulattonal . You have :::
AERATION MOTORS
won 2 free movie tickets to
Ropalrocl , New &amp; Rebul~ In tho Spring .Valley 7 In Ga~ ~
Stock. Ca ll Ron Evans, 1- llpolla. Ca!l the Ae.~lster to- 7
800-537-9528.
day lor detalla.(304)676· -:
1333
· =-~

;~~

www.wvpcdr.com
doctorOwv dr.com

·:

Pit Bull puppies and yearlings, had shots . Call any"lime (740)245·9491

M

992-6635

~P[CIAL

-,.,
,.,'
••
·•

I

www.herbandlot.com

·'

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• BuckEt Truck

(10'x10' 61Drx20')

I-IOU DAY

·1

740-992-7996
or visit website:

..'
...
·:

Tree Service

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

IB80N
6RAPHIC8

~

Miniature Doberman pups,
reglslered , 6 weeks old,
(740)992·4410

JUST launched II!
LOSE WEIGHT
. NOW! Burns FATI
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energyl
All Natural/Doctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie

A-JMN-SIOIWE
(740) 992-3194 (304) 675·5282
992-6396

.

J

••

JONES'

We Make House Cella

~

r

TFt&lt;

Terry Lamm
(740) 992-0739

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

~

!

Miniature Dachshund, call
aHer 5:00pm, (740)4463243

I

Owner:

PC DOCTOR

•

Block, brick, sewer pipes, fll
windows, lintels, etc. Claude .:
Winters, Rio Grande, OH .,
Call740·245·512t .

BUI H1mmlck

All pack $5.00
Bring tbls coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

•
,

CKC German Shepherd
Pups, have Service Backgro unds. Black 7 Tan. $250.
(740)446·3856

Jeff Warner Ins. .
'
992-5479
'•

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

•"'•

AKC Oerman Shephard
puppies, $250" (740)2868726

Cellular

•

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGOll71
I&gt; very Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every month

992-297

l

t

(740) 992·2222 or
(740) 446-1018

'I

l'

r

Agency

'

740-992-5232

..•

sui overheads, in sui roof,
~
painted steel sides &amp; rool 1'
overhang gutter, erected
price $9987.00; Precision
Post Frame Bldrs, 740..742·
4011 , 1-800-396·3026
I

'1

Community Act1on

B. D. COnsTRUCTIOn

l

SUPI'l.IES

more information,
call Gallla Me i~s

For

For all your Home
Improvement needs
'No Job To Small"

'•

i

i

•I

•

Dining room suite &amp; hutch, __
very good condition, $200,
Wurlitzer Spirit piano, oak
&amp; Trash, No Pets, applica• (740)949•2169
ca binet
with
matching
tion, Reference &amp; Sufficient
FireWOOd tor sale, $35 you bench and books. $2500
Income to Qualify 740-.378·
pick up, $45 delivered . Excellent Corldition Antique
6H1
(7 40)256-6702 (740)256· Wardrobe , beautiful condi8106
Hon, $2,000. (740)387·5095

$400.00 dep ·you pay utili!·
iesJtrash PU, no pets. Ap3 paroe!s or tots, totaling ap- J)llcatlons available M·F, 8·5
prox. 3·112 acres on Sldd· 0 1403 Eastern Ave, Gal- ..._
more Rd. overlooking 160. II polls. Call 446-45 t 4 for , /2·1 acre mobile home
more Into.
Call (740)446·3897
lots. $125 month plus utlltt4· 1/2 acres in VInton, no re· Beautiful Rlver View Ideal los. (740)256· 101 5
strlctlons, wooded. Call For 1 Or 2 People, AeterenCentury Homes, Holley and ces , Deposit, No Pets, Fos· Trailer apace for rent. $125
Assoc. (740)286-HOME.
ter Trailer Park, 740-441 · per month, plus deposit.
Priest's Trailer Park. Water
1
Patriot area, 20+ wooded ~OCit8ir.;..
· ~-----., Paid. Coli (740)446-3644
acres , county water &amp; alec·
APAR'IMEMli
\ III H 11 \\I!IO..,I
tric available, homesite.
FOR RENT

r.

For
Delivery
Call
The
Daily

•
!I

t

Skin, cut, wrap
All boneless cut
740.949-0706
740.949-7600

You could be
eligible for FREE
help gettl ng
back to work

••

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

~=~:aT~:r::~ ~~=~~::~ ~

2 + bedroom home, Bur·
dette Additton. Extremely
clean. Affordable utilities.
No Pets. $375. Month +Deposit.
Ref.
a
must.
(304)675·7906

PRECISION DEER
. PROCESSING

Laid on;a

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

•

1r

773-15412

Arevou

~~~

1 BR House in Racine, with 2 bedrooms· 6 month lease Oak Student desks- very Wooden futon, Play Station ~
water, sewer, trash $325. Garage Apartment, utinties sturqy, Oak veneer on plyMonth, No Pets (740)992· paid, no pets, no parties. wood, 4-drawers. Can be
5039
$550 month plus $550 de- used as a computer desk. 7933
111
•
----~---- posit. (740)446-0241
42"x2•". $&lt;10. Call 6·6pm ,

Wanted! Good credit customers to purchase new
home wlland. $0 down to
qualified customers. 1·5
acre
tracts
avallabte.
(740)446·3093

3090
I -~~"""~--.,
j M~SI_f~

ForeciOied sw on 2 acre
:W"-.0.:~;;;;;;;;;~ tract, $500 down to qualified
~
buyara. Call (740)446-3670

l'l.O

i

1r

l

740-667-0363

and Small Home
Maintenance Joba

2002 Honda 350 Rancher -::-:--::-::-------

C&amp;C General Home Mainte4x4, 3yr extended warranty.
~-•iiiitiiiiiiolllliirl Perfect Condition . $3,800. nence· Painting, vinyl sld·
·
lng, carpentry, doors, win·
dowa, baths, mobile home
clean, $3950; 1886 OMC 1985 Ford F-150, 302 auto, (304)875·6325
1/2 ·ton pickup. 2 wheel 4x4, good truck In &amp; out, 2003 Suzuki 500 Vinson 4- repair and more. For free
drive, runs good, drives lots of new parts, $2500, wheeler, 489 Mud tires. estimate call Chet, 740-992·
good, $800. (740)256-6430 (740)742·1400
$8,700. (304)875·2790
6323.

l

concele~n~y;~~~~··~~~·:m~L~E~n:oo~.•~m:•~d::be~ropor.n:ed~on~the:~flr::ot~d~e~~ot~;,;~::l ·l

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 457'23

Jim Ruark

Electrle, Plumbing,

1996 Yamaha Tlmberwolf
BASEMENT
ATV, $1700 OBO. Now 17
WATERPROOFING
Inch Chrome Wheels tor
Unconditional lifetime guarGarage Kept. Well Main- 99-03 Mustang Cobra, antee . Local refere nces furtained, 87 Ply Reliant. T1H $700, OBO (740)256-1621
nished. Established 1975.
wheel , cruise-control, and
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
300·EX,
more. Runs &amp; lOOks good. 2002
Honda
0870, Rogers Basement
Make good student wor1&lt; or (740)742-2404
Walerproollng.
travel car. $1,2001.080. 2002
Honda
300·EX,
"(304;rl;;;67.;;5-.;13~2;.;.7_ _ _,
(740)742·2404

''
•',
.
·..•

POLICIES: Ohio votloy Publtlhtng ....,.. t11e nght to oc1t, roJ4Ct, or
..
Trlbune-Sintlnei-Aegllttr will btl rnpon•_. tor no men than the COlt of lh;~Piot occupied by ttlt enor 1nd only tht ftrll: ln!tO'IIon. We 1h11t not
1ny loa• or upanMihlt rnutlt from thl publlcllion or omlnion of .-.ldvertlatment Conectlon will bll mlde In tht fl111t avaU•blt ecltlon. • Box
n atweya confidential. • Current r • card appltll. • All ,.., •tltfl 1dvert1Hmtnta are •ubfect to Ute Fedtr~l Fair Hou1lng Act or ·1988. • This

• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include Complete

e~~

- -

'

PAm

I

88 Chevy 1500 4x4 , 340, 5 Road Runner. $500 firm,
sp, high miles, $2500 OBO, ~
fj0)742-4011

DEPOYSAG

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

FUlLY

1000 S.R. 7 South

Coolville, OH
45723

1-740.667-0363

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

Le ~ m8

COimiCTIOI
Bu ilding Ol.itr 30 y~ars
Footers, Fou~dation,

..-·
"

Depoy's Ag Parts

"Nofmel
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
ond Rnanclal Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264.'

Take the PAIN
cut of PAINTING!

I IUS

'r·

Best Service at
the Best Price

do 1t fer youl

M)~.. .\1/fe~~t E? . ..r tfr;ft'.~r

UNI1PIImNI

Skin, Cut, Wrap
&amp;Freeze
All this for only

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

$45.00
31645SR325
Lanvsvllle, OH
740-742-2076

lnxuralfCt WvT.t lnduJtd

(740) 992-3320
Email: bledeaOzaplink.com

Open 9111ll·5pm
f-m" ..u m~ •e-. f!O:'I' in llo•me piclwr
C all m i"oM a ll )otUI COnlfl"'ICf ncc.1-.

(740) 446-1812
A sk~-'

(1/Jout.:mr
St n"irt l' lut~1·!

Hill 's Self
S torage
• Tonneue Cover •

Vent visor • Bug
Shield

•

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Oh io
45771
74D-949·2217

.

&amp; Full Line of

Other A ccessories
\!I, j,

•I I

I i111"

i 740) 992 -5 B22

Wolfe Heating &amp; Cooling

=

• 10 yr parts &amp; labor
• Service on all brands
• Residentla1 &amp; llghl commercial
• www.americanstandardalr.com
GAS, FUEL OIL &amp; HEAT PUM PS

"SALES &amp; SERVICE"
CUSTOMER CA RE DEALER

Toll Free: 1·877-466-1234
WV034816
(740) 992-1385

YOUNG'S
ROBERT
CARPENTER
BISSELL
SERVICE
• Room Addltlono •
CONSTRUCTION Romcidollng
•New Homes

• New 01ragee
• ElocirlcOI l Plumbing

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

• Roonng • Quttera
• VInyl Siding • Pointing
• Po11o ond Porch Docks

Free

Stop &amp;Compare
7122/TFN

Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

P.,.roy. Ohio

..

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Disabled man's sexual fling
meets·parents' disapproval
DEAR ABBY: I am writing
·not for advice, but to help others. in a situation that I recently encountered.
I have a dear friend I' II call
"Kent" who has muscular
dystrophy. Kent is 95 percent
paralyzed, but mentally he is
one of the most intelligent,
mature, open-minded, wonderful people I have ever met.
At age 40, he is confined to
his parents' home, to his bed
and to a ventilator. Kent lives
every day knowing that his
next breath could be his last.
Kent has never had a girlfriend nor any sexual experi·
ences. although he has all the
normal sexual feelings and
desires that any able-bodied
man would have. For the past
four years, Kent has asked me
to arrange a sexual experience
for him. He called and asked
again recently. so I agreed.
I contacted an escort service
and before I could finish two
sentences, the manager said,
"Don't worry about it. We've
got it covered- and we 'II do
it for free." The encounter
went very well. The woman
had a medical background
and was not shocked by his
disability or life- support
devices.
When Kent's religious par·
ents found out (they were not
at home at the time), I was

I

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
banned from their house, from
contacting him, and his phone
book suddenly "disappeared."
I regret that I may have lost a
dear friend, but I am more
saddened to realize that a 40year-old man can be held captive in his room by his disabled body and by his parents' morals ;llld values as
though he were a 13-year-old
adolescent.
Abby, there must be many
"invisible" people with disabilities that we never see
because they are trapped
inside. I hope this letter will
open the lines pf communication in some homes, and also
make people understand the
normal, natural needs of these
individuals. - VIC IN GRA·
HAM, N.C.
DEAR VIC: So do I,
because the situation you
describe is tragic. Too often,
assumptions that have nothing
to do with reality are made

about people with disabilities.
One of these is that people
with disabilities do not have
sexual feelings. Nothing
could be further from the
truth.
Healthy relationships help a
person build self-esteem.
They should be encouraged
because they are an important
part of a person's development. It is wron¥ for a person
in control to proJect his or her
own moral values on another
adult who is dependent. For
parents to confine an adult
child, to prevent that person
from having relationships.
and to discourage that person
from living life as fully as
possible is to me both cruel
and ignorant.
I would only hope that
someone in your community
who understands this could
intercede and explain to
Kent's parents that there is
room for nontraditional relationships in cases like this
one.
DEAR ABBY: I just turned
21 and am engaged to be married in May. My fiance and I
have been together all through
college, but I have 'been feeling hostile toward him for the
last couple of months. I get
mad for the stupidest things
and don't know why. Lately
I've been feeling I want to go

out and "experience life."
Should I call off the weddiEgJ
OVERWHELM
WITH CONFUSION IN
OKLAHOMA
DEAR
OVER·
WHELMED: You are overdue for a frank talk with your
fiance. You may be experiencing pre-wedding jitters or are
feehng trapped. Whether the
wedding should be postponed
or called off is up to the two
of you to decide. You both
would benefit from premarital
counseling.
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.DearAbby.com
or P 0. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

ACROSS

51 Monaa1er·

' '"

1 Competing 54 Indian

groups
6 Retirement
55 Expensive
plllll
11 -Babies 56 Ask too

much
12 Dull payer
57 Slllndlngs
13 Valuable
58 Reeltllllt
lur
14 Planets'
DOWN
courses
15 Prelerence
18 North-forty 1 ActriiBMIIes
unit
2 Orange
17 -aaltls
vegelablaa
19 Hindu
3 --for
prince
keeps
23 CEO's auto,
perhapa
4 Baseb•ll
26 Summit
tum•
28 Musician's 5 "-whlzl" ·
8 "Quo Vadls"
job
co-llar
29 Grills
31 Brick type 7 Coal
8 Geisha's
33 Releaee
2wds.l
aeCIItof'Y
!
9 Fetch
34 'Sawed
logs"
10 Ballgame
at at
35 Blasting
11 Poker
material
stake
36 Run-In
12 Gourmet
39 Traipse
coffee
about
40 Put away 16 Make a hole
In one
gear
42 Not up yet 18 Brown·
truck logo
44
on
20 Socrsles'
46

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-·

forum
21 Agreed
22 Like
smooth
brandy
23 Mr.
Musburger
24 Slogan
25 Dlagulae
Item
27 Topeka loc.
29. Dell orders
30 Part ol
UCLA
32 Lab or
boxer
34 SaultMarie
37 Easy
victim
38 Tummy

muscl11

41 Ruin

43 Student•'
quarter•
45 Votealn
favor
47 Faatens
48 Clarinet
kin
49 Snug
relreat
50 Compass .
dlr.
51 Aries mo.
52 Lingerie
Item
53 Com crib ,
54 Senorita's · ·
aunt

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Several new and unique inleresis or undertakings may
come 10 your attention in the
year ahead. It will be worth
your while to look into them,
because one or two could be
real winners for you and your
loved ones.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - An arrangement you
have with a good friend that
has gotten off to a bad start
can be rectified today . But
you 'II need to act on it imme·
diately while both are in an
amicable mood.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Bypass those who lack
clout and head right to the top
dog today ' if you have any
hope of completing a critical .
assignment. You'll get no
place dealing with underlings.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Chances are all the
pieces of the puzzle are in
your hands and by now you
should have had time to figure out where they fit. Act m
accordance with the way

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 112

Prosecutor cites
conflict in case
BY BRIAN

J.

REEO

Staft writer
POMEROY - Prosecutor Pat
Story plans to file an application
for the appointment of special
counsel to represent county commissioners in their latest court battle with Sheriff Ralph Tru ssell.
Story said Thursday he would

BY J. MILES
Staft writer

you've reasoned things out.
your pos.ition if things haven't subtly, and then spring your
TAURUS (April 20-May lived up to your expeciations trump card when nobody is
20) - If you give free reign lately. You should be more expecting it.
to your desires today. they ' ll astute about matters at this
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23direct you in ways that will time.
Dec. 21)- Don't wait to be
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) asked: assume control of a soserve to captivate a person
- Put your best foot forward cial activity that seems to be
you're eager to impress.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) today and be your most ingra- in limbo that involves several
- Two situations that have tiating self. Something quite friends . You're the one who
appeared to be going no place beneficial could come out of a can get things rolling today.
can be linked up today for a social involvement at thi s
CAPRICORN \Dec. 22successful merger. Once you time.
Jan. 19) - Do not procrastiSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. nate any longer about going
spot how. act on it immedi22) - By using an indirect after something that is imporately.
CANCER (June 21-July approach today, you should tant to you . Conditions are ex22) - Thin_gs could suddenly . be able to make great head- tremely favorable at this time
take a turn lor the better today way in your busmess deal- for g,etti!1g what }'fill want, but
in relation to a malter that has ings. Play things slowly and they might not be lo"morrow:
given you some concern. It
looks like everything is going
to be finalized to your satisfaction.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Answer
Your fast-thinking brain will
13
1st DOWN
to
put you head and shoulders
previous
above the masses today .
2nd OOWN
·-l.L
.
While others are st ill figuring
Word
20
things out. your quick speed
Scrimwi II have the job completed.
•..ill...
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
mag\! ·
- Today may be the day to
JUDO'S TOTAL
161
1-2l.o:l
make adjustments to improve

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AVERAGE GAME 1110-170

by

.-

JUDD HAMBRICK

0
FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- to 7-lettllf word !rom the 1et1e11 on Hch ~ardllne.
Add I'Oflts to eaCh word orlener USilg SCOring Clrectlotls at ~ - Seven-tener
word! get a OO.point bonus. All words can be lould In Wllbslef'l New Wortd

.....

~

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMOIIROW

lllcllona'l.

UIIGUit fOR
liiiiLL
l'l'
OOE:IH'T
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1'lii!T
NO ONE
W£ I&gt;IIU.

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OOEIII'T
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~

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um.e

fMTA5~

file the joint application on behalf
of himself and the board with the
Common Pleas Court, asking
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill to appoint
an attorney to represent the commissioners' interests in the new
case.
On Jan. I 0, Trussell's attorney,
Herman Carson of Athens. filed a
complaint with the Fourth District
Court of Appeals, asking the court
to issue a writ of mandamus
requiring
comm1sstoners
to
increase their appropriations for
Trussell's office operations.

I "''""'" .,,. . . . .,

I RE6RET TIIAT I DRANK
TIIAT LAST ROOT SEER ..

&amp;L,.IT I 'M NOT s.-,.YIN6
YOU CAN 'T READ COMICS!

I

POMEROY - Period dance
and costume workshops will be
offered in Meigs and Vinton
counties over the next few
months in preparation for the
September bicentennial ball.
The event wiD be staged on
the Chester Commons following a Civil War battle re-enactment,
The re-enactment and ball
will be a signature event in the
lineup of activities over the
state marking the celebration of
Ohio's 200th birthday.
Jean Milton of Parkersburg,

Please see WOrkshops, A5

Wetland system
likely at landfill site
Pomeroy motorists were reminded this morning of just how cold it was. The time and
temperature sign at Farmers Bank and Savings Co.'s main office recorded 8 degrees
about 8 a.m. today. (Brian J. Reed)

Temperatures dip in
season's coldest spell
Stall report

reported this morning at
the Gallipolis Water
Treatment
Plant.
Thursday's high reached
only 15.
There is no official
weather reporting station
in Meigs County, but the
temperature
sign
at
Farmers Bank read only 8
~egrees about 8 this mommg.

Brutally cold weather
gripped Gallia and Meigs
counties, as well as the rest
of Ohio on Thursday and
this morning, with temperatures reported below zero
in some areas of the state.
An overnight low of 6
degrees Thursday was

'

z SHtlons- IZ Paps

W.Va., a dance caller and
instructor for many years, will
be teaching the box waltz, reels,
and circle dances at workshops.
The period costume workshops will be taught by Pam
Schatz. These are for residents
interested in learning about
period costumes for men,
women and children and/or in
making their own for the bicentennial ball.
Fabrics, a variety of styles,
and accessories of that time
period will be on display.
Charge for the dance workshops. open to all ages, is $3 per
person for each class. The ftrst

..

,....

',·'

Temperatures reported
elsewhere in Ohio included I degree in Fremont,
zero in Akron and minus 2
in Mansfield - bitter cold
but falling short of the
Cleveland record of minus
I 0 for the date in 1936.
Wind chills made it feel
like minus 20.

Please see Temps, AS

County to
comply with
EPA orders
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY
Development of a wetland system at Meigs County's abandoned landfill is likely the most
cost-effective and practical
approach to treating a contamination problem there, according
to County Commissioner Jim
Sheets.
Sheets met with representatives
of
the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency Wednesday, and said
cqmmissioners plan to notify
the agency before Feb. 12 of
their plans to seek funding for,

and complete, the necessary
repairs at the Salisbury
Township landfill site.
In 1998, the EPA notified the
· county
of contaminated
groundwater at the site, and
issued a notice of violation.
A feasibility study completed
by the engineering fmn
Burgess &amp; Niple Ltd. suggested
a number of alternatives for
addressing the problem, including the creation of a wetlands
system to combat leachate from
the landfill.
The EPA maintains infiltration of rain water and migration
of ground water is producing a
contaminated leachate from the
landfill, which in twn is contaminating groundwater near the
site - a common problem for
abandoned landfills.
Last month, Sheets said

Please see Wltlancl. AS

WORD ON THE STREET

'

Gov. Bob Taft is considering raising the "sin" ta,xes on cigarettes and alcohol in order .to balance
bUdget. Tjiese ~pie do not think this is
. .
. .
.the best approach to solving the $720 minion buqget 4efiicit.
·
'
, I jpink thai if· 'lltey

A3
B4-5
B6
B6
A4
A3
AS
B1·3
A2

Jt~st ·. mana~ .the bud•

l:l.ave .a .llttl'e
· ,t h""' woul&lt;!11't
.. need.f9',~l!.!ll 'clg·
. . taxe~4 an&lt;! put
on us.
·
they

·

'

It's just a sin tax. It's
~rnor's Idea of
what. l!fnll!.'ll the ~ver· ·
'cljJarenes' and .
Iiili olthe reach of
ordinary man1what Is
he going to lax next?

.'

No, I don't

·. thin~ .cigarette
'taxee .sl\ould go

,up. · Tiley are
fllrl!idy too high .
ask Is.

. or

. -'.IOhri ~.
.

Byraeuee

'

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

USED TO LOVE

COMIC.

Bicentennial
workshops
on tap in Meigs
News editor

RACINE - Southern Local
School District made better
marks on the state report card
this year because of a solid formula for improvement.
According to Superintendent
Bob Grueser, the district scored
nine out of 27 standards for a
grade "academic watch" last
year. The district scored 12 out
of 22 standards for a grade of
"continuous improvement" this
year.
The reason for the improvement, which Grueser said would
be an on-going trend, is that
teachers have a plan and are
working together to better
implement learnin15 strategies
and alternative teaching meth·
ods.
·
Mickey Ku.csma. principal of
Southern Elementary, said her
teachers have implemented vertical and horizontal alignment
strategies to better address each
individual student's needs.
Fourth graders and sixth
graders have to take a barrage of
state proficiency tests each year
including writing, science, math
and reading.
All other grade levels take
same type of tests, known as
Terra Nova tests, each year.
As the students advance grade
to grade, class to class, teachers
are able to track their progress.
Teachers track student progress
"horizontally" within the grade
and "vertically" by checking the
student's overall progress compared to previous scores at earlier grade levels.
This vertical and horirontal
approach is further enhanced
across the curriculum as teachers work toward leaching skills
necessary for success at the next
grade level. .
·
Southern High School princi-

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

including those relating to housing
prisoners, from "his own budget
when the costs should have been
borne by the commissioners themselves.
"As a direct result of the unreasonable funding ... (commissioners) have prevented Trussell from
fulfilling and performing the
mandatory dutie s required of hi s
office," Carson 's complaint states.
"(Commissioners) have unlawfully reduced the appropriations to
the sheriff's office to an amount
that is unreasonable."

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Index
J.lAS !.IE FOR60TTEN TJ.lE
SLOGAN OF TJ.lE LEGION .
• JE NE RE6~ETTE RIEN " ?
'' 1 RE6RET NOTJ.liN6! ~

denied Trussell's request in the
common pleas court for funds to
pay Carson to represent him in his
ongoing budget battle with the
board.
At that time, Lotz cited the lack
of a writ of mandamus, ordering
such funding as a reason for denying Trussell's request.
In hi s Jan. I 0 complaint, Carson
alleges that commissioners have
under-funded Trussell's office
operations since he first took
office in 2001 , and that Trussell
has been required to pay expenses,

Brrrrrr... lt's cold!

~EJL

Tt.lE FAMOUS SERGEANT OF
~E FOREIGN LE610N LOOKS
SAD TONI6t.lT ... IS ~E

Story said he
felt his representation of the commissioners in the
case would create
a conflict of interest because, as
prosecutor, he is
statutory
legal
counsel for all
elected officials,
Trussell
including . commissioners
and
sheriff.
In November, Judge Warren Lotz

LAYTON

Pieese see Southern. AS

Ill TilE
1!1\:1( Of
111t

www.mydaily•entinel.wm

FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 2003

Story, commissioners to .seek special counsel

Academic .
improvement
continuous
at Southern
Schools

Astrograph

Fritlay, Jan. 24, 2003

Southem defeats Tremble, B1

Thursday, January 23, 2003

SOOKS AS A

KID , TOO!

Senior Outreach
"Reaching Out to Meet Senior Needs"
"i-01::&gt;/&gt;,Y, I\'!&gt; ~~OY FOR Tt'£""
AATIQU~ ~,o.D,:)!Jp&gt;J I

Free Telephone Reassurance,
Socialization and Prescription Reminders

Discover the Holzer Difference

NOW ACCEPTING NEW CLIENTS

www.holzer .org

MEDICAL CENTER

(740) 446-9560
,

')

I

\

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