<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5622" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5622?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T02:07:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15552">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c5d251ada25674bcf3e1bf1102e73396.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2bf3f920f087a4e7abbe99c75e153cae</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18984">
                  <text>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

-

WORD®©®CD@@®@®-

ooooooo

,.

0000000

20000

oo~

0

·®®@@@@@
®@(9@@@@ !'1~~~Tmol

~

0

·®@®@C9®@
?. 9.9.?9.? 3•d0owoT~ol 0
0

].

-

+60po1nls

gg~~g~~
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
IMiiU,
1'lii!T
NO ONE
W£ I&gt;IIU.

I'l'
OOEIII'T
I'IA11£R

'TMT IT
MOSASL~

i&gt;ION'T

E~ER

(V(JI. eltN

5« !T '

I!E 11([£0.

'l'llt llt51\'

IOIA~5
KNOIJn~
~

llEI\t,
Sl'eti/IL

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

\

�PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 24, 1003

Democrats say Taft should use
clout with Bush on tax package

Ohio weather
Saturday, Jan. 25

Congress. We are there to listm
aid to do what's right fa' tlx: IXUtay, I was tlabbergasiOO by tlx: );reSident's (!qXlSlll in that it hurt the
stares that were aina:ly on their
krees," Kapur said
Kapur was joined at a
Statehouse news conference by
fellow Democtalic Reps. Sherrod
Bl'OI'm ofl.orain aid 11m Ryan of
N'des.
.
"This governor aid OOXll' governoo; of both IB1ies need to say 00
to George Bush on this divideOO
tax. This divideOO tax goes overwhe~Inil@y to the richestpeq&gt;le in
society. futy-two petrent of this
tax cut goes to the I pem:nt richest
peq&gt;le," Brown said

I u.no~~otd lr-121o I •

o l Columbuo

!10°/27°

I

\,/~~~-

W.VA.

'Inc.

o . . . . . . . . . .: .
. :,,,•

Sunny PI Clou(t;

Cloudy

Showell!

T·alorm.

Rai1

•

~

Aurries

' , , ,.,.

~ v•

Snow

Ice

W.~twrdPrwl

Cold will loosen grip on area
winds.
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday night... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 20s..
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Cloudy with a
chance of snow showers .. Any
accumulation expected to be
light. Highs in the lower 30s.
Chance of snow 50 percent.
Sunday night...Partly cloudy
with a chance of snow showers.
Little or no snow accumulation
expected. Lows in the mid teens.
Chance of snow 50 percent.
Monday... Partly cloudy and
continued cold. Highs in the
upper20s.
Thesday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the lower 20s and highs in the
upper30s.
Wednesday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 20s and highs
in the lower 40s.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows near 30 and highs in the
lower40s.

BY 'THE ASSOCL4.TED PRESS

It was another very cold
morning across the region.
Early morning temperatures
were generally within a few
degrees of I 0 above. The airport
at Cincinnati was the cold spot at
5degrees.
Light snow should taper off
during the morning hours and
some sunshine will likely peak
through. High temperatures will
range from the mid teens to the
lower 20s, some I 0 to 20
degrees below nonnal.
The cold weather will loose its
gripfor about ofle day. Some sections could break the freezing
marl&lt;. Colder weather will surge
· back Sunday, however, as a cold
front from the Northern Plains
drops south across the area.
High temperatures in the upper
teens and 20s are likely Sunday
and Monday. Warmer weather
will push back across the area by
midweek next week.
Weather foi'I!CMt:
Tonight..:Partly cloudy. Lows
near 10 above. Light southwest
A DAY ON WALL STREET
Jan.23,2003

10,000

Dow
jones

--8,389.47

.............

!rom ,.....,..,

'

+().111

---e.ooo
...:::OC~T-~N;:;;OV:;-----;D'O;E:;;C--J~A;;NHigh

8,386.61

I.OW ·

8,255.86

RMOrcl high: ,, .72Z.98
Jan. 14. 2000

Jon.23,2003

.

__.._.

7 •000

1,000

Nasdaq
compostt

.,..........

1,388.27

frOm~

"-';;:;:;"'----.;;;;;----;;-;;;0---=-

1 ,000

Reoonl high: 15,048.82

+2.12

March 10, aooo

Jan.23, 2003

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

----

887.34
.............

- - +1.02

000
800
700

Reoanl high:
880.25
"""

878.89
Low

1.~27 . 48

Marc:h 24.2000

Local Stocks
AEP-26.89
Arch Coal- 20.51
Akzo-29
AmTech/SBC- 25.53
Ashland Inc. - 27.22
AT&amp;T-20.49
Bank One- 38.02
BLI- 13.85
Bob Evans- 23.26
BorgWarner - 53.35
Champion - 3.35
Charming Shops - 4
City Holding - 26.09
Col- 20.69
DG-11 .58
DuPont - 40.96

Federal Mogul - .38
USB-21.76
Gannett - 73.34
General Electric- 23.95
GKNLY - 3.30
Harley Davidson - 42.12
Kmarl- .14
Kroger- 16.13
Ltd.- 12.97
NSC- 18.68

Rockwell - 23. 13
Rocky Boots- 5.64

AD Shell- 41.23
Sears - 28.28
Wai·Mart - 48.57
Wendy's- 27.76
Worthington- 14.60
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
Oak Hil Financial-23.99 quotes of the previous
OVB-21.11
day's transactions, proBBT -34.13
vided by Smith Partners
Peoples- 24.18
at Advast Inc. of
Pepsico - 41.93
Premier- 7.98
Gallipolis.

Longtime
police
chief
retires
CANTON (AP)
Police Chief Thomas W.
Wyatt's last day in office
was Friday after 45 years
with the police force, 22 of
them as chief.
Safety Director Joe
Concatto
confirmed
Wyatt's retirement. ..
Wyatt was one month
shy of his 68th birthday
and had not taken a day off
sick in the last 30 years.
He could have retired in
1987, but chose to stay on
the job.
"I've never had a day
when I didn't want to
come to work," Wyatt said
recently.
Some Canton city councilmen once accused him
of stuffing his own pockets by working on a
Veterans Day in the midst
of an eight-week vacation·. ·
"He's gotten a lot of
flack from time to time,
and that's part of the job·
when you're the top man."
said
Mayor Richard
Watkins.
Those in law enforcement who worked directly
with Wyatt respected him.
"He always had the
interest of the city at heart,
but he was well ahead of
his time when it came to
collaborating with other
members of the lawenforcement community,"
said former local FBI official William Downey.
If it haqn't been for hil!l,
the Stark County Violent
Crimes Task Force may
never have come into existence, Downey said.
He became a rookie
patrolman on Aug. 1,
1957, seven weeks after he
was married. He became a
sergeant in 1973, a captain
in 1975, and a major the
year later. On Aug. 19.
1980. he was sworn in by
then-Mayor Stanley A.
Cmich as the department's
13th police chief.

"'~ compassionate care

Is given to those who
face Alzheimer's
Dlseiose and related

dementia.
Our goal is to help our residents

A WIRED WORLD.COMPANY

Lingerie
Oils &amp;.. lotions

maintain their independence

as long as possible.
+ P.,Jvate Dining Room

+ Brigh~ open, airy "Florida Roo.m"
+ Nutritious Meal Supplements
+ Proresslonal Nursing Stair

Sa, &amp; ...-.., ~ de'tt ..t-1
Monday. Saturday 1Dam-Bpm

311 Buckrldge ROIId
OH45614

Spring Valley Plaza • GaUipolls .

441-1611

ihs

~~7150::::=====

frieidaire
Stainless
... Steel. .
APPliances
Nowln
Stock!
FURNITURE .
COMPANY
•Quality • Selection • Service
304-773-5592
~

Gallipolis
.Y Chiropractic
'lll•• .~-. Center
Dro,Joey D. m!!~!.D
We Art A
(tO) 2002 MF47t, 2WD, 8x2 """'"·.U
dual remotee, wet brakea, 1111
than 30 hra., lull warranty,
6.8% II lOW II $289 per month.

JIM'S FARM
EQUI..MENT, INC.
2150 Eutem Av•nu•

G•lllpolls. Ohio

Full Stnlq
Flclllty

Offtdnc:

HOLZER
CLINIC

o

Diagnostic X·Rays
• Personal
""-"""'""""'"Rehabil~ation
• Nutr~ional Counseling
• Personal Injury

Workers Compensation
o Most Insurance Accepted
o

www.halzerdlnlc.com

740·441·0200
1-888-451-2225
990 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis

"

Man kills
self, baby
to spite
ex-girlfriend

Urinary Incontinence?
Confidence can
change eve
g.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
man set a house fire that killed
him and his young son
because he was upset over a
breakup with his girlfriend,
the toddler's mother. police
said. .
A few days after the Jan. 16
fire, the ex-girlfriend received
a letter written by Christopher
Moore, 34, that said, "I told
you if I couldn't have rou and
Corey. no one would.'
Authorities said Moore set
his home ablaze and then
holed up in the bathroom with
the couple's 13-month-old son
Corey until smoke suffocated
them both.
Cuyahoga County Coroner
Elizabeth Balraj on Thursday
ruled the death of Corey
Olszko a homicide and the
death of Moore a suicide.

Hyou're one of the millions who suffer
from incontinence, Holzer Clinic may
have the answer to help you take
control of your life. You can end the
restrictions you place on yourself, and

the embarrassment. Call lor details about
our thorough testing and treatment plans.
Call Holzer Clinic at (740)441-8051. Now
there's a reason to face each day again

will1 confidence.

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

HOLZER CLINIC
www.holzerclinic.com • (740) 441-8051

•

•

PageA3

Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 24, 2003

Who's knocking Christian radio host tells
at the door?
listeners to abandon church

Pam Thompson is the
librarian of the athenaeum
in Mason. I often tease her
by referring to her as "the
wor]d,famous librarian."
The stereotypical librarian
is one who, having to work
with a variety of books and
subjects, typifies a high
mental aptitude toward
learning in general. Pam
certainly fits the mold on
that point.
But, according to her own
account, she has consistently demonstrated over the
years a particular inability
to learn from experience.
1 recently was scheduled
to referee a JV basketball
game at Wahama High
School. Entering the gym,
Pam and I chatted briefly, at
which time she related how
during the winter seasons
she is all too often gripped
with numbness of mind.
It always occurs at those
times after there is a significant snowfall. She hears a
sharp rap at the front door,
to which she checks to see
who is knocking.
However, just as she
opens the door, she is suddenly blasted with a snowball thrown by her husband,
Lou.
She expressed no small
amount of frustration how
she always fails to check
who is knocking at the door
· knowing firsthand how
sneaky Lou has been.
Hey, Pam! Plan a sneakattack of your own . Pack up
several big snowballs while
there is snow on the ground,
and hide them away in the
freezer until July.
On the hottest day according to forecast, knock on the
barn door while Lou is
milking the cows, and when
he checks to see who is
knocking at the door blast him with every one
you have. ,
Oh, my, pardon me. That
does not sound like mature
ffiarit)ll .'iPJIJl~el,ing .q.n my
part, does It? Inad b'6tter get
on track with the spiritual
truth that occurred to me
upon hearing Pam's humorous yarn.
Checking to see who is
knocking at the door is actually a concern of considerable spiritual consequence.
In chapters two and three
of the book of Revelation,
the Lord Jesus Christ directed spiritual challenges and
exhortations to seven specified church groups.

Ron
Branch
GUEST VIEW

He had some particularly
strong words for the church
in the town of Laodicea.
They were spiritually luke·
warm, He indicated, and in
no uncertain terms, made it
clear how He despised luke·
warm spirituality.
But, then, He made a suggestion of critical importance if they were to ever
relate rightly to Him. He
rather suggested they had
better check to see who it is
that is knocking at the door.
The Lord told them,
"Behold, I stand at the door,
and knock. If any man hear
my voice, and open the
door, 'I will come in to Him,
and will sup with Him, and
he with me."
The reference to knocking
at the door proposes some
inherent spiritual possibilities for those who stand in
need of the Lord's presence
in their lives.
But, the great omission on
the part of many involves
the purposeful neglect of
even checking the door
when Christ knocks.
Herein lies the common
spiritual stumbling block,
which I know right well
myself, When I was nineteen years old, I struggled
spiritually. One night far
away from home, I decided
to ~o into a church holding
revtval services. During the
invitation, I purposely
refused to answer the sharp
spiritual rapping at the door
of my heart. I did not want
to check the door, because I
knew who was: there. Thus,
I left the .Pew\ a!ld. ~)(ite~~tj}e
sanctuary.
··
There 1s coo much at stake
for us not to check to see
who is knocking at the door.
Now is the time to open the
door, and let Cl)rist come in.
Anyway, I can imagine
the
headline,
"Worldfamous librarian puts local
milk man in hospital with
July snowball! Local pastor
sued for faulty counseling.''
(Ron Branch is the pastor
at Faith Baptist Church in
Mason, W.Va.)

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
- An influential Christian
radio .host, best known for his
failed predictions of the second coming of Christ, has
run into more derision and
criticism for telling listeners
to abandon church.
Harold Camping says his
Bible studies have revealed
that what he calls "the church
age" has ended. He has told
his worldwide radio audience
that Satan has taken over all
churches.
For the ' past two years,
Camping has been teaching
that God wants people 'to
worship privately in their
homes instead - with no
leaders, no baptism and no
communion.
"The Bible says God is not
saving people any longer in
the churches," Camping said
in a recent interview at
Family Radio's headquarters
in Oakland. "They're being
saved outside the churches."
Critics call the idea heretical, and say the selfdescribed Bible expert doesn' t know what he's talking
about. Some evangel,ical
Christian leaders complain
that his call is hurting their
churches.
"He's in critical locations
in the United States and the
rest of the world. He has a
large listening audience,"
said David Clark, who tracks
Christian fringe groups.
"He's got pastors all over the
United States in an uproar.
He's ione over the edge this
time.'
Camping, 81. parted ways
several years ago with the
conservative, evangelical
Christian Reformed Church

Group to
perform
ATHENS

-

Culture. (800-523-7964), sis- issue carries a significant
ter publication of evangelical- book review by Martin E.
ism's quality middlebrow Marty, a longtime staffer with
Some of America's most voice, Christianity Today, Christianity Today's competiinteresting
journalism (800-999-1704).
tor• .The Christian Century
appears ih religious periodi(800-208-4097),
liberal
cals with small circulations
B&amp;C, founded in ·1995, has weekly that in its Ia19th
year
and .high ambitions that are established a solid niche as a
free of denominational con- spiritual equivalent to The boasts a souped-up news secNew York Review of Books .. tion.
B&amp;C essay assesstr~mong marketplace sur- Though handicapped by esMarty's
"America's God: From
prises: Who would have pre- infrequent (bimonthly) publi- Jonathan
Edwards
to
dicted that conservative evan- cation, it makes up for this Abraham Lincoln" (Oxford)
gelical Protestants - once with rich fare, not to mention by Mark A. Noll, a professor
stereotyped as "poor, unedu- splendid caricatures drawn by at Wheaton {Ill.) College and
cated and easily led" in an. Klaus Ernst.
co-chairman of B&amp;C's editorIn choosing writers, editor ial board.
infamous Washington Post
piece would produce · John Wilson roves well
American religion's classiest beyond the evangelical ghetto.
highbrow magazine?
Yet that describes Books &amp;
For example, the current _
.

MATINEES SHOWN ON
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 P.. MON·FRI So
12:30 PM SAT· SUN
DARKNESS FALLS (PGt 3)
7:30 So 9:30
JACK (PG)
7:10 &amp;9:10

/JIIedeNU

The Shaffers
Rev. Allen Midcap, Pastor
Everybody is Welcome!

Clark, who calls Camping
"an authoritarian spiritual
meathead," says the talkr
show host keeps a tight rein
on the radio network and
refuses to answer his critics,
who say they can tlnd no
trace of his teachings in the
Bible.
"I believe he can be
destructive to churches and
individual lives. His world-

',.

West Union St., will host
"Destiny," a 12-member
vocal
group
from
Christian
Kentucky
College at 7 p.m., Feb . IS
and 16. The group will
also sing at both 8: I 0 a.m.
and I 0:35 a.m. worship
services. The concerts are
free and child care will be
provided. Additional parking will be available at the
Morrison and Beacon
School lots.

By the Associated Press

Saturday, January 25 • 7:00p.m.

..
Harold Camping, a Christian radio host on the Family Radio
Network, gestures while holding the Bible during a televisio'n'
broadcast Dec. 12, 2002 in San Leandro, Calif. (AP)
··

Secret Sisters group
holds tea party

Athens

Church of c;;:hrist, .. 785

Surprise! Evangelicals produce American
religion's classiest highbrow magazine

Middleport
Church
of the
Nazarene

in which he grew up. Retired
from his own construction
business, he serves full time
as the unpaid president of
Family Radio, which he
helped start in 1958.
The network grew and
gained .international attention
in 1994 with Camping's
well-publicized prediction
that the world would end that
September. Since . then, he
has made several more apocalyptic predictions.
The radio network has built
a broad and powerful reach.
Its signal is broadcast or
relayed on more than ISO stations and translators In the
United Stf1tes. It airs in several major metropolitan areas,
on the Internet and in
Europe, Africa and Asia. It
reaches mainland China from
a station in Taiwan and is
building a station to reach
much of Southeast Asia.
It's not clear how many listeners are tuning in. Camping
says he doesn't know. But
donations, one measure of
the network's effectiveness at
reaching people, totaled
more than $12 million in
2000, according to documents the nonprofit filed
with the Internal Revenue
Service.
Camping this
month
released a book, "The End of
the Church Age and After,"
one of many he has written
but the first devoted to his
new beliefs about the church.
Church leaders have complained that Camping's
teachings are costing them
parishioners. Some are so
angry that they have held
specta.l meetings to discuss
Campmg.

Secret Sisters of River Valley Apostolic Worship Center in
Middleport recently held a tea party, where current
secret sisters were revealed and new sisters named for
2003. Kathy Dougari, Ladies Director, was the speaker,
and read scripture and spoke in women 's issues.
Sisters were presented vintage tea cups and handkerchiefs, and door ,prizes of tea pots were won by Paulette
Northup and Kandice Legg. Attending were,front row,
from left, Northup, Diann Satuers, Lisa Victory, Jennifer
Konkle, Pam Hoffman, Lisa Cline and Rachel Buckley;
back row, from left, Legg, Kathy Dougan , Carla Chappel,
Cledith King, Misty King, Robin Spurlock, Katrina
Spurlock and Valerie Nottingham. Lora Rawson , not pic·
tured, als'o attended.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 21a-9soJ
Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
every afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Published
accurate. If you know of an error in a Monday through Frid~y. 11 1 Court
story, call the newsroom et (740) 992· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Seoond·
class postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
a~d
the Ohio Newspaper
Our main number Is
Association.
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are: Postmaster: Send address corrections lo The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
News
45769. '
Edllor: Chartene Hoellich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

Advertising
one month . .... .......'9.95
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, E•t. 15 One year ......... . . .'119.40
OUiolda Salas: Jessica Evans, Ext. 161 Dally ........... .......50'
CluaJCln:.:.Judy Clark, Ext. 10
Subscribers should remit in
CiassJCin:.: Cyothia Swisher. Ext. 11 advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subscription by mail
permiHed in areas where horne
Circulation
carrier service is available.
Dlotrlct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, E•t. 17
General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12

(PG13)7:00 &amp; 9:30
MATINEES 1:00 &amp; 3:30
LORD OF THE RINGS: THE
TWO TOWERS (PG13)
7:30 MATINEE 1:30

E·mall:
news@ mydailysenlinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel .co'!'

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks ........
. .'30.15
26 Weeks ·. . . . . . . .. .'60.00
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . .'118.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13Weeks .. .
. ..,.'50.05
26 Weeks .
. ...... '100.10
52 Weeks ........... '200.20

view is nonnegotiable.''
Clark says.
.•
Camping calls all the critiC;
cism "character assassina~
lion" but says he is not sur"
prised that church leaders
aren't embracing a teaching
that, if true, would lead to
their churches' dismantling: ·
Of his critics, he says, '.'I
worry about their standing
with the Lord."

Calendar
Saturday, Jan. 25
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, 7 p.ril with The
Shaffers to sing. The Rev.
Allen Midcap, pastor, invites
the public.
STIVERS VILLE- Hymn
sing, 7 p.m. at the
Community
Stiversville
Church. The golden tones .
from Parkersburg, W.Va. and
Jim and Shirley Nutter from
Reedsville. will sing. Rev.
Wayne Jewell invites public .
Monday, Jan. 27
MIDDLEPORT - Free
clothing and miscellaneous
items at Rejoicing .Life
Church, 10 a. m. to 2 "p.m.
each Monday. Public welcome,

�PageA4 ..

0 inion

The Daily Sentinel

c"""*

••

-Hut-Me .•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

,,

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed and include addreH and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good
taste, addresSing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 's editorial board,
unle~· !i· otherwise noled.

NATIONAL VIEW

Progress?
Trnth made strides in 2002,
but no permanent victory
• The Columbus Dispatch, on Time magazines whistleblowers: During the boorning ' 90s, high-flying corporate
executives were magazine cover boys. Now, some of these
cover boys have been taken away in handcuffs, and Time
magazine has named three whistle-blowers its Persons of the
Year for 2002.
As Time put it, Sherron Watkins; Coleen Rowley and
Cynthia Cooper are "three women of ordinary demeanor but
exceptional guts and sense."
Watkins is the Enron vice president who tried to alert
Chairman Kenneth Lay in the summer of 200 I that the company was using improper accounting methods to hide its true
financial picture.
Rowley is the FBI staff attorney who wrote a memo to FBI
Director Robert Mueller in Ma~ about how bureau higher-ups
had ignored her pleas for funnel' investigation of Zacarias
Moussaoui, now known as the 20th hijacker, when he was
arrested several weeks before the Sept. II attacks.
Cooper is the WorldCom staff auditor who informed the
corporate board in June that $3.8 billion in losses had been
concealed through phony bookkeeping orchestrated at the
highest levels.
Despite the shining examples of these three women, truth
has won no pennanent victory. Yes, big corpomtions have
been chastened, and Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act,
which might lead to better oversight. But Congress also resisted attempts to patch holes in federal whistle-blower protections, and it caved in to President Bush's desire to remove any
such protections for employees of the new Department of
Homeland Security.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Jan. 24, the 24th day of 2003. There are 341
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 24, 1848, James W. Marshall discovered a gold nugget
at Sutter's Mill in northern California, a discovery that led to the
gold rush of '49.
On this date:
In 1908, the first Boy Scout troop was organized in England by
Robert Baden-Powell.
'
In 1924, the Russian city of St. Petersburg was renamed
Leningrad in honor of the late revolutionary leader (however, it
has since been renamed St. Petersburg).
In 1942, a special coun of inquiry into America's lack of preparedness for the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor placed much
of the blame on Rear Admiral Husband E. Kimmel and Lt. Gen.
Walter C. Shon, the Navy and Army commanders.
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill concluded a wartime conference in
Casablanca, Morocco.
In 1965, Winston Churchill died in London at age 90.
In 1972, the Supreme Court struck down laws that denied welfare benelits to people who had resided in a state for less than a
year.
In 1978, a nuclear-powered Soviet satellite plunged through
Earth's atmosphere and disintegrated, scattering radioactive
debris over parts of nonhem Canada.
In 1989, con!essed serial killer Theodore Bundy was put to
death in Florida's electric chair.
Five years ago: Pope John Paul II, delivering blunt political
messages during his visit to Cuba, called for the release of "prisoners of conscience" and res~ct for freedom of expression, initiative and a~sociation. Pres1dent Clinton, in his weekly radio
address, unveiled a proposal to root out Medicare fraud.
One year ago: A H~use committee opened heiuings into the
collapse of energy gJant Enron Corp. Officials of Enron 's
accounting tirm, Anhur Andersen, claimed fired auditor Oavid
Duncan was solely responsible for the massive destruction of
Enron documents; Duncan refused to answer questions, invoking
the Fifth Amendment. John Walker Lindh, the so-called
"American Taliban," made his frrst court appearance in suburban
Washington D.C.
Today's Binhdays: Actor Ernest Borgnine is 86. Evangelist
Oral Roberts is 85 . Actor Marvin Kaplan ("To!&gt; Cat") is 76. Cajun
rnus1cmn Doug Kershaw 1s 67. Smger-songwnter Ray Stevens is
64. Singer-songwriter Neil Diamond is 62. Singer Aaron Neville
is 62. Actor Michael Ontkean is 57. Singer Warren Zevon is 56.
Country singer-songwriter Becky Hobbs is 53. Comedian Yakov
Smirnoff is 52. Bandlcader-musician Jools Holland is 45. Actress
Nastassja Kinski is 43. Country musician Keech Rainwater
(Lonestar) i' 40. Comedian Phil LaMarr is 36. Olympic goldmedal gymnast Mary Lou Retton is 35. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Pat "Sleepy'' Brown !Society of Soul) is 33. Actor Matthew
Lillard is 33. Actress Merrilee McCommas is 32. Actress Tatyana
Ali is 24.
Thoughl for Toclay: "The most fatal !llusion is the s~ttled point
of v1ew. Smce l1le 1s growth and monon, a fixed pomt of view
kills anybody who has one." - Brooks Atkinson, American
drama critic ( 1894-1984 ).

WEST'S VIEW

VVhen understanding the Bast means losing the T#st .
Breaking hews from Saudi Arabia:
"U.S. women interact with local populace." According to the Arab News, actual "female" Americans of the SaudiAmerican Exchange Program met with a
bona fide Saudi "female date farmer." The
reason? "To PI'? mote understanding and
encourage d1alogue between the two
sides," Arab News reports.
It
was a success, naturally.
Understanding was busting out all over
Ye Olde Saudi Date Ranch, while dialogue also occurred - at least with the
state-controlled press. "The portrayal in
the Western media and culture is that
Muslim women, especially in Saudi
Arabia, are oppressed and subservient,"
said one American participant. "Many
Americans believed that women here
were forced to wear the traditional abaya
and veil. However, I have come to learn
that the women here wear the veil by
choice." While a Saudi .censor couldn't
have said it better, this quotation is attributed to Lorna Hadley, a student at Yale
University School of Public Health.
And, judging by the comments of fellow student Amelia Shaw, a fine choice
wearing the veil is: "I thought women, by
wearing the veil, would be silenced, and
that symbolized not being allowed any
verbal expression. However, when I did
wear it, I felt free from being looked at as
a sexual object."
What a relief. Thanks to SaudiAmerican exchange, it now becomes
clear that, all this time, while Western
women were junking their corsets, bobbing their hair, lifting their hemlines, donning slacks, burning bras and discovering
the easy cling of stretch denim, they really should have been shopping for the perfeet abaya. And why noi? As Maryvonne
Van Der Bauwede, a ·~ewelry designer
from France," told the Arab News, "It's
very comfortable and beautifies the eyes."
Me, I'll take Maybelline. Not that it
matters. In fact, maybe we should leave
the exchange students to their continuing
adv~ntures 'The Preppy Handbook"

Diana
West
COLUMNIST
meets "Let's Go Mecca and Medina" and consider the more serious impon of
this kind of cross-cultural "understanding."

It's one thing to learn about Muslim
dress - which, despite all the "understanding" this program has managed to
promote, is about as voluntary a choice
for your average Saudi gal as her religion.
It's quite another when presumably liberty-loving American women become apologists for a sartorial brand of servitude
that, of course, is just one oppressive fact
of life for women living under Islamic
sharia law as legal, professional and social
nonentities. And another thing: A woman
may not look like a "sex object" when she
dresses up like a haystack, but she still
looks like an object, period - one wholly devoid of a recogruzable human.shape.
Or maybe that's my Western bias showing. It slips through now and again, particularly as cross-cultural "understandin~" catches on to a potentially dangerous
potnt. I refer not just to the fashion nonsense of grad students on a junket. While
it's easy to poke fun at such exploitable
naivete, the impulse to understand is no
laughing matter when it requires drastic
compromises on principles of life and liberty.

more obviously apparent in the alarming ·
effon in the West to understand, perhaps ·
even accommodate, what may be best ·
described as a cult of death found in :
regions to the East.
'
Maybe it's just a feeling that comes ·
from observing the shocked-no-more '
responses to the latest suicide-bombing in '
Israel, or from reading t~e smooth ·
reportage ofa New York Tunes article on ·
Sri Lanka's "masters" of suicide bombing ·
and their territory ("a place steeped in the ;
notion of self-sacrifice"), but it does r;eem .
that suicide bombers aren't quite the pariahs they once were. British enthus1asm
over a recent conference on Palestinian ·
Authority reform only intensifies the
queasiness.
Among other things, the PA agreed to a : .
"cease-fire" against "pre-1967" Israel. ·
This means that .citizens of post-1967 ,
Israel - namely, the West Bank, Gaza ;
Strip and eastern Jerusalem - remain
what Palestinians consider fair game. Of .
course, the cease-fire expires after Israeli
elections this month, and then it's back to
suicide-bombings as usual throughout · ·
Israel-post-1967,pre-1967,A.D., B.C., '
whatever. In Great Britain today, this '
counts as progress.
Is it? Jan. 7 was •I'Palestinian·Martyrsl '
Day," an occasion marked by PA memori- ~
als to Palestinians killed in the intifada, '
including those praised by one govern- _
ment speaker as "the most noble among
us" - the shaJiidim, or suicide bombers.
According to The Media Line (www.the- :
medialine.org), festivities included a gov- :
emment TV special "featuring pictures of '
dead babies with uncovered faces" and
exhortations to Palestinians "to follow in
(the suicide bombers') path." Such a :
death cult seems largely mcomprehensible to Westerners. The only way to under- ;
stand it is to renounce all respect for
human life, a measure that still remains
beyond our understanding - one hopes.
(Diana West is a columnist for The :

When cultures really clash, outreach
becomes less a tool. of coexistence than of
transfonrtation. Such attempts, in other Washington Times. She can be contacted ·
words,
end up undermining the basic via dianaww@attglobal.net.)
precepts o the Free World. This becomes

mar

--------------------------------------------~---------- '

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Making the most ofpoor economic conditions
Although economists had hoped that
the unemployment rate would have
improved by now, CNNfn Washington
Correspondent Louise Schiavone told
"CNN Monday Mornin~( viewers on Jan.
6 that the job market IS still grim. The
Dec. 2002 unemployment rate was 6 percent, unchanged from the November
unemployment rate of 6 percent, and 8.6
million people remain unemployeq in the
United States, Schiavone said.
Considering the shape our job market is
in, it is not surprising that many formerly
high-salaried executives and professionals are working as clerks in hardware
stores or doing house painting. Under
other circumstances, we might find such
work degrading, but not when it puts
bread on the family table.
Many young folks on their way up who
work, say, for the sanitation department in
their town realize it's not going to be forever and they haye a healthy attitude
toward their work - almost as if they can
see the future story possibilities in the situation. I still like to talk about the days
when I was a laborer for the state highway
department, cleaning out the catch basins
along the side of the road with that longhandled scoop and sweeping the sides of
the street.
Of course, it's easy to be cavalier about
jobs like that if you know it isn 't going to
be your life's work. But· under many conditions such jobs can be viewed as
degrading. It is easy to understand why until people started getting laid off in
great numbers, we were having trouble
getting people 'to do "the diny work" as
some may call it. Everybody aspired to
wear a suit to work.
What society must do to save itself,

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Friday, January 24, 2003
®'il00'1 !lOll'!'~ 9TA~t-•e:--.....

Bette Pearce

Friday, January 24, 2003

asked him what his line of work was, he
would say "violinist." If the person mentioned seeing him in the shoe-repair shop,
he would explain, "l mend shoes to make
ends meet." But he was a violinist.
We work at least 40 hours a week and ·
sleep about 56 hours. ·That leaves about
0
72 hours. If we can fill those hours with
wonhwhile cultural pursuits like reading :
or listening to music, we will very likely ;
- - - - - ' be happy - regardless of the jobs we •
work.
.
COLUMNIST
In such a society one can imagine the ·
driver of the town garbage truck ·asking
some have suggested, is accord the manu- the fellow dumping the trash in the back, '
allaborer the same status the executive or "Who said, 'The quality of mercy is not
professional enjoys so that a person is strained?"'
proud to say he or she works with their
And the fellow emptying the cans in the ·
hands. It is interesting, however, that most back replies, "Portia in 'The Merchant of ·
people who are making this kind of sug- Venice,' Act 4, Scene 1."
'
gestion don't want to be truck d1ivers or
In "The Idea of a University," Cardinal
other kinds of laborers themselves, nor John Henry Newman ( 180 1-1890) said of '
may they want their children to he.
the educated man, "He has a gift which
Some say the answer lies in getting over serves him in public and supports him in '
our obsession with college education. retirement, without which good fortune is .
Almost everyone today wants to go to but vulgar and with which failure and discollege and I don't know too many col- appointment have a charm."
lege grads who want to he a sanitation
So who should do the dirty work in
worker or bricklayer.
such a world? We must learn to do our
Yet, some will tell you that there are own. If we all do it, it won't be degrading :
gmduates who would be happier as brick- for anybody.
·
layers - and make more money than
Where we used to live, there was rio
they are currently earning in their entry- town rubbish collection. Every family had ,
level corporate jobs.
to haul its own rubbi sh to the dump. It was ·
This is undoubtedly true. But I can 't quite a sight there on Saturday mornings
help thin!qng that hopes for happiness lie - Cadillacs and Ford Country Squires .
more in the area of education than in find- lined up along with the rest of us, waiting
ing the right job. We have made our jobs thw turn to unload. Nobody really mindtoo important.
,
ed. We certainly didn't find it degrading.
I knew a cobbler in Boston who loved · (George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
to pl ay the violin. Whenever an yone Neivspaper Emerprise Association.)

G e r ge

·
PIagenz

Obituaries

Local Briefs

Ivan Miller

Elect officers

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
Ivan Douglas Miller, 84, of
New Haven, died Thursday,
January 23, 2003, at his residence.
He was born October 30,
I 9 I 8, in Mason County, West
Virginia, .son of the late
Robert anii Pearl Shawver
Miller.
He was a member of the St.
Paul Lutheran Church, the
Junior Order of the United
American Mechanics, and
American Legion Post I 40.
He was retired from Phillip
Sport Plant in I 980.
Mr. Miller was a veteran of
the U.S. Army, and served in
World War II and the Korean
.Conflict. He earned a Bronze
Star for his service.
Surviving are a son,
William Stump II; daughters,
Dianna (Darmie) Harbour of
New Haven, and Amanda
(Greg) Blessing of Letart,
West Virginia; two half-sisters and a half-brother, Doris
Mantz and Charles W. Nortb,
both of Cynthiana, Kentucky,
/" and Ruby Orehowsky of
Virgini ; his grandchildren,
Wend (Jerry) Mullins of
Fayett ville, Michael (Bobbi)
Harb r
of
Pomeroy,
itc ell (Jessica) Harbour of
oint Pleasant, West Virginia,
ichelle Stump and Curtis
· Blessing of Philippi, West
Virginia, and Cara Blessing of
Letart; great-grandchildren,
Olivia and Aurora Mullins of
Fayetteville, Garrett Harbour
of Point Pleasant, and Ryan
Harbour of Pomeroy; and
several nieces and nephews:
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Pauline Lough Miller; his
brother, Rawland Miller; and
his brother, Jack Miller.
Services will be 2 p.m.
Sunday, January 26, 2003, at
Anderson Funeral Home in
New Haven, with the Rev.
George Weirick and David
Russell officiating.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
Saturday, January 25, 2003.
An online registry is available
at www.andersonfh.com.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to St. Paul
Lutheran Church Building
Fund.
- Paid notice

Ethel Alberta
Newman
POMEROY
Ethel
Alberta Newman, 97, of
Pomeroy, died Thursday,
January 23, 2003, at
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center in Pomeroy.
She was born September
30, 1905, in West Union,
Ohio, daughter of the late
Alen and Evelyn Mae Easter
Nichols.
She was a homemaker, and
a member of the Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
She ts survived by 10
grandchildren, 20 greatgrandchildren and 13 greatgreat-grandchildren.
In addition to her parents,
she was preceded in death by
her
husband,
Wilson
Newman; children, Mary
Kathryn Butcher, James
Newman, Donald Newman
and Barbara Newman; and
grandchildren,
William
Butcher and John Newman.
Services will be 3 p.m.
Saturday, January 25, 2003, at
Fisher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Richard Barcus will
be officiating, and burial will
follow in Mound Hill
Cemetery in Gallipolis.
Friends may call at the funeral home one hour prior to services.
- Paid noffce

Life Line Screening Workshops
from PageA1
coming to Pomeroy
POMEROY- A change
in the Pomeroy location
where the Life. Line
Screening will take place
on Jan. 30 has been
announced.
The screenings will be
held at the Sacred Heart
Catholic
Church.
Appointments are still
being accepted and may be
made by calling 1-S00407-4557.
.
Life Line Screening
offers health screenings to
assess the risk of stroke and
vascular disease. The
screenings include
a
carotid artery screening,
abdominal aortic aneurysm
· screenin~ and an ankle
brachial tndex.
Also offered for men and
women is a bone density
screening to assess risk for
osteoporosis.
The tests use ultrasound

Plan meeting
POMEROY Regular
meeting of the Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee will be held at
II :30 a.m. Tuesday, in the
conference room of the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center in Pomeroy.

Red Cross visits
TUPPERS PLAINS American
Red
Cross
Bloodmobile has been scheduled from 9:30a.m. to 1:30
p.m., Monday, at Eastern
High School.
Inventory levels of blood
types are at a three-day supply for most types, but types
0, A and B negative are in
short supply, a~cording to the
Red Cross.
Blood donors must be at
least I 7 years old, weigh 105
pounds or more, be in good
general health and not have
donated blood within the past
56 days.

POMEROY - Units of
Meigs Emergency Services
answered the following
calls
for
assistance
Thursday :
CENTRAL
10:33 a.m., Sixth Street,

~

technology and are conducted by registered or registry-eligible ultrasound
technologists. A board-certified physician reviews the
results of each test to
ensure the accuracy of the
results before they are
mailed to the individual.
Each screening requires
I 0 minutes or less to complete and costs $40. A
package of all three vascular screenings is $99, a savings of $21.
Life Line Screening is
the
nation's
leading
provider of health screenmgs.

Meigs parent-teacher
conferences scheduled
POMEROY The
School
Meigs Local
District will be holding
parent-teacher
conferences on Feb. 5 and 12
after the dismissal of
school for three hours .
Parents will receive a
letter describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information on the conferences,
according
to
Superintendent William
L. Buckley. He said that
the information ori the
conferences will be sent
home with students the
week of Jan. 27 .
Purpose of the conferences, Buckley explained,
is to allow parents and
teachers to discuss pupil
progress and to keep the
parents
and
school
informed about student
activities as they relate to

Sale planned
RACINE
Sonshine
Circle will be having a noo-'
die and bake sale beginning
at 8 a.m. on Feb. 8 at the
Dorcas Bethany Church.
Anyone wanting to place
special orders for noodles or
baked goods may contact ·
Lois Sterrett at 949-0032 or
Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.

formance.
Buckley said he encourages parents to take
advantage of the opportunity to communicate with
their children's instructors.
'fHopefully, a more
effective educational program can result from this
exchange of information
and ides," he said.
Questions regarding the
conferences are to be
directed to the children's
schools of attendance, he
advised.
·

Daschle's stimulus package
calls for income tax cuts
Democrats have criticized
and that Daschle omitted
from his own plan.
"If we're looking ljt a
short-term economic goal,
if we want to get the biggest
bang for the buck in the
shortest period of time, the
dividend tax cut is not it,"
Daschle said.
Daschle's speech was part
of a broader Democratic
attempt to counter the
administration's economic
proposals. The party's
leader in the House, Rep.
Nancy Pelosi of California,
proposed an alternative earlier this month, and she and
Daschle plan a joint appearance on Monday that their
offices described as a "prebulla! to President Bush's
State of the
Union
Address."
Sen. Max Baucus, DMont., the senior Democrat
on the Senaie Finance
Committee, released a plan
a month ago that blends tax
cuts for individuals with aid
to the states and costs
slightly
more
than
Daschle's
recommendations.
Daschle has been particularly critical o~ Bush's tax
proposals, describing them
as a plan to "leave no millionaire behind."
Daschle proposed a tax
cut of $300 per adult and an
additional $300 per child,
up to two children per family. Adults would qualify

even if they have no federal
tax liability, as long as they
pay Social Security and
Medicare payroll taxes.
Daschle also proposed
additional tax breaks for
businesses, including more
generous
depreciation
designed to encourage companies to invest in new
equipment. He also called
for a tax credit to help small
businesses pay for health
insurance premiums and
proposed a credit for businesses investing in broadband high-speed Internet
equipment.
The aid to the states and
local governments includes
about $15 billion with no
strings attached, as well as
about $25 billion more to
be
divided
among
Medicaid, education, homeland security and highway
and mass transit construction.
Daschle also proposed
extending unemployment
benefits to an estimated I
million people who have
exhausted benefits and
remain out of work.
Republicans rejected similar proposals earlier this
year
when
Congress
approved legislation renewing a program that gives 13
weeks of benefits to workers who have depleted the
26 weeks of ·aid that comes
from the states.

one held at the Wilkesville
Community Center on Jan. 7
attracted 38 people.
The next workshop will be
held on from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Feb. 18 in the Rutland
Elementary Sc;hool gymnasium, with the next three classes
scheduled for March 18, April
15 and May 20 at the Meigs
County Extension Office on
Mulbeny Avenue in Pomeroy.
Anyone of any age can
attend, according to Mary
Powell, who is one of the coordinators for the dance workshop~. For more information,

Wetland
from Page A1
county officials were skeptical
that the landfill was the source
of the contaminated leachate,
believing instead, that the
leachate originates from abandoned mine water in Thomas
Fork Creek, which runs
through the landfill site.
The Burgess &amp; Niple study
recommended the construction
of a wetland leachate treatment
system, at a cost of $100,000,
and Sheets said it is likely the
county will pursue plans to
construct such a system.
The study also considers a
system requiring the containment and physical removal of
the contaminated water, but
Sheets said that while such as
system would cost about the
same to implement, it would
also be more costly to operate

.Southern
from PageA1
pal Gordon Fisher said this
approach to learning "builds on
itself steP, by step like going up
a ladder.'
To keep pace with improvement, Southern High School
has eliminated five of the eight
study halls which has freed up
teachers. Since there are tive
more teachers available, more
classes can be offered .which
can bring down class size. Prior
to this change, there were 15.7
students per teacher, which is
· already below the state standard of 18 students per teacher.
Fisher said teachers offer a
lot of individual attention to
students who need it. He talked
about a student who was not
passing two of the skill levels.

Temps
from PageA1
Many school districts
across the state announced
Thursday evening that they
would be closed Friday. No
closings were reported in
Gallia or Meigs counties, but
several were on two-hour
·
delays.
"The ice just isn't melting
out there,' said Highway
Patrol spokeswoman Robin
Schmutz, who added that
blowing snow has been a
problem in some rural areas.
Schmutz said despite the
icy roads, there hasn't been a
huge increase in crashes.
"People tend to stay home

she can be contacted at 992- ·
2611 .
'
Period costume construction
workshops for those interested
in making their own costumes
will be held from I 0 a.m. to 4
p.m. March I at the Meigs
.Senior Center. A seamstress
will be on hand to guide costume construction. Participants
must know how to sew.
Reservations for the initial
class are due to Schatz at (740)
667-9712 by Feb. 21. A noon
lunch will be served at a cost of
$5 a person.
Additional classes at no
charge will be held from 10
a.m. to noon on March 15,
April 5, and April 12, all at the
Meigs Senior Center.
in the long run.
"EPA told me yesterday the
containment and removal system is likely the most effective
means to deal with the problem, and we're going to continue communicating with the
EPA, but we'll likely pursue
the wetlands system," Sheets
said. ·
According to Sheets, litigation would be almost cenain if
the county doesn't respond to
the agency's Feb. 12 deadline
for a plan of action.
Commissioners plan to seek
loan and grant funds through
the Ohio Water Development
Authority to help install the
wetland system. Sheets said If
the creek can be pinpointed a~ a
source of the leachate, mining
reclamation funding might also
he available.
"It's not going to happen
overnight," Sheets said. "It's
probably going to take a year to
secure funding and another
year to complete the work." · ·
Teachers W!Jrked with this ·
student who went on to passing ·
the proficiency tests. Teachers
adjust their methods to suit stu- ·
dents. In some cases, discovery'
is replacing lecture.
Tutoring is available to stu- .
dents who need it. Kucsma said
·the elementary school has a ·
certified teacher available who ·
can teach all topics.
Also, there are tutors who
specialize in fourth-grade reading proficiency. She said there.
is a four student-to-tutor teaching ratio,
.
Improvement comes in small ,
steps which add up to a journey.
"We are improving year by'
year," Kucsma said.
"We are not where we want :
to be yet, but with alternative ·
teaching techniques and an
alternative curriculum, we are
steadily improving."
when it gets this cold, ·which
kind of helps," she said.
Schmutz said troopers ·
were kept busy Thursday
checking interstates and state
routes for disabled vehicles.
"We don't want people
stranded out there m the
cold."
The cold was blamed on ·
Arctic air from Canada, and
more was. headed south ·
across Lake Erie by Saturday.'
Then, relief: a watm front
across the lower Great Lakes
by Tuesday, with Ohio temperatures above freezing.
Until then, the weather service offered this advice:
"Bundle up in layers expos- ·
ing as little flesh as possible."
(The Associated Press con tributed to this story).

Wonderful opportunities are available in
Tom Peden Country. We are expanding our facilities
and need more sales people. No experience is required,
only a willingness to learn , work as a team
and have a strong initiative.

• Excellent Payment Plan • Great Benefits (loelu&lt;llng demo progromJ

For the Record
EMS·runs

.

.

ALFRED Board of
Orange Township Trustees
re-elected Roger Ritchie
president and John Rankin
vice president at its recent •
organizational meeting.
Lewis White is the third
trustee. Regular meetings
will be held on the first
Tuesday of each month, ·at
the home of clerk, Osie
Follrod.

CLEVELAND (AP) Senate Democratic Leader
Tom Daschle called Friday
for $300-per-person income
tax cuts and billions in aid
to cash-strapped states as
part of an economic stimulus package designt;d as an
alternative to President
Bush's recommendations.
Daschle's proposals also
include tax breaks to help
small businesses afford
health insurance premiums
and aid for an estimated I
million jobless people who
·have exhausted their unemployment benefits.
Daschle,
D-S .D,
announced his proposals in
a speech before the City
Club of Cleveland. While
they stand virtually no
chance of enactment in the
Republican-controlled
Senate,
they
give
Democrats an alternative to
support during the coming
debate over the president's
recommendations.
The measures proposed
by Daschle would expire
after one year and cany a
price tag of roughly $140
billion, far less than the
$674 billion, 10-year plan
that Bush has issued.
Bush's plan proposed the
elimination of the tax on
dividends, and called for
the acceleration of some of
the income tax cuts that
Congress approved two
years ago - two elements
that Daschle and other

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

• Work At The #1 Dealership

...

•WIN•
Rose Peterman, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
6:37 p.m. , West Main ·
Street, Bonnie Evans,
Holzer Medical Center;
8:50 p.m., Greenwood
Cemetery
Road , Paul
Evans, treated.

2FREEDCIDS
IPRIIIVIWY
CIIE.J
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WINI

Call To Schedule An Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822-0417. 372-2844
475 South Church Street • Ripley, WV

~=J~~~~~~~~

�Church of Jesus Christ AposloUc:
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pwilor: James Miller
Sunday School - I 0:30 a.m.
Evening -7:30p.m.

River Valley
Apostoli.: Worship Center
~73 S. 3rd Ave .. Middlepon
Kevin Konkle, Pastor
Sunday. HI a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4.5 -5: 15p.m.; MltSs- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass-9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass-8:30a.m.

Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

( 'hurd! of( 'hrist

Trinity Chun:h
Second &amp; LyM, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rt:v. Jack Noble
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School9:15 a.m.

Hemlock Grove Chril!itian Chun:h
Minister: larry Brown
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study - 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Chun:h or Christ

1.-:mmantKI Aposlolic Tabernade Inc. ·
Loop Rd off Nt'w Lima Rd . Rutland
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7: JO p.m.
Thurs. 7:00p.m.
Pastor

Marty R. Hutlon

Libeny Assembly or God
P.O. Bol( 467, Dudding Lane
Muson. W.Va.

Pastor. Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Ba pi ist
Hope Baptist Chun:ll (Southern)
570 Grnnt St., MKidleport
Pastor: Re\1. David Bryar1
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Worship · I I a.m. and 6 p.m
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Rutland First Rapti!d: Cbun:-h
Sunday School - 9 :~0 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert
East Main St.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Flnt Soutb~m Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:15a.m., 9:4j am &amp; 7:00p. m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Flnt B11ptist Chun:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St.. Middl~port
Su11day School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:1.5 a.m .• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvict:· 7:00p.m.
Radne Fl nt Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Silver Run B1ptisl
Pastor: John SwiUtsoo
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Wors hip ~ ll a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m

ML Union Baptist
Pastor : David Wiseman
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wcdnesda}' Services · 6:30p.m .
Bethlehem h11.ptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 u.m.
Wednesday Bihle Study • 6:00 p.m.

Gr•c-e Episcopal Chun:b

212 W. Main St
Mini ste r: Anthony Morri s
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo rship· 10:;\0 a.m., 6 p.m
WedncMiay Servtccs - 7 p.m.

Sunda~

School and
Holy Eucharisl I I :00 a.m.

Pomeroy Westside Church or Christ
33226 Children 's Home Rd .
Sund11y St:hool- II a.m
\\o'or.~hip - IOu.m.. 6 p.m.
WedneW.uy Scrvici!S • 7 p.m.

II ul i m·ss
CommunitY Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
SunrJay Scrvice-7 p.m-

Middlepon Church or Chrls1
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sund;~ y School · 9:30a.m.·
Worship- 8: 15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l 43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sen·ices • 7 p.m.
Tuppen Plain Chun::h of Christ

Instrumental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communio~:~ · 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Youth· 5:30pm Sunday
Bib le Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Chun:h of Christ

Minister: Tom Runyon
39558 Bradbury Road, Middleport
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Latlt• r-Da~

Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

I . utilt· l .111

St. Rt. 143 just offRt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Victory Baptist Independent

325 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
WedneWy Services· 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Chun:-h
Railroad St .. Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Fon:st Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St. , Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbcn Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m
Antlqull)' Bapdst
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor5hip - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas
Rutland Free WiD Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Tayl or
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Evening - 7 p.m.
WedneSI.lay Servi1..-es- 7 p.m.

Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood. WV
David W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMorning worship I I am EYening - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.
Pa.~ lor:

( ·atlwlir
Sacftd Hurt Catholk Chun:h

Dntn Church or Christ
Pastor: Bill Eshelman
Sunduy school9:30 a.m .
Norman Will. superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.
Church of Christ
7 and 124 W
Evtmgclist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Srudy- 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.
lnt t:~tion

( 'hristian l nion
Hartrord Chun:b of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:David Greer
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Se~ices- '7:00p.m.

( 'hurd1 of ( ;od
Mt. Moriah Chun:h of God

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Jamt:s Satterflt:ld
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wedn~sday Sen·kes - 7 p.m.
RuUand Chun::h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Bill Quickel

992-&amp;&amp;n

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667-3110

-'-·'St.)Oha L~~i:tiiRtr ..

~eafotb
l\eal lf~tate
216 E. Second Pomeroy
740..992·3325

Marketing Property
Since 1971 ·

';tttt-e,a.t.

~&lt;J.me

174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265
H. Anderson
DirtJCfor Fax: 304·882·821

Cannel-Sutton

.

- .•

..

~7.5

Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday S&lt;:hooiiO a.m.
EYening ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

1

1- 10 a.m.
" 9 a.m,

..

Our Sa~lour Luth~ran Chutth
Walnut and Henry Sts.. Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: DaYid Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comt-:r Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

l nitnl \kthodist
GrahllDI United Methodist
Worship- 9:30 a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilke-iville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Meip Cooperative Pari.sh

Nonheast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: lane Beattie
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:]0 p.m.

a......
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunda~ School - I0 11.111.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rceclsvi.Ue

;t~er ;t'untrllJiomt
811118 ....111.•EPE L.

Pentecostal Auanbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine

l'lt ... ll\ (tl

"",.SJD£~.~R"

P8stor. Brian Haltness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
Wednesday 1 p.m.

Flnt U.Jted Pfttbyterian
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship • ll a.m.

OffRt. 124
Pastor. Edsel Han
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Helen Kltne
Coolville Church
•· Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday &amp;:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
TUesday Services - 7 p.m.
Bttbel Cbun:h

Morse Chapel Churtb
Sunday !1Chool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sevenlb-Day Advendsl
Mulbeny Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
w h" 3 '

Faith Gospel Church

.

Long BottQIU
Sunday Sch~l - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Hockingport Chun:h
Grand Street
Sunday School , 10 a.m.
Worship . II a.m.
Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.

l nill'd llrl'lhren
Mt. Hermon United Breth~n
In Chrl!it Cburch ·
Texas Community 364 11 Wickham Rd
Pastor: Robert Sandm
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won&gt;hip· l0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.

Me. Olin Community Chufth

Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
EYening- 6:30 r.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Torch ChuKh
Co. Rd. 63
Sun~ay School-9:30a.m.
w h ' 1030

'

Middleport Chun::h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midco.p
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Sooth Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge- Putor Linda Damewood
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship Service I0 a.m.
Carleton lnterdenomlaational Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Robert Vance
SunQay School - 9:30a.m.
Wo~hip Service 10:30 a.m.
Evening Service 6 p.m.
Flftdom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Willford

Reedsville FeUowshlp
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School- 9 : ~0 a.m.
Worship - I0:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church or lbe N111rent

Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunda~ School - 9:30a.m.
Woohip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se~ices - 7 p.m.

Eden United Brethrea in Christ
SLate Route 124. Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m.&amp;. 7:00p.m.:
Wtdflt:sday Services- 7:00 p.rn
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:00p.m.

...

.

..

··--·· ....

'}"nuu:isFiorist
Meigs County's Oldest Aorist
352 East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

106 BUITERNUT AVE.
POMEROY, OH 992-6454

MY arace Is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streneth is made
Perfect In weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

"So I strive always to keep

6noulhr'•
:fin &amp; 6aletp

. .l ..... _

"Let your light so shine before
men, fhat they may see your my conscience clear before
good works and glor;}y your God and man."
Father in Heaven."

Matthew 5:16

MELBOURNE, Australia
(AP) - Serena and Venus
Williams combined to win
their sixth Grand Slam doubles title, an ideal tuneup for
their fourth consecutive clash
in a singles final at a major.
The top-seeded Williams
sisters rallied from a set and a
break down to win the
Australian Open women's
final 4-6, 6-4, 6·3 over sec·
ond-seeded Virginia Ruano
Pascual of Spain and
Argentina's Paola Suarez.

Yao to start in
All-Star game
Blessed are the pure ICrtNI's Family Restaurant
in heart,· fior they
"FNturtng Kentucky Fried
Chicken"
shall see God.
w. Main St., Pomeroy
Matthew 5:8.
992-5432

,....... .
•m•m

Williams sisters
win Grand Slam

Wedne5day Services - 7:00p.m.

Full Gospel Ughthoutie
33~ Hiland Road, Poineroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · I0 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday-7:30p.m.

:\atan"lll'

NEW YORK (AP) - Add
Michael Vick and Priest
Holmes to the list of stars
who will miss the Pro Bowl.
Vick will stay in Atlanta to
have a bunion removed from
his right foot. Tampa Bay
quarterback Brad Johnson
will replace Vick.
Holmes won't make the
trip to Honolulu because of
the right hip injury that sidelined him for the season's
final two games. A replacement wasn't named.

Middlepor1 Pmbyl~rian
Putor: Roher Crow.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Dyes..Ule Community Churtb
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Township Rd ., 46BC
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- IOa.m.

Vick, Holmes to
miss Pro Bowl

Harrisonville Prnby1erlaa Chan:h
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship - 9 a.m.

Hazel Community Church
CoolviUe United Methodist Parish

i.lll

Syn~cuse

1411 Bridgeman :st.. Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday S!!rvice - 7 p.m.

Racine

Acts 24:1

"l"hi\U

FLOWER

"Flowers for all occasions"

..

,

...

........... .

IIIIU .... n

•let yc •~d yom fho~.~ghtc with cpec.l•l Clltll•

740-992·2644

74(1.992-6298

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

Southern defeats ,Trimble, moves closer to TVC title
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent
RACINE
Holding
Trimble to just three thirdquarter points, the Southern
Tornadoes rode a 13-point
lead into the fourth quarter
and held on for an exciting
49-41 Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division win over
the
Trimble
Tomcats
Thursday night during girls
varsity basketball action in
Hayman gymnasium.
Southern is now 6·1 in the
Hocking Division and 11-3
overall. Trimble is now 9-4
and 4·3 · in the Hocking
Division.
Southern was Jed in scoring
by junior swing guard Katie

Sayre who clipped the
Tomcats with five three
pointers for a team-high 19
points. In an evenly balanced
offensive attack, senior guard
Amy Lee had a great floor
game with five assists and
seven points, Brigette Barnes
also notched seven in a great
floor game, while Rachel
Chapman, playing with a
severe aplde sprain that sidelined .J:rer Monday. added six
and Deana Pullins added
another six. Pullins hit several key buckets in Southern's
victory run, and junior post
Ashley Dunn added four
points, but most importantly
brought down a game-high
16 rebounds.
Southern's Tara ·Pickens
and Brooke Kiser never

cracked the scoring column
but posted solid defensive
efforts and had great floor
games. Pickens handled the
ball well against the Trimble
zone and Kiser made a big
steal and good defensive
stand in Southern's winning
drive.
"It was perhaps the best
game this group has ever
played," said SHS coach
Scott Wolfe. "It was a gutsy
performance and a total team
effort. I am very proud of
these girls. We had a couple
girls hurting bad and they
never made excuses. Our
bench did an outstanding job
and we played a super defensive game."
Despite being double
teamed most of the game,

NASCAR

NEW YORK (AP) - Yao
Ming will be starting for the
Western Conference after
defeating Shaquille 0 ' Neal
by almost a quarter-million
votes in final fan balloting
totals for the NBA All-Star
game Feb. 9 in Atlanta.
Yao will become the first
rookie to start in the All-Star
game since Grant Hill in
1995.
In the closest race, Kevin
Garnett of Minnesota edged
Dirk Nowitzki of Dallas by
7,355 votes for the last starting spot among Western forwards.
In the Eastern Conference,
Allen Iverson of Philadelphia
drew almost 73,000 more
votes than Michael Jordan to
earn the second guard spot.

Trimble's freshman point
guard Jennifer Grandy posted
game-high scoring honors
with 25 points. Grandy had a
great floor game and her keen
basketball on-court knowledge kept Trimble in the
game throughout the contest.
Trimble's Allory Hooper
n.ine,
Penny
added
McClelland four, and Hannah
Faires three. Hooper had a
good inside-outside game for
the Tomcats· and picked up
the slack when Grandy was
shut down by the SHS
defense.
Southern started quick,
fueled mainly by a series of
Katie Sayre threes. Sayre was
red-hot from the floor, while
also playing a great defensive
game and having three

assists. Overall the first
frame became a long-distance offensive shootout with
six treys traded in the opening eight minutes.
The Tornadoes went up 60 on buckets by Amy Lee,
Brigette Barnes and Rachel
Chapman. The Tornadoes
went up 9·2 after a pair of
Grandy free throws, and a
Sayre trey. Sayre added
another for an 12-2 tally then
Grandy hit a three-pointer for
an II-5 score, followed by
another Grandy three and a
score of 12-8.
Sayre drilled another threepointer for a 13-8 advantage,
tlien following a Hooper
three-pointer, Sayre drove
Please see Southem, 82

Super Bowl

U.S. Customs officer Mike Johnson oversees a security
checkpoint at the delivery entrance to Qualcomm Stadium
Thursday in San Diego, Calif. The vehicles are queued up to
be scanned for contratland by a device that measures density. {AP)

BALTIMORE (AP)
Hall of Fame linebacker
Mike Singletary was hired to
coach that position for the
Baltimore Ravens.

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Vallty Tabemaclt Church
Bailey Run Road
~.f-'.Rcvf'~ {law80il
Sunday Evenina 7 p.m.
Thuttday Service- 7 p.m.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - The
NFL fined the Oakland
Raiders $50,000 for violating
the NFL's Super Bowl media
policy
by
skipping
Wednesday's
mandatory
morning interview session.
• The NFL Players
Association announced that it
was in favor of a change in
overtime, the first major
group to support altering the
su~den-death system that has
been in place since 1974.
NFLPA executive director
Gene Upshaw said players
favor a system in which both
teams would get a chance
with the ball.
• The· NFLPA released its
biennial report on turf conditions and, to nobody's surprise, Veterans Stadium in
Philadelphia was rated the
worst field in the league.
at
The
grass field
Qualcomm Stadium, where
the Super Bowl will be
played, ranked I Oth worst.
• The Jacksonville Jaguars
hired James Harris, who is
black, as their vice president
of player personnel. He is the
second black man to be elevated to a high-ranking executive's position this month,
along with Rod Graves of the
Arizona Cardinals.
• Referee Bill Carollo will
head the seven-man crew
selected to officiate the Super
Bowl. Carollo is completing
his 14th year in the league
and will work his second
Super Bowl, first as a referee.

Prep basketball

Singletary hired
by Ravens

Middleport Community Church

r.~u;':t::
,,: Harlcne~rt .'. . --, .. .,.

Sunday.
~· W

Langsville Christian Church
Full Gospel
l'astor: Robert Musser
Sunday School 9:30 am,
Worship 10:30 am- 7:00 !"m
Wednesday Se~ice 7:00pm

Harrison\'llle Community Church
Pastor: theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Momiq Star
Pastor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- II a.m. .
Worship - I0 a.m.

Worship- 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Joppa

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

New Lime Rd., RuUand
Pas10r: Rev. Margarell. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Pine~~~e""-~~: ..-..~~~ ·~~- ~~~.·~~p ~ .. :~n.~:.-~ :.~-~~-•"'-'"~4

Pastor: Bob Randolph
Wofllhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

992·3785

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.
INSURANCE
Full line of
Insurance
Products+
Financial
ENCIES Inc&lt; Services

, !..:

Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor. Rev. David Russell
Sunda~ School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
MillWork
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

..~,.·

Re..torallon Chrhtian Fellowship
936S Hooper Road, Athens
Pastor: Lonnie Coats
Sunday Worship I 0:00 am
Wednesday: 1 pm

The BeUevers' Fellowship Ministry

. Carmel &amp;. Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewaync Stutler
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Bible Scudy Wed. 7:00p.m.

''""I"'"

Syratuse First Chun:h of God

Chun:h of God ofl'rophe&lt;y
OJ. White Rd . off St. Rt. 160

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - I0 a.m.

0000

Hobson Christian Fellowship ChurTh
Pslor: Herschel While
Sunday School- I 0 am
Sunday Church servic,e - 6:30 pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowship service 7 p.m.

Bethany

Th~ Church or JtsWI
Christ or Lauer-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Sociecy/Priesrhood 11 :0!5-12:00

Hickory Hills Church of Christ

ReedsviUe Ch~~.~fChrlst
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Worship· 9:15a.m.
Bible Srudy: Monday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 un.

Saiuts

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening -7:00p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

Hillside Baptist Chun:h

Rudand
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Thui"Mfay Services • 7 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Cburcb
Rev. Les Strand! and Myra L. Strandt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m. •

Bradrord Church or Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbul)' Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School- 9:]0 a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m .. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

•

Rock Springs

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Youth Fellows hip. Sunday- 6 p.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth- 7 p.m. ·

Rudand Chun::h or Christ
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

., .

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Bmwor
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:35 a.m.

Hysell Run Hollnas Church
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Rejoicing Life Chun:h
.'iOO N. 2nd A\'e., Middleport
Pastor: Mik.e Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- 10:00 am
Wt:dncsday Services· 7 p.m .

Bethel Worship Center
Chester School
Pastor: Rob Barber
Assistant Pastor: Karen Davis
Sunday Worship: IO _am
Clition Tabernacle Chun:h
Evening Worship: 6 pm
Clifton. W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday: Power in Prayer
Wofllhip- 7 p.m.
and Bible Study - 7 pm
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Ash Street Chun::h
Ash St., Middleport- Pastor: Glenn Rowe
N~w Lire Victory Center
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 pm 3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, 01{
Pastor: Bill Staten
..Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.
Sunday Se~ices • 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. ;:
Youth Service-7:00p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.f
Agape Life Center
?
"Full-Gospel Church"
Full
Gospel
Church
or
the
Living
Savlofl
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wad~
Rt.338, Antiquity
603 Second Ave. Mason
Pastor:
Jesse Morris
773·5017
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Servict-: Lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm
Salem Commually Church
Lieving
Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Abundant Grac:e R.F. I.
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Sunday School 9:30 am
Pastor Teresa Oa\'is
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Werlnesday service 7 pm
Wednt:sday service, 7 p.m.

Peart Chapel

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pustor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sum.luy Worship-9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· '7:30p.m.

Stiversvllle Community Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
•
Sunday Servkes · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m..
Thursday - 7:00p.m.
~

Community of Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd .
Pastor: Michael [)uhl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WO!Ship - 10 a.m.

Pine Gruve Bible Holineu Church
1!2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Raiders
fined $50,000

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pa.~ tor : ReY . Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 u.m .• 7:]0 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Other ( ' hurrhcs

MlntrsYille
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9 a.m
Worship - 10 a.m.

Rose or Sharon llolinr:ss ChurcH
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastur: ReY. Dewey King
Sunday scllool· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Friday, January 24, 2003

Faith Fellowship Cru...adt for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Di.ckens
SerVice: Friday. 7 p.m .

Portland Ftnt Chun:h or the Nazarene
Pas1or: William Justis
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - I0:45 a.m.
Sunchty Service - 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor5hip - I I :00 a.m.

Cabary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Ruad
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday Sc hool 9:30a.m.
Worsllip - II a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Chun:h or Christ
Pa.~tor: Brucc Terry
Sunda}' School-9:30a.m.
Wurship • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:.30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - '7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)

Page Bl

Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. R1. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

Rutland Chun:h or tbe "'az.arene
Pastor: Rev. Louis S. Staubs

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Danville Holiness Churth
31057 State Route 325, L1ngsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Su nday school - 9:30a. m.
Sunday wo~hip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Keno Chun:h or Christ
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Pa5tor-leffrey Wallace
I st and 3rd Sunday

Jlutor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship . II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Enterprist
Pastor: Arland king
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:30
Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

326 E. Main St., fYmeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Re\'. Katharin Foster

Super Bowl Preview, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page B3

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville ROlld
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship ... I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Chester Church ot tht Nazarene

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Worsltip- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church ot lbe Nazarene
Pastor: Jan La"·ender
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. .
Worship · I0:30a.m. and 6 p.m
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Central CIU51er
Asbury (Syn~cuse)
Pastor: I,Joh Robinson
Sunday School · 9 : 4~ a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sacnunent Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking m~ting, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

,..

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Monlh - 7:00p.m. ~rvice
Tuppen Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Worship - I 0 a.m.
1\tesdoy Se~ices - 7:30p.m.

Old Jlot...l FI'H WIU Baptist Chun:h
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middleport

-.

Friday, January 24, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page A6 • The Dally Sltntlnel

NASCAR president Mike Helton, right, comments on new safety rules at NASCAR tracks as
executive vice president Brian France, left, and chief operating officer George Pyne, center,
look on during a news conference Tuesday in Concord, N.C. NASCAR unveiled its new poli·
cy for garage access, a plan that is expected to reduce congestion in the garage area by at
least 20 percent and prevent fans from getting too close to the cars. (AP)

NASCAR to make
several changes
Schedule,
garage access
policies to be
revamped
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) NASCAR put tracks on notice
Tuesday that the 2004
Winston Cup schedule could
look a lot different under a
realignment plan that might
move races to different parts
of the country.

That could be bad news for
historic tracks such as North
Carolina
Speedway
in
Rockingham Wld Darlington
Raceway in South Carolinafacilities that are clinging to
two Winston Cup races a rear.
"We CWlnOt expand Within
the current schedule, we're
racing 38 weekends , and
there's no more room to add
another
week,"
said
NASCAR vice · president
George Pyne. "So we're now
looking within the schedule to
see if any moves make sense

geographically."
The realignment plan was
just one of many issues
NASCAR addressed. including its new policy to reduce
congestion in the garage by
sweeping fans from the area
whenever cars are on the
track.
But it was the possible
changes to the 2004 schedule
that drew the most attention.
NASCAR has a set list of
criteria it will be looking for

Please see Changes, 82

Carbon monoxide ends Mast's career
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Years of
breathing fumes in a race car has given
NASCAR driver Rick Mast carbon monoxide
poisoning that will end his career.
Mast, who has not raced since May, said
Wednesday he is suffering from acute and
chronic carbon monoxide poisoning that canies
symptoms similar ·to "the worst hangover in
your life."
"You waJce up feeling nauseated and you
want to throw up and you can't," Mast said.
"Your head is pounding all the lime and you just
feel awful. That is what I lived with for live and
a half weeks, seven days a week."
Mast, who made 364 starts over a 15-year
Winston Cup career, said he began feeling ill in
March but didn't get of the car until May.
It took dozens of visits to various doctors
before he was fmally diagnosed in November
- he said he lost 43 pounds in that time - and
there is no timetable for when the poisoning will
be out of his system.
The only thing he knows for certain is that he
can no longer be around chemicals that are spinoffs of carbon monoxide, an odorless, colorless,
tasteless gas that is in everything from a car's
exhaust to poorly ventilated heating systems.
That means everything from r.teing cars to
using a lawnmower Wld riding a tractor on his

Former NASCAR Winstoni Cup driver Rick
Mast answers a question during a news con·
terence Wednesday in Charlotte, N.C. after
confirming his retirement from racing due to
fatigue symptoms from prolonged exposure
to carbon monoxcide. {AP)
Virginia fann are off limits to Mast
'"I cut ~s one day in June and the air was
blowing JUSt a certain way and the fumes were
blowing and I was down for five days after it,"
MCJSt said.

Pleise see Mast. Bl

Big Brother takes
over security at
Super Bowl
SAN DIEGO (AP) The armored military
trucks and camouflaged
soldiers are gone. This
Super Bowl looks more
like a football game than
the
military
staging
ground it resembled last
year.
Of course, the NFL still
is watching very, very
closely.
A high-tech surveillance
system - the league's
version of Big Brother is keeping twck of every
corner of the Super Bowl
stadium. It's part of an
intensive, less intrusive
effort to ensure safety at
Sunday's game between
the Oakland Raiders and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
"Security is at exactly
the same level as it was
last year," NFL vice presi·
dent for security Milt
Ahlerich said.
Thus far, it 's just not as
easy to tell.
Last year, the Super
Bowl was played only f1ve
months after the Sept. II
terrorist attacks, and
securing
America's
biggest single-day sporting event was the key
story of the week.
From the French Quarter
to the Superdome, New
Orleans was swarming
with national guardsmen
in military garb. Armored
personnel carriers surround,ed the dome .
The federal government
de signated the game a
National Special Security
Event, a status normally
reserved for presidential
and papal visits. The
Secret Service coordinated
security.
Thi s year, tho se measures aren't being taken,
mainly because the Office
of Homeland Security has
so' much confidence in
local authorities' ability to
handle the game, Ahlerich
said.
"We're doing a lot of the
same thing s. We're just
doing il better, more effi .
ciently," he said. "That 's

why people mi~ht not
notice it as much.'
San Diego police are
spending about $2 million
on
security.
About
$400,000 is going toward
a system of 52 cameras
around
Qualcomm
Stadium that will leave no
corner unmonitored.
Unlike less-sophistical·
ed camera systems, this
one won't require security
personnel to watch the
footage from a centraL
command post. Police·
working the stadium can
see shots by hooking mooitors into cell phones,
meaning they can react to
trouble almost immediate·
ly.
The cameras have been
used at the stadium for
weeks in preparation for
the Super Bowl. At a San
Diego Chargers game last.
month, they were able to
catch a rowdy fan who had
been thrown out of the
game but tried to sneak
back in .
" It's more cameras, it's
more control of the cameras," said Bill Guetz, vice
president of cVideo Inc.,
the company . that created
the system. "It allows a lot
of government agencies to
look at the same stuff at
the same time."
San
Diego
Police
Captain Joel Bryden said
very little military personnel is being used to secure
,the stadium -. an odd
t":1s1 cons1denng San
D1ego. ha s one of . the
nat1on s heav1est m11itary
presences.. .
.
.
St1ll, m1lit~ry Jets will
patrol the sk1es above the
stadium to enforce a nofly zone rhat has a 7-mile
radius and an 18,000-foot
ceiling.
And the California
National Guard will protect 29 mass1ve tanks
filled with abo ut 700,000'
barrels of combustible
petroleum products near
lhe stadium.

Please see Security, 82

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 24, 2003

Friday, January 24, 2003

/ www.mydallysentlnel.com

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

"

Southern
from Page B1
baseline and hit Dunn for an
open basket and 17- II first
period Southern advantage.
The action simmered
somewhat in the second
frame, but the key to the
game
seemed
to
be
Southern!' use of various
zone defenses and doubling
up the Trimble ace Grandy.
Grandy was still able to keep
Trimble astride with the runout on the fast break and
assist from Allory Hooper.
Grandy had six points via
break-aways to keep Trimble
in the game. Hannah Faires
added two and McClelland
two in the march.
Southern got a scare in the
frame when Brigene Barnes
went down with a sprained
ankle and missed most of the
quarter before going to the
locker room and returning
with a taped ankle.
Meanwhile, Sayre stroked
another three-pointer and
Amy Lee followed up a sinking driver with a banking

Changes
from Page B1
track owners to meet in order
to keep its current race dates.
Among things NASCAR
will be srudr,ing are tracks that
need sigmficant upgrades,
have trouble selling tickets,
have a history of poor weather
on race weekends,. or are in
small markets that lack adequate hotels and restaurants.
"We don't want any tracks to
start looking over their shoulder
wondering
when
NASCAR is going to pull a
date from them," said
NASCAR vice chairman
Brian France. "But we are
going to start looking at places
where there is more of a
demand for races."
NASCAR chairman Bill
France Jr. said the intent is not
to take races away from tracks
owned by
International
Speedway Corp., which his
family runs, or from rival
Speedway Motorsports Inc.,
owned by Bruton Smith.
Instead, NASCAR might
move races between ISCowned tracks, as well as
between SMI-owned tracks.
That could offer a solution to a
long-running feud over the
awarding of a second date to
Texas Motor Speedway.
SMI owns the Texas track,
and Smith has long contended
he was promised a second race
date. NASCAR insists it never
promised Texas another race.
NASCAR has never even
awarded one date to Texas Smith landed the Arril race by
purchasing half o the nowdefunct track in North
Wilkesboro, N.C., and moving

Mast
from Page 81
The 45-year-old driver from
VIrginia can't pin his illness on
NASCAR, although he is now
working with the sanctioning
body to educate other drivers
on the dangers of carbon
monoxide poisoning.
Because he has been around
race cars since he was 4-yearsold, Mast said the lifetime of
exposure to the fumes is probably to blame.
"I was a ~ monkey of
sorts," he S3Id. "In the winter
~e. we worked in the garage
wtth the doors shut and the windows closed and all the cars
running."

Security

three of her own to give SHS
a ten point lead. Ashley Dunn
got a follow up jumper to
make the score 27-21 at the
half. That came after Trimble
cut the lead to four.
Sayre had 12 at the half
and Grandy had 14 of
Trimble's 2 I.
A Hannah Faires free
throw cut the SHS lead to
five points, but a Pullins
bucket and· Chapman bucket
sandwiched
around
a
Trimble turnover made the
score 31-22. Grandy then
broke away for another runout lay-up for a 31-24 tally,
then Sayre drilled an
inbounds three pointer and
Pullins hit a three at the
buzzer for a 37-24 Southern
lead.
Southern went into a delay
game and ran the clock to
near perfection. Their only
stumbling block almost came
at the foul line however. The
Tornadoes hit just 8-16 going
down \he stretch and allowed
Trimble to come to within
seven at the 3:25 mark in the
game. A Barnes steal and layin pushed the SHS lead back
to nine and then SHS started
to pull away at the line. Sayre

one of its Winston Cup events
to Texas. '
A TMS shareholder is suing
NASCAR over the lack of a
second race.
"If Bruton Wants to take a
look at his tracks in Atlanta
and Charlotte and move one of
those races to Texas, that is a
~ssibility," Bill France said.
'But we are not going to take
ISC races and give them to
SMI, or vice versa."
Bill France specifically listed Atlanta Motor Speedway
and Lowe's Motor Speedway
in suburban Charlotte as
examples of SMI tracks that
coulo lose dates. Atlanta has
been plagued by poor weather
and often doesn't sell out,
while Charlotte's October race
has always been a tough sell.
But Charlotte's race will be
run on a Saturday night this
year instead of a Sunday afternoon, which should boost ticket sales.
Ed Clark, president of
Atlanta Motor Speedway, said
he and Smith have already
rejected moving a race from
Atlanta to Texas.
"Why should Bruton give up
something he's already got to
get a date he should already
have?" Clark said.
Rockingham and Darlington
were the two ISC-owned
tracks that France targeted. It's
possible that those tracks lose a
date to other ISC facilities,
such as ones in Fontana, Calif.,
Kansas City, Mo., or suburban
Chicago.
There has been speculation
for years that Darlington and
Rockingham might each eventually lose a Cup date - the
tracks have the smallest seating capacities in the sport and
sellouts are rare.
Still, NASCAR is taking a
proactive approach to the problem.
Gary Nelson, NASCAR 's
managing director of competition, accompanied Mast while
he discussed the illness during
an infonnal announcement at
the annual media tour.
Mast first told NASCAR
about the poisoning after he
was diagnosed in November,
and the sanctioning body
immediately went to work on
ways to prevent it. .
A lab was built into
NASCAR's new research and
development center, and all drivers were a~ked if they had an
air filter system they used in
their car that they wanted
NASCAR to test for them.
"We have found plenty of
systems that didn't work that

detectors and. be checked
for weapons, are being told
to arrive early to avoid long
lines .
·
from Page 81
Bryden urged fans to
Even if an attack caused leave cell phones and
the tanks to explode, fans pagers at home, becau se
inside the stadium probably checking them at security
points will take too much
wouldn't be hurt . Of time.
He said spectators
course, the blast still would
should not brio~ anything
be dangerous.
into the stadiUm they
"It would probably be wouldn't get past security
something spectacular to screeners at the airport.
look at and listen to, but it's
That would probably
not one that would have the include the footlong ' metal
greatest impact on human spikes and much of the
life," terrorism expert other
leather-and-chain
Bruce GadboiS said.
gear many Raiders fans
Just like last year, / 90 wear to games as part of
metal detectors will ring the their elaborate silver-andstadium.
Ticketholders, black costumes.
who will go through the
"We 'II have to take a look

went 4,6 with the game on
the line, and Barnes was 3-6,
but hit three of her last four.
Threes by Hooper and
Grandy twice cut the. lead to
nine, but in the last three
minutes that was as close as
it got until Southern gave up
the last basket to McClelland
to end the game at 49-41 .
Southern hit 9-33 two's, 815 treyf' , and just 8-20 at the
line. Southern grabbed 40
rebounds
(Dunn
16,
Chapman 7): 14 steals (Sayre
4, Pullins 3); 12 assists (Lee
5, Sayre 3): 14 turnovers, and
21 fouls.
Trimble hit 9-31, 5-16
three's and was 8-10 at the
line. The Tomcats had 28
rebounds (Hooper 9, Grandy
6); eight steals (Grandy 4,
Hooper 4 ); five assists
(Grandy 3); 15 turnovers;
and 21 fouls.
Southern won the reserve
game 54-26 led by Joanne
Pickens with 14, Kasie
Sellers
ten,
Kristiina
Williams eight, Susan Brauer
eight, and Jessica HiU six.
Trimble was Jed by Alicia
Andrews with 14.
Southern. goes to Miller
Saturday at I p.m.

"I wish things wouldn't
change, but the fact of the matter is they're probably going
to," said Darlington president
Andrew Gurtis. "What they
have laid out here is a prudent
way to grow the sport. I just
hope it doesn't come at the
expense of Darlington."
NASCAR also said tracks
that currently don't have dates,
like Kentucky and Nashville,
would factor into the realignment only through potential
deals with track owners currently on the schedule.
NASCAR is also looking at
later starting times so races
could stretch into prime time
on Sunday evenings, as well as
running more night races.
As for its new gara~e-access
policy, the sanctiomng body
backed away from proposals
to reduce the number of passes
it gives out to each race as well
as prohibiting the signing of
autographs in the garage.
Instead, there will now. be
"hot" and "cold" times at the
track. Anyone with a "hard
card" - the credential ~n
out to team members and fulltime media - will have no
garage restrictions.
Those without a hard card
will not be allowed in the
garage during "hot" times
without obtaining a special
credential. The garage will be
considered "hot" 30 minutes
before cars go on the track for
any reason and last until the
track-time session .is over.
The pit area also will be
"hot" 30 minutes prior to the
start of a race.
France said the plap will be
tweaked as the season goes on,
and j:he ban on autographs
could still be implemented at a
later date.

Scoreboard·

Super Bowl

Raiders not wimps on defense,
Bucs not buffoons on offense
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Hey,
Super Bowl fans, the Oakland
Raiders are not wimps on
defense and the Tampa Bay
Bucs are not buffoons on
offense.
True, neither is ranked at
the top of the league the way
the Raiders are with the ball
and the way the Buccaneers
are when the opposition has
it. And neither has gotten
much credit for lifting its
team to a conference title.
"But we've played well,"
Raiders cornerback Charles
Woodson said. "We've been
beaten up and we still played
well. So we're not concerned
about their defense getting all
the attention."
Nor are the Bucs offended
that they're pretty much
i!lnored while all the reco!lniuon goes to Oakland's htghpowered attack.
"If we win the Super Bowl,
that will change," wide
receiver Keyshawn Johnson
said. "The Super Bowl puts
the stamp and the legacy on
w,hat you did in your career.
The great players win Super
Bowls. The stats don't matter
- it's the ring."
Ah, the ring. To win it, the
Bucs can't have their offense
become bystanders. Same for
Oakland's defense.
Tampa Bay ranked 24th in
yards gained (27th rushing,
15th passing). The Bucs
scored 346 points, but the
defense scored five touchdowns, four by NFL defensive player of the year Derrick
Brooks, and the special teanis
had one. The defense also set
up a bunch of points by forcing 38 turnovers, including 31
interceptions.
In other words, that allworld D made things far easier for the sometimes-pedestrian offense.
But the Buccaneers have

begun to establish an identity
offensively, and they've been
efficient' enough in the playoffs.
"We have attitude," Pro
Bowl fullback Mike Alstott
said. "We haven't always
looked pretty, but we get the
job done one way or another.
We try to be very physical up
front, we have a wide recei ver corps that will go downfield and block. They are
horses.
"Remember, we have a new
offense, a new 0 line since
Jon (Groden) was hired as our
coach. Ask any player in the
NFL when you have gone
through dramatic changes like
we have, to be asked to be
perfect in nine months, it
can't happen."
Here's what the stars on the
Bucs' stingy defense believe
can happen: Their teammates
on offense will rise to the
challenge of winning a championship. All-Pro defensive
tackle Warren Sapp doesn't
want people separating
Tampa's units.
"We've got an inferno
going," he said, "and when
that three-headed monster offense, defense, special
teanis - raises his head, he is
impossible to slay."
Oakland's defenders say
they are ready for that monster, regardless of how many
heads it has. The Raiders have
plenty of big names on
defense, from All-Pro safety
Rod Woodson to cornerback
Charles Woodson to linebacker Bill Romanowski to
tackle Sam Adams. Rod
Woodson, Romanowski and
Adams already have won
Super Bowls with other
teams, so there is no lack of
success, experience or. leadership on the squad.
The Raiders ranked II th in
yards allowed and a very

impressive third against the
run, ahead of the Bucs, who
were fifth. But Oakland was
23rd against the pass and
allowed 304 points, I08 more
than the NFC champions.
"They inight not get the
notoriety
of
Tampa's
defense," Raiders coach BiJJ
Callahan said, "but it is a
defense that has improved
and continues to make plays.
The value of our defense was
so important to us down the
stretch."
Oakland's defense also has
injury concerns, most notably
Charles Woodson's leg.
Although he made the Pro
Bowl, he's had a difficult
stretch, particularly in the
playoffs.
"We overcame a lot of
injuries on that side of the
ball," Callahan said. "How
we stayed together to do that
and play at such a high level
is astronomical."
The number of points the
Raiders usually put up is
astronomical. If the game
turns into a shootout, the Bucs
are done.
However, if Tampa can
establish its tempo when it
has the ball, how long will
league MVP Rich Gannon
and his compatriots get to
assert themselves?
Adams, a Super Bowl win- ·
ner two · years ago with
Baltimore, says not to count
on that happening. Besides,
it's not what everyone wants.
"Our job is to get off the
field as quick as possible and
let our guys do their thing on
offense," Adams said. "I'd
pay to see it, too: No. J· vs.
No.1.
"Yeah, we have a solid
defense and they are a good
offense. But it's not what people are paying to see."

NASCAR

Brooke.Gordon wants materials
from husband's racing rivals

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
-Lawyers for Jeff Gordon's
wife have subpoenaed records
from his competitors and
NASCAR for use in their
divorce case.
Geoff Smith, general manager of Roush Racing, said
the team planned to file an
order Friday to block Brooke
Gordon's request in Wayne
County Circuit Court in
Michigan, where the company is headquartered.
Roush does not want to
make
public the individual
were being used," Nelson said.
contracts
it has with its dri"What we're looking for is a
way to get drivers to breathe the vers and sponsors. Those
deals are highly sensitive in
freshest air possible in the car.
'The way to do that is to find NASCAR, where each car
a way to bring air from the out- · owner works out separate
side through a hose into the hel- agreements with every indi-

vidual.
Numbers are rarely talked
about, preventing drivers
from knowing 'how much
their rivals receive in salary,
percentage of winnings and
souvenir sales.
Sponsor deals also are
secret, lest a company should
find out if it is paying extra
for something another might
get for free.
"Those are all the things
that are the heart of our business," Smith said. "When we
give it to Brooke, we're going
to give it to Jeff. It's like having the Hendrick organization
inside our team."
NASCAR spokesman Jim
Hunter said the lawyers
requested prize money infor-

mation on Gordon, which it
provided to the lawyers.
Gordon,
a
four-time
Winston Cup champion, drives for Hendrick. Roush
fields cars for Winston Cup
drivers Mark Martin, Jeff
Burton, Matt Kenseth, Kurt
Busch and Greg Biffle.
Smith said other teams have
also been asked to turn over
contracts.
Brooke Gordon's lawyer,
Jeff Fisher, did not immediately return a call to The
Associated Press for commerit.
Jeff Gordon has unsuccessfully tried to get a Florida
judge to require his estranged
wife and anyone involved in
his divorce to sign a confiden-

met"

NASCAR has even tested
some drivers for toxic levels in
their body, including Jimmy
Spencer following his fiery
wreck in the season-finale in
Homestead, Fla.
Nelson said Spencer's toxic
level was less than 3 percent.
Major problems begin when
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP)
the level nears 20 percent, ,- The Cleveland Indians
Nelson said.
have hit a bump in the road on
Spencer, the only driver on their y;ay to a n~w spring
the Winston Cup cucuit to still home m Fort Myers.
. use an open-face helmet, thinks
Federal permitting issues
that chotce has kept his levels could delay expanding a
of toxicity fairly low.
spring-training practice complex to accommodate the
major league team until 2006,
at that," Bryden said. "If Lee County officials said
you were asking me for a Wednesday.
decision on that right now,
The Indians are negotiating
I'd say 'No.' But we want with the county for a move to
to make it clear that we Fort Myers' City of Palms
don ' t want anything that Park in 2004. They would
would keep fans for rooting join the Boston Red Sox at
for their team."
that facility.

Major.League Baseball

Indians' move to Fort Myers ~its snag

•WIN•
2 FREE nCIEJS

..

..
SPRI18 VAllEY
CIIIEMAJ

First, though, it appears the
U.S.
Army Corps of
Engineers will have to decide
whether the expansion needs
federal approval, since some
of the proposed building
would be done on areas considered wetlands.
The corps could not be
reached
for
comment
Wednesday or Thursday.

The delay poses a dilemma
for the Indians, whose I()..
year spring-training contract
with Winter Haven expires
this year. The Indians have
four five-year options to continue training in Winter
Haven, but club officials have
said they'd rather be in Fort
Myers.

DElli liD TilES· WUT I

LO DANTU LIGHTEN
·YOUR LOAD
CDIPITIIIIEIRmiNS IIID ELECTRDIIIC FILIIIB
Will IEFIIIDS Ill I unER DF DAYS OR lOURS
DEPEIDIIIB 011 TIE CIOICES YOU MilE

E TU bV DANTU

FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WINI

IS TIE RIBIT CHOICE

I

Prep Basketball
Boys
Thur~~day

Cin. SCPA 62, Covington Latin 41
Cle. Lincoln W. 90, Horizon Science 54
Col&amp;. Brookhaven 78, Cols. Whetstone
62
Evangel Chr. 58, Maranatha Chr. 43
Lewistown Indian Lake 65, New Gar1isle

Tecumseh 44
Mt. Vernon Acad. 52, Fairfield Chr. 49
New Bremen 59, Ft Recovery 44
Powell Village Acad. 65, Cols. Ohio
School tor the Deaf 36
To!. Cent. Cath. 50, To!. St. Francts 36
To!. St. John's 76, Tol. Scott 45

Girls
Southern 4&amp;, Trlmbl• 41
Trlmble ..... 11 10 317-41
Southern ... 17 10 10 12 - 49
SOUTHERN - Katie Sayre 5 4-8 19,
Rachel Chapman 3 o-2· 6, Brooke Kiser 0
0·0 0, Brigette Barnes 2 ;3-6 7, Tara
Plci&lt;ens 0 0·0 0, Deana PuAins 2 1·3 6.
Amy Lee 3 0·3 7. Ashley Dunn 2 O·O 4.
TOTALS 15 6·20 49.
TRIMBLE - Jessica Grandy 0 0.0 0,
Jessica Burdette 0 O..Q 0, Alicia Andrews 0
().() 0, Hannah Faires 1 H 3, Megan
Arnold 0 0.0 0, Jennifer Grandy 8 6-7 25.
Penny McClelland 2 0·0 4, Atlory Hooper 3
1·2 9. TOTALS 14 8·10 41.
.
3-polnt goats -

Trimble 5 (Jennifer

Grandy 3, Hooper 2), Southern ?(Sayre 5,
Lee, Pullins).
Tlluroday
Akr. Ellet 64, Akr. E. 13
Akr. Firestone 61, Akr. Centrai-Hower 47
Akr. Manchester 59. Akr. Coventry 44
Albany AleKander 50, Pomeroy Meigs 38
Antwerp 54, Defiance Tlnora 43
Applecreek Waynedale 52. Dalton 37
Archbold 52, Hamler Patrick Henry 51
Barberton 67, Kent Roosevelt 55
Beachwood 411. Gates Mills Hawken 44
Bellaire St. John B4, Toronto 46
Belpie 47, Wellston 44
Berlin Hiland 57, W. Lafayette Ridgewood
36
. Bloomdale Elmwood 67, Genoa 31
Bryan 60, Montpelier 37
Caldwell 55, Barnesville 411
Can . McKinley 49, Massillon Jackson 40
Cardington 49, Marion Elgin 36
Carey 59, Fostoria St. Wendelln 40
Celina 44, Defiance 32
Centerburg 65, Howard E. Knox 46
ChiiHcothe Zane Trace 58, BelnDridge
Paint Valley 45
Cin . Chr. 45. Ridgeville Chr. 34
Cin . Mother of Mercy 70, Cln. UrauUne 45
Gin. Mt. Notre Dame 66, Cin. McAuley 31
Cin. Purcell Marian 64, Hamilton Badin

56
Gin. St. Ursula 48, Cin. Seton 42
.. Cle. Collinwood 53, Cle. Hts. lutheran E.
35
Cia. VASJ 64, Cle. Hts. Beaumont 37
Coldwater 47, Delphos St. John's 39
Cols. Ohio School for the Deaf 80, Powell
VIllage Acad. 34
Columbus Grove 59, Lima Perry 54
Convoy Crestview 65, Van Wert
Llncolnvlew 20
Cuyahoga Valley Chr. Acad. 49, Zoarville
Tuscarawas Valley 40
Danllury Lakeside 49. Tol. Emmanuel
Bapt. 37
Day. Carroll 62, Lebanon 38
Oay. Oakwood 61, W. MIRon Milton-Union
36
Delaware Buckeye Valley 40, Morral
Ridgedale 33
Delaware Chr. 39, liberty Chr. 29
Doylestown Chippewa 64, Jeromesville
Hillsdale 39
Edon 33, Gorham Fayette 28
Fairfield Chr. 33, Mt. vernon Academy 28
Findlay 71 , Oregon Clay 63
Findlay Uberty-Benton 47. Cory·Aawson
29
Franklin 57, Edgewood 30
Fredericktown 88, Johnatown Northridge
58
Fremont Ross 55, Sandusky 40
Fremont St. Joseph 67, Old Fort 49
Ft. Loramie 65, Houston 31
Galllplis Gallla Acad. 60, Athens 53
Georgetown 60, Clinton-Massle 47
Gibsonburg 63, Tontogany Otsego 38
Greenwich S. Cent. 48, Collins Western
Reserve 43
·
Hicksville 67, Edgerton .55
Holgate 57, Haviland Wayne Trace 38
Holland Sprlng.-41, Bowling Green 31
Hudson 55, Cuyahoga Falls 25
Hudson WAA 33, Akr. Our Lady or the
Elms28
Jacl&lt;son Center 50, Waynesfield 36
Jamestown Greeneview 56, Spring.
Cath. 52
Johns10wn 57, Danville 47
Kansas Lakota 73, Millbury Lake 66
Kettering Alter 52, Cin. Roger Bacon 41
Kings 50, Goshen 45
Lafayette Allen E. 56, McGuffey Upper
Scioto Valley 42
leetonia 40, Columbiana Crestview 28
Lemon-Monroe 75, W. Carrollton 44
le~eington 56, Marion Harding 35
Libert'/' Center 58, Metamora Evergreen
54
Liberty Twp. lakota E. 33l Cin. Milford 32
Magnolia Sandy Valley 64, Bowerston
Conotton Valley 45
Maranatha Chr. 37, Cols. Tree of Life 36
Maria Stein Marion Local 50, Minster 46,

Sylvania Northview 86, Rossford 20
Tiffin Calve~ 58. Attica Seneca E. 35
Twinsburg 57, Solon 30
Tyier Consolidated, W.Va. 63, Woodsfield
Monroe Cent. 34
Van Buren 57, Arlington 54, OT
Van Wert 61 , Kenlan 35
Vanlue 51, Dola Hardin N. 36
Versailles 6!. Rockford Parkway 20
W. Uberty-Salem 69, N. Lewisburg Triad
37
W. Unity Hilltop 48, Pioneer N. Cent. 22
Wapakoneta 59, Lima Bath 51
Waterford 63, Stewart Federal Hocking
59
Waynesville 66, New Lebanon Dixie 29
Weirton, W.Va. 56, Steubenville Cath.
Cent. 41
·
Wilmington 42. Little Miami 39. OT
Woodrnore 47, Pemberville Eastwoocl44
Wooster 57, Massilon Perry 25
Worthington Chr. 68, Utica -43
Xenia Chr. 52. Mlddlatown Chr. 41
Youngs. Ursuline 74, Warren Harding 57

College Basketball
Men
EAST
Drexel 83, Delaware 78, OT
Manhattan 93, Fairfield 86
Monmouth, N.J. 65, Sacred Heart 55
Mount St. Mary's, Md. 72. Long Island u.
69,0T
Siena 61, Loyola, Md. 65
SOUTH
Austin Paay 87, E. llllnoo 80. OT
Charteston Southern 78, liberty 57
Georgia St. 58, Florida Atlantic 64
Jacksonville 65, Cempbell51
McNeese St. 75, Nicholls St. 70
Mercer 74, Samford 68
Morehead St. 83, Murray St. 76
Morris Brown 73, Tennessee St. 68
New Orleans 74, North Texas 62
South AlaDama 59, Denver 50
Stetson 78, Gardner-Webb 63
Tenn.·Martln 85, E. Kentucky 75
UCF 68, Jackeonvllle St. 66
Virginia 85, Wake Forest 75
MIDWEST
Detroit 57,. Youngstown St. 49
Evansville 74, Creighton 66
Kent St. 79, Akron 72
Oakland, Mich. 75, W.lllinols 62
Valparaiso 72, lnd.·Pur.·lndpls. 62
Wis.·Graen Bay 69, Wrilt't St. 67
Wls.-Milwaukee 69, Butler 65
SOUTHWEST
lamar 79, Northwestern St 63
SMU 69, Rice 83
SW Texas 58, Texas-Arlington 53
Sam Houston St. 83, Louisiana-Monroe
66
Tulsa 68, Louisiana Tech 61
FAR WEST
California 73, Southern Cal 68
Fresno St. 56, Hawaii 55
Idaho 66, Cal St.-Fullerton 49
Idaho St. 67, Sacramento St. 62
Middle Tennessee 70, New Mexico St. 68
Navada 86, San Jose St. 59
Oregon 91, Washington 66
Oregon St. 63, Washington St. 48
Stanford 52. UCLA 5 t
uc Irvine 66, Pacific 62
Utah Sl. 77. UC Riverside 58
Weber St. 64, N. Arizona 61

Detroit 69, Youngstown St. 58
Fort Hays St. 55, Chadron St. 50
Hillsdale 75, Findlay 67

III.·Chicago 60. Loyola of Chicago 69
Illinois St. 65, S. Illinois 56
Indianapolis 77 , Kentucky Wesleyan 64
Lake Superior St. 70. Grand Valley St. 59
Malone 72, Mount Vernon Nazarene 55
Mary 84, Jamestown 72
Michigan 65, Northwestern 50
Michigan St. ,74, Minnesota 71
N. Michigan 66. Northwood, Mich. 62
North Carolina 79, W. Michigan 76
OhiO St. 82, Illinois 74
Purdue 83, Iowa 64
Purdue-Calumet 80, lndi ana~ Northwest
55
Quincy 77 , lewis 55
Rio Grande 67, Spalding 52
SW Missouri St. 90, N. lowa 51
Shawnee Sl. 67, Ohio Dominican 55
South Dakota 67, Nebraska-Omaha 55
Southwestern. Kan. 67, St. Mary, Kan. 56
Tabar 64, Kansas Wesleyan 36
Wayne, Mich, 91 , Ashland 71
Wheaton, Ill. 59, Dominican. Ill. 40
William Jewell 63, Evangel 6 1
Wis.-Green Bay 75, Butter 36
Wis.·MIIwaukee 76, Wright St. 65
SOUTHWEST
Abilene Christian 73, E. New Me~eico 56
Concordia-Austin 65, Texas lutheran 52
Fla. International 72, Arkansas St. 62
Hardin-Simmons 92, Sui Ross St. 56
Harding e1, Christian Brothers 38
Henderson St. 86, Ouachita 66
Incarnate Word 63, St. Edward's, Te~eas
43
Louisiana-Monroe 60, Sam Houston St.
50
Mary Hardin-Baylor 75, Schreiner 72
New Orleans 74, Norlh Te~eas 72, OT
Northwestern St. 85, Lamar 65
S. Aikansas 52, Ark.·Monlicello 49
SMU 67, Rica 52
SW Texas 70, Te~eas-Artington 61
St. Gregory's 69, John Brown 66
Texas-Dallas 55, Austin 52
TeMaa-Pan Amer ican 66, Ark.-Little Rock
56
FAR WEST
Arizona St. 73, Arizona 58
BYU 61, San Diego St. 46
Cal St.-Fullerton 70, Idaho 55
Colorado St. 66, New MeMico 53
Denver 76, South Alabama 64
Idaho St. 77, Sacramento St. 62
l ong Beach St. 72, CS North ridge 59

Oregon St. 65, Washington St. 62
Aegis 68, Colorado Mines 47
San Jose St. 63, Nevada 60
UC Irvine 67, Pacific 59
.UC Sanla Barbara 70, UC Aivei'Side 58
Utah 56, UNLV 49
.
Washi ngton 79, Oregon 60
Weber St. 86, N. Arizona 54
Wyoming 68, Air Force 53

Pro Basketball
Natlonol Beokelbalt Aosoclallon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlofon
W
L
Pet GB
New Jersey. . 28
14 .667
Boston ........ 24
18 .571
4
Orlando .. . .. .. 23
21 .523
6
Philadelphia. . .' 22
21 .512
6'1;.
Washington . . 21
21 .500
7
NewYori&lt; .... . . 17
23 .425
tO
Miami ...... . . 15
27 .357
13

Central Division
W
L Pet
Indiana . .. .... 30
12 .714
Detroit .
. 27
14 .659
New Orleans . . 23
20 .535
Milwaukee ..... 20
21 ,488
Chicago ...... . 15
27 357
Atlanta ........ 14
26 .333
Toronto ....... 10
33 .233
Cleveland . . . . . 6
35 186
WESTERN CONFERENCE
MldWoot Dlvlolon .
W
L Pet
OaUas ... . .. . .. 33
8 .605
San Antonio . . . 26
15 .634
U!eh . . . . . ... 25
16 .610
Houston .
23
17 .575
Minnesota ..... 24
18 .571
Memphis ...... 13
29 .31 o
Denver .. . .. . .. to
3 t .244
Pacific Division
W
L Pet
Sacramento .... 32
11 .744
Portland ....... 25
15 .625
Phoenix ....... 25
18 .581
L.A. Lakers ... 19
22 .463
23 .452
Golden State ... 19
Seattle ........ 18
22 .450
LA Clippers .. , 16
25 .390
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee 106, Boston 97
Indiana 101, Toronto 98
Orlando 94, Chicago 91
Miami 92, Phoenix 85
Portland 112, Atlanta 110. 2DT

GB
2 '1~

7 ~t
9 i~

15
16
20 ~i
22 ~1

GB
7

a
9'/t

9'/t
20'h
23

GB
5'!2
7
12
12 ~

12i2
15

New York 97, Denver 88
Philadelphia 92, Detroit 83
Minnesota 96, Seattle 91
Memphis 98, San Antonio 93
L.A. Clippers 96, Utah 69
New Orleans 103, Washington 94
Golden Stale 114, L.A. lakers no
Thursday's Gamn
Dallas 107. Philadelphia 94
Sacramento 104, Memphis 98
Golden State 105, New Jersey 97
Friday's Games
PhOeniM at PrlandO, 7 p.m.
Seattle at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Denver at Boston. 7:30p.m.
Sacramento at AUBnta, 7:30 p.m.
Dallas at New York, 7:30p.m.
Washington at Chicago, 8 p.m ..
L.A. Clippers at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Detroit at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Po~tla nd at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Utah, 9 p.m.
New Jersey at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m
Saturday'' Gamaa
Philadelphia at Miami, 3 p.m.
Minnesota at Washington, 7 p.m.
Atlanta at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.
Seanle at Memphis, a p.m.
Denver at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Detro~ at San Antonio, 8:30p.m .
Utah at Golden State. 10:30 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Sacramento at Toronto, 12:30 p.m.
Orlando at Boston, 1 p.m.
Houston at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Phoenix at New York, 1 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Indiana, 1 p.m.
Portland at Dallas, 2 p.m.

DETROIT TIGERS- Agreed to terms
with RHP Fernanda Rodney, LHP Adnan
Burnside, LHP Eric Eckenstahler, INF
Ramon Santiago, OF Nook Logan and OF
Cody Ross. Agreed to terms w1th LHP
Steve Avery and 38 Tom Evans on minor
league contracts.
KANSAS CITY FlOYALS- Agreed tO
terms wtth RHP James Baldwin on a minor
league contract
NEW YORK YANKEES-Reassigned
senior vice president of baseball operations Mark Newman to vice pres1dent Of
player development. Promoted vice president a! international and professional
scouting Gordon Blakeley to senior yice
president of baseball operations.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS- Named
Omer Munoz manager of BaKersfield of th'
California League and Skeeter Barnes
coach of Orlando of the Southern League.
TEXAS RANGEA$-Name Dick Bogard
special assistant tor scouting operations
and Mel Didier spec1a1 assignment prates~
sional scout.
National League
MONTREAL EXP05-Agreed to te rm~
with RHP Luis Ayala, RHP Eric Good, RHP
Julio Manon. tNF Scan Hodges. OF Ron
Calloway, OF Val Pascucci and OF TerrmSI
Sledge on one-year contracts.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
CLEVELAND
CAVALIERS- Named
Clifford Ray assistant coach
TORONTO
RAPTORS-Waived
F,
Damone Brown .
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BALTIMORE RAVEN S-Named Mike
Singletary linebackers coach.
BASEBALL
CINCINNATI
BENGALS- Named
American League
ANAHEIM ANGELS- Agreed to terms Jonathan Hayes t1ghl ends coac h
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Narned Mark
with LHP Rich Rodriguez, INF Adam Riggs
and INF Oscar Salazar on minor league Duffner linebackers coach.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Signed QB
contracts.
BALTIMORE ORIOLEs-:-Announced Jim Druckenmiller and K Brett Conway.
KANSAS CITY CHIEF&amp;-Signed WR'
RHP Kerry Ligtenberg has passed his
physical e~eamlnation and has been added KR Dante Hall to a five-year contract.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed T Jarvis
to the team's 40-man roster. DesiQnated
Borum and P Kevin Stem~e .
OF Tim Raines, Jr. for assignment.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLE&amp;-Signed Jim
BOSTON RED SOX- Agreed to terms
with C Doug Mirabelli and RHP Hector Johnson, defensive coordinator. to a fourAlmonte on one-year contracts. Agreed to year contract edension.
terms with C·1 B Dave Nilsson on a minor
PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Signed RB
league contract. Designated INF Earl Antwon McCray, OL Dave Costa and FE;!
Snyder for assignment.
Wes Ours.

Transactions

Women

EAST
Adelphi 75. Bridgeport 6~
Alderson-Broaddus 88, Bluefield St. 71
American "International 58, Franklin
Pierce 45
Anna Marla 74, E. Nazarene 46
Bentley 59, St. Rose 43
•
Bloomflald 69. Geor~an Court n
Bridgewater, Mass. 58, Mass.-Boston 51
Bryant 80, S. New Hampshire 57
CCNY 75, Kings Point 44
Caldweft 79, Wilmington, Dol. 44
Cent. Connecttcut St. 54, Monmouth,
N.J. 52
Centenary. N.J. 70. Old Wssfbury 68
Clark U. 87. SiJIIolk 54
Concordia, N.Y. 60, Molk&gt;y 58
Delaware 48, Drexel 47
DickinBOn 67, Rosemont 48
Duquesne 79, St. Bonaventure 75
Fairmont St. 62, Ohio Val~y 57
George Washington 77, Saint Joseph's
67
Glenville St. 86. Concord 75
Keene"St. 65, Naw England CoU. 53
La S&amp;lle 74, Richmond 62
Long Island U. 75, Mount St. Mary's, Md .
58
Mess.-Lowell 76, Assumption 53
Merrimacl&lt; 68, Pace 39
Moravian 81, Franklin &amp; Marshall 68
New' England 60, Newbury 57
New Haven 62, C.W. Post 60
Nichols 72, Roger Williams 62
Plymouth St. 62, Coll&gt;y·sawyer 76
Ouinnipiac 79, Fairleigh Dickinson 78
Sacred Heart 68. Robert Morris 54
Salve Regina 81, Curry 62
Sciences, Pa. 55, Nyack 45
Seton Hill 59. Geneva 52
Simmons 90, Johnsoo &amp; Wales, R.I. 60
Springlield 66, Worcester St. 43
St. Francis, Pa. 57, Wagner 47
St. Joseph's, N.Y. 76, Mount St. Vincent
61
St. Michael's 7o, LeMoyne 66
St. Pater's 65, Loyola. Md. 61
St. Thomas Aquinas 79, Philadelphia 67
Stonehill 64, S. Connecticut 58
Telkyc·Post66, Oomlnk;an, N.Y. 56
OT
Marion Cath. 40, lima Temple Chr. 37
Temple 63, Fordham 56
UMBC 68, St. Francis, NY 48
Marion Pleasant 49, Marion River Valley
Urslnus 73, Lincoln, Pa. 53
44
Villanova 73, Penn St. 66, OT
Martins Ferry 62, Steubenville 35
W. New England 61, Russel! Sage 41
Maumee 46, Sylvania Southview 44
W. Va. Wesleyan 78, W. Virginia St. 62
Mayfield 62. Macedonia Nordonla 51
WVU Tech 58, Shepherd 51
McComb 58, Arcadia 22
West Uberty 78, Salem International 70
Mechanicsburg 37, Cedarville 34'
Yeshiva 69, Purchase St. 61
Middletown Fenwtck 27, Oxford
SOUTH
Talawanda 25
Auburn-Montgomery 74, Southern
Middletown Madlson 54, Carlisle 37
Mlllersllurg W. Holmes 59, CamDrldge 43 Wesleyan 19
Austin Peay 82, Tennessee St. 57
Monroe 75, w. Carrollton 44
Bryan 71 , King , Tenn. 58
Mt Orab W. Brown 30, Bethel·Tate 26
Campbell 49, Samlord 42
N. Baltimore 67, Bettsville 34
Cent. Arkansas 72, Delta St. 62
Napoleon 4 t. To!. Whitmer 39
Clark Atlanta 79, Lane 66
. Navarre Fairless 45, E. Can. 38
Delaware St. 59, Md.-Eastern Shore 54
Nelsonville-York 57, McAuthur VInton Co.
Duke 101, Maryland 52
47
New Bremen 59, Ft. Recovery 44
Aorlda St. 55, VIrginia 46
Fread-Hardeman 71 , Cumberland, Tenn .
Now London 52. Ashland Mapleton 31
New Philadelphia Tuscarawas Cent. 56
Gardner·W.DD 76. Belmont 69
cath. 37, Malvern 34
Georgia 77, Alabama 47
New Riegel 41 , Bascom HopewellGeorgia Tech 89, Clemson 78. OT
Loudon 33
Guilford at Ferrum. ppd.
Norwalk St. Paul 62, Monroeville 29
Jamea Madison 82, Towson 42
Orange Chr. 411, Mogadore Chr. 25
Kantuct&lt;y 83, Mlasllalppl 66
Oregon S1rltch 57, To I. Chr. 43
LSU 94. Florida 54
Orrville 72, Aahland 47
Lincoln Memorial 64, North AlaDama 411
Ottawa Hills !55, Northwood -42
. Llpacomb 64, Birmingham-Southern 62
Ottawa·Giandort 58, Lima Shawnee 36
Longwood f04, Dlst. ol Columt&gt;la 83
Pandora·GIIIX&gt;a 63. Lelpalc 28
Loulalena College 73, E. To••• Baptist
Paulding 88, Ada 16
Perrysburg 50, Whitehouse Anthony 69
Louisiana Tech 75, Tulaa 62
wayne 35
Mercer 70, Jackaonvllle 54
Ractne Southern 49, Glouster Trimble 41
Mlaaluippl College 78, LeTourneau B7
Rayland Buckeye Local 67, Cadiz
Mlaslsolppl St. 89, AubUrn 60
Harrlaon Cent. 47
N, Kentucky 73. Bellarmlne 69
Richmond Edlaon 57, E. uverpool 42
N.C. State 70, Wl!)&lt;a Forest 57
Richwood N. Union 56. Gallon Northmor
N.C.·WIImlngton 60. George Mason 55
33
New Meldco St. 73, Mld&lt;le Tennessee 63
Ruasla 71. Falrtawn 33
Nicholls St. 53, McNeese St. 46
Shadyside 50, HanniDal River 411
.North Georgia 79, Ga. SOuthwestern 65
Sparta Highland 54. Mt. Gilead 52
Rust 83, Sillman 52
Spencerville 65. Bluffton 54
Spring Hill 54, Southsrn, NO 45
Spring. Greenan 48, St. Paris Graham 37
Tennessee 97, South carolina 78
Spring. Shawnee 72, Bellefontaine 53
l1vy St. 72, Stetson 53
St. Clairsville 55. Wintersville lndl!ln
Tuskegee 79, Albany, Ga. 72
Creek 31
Union, Tenn. 68, Trevecca Nazarene 57
St. Henry 52, New Knoxville 36
Vanderbl" 76, 1Arkansas 59
St. Marys 58. Elida 32
W. Kentucky 71, Loulslana-Lafayene 43
Stow 52, Ravenna 51
William &amp; Mary 59, Hofstra 53
Strasburg-Franklin 55, Newcomerstown
.
MIDWEST
36
Baker 67. Culver-Stockton 52
Stryker 79, PettisvUie 37
Sugarcreek Garaway 62, Kidron Cent.
Bethany, ~an . 80, Sterling 68
Bradlay 66, WlcMa St. 61
Chr. 42
Carlow 61. Notre Dame Coli. ~8
Sunbury Big Walnut 55, Cola. Franklin
Cent. Methodist 63, Park 59
Hts. 43

'.

PRICES SLASHED S,.OREWIDE!
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED!

.

ftlll IS BAilLY THE BID.ST SALES EVENT IN THE
HIStoRY OF THI AREA. HURRY FOR BE&amp;,. SELECTION!

•Uvlng Rooms •Bedrooms •Dining Rooms •Wall Units •Rediners •Dinettes
•Etageres •Lamps •Pictures •Entertaimnent Centers •Motion Salas
•Mattresses In Every Size and Firmness •Occasional Tables •Sleepers •More

EVERYTHING MUST GO • REGARDLESS OF COST OR LOSS!
IT'S AWALL TO WALL, FLOOR TO CEILING TOTAL LIQUIDATION!
IT'S FIRST
FIRST SERVED! ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE!

DIRYTHING MUST BE LIQUIDATED n.OOR TO
CEILING. OVER 81 MILLION OF QUALm FURNI7URBI
,.BE BUNDS YOU KNOW AND TRUI,, OUT THEY 001

�Friday, January 24, 2003

~ribune-

Sentinel- l\egister
CLASSIFIED

•

r

~

roR

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ipiiiillio;;;;;;A~UIUi;;;;;;;;;~ L'D
l

For sols- old English
FOR SAu
I
SheepdOg pups, first shots
&amp; wormed , lovable, $200 $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS!
each, call (740)985-9823
Hondas, Chovys, etcl Cars/
TruCks from $500.
For
- - : - - : : - - - -- Miniature Dachshund, call
after 5:00pm, (740)4463243

llslings t-800-719-3001 ext.
3901

1981 International School
Bus used tor GAHS Band.
Will accept best offer. $500
- - - - - - - - - minimum. Can be seen beMiniature Doberman pups, hind Green Elementary.
reg Iat ered • 6 wee k s o ld • (740)446-32 11 or (740)448"10
1 0350
1740)992
,
~
~::--C::-:h-o_vy_S::-:----E-xt-ond_od_

10

1984

Ci•Uiro CCKonty, OH

~~

Ir.s MarotKY~ I

2002 Ford Focus 8500 2002
Honda
300-EX,
miles. auto, 8/c, sliver, 4dr. (740)742-2404
Excellent Condition. $8,500.
8am-6pm. (304)87!H;325
300-EX,
2002
Honda
(740)742·2404
90 Corsica LT, 4 cylinder, 4 - - - - - - ' - - -door, some new parts, ask- 2002 Honda 350 Rancher
:ior:900pm
. . (304)8 75 •4784 4x4, 3yr extended warranty.
7
Perfect Condition. $3,800.
(304)675-6325
Garage Kept. Well Main·
talned. 87 Ply Reliant. Tilt 2003 Suzuki 500 VInson 4·
wheel , cruise-control, and
wheeler, 489 Mud tires.
more. Runs &amp; loOks good.
$6,700. 304 675·2790
Make good student work or
travel car. $1,200/.0BO.
BoA11l &amp; MoroRS
(304)875-1327
FOR SAlE

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

To

Place
Your
Ad •••

'

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
·
Fax
us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classlfled@mydallysentlnel.com
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Offiee /lot.&lt;P-.f'
Successfu I AdS
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response,,,

tv~ I

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675·1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lyregister.com

Bill Hommlck
COngratulattonsl You ·have
won 2 free movie tickets to
the Spring Valley 7 In Gal·
llpolls. Call the Register today lor dotalls.(304)675·
1333

••

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With

· Monday-Friday for Insertion

In Next Day•• Paper
~UI1dOIV

In-Column: l :00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

AKeyword

1 I nclude Complete

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
1 Ads Should Run 7 Days

t ~mwms

I•A•s•s•ls.ta•n•t•ln.fot-m•s•tl•on-'

Help wanted car.ing for the
elderly, Darst Group Home.
Technology Manager
Position based in Rio now paying minimum wage,
Grande, Ohio Office. Start- new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7aming Salary: $27,400 plus ex- 5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pmcellent benefits.
7am . call 740-992-5023.

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County. send letters
of Inter est to: The Daily
Seriti nel, PO Box 729-20,

:.Poij
. mre;;r;;;oy._,~O;.;hi;;;o.;4;;;57;.;6;,;9.;.
. - . , Provide daily support of the
La;;'"r AND
Agen cy's information technology infrastructure includ·
FOUND
ing but not Hmited to: support lor all PC 's. printers, reFOUND- Chocolate Lab, lated hardware and softaroUnd Cheshire. Call to 10 ware; maintenance of serv(740)446·2005 (740) 367- er software and database:
01.42
maintenance of LAN and
WAN: maintenance of teteFQUND- German Shepherd
phone and voice mail syspup. North of Vinton ,
tem; monitor and manage
(740)388·0134
the security infrastructure.
LOST-pug dog, tan and
black, lost on Addison Pike Bachelor's degree in com-

r
z:r

b

Red collar. Call (740)367- puter science or combination of equivalent training
01~9
and experience. A+ certifi·
"lilt--~~---., ~ f1on, .Ne two rk + e rtT11caWAN!lD
hon, C1sco CCNA, Novell
.
m Buv
"
··cNA Microsoft MCP in
". - - - - - - - - - ' · Windows
. •
. . Ex2~ reqwred

I

~

c

1950's. l9SO's, 1 ~ 7 o ·s. 45 .
33 RPM records anliques &amp;
collectibl es . ( 93 ~7) 675.•2930
(937)372-645 3

perience w1th Novel Net·
ware, · Windows 2000. SOL
Server. and/or Oracle Database.

Absolute Top Qollar: U.S.
S_Uver, Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamon ds,
Gold
U.S. Currency,Rings,
M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second Avenue, Gallipoli s, 740446-2842.

Send resume no later than
4:30pm on J anuary 31,
2003 to:
Human Resources Dept.
Area Agen cy on Aging
District 7, Inc.
F32, URG , P.O. Box 500
Rio Grande. OH 45674
An Equal Opportunity
Employer

l\ll'f(),\11\1

"I H\ II I ...,

HELP WANIF.JJ
Avo n
Representatives
wanted. (740)¥ 6·3358
WE NEED TO "TALK"
TO YOU!!
A Great Opportunity Awaits!
The Ohio Valley Publishing
Company
is seeking a
highly motivated individual
who is intersled· in an
"OUTSI DE ADVERTISING
SALES CAREER",
earnlnQ
with unlimited
potentiall lntersted??
WE NEED TO TALKI
•Salary Plu s Commission
-Great working environment
-Monday- Friday Bam-5pm
Send your resume to:
Ohio Valley Publishing
P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis. OH 45631
• Fax: (740)446-3008
or email·
tboyer@ mydailytribune .com
Eam gOOd money working
from home. PT or FT, $300·
SBQO weekly possible. Send
SASE to : Empire USA, 762
Cap Lane, Columbus, OH
43085

to Recent
Growth

POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
• Sales Consultant
• Parts Depart me nt
Counlcr Sa les
• Parts Depart me nt

Delivery
• Oi l &amp; Lube
Technician

Send Resume to

ATIENTION: LPN 'S
Arcadia Nursing Center
Full-time positions are avail able on 11-7 shifts. We offer
excellent benefits that include Health Insurance,
401k, Life Insurance, competitive wages plus Shih differe ntial and opportunities
for advancemenl. If you
would like to join our team,
apply in person between
9:00-4:00 or ca ll Susan
Winland , AN · Director of
Nursing, at (740·667-3 t 56)
Arcadia Nursing Center
East Main Street
Coolville, Oh 4572 3
(740)667-3 t56
EOE·MIFIHIDV

CURVE~

•

Is accepttng applications for
a 3:30-7: 30pm employee.

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your togs to the
mill just call304-675-t957.
Will babysit in my home
hours till 1 evening. Have
references. Mother of two.
(304 )882-t13t

·j

11 \\"\ 11\J

'I!

All real estata edvarttalng
In this newap~~pe~ Ia
aublect to the Fec*'all
Fair Houatng Aot of 1818
which makee It Illegal to
1dvertl18 "any
preferenoe, ltmlt111on or
dlecrlmlnatlon baud on

111ce, color, reUglon, eex
familial 1tetua or nltlonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, ltml11tlon or
dlacrimlnetion."
Thla newspaper wMI no1
knowingly tceept
advertiHIMflhl for rNI
ettMe whiCh II In
wlolatlon of thtl law. Our
rwct.ra ar. t.r.by
Ini ormtd thlt all
dwelling• advertiMCIIn

lhto -poper ...
available on en equal
~~ap~poo~rtu~n~lly~bo~oo~•~·~

grow w/~he business, com- offfJrlng.
puter skills a plus, $8 hr. 10 i!il!r~:-----...,
start. Send resume &amp; inqui·
~ONAL
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
·rles to : G.C. Hunt, PO Box
SERvJ&lt;Et
tract, $500 down to qualified
43, Middleport, Oh 45760.
buyers. Call (740)446-3570
TURNED DOWN ONto
··.:.r.::.•2q:::uic:::k:.:sa=l•::.·_ _ __
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
has an immediate opening SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Land home packages. No
tor a part-time dietary aide
No Fee Unless We Winl
payments while under con1or the 5:00am to 11 :30am
1-888·582·3345
structlon.
little
or no
shift, or 11 :00am to 7:30 - - - - - - - - - down payment required.
pm. we are an equal oppor- Wicked Concepts- custom (740)446-3218
exhaust, engine trans mistum·ty emp1oyer.
S1ick built in 1998, 3 bed·
· ndl
sian rebuilds, detaili ng,
If you are a fne
y, enerroom, 3 bath fireplace, over
.ke
tune-up,
speed
parts.
powgeII c person who wou ld l1
1 acre, asking $104,900.
to join our dedicated team der coating, oil changes,
of caregivers, please call tires, batteries, restorations,
Justin Frum at (740)446· special orders, Mon-Sat.
7150 or stop by and apply In 8 :00am-9 :00pm, Sundays
person at 311 Buckridge noon tUI 6:00pm, 315 Ash
Road, Bidwell, OH. (Right Street, Middleport, Ohio, 1989 Clayton Westwlnd,
Behind Spring Valley Cine· (740)992-4551
2BR, WID hookup, range,
ma)
I&lt;I \I I ..., I \II
refrigerator &amp; electric fur-

r

STNA's

rid

.

H~

;:ce. located on

~ ren~~d

G~a:de~ ; ~~~~es ~~lk
~~
080.
4

Are you a dedicated, caring '"---tiiFORiliioiSiiALEiill;._.l
indillidual INho would enjoy _
campus . SlO.OOO
a part-time job that offers
great fulfillment and creative 2 BR, 1 bath house wllarge (614)614·5151
rooms. Well maintained
,home in the country, just tO
minutes lrom town. Priced
below appraisal at $56,000.
Call(740)446-7704

1130

1998 Schult 16 x 80 2 BR
wl Heated Garage 1_74
_
992 1987

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

200t 14x80 Oakwood, 3
BR, 2 bath, all appliances
3' Bedroom newly remod· included. We'll make securleled, in Middleport, call Tom ty deposit; you take over
Anderson after 5 p.m.
payments of $370 month.
992·3348
(2t6)351-7086 or (2t6)267·
3 bedroom, single bath,
large family room, fireplace,
large living room·. complete
new kitchen, utility room, 2
car garage u~attachod , 10
miles South Gallipolis. In
Eureka, close to Locks &amp;
Dam. Phone (740)256-6949
(740)256· 1243 Serious In·
quires Only.

4
BEDROOM
HOME
Foreclosure, only $14,900,
Won't last. 1-800-719-3001
Ext. F144
4 br.• lr. &amp; dr.. 2 baths, H2
basement, lg. kitchen wnots
of c upboards, ate-tan &amp;
heat, water softener. new
windows, lg. front porch

_14-'8'-5._- , - - - - - - 2001 Fleetwood, 2Bx40,
3BR, 2BA, all electric wlappliances.
Must
Move,
$30,000. (740)388-8604 till
Saturday; (740)983-1900 at·
tar Saturday.

-=-===---:---:

"Gal Your Money's Worth"
at COtes Mobile Homes, St.
At. 50 East of Athens. DeNverles, set-ups, excavating ,
foundations, sewage sys·
tems, driveways, heating
and cooling along with parts
and service. You should ac·
. cept nothing less. Since
1967 we are Cole's Mobile
Homes where you "Get
Your Money's Worth .~

overlooking river, wiM con - Like. new, 14x72, 3 bed·
sider trade, (740)992·9012
room, 2 bath, drywall, rent·
Brick Ranch. 2 bedroom, 2
bath, garage, on river, 5
miles south ol Gallipolis.
(740)44t -88t 7

ed lot. new berber. lmmedl·
ate occupancy $16,900,
(740)992-7680
New t4 wide. Only $799

Well maintained Ranch down and only $158.36 per
style home in Racine , 3 month. Call Nikki, 740·385·
bedroom, 1 bath, livingroom , ~ltchen,
laundry
room, 1 car garage, large
deck, storage building, all
w/air,
(740}949·

=ric

New 2000 sq ft home, · 10
minutes from Hospital.
Complete above ground
pool with porch, driveway
and garage foundation .
•
INsuRANcE
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _... Price
below
appraisal.
(740)446-3384.
Terry Garten
740-992-6 154
Wa nted! Good credit CUS·
tame rs to purchase new
home wnand. $0 down to
tl'le S rin Vall e 7 Galli _ qualified customers. t -5
·.
P g
~
po
tracts
available.
lls. Call the Sentmel for de· acre
latls. (7 40)992-2155)
(740)446-3093
•

c_~llege students in PE, Nu- ~~~~~;~:~~~~~~~ :~~e~~~
tnt10n , or health preferred,
bu t not necessary. Please
) t_
t f .
•
ca 111304 42 355 or In1or
malton

Golllpollo ConMir College
(Careers Close To Horrie)
Call Todayl 740-448-4367,
1-800-214-0452,
Reg j90.05·1274B.

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring all 3 locations, full or
10
part-time. pick up applica·
~
tion at location &amp; bring back '"--llliiiioiiiiiiiiiil;.pl
between
1O:OOam
&amp; '
!NOTICE!
10:30am, Monday thru Sat·
urday.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
.
lNG do
CO.
recommends
that
Office help wanted: mu_st be you
business
with people
neat, courteous &amp; reliable .
' WI 'dd . ·n~r •'&amp; " rif ' I' ' ¥0U knOw, and NOT to...nd
~o sk1lls. ng
com
un&amp; you
money
through
the mail unt1l
cat1on
Able to
learn
have
investigated
the

opportunities? Scenic Hills
Nursing Center has a new
poSition available. You must
be a slate tested nurse
aide. tt is from 4:00pm to
8:00pm. Your responsibili ·
ti es would Include assisting
with evening meals and do·
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or ing evening activities with
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304- the residents. tf you are In·
675- 1429.
terested, please call Krlsti
Bartender
Tralneea O'Dell at (740)446·7150. Or
day stop by and apply in person
needed, $250 a
potential. .Local positions at 3t1 Buc:kridge Road. Bid·
1-800-293-3985 eKt. 4060.
wall , OH (Right behind
Spring Valley Cinema). We
Construction
Company
are and equal opportunity
needs one or two eM.peri·
employer.
enced workers with building
trades skills. Send resumes
outlining experience and The ODMA8.DD Gallipolis
refe rences to CLA 570, c/o Developmental Center is re Gallipolis Daily Tribune, cruiting Registered Nurses
P.O Box 469, Gallipolis, to plan and provide nursing
services to its res idents. InOH 45631.
terested persons should
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT
submit an Ohio Civil Service
PAY! Assemble Products at
Application (available on
Home. Call Toll Free 1-800grounds) and have a· valid
467·5566 Ext. 12170
Ohio R.N. and driver's li·
Foster Care givers Need-- censes. Ple.ase summit to:
ed, Become a therapeutic
ODMR&amp;DD Gallipolis
laster care gi11er. You will be
Development Center
Reimburse $30-$45 a day
Ann : Human Resou rces
for the ca re of child in your
Dept.
home. Trai ning will begin
2500 Ohio Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
January. For more information call Oasis Therapeutic Ph:(740)446-t642 ext 273
Care givers Networlc:. AlbaFax: (740)446-t341
ny, Oh. toll free 1-977-325Truck Drhttrl. Immediate
t558
hire, class A COL required,
excellent pay, experience
FTIPT Curvete
Worl d's largest 11tness or- required . Earn up to
ganization,
looking
lor $1,000. per WMk.Catl 304·
·Manager Trainee. If you are 675-4005
energetic , self-motivated ,
Wanted· full-ti me waitress.
have personality and love to A N .
with people. Fax
p..,y ln. pe_rson at Holiday
work
resume to (781 )207·6449 or ,Inn, Gallipolis.
call (304)42 1-3551. Pertect
opportunity lor someone re·
turnmg to the work Ioree.

The Best Product&lt;.
The Best Benefils.
The Best Work
Envlronmeni.

HVAC: 8-Service tech/installers wanted: Commercial
experience a plus. Must be
reliable &amp; ha11e own tools .
Travel &amp; weekends sometimes req. 3·5 yrs. experience, $10-$15 hr. Send resume &amp; inquiries to: G.C.
Hunt, PO Box 43, Middle·
port, Oh 45760

It

:.:76::7c.
t :.
. ------Nice lots available for up to
16x80 mobile homes. $115
water included, (740)992·
:.2t::6::_7_ _ _ _ _ __
Used 14x70, 3 bedroom/2
bath . Great condition. Call
Karena, 740-385-9948-

j

__

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE

112 acre lot on Tycoon Lake
w/12x60Trai1er$16,500.00
now $13,500.00
(740) 247-ttOO
30 Acres with House &amp; 2
bams, locat&amp;d in Southside
. (304)675-5490

ACREAGE

1

r M%~E~~ 1 r._AP._FO_~.R.RENr_.__.l r ~

3 parcels or lots. totaling ap- ~4 x 80 Trailer, 3 bedroom,
prox. 3-112 acres on Skid· 2 bath. tront porch , storage
more Ad. overlooking 160. bldg , all electric, Porter
Call (740)446-3697
$400.00 per mo.
area.
$400.00 dep - you pay utilit4· 112 acres In Vinton , no re- ies/trash PU , no pets. Ap·
strictions, wooded . Call plications available M-F, B-5
Century Homes, Holley and @ 1403 Easte rn Ave , GalAssoc. (740)286-HOME.
lipolis
Call 446-4514 for
more info.
Patriot area, 20+ wooded
acres. county water &amp; elec- 2br. WID Hookup, water,
tric: available, homesite. sewer, trash paid. $280.
Borders Wayne National month . Leave message.
Forrest, eKcellent hunting, (304)675-6291
$38,000 (740)379-9141
Beautiful Ri ver View Ideal
Property for sale, close to For 1 Or 2 People, ReferenGreen School, 1/2 acre with ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos2 mobile home lots. Great 1er Trailer Park, 740-441Investment- Own 1 &amp; rent 1. 0 t8t.

1

~~m

Pi&lt;_ _....,.,~....

I
t

~"·

"

-

·

&gt;

'\

1992 Achlova, 2D, $1895;
1995 G d A 4 D 52895
ran m,
'
;
1995 Beretta, $2395. 17
others instock starting at

t998 Ford F·l50 4-wheel
drive. Ext. cab .. 1979 F-250
4·whael drive. (304)5763086 Leave message.

$895. COOK MOTORS .
(740)446-0103
1993 Camaro, 3.4 V-6, air,
cruise, tilt power windows ,
clean, $3950; 1968 GMC
112 ton pickup. 2 wheel
drive, runs . good, drives
gOOd, $800. (740)256-6430

1999 Mercury Villager Estala, 80,000 mile&amp;, PW, PL,
AIC,
good
condition,
St0,500. (740)44t·946t altor 6pm.
" - '--F-o-rd_R_a_n-ge_r_C_Iu-b
2000
Cab, 4x4, automatic, V6,
/VC, 50,000 miles, oxcallent
condition.
$12,500.
(740)44~53
-------88 Chevy 1500 4x4, 340, 5
op, high mllea, $2500 080,
740 742-4011

r

1998 Dodge Noon 4dr. .au·
to, ole, 74,000 mlloa. Rod. 1998 Yamaha TlmberwoW
ATV, $1700 080. Now 17
Boarding , Training, Condl· Excellenl Condlllon. $3,800. Inch Chrcmt WhMII for
Bam·8pm. (304)875·8325
tlonlng, Indoor and Ou1door
99·03
Muolong Cobra,
riding lacllllloo, trails and 94 Cavalier, lair condliloo, $700, OBO (740)2158·192t
wash bay. 1-740~8-4710 $1000 OBO. (740)2158·1446

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

TFN

~~~
High&amp; Dry

740-992-5232
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uricondltlonol lllotima guaranies. Local references furnlohed. Established t975.
Coil 24 Hro. (740) 4ol8·
0870, Rogers Basement
W&amp;tOIJirooflng.

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171

Every Thursday &amp;

CIISTIUGn81

Sunday

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Additions
Owner:
Tarry Lamm
(740) 992-0739

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
or every month
AU pack $5.00
Bring thiB coupon
Buy $!.00 Bonanza

C&amp;C Gansrol Home Malnta·
nonce· Painting, vinyl old·
lng, carpentry, tloore, windows, bath&amp;, mobile home
repair and more. For tree
utlmale call Chet, 740·992·
6323. .

Get!FREE

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

PC DOCTOR

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

We Make HOUH Calli

1880N

tiRAPniCS

1-lOUDAY

k

A-JMH-STOIWI

(304) 675-5282

!mm

www.wvpcdr.com

mm2

e

fJ II

(1 :tr rfc:

r.com

HARTWELL
STORAGE
10x10
10x20

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

740-992-1717

1-800-822-0417

1()%

I? tJ': i Ill":''

Now Renting

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networlts

~P~CIAl

~~]V(t

or visit website:
www.herbendlot.com

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

740-992-7996

Tree Service

992-2979, ..._ ..

(10'x10' 618'x201

JUST launch8d!l!
LOSE WEIGHT
NOWI Burns FATI
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All NaturaVDoctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME
produc1 TODAY
Call: Jeanie

JONES'

B.D.COIISTRUCTIOR

o

St. Rt. 7 Goea!ein Rd.
Pomeroy

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

~::~~:§::::~V:;a;n;;;;~~::~'.
'

BISSEll

Depoy'sAg Pal1s

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

45723
1-74o-667-0363
Shop early for the
holidays!

BUilDfRS IDC.
• Replacement

Saving for your
nest egg
Try looking
in the
Classifieds!

r

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155
·
;
'
,
•
:
;
'
•
,

i

i

.ALliiiL

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

r.~~~_,_ J

~

(740) 992-2222 or
(740)446-1018

Foi more intorma11on,
call Gallla Meigs
Communi1y Action
Agency

..

SeD-Storage

SPACE

I

PROCESSING

'

Desk top computer. Dell Di·
FUR RENT
mension L Series, $600;
Haines
Brothers
Baby
1/2-1 acre mobile home Grand Plano, (740)446lots. $125 month plus utlllt· 7693 after 5:30pm.
ies. (740)256-t015
Dining room suite &amp; hutch,
very
good co ndition, $200,
Trai ler space tor rent. $125
(740)949-2t
69
per month , plus deposit.

r

laid ofl;l

· Skin, cut, wrap
All boneleBa cut
74G-949-0706
74G-949-7600

___..,-- I '\

•

Arevou

You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting
back to worll

Lt/vcatloH Start.&gt; t
Witlt Ndwspopers '-·u

BURN Fat, BLOCK Cravings , and BOOST Energy
Like You Have Never Experienced.
WEIGHT- LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launCh OCtober 23. 2002 . Call Tracy at
1:::11:""-~~---., (740)44t·l982

j

(340 773-5412

-~A

Two
2 BR apartments
available in Syracuse $200.
deposit $330. per month.
Rent includes Water, Sewer
&amp; Trash, No Pets, application, Relerence &amp; Sufficient
Income to Qualify 740-3786ttt

Priest's Trailer Park. Water Firewood for sale, $35 you
pick up, $45 delivered.
Paid. Call (740)446·3644
(740)256-6702 (740)256·
Call (4t9)991-0924
\ll
l~l
II\
\Ill
\
!
Nice 2 bedroom trailer. Fur8106
nisl1ed. $400. mo. plus deGrubb's Plano - Tuning &amp;
posit on Redmond Ridge.
Repairs. Problems? Need
(304)675-4693
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr
Will pay top dollar for prime
5 bu rner gas wall heater, 740-446-4525
land, -·Ne~ ho@f bwilder.
.JET'
$300; Like new couch wire~
(740)446-3093 ·'
cliner on ends &amp; matching
AERATION MOTORS
l and 2 bedroom apart1&lt;1 \I \ I \
rocker recliner. Pd $1 ,000, 3 Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
ments, furnished and unfur·
months old, $600. (740)446- Stock. Call Ron Evans, l ·
nished, security deposit re- t637
800-537-9528.
riO
quired, no pets. 740-9922218.
For Sale : Recondi tioned
Like New Sofa bed, End tawashers, dryers and refrig1 Bedroom Apartment s
ble, Rolf-away bed, white
:1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Starting at $289/mo, Wash- erators. Thompsons Applilike new. TV &amp;
Refrigerator
ance. 3407 Jackson AveHomes From $199/Mo., 4%
er/ Dryer Hookup, Stove
stand.
(304
)675-6633
after
nue, (304)675-7388.
Down. 30 Years at 8.5%
and Refrigerator. (740)441 5pm.
APR. For Ustings, 800-919- t 5 t9.
Good Used Appliances, Re·
332 3 Ext. 17 9 .
New &amp; Used Heat Pumpsconditioned and GuaranGas Furnaces. Free Esti1 or 2 BA Appt. for Rent,
teed. Washers . Dryers,
mates. (740)446·6308
1 bedroom brick house in Utilities Pd., No Pets
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
Mason, stove/refrigerator 992-5858
Some start at $95. Skaggs NEW AND USED STEEL
furnished, electric heat, no 1 br. Apartment Avail able Appliances , 76 VIne St. , Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
pets, (740)773-5604
For Concrete , Angle. Chan·
now. 2br. Apartment availa- (740)446-7398
nei, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
ble Feb. Water, Trash In1 BR House in Recine, with cluded. (304)882·313t
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark For Drains, Driveways &amp;
water, sewer, trash $325.
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio. Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap MetMonth, No Pets (740)992· 2 bedrooms- 6 month lease (740)446-7444 1-877-830- als Open Monday, Tuesday,
Garage Apartment, utilities 9162. Free Estimates, Easy Wednesday &amp; Friday. Sam·
5039
paid , no pets, no parties. financing,. 90 days same as 4:30pm. Closed Thursday.
2 + bedroom home, Bur- $550 month plus $550 de- cash. Visal Master Card.
&amp;
Sunday.
Saturday
dette Addition . Extremely posit. (740)446-024 t
Drive- a- little save alot.
(740)446-7300
clean. Affordable utilities .
No Pets. $375. Month + De· 4 rooms and bath , stove/ re- Oak Pedestal Round Table Waterline Special: 314 200.
posit.
Ret .
a
must. frigerator. Utilities paid, &amp; Four Chairs. (740)446· PSI $21.00 Per 100; t' 200
$400 month. 46 Olive 0946
PSI $35.00 Per tOO; All
(304)675-7906
Street (740)446-3945
Brass COmpression Fil1ings
Oak Student desks- 11ery
2 bedroom house, 127 Kin·
In
Stock.
Apartment for rent 2br 2217 sturdy, OaK veneer on plyeon Avenue , $500 month
RON
EVANS ENTERPRIS·
North Main Street. $275. wood, 4-drawers. Can be
plus deposit. No pets,
Mo. + deposit. No Pets. used as a computer desk. ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·800·
(740)441-1519
Available Feb. t . (304)675- 42"x24", $40. Call 6-8pm, 537-9528
-----,----4900
M-F No Phone calls Wed. Wooden futon , Play Station
2-3 Bedroom.house !ocated
One, Sega, glass chandelier
tn New Haven, WV. $375. BEAUTIFUL
APART· (740)245-9047
cards, (740)992·
baseball
mo Deposit $300. no Pets MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
Used furniture store, 130
(304)882·3652
CES AT JACKSON ES· Bulaville Pi~e . We sell mat- 7933
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive tresses, bunk beds, dressBUIWING
260 State St. , Gallipolis. 1
BR, furnished or unturnlsh- from $297 to $383. Walk to ers. couches. appliances,
SUPPLIES
ed. $350 month, no pets. shop &amp; movies. Call 740- much more. Grave manu·
446·2568. Equal Housin g
(740)446-3667
ments. (740)446-4782 Gal· 10 &amp; 12 wide portable yard
Opportunity.
lipolis, OH .
buildings, available In 9'
3 bedroom house, Alo Deluxe. 1 BA Town House.
thru 21' metal side &amp; roof,
Grande
area, $500 plus near Holzer, C/A, Economi- Washer, $75; Dryer, $75: 6'x6'6" mini roll· up door;
deposit, no pets. (740)441 - cal gas heat, WID hOOkup, Electric Range. $75; Fro st 40X64M. 13' shop building, 1Free Refrigerato r. small,
1519
$359.00
plus
utilities.
3 entry, 3· 12x12 overheads
$75; GE Washer &amp; Dryer
--------gutter paint&amp;d steel sides &amp;
(740)446-2957 . '
3 bedroom, in Middleport
set, $250: Norge retrigera·
roof . insulated roof. erected
w/ 1 car garage , $375 a Furnished 3 rooms + bath , tor, nice, $150; Kenmore re$20, 106.00;
month
plus
deposit, upsta irs , clean, no pets. friger ator, white. same as price
30x40x9'4H garage, 3-1DxB
(740)992-3194
Refe rence &amp; deposit re- new. $350; Dining table with insul overheads, 1·3' entry,
- - - - -- -- - quired. (740)446· 15t9 "'
4 chairs, $135; We also
insulated roof guitar, 1'
3br. House located in Ma~ave barg ains on other overhang painted ste el
son, WV. $495. + Utilities. Gracious li11ing. 1 and 2 1tems. Skaggs Appliances. sides &amp; roof, erected,
bedroom apartmen ts at VilNo Pets. (304)773·588t
76 VIne Street, (740)448- "!itO,t57.00: 24X42x9'4" galage Manor and Riverside
rage, 1-3' entry, 2·20x9' ln6 room Furnished house for Apartments in Middleport. 7398
sui overheads, insul root.
rent in Mason. (304) 773- From $278-$348. Call 740ANnQU~
painted steel sides &amp; roof 1'
5764
992-5064 . Equal Housing
Opportuni ties.
1,~-------· overhang gutter, erected
Clean wa rm 2 bedroom
price $9967.00: Precisi on
home In Pomeroy, w/option- Modern 1 bedroom apart· Buy or sell Riverine Anti- Post Frame Bldrs, 740-742ques, 1124 East Main on
to buy, $400 a mo., good ment {740)446.0390
40 t 1' 1-800-396-3026
SA
124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
references. (740)698-7244
Modern 1 br Apt. 740· 992-2526. Russ Moore,
Block , brick, sewer pipes,
For rent or sale- 10~ Pleas· (740)446-0390
owner.
windows, lintels , etc. Claude
ant Ridge, Pomeroy, $375 a Now Taking Application sMISCELLANEOUS
Winters , Rio Grande, OH
$375
deposit, 35 West 2 Bedroom Townmonth ,
MERCHANDISE • Catl740·245-512t.
(740) 698-6783
house Apartments, Includes
- - - - - - - - - Water
Sewage, Trash ,
PESIAJ'S
1 Northman snow blade, 2
.._
•
For rent or sale- 2 bedroom 5350 /Mo.. 740 _446_0008 _
FOR
gravity wagons , (two hunhOuse in Portland Long Bottom area. $300 rent, $300 Tara Town house Apart· dred bushel) . Please ca ll AKC German Shephard
deposit, (740)843-5425
ments. Very Spacious, 2 (740)245-5788 tor more in· puppies, $250. (740)286Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 form ation .
6726
House for rent In Wes t 112 Bath. Newly carpeted.
Columbia on At 62 l mile · Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Approx. lOft of Used Kitch· AKC Golden Retrievers,
ffom Mason Walmart DIW, 110. Start S385/Mo. No Pets . en ca binets, base &amp; wall . $200 each. (740)643..()(}13
whirl pool tub , 2br. Lg. Lease Plus Security Deposit counter top, sink, faucet,
·
Beautiful markings , AKC
K I· 1 c h 1 L R 1 0 e c k . Required , Days· 740-446- garbage disposal.
range
$400 .mo/$400· Sec. Depos- 3481: Evenings. 740·367 - hood . All lair condit1on, Boxer pups, 6 weeks Old,
it. Fu11Basementorwi1lcon- 0502 .
$250 . Call (740)446-4514 shots, current, parents on
sider selling. (304 )773-9167 --------~ for more Information.
pre mises. (7 40)379-2639
Twin Rivers Tower is ac- - - - - - - - - - Chihuahua- female. 2 years,
Small 1 bedroom home in cepting applicatiOn s for Baby items . Household male. 1-yr. S200 each; 8
Middleport, referencft_s &amp; waiting l1st for Hud-sub- items, bird : age, Utile Tyke week old male, $250.
deposit required, (740)992- sized, 1· br. apartment. call work shop, fridg &amp; stove . (740)446-2487 or (740}4466154
675-6679 EHO
(304)675-2801
3398

t

740-667

•nd Sm11ll Home
Maln-nanoe Job•

(740)992-5596

1994 Buick LeSabar, wall
maintained,
one owner,
nmelor Froet Seeding Pas·
great.
150,000
miles,
drives
ture and Hay Fields. ATV
$2000. (740)446-6970
Broadcast Seeders, t 2 von,
High Quoltty. Fits moll ATV, 1996 Bronco XLT, 302 auto,
$296. Jlm'o Farm Equip· 4x4, loaded, am/t m CO,
mont, (740)448·2484
80,000
mlleo,
$1800,
(740)992-3879 aller 5pm.

~----------------------------------------------------------------_.
HOMQi
LoTs&amp;
1116 HELP WANilD 11"6 HELP WAN!lD
FOR SALE

,\11\t\/flih

"

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlthlng reaervee the right to edit, reject, or cancel an~ ad at any time. Error• mull be reported on the flrat day of
Trl:lune-Senttnei-Regilter will be reaponalble tor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We ahall not be
any lost or expenH that resutt. from the publication or oml11lon ot an advertisement Correc:tlon will be made In the first available edition. • Box number
are always contldanuat. • Curnnt nit card apptlea. • An real estate advertlaementa are aubject ta the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968.. • Thla ne•r•p•rpe•l
accepll only help wanted ada meeting EOE standard a. We will not knowingly accept any advertising in violation of the law.

\\\Cll \ ( I \ I I \ IS

I \ In I ..,I 1'1'1 II ...,

..

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

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

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

Coolville, OH 45723

r

l\egt!iter

Electric, Plumbing.

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts .
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts .
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7South

·--illiiiliiiiilio-.,1

r~

.Jim Rur.:rk

PARft

.___

liiiiiiiiiiii-_.1
Pit Bull puppies and year- cab 4x4, 2 8, 4 speed, ole, jj~~;:.-...~--,
TitucKs
lings, hod shots. Call any- goOd condition. St 800.
8am-6pm. (304)675-8325
FOR SAt£
t994 Ranger R72 with Mertime (740)245-9497
cury Tracker, 115HP, molor
loaded. $7500. (74014461987 buick Century, one
ownsr, 4c:y, auto, EMcellent 1985 Ford F-150, 302 auto, 6970
Condition. $1500. (304)875· 4x4, good truck In &amp; out,
6325 8am-6pm.
lots of now parts, $2500,
97 Stratos, 17'6" bass boat,
Wurlilzer Spirit plano, oak
(740)742-14011
1987 Pontiac Fierro, 4 cylln·
black &amp; silver with wl1ite botcabinet
with
matching
V.4-~
tom, gray carpel, 120 hp.
bench and books. $2500 dar, S·speod, $t500. t979
"~
Evinrude trolling motor, reEKcellent Condition Antique Lincoln Versailles, 49,000
miles, very good condition,
built last year from lack of
Wardrobe, beautHul condl·
t889 Chovy 112 too, 4&gt;&lt;4, use, runs great, looks great.
tioo. $2,000. (740)387-5095 $3,000. (740)367-0856
1990 Corsica 4dr, green. well equipped. 1 owner, $7500 080.. (740)74240tt
Good Condition. St ,000. $2500. (740)446-6970

I''"'

IEPOYS

~

~

I;:

_
,
1

•
•

Windows • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

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

MILLS
FUlLY
CINmlcniN
Building over 30 years

1000 S.R. 7 South
CooMIIe, OH

New Shipment

Farm Toys&amp;
Construction Toys

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia he~eby
given
that
on
Slllu~day, January 25,
2003, at10:00 a.m., a
public aale will be ,
held at 211 Weal
Second
SI~HI,
Pome~oy, Ohio, In the
pa~klng lot of The
Fa~mera Bank and
Savings Company.
The ~armera Bank
and
Savings
Company Ia telling
for caah In hand or
certified check the
following collataral:
1888 FORD F150
1FTEF14N4JLA48990
1994 FORD
MUSTANOOT
1FALP42T2RF129574
The Fannera Bank
and
Saving•
Company, Pomaroy,
Ohio, reaerv.. lha
~lghl to bid at thll
Hie, and 10 wHhdraw
the above collalaral
prior to Hie. Further,

The Farmers Bank
and
Savlngl
Company reoervaa
the rlghtlo reJect any
or all bld1 aubmiHed.
The
above
deacrlbed collateral
Will be tole "81 II •
where Is", with no
expreued or Implied
warranty given.
For further lnlor·
matlon, or tor an
appointment
to
lnapect
collateral,
prior to 111e data,
contact
Cyndla
Rodriguez at 11112·
2136.
(1) 22, 23, 24 3TC

PUBLIC NOTICE
Thla 11 to provide
notice to oil residents
end afflllatll ol the
Tupper•
Plaine
Regional
Sewar
Dlt!Tict II woll H the
Olive
Townahlp
Trulllaal that crue to

the leck of required
numbll~
of board
member• 1o conduct
bualnell,
Gall
Paraona, and D.
Wayne Dunlap have
realgnacl their poel·
Ilona effactlve Jan.
17, 2003. 111 of thla
dete there are no
Tuppara
Plaine
Reglonel
Sewer
Dletrlcl Truateea to
conduct bualneu.
Sewar
payments
ahould be made by
lhll dua dille to the
Farmer• Bank In
Tuppera Plaint, OH.
Any realdant who 11
lntereated In blleom·
lng a board member
o~ enyone who hll
queatlona concemlng
the Tuppara Plaine
Regional
Sewer
Dlatrlcl ahould con·
tact
the
Olive
Townahlp truataaa.
(1) 24

Le~

me do 1: f·;r Y·"u'

01111 r~~m•a

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

Middleport Legion
February 6th 6PM

21

$20

Tuesday Euchre Toumements
Karaoke Wed. &amp; Fridays
Band Sat.
Swamp Juice

9-1

"Y~ W..,

&amp;' •· cl!fl'.,r"
Skin, Cut, Wrap

&amp;Freeze
All this for only

$45.00

lnslirQttet Wort lnd!llkd

(740) 992-3320

31645SR325

Open 9:~ nl·~pm
Ffft' L'SUtnll~"- fn.-., •~ I&gt;.H nr ptd•Ul'
CaiiU&gt; fill" Ill )lltlr&lt;"""lJ'UI &lt;' r.&lt;:~'&lt;h

langsville, OH

(740) 446·1812

740-742-2076

A•l: ....· tiiN!III " " '
Sen·i("f' 1'/mr.•.'

Hill's Se lf
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

• Ton neue Cover •
Vent visor • Bug
Shield &amp;

Line of

Full

Olher Accessories
\ lr ' 'I '

Star Mill Park Board
Basket Bingo

Best Service at
the Best Price

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

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

Rocky Hupp lnsur1111Ce
and FlnondoiSaMces,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264."

All Brands

Em•il: blade&amp;Ozapl!nk.oom

NOTICES

"Not mal
My money is with

'

1 I'

(740) 992 -5 822

Ball Logging
&amp; Firewood

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

•••n

Dump Truck Delivery

1-740.992-41142
Leave a

Wolfe Heating &amp; Cooling
~
• 10 yr parts &amp; labor
.S.m6rt
• Service on all brands
• Residential &amp; light commercial
• www.amerleanstandardalr.com
GAS, FUEL OIL &amp; HEAT PUMPS
"SALES &amp; SERVICE"
CUSTOMER CARE DEALER

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

YOUNG'S
ROBERT
CARPENTER
-BISSELL
SERVICE
I
CONSTRUCTION • New Glirege1
• Room Addltlono
Remodeling

•New Homes
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling

• E*-trtcel 6 Plumbing
• Rooting • Qutttll
• Vinyl Siding I Painting
• Polio end POrch Decko

Free Es11mates

Stop &amp; Compare
71'22/TFN

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeruy, Ot!lo
!

'

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, January 24, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friends and family flee when
husband shares his feelings
DEAR ABBY: I am writing
this for those female readers
who wish the men in their
lives would share their feelings with them. What I have
to say to them is this: COUNT
. YOUR BLESSINGS!
My husband shares all his
feelings and thoughts (mostly
negative ones) with me all the
time. Every night I am forced
to sit for hours listening to
him verbalize his thoughts
and feelings . He has no time
to do yard work or household
repairs because he's either too
busy thinking and feeling or
v~rbalizing his endless critiCisms.
He does hold down a steady
(sedentary) job, and some of
the ways he gets in touch with
his feelings -through music
and poetry -- are positive.
However, when I was in a car
accident last year and should
have been resting and recuperating, my husband "didn't
have time" to help with
housework because his piano
had to be played and his novels had to be read.
When we were first mar·
ried, we moved to a small
rural town hundreds of miles
awaY. from our friends and
fanulies. It has been hard to
make friends in this closed
community. Once every few
years a family member or
friend is willing to come and

Dear·
Abby
ADVICE
vtsll us, but my husband
almost always finds a way to
alienate our visitors. He will
start arguments, tell them
what he didn't like about the
Christmas presents they gave
us, complam about how much
money we spend on food
while they're at our house,
etc.
I'm afraid that soon I'm
going to have no one left. I've
talked to my husband about
this several times, but he
doesn't see it as a problem.
Help! TALKED TO
DEATH IN MINNESOTA
DEAR TALKED TO
DEATH: I am all for sharing
thoughts and feelings, but the
person you have described is
one who is self-obsessed, verball~ abusive, and thinks no
one s feelings are as important as his own.
By "sharing his thoughts
and feelings," your husband is
chipping away at your self-

esteem and isolating you from
friends and family. It's important that you give this some
thought and not allow yourself to be his scapegoat. Also,
I hope you have, a job outside
the home, because it may be
your only way to have meanmgful contact with others.
DEAR ABBY: I bought my
wedding dress two months
ago. I showed a picture of it to
my sister-in-law who is being
married a few weeks before
me. Yesterday she went out
and purchased the exact same
dress. Although she is having
a small wedding, my fiance
and I are still very upset. She
and her fiance insist we are
being selfish and inconsiderate of their feelings. Do you
think we are wrong to be
angry?- P.O. IN N.J.
DEAR P.O.: No, I do not.
You are entitled to your feelings. That said, there is still
time for you to return to the
shop where you purchased
your bridal gown and discuss
how to individualize your
attire for the wedding.
(Consider a different headpiece and veil. adding or
deleting gloves or other
accessories, adding or subtracting a train.)
And remember, although
imitation may be irritating,
it's also the smcerest form of
flattery. Your sister-in- law is

"family," so pleased don't let
this cause a perrnanent rift.
And in the future, don't show
her any more pictures. ·
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known ds 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.

Pidure yourself
in a new career.
Find it In the
Classifiecls!

,

Mason'•
org,
1 Refreahlng 43 Common
S.Vak
vine
B Lyric poem 45 Leaven
11 Condor's 47 Sudden
neat
50 Hardy's
13 Mont.
dairymaid
nel9hbor 51 Four qts.
14 Cat afoot 52 Last degree
15 Amualng
54 Suit
16 Son
material
17 Forum hello 58 Footed vase
18 Basilica
59 Frat letter
part
60 Cowboy
20 OPEC
flick
vessel
61 PCB
22 Rain loraat
regulator
parrot
62 Turf
24 Rille
63 Not any
25 Pap
DOWN
26 By oneaell
28 Grant
32 i'olsonoua 1 Bounder
snake
2 Above, In
33 lwo-color
veree
::ookle
3 Pizarro a
34 Love, to
quest
l'edro
4 Flowery
35 Allee's
scent
restaurant 5 Mocking
37 Conclucomment
slons
6 Uproar
39 Shaggy
7 Cajun's
flower
home
40 Get ready
8 Gemstone
41 Movie pig
9 Brubeck of
r.-4-2.,PI"er_ry~-rl,..... jazz

I

BY BERNICE 8EDE 0sOL

Enterprises you tackle in
the year ahead that are inde·
pendent of others have excel·
lent chances to succeed. On
the other hand, a partnership
' arrangement could have
drawbacks. so be careful be·
fore teaming up.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Someone could be
looking for the cracks in your
armor today rather than things
to admire. Rise above it and
don't give him or her any·
thing to crow over. Be your
wonderful, amicable self.
riSCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Be tolerant at all times
with the views of others to·
day. You're not going to ever
agree with all their viewpoints, so don't attempt to
counter unresponsive listeners
with your opinions.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -· In any financial arrangement you make with
others today. be certain that
the heavy end of the burden
doesn't fall to you. Don't fall

for any sob stories.
TAURUS · (April 20-May
20) -- Take time to eva! uate
the strengths and weaknesses
of an agreement before entering into one ~ith someone
who is pressuring you to do
so today. The details could be
a bit shaky.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
·· Should you take on a job
today that is way over your
head, check to see if someone
can come to your aid. You'll
find just the right person to
bail you out.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Don't let a person who
likes to lord it over you
threaten your feelings of self·
worth today. Listen to others
who are telling you that
you' re just as good as this
person. if not better.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·•
Heavy handedness in dealing
with family members will be
met with bitter reactions and
altercations.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepr. 22)
Although you may view
your rebuttals to someone' s

views today as debate, your
opponent could see it as a
form of warfare. Present your
arguments in soft tones and
sugarcoat your words.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) · Decisions that affect your
personal finances should be
made by you today and not
forced on you, no matter who
the person is or for what reason they give. It'll be your
loss.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ·- You and your mate are
likely to work at cross-purposes •today unless you can
work things out beforehand.
Unfortunately, under those

conditions neither of ).'OU will
have your desires fulftlled.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) .. Difficult problems
you may encounter today
could be of your own making.
This can easily be avoided if
you take time first to think
things through before you act.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Should a member
of your family invite a particular group of people into
the home wtth wnom you do
not feel comfortable, find a
reason to excuse yourself
rather than have to put up
with being uneasy.

WORD SCRIMMAGE. SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
~mm UnM1d futur1 SynCIIC.et

R,@
s

1nt

1st DOWN

·...l!L.

-

= 130
41h OOWN

AVERAGE GAME 160.170

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

•..ll_

JUDD'S TOTAL

255

1·J).(IJ

mag~

ne

Hometown News for Gallia, Mas~n &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • January 25, 2003

Pitcher In 3 31 Humoristbasin
Bombeck
12 Rio G~anda 36 Hiss
town
38 Ia responal(2 wds.)
ble lor
19 Had great
(2 wds.)
faith In
44 Skirt ~llts
21 Machu
46 Nllti city
Plcchu
47 The chills
builder
48 lloldllah
22 Cheapskate 49 Forearm
23 Plenty
bone
24 Adieu
50 Clonk
(hyph.)
53 "- Te
25 Seductive
Ching"
woman
55 LAX Info
27 Olin or
56 Always, to
Horne
Tennyson ,
29 Peel and
57 Putln a kllrj
Bovary
30 Question

50 CENTS • Vol. 1 , No. 22

10

Astrograph
Sai!Jrday, Jan. 25. 2003

Prep basketball: Blue Devils cage ·aulldogs. B 1

ACROSS

Education

Southern levy
up for renewa·l
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Stall writer

Mason County authorities investigate a wreck that occurred Friday along West Virginia Route 2. A Gallia County man was flown
by Health Net to St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington following the accident that left the driver pinned beneath this car in a creek
near Bud Chattin Road. (Kandy Boyce)

Gallia County man injured
in '-'ason County wreck

®©®CD@@®@®··

0000000

0
0000000
®@@@@©® ;·~~~:T~al 0

lotDOWN

COO@@@@@

'""DOWN

0
0
999. ~9. ••Pa""
@@@@@®@

181LonorToJal

~gg~~
AVERAGE \lAME 210.220

by JUDD HAMBRICK

BY KANDY BOYCE

Staff writer

0
0

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME UMtT: 20 MIN

FLAT ROCK, W.Va. -Quick action
by . ~ Mason ·· C.mnty woman and an
unknown passerfly may have saved the
life of an Ohio man on Friday afternoon
when they uprighted the car that had its
driver pinned beneath it in a creek.
Lonnie McClellan, 66, of Kerr, Ohio,
was traveling north on West Virginia
Route. 2 in a Ford Focus near Bud
Chattin Road when he lost control of the
car in a curve, hit a guardrail and went
off the roadway. The car flipped over as
it went airborne over a steep embankment. It struck a tree and flipped over
again in the air and came to rest on its
side in the creek, pinning McClellan
under it in the creek.

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- to Hetter wort! from the lefters on each yarcttne
Add pdntiiO each word or letter using searing directions at ~ - Seveniatler
words get a 60-pdnl: bonus. AM words can be found In Webster's New World
Cologo Dl&lt;ilolla"f
JUDD'S SOLUTIOH TOMORROW

,....

Doris Queen of Flat Rock said that she
was sitting in the living room when she
heard a big bang and ran to the window.
She saw a car turned over on its side in
the creekjust below their house on..W.Va.
Rte. 2. She ~Ued for her husband'and
ll d 9ll fte
·f
ca e
, t en ran out to see I everyone was okay.
When she got to McClellan's car, she
found a passerby trying unsuccessfully
. to push the car upright. She helped him
roll the car back onto its wheels, freeing
McClellan. Queen and the passerby
helped the thoroughly drenched and
injured man up the hill to Queen's house
to get warm until the an1bulance arrived.
Queen said that McClellan had a c.ut
on his head, arm and side. ·
"He was bleeding and was very disoriented. He kept asking what had happened to him. He didn't even remember

wrecking," said Queen.
William Queen, Doris' husband, in the
meantime had rushed down the road to get
Steve Rollins with his wrecker to pull the
car off the m;:m. When they reW,med with
the wrecker, McClellan was airelldy freed.
Steve Rollins, owner o'f Rollins
Wrecking Service, said that McClellan
was fortunate that Queen and her helper
were able to pull the car off of him right
away.
"As cold as it is today, he wouldn't
have lasted long in that creek," said
Rollins.
McClellan was flown by Health Net to
St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington. His
condition was unknown, but he was conscience when emergency workers loaded
him into the helicopter.
No information regarding McClellan's
condition was available at presstime.

Man sought in Gallia break-ins

RACINE,
Ohio
"Follow the money" was
once a slogan used by
reporters to understand the
financial dealings of government.
Schools are funded by
levies. "Inside levies" are
those taxes which are not
subject to local control.
"Outside" levies are additional taxes the voters choose
to pay to help provide additional funding for public
schools.
The amount of taxes paid
for a house worth $50,000
under a 4-mill tax levy, like
the one up for renewal in the
Southern Local School
District, is approximately
$48 per year.
The
Meigs
County
Treasurer's office lists the
millage rates for the school
districts in the local newspaper once each year. For
mstance, Southern Local is
listed as collecting 32.39
mills. From this amount,
there is an inside levy of 3.5
mills. The rest of funding
comes from outside levies.
State law entitles school districts a millage minimum at
20 mills fol' operating
exbu~se~f the total 32 .39

The school district collects
20 mills for operating
expenses. There is also ' a
4.89-mill bond levy and a
facility levy of .50 mills, but
they are not in the same category as operating expenses
because the money raised by
these levies is specially earmarked for expenses dealing
directly with the construc.•
tion and maintenance of the
schools. There is a total
effective tax rate of 25.322
millage collected.
.
The disparity between the
32.39 and the 25.322 is
because the state factors into
the system a change in propc
erty values. In most cases, a~
time goes by property values
increase. .A house that was
purchased for $10,000 in
· 1980 is probably worth more
today. As property values go
millS', 27 mills are used to up, the amount of millage
provide funds for operating taxed goes down so that taxexpenses like salaries, heat payers do not have to pay
or tires for the buses. There
h
b th
is also·•~b 4.89 bond levy more eac ye~r, jill e same
,.
amount over ttme.
which 'provides money
Picture a scale between
exclusively for the recent property value and .tax rate
school construction. There is which must stay in balance
also a .50 facilities levy as time marches on. If propwhich provides money
1
·
h
toward school maintenance. erty va ues mcrease, t e
millage percentage collected
While the county treasurer must decrease. Since the 3.5has 32.39 mills listed in the
account books, this is not the mill inside levy rate is set by
amount of millage collected. Please see Southem, AS

State funding cuts in.
education expected
J. MILES
Staff writer
BY

lAYTON

I

BY KEVIN KELlY

News editor
'Tl&lt;E
011611NilED
IS 1ll NEUE!!. TOU~H
A PIECE Of PAPER

5\'A~INir

~ 'TliAJol l)t.)(.E !

.. . WHICK AA&amp; A DifECt'l~E

·o~·

8U1\0N .. .

.. . WHIGH MEA1&lt;5 fiNDING THE IIJI\RRAN1'1 .. .
... WHICH II\EAN5 fiNI&gt;INfr 'Tlle RE~EIPT . . •
.. .WIIl~H llltArl5 &amp;01~(, '!11~0\lc.H FILES.. .
... 11/HI~H 11\E~N&amp; lrOI'IC. TO ~TOR~()£ . .•
... ~~IGH 1\\Em~ fiNOINfr TilE KE~ . . .
... WHICH MEAN&amp; C~A~I'IC, '!lie PUR bE .. ,

AI=TER A TRIAL, M'(
CLIEI.JT5 ARE ALWA'fS MORE
DEPRESSED T~AN I AM .. '

..-

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Gallia County sheriff's investigators are distributing a
security-camera image of the
man they suspect in a series
of break-ins at local businesses over the past week, the
most
recent
overnight
Thursday.
Detective Chad Wallace
said investigators hope the
man in the image will be rec·
o~nized and inforrnation on
h1s whereabouts will be
relayed to them.
:1 Section• - 1:1 hpl
Wallace encouraged anywith information to call
AS one
Calendar ·
the county jail at 441-2054.
84-S
Classifieds
"The information will be
Comics
86
relayed directly to the detec86 . tive on the case to allow for
Dear Abby
A4
Editorials
followup and a quicker
AS
Movies
apprehension," he said.
AS
Obituaries
"However, if they don't
81-3
Sports
feel comfortable with talking
to someone, they can call the
A2
Weather
tip line. We won't discourage
Q 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
that."

Index

The tip line, where information can be left anonymously, is 446-6555.
The man is suspected in
break-ins and thefts from
several businesses.
The first was the Fast Stop
at Ohio routes 7 and 218
south of Gallipolis on Jan .
16, also broken into Jan. 20
and again Thursday; the
Little John's in Centenary
last weekend; the Dairy Boy
in Crown City and the Guyan
Valley General Store at Ohio
routes 218 and 553 near
Crown City, both on Jan. 18;
Fat Boyz Pizza on Ohio
Route 160 near Gallipolis on
Wednesday ; and Bladen
Landing on Ollio Route 7
South Thursday.
Wallace could not elaborate on the incidents since an
investigation is ongoing, but

said "tangible" items were
taken from the businesses.
Investigators are also looking into break-ins reported at
three Centenary-area homes
and
another
on
Neighborhood Road last
weekend, at a house on
Lincoln Pike Tuesday, and at
residences on Hamilton and
Little
Bullskin
roads
Thursday.
Investigators believe there
is not a connection between
the commercial break-ins and
the incidents at the resi- .
dences.
Wallace advised residents
living near businesses to keep
an eye out for suspicious
activity and report it immediately to the sheriff's office.
Above all , he said, do not
intervene in the situation or
try to apprehend suspects.
"The best advice I can give
is that if you live near a commercial location, be alert,"
Wallace said. "If anyone
observes any suspicious
activity, call us first."

POMEROY, Ohio
Potential budget cuts to the
school funding formula
could impact school districts
in Meigs County.
According to the Ohio
Department of Education
(ODE), the Southern Local
School District spends an
average of $7,200 per rupil.
The district source o revenue comes from local funds
amounting to $2,066, state
funds of $3,488 and $786 in
federal funds, which add up
to a total of approximately
$6,300. The district sources
of revenue do not equal district expenditures forcing the
school district to borrow
money to continue operating.
Superintendent
Bob
Grueser said many school
districts in Southern Ohio
experience deficit spending
for survival.
Despite Gov. Bob Taft's
rhetonc during the State of
the State address, there are
potential cuts coming to the
school parity program prescribed by a legislature pay-

ing lip service to the school
funding DeRolph case.
.
The state must balance its
budget
by
June 30.
.According to the Office of
Budget and Management,
the state hopes to cut 2.5 percent or approximately $30
million from the local government fund. If revenue
enhancements and local government fund reductions are
not enacted by March I, the
state is considering a 2.5 percent cut to Education
Foundation and Parity Aid
and a 2.5 percent cut to
Board
of
Regents
Instructional Subsidy. ·
These potential cuts could
have a dramatic impact oa
the amount spent per pupil in
Southern Ohio. Grueser said
if these potential cuts
becomes reality, it would
amount to approximately
$75 ,000 less for his district.
"We will experience
greater deficits and more
borrowing from the state,"
he said. "Any cuts that are
made will add to the difficulties facing us right now. We
don't have a surplus and we
don't have stuff to cut."

Far
Thursday, January 30
I AM REAt.t.Y
5fRIKINC. OIJf,
&amp;ARFIELt:'

EVEN "GAP • fOO'ri-IEP

51-lf ACfUIIt.t.o,&gt;

&amp;REffA,' fHf Pl!;fANCE'

50UNP'3 LIKE A
FUN t:&gt;AfE

5P11'1'1NG QUfEON, 5HO'f

ME POWN

8 am - 12 Noon • Meigs County Health Department
Free Screenings • Health Information
sPECIAL UPID PROFILE SCREENING · Measuring Tolal Cholesterol
Screening includes a 1O·hour fast beforehand.
Spaces ore limited for this screening, so call naw to reserve a space.
Contact Courtney Sim at
~&lt;l"ith tt.u i.ftancr

(740) 992-6626

s,,m.~lll?d by thr HPI::.rr MPdiml Crtllf'r Diflbt&gt;/l'.l
fmm tht HM C Cammunrty Hra/th and Wrffllt'.t~

thl'

[ffm:(ltim! O,.[KJnml'nt,

r!tr Mt&gt;i(l .( Cmmty Hn1llh Drpanmrm.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Dif.lerence

www.holzer .org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="474">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9922">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18986">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18985">
              <text>January 24, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="954">
      <name>newman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1232">
      <name>nichols</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
